CHAPTER IX - KARI’S TRAVELS
Sometimes Kari was used for travel.
He and I went through many distant places in India
with camel caravans, carrying loads of silver and
gold, spices and fruits. They went from one end
of India to the other, passing through hot and deserted
cities while our accustomed way when not in their
company led through populous places and thick jungle
regions. Elephants have an advantage over camels
in this respect gangs of robbers may attack
a camel and his driver and rob him, but no one dares
to attack an elephant. As the animals of the
jungle do not care to touch an elephant, neither do
wild men in desolate places. For this reason they
generally used Kari when they wanted to send pearls
and other jewels from one place to another.
Once, we were given the king’s
emerald to carry. It was as big as the morning
star, and burned when the glow of the noon-day sun
was upon it. Two epics were carved on it on
one side was the story of the heroes, and on the other
the story of the gods. We left the city and passed
into the jungle. Night came on apace and we stopped.
That night I watched the jungle as
I had never watched it before. It was about nine
o’clock; everything was dark and the stars were
right on the tips of the trees. Below us in the
foliage the eyes of the jungle were looking upon us.
Wherever I turned, I thought I saw eyes. Kari
swayed slightly from side to side and fell into a
doze. The first thing that I noticed was the faint
call of a night bird. When that died down, the
hooting owl took it up. Then it passed into the
soft wings of the bats and came into the leaves, and
you could feel that noise shimmering down the trees
like water in a dream till, with gentle undulations,
it disappeared into the ground. The wild boar
could be heard grazing. Then there was silence
again.
Out of the blackness then came the
green eyes of the wild cat below me and, as my eyes
became more accustomed to the darkness, I saw small,
beaver-like animals burrowing their way through leaves
and brushes. I thought I saw weasels way below,
and in the distance I felt the stag disturbing the
leaves of small plants. Then there was a snarl
in the jungle and these gently moving sounds and quivers
ceased. An aching silence came over everything,
broken only by strange insect voices like the spurting
of water. Very soon the call of the fox was heard,
and then the groan of the tiger, but that passed.
As I was above the ground the odor of my breath went
up in the air, and the animals never knew there was
man about. Men always disturb animals because
they hate and fear more than the animals.
Little by little the sounds died down
and stillness took possession of the jungle.
I saw herds of elephants go into the water to bathe.
They did not make the slightest sound; their bodies
sank into the water as clouds dip into the sunset.
I could see them curling their trunks around their
mates and plucking lilies from the water to eat.
As the moon with its shadowy light had risen, I seemed
to be looking at them through a veil of water.
Close to the shore were the little ones stepping into
the water and learning how to breathe quantities of
water into their trunks and then snort it out slowly
without the slightest sound. Soon their bath
was over, but the only way you could tell that they
had bathed was by hearing drops of water like twinkling
stars fall from their wet bodies and strike the leaves
on the ground.
This proved too much for Kari; he
wanted to follow them. I had a hard time keeping
him away from the herd, and despite all my urging,
he ran right into the river. His mattress and
everything that was tied to his back was wet through
and through and I had to swim ashore. If the
emerald had not been tied to my neck, it would have
been lost in the water. I went up a tree and waited
for Kari to come out of the water.
After I had sat on a branch a little
while, I saw two stony eyes watching me. I looked,
and looked and looked; a cold shiver ran up and down
my back, but I was determined not to fear and hate.
I made myself feel very brave and I stared right back
into the shining eyes. They closed. In the
moonlight I could distinctly see the head of a cobra
lying on another branch very near mine. I had
disturbed him going up. I knew if I moved a little
he would get up and sting me to death, so I sat very
still.
Soon there was a terrible hooting
and calling in the jungle. I heard hoofs stampeding
in the distance. The noise grew louder and louder
and I could feel a vast warm tongue licking the cool
silence of the night. Then the cobra crawled along
the branch to the trunk of the tree, and then on down
to the ground. I, who was holding to the trunk,
had to sit still while his cold body passed over my
finger. But I was determined not to fear and I
could feel the silken coolness passing over my hot
hand. In an instant he was gone.
Now I caught sight of Kari snorting
before me. As I knew something had taken possession
of the jungle, I jumped on his back. While we
hurried along we heard the whining snarl of a tiger,
not the call of hate or killing, but the call for
protection, swiftly following our lead. Being
civilized, we instinctively knew the way out of the
jungle to human habitation. We approached the
village which was still sleeping in the morning grayness,
and behind us saw horny deer, leopards, and wild cats
rushing after us. Then the boars came after us,
dashing out of the jungle in terror. Vast clouds
of blackness were rising from the horizon, and when
the morning light grew more intense, I realized they
were clouds of smoke. The morning breeze was warm
and in a short time the smell of burning leaves reached
me. The forest was on fire.
We arrived at the village in an hour
and a half. The sun was already up. The
leopards came and sat near the houses as guileless
as children; the boars snorted and ran into the rice
fields to hide. The tiger came and sat in the
open and watched the forest. The antelopes and
the deer stood in the ponds and on the banks of the
river. By instinct they knew that the water was
the only place where the fire could not reach them.
We saw flocks of birds flying to shelter. Soon
we saw the red tongue of fire licking the grass and
the trees. A terrible heat settled upon the country-side.
I could now go near any animal and
touch him. The terrible danger which was common
to all had made them forget their relations with each
other that of hunter and prey. Tiger,
elephant and man were standing near each other.
All had a sense of common friendship, as if the tiger
had thrown away his stripes, man his fear, and the
deer his sense of danger. We all looked at one
another, brothers in a common bond of soul relationship.
This sight made me realize why the Hindus believe
that each plant and each animal, like man, has a golden
thread of spirituality in its soul. In the darkness
of the animal’s eyes and the eloquence of man’s
mind it was the same Spirit, the great active Silence
moving from life to life.
The jungle was burning to cinders.
The tiger hid his face between his paws; the wild
cats curled up, hiding their faces. None wanted
to see the passing of the terror. Later in the
afternoon some of the birds that were flying aimlessly
around were drawn by the hypnotism of the flames into
the jungle where they perished. If one is frightened
beyond his control, fear possesses him so that he
loses all consciousness of self-protection and he is
drawn down into the vortex of the very destruction
which rouses that fear.
The more I watched Kari and the other
animals, the more I came to understand why Kari and
I loved each other. We had a soul in common.
I played the flute for him and was deeply moved.
I felt that if I could be dumb like he, I could understand
him better. This was the lesson the fire taught
me: do not hate and fear animals. In them
is the soul that is God, as it is also in us.
Behind each face, human or animal, is the face of the
Christ. Those who have eyes to see can always
find it.