Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

MY FAVOURITE SHORT STORIES Part 28 THE LOST CHILD Sulekha Creative

Powerful Essays
2507 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
MY FAVOURITE SHORT STORIES Part 28 THE LOST CHILD Sulekha Creative
Sign in | Register

Delhi



COMMUNITY
Creative

General


MY FAVOURITE SHORT STORIES Part 28 – THE LOST CHILD

MY FAVOURITE SHORT STORIES Part 28 – THE LOST CHILD
Vikram Karve / 4 yrs ago /

MY FAVOURITE SHORT STORIES

Part 28 – THE LOST CHILD

By

VIKRAM KARVE

We do not realize the value of the things we have. We take these things for granted. It is only when we lose something that we begin to realize its value. Take the example of health.
As long as we are in good health we do not appreciate the value of good health and take it for granted – it is only when we fall ill that we realize the value of health. It is the same with persons and relationships too. It is only when we lose someone or a relationship breaks that we realize their importance and value in our lives. This is the essence of the story THE
LOST CHILD by Mulk Raj Anand. Let’s read the story first and then we will discuss it. This story is freely available on the internet and as usual I have given the link below and also pasted the story for your convenience.

http://smohanraj.blogspot.com/2005/12/lost-child.html



The
Lost Child By Mulk Raj Anand
3



It was the festival of spring. From the wintry shades of narrow lanes and alleys emerged a

 clad humanity. Some walked, some rode on horses, others sat, being carried in gaily bamboo and bullock carts. One little boy ran between his father’s legs, brimming over with life and laughter. “Come, child, come,” called his parents, as he lagged behind, fascinated by the toys in the shops that lined the way.

He hurried towards his parents, his feet obedient to their call, his eyes still lingering on the receding toys. As he came to where they had stopped to wait for him, he could not suppress the desire of his heart, even though he well knew the old, cold stare of refusal in their eyes. “I want that toy,” he pleaded. His father looked at him red-eyed, in his familiar tyrant’s way. His mother, melted by the free spirit of the day was tender and, giving him her finger to hold, said, “Look, child, what is before you!”

It was a flowering mustard-field, pale like melting gold as it swept across miles and miles of even land. A group of dragon-flies were bustling about on their gaudy purple wings, intercepting the flight of a lone black bee or butterfly in search of sweetness from the flowers. The child followed them in the air with his gaze, till one of them would still its wings and rest, and he would try to catch it. But it would go fluttering, flapping, up into the air, when he had almost caught it in his hands. Then his mother gave a cautionary call:
“Come, child, come, come on to the footpath.”

He ran towards his parents gaily and walked abreast of them for a while, being, however, soon left behind, attracted by the little insects and worms along the footpath that were teeming out from their hiding places to enjoy the sunshine.

“Come, child, come!” his parents called from the shade of a grove where they had seated themselves on the edge of a well. He ran towards them. A shower of young flowers fell upon the child as he entered the grove, and, forgetting his parents, he began to gather the raining petals in his hands. But lo! he heard the cooing of doves and ran towards his parents, shouting, “The dove! The dove!” The raining petals dropped from his forgotten hands. “Come, child, come!” they called to the child, who had now gone running in wild capers round the banyan tree, and gathering him up they took the narrow, winding footpath which led to the fair through the mustard fields. As they neared the village the child could see many other footpaths full of throngs, converging to the whirlpool of the fair, and felt at once repelled and fascinated by the confusion of the world he was entering.

A sweetmeat seller hawked, “gulab-jaman, rasagulla, burfi, jalebi,” at the corner of the entrance and a crowd pressed round his counter at the foot of an architecture of many coloured sweets, decorated with leaves of silver and gold. The child stared open-eyed and his mouth watered for the burfi that was his favourite sweet. “I want that burfi,” he slowly murmured. But he half knew as he begged that his plea would not be heeded because his parents would say he was greedy. So without waiting for an answer he moved on.

A flower-seller hawked, “A garland of gulmohur, a garland of gulmohur !” The child seemed irresistibly drawn. He went towards the basket where the flowers lay heaped and half murmured, “I want that garland.” But he well knew his parents would refuse to buy him those flowers because they would say that they were cheap. So, without waiting for an answer, he moved on.

A man stood holding a pole with yellow, red, green and purple balloons flying from it. The child was simply carried away by the rainbow glory of their silken colours and he was filled with an overwhelming desire to possess them all. But he well knew his parents would never buy him the balloons because they would say he was too old to play with such toys. So he walked on farther.

A snake-charmer stood playing a flute to a snake which coiled itself in a basket, its head raised in a graceful bend like the neck of a swan, while the music stole into its invisible ears like the gentle rippling of an invisible waterfall. The child went towards the snake-charmer.
But, knowing his parents had forbidden him to hear such coarse music as the snakecharmer played, he proceeded farther.

