A Passage to India E. M. Forster (best ereader manga TXT) đ
- Author: E. M. Forster
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âI do. I do,â she said, suddenly vital and young.
âAnd how rough and rude I was, and how good you were.â
âAnd how happy we both were.â
âFriendships last longest that begin like that, I think. Shall I ever entertain your other children?â
âDo you know about the others? She will never talk about them to me,â said Miss Quested, unintentionally breaking a spell.
âRalph and Stella, yes, I know everything about them. But we must not forget to visit our caves. One of the dreams of my life is accomplished in having you both here as my guests. You cannot imagine how you have honoured me. I feel like the Emperor Babur.â
âWhy like him?â she enquired, rising.
âBecause my ancestors came down with him from Afghanistan. They joined him at Herat. He also had often no more elephants than one, none sometimes, but he never ceased showing hospitality. When he fought or hunted or ran away, he would always stop for a time among hills, just like us; he would never let go of hospitality and pleasure, and if there was only a little food, he would have it arranged nicely, and if only one musical instrument, he would compel it to play a beautiful tune. I take him as my ideal. He is the poor gentleman, and he became a great king.â
âI thought another Emperor is your favouriteâ âI forget the nameâ âyou mentioned him at Mr. Fieldingâs: what my book calls Aurangzebe.â
âAlamgir? Oh yes, he was of course the more pious. But Baburâ ânever in his whole life did he betray a friend, so I can only think of him this morning. And you know how he died? He laid down his life for his son. A death far more difficult than battle. They were caught in the heat. They should have gone back to Kabul for the bad weather, but could not for reasons of state, and at Agra Humayun fell sick. Babur walked round the bed three times, and said, âI have borne it away,â and he did bear it away; the fever left his son and came to him instead, and he died. That is why I prefer Babur to Alamgir. I ought not to do so, but I do. However, I mustnât delay you. I see you are ready to start.â
âNot at all,â she said, sitting down by Mrs. Moore again. âWe enjoy talk like this very much.â For at last he was talking about what he knew and felt, talking as he had in Fieldingâs garden-house; he was again the Oriental guide whom they appreciated.
âI always enjoy conversing about the Moguls. It is the chief pleasure I know. You see, those first six emperors were all most wonderful men, and as soon as one of them is mentioned, no matter which, I forget everything else in the world except the other five. You could not find six such kings in all the countries of the earth, not, I mean, coming one after the otherâ âfather, son.â
âTell us something about Akbar.â
âAh, you have heard the name of Akbar. Good. Hamidullahâ âwhom you shall meetâ âwill tell you that Akbar is the greatest of all. I say, âYes, Akbar is very wonderful, but half a Hindu; he was not a true Muslim,â which makes Hamidullah cry, âNo more was Babur, he drank wine.â But Babur always repented afterwards, which makes the entire difference, and Akbar never repented of the new religion he invented instead of the Holy Koran.â
âBut wasnât Akbarâs new religion very fine? It was to embrace the whole of India.â
âMiss Quested, fine but foolish. You keep your religion, I mine. That is the best. Nothing embraces the whole of India, nothing, nothing, and that was Akbarâs mistake.â
âOh, do you feel that, Dr. Aziz?â she said thoughtfully. âI hope youâre not right. There will have to be something universal in this countryâ âI donât say religion, for Iâm not religious, but something, or how else are barriers to be broken down?â
She was only recommending the universal brotherhood he sometimes dreamed of, but as soon as it was put into prose it became untrue.
âTake my own case,â she continuedâ âit was indeed her own case that had animated her. âI donât know whether you happen to have heard, but Iâm going to marry Mr. Heaslop.â
âOn which my heartiest congratulations.â
âMrs. Moore, may I put our difficulty to Dr. Azizâ âI mean our Anglo-Indian one?â
âIt is your difficulty, not mine, my dear.â
âAh, thatâs true. Well, by marrying Mr. Heaslop, I shall become what is known as an Anglo-Indian.â
He held up his hand in protest. âImpossible. Take back such a terrible remark.â
âBut I shall; itâs inevitable. I canât avoid the label. What I do hope to avoid is the mentality. Women likeâ ââ She stopped, not quite liking to mention names; she would boldly have said âMrs. Turton and Mrs. Callendarâ a fortnight ago. âSome women are soâ âwell, ungenerous and snobby about Indians, and I should feel too ashamed for words if I turned like them, butâ âand hereâs my difficultyâ âthereâs nothing special about me, nothing specially good or strong, which will help me to resist my environment and avoid becoming like them. Iâve most lamentable defects. Thatâs why I want Akbarâs âuniversal religionâ or the equivalent to keep me decent and sensible. Do you see what I mean?â
Her
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