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Sultana's Dream Naristan (continued) | |||||||||||
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"How can you find time to do all these? You have to do the office work as well! Have you not?" I asked. "Yes," she said. "I do not stick to the laboratory all day long. I finish my work in two hours." "In two hours!" said I, "How do you manage? In our land the officers, magistrates, for instance, work seven hours daily." "I have seen some of them doing their work," she said. "Do you think they work all the seven hours?" "Certainly they do!" said I. "No, dear Sultana, they do not," said she. "They dawdle away their time in smoking. Some smoke two or three cigars during the office time. They talk much about their work, but do little. Suppose one cigar takes half an hour to burn off, and a man smokes twelve cigars daily; then you see, he wastes six hours every day in sheer smoking." |
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We talked on various subjects; and I learned that they were not subject to any kind of epidemic disease, not did they suffer from mosquito bites as we do. I was very much astonished to hear that in Ladyland no one died in youth except by rare accident. "Will you care to see our kitchen?" she asked me. "With pleasure," said I, and we went to see it. Of course the men had been asked to clear off when I was going there. The kitchen was situated in a beautiful vegetable garden. Every creeper, every tomato plant, was itself an ornament. I found neither smoke, nor any chimney either in the kitchