![]() Love Lost A Lifetime AgoKiran Doshi THE LAST CANDLES OF THE NIGHT By Ian Bedford Speaking Tiger Publications, New Delhi, 2016, pp. 275, Rs. 299.00 VOLUME XL NUMBER 4 April 2016 The Last Candles of the Night is the
fourth and last novel by Ian Bedford,
who passed away, at the age of 76,
shortly after the novel was published. He
must have been a remarkable man. He did
his Master’s in Lahore, studied Islam in Pakistan
and India, did much field research
work in India, Pakistan and elsewhere in
Central Asia, translated Urdu poetry, explored
Sufism and Indian classical music, and
married an Indian woman. And yes, he
worked in the Department of Anthropology
at Macquarie University for decades before
taking to writing fiction. All his novels—his
earlier novels are The Shell of the Old (1981);
A View from the Bund (1990) republished
recently; and The Resemblance (2008)—are
of interest to Indian readers because they
reflect this unusual background.
The intriguing title of his last novel is
also taken from a sher by an Indian poet, well,
actually an Indo-Pakistani poet, for the poet,
Zaheer Kashmiri, chose to live in Pakistan
after the Partition (like his contemporary and
fellow-Leftist, Faiz Ahmed Faiz.) Incidentally,
the complete sher consists of two lines:
Hamen khabar hai ke ham hain chirag-e-aakhire-shab
Hamare baad andhera nahin ujaala hai
(We know that we are the last flicker of the flame
After us will come not darkness but light.)
Of course, the meaning of the sher alters
if you read only the first line of it, as the
author has chosen to do. But obviously he
has done it purposely, wanting (unlike the
poet) to lament the dying of some flame,
not to herald the coming dawn. The question
is, what flame?
But first, the ‘story’ of the novel . . .
It begins in the year 2001, shortly before
9/11, in Sydney, Australia, where an elderly
Philip Chalk, back from a 50 year, selfimposed
exile managing schools in India, is
struggling to cope with a retired life—and
‘home’. It is not an easy task, for nobody
there has much use for him, not the (educational)
system, no matter what his achievements
in India, nor any near or dear one (except
a grandson curious about his Indian
past) and certainly not his Indian wife Jenny,
whom he had married in India back in 1948,
brought to Australia shortly thereafter, and soon abandoned for fifty years, yes, fifty long
years, save for three brief visits in all those
years. An improbable tale? Of course. But
interesting. And, come to think of it, an Indian
wife, ... Table of Contents >> |