For Rachel
C
We must cultivate our own
Garden. —Voltaire
Interest
in the care of the village’s gardens diminished inexplicably over the years. Where once the villagers had
considered maintaining the garden and lawn to be honest and noble work, now many allowed weeds to flourish and
strangle the wild daffodils, daisies and tulips that freckled their once-bright groves. And even the Prefect
took no action on villagers neglecting their gardens. For it was a rare sight to find hoes, sickles, edging
irons, pea hooks, spades or a shovel protruding from the soil. It seemed that none were as committed towards
such a cultivation other than a particular citizen who had come to be known simply as the
Gardener.
As
if he had taken an oath, he tirelessly tilled every corner of his land, even neglecting his appearance. In
addition to the smell of earth emanating from his skin, his dishevelment was disconcerting, and his ragged
clothes—as if out of disdain for him—seemed to stand apart from his body. It wasn’t long before his neighbours
kept their distance, their children instructed to never venture near the unkempt Gardener. Though he would skim
past the villagers’ judging eyes, he was aware of their whispers, ridiculing his work, belittling the devoted
life that he had chosen.
In
spite of being both aware of their misconceptions about him and failing to understand why they neglected their
own gardens, he did not go out of his way to engage his neighbours. On the occasion he made eye contact with a
passerby, he would pause in his labour and hold his smile until they left. He would say nothing, though he
wanted to.
Tired of seeing the Gardener’s well-groomed grove, villagers begrudgingly reseeded their fields and mended their
trellises. And although the villagers enjoyed this reversal in appearance, many harboured animosity and spite
towards the Gardener, as if he were solely responsible for what they deemed as unnecessary labour. Capitalizing
on this sentiment, a maintenance service arose and spared villagers of this burdensome labour for a fee. What
followed were identical heady, healthy green lawns, devoid of the character and the uniqueness of their
owners.
With the rise of the service contract, owners became blessed with something in addition to a return to their
former state. And instead of spending this free time with their families, or enjoying walks under parasols, or
engaging their neighbours, villagers simply remained in their homes. They filled their time with the
distractions offered by the latest craze of wooden box peg puzzles, whose goal was to stack matching marbles in
their designated columns by tilting the device while avoiding traps and obstacles within the game. The clacking
of the marbles and the clicking of the counter keeping score constantly chirped from the homes of
villagers.
For
his part, the Gardener took greater pains in cultivating his garden. In fact, there was a point in time when he
dug up his entire lawn in an attempt to rid his land of weeds and their roots. For several days, the overturned
soil lay scattered haphazardly like ripples of drifted sand on a dune, the drying soil no longer exhibiting the
pink, wrinkled worms or the white, grooved grubs from when the soil was first overturned. During this disarray,
a moderate rainfall flooded his garden and vineyard, as the uneven ground funnelled the flowing water and washed
away what had been years of labour.
Although his garden had been ruined, he realized
it could be restored, whereas his relationship with his neighbours and his extension of goodwill towards them
was irreplaceable. He remained vigilant in caring for his garden, but he exhibited a greater openness with
his neighbours, and the understanding (which he always knew but seldom acted on) that tending one’s garden
was equally as important as caring for one’s neighbours; that goodness, generosity, and caring for others
were vital for the village’s existence. “The village is my garden,” he said.
The Garden appears in
Resistance, Revolution and Other Short Stories.
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