The Old Tree and the Nightingale
Story
Mahesh Paudyal
“Hang on dear moon,” said the nightingale, “for there is no light, and
I am not yet decided where I would put up tonight.”
It was extremely cold, though
the sky looked very clear. It was twilight, but the moon was just an arc of
diamond upon the head on the western mountain.
The nightingale shivered
remembering the previous night. O, what a dreadful experience it had been!
Someone in the south had set the whole forest on fire, and its little nest on a
little willow had burnt, roasting its two little kids to death. It shed two
drops of tears for the kids and flew away, and sat on a silver wire that hanged
between iron poles, knowing that a silver thing would not burn. It was
nightmarish, hanging on a silver wire all through the night.
“Allow me to stay here for
tonight, for both of us are dying soon,” said the nightingale to an old ebony tree
that stood alone in a big, flat land, bare and shabby.
“How do you say so?” asked the tree.
“You know not a thing of the
world, as fastened are your feet to the soil. I fly and see what is happening
in the world. A devil has burnt the
forest in the south. He will soon be here,” said the little bird to the old
tree.
“O, terrible!” said the tree,
and shed thick drops of tears. Then it said, “I have a hole, dear nightingale;
but I have rented it to a squirrel. Make it your home for tonight. You need to
leave early tomorrow, for the squirrel, that has gone to the Manasarobar, will
come back.”
“So kind of you! In the
morning, I shall sing you the best of the songs I know.”
By this time, the moon had
almost slipped off the mountain. “Hold on,” shouted the nightingale again, and
said, “Give me light till I go to bed. Early at dawn tomorrow, I shall sing you
the most beautiful of the songs I know.”
In fact, the moon waited till
the nightingale had found a cozy hole on the tree. It looked into it carefully,
till it was convinced that there was no snake to try an ambush. When it had
safely housed itself, the moon gave a last, parting wink and disappeared. The
veil of the night covered the tree from all around.
O, what a cozy night it was! The
nightingale soon fell asleep, and dreamt of the Sleshmantak Forest, far way.
Trees full of nuts bedecked the dream world, and the nightingale sang to the
king’s daughters sailing to Malaya on the cloud-ships in the vast blue ocean,
up there in the sky. No hunter would ever come in the dreamland, and no
woodcutter would ever charge his devilish axe upon the tree that gave it a
home.
When the day broke, ‘two-whee’
sang the nightingale, and the tree woke up too. The moon—just an arc—appeared
too, and ‘two-whee’ said the nightingale. It paid for their favor.
When the sun was fairly up, the
nightingale thanked the old tree and took leave of it.
It flew over the great Bagmati
river, in whose water, little naked boys dived and searched for coins devotees
often threw. It also flew over burning dead bodies and trembled to remember the
burnt bodies of its little kids. ‘Man and birds are same,’ it thought, and flew
north.
Up there in the north, the
returning monsoon rode on the wings of wind, and soaked the nightingale all
through. A terrible rain had set the sloppy land sliding, and everything from
houses to trees, chestnut or pine, were flowing down with the swelling rivers. People
ran in all directions, shouting at Lord Indra, who, as they thought, had poured
the whole of the Blue Sea down upon them.
“There is not a tree to hold
the slide,” said an old man. “Somebody dead has cleared the entire thicket.
Hell be with him!”
‘It’s terrible,’ thought the
nightingale and twisted its little tail, changing its direction. ‘The tree that
hosted me last night is far better. Let me go back; perhaps it will allow me a
stay for one more night.’
“Dear old tree, I love you
better than anyone. Do allow me to put up for one more night, for both of us
are dying soon,” it implored.
“How do you say so?” asked the
tree.
“Up there in the north, the
Lord is so angry that he is emptying the entire Blue Sea upon the earth. The
land is sliding, carrying all trees—big and small—down the hill. The rivers are
touching the sky, and the creation is ending. I will miss you, good old tree,
when you die.”
“O, terrible!” said the tree,
and shed thick drops of tears. Then it said, “Stay for a day, little bird, and
when the day breaks, sing me a song for the leaves that have fallen off my
body. O, how much I miss them!”
“So kind of you! In the
morning, I shall sing you the best of the songs I know.”
So, the nightingale stayed for
the second day. Early next morning, it sang a sad song for the fallen leaves,
and said to the tree, “Soon, you will be with your lost leaves, dear old tree.”
“How?” said the tree, which was
just waking up.
“For, you will lay dead upon
the same leaves down there. Rain will pound upon you, and the land underneath
will slide.”
The tree dropped two big tears.
The nightingale wished it a long life before the flood, and flew. It had heard
that the west had trees with the sweetest figs on them.
The sky had cleared now after
the nightlong crying, and the rays of the sun shone brightly. It flew all day
long, till in the afternoon, the rays of the sun directly fell on its little,
round eyes. The nightingale saw many colours—red, blue, green and
violet—floating in the sky.
Far away, it saw a fat man with
a yellow cap, driving a big yellow thing across the forest. It was felling all
the trees that stood, and the land was being leveled.
“We will make a city here,”
shouted the politician. The lovers said, “Do make for us a lovely park.”
“Swimming pool,” shouted
children, and the ladies wanted a cinema—the biggest one in the country—to come
up. Brick merchants, who had come all the way from Bhaktapur said, “This soil
is best suited for bricks. We will perhaps make a brick kiln here.”
‘The old tree is better than
this,’ thought the nightingale and turned back. It was afraid that if the
squirrel was back, the tree would allow it no stay.
It flew past a dusty sky, full
of fume and reeking odors. The air almost blinded its eyes.
“I am back, dear old tree, for
I love you very much. Do allow me to stay for one more night, for both of us
are dying soon.”
“How do you say so?” asked the
tree.
“A yellow man in the west, with
a yellow thing, is clearing the forest to make a city. It is felling all trees on the way, and soon,
he will reach here.
“O, terrible!” said the tree, and shed thick
drops of tears. Then it said, “Stay for a day, little bird, and when the day
breaks, sing me a song for my kinsmen that are killed far away in the west.”
“I will,” said the nightingale,
and kissed the old tree on the apex of its main branch. Then it came to the
hole. Thank God, the squirrel was still out.
“I think, flood in the north
has killed the squirrel,” said the nightingale to the tree.
“Do not say so, dear bird,”
said the tree. “He has stayed with me too long, and I love him more than any of
my fallen leaves. I will be dead, if he dies.”
“Live long, old tree,” said the
nightingale, feeling sour at heart.
“Good night,” said the tree and
started whispering to the slow breeze that had come in the dusk to fan the few
leaves that still lingered on the twigs.
At dawn, the nightingale sang
the most melodious of songs it knew, lamenting the death of the trees, far away
in the west. The old tree heard the song, and woke up. It was the saddest song it
had ever heard.
“I take leave of you,” said the
nightingale. “Stay well, and do not forget me.”
“Sure. I hope the squirrel is
coming home tonight. It has been long since the squirrel left. Ungrateful
creature; it takes no name of coming
home early. I feel so lonely without him.”
“He must be dead in the
northern flood, dear tree,” said the nightingale.
“For God’s sake, do not say so.
For, if he dies, I shall lie dead too, broken in heart.”
“I don’t wish so,” said the
nightingale in a pathetic voice. “But if you die, I shall pray for you. Here I
go, dear old tree!”
The nightingale made a quick
flight, and darted eastward. East it had heard, had the best of the
blackberries that grew on the banks of those long rivers, that had been flowing
ever since the world was created.
Far away, in the east, it saw
the sky full of birds—bigger than the ones it could imagine—crossing the sky
from one side to another, making terrible noises. It sat on a little willow
with yellow, rusted leaves, and watched the birds dart and play. O, what a
terrible game it was! Sometimes the two collided, and both fell dead, torn to
pieces, into the sea.
After a long wait, the
nightingale saw something it could hardly understand. A black bird, fastest of
the ones it had seen so far, laid an egg while still in the air. The egg fell
down with a tremendous speed, and burst with the loudest of the noise it had
ever heard. Soon smoke engulfed the entire land of the east, and flames of fire
ran everywhere.
Unable to bear the spectacle,
it darted away. O, the fume had almost smothered its little throat to death.
On the way, a terrible vertigo
besieged its head. It could not locate the direction of the kind and old tree.
As night came darting, it slipped under a gutter that reeked of filth so
terribly. Underneath ran sewage carrying all the dirty things of the world, and
at times, it little feet touched the wet, smudgy thing. Upon the gutter ran
feet, all through the night, making strange but periodic trots. It could not
sleep for fear of falling into the waste.
When the night waned and the
sun rose, it flew out and sat on a tree. It wanted to sing a song to the
beautiful sun, but a hoarse sound escaped its strained throat. For the first
time in life, it felt that it could sing no more.
But its head was clearer. It
looked far and wide, till it could locate the flags of the monastery on the
hill. ‘The old tree is west of the monastery,’ it thought, and was soon on the
branch of the benevolent tree.
It sat on the branch for a
long, long time without a word. It had so many things to tell to the tree, but
no word would escape. It just sat on the branch outside the hole, brooding. Its
head hanged low, and the eyes looked on the earth underneath.
“Ah!” shouted the nightingale
all of a sudden. Its voice was no match to the songs it sang in the past.
“Are you back? Good. I missed
you last night.”
“You will be dead now, dear
tree, and with you I will be dead.”
“How do you say so?”
“Your squirrel lies dead down
there. Look down there, at the foot of the red-berry shrub. There it lies,
stiff and dead.”
“No,” shouted the tree, but the
few leaves it had on the top had, with the little holes on their surface, seen
the squirrel lying dead.
“It has gone,” said the
nightingale, and offered: “Let me fly down and see how it died.”
Down flew the nightingale and
keenly observed the dead body of the squirrel, even as tears kept dropping from
the tree upon its wings. Yes, someone had shot it with a catapult, and the
bullet had hit its little head right in the middle. Some blood clotted outside
the hole on the head.”
“I will die now,” said the
tree, sad and forlorn.
“I will die too, said the
nightingale.”
Then the nightingale flew up
and sat on the main branch of the tree.
“Alas, alas! All’s gone now.
Let me sing you the swan song—the
last song of my life,” said the nightingale, and started singing of the saddest
things. It sang of the fire in the south, flood in the north, the big yellow
thing in the west, and the egg of fire in the east. Both shed tears, till the
little dead squirrel under the tree was fully drenched.”
“Adieu, adieu, dear old tree,”
said the nightingale and fell from the branch. It dropped upon the dead body of
the squirrel.
“It’s ebony. It gives the best
wood to make seats for the theater,” said a tall, fat man later in the
afternoon, and the tree was sawed down.
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