Post by etm solmerano on Dec 2, 2009 8:20:39 GMT -5
The Interview
By Ruth Prawer Jhabala
Ruth Prawer Jhabala was born in Cologne, Germany, to Polish-Jewish parents. She immigrated to England in 1939. After earning an M.A. at Queen Mary College of London University, she married C.S.H. Jhabvala, an Indian architect, in 1951, and moved with him in Delhi. An insider by virtue of her decades of living in India yet an outsider by virtue of her Western youth and education, she frequently depicts characters torn between their desire for modern Western comfort and the spiritual consolation of Hinduism and traditional Indian family relationship and cultural values. Pearl K. Bell ha noted: “Jhabvala writes from within the extended Indian family structure, an affectionately satiric observer of the conflict between the traditional passivity and Westernized ambition within individuals battered by the indifferent tides of change in present-day Indian life.” In analyzing one of Jhabvala’s recurring subjects, the experience of the Westerners in India, S. M. Mollinger has observed that the novelist “use India as a catalyst, as an outrageous force that elicits unexpected, frequently frightening, reactions from it’s visitors.” Among his many honors, Jhabvala has been awarded a Booker prize, a Neil Gunn International Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a McArthur Foundation Award. A prolific novelist and storywriter, she had also a successful career as a screenwriter, often in collaboration with James Ivory of Merchant-Ivory Productions. With Ivory, she wrote the Guru, Shakespeare Wallah, The Europeans (based on the Henry James novel), and A Room with a View (based on the E. M. Forster novel). Among her best known novels are Amrita (1956), The Nature of Passion (1957), Esmond in India (1958), A Backward Place (1965), Heat and Dust (1976), and In Search of Love and Beauty (1983). Her stories are collected in five volumes: Like Birds, Like Fishes (1964), A Stronger Climate (1969), An Experience of India (1972), How I Became a Holy Mother and Other Stories (1976), and Out of India (1986).
I am always very careful of my appearance, so you could not say that I spent much more time than usual over myself that morning. It is true, I trimmed and oiled my moustache, but then I often do that; I always like it to look very neat, like Raj Kapoor’s , the film star. But I knew my sister-in-law and my wife was watching me. My sister-in-law was smiling, and she had one hand on her hip; my wife only looked anxious. I knew she was anxious. All night she had been whispering to me. She had whispered, “Get this job and take me away to live somewhere alone only you and I and our children.” I had answered, “Yes,” because I wanted to go to sleep. I don’t know where and why she had taken this notion that we should go and live alone.
When I had finished combining my hair, I sat on the floor and my sister-in-law brought me my food on the tray. It may sound strange that my sister-in-law should serve me, and not my wife, but it is so in our house. It used to be my mother who brought me my food, even after I was married; she would never allow my wife to do this for me, though my wife wanted to very much. Then when my mother got so old, my sister-in-law began to serve me. I know my wife feels deeply hurt by this, but she doesn’t dare to say anything. My mother doesn’t notice many things anymore, otherwise she would not allow my sister-in-law to bring me my food; she has always been very jealous of this privilege herself, though she never cared who served my brother. Now she has become so old that she can hardly see anything, and most of the time she sits in the corner by the family trunks and folds and strokes her pieces of cloth. For years now she has been collecting pieces of cloth. Some of them are very old and dirty, but she doesn’t care, she loves them all equally. Nobody is allowed to touch them. Once there was a quarrel, because my wife had taken one of them to make a dress for our child. My mother shouted at her-it was terrible to hear her: but then, she has never liked my wife-and my wife was very much afraid and cried and tried to excuse her self. I hit her across the face, not very hard and not because I wanted to, but only to satisfy my mother. The old women kept quiet then and went back to folding and stroking her pieces of cloth.
All the time I was eating, I could feel my sister-in-law looking at me smiling. It made me uncomfortable. I thought she might be smiling because she knew wouldn’t get the job for which I had to go and be interviewed. I also knew I wouldn’t get it, but I didn’t like her to smile like that. It was as if she was saying, “You see, you will always have to be dependent on us.” It is clearly that my brother my brother’s duty to keep me and my family until I can get to work and contribute my own earnings to the family household. There is no need for her to smile about it. But it is true that I am more dependent on her now than anyone else. Since my mother has got so old, my sister-in-law has become more and more the most important person in the house, so that she even keeps the keys and the household stores. At first I didn’t like this. As long as my mother managed the household, I was sure of getting many extra tidbits, nor for her children, but for me; and when she gives them to me, she never says anything and I never say anything, but she smiles and then I feel confused and rather embarrassed. My wife has noticed what she does for me.
I have found that women are usually kind to me. I think they realize that I am more sensitive person and that therefore I must be treated gently. My mother has always treated me very gently. I am her youngest child, and I am fifteen years younger than my brother who is next to me (she did have several children in between us, but they all died). Right from the time when I was a tiny baby, she understood that I needed greater care and tenderness than other children. She always made me sleep close beside her every night, and in the day I always sat with her and my grandmother and my widowed aunt, who were also very fond of me. When I got bigger, my father sometimes wanted to take me to help in his stall (he had a little grocer’s stall, where he sold lentils and rice and cheap cigarettes and colored drinks in bottles) but my mother and grandmother and aunt never liked to let me go. Once he did take me with him, and he made me pour some lentils out of paper bag into a tin. I rather liked pouring the lentils they made such a nice noise as they landed in the tin-but suddenly my mother came was very angry with my father for making me this work. She took me home at once, and when she told my grandmother and my aunt what had happened, they stoked me and kissed me and then they gave me a hot fritter to eat. The fact is, right from childhood I have been a person who needs a lot of peace and rest, and my food too has to be rather mote delicate than that of other people. I have often tried to explain this to my wife, but as she is not very intelligent, she doesn’t seem to understand.