There was a roundabout in full swing. Men, women and children, carried away in a whirling motion, shrieked and cried with dizzy laughter. The child watched them intently and then he made a bold request: “I want to go on the roundabout, please, Father, Mother.” There was no reply. He turned to look at his parents. They were not there, ahead of him. He turned to

look on either side. They were not there. He looked behind. There was no sign of them.

A full, deep cry rose within his dry throat and with a sudden jerk of his body he ran from where he stood, crying in real fear, “Mother, Father.” Tears rolled down from his eyes, hot and fierce; his flushed face was convulsed with fear. Panic- stricken, he ran to one side first, then to the other, hither and thither in all directions, knowing not where to go. “Mother,
Father,” he wailed. His yellow turban came untied and his clothes became muddy.

Having run to and fro in a rage of running for a while, he stood defeated, his cries suppressed into sobs. At little distances on the green grass he could see, through his filmy eyes, men and women talking. He tried to look intently among the patches of bright yellow clothes, but there was no sign of his father and mother among these people, who seemed to laugh and talk just for the sake of laughing and talking.

He ran quickly again, this time to a shrine to which people seemed to be crowding. Every little inch of space here was congested with men, but he ran through people’s legs, his little sob lingering: “Mother, Father!” Near the entrance to the temple, however, the crowd became very thick: men jostled each other, heavy men, with flashing, murderous eyes and hefty shoulders. The poor child struggled to thrust a way between their feet but, knocked to and fro by their brutal movements, he might have been trampled underfoot, had he not shrieked at the highest pitch of his voice, “Father, Mother!”

A man in the surging crowd heard his cry and, stooping with great difficulty, lifted him up in his arms. “How did you get here, child? Whose baby are you?” the man asked as he steered clear of the mass. The child wept more bitterly than ever now and only cried, “I want my mother, I want my father!”

The man tried to soothe him by taking him to the roundabout. “Will you have a ride on the horse?” he gently asked as he approached the ring. The child’s throat tore into a thousand shrill sobs and he only shouted: “I want my mother, I want my father!”

The man headed towards the place where the snake- charmer still played on the flute to the swaying cobra. “Listen to that nice music, child!” he pleaded. But the child shut his ears with his fingers and shouted his double-pitched strain: “I want my mother, I want my father!” The man took him near the balloons, thinking the bright colours of the balloons

would distract the child’s attention and quieten him. “Would you like a rainbow-coloured balloon?” he persuasively asked. The child turned his eyes from the flying balloons and just sobbed, “I want my mother, I want my father!”

The man, still trying to make the child happy, bore him to the gate where the flower-seller sat. “Look! Can you smell those nice flowers, child! Would you like a garland to put round your neck?” The child turned his nose away from the basket and reiterated his sob: “I want my mother, I want my father!”

Thinking to humour his disconsolate charge by a gift of sweets, the man took him to the counter of the sweet shop. “What sweets would you like, child?” he asked. The child turned his face from the sweet shop and only sobbed, “I want my mother, I want my father!”

A thrilled boy is going to a village fair with his parents. The child is full of joy and anticipation. In his exuberance the boy demands all sorts of things from his parents – toys, sweets, flowers, balloons, rides – but to his disappointment his parents pay no heed to the child’s desires. The boy is quite frustrated as he is denied everything he wants and after some time he stops asking his parents since he knows his requests will be refused.
Suddenly the boy sees a roundabout and he so desperately wants a ride that he summons up courage to ask his father and mother and when he gets no reply he turns around and does not see his parents. He searches but cannot find his parents and is panic stricken when he realizes that he is lost. A kind man hears the child’s desperate cries for his parents, takes pity on the child and tries to console and comfort him. The man lifts the child in his arms and tries to help him search for his parents. As the boy is crying bitterly the man tries to pacify him by offering the boy all those things he desired a few moments ago but his parents had refused to give him, but all these things lose significance for the child and the child constantly goes on crying, ”I want my mother, I want my father.” Till now the boy had taken his parents for granted. It is only when he loses them that the child realizes the importance of his parents in his life and that they are the most valuable thing he has.

I love this story – the way it is skilfully narrated, the way the atmosphere is built up, and though breathtaking in its simplicity, the profound message the story delivers and the aftertaste it leaves in the reader’s mind.

Bye for now, Dear Reader. I will be back with my another of my favourite stories soon right here in my blog.

Till then, Happy Reading.

VIKRAM KARVE

© vikram karve., all rights reserved.

