Jam Fruit Tree
77 pages
English

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77 pages
English

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Description

Winner of the Gratiean Memorial Prize for the best work in English Literature by a Sri Lankan for 1993 Hilarious, affectionate, candid and moving, this is the story of the Burghers of Sri Lanka... Who are the Burghers? Descended from the Dutch, the Portuguese, the British and other foreigners who arrived in the island-nation of Sri Lanka (and 'mingled' with the local inhabitants), the Burghers often stand out because of their curiously mixed features grey eyes in an otherwise Dravid face, for instance.... A handsome and guileless people, the Burghers have always lived it up, forever willing to 'put a party'. Carl Muller, a Burgher himself, writes in this quasi-fictional, engaging biography of the lives of his people; they emerge, at the end of his story, as a race of fun-loving, hardy people, much like the jam fruit tree which simply refuses to be contained or destroyed.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 14 octobre 2000
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9789351180258
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0400€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Carl Muller


The Jam Fruit Tree

PENGUIN BOOKS
Contents
About the Author
Dedication
Part One-The Flowering
Part Two-The Berrying
Part Three-Bearing Fruit
Part Four-The Ripening
Copyright
PENGUIN BOOKS
THE JAM FRUIT TREE
Carl Muller completed his education from the Royal College, Colombo, and has served in the Royal Ceylon Navy and Ceylon Army. In 1959 he entered the Colombo Port Commission and subsequently worked in advertising and travel firms. Muller took up journalism and writing in the early Sixties and has worked in leading newspapers in Sri Lanka and the Middle East. His published works include, Sri Lanka - A Lyric, Father Saman and the Devil and a link language reader for students, Ranjit Discovers Where Kandy Began.
At present he is working on his third novel. He lives in Kandy with his wife and four children.
To Professor ASHLEY HALPE, Dean, Faculty of Arts, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka and his wife, BRIDGET - my dearest friends and my greatest inspiration
Part One


The Flowering
T he sky was as blue as an Eskimo s nose on the morning that Sonnaboy cycled sedately to work. A large man with big fists, grey eyes set wide in a broad, brown face, a largish nose that swept down from between bushy eyebrows to just short of a rather petulant mouth and a chin that kept saying to hell with you in a language all its own, Sonnaboy was pushing thirty-five and, in his home in suburban Dehiwela and in the Ceylon Government Railway Running Shed in Dematagoda, was a force to reckon with.
Cecilprins von Bloss had a principle he firmly abided by. Keep the wife in the family way. Women, he maintained, stay out of mischief when they are carrying . Siring a string of children was, to the old reprobate, child s play. In those fine old days a meal of rice and curry, a cup of tea and a cigarette cost a mere nine cents-and the best samba rice with beef, two vegetables, sambol (a relish made of ground coconut, chillie, lime, salt, chopped onions, tomato and peppercorns, eaten with meals), a pappadam and mallung (chopped leaves, basted with grated coconut and seasoning) at that-and an assistant postmaster s job was public service with all manner of perks and pensionable to boot. All a husband could wish for was to come home from office, drink great quantities of tea, consider his fat wife who sprawled on the lounger fingering her rosary and check the time. Cecilprins was a creature of habit. Leave the General Post Office at four, take the 4.18 train to Dehiwela, reach home at five. Sometimes Maudiegirl had a bun on his plate with his tea. After a bath at the well, carry his sagging rattan chair to the porch where he would sit, watch the road and waggle a hand at passers-by. Neighbours would pop heads over walls to say how and do you know what? and Cecilprins would say he knew and nod and slap at his ankles as the early mosquitoes swizzed around.
Boteju Lane, Dehiwela, had a fair wedge of assorted citizenry. Old Simmons who hated dogs, and the Bennett woman with one big filaria leg, and the Fernandos who moved away one night after the Rodrigo boy fucked their daughter. Cecilprins enjoyed his porch evenings. He got, he knew, respect. He was an assistant postmaster and always wore high, white, starched collars and a cravat as large as a table napkin. And such a man, too. Thirteen children. Must be the Dutch blood in him. Or was it German? One couldn t be specific.
When the mosquitoes became too demanding, Cecilprins would go indoors and take the little key he kept on the altar where an old Palm Sunday coconut-frond cross lay propped between two sputtering oil lamps and a frayed St. Anthony s scapular. Over the little altar was a quite spectacular picture of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, all scarlet and butter-yellow with a heart that was crowned with tongues of flame-thirteen points of flame, Cecilprins noted one day and remarked on and the whole family counted and solemnly agreed that Papa was right and thirteen had to mean something. Maudiegirl clutched at her rosary and called on the Blessed Virgin to witness. See, will you, how Jesus is telling to me. Thirteen fires in His heart like thirteen fires in my stomach, no? Thirteen children I give and every one of you make me suffer.
Cecilprins would take the key from the altar, open his special cupboard, pour himself four fingers of whisky, top that with water and say Cheers and take a deep swig. Maudiegirl would watch and sniff. Small sip is good for my rheumatics, no? and a carefully measured tot is dispensed, which the old lady would dispatch in a twinkling.
Dinner was a humdrum affair, usually. The children would straggle in at odd times. Terry was in Singapore. He had gone into rubber, and the broker-house he worked for had sent him to their Malayan office. He wrote long letters about tiger shooting and his bungalow and Malay servants with their red caps and the enormous snakes he encountered. Sonnaboy would snort and smack a fist into a palm and stalk off to the well. He liked coming home before dark. Stripped to his jocks he would make quite a hullaballoo drawing and dashing water on himself while the servant-girl next door would creep up to peer through the thatch. Sonnaboy would take out his cock and waggle it at her. He was proud of his penis. It was, he knew, bigger and stood stiffer than Dunnyboy s or Totoboy s. He made an elaborate show of soaping it as the servant girl crept closer to watch, and he thought of Elaine and how they would be married soon. Thin girl, Elaine, not much flesh on her thighs, boyishly undeveloped, small breasts, tight little bum. Yes, Elaine was just right. Like a boy. And Sonnaboy liked boys.
Elsie, his sister, would come to the well. Chee ! What you are doing! Wait, I ll tell Mama. But she would go to the store-room where the rice and flour was kept and rub and rub until her bloomers were wet between her legs and would then emerge panting and run to the bedroom to say a feverish Hail Mary.
Yes, a nice, ordinary family. Terry and Dunnyboy, Leah and Elsie, Totoboy and Anna, Viva and Patty, Ruthie and Vinto, Fritzy and Marla and Sonnaboy who was the youngest and quite the strongest in a clutch of eight strong sons. Three died, however, before reaching their teens. Patty and Vinto succumbed to pneumonia and Fritzy fell off the neighbour s roof where he had perched to steal guavas. Of all the family, Dunnyboy was near inconsolable at their passing. He was the eldest and the strangest. Routed from school in disgrace, he never found work. Strong as an ox, too, and not a man to tangle with, with a twelve-year-old mind in his strapping, adult body. Viva was lean, whip-strong and calculating. Totoboy a gregarious, sunny fellow with pianist s fingers and a great talker.
The girls were all big-buttocked and round-thighed, each promising to be fat and fifty like their mother. The fat clung to their bottoms even as teenagers and they bustled invitingly as they walked and Dunnyboy would squeeze them gently over their knees and rub against their behinds and couldn t stop the trembling in his fingers. The small Boteju Lane house had two and a half rooms, actually, and the boys would lump in one and the girls in another and there were no doors to shut between any of them-not even when Cecilprins would cover Maudiegirl at eleven each night and she would wheeze complainingly as he jerked over her and the girls would listen and shiver deliciously and Sonnaboy would crawl softly on hands and knees to peer into the darkness and discover what being married was all about.
They re doing, no? Marla would hiss when he crawled past their mats.
Sonnaboy would nod and Leah would sigh softly and go to the chamberpot to raise her nightdress and squat and do pippy. It was Dunnyboy who would want to play papa with them and crawl over to meddle with them and rub his cock against their legs. But that was the night and everything was all right at daybreak when they rose, stacked their pillows, rolled up their mats and emptied the chamberpot in the lavatory and dressed for Mass. St. Mary s Church was a few blocks away. They would check their Missals and the Saint s day and mark the epistle and gospel with holy pictures. The girls wore veils and the boys snapped loops of elastic under their stocking-hose to keep them in place below the knee. And so, each morning, Cecilprins von Bloss and his family would go to church and Sonnaboy would go to the vestry to put on a red cassock and white surplice and serve at the altar. Father Romiel would beam on them and wish them a blessed morning and they would say hullo to old Mr Capper and Mrs Vanderputt and the Rozairos with their three straw-haired daughters.
Come go, Maudiegirl would urge, told, no, the hopper boy to come by seven. And sure enough the hopper boy would come with his basket and Maudiegirl would count a quantity of hoppers (a type of thin griddle cake made of flour and fermented coconut water) for breakfast and tip the packet of sambol into a tin plate and note the account in a little book. The boy would whistle and show yellow teeth and pick at a sore on his hand. And it was another day. Cecilprins to the G.P.O.; Totoboy to the liquor merchant s where he counted stock and wrote all manner of squiggles in ledgers; Leah to a florist s where she arranged posies and bouquets and smiled at vinegary customers; Anna to a pharmacy where she spent long hours cooing with a Sinhalese gentleman who was something in the radio station, a Buddhist, and who rode a Raleigh bicycle. He was a fastidious little person, scrawny and a regular fusspot. He was the only one Anna knew who wore bicycle clips at the bottom of his trousers. All the others, she said, including Sonnaboy, just shoved the bottom of their trousers into their socks. Sonnaboy would grin. Mostly, he wore short trousers to work anyway. Viva was a salesman. He would wait at the top of the lane for the company van and make a great show

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