Now my wife was watching me while I ate. She was squatting on the floor, watching our youngest baby; the baby’s head was in her lap, and all one could see of it was of its legs and its naked bottom. My wife didn’t watch me as openly as my sister-in-law did; only from time to time she raised her eyes to me, I could feel it, and they were very worried and troubled. She too was thinking about the job for which I was going to be interviewed, but she was anxious that I should get it. “We will go and live somewhere alone,” she said. Why did she say it? When she knows that it is not possible and never will be.
And even if it were possible, I would not like it. I can’t live away from my mother; and I don’t think I would like to live away from my mother; and I don’t think I would like to live away from my sister-in-law. I often look at her and it makes me happy. Even though she is not young anymore, she is still beautiful. She is tall, with big hips and big breasts and eyes that flash; she often gets angry, and when she is angry she is the most beautiful at all. And then her eyes are like fire and she shows all her teeth, which are very strong and white, and her head is proud with the black hair flying loose. My wife is not beautiful at all. I was very disappointed in her when they first married me to her. Now I have got used to her and I even like her, because she is so good and very quiet and never troubles me at all. I don’t think anybody else in our house likes her. My sister-in-law always calls her “that beauty”, but she does not mean it; and she makes her do all the most difficult household tasks, and often she shouts at her and even beats her. This is not right; my wife has never done anything to her-on the contrary, she always treats her with respect. But I cannot interfere in their quarrels.
Then I was ready to go, though I didn’t want to go. I knew only too well what would happen at the interview. My mother blessed me, and my sister-in-law looked at me over her shoulder and her great eyes flashed with laughter. I didn’t look at my wife, who still sat squatting on the floor, but I knew she was pleading to me to get the job like she had pleaded me in the night. As I walked down the stairs the daughter of the carpenter, who lives in one of the rooms on the lower floor, came out of her door and she walked up the stairs as I walked down, and she passed very closed beside me, with her eyes lowered but her arm just touching my sleeve. She always waits for me to come out and she passes me on the stairs. We have never spoken together. She is a young girl, her breasts are only just forming; her blouse has short sleeves and her arms are beautiful, long and slender. I think soon she is to be married; I have heard my sister-in-law say so. My sister-in-law laughed when she told me, she said, “It is high time” and then she said something coarse. Perhaps she has noticed that the girl waits for me to pass on the stairs.
No, I did not want to go to the interview. I had been to so many during the last few months, and always the same thing happed. I know I have to work, in order to earn money to give it to my mother or my sister-in-law for the household, but there is no pleasure for me in the work. Last time I had a work, it was in an insurance office and all day they made me sit at the desk and write figures. What pleasure could there be for me in that? I am a very thoughtful person, and I always like to sit and think my own thoughts; but while I thought my own thoughts in the office, I sometimes made mistakes over the figures and then my superiors were very angry with me. I was always afraid to their anger, and I begged their forgiveness and admitted that I was much at fault. When they forgave me, I was no longer afraid and continued doing my work and thinking my thoughts. But the last time they would not forgive me again, though I begged and begged cried what a faulty, bad man I was and what good men they were, and how they were my mother and my father and how I looked only to them for my life and the lives of my children. But when they still said I must go, I saw that the work there was really finished and I stopped crying. I went to the washroom and combed my hair and folded my soap in my towel, and then I took my money from the accountant without a word and I left the office with my eyes lowered. But I was no longer afraid, because what is finished is finished, and my brother still had a work and probably one day I would get another job.
Ever since then my brother has been trying to get me into government office. He himself is a clerk in government service and enjoys many advantages: every five years he gets an increase of ten rupees in his salary and he has ten days sick leave in the year and when he retires he will get a pension. It will be good for me also to have such job; but it is difficult because there is an interview at which important people sit at a desk and ask many questions. I am afraid of them, and I cannot understand properly what they are saying, so I answer what I think they want me to answer. But it seems that my answers are not after all the right ones, because up till now they have not given me a job.
On my way to this interview, I thought how much nicer it would be to go to the cinema instead. If I had ten annas, perhaps I would have gone; it was just time for the morning show. The young clerks and the students would be collecting in a queue outside the cinema now. They would be standing and not talking much, holding their ten annas and waiting for the box office to open. I enjoy this morning shows, perhaps because the people who come to them are young men like myself, all silent and rather sad. I am often sad; it would even be right to say that I am sad most of the time. But when the film begins, I am very happy. I love to see the beautiful women, dressed with golden clothes with heavy earrings and necklaces and bracelets covering their arms, and their handsome lovers who are all the things I would like to be. And when they sing their love songs, so full of deep feelings, and tears sometimes comes into m eyes; but not because I am sad, no, on the contrary, because I am so happy. After the film is over, I never go home straightaway, but I walk around the streets and think how wonderful life could be.
When I arrived at the place where the interview was, I had to walk down many corridors and ask directions from many peons before I could find the right room. The peons were all rude to me, because they knew what I had come for. They lounge on benches outside the offices, and when I asked them, they looked me up and down before answering and sometimes and sometimes they made jokes about me with one another. I was very polite to them, for even though they were only peons, their uniforms and jobs belonged here, and they knew the right way whereas I did not. At last I came to the room where I had to wait. Many others were already sitting there, on chairs that were drawn up all around the room against the wall. No one was walking. I also sat on a chair, and after a while an official came in with a list and asked if anyone else had come. I got up and he asked my name, and then he looked down the list and made a tick with a pencil.
He said to me very sternly, “Why are you late?” I begged pardon and told him the bus in which I had come had had an accident. He said, “When you are called for interview, you have to be here exactly on time, otherwise your name is crossed off the list.” I begged pardon again and asked him humbly please not to cross me off this time. I knew that all the others were listening, though none of them looked at us. He was very stern with me and even scornful, but in the end he said, “Wait here, and when your name is called, you must go in at once.”
I didn’t count the number of people waiting in the room, but there were many. Perhaps there was one job free, perhaps two or three. I knew that all the others were very worried and anxious to get the job, so I became worried and anxious too. The walls of the room were painted green halfway up and white above that and were quite bare. There was a fan turning from the ceiling, but it was not turning fast enough to give much breeze. Behind the big door the interview was going on; one by one we would all be called in behind this closed door.
I began to worry desperately. It always happens like this. When I come to an interview, I don’t want the job at all, but when I see the others waiting and worrying, I want it terribly. Yet at the same time I don’t want it. It would always be the same thing again: writing figures and making mistakes and being afraid when they found out. And there would be a superior officer to whom I would be very differential, and every time I saw him or heard his voice I would begin to be afraid that he had found out something against me. For weeks and months I would sit and write figures, getting wearier of it and wearier, so that more and more I would be thinking of my own thoughts. Then the mistakes would come, and my superior officer would be angry and I afraid.
My brother makes mistakes. For years he has been sitting in the same office, writing figures and being differential to his superior officer; he concentrates very hard on his work, and so he doesn’t make mistakes. But all the same he is afraid; that is why he concentrates so hard-because he is afraid that he will make a mistake and they will be angry with him and take away his job. He is afraid of this all the time. And he is right: what would become of us all if he also lost his job? It is not the same with me. I think I am afraid to lose my job only because that is a thing of which one is expected to be afraid. When I have actually lost it, I am really relieved. But I am very different with my brother; even in appearance I am very different. It is true, he is fifteen years older than I am, but even when he was my age, he never looked like I do. My appearance has always attracted others, and up to the time I was married, my mother used to stroke my hair and my face and say many tender things to me. Once, when I was walking on my way to school through the bazaar, a man called to me, very softly, and when I came he gave me a ripe mango, and then he took me to a dark passage led to a disused mosque, and he touched me under my clothes and he said, “You are so nice, so nice.” He was very kind to me. I love wearing fine clothes, very thin white muslins kurtas that have been freshly washed and starched and are embroidered at the shoulders. Sometimes I also use scent, a fine khas smell; my hair oil also smells of khas. Some years ago, when the carpenter’s daughter was still a small child and did not yet wait for me on the stairs, there was a girl living in the tailor’s shop opposite our house and she used to follow me when I went out. But it is my brother who is married to a beautiful wife, and my wife is not beautiful at all. He is not happy with his wife; when she talks to him, she talks in a hard scornful way; and it is not for him that she saves the best food, but for me, even though I have not brought money home for many months.
The big closed door opened and the man who had been there for interview came out. We all looked at him, but he walked out in a great hurry, with a preoccupied expression on his face; probably he going all over in his mind all that had been said at the interview. I could feel the anxiety in the other men getting stronger, so mine got stronger too. The official with the list came and we all looked at him. He read out another name and the man whose name was called jumped up from his chair; he did not notice that his dhoti had got caught on a nail in the chair and he wondered why he could not go farther. When he realized what had happened, he tried to disentangle himself, but his finger shook so much that he could not get the dhoti off the nail. The official watched him and said, “Hurry, now, do you think the gentle man will wait for you for as long as you please?” then the man also dropped the umbrella he was carrying and now he is trying both to disentangle the dhoti and to pick up the umbrella. When he could not get the dhoti loose, he became desperate that he tore at the cloth and ripped it free. It was a pity to see the dhoti torn because the dhoti was a new one, which he was probably wearing for the first time and had put on especially for the interview. He clasped his umbrella to his chest and walked in a great hurry to the interview room, with his dhoti hanging about his legs and his face swollen with embarrassment and confusion.
We all sat and waited. The fan, which seems to be a very old one, made a creaking noise. One man kept creaking his finger joints tick, we heard (it made my own finger joints long to be cracked too.) all the rest of us kept very still. From time to time the official with the list came in, he walked around the room very slowly, tapping his list, and then we all looked down at our feet and the man who had been cracking his finger joints stopped doing it. A faint and muffled sound of voices came from behind the closed door. Sometimes a voice was raised, but even then I could not make out what was being said, though I strained very hard.
The last time I had an interview, it was very unpleasant for me. One of the people who was interviewing took a dislike to me and shouted at me very loudly. He was a large fat man and he wore an English suit; his teeth was quite yellow, and when he became angry and shouted, he showed them all, and even though I was very upset, I couldn’t help looking at them and wondering how they had become so yellow. I don’t know why he was angry. He shouted: “Good God, man, can’t you understand, but I had been trying so hard to answer well. What more did he expect of me? Probably there was something in my appearance that he did not like. It happens that way sometimes-they take a dislike to you, and then of course there is nothing you can do.
When I thought of the man with the yellow teeth, I became more conscious than ever. I need great calm in my life. Whenever anything worries me too much, I have to cast the thought of it off immediately, otherwise there is a danger that I may become very ill. All my limbs were itching so that it was difficult for me to sit still, and I could feel blood rushing into my brain. It was this room that was doing me so much harm: all the other men waiting, anxious and silent, and the noise from the fan and the official with the list walking around, tapping his list or striking it against his thighs, and the big closed door behind which the interview was going on. I felt a great need to get up and go away. I didn’t want the job. I wasn’t even thinking it anymore-I was thinking about how to avoid having to sit here and wait.
