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SECOND
THOUGHTS – THE HINDU
Grace of the unspoken
BY
NAVTEJ SARNA
An old-fashioned salaam to times long gone by...
Vanishing
past:Letter writing has fallen under the juggernaut of
technology.Floating thoughts, an intercepted glance, a snatch of a
conversation overheard, a book picked at random from an apple box
outside a second-hand bookshop: in such things, given the right
moment, often lie the seeds of an essay, a poem, a short story and —
for the fortunate few — a novel. And so it seems is the case for
this column. A yellowing news cutting in my files about the lost art
of written correspondence, a few old Hindi songs at dusk and a news
item mourning the closure, in a small border town, of the municipal
library with a picture of the crestfallen faces of helpless children
and elderly citizens. Alone, each of these is just a stray event, at
best a sentimental paean for a vanished past or a grudging salute to
the juggernaut of technology. Taken together, especially on a windy
night when a lone lit-up boat is the only thing that breaks the inky
darkness of the sea and sky, these things fall into the finality of a
pattern, reminding us of all that has slipped unknowing through our
fingers while we were looking elsewhere, signalling a loss that has
already become irretrievable even as we become aware of it.
The
news cutting is just a book review, but the book is enticingly called Yours
Ever, Written over several years by Thomas Mallon, during which
our hesitant handshake with e-mails over screeching modems has turned
into a 24-hour addictive embrace, it is an elegy to the art of letter
writing. Among those whose letters make up the meat of the book are
several writers including Flaubert, William Faulkner, F. Scott
Fitzgerald and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Nothing reveals better the mind of
a writer, or for that matter, of a president or a king or a lover,
than a letter written by him. Separated by decades or by centuries,
the reader can feel the writer's torture congealed in the long dried
ink, the passion in the folds of carefully chosen paper, the
hesitation in the little post-script, the doubt in the scratched out
sentence... Seen in this manner these letters become the lifeblood of
historical research, the insight that brings biography alive.
When
writing my own novel,The Exile, I searched for, and found,
Maharaja Duleep Singh's voice in a handful of his letters that I read
one stolen afternoon in the British Library. His handwriting, his
phrasing, his choice of words — all became windows into his mind and
then his soul. I wonder what the biographers or writers of historical
fiction will do when they have to reopen the secrets of our digital
age. What will replace these letters? Where will they find the cache
of personal e-mails, the confessions, the fears, the advice, the
justification, the evasion that will give the third dimension to their
subjects? Which spouse, or child, or one-time sweetheart will keep
these e-mails tied up in a ribbon or carefully folded into an old tin
candy box?
The
loss is greater than simply the difficulties that will be faced by the
researchers of the future; no doubt they will invent some virtual bank
where it will all be archived. Perhaps some imaginative minds and
sensitive souls will reinvent the postal system as a speedy and safe
courier service and even find ways to retain the old colonial
buildings that were our best post offices, turning them into
philatelic museums and internet cafes.
But
how will one ever explain to the next generation the anticipation that
rose to fever pitch as one waited for the tinkle of the bicycle bell
of the khaki-clad, peak-capped postman in the hot summer afternoons.
Or the disappointment that his consoling smile never quite wiped out
on the days that brought no letter. Or the smell of sealing wax when
sending a birthday parcel, or the glue-laden brushes that covered not
only the back of the stamp but also the thumb and forefinger, or the
rush for putting a letter at the last minute into a stunted, red
pillar box marked ‘late fee delivery' or the sight of the huge bags
being thrown into red vans in the gathering dusk behind the post
office as if they were being sent into nowhere, or the pleasure of
walking a mile on fallen pine needles to the little hill post office
and finding a letter with your name waiting there labelled ‘Poste
Restante.' Something has vanished in this trade-off for instant
communication, some romance, some mystery.
Or
quite simply, some grace.
Perhaps
it is the same vanished grace that haunts the old songs that burnished
the edges of the twilight today, breathing in the lilt of those
melodies or the obliqueness of the lyrics. The same wordless quality
that could suffuse Waheeda Rahman's eyes with loss and regret in a
haunting shot in a deserted film studio, lit only by a strobe of
sunlight from an open skylight. Or that enabled Meena Kumari to convey
passion, intoxication, taunt and promise in one look as she fought to
keep herzamindar husband
away from the dancing girls. Or that lay, like his rough coat, on Guru
Dutt's hunched shoulders, with all the heaviness of defeat and
frustration. Nothing much needed to be said after that, the unspoken
said it all. It is not mere sentimentalism or nostalgia when one fails
to find this grace of the unsaid, the romance of the unspoken, the
passion that smoulders, in a world in which Shah Rukh Khan acts as
Shah Rukh Khan in movie after movie, where Salman Khan's shirt
magically unbuttons itself and falls off to reveal the rippling stuff
and Munni competes in a torso-twisting tussle with Sheila.
The
battle is already lost, but there are consolations in minor acts of
rebellion. The use of a fountain pen, a soft creamy paper diary, an
occasional letter written on an inland letter and posted to an
unsuspecting friend from a remote post office, a walk through the
shelves of an old library inhaling the smell of old books and talcum
powder….Perhaps all these put together will form another pattern: an
old-fashioned salaam to times that were.
Navtej
Sarna
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