Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather

Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather by Gao Xingjian Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather by Gao Xingjian Read Free Book Online
Authors: Gao Xingjian
where I won’t be noticed as much, but I can’t get the rod to retract. I hate it when people stare at me. Shy since childhood, I am uncomfortable in new clothes, and being dressed up is like standing in a display window; but it’s worse carrying this long, swaying, shiny fishing rod. If I walk fast the rod sways more, so I go slow, parading down the street with the rod on my shoulder, feeling as if I’ve split my trousers or I can’t zip up my fly.
    Of course I know that people in the city who go fishing are not after fish. The men who buy tickets to fish in the parks are out for leisure and freedom. It’s an excuse to escape from home, to get away from the wife and children, and to get a little peace. Fishing is now regarded as a sport, and there are competitions with divisions according to the type of rod used; the evening newspapers rate the sport highly and carry the results. Fishing spots and party venues are designated, but there are no signs of any fish. No wonder skeptics say that the night before the competitions, people from the fishing committee come to put fish intonets, and that’s what the sportsmen catch. As I am carrying a brand-new rod on my shoulder, people must think I’m one of those fishing enthusiasts. But I know what it will mean to my old grandfather. I can already see him. So hunched over that he can’t straighten his back, he is carrying his little bucket of worms. It is riddled with rust and bits of dirt are falling out of it. I should visit my old home to get over my homesickness.
    But first I must find a safe place to put the rod. If that young son of mine sees it, he’ll wreck it. I hear my wife shouting at me, Why did you have to buy that? It’s cramped enough in here already. Where will you put the thing? I put it above the toilet tank in the bathroom, the only place my son can’t reach, unless he climbs onto a stool. No matter what, I must go back to the village to get rid of this homesickness, which, once triggered, is impossible to shake. I hear a loud crash and think it’s my wife using the meat cleaver in the kitchen. You hear her yelling, Go and have a look! You then hear that son of mine crying in the bathroom and know that calamity has befallen the fishing rod. You’ve made up your mind. You’re taking the fishing rod back to your old home.
    But the village has changed so much you can’t recognize it. The dirt roads are now asphalt, and there are prefab buildings, all new and exactly the same. On the streets women of all ages are wearing bras, and they wear flimsy shirts to show them off, just as each rooftop must have anaerial to show there’s a television in the house. A house without an aerial stands out and is regarded as defective. And of course everyone watches the same programs. From 7:00 to 7:30 it’s the national news, from 7:30 to 8:00 the international, then short TV films, commercials, weather forecasts, sports, more commercials, then variety shows, and from 10:00 to 11:00 old movies. The movies aren’t aired every day: on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, it’s TV series instead. On the weekends, programs on cultural life are shown through the night. Anyway, the aerials are magnificent. It’s as if the rooftops had grown small forests but a cold wind came and blew off all the leaves so that only bare branches remain. You are lost in these barren forests and can’t find your old home.
    I remember that every day on my way to school I had to pass a stone bridge, and the lake was right next to it. Even when there was no wind, there were waves lapping all the time, and I used to think they were the backs of swimming fish. I never imagined that the fish would all die, that the sparkling lake would turn into a foul pond, that the foul pond would then be filled in, and that I would not be able to find the way to my old home.
    I ask where Nanhu Road is. But people look at you with surprise, as if they can’t understand what you are saying. I still speak the

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