Now the door opened again and the man with the torn new dhoti came out. He was biting his lips and scratching the back of his neck, and he too walked straight out without looking at us all. The big door was left slightly open for a moment, and I could see a man’s arm in a white shirtsleeve and part of the back of his head. His shirt was very white and of good material, and his ears stood away from his head so that one could see how his spectacles fitted into the backs of his ears. I realized at once that this man would be my enemy and he would make things very difficult for me and perhaps even shot at me. Then I knew it was no use for me to stay there. The official with the list came back and a great panic seized me that he would read out my name. I got up quickly, murmuring, “Please excuse me. Bathroom,” and went out. The official with the list called after me “Hey mister, where are you going?” so I lowered my head and walked faster. I would have started to run, but that might have caused suspicion, so I just walked as fast as I could, down the long corridors and right out of the building. There at last I was able to stop and take a deep breath, and felt much better.
I stood still for a little while, and then I moved on, though in no particular direction. There were many clerks and peons moving around in the street, hurrying from one office building to another and carrying files and papers. Everyone seemed to have something to do. I was glad when I had moved out of this block and on to the open space where people like myself, who had nothing to do, sat under the trees or in any other patch of shade they could find. But I couldn’t sit there; it was too close to the office blocks, and any moment someone might come and say to me, “Why did you go away?” so I walked farther. I was feeling quite light-hearted; it was such a relief for me not to have to be interviewed.
I came a row of eating stalls, and I sat down on a wooden bench outside of them, which was called the Paris Hotel, and asked for tea, and since I intended to walk part of the way home, I was in a position to pay for it. There were two Sikhs sitting at the end of my bench who were eating with great appetite, dipping their hands very rapidly into brass bowls. In between eating they exchanged remarks with the proprietor of the Paris Hotel, who sat high up inside his stall, stirring in a big brass pot in which he was cooking the day’s food. He was chewing a betel leaf, and from time to time the spat out the red betel juice far over the cooking pot and on to the ground between the wooden benches and tables.
I sat quietly at my end of the bench and drank my tea. The food smelled very good, and it made me realize that I was hungry. I decided that if I walked all the way home, I could afford s little cake (I am very fond of sweet things). The cake was not new, but it had a beautiful piece of bright-green peel inside it. That way no one would be able to ask me any questions. I would not look at my wife at all, so I would be able to avoid her eyes. I would not look at my sister-in-law either; but she would be smiling, that I knew already-leaning against the wall with her hand on her hip, looking at me and smiling. She would know that I had run away, but she would not say anything.
Let her know! What does it matter? It is true I have no job and no immediate prospect of getting one. It is true that I am dependent on my brother. Everybody knows that. There is no shame in it: there are many people without jobs. And she has been so kind to me up till now, there is no reason why she would not continue to be kind to me. Though I know she is not by nature a kind-woman; she speaks mostly with a very harsh tongue and her actions also are harsh. Only to me she has been kind.
The Sikhs at the end of the bench had finished eating. They licked their fingers and belched deeply, the way one does after a good meal. They started to laugh and joke with the propriety. I sat quiet and alone at my end of the bench. Of course they did not laugh and joke with me. They knew that was superior to them, for whereas they work with their hands, I am a lettered who does not have to sweat for living but sits on a chair in an office and writes figures and can speak English. My brother is very proud of his superiority, and he has great contempt for carpenters and mechanics and such people who work with their hands. I am also proud of being a lettered man, but when I listen to the Sikhs laughing and joking, the thought came to me that perhaps their life is happier than mine. It was a thought that had come to me by people come and I hear them laughing and singing even dancing. The carpenter is a big strong man and he always looks happy, never anxious and sick worry the way my brother does. He doesn’t wear shoes and clean white clothes like m brother and I do, nor does he speak any English, but all the same he is happy. Even though his work is inferior, I don’t think he gets a weary of it as I do of mine, and he has no superior officer to make him afraid.
Then I thought again about my sister-in-law and I thought that if we were kind to her, she would continue to be kind tome. I would know then how her big breasts felt under the blouse, how warm they were and how soft. And I would know the inside of her mouth with the big strong teeth. Her tongue and palate are very pink, like a pink satin blouse she wears on festive occasions, and I had often wondered they are soft as the blouse too. Her eyes would be shut and perhaps there would be tears on the lashes; and she would be making warm animal sounds and her big body too would be warm like an animal. I became very excited when I thought of it; but when the excitement had passed, I was sad. Because then I thought of my life, who is thin and not beautiful and there is no excitement in her body. But she does whatever I want and always tries to please me. I remembered her whispering to me in the night, “Take me away, let us go and live somewhere alone, only you and I and our children.” That can never be, and so always she would be unhappy.
I was very sad when I thought of her being unhappy; because it is not only she who is unhappy but I also and many others. Everywhere there is unhappiness. I thought of the man whose new dhoti had been torn and who would now have to go home and sew it carefully so that the tear would not be seen. I thought of all the other men sitting and waiting to be interviewed, all but one or two of whom would not get the job for which they had come to be interviewed, and so again they would have to go to another interview and another and another, to sit and wait and to be anxious. And my brother who has a job, but is frightened that he will lose it; and my mother so old that she can only sit on the floor and stroke her pieces of cloth; and my sister-in-law who does not care for her husband; and the carpenter’s daughter who is to be married and perhaps she also will not be happy. Yet life could be so different. When I go to the cinema and hear the beautiful songs they sing. I know how different it could be; and also sometimes when I sit alone and think of my thoughts, then I have feeling that everything could be so beautiful. But now my tea is finished and also my cake, and I wished I had not bought them, because it was a long way to walk home and I was tired.