Did you like this story? I am sure you will like the stories in my recently published book COCKTAIL comprising twenty seven short stories about relationships. To know more please click the links below:

Do try out this delicious, heady and exciting COCKTAIL

http://www.flipkart.com/cocktail-vikram-karve-short-stories-book-8191091844? affid=nme http://www.indiaplaza.in/cocktail-vikram-karve/books/9788191091847.htm

http://www.apkpublishers.com/books/short-stories/cocktail-by-vikram-karve.html

About Vikram Karve

A creative person with a zest for life, Vikram Karve is a retired Naval Officer turned full time writer. Educated at IIT Delhi, ITBHU Varanasi, The Lawrence School Lovedale and Bishops
School Pune, Vikram has published two books: COCKTAIL a collection of fiction short stories about relationships (2011) and APPETITE FOR A STROLL a book of Foodie
Adventures (2008) and he is currently working on his novel. An avid blogger, he has written a number of fiction short stories and creative non-fiction articles in magazines and journals for many years before the advent of blogging. Vikram has taught at a University as a
Professor for almost 14 years and now teaches as a visiting faculty and devotes most of his time to creative writing. Vikram lives in Pune India with his family and muse - his pet dog Sherry with whom he takes long walks thinking creative thoughts.

Vikram Karve Academic and Creative Writing Journal: http://karvediat.blogspot.com

Professional Profile Vikram Karve: http://www.linkedin.com/in/karve

Vikram Karve Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/vikramkarve

Vikram Karve Creative Writing Blog: http://vikramkarve.sulekha.com/blog/posts.htm

Email: vikramkarve@sify.com

Fiction Short Stories Book

COCKTAIL : Short Stories about Relationships By VIKRAM KARVE

http://www.flipkart.com/cocktail-vikram-karve-short-stories-book-8191091844?affid=nme

http://www.indiaplaza.in/cocktail-vikram-karve/books/9788191091847.htm

http://www.apkpublishers.com/books/short-stories/cocktail-by-vikram-karve.html

Foodie Book: Appetite for a Stroll

http://books.sulekha.com/book/appetite-for-a-stroll/default.htm

http://www.flipkart.com/appetite-stroll-vikram-karve/8190690094-gw23f9mr2o

© vikram karve., all rights reserved.

General

Post a Comment

   

Submit

All Comments

0

Topic Related Articles
Chemistry- My Thoughts by katokatha
Sly Hunters Of Human Souls by Hemant
Government Servants? by Santha Devi
Socialism And Communism by Soundrapandian
Protection To Government Employees. by Purushottam

View More

More Articles
Nightmares Of BJP: Anna Hazare And Kejriwal by dr abdul ruff
Indian Congress Partys Rahul Gandhi Dilemma To Be Or Not To Be by dr abdul ruff

Chemistry- My Thoughts by katokatha
MOHAN BHAGWAT, MOTHER TERESA AND THE UNWANTED CONTROVERSY , by rajee kushwaha
A Historical Temple On The Borders Of India-Pakistan. by Karor

View More

Corporate
About Us Contact Us Meet Our Users Sulekha Rivr Media Coverage Ads/Commercials Careers/Jobs
Advertise on Sulekha Terms/Conditions Privacy Policy Copyright Policy

Top Domains
Yellow Pages Property/Rentals Roommates/Home Stay Buy/Sell Cars/Bikes Home Needs
Office Needs Mobiles Deals Education Movies

Top Cities (India)
Bangalore Chennai Delhi Mumbai Hyderabad Pune Kolkata Ahmedabad Chandigarh Coimbatore
Cochin

Top Cities (US)
Austin Atlanta Bay Area Boston Chicago Los Angeles New Jersey New York Toronto

Follow Us

 

 

Download your
Sulekha.com app now!
© 2015 Copyright Sulekha.com
All Rights Reserved.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Since, this is a collection of short stories I’ll rate separately the parts that left a mark on me:…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On this journey to the south, the boy sees and goes through many situations most could not fathom seeing with their own eyes. He saw people lying dead in the streets, people being shot, starving people just begging for help, and had to continue on his journey with his Papa for their own mere survival. His Papa also teaches him all the necessities the boy will have to be able to perform, for the Papa knew he would…

    • 699 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Aortic Valve Stenosis

    • 1308 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Aortic Valve Stenosis is the narrowing or obstruction of the heart 's aortic valve. The aorta is a large artery that originates in the left ventricle (lower chamber) of the heart. The narrowing and obstruction of the aortic valve prevents it from opening properly and blocks the flow of blood from the left ventricle to the aorta and onward towards the rest of the body. Aortic valve stenosis occurs in approximately 5 out of every 10,000 people.1 It occurs more commonly in males than females. Symptoms do not often appear until middle age or older.…

    • 1308 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    He stopped and let the crew and cattle catch up. When they got to him they went into the town together. They started going into the town everyone gathered on the streets to see them. It was the largest herd of cattle that has ever gone through that town. They had to prepare all the cattle to be sold.…

    • 1023 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    It demonstrated how they were molded as persons which is appeared by how they treat other individuals and live their lives.…

