A Story of Teesta and Rangit
- Manprasad Subba
The Rangit nowadays
is an irony to himself.
Emaciated and thinned as he is today
even a goat kid can hop across him.
While in his eternal youthfulness
he would show masculine pride
to his beloved Teesta.
At the mere sight of his pride
the rising hills trembled with fear.
But while he glided lovingly singing
all trees rejoiced and birds fluttered cheerfully.
His breath was a boon to the hills and valleys.
His attractive gait, confident move,
his indomitable power of roaring flow
bearing torrential rain…
All these are now but merely a mythical story.
And who else has the time
even to listen to this story?
At the crack of dawn
as the wild fowl let out its first crow
the Banjhankri would perform his ablutions
in the crystal Rangit water.
But, as even his incantations
couldn’t rejuvenate the Rangit,
he, nowadays, has just vanished.
(He is believed to have uttered -
Any deity’s wrath could be appeased,
but things fallen under dark human-spell
rarely escape.)
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His brother, Chhota Rangit,
coming from the south
carries him on his back nowadays
down to Tribeni and leaves him to the care
of the Teesta who arrives there sighing.
And seeing each-other’s poor shapes
both break down in embrace.
Without uttering a word, both know
that their souls have been abducted
by one dark eye coming from the underworld.
(Strange! Who is singing so soulfully -
Where the Teesta-Rangit flow…)
‘Never to part with each other’
is the promise they made aeon ago.
Now both in one single entity
that moves on haltingly-
sluggishly …
In winter season
Teesta unable to drag itself
needs rest quite often.
Her stomach swells up
like suffering from cirrhosis.
Like silver medals on the chest
of an ex-soldier now in wheel chair
flashes in her memory the words -
‘O Mighty Teesta !’- once uttered by poet Devkota
standing on the Anderson Bridge.
In such an infirmity,
she thinks also of the poem
Bikas Gotamey had once read to her -
‘Flow on, O Teesta, keep flowing..’
And all these songs and poems get mixed up
in her memory like a jigsaw puzzle -
‘where flow O mighty flow you Teesta..’
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*Banjhankri - A mythical shaman living in some deep forest cave.
[Translated from Nepali original by the poet.]