By Ruth Prawer Jhabala
Ruth Prawer Jhabala was born in Cologne, Germany, to Polish-Jewish parents. She immigrated to England in 1939. After earning an M.A. at Queen Mary College of London University, she married C.S.H. Jhabvala, an Indian architect, in 1951, and moved with him in Delhi. An insider by virtue of her decades of living in India yet an outsider by virtue of her Western youth and education, she frequently depicts characters torn between their desire for modern Western comfort and the spiritual consolation of Hinduism and traditional Indian family relationship and cultural values. Pearl K. Bell ha noted: “Jhabvala writes from within the extended Indian family structure, an affectionately satiric observer of the conflict between the traditional passivity and Westernized ambition within individuals battered by the indifferent tides of change in present-day Indian life.” In analyzing one of Jhabvala’s recurring subjects, the experience of the Westerners in India, S. M. Mollinger has observed that the novelist “use India as a catalyst, as an outrageous force that elicits unexpected, frequently frightening, reactions from it’s visitors.” Among his many honors, Jhabvala has been awarded a Booker prize, a Neil Gunn International Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a McArthur Foundation Award. A prolific novelist and storywriter, she had also a successful career as a screenwriter, often in collaboration with James Ivory of Merchant-Ivory Productions. With Ivory, she wrote the Guru, Shakespeare Wallah, The Europeans (based on the Henry James novel), and A Room with a View (based on the E. M. Forster novel). Among her best known novels are Amrita (1956), The Nature of Passion (1957), Esmond in India (1958), A Backward Place (1965), Heat and Dust (1976), and In Search of Love and Beauty (1983). Her stories are collected in five volumes: Like Birds, Like Fishes (1964), A Stronger Climate (1969), An Experience of India (1972), How I Became a Holy Mother and Other Stories (1976), and Out of India (1986).
I am always very careful of my appearance, so you could not say that I spent much more time than usual over myself that morning. It is true, I trimmed and oiled my moustache, but then I often do that; I always like it to look very neat, like Raj Kapoor’s , the film star. But I knew my sister-in-law and my wife was watching me. My sister-in-law was smiling, and she had one hand on her hip; my wife only looked anxious. I knew she was anxious. All night she had been whispering to me. She had whispered, “Get this job and take me away to live somewhere alone only you and I and our children.” I had answered, “Yes,” because I wanted to go to sleep. I don’t know where and why she had taken this notion that we should go and live alone.
When I had finished combining my hair, I sat on the floor and my sister-in-law brought me my food on the tray. It may sound strange that my sister-in-law should serve me, and not my wife, but it is so in our house. It used to be my mother who brought me my food, even after I was married; she would never allow my wife to do this for me, though my wife wanted to very much. Then when my mother got so old, my sister-in-law began to serve me. I know my wife feels deeply hurt by this, but she doesn’t dare to say anything. My mother doesn’t notice many things anymore, otherwise she would not allow my sister-in-law to bring me my food; she has always been very jealous of this privilege herself, though she never cared who served my brother. Now she has become so old that she can hardly see anything, and most of the time she sits in the corner by the family trunks and folds and strokes her pieces of cloth. For years now she has been collecting pieces of cloth. Some of them are very old and dirty, but she doesn’t care, she loves them all equally. Nobody is allowed to touch them. Once there was a quarrel, because my wife had taken one of them to make a dress for our child. My mother shouted at her-it was terrible to hear her: but then, she has never liked my wife-and my wife was very much afraid and cried and tried to excuse her self. I hit her across the face, not very hard and not because I wanted to, but only to satisfy my mother. The old women kept quiet then and went back to folding and stroking her pieces of cloth.
All the time I was eating, I could feel my sister-in-law looking at me smiling. It made me uncomfortable. I thought she might be smiling because she knew wouldn’t get the job for which I had to go and be interviewed. I also knew I wouldn’t get it, but I didn’t like her to smile like that. It was as if she was saying, “You see, you will always have to be dependent on us.” It is clearly that my brother my brother’s duty to keep me and my family until I can get to work and contribute my own earnings to the family household. There is no need for her to smile about it. But it is true that I am more dependent on her now than anyone else. Since my mother has got so old, my sister-in-law has become more and more the most important person in the house, so that she even keeps the keys and the household stores. At first I didn’t like this. As long as my mother managed the household, I was sure of getting many extra tidbits, nor for her children, but for me; and when she gives them to me, she never says anything and I never say anything, but she smiles and then I feel confused and rather embarrassed. My wife has noticed what she does for me.
I have found that women are usually kind to me. I think they realize that I am more sensitive person and that therefore I must be treated gently. My mother has always treated me very gently. I am her youngest child, and I am fifteen years younger than my brother who is next to me (she did have several children in between us, but they all died). Right from the time when I was a tiny baby, she understood that I needed greater care and tenderness than other children. She always made me sleep close beside her every night, and in the day I always sat with her and my grandmother and my widowed aunt, who were also very fond of me. When I got bigger, my father sometimes wanted to take me to help in his stall (he had a little grocer’s stall, where he sold lentils and rice and cheap cigarettes and colored drinks in bottles) but my mother and grandmother and aunt never liked to let me go. Once he did take me with him, and he made me pour some lentils out of paper bag into a tin. I rather liked pouring the lentils they made such a nice noise as they landed in the tin-but suddenly my mother came was very angry with my father for making me this work. She took me home at once, and when she told my grandmother and my aunt what had happened, they stoked me and kissed me and then they gave me a hot fritter to eat. The fact is, right from childhood I have been a person who needs a lot of peace and rest, and my food too has to be rather mote delicate than that of other people. I have often tried to explain this to my wife, but as she is not very intelligent, she doesn’t seem to understand.
Now my wife was watching me while I ate. She was squatting on the floor, watching our youngest baby; the baby’s head was in her lap, and all one could see of it was of its legs and its naked bottom. My wife didn’t watch me as openly as my sister-in-law did; only from time to time she raised her eyes to me, I could feel it, and they were very worried and troubled. She too was thinking about the job for which I was going to be interviewed, but she was anxious that I should get it. “We will go and live somewhere alone,” she said. Why did she say it? When she knows that it is not possible and never will be.
And even if it were possible, I would not like it. I can’t live away from my mother; and I don’t think I would like to live away from my mother; and I don’t think I would like to live away from my sister-in-law. I often look at her and it makes me happy. Even though she is not young anymore, she is still beautiful. She is tall, with big hips and big breasts and eyes that flash; she often gets angry, and when she is angry she is the most beautiful at all. And then her eyes are like fire and she shows all her teeth, which are very strong and white, and her head is proud with the black hair flying loose. My wife is not beautiful at all. I was very disappointed in her when they first married me to her. Now I have got used to her and I even like her, because she is so good and very quiet and never troubles me at all. I don’t think anybody else in our house likes her. My sister-in-law always calls her “that beauty”, but she does not mean it; and she makes her do all the most difficult household tasks, and often she shouts at her and even beats her. This is not right; my wife has never done anything to her-on the contrary, she always treats her with respect. But I cannot interfere in their quarrels.
Then I was ready to go, though I didn’t want to go. I knew only too well what would happen at the interview. My mother blessed me, and my sister-in-law looked at me over her shoulder and her great eyes flashed with laughter. I didn’t look at my wife, who still sat squatting on the floor, but I knew she was pleading to me to get the job like she had pleaded me in the night. As I walked down the stairs the daughter of the carpenter, who lives in one of the rooms on the lower floor, came out of her door and she walked up the stairs as I walked down, and she passed very closed beside me, with her eyes lowered but her arm just touching my sleeve. She always waits for me to come out and she passes me on the stairs. We have never spoken together. She is a young girl, her breasts are only just forming; her blouse has short sleeves and her arms are beautiful, long and slender. I think soon she is to be married; I have heard my sister-in-law say so. My sister-in-law laughed when she told me, she said, “It is high time” and then she said something coarse. Perhaps she has noticed that the girl waits for me to pass on the stairs.
No, I did not want to go to the interview. I had been to so many during the last few months, and always the same thing happed. I know I have to work, in order to earn money to give it to my mother or my sister-in-law for the household, but there is no pleasure for me in the work. Last time I had a work, it was in an insurance office and all day they made me sit at the desk and write figures. What pleasure could there be for me in that? I am a very thoughtful person, and I always like to sit and think my own thoughts; but while I thought my own thoughts in the office, I sometimes made mistakes over the figures and then my superiors were very angry with me. I was always afraid to their anger, and I begged their forgiveness and admitted that I was much at fault. When they forgave me, I was no longer afraid and continued doing my work and thinking my thoughts. But the last time they would not forgive me again, though I begged and begged cried what a faulty, bad man I was and what good men they were, and how they were my mother and my father and how I looked only to them for my life and the lives of my children. But when they still said I must go, I saw that the work there was really finished and I stopped crying. I went to the washroom and combed my hair and folded my soap in my towel, and then I took my money from the accountant without a word and I left the office with my eyes lowered. But I was no longer afraid, because what is finished is finished, and my brother still had a work and probably one day I would get another job.
Ever since then my brother has been trying to get me into government office. He himself is a clerk in government service and enjoys many advantages: every five years he gets an increase of ten rupees in his salary and he has ten days sick leave in the year and when he retires he will get a pension. It will be good for me also to have such job; but it is difficult because there is an interview at which important people sit at a desk and ask many questions. I am afraid of them, and I cannot understand properly what they are saying, so I answer what I think they want me to answer. But it seems that my answers are not after all the right ones, because up till now they have not given me a job.
On my way to this interview, I thought how much nicer it would be to go to the cinema instead. If I had ten annas, perhaps I would have gone; it was just time for the morning show. The young clerks and the students would be collecting in a queue outside the cinema now. They would be standing and not talking much, holding their ten annas and waiting for the box office to open. I enjoy this morning shows, perhaps because the people who come to them are young men like myself, all silent and rather sad. I am often sad; it would even be right to say that I am sad most of the time. But when the film begins, I am very happy. I love to see the beautiful women, dressed with golden clothes with heavy earrings and necklaces and bracelets covering their arms, and their handsome lovers who are all the things I would like to be. And when they sing their love songs, so full of deep feelings, and tears sometimes comes into m eyes; but not because I am sad, no, on the contrary, because I am so happy. After the film is over, I never go home straightaway, but I walk around the streets and think how wonderful life could be.
When I arrived at the place where the interview was, I had to walk down many corridors and ask directions from many peons before I could find the right room. The peons were all rude to me, because they knew what I had come for. They lounge on benches outside the offices, and when I asked them, they looked me up and down before answering and sometimes and sometimes they made jokes about me with one another. I was very polite to them, for even though they were only peons, their uniforms and jobs belonged here, and they knew the right way whereas I did not. At last I came to the room where I had to wait. Many others were already sitting there, on chairs that were drawn up all around the room against the wall. No one was walking. I also sat on a chair, and after a while an official came in with a list and asked if anyone else had come. I got up and he asked my name, and then he looked down the list and made a tick with a pencil.
He said to me very sternly, “Why are you late?” I begged pardon and told him the bus in which I had come had had an accident. He said, “When you are called for interview, you have to be here exactly on time, otherwise your name is crossed off the list.” I begged pardon again and asked him humbly please not to cross me off this time. I knew that all the others were listening, though none of them looked at us. He was very stern with me and even scornful, but in the end he said, “Wait here, and when your name is called, you must go in at once.”
I didn’t count the number of people waiting in the room, but there were many. Perhaps there was one job free, perhaps two or three. I knew that all the others were very worried and anxious to get the job, so I became worried and anxious too. The walls of the room were painted green halfway up and white above that and were quite bare. There was a fan turning from the ceiling, but it was not turning fast enough to give much breeze. Behind the big door the interview was going on; one by one we would all be called in behind this closed door.
I began to worry desperately. It always happens like this. When I come to an interview, I don’t want the job at all, but when I see the others waiting and worrying, I want it terribly. Yet at the same time I don’t want it. It would always be the same thing again: writing figures and making mistakes and being afraid when they found out. And there would be a superior officer to whom I would be very differential, and every time I saw him or heard his voice I would begin to be afraid that he had found out something against me. For weeks and months I would sit and write figures, getting wearier of it and wearier, so that more and more I would be thinking of my own thoughts. Then the mistakes would come, and my superior officer would be angry and I afraid.
My brother makes mistakes. For years he has been sitting in the same office, writing figures and being differential to his superior officer; he concentrates very hard on his work, and so he doesn’t make mistakes. But all the same he is afraid; that is why he concentrates so hard-because he is afraid that he will make a mistake and they will be angry with him and take away his job. He is afraid of this all the time. And he is right: what would become of us all if he also lost his job? It is not the same with me. I think I am afraid to lose my job only because that is a thing of which one is expected to be afraid. When I have actually lost it, I am really relieved. But I am very different with my brother; even in appearance I am very different. It is true, he is fifteen years older than I am, but even when he was my age, he never looked like I do. My appearance has always attracted others, and up to the time I was married, my mother used to stroke my hair and my face and say many tender things to me. Once, when I was walking on my way to school through the bazaar, a man called to me, very softly, and when I came he gave me a ripe mango, and then he took me to a dark passage led to a disused mosque, and he touched me under my clothes and he said, “You are so nice, so nice.” He was very kind to me. I love wearing fine clothes, very thin white muslins kurtas that have been freshly washed and starched and are embroidered at the shoulders. Sometimes I also use scent, a fine khas smell; my hair oil also smells of khas. Some years ago, when the carpenter’s daughter was still a small child and did not yet wait for me on the stairs, there was a girl living in the tailor’s shop opposite our house and she used to follow me when I went out. But it is my brother who is married to a beautiful wife, and my wife is not beautiful at all. He is not happy with his wife; when she talks to him, she talks in a hard scornful way; and it is not for him that she saves the best food, but for me, even though I have not brought money home for many months.
The big closed door opened and the man who had been there for interview came out. We all looked at him, but he walked out in a great hurry, with a preoccupied expression on his face; probably he going all over in his mind all that had been said at the interview. I could feel the anxiety in the other men getting stronger, so mine got stronger too. The official with the list came and we all looked at him. He read out another name and the man whose name was called jumped up from his chair; he did not notice that his dhoti had got caught on a nail in the chair and he wondered why he could not go farther. When he realized what had happened, he tried to disentangle himself, but his finger shook so much that he could not get the dhoti off the nail. The official watched him and said, “Hurry, now, do you think the gentle man will wait for you for as long as you please?” then the man also dropped the umbrella he was carrying and now he is trying both to disentangle the dhoti and to pick up the umbrella. When he could not get the dhoti loose, he became desperate that he tore at the cloth and ripped it free. It was a pity to see the dhoti torn because the dhoti was a new one, which he was probably wearing for the first time and had put on especially for the interview. He clasped his umbrella to his chest and walked in a great hurry to the interview room, with his dhoti hanging about his legs and his face swollen with embarrassment and confusion.
We all sat and waited. The fan, which seems to be a very old one, made a creaking noise. One man kept creaking his finger joints tick, we heard (it made my own finger joints long to be cracked too.) all the rest of us kept very still. From time to time the official with the list came in, he walked around the room very slowly, tapping his list, and then we all looked down at our feet and the man who had been cracking his finger joints stopped doing it. A faint and muffled sound of voices came from behind the closed door. Sometimes a voice was raised, but even then I could not make out what was being said, though I strained very hard.
The last time I had an interview, it was very unpleasant for me. One of the people who was interviewing took a dislike to me and shouted at me very loudly. He was a large fat man and he wore an English suit; his teeth was quite yellow, and when he became angry and shouted, he showed them all, and even though I was very upset, I couldn’t help looking at them and wondering how they had become so yellow. I don’t know why he was angry. He shouted: “Good God, man, can’t you understand, but I had been trying so hard to answer well. What more did he expect of me? Probably there was something in my appearance that he did not like. It happens that way sometimes-they take a dislike to you, and then of course there is nothing you can do.
When I thought of the man with the yellow teeth, I became more conscious than ever. I need great calm in my life. Whenever anything worries me too much, I have to cast the thought of it off immediately, otherwise there is a danger that I may become very ill. All my limbs were itching so that it was difficult for me to sit still, and I could feel blood rushing into my brain. It was this room that was doing me so much harm: all the other men waiting, anxious and silent, and the noise from the fan and the official with the list walking around, tapping his list or striking it against his thighs, and the big closed door behind which the interview was going on. I felt a great need to get up and go away. I didn’t want the job. I wasn’t even thinking it anymore-I was thinking about how to avoid having to sit here and wait.
