"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
87
It would be ideal for us, said Tereza. You'd be bored to tears, ma'am. There's nothing to
do there. Nothing at all.
Tereza looked into the farm worker's weather-beaten face. She found him very kind.
For the first time in ages, she had found someone kind! An image of life in the country
arose before her eyes:
a village with a belfry, fields, woods, a rabbit scampering along a
furrow, a hunter with a green cap. She had never lived in the country. Her image of it
came entirely from what she had heard. Or read. Or received unconsciously from
distant ancestors. And yet it lived within her, as plain and clear as the daguerreotype of
her great-grandmother in the family album.
Does it give you any trouble? Tomas asked. The farmer pointed to the area at the back
of the neck where the brain is connected to the spinal cord. I still have pains here from
time to time.
Without getting out of his seat, Tomas palpated the spot and put his former patient
through a brief examination. I no longer have the right to prescribe drugs, he said after
he
had finished, but tell the doctor taking care of you now that you talked to me and I
recommended you use this. And tearing a sheet of paper from the pad in his wallet, he
wrote out the name of a medicine in large letters.
They started back to Prague.
All the way Tereza brooded about the photograph showing her naked body embracing
the engineer. She tried to console herself with the thought that even if the picture did
exist, Tomas would never see it. The only value it had for them was as a blackmailing
device. It would lose that value the moment they sent it to Tomas.
But what if the police decided somewhere along the way that they couldn't use her?
Then the picture would become a mere plaything in their hands, and nothing would
prevent them from slipping it in an envelope and sending it off to Tomas. Just for the
fun of it.
What would happen if Tomas were to receive such a picture? Would he throw her out?
Perhaps not. Probably not. But the fragile edifice of their love would certainly come
tumbling down. For that edifice rested on the single column of her fidelity,
and loves are
like empires: when the idea they are founded on crumbles, they, too, fade away.
And now she had an image before her eyes: a rabbit scampering along a furrow, a
hunter with a green cap, and the belfry of a village church rising up over the woods.
She wanted to tell Tomas that they should leave Prague. Leave the children who bury
crows alive in the ground, leave the police spies, leave the young women armed with
umbrellas. She wanted to tell him that they should move to the country. That it was their
only path to salvation.
She turned to him. But Tomas did not respond. He kept his eyes on the road ahead.
Having thus failed to scale the fence of silence between them, she lost all courage to
speak. She felt as she had felt when walking down Petrin Hill. Her
stomach was in
knots, and she thought she was going to be sick. She was afraid of Tomas. He was too
"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
88
strong for her; she was too weak. He gave her commands that she could not
understand; she tried to carry them out, but did not know how.
She wanted to go back to Petrin Hill and ask the man with the rifle to wind the blindfold
around her eyes and let her lean against the trunk of the chestnut tree. She wanted to
die.
Waking up, she realized she was at home alone.
She went outside and set off in the direction of the embankment. She wanted to see the
Vltava. She wanted to stand on its banks and look long and hard into its waters,
because the sight of the flow was soothing and healing. The river flowed from century
to century, and human affairs play themselves out on its banks. Play themselves out to
be
forgotten the next day, while the river flows on.
Leaning against the balustrade, she peered into the water. She was on the outskirts of
Prague, and the Vltava had already flowed through the city, leaving behind the glory of
the Castle and churches; like an actress after a performance, it was tired and
contemplative; it flowed on between its dirty banks, bounded by walls and fences that
themselves bounded factories and abandoned playgrounds.
She was staring at the water—it seemed sadder and darker here—when suddenly she
spied a strange object
in the middle of the river, something red—yes, it was a bench. A
wooden bench on iron legs, the kind Prague's parks abound in. It was floating down the
Vltava. Followed by another. And another and another, and only then did Tereza realize
that all the park benches of Prague were floating downstream, away from the city,
many, many benches, more and more, drifting by like the autumn leaves that the water
carries off from the woods—red, yellow, blue.
She turned and looked behind her as if to ask the passersby what it meant. Why are
Prague's park benches floating downstream?
But everyone passed her by, indifferent,
for little did they care that a river flowed from century to century through their ephemeral
city.
Again she looked down at the river. She was grief-stricken. She understood that what
she saw was a farewell.
When most of the benches had vanished from sight, a few latecomers appeared: one
more yellow one, and then another, blue, the last.
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