Sunday, June 24, 2007

Life refused to remain life-sized.

As a young man he had shared a room with a painter whose paintings had grown larger and larger as he tried to get the whole of life into his art. 'Look at me,' he said before he killed himself, 'I wanted to be a miniaturist and I've got elephantiasis instead!' The swollen events of the night of the crescent knives reminded Nadir Khan of his room-mate, because life had once again, perversely, refused to remain life-sized. It had turned melodramatic: and that embarrassed him.


Rushdie, Salman. Midnight's Children. pag. 48, 49, Jonathan Cape Ltd, London, 1981