Now the door opened again and the man with the torn new dhoti came out. He was biting his lips and scratching the back of his neck, and he too walked straight out without looking at us all. The big door was left slightly open for a moment, and I could see a man’s arm in a white shirtsleeve and part of the back of his head. His shirt was very white and of good material, and his ears stood away from his head so that one could see how his spectacles fitted into the backs of his ears. I realized at once that this man would be my enemy and he would make things very difficult for me and perhaps even shot at me. Then I knew it was no use for me to stay there. The official with the list came back and a great panic seized me that he would read out my name. I got up quickly, murmuring, “Please excuse me. Bathroom,” and went out. The official with the list called after me “Hey mister, where are you going?” so I lowered my head and walked faster. I would have started to run, but that might have caused suspicion, so I just walked as fast as I could, down the long corridors and right out of the building. There at last I was able to stop and take a deep breath, and felt much better.
I stood still for a little while, and then I moved on, though in no particular direction. There were many clerks and peons moving around in the street, hurrying from one office building to another and carrying files and papers. Everyone seemed to have something to do. I was glad when I had moved out of this block and on to the open space where people like myself, who had nothing to do, sat under the trees or in any other patch of shade they could find. But I couldn’t sit there; it was too close to the office blocks, and any moment someone might come and say to me, “Why did you go away?” so I walked farther. I was feeling quite light-hearted; it was such a relief for me not to have to be interviewed.
I came a row of eating stalls, and I sat down on a wooden bench outside of them, which was called the Paris Hotel, and asked for tea, and since I intended to walk part of the way home, I was in a position to pay for it. There were two Sikhs sitting at the end of my bench who were eating with great appetite, dipping their hands very rapidly into brass bowls. In between eating they exchanged remarks with the proprietor of the Paris Hotel, who sat high up inside his stall, stirring in a big brass pot in which he was cooking the day’s food. He was chewing a betel leaf, and from time to time the spat out the red betel juice far over the cooking pot and on to the ground between the wooden benches and tables.
I sat quietly at my end of the bench and drank my tea. The food smelled very good, and it made me realize that I was hungry. I decided that if I walked all the way home, I could afford s little cake (I am very fond of sweet things). The cake was not new, but it had a beautiful piece of bright-green peel inside it. That way no one would be able to ask me any questions. I would not look at my wife at all, so I would be able to avoid her eyes. I would not look at my sister-in-law either; but she would be smiling, that I knew already-leaning against the wall with her hand on her hip, looking at me and smiling. She would know that I had run away, but she would not say anything.
Let her know! What does it matter? It is true I have no job and no immediate prospect of getting one. It is true that I am dependent on my brother. Everybody knows that. There is no shame in it: there are many people without jobs. And she has been so kind to me up till now, there is no reason why she would not continue to be kind to me. Though I know she is not by nature a kind-woman; she speaks mostly with a very harsh tongue and her actions also are harsh. Only to me she has been kind.
The Sikhs at the end of the bench had finished eating. They licked their fingers and belched deeply, the way one does after a good meal. They started to laugh and joke with the propriety. I sat quiet and alone at my end of the bench. Of course they did not laugh and joke with me. They knew that was superior to them, for whereas they work with their hands, I am a lettered who does not have to sweat for living but sits on a chair in an office and writes figures and can speak English. My brother is very proud of his superiority, and he has great contempt for carpenters and mechanics and such people who work with their hands. I am also proud of being a lettered man, but when I listen to the Sikhs laughing and joking, the thought came to me that perhaps their life is happier than mine. It was a thought that had come to me by people come and I hear them laughing and singing even dancing. The carpenter is a big strong man and he always looks happy, never anxious and sick worry the way my brother does. He doesn’t wear shoes and clean white clothes like m brother and I do, nor does he speak any English, but all the same he is happy. Even though his work is inferior, I don’t think he gets a weary of it as I do of mine, and he has no superior officer to make him afraid.
Then I thought again about my sister-in-law and I thought that if we were kind to her, she would continue to be kind tome. I would know then how her big breasts felt under the blouse, how warm they were and how soft. And I would know the inside of her mouth with the big strong teeth. Her tongue and palate are very pink, like a pink satin blouse she wears on festive occasions, and I had often wondered they are soft as the blouse too. Her eyes would be shut and perhaps there would be tears on the lashes; and she would be making warm animal sounds and her big body too would be warm like an animal. I became very excited when I thought of it; but when the excitement had passed, I was sad. Because then I thought of my life, who is thin and not beautiful and there is no excitement in her body. But she does whatever I want and always tries to please me. I remembered her whispering to me in the night, “Take me away, let us go and live somewhere alone, only you and I and our children.” That can never be, and so always she would be unhappy.
I was very sad when I thought of her being unhappy; because it is not only she who is unhappy but I also and many others. Everywhere there is unhappiness. I thought of the man whose new dhoti had been torn and who would now have to go home and sew it carefully so that the tear would not be seen. I thought of all the other men sitting and waiting to be interviewed, all but one or two of whom would not get the job for which they had come to be interviewed, and so again they would have to go to another interview and another and another, to sit and wait and to be anxious. And my brother who has a job, but is frightened that he will lose it; and my mother so old that she can only sit on the floor and stroke her pieces of cloth; and my sister-in-law who does not care for her husband; and the carpenter’s daughter who is to be married and perhaps she also will not be happy. Yet life could be so different. When I go to the cinema and hear the beautiful songs they sing. I know how different it could be; and also sometimes when I sit alone and think of my thoughts, then I have feeling that everything could be so beautiful. But now my tea is finished and also my cake, and I wished I had not bought them, because it was a long way to walk home and I was tired.