    • 459 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jesse Yates 1

    • 354 Words
    • 2 Pages

    A person holds the key to their own life, it is their choice to be health and make sure they it is long and plentiful.…

    • 354 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    1900 vs 2000

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages

    I think that we take for granted the things that we have today. Just look at all…

    • 659 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    New technology is constantly being released and of course everyone is all over it. These things are definitely not cheap, but people feel the need to be in possession of them in order to be accepted. "As often as not, it isn't the money itself that means anything; it is the use of money as the currency of the soul." This sentence is very real. It isn't the actual dollar bill that is important. What's important is what you can actually do with the money. If one won the lottery, one wouldn't say "oh, I got a lot of bills, I'm going to keep them forever and not spend them." No. One will most likely say, "I'm going to buy a new mansion and 3 cars, and part of the city." So in reality it isn't the money that people want, it is in fact what the money can do that appeals to…

    • 520 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Money and gems can not buy happiness, but only comfort. For example Prof. Howell says, “And yet we still keep on buying material things,” He says ,“Because they’re tangible and we think we can keep on using them.”(Prof. Howell 2008). This tells us that people will buy jewelry and furniture because they’re tangible and will last a while. This also proves that people will buy material goods because they think it will last longer than a cruise or a flight to Hawaii. Dr. Dean says “People's’ desires for material possessions at the same, or greater rate, than their salaries… this means that despite considerably have more luxurious possessions, people end up no happier.”(Dr. Dean 2008) This…

    • 608 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    HNC Social Care Grief & Loss

    • 3657 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Grief is a natural response to a major loss, though often deeply painful and can have a negative impact on your life. Any loss can cause varied levels of grief often when someone least expects it however, loss is widely varied and is often only perceived as death. Tugendhat (2005) argued that losses such as infertility, miscarriage, stillbirth, adoption and divorce can cause grief in everyday life. Throughout our lives we all face loss in one way or another, whether it is being diagnosed with a terminal illness, loss of independence due to a serious accident or illness, gaining a criminal record (identity loss), losing our job, home or ending a relationship; we all experience loss that will trigger grief but some experiences can be less intense.…

    • 3657 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Everyone has their own morals which molds them into who they are. This also often determines the choices they make. From the book The Great Gatsby, Nick has a decision to make based upon his standards and values of living. His decision in this case is determining what his next step would be after knowing the broken relationship between Tom and Daisy. Both Tom and Daisy are identified to value money and love more than anything else. Money plays a big role in their lives, because it shapes their reputation in the community and also fills up their own satisfactions. Their value of love is also evidently shown when they displayed signs of disloyalty in their marriage relationship. While Tom had “secret” affairs with Myrtle and the maid in Santa Barbara, Daisy, who yearned for a romantic love life, processed a relationship with Gatsby. In the midst of this, Nick as a bystander of their relationship has slightly different morals than them. He indeed values love, however he…

    • 576 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    A doctor is familiar with something that many others may not be too familiar with, and that is the Hippocratic Oath. If you are to look at said oath, it says nothing about kickbacks from drug companies to push this new prescription. There is nothing about how expensive a treatment is, but what it does talk about caring for others in the Hippocratic Oath. It does specify what a doctor does as something that is done for the benefit of the sick. In 1964, Louis Lasagna, Academic Dean of the School of Medicine at Tufts University, wrote a version of the oath that talks about how a doctor should care for the sick with compassion, humanely, and says nothing about working to get rich off of those who are suffering (Lasagna, 1964). In the United States, there should not be anyone who cannot see a doctor because they are poor; a doctor takes an oath to heal the sick wherever he can, not to heal the sick only if they are rich.…

    • 2557 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Defining the Moral Status

    • 1565 Words
    • 7 Pages

    As time passes medicine and the healthcare system has greatly improved the life expectancy of mankind, and more options present themselves, they also come a price as to which is the right choice to make. How do we defy which life is more important, who gets to live and who has second priority?…

    • 1565 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “The real problem is not that people have some sort of excellent secret knowledge about their health that will produce adverse selection; the problem is that some people can 't afford to pay the cost of medical care for diseases that have already occurred. This is no more or less of an issue than the fact that some people cannot afford to replace the contents of their home after it burns down (The Economist, 2007).”…

    • 402 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    With all that is before us as a society of human beings, health care is far reaching and of the highest attribute next to our existence. Without proper health care life becomes a hollow existence. We push through each day with painful thoughts about life, or what we think we know about it. While we focus on negative feelings of weakness and doom, wishing for better days. Always hoping for a peace that we know will never come in this life without our health. Health care is something everyone is not privilege to have. Billions of people around the world are suffering everyday from lack of proper health care. Unfortunately many have no idea what it is to be healthy, or what it feels like to feel good. They have no idea they are sick, all they know is that they exist. To be numb is what they know, how unfortunate.…

    • 7865 Words
    • 32 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics