"Clark A Smith - The Brahmin's Wisdom" - читать интересную книгу автора (Smith Clark Ashton)And the monks prayed and waited a whole year till the feast of Gala Gopala had come again; and again, with a measured step, they walked round the Venerable One, three times from the left to the right, and they beseeched him to go and calm that penitent man who still screamed and screamed through the jungle.
And silently the old, old Brahmin rose and made his way to the lonely, gurgling, rotting, ever murmuring waters. * * * Far away through the thickets shimmers white Madhu's mask -- half-submerged in the pond -- staring to the heavens with empty eyes. Out of the brooding waters rise the swampy effluvia like a quivering steam and drizzle back into glittering drops from the stone-face. From the white and empty sockets they purl down and down and cut deep furrows across the smoothly carved face, dolorously changing its features throughout the milleniums. Thus weeps Madhu, The Demon -- thus weeps Madhu, The Mad. And the jungle glows, and the cold sweat of death stands on his forehead. * * * And as the old Brahmin approached an open space in the thicket, he beheld standing there a penitent sinner, screaming, screaming in horrible pain -- never stopping, never taking new breath, never lowering his voice. Naked and emaciated he was. His vertebra looked like a braid, his thighs like withered sticks, his hollow black eyes like dried berries. His right arm was outstretched, and in his hand he tightly held a heavy iron ball covered with long and pointed spikes. And the more he contracted his fingers, the deeper the spikes cut into his flesh. For seven days and seven nights the old Brahmin stood there, lost in thought, and as the penitent man did not stop screaming even for the fraction of a second, he walked round him three times from the left to the right and spoke: Howling, the penitent man turned his eyes toward the iron ball he clenched and pressed in his fist. And the old Brahmin whose name no one knew anymore, was seized with wonder. And his mind descended into the abyss of causes and effects, and he compared the things which would come to pass with the things which had come to pass. And he dwelled on the words and the meaning of the teachings of the Vedas, but he found not what he searched for. Deeper, even deeper, he plunged into meditation, and it seemed as if his heartbeat had stopped, as if the ebbing and flowing of his breath had left him forever. The grass of the swamps turned brown and withered. Autumn came and called home the flowers. And still the old Brahmin stood there, absorbed in contemplation. The thousand years old salamander crawled out of the swamp and whispered to his wife -- and also to his friend, the earwig: "Oh, I know him well, old, old he is, the venerable Swami, and of infinite wisdom. In the womb of the earth I have seen his birth-certificate: He is the retired, honorable Brahmin extraordinary Tsakamuntibudibaba from North Carolina." And having whispered these words to his wife -- and also to his friend, the earwig -- the thousand years old salamander devoured them both. When winter came, the old, old Brahmin awoke, and turning to the penitent man, he spoke: "Let go of this ball, Sir, just drop it!" And the penitent man opened his hand; the iron ball rolled to the ground, and -- right away -- he felt better. "Jipiii ... !" he shouted, and jumping like a mountain-goat, he absented himself speedily. |
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