Ratan held it carefully, as if it were made of glass. For the first time, he understood the real lesson of Tagore’s story: A book is never just paper and ink. It is a conversation. And sometimes, the most important answers are the ones you write not for a teacher, but for yourself.
In Tagore’s tale, a schoolboy steals a little girl’s exercise book out of sheer, inexplicable mischief—not hatred, not love, but a lazy afternoon’s cruelty. He never opens it. Later, overcome by a strange, wordless guilt, he returns it. The girl smiles, doesn’t scold, doesn’t cry. But the book has been ruined by rain, its pages now a blur of ink and pulp. The boy is left with an emptiness that no punishment could fill. Ratan held it carefully, as if it were made of glass
The story ends with the narrator returning the book, but the ink has bled and the pages are ruined. What does the ruined exercise book finally represent? And sometimes, the most important answers are the
In Tagore’s story, why does the young narrator steal the girl’s exercise book? Is it guilt, love, or the simple tyranny of a child’s boredom? Later, overcome by a strange, wordless guilt, he returns it
"This is for you," Mr. Chakraborty said. "Not for homework. For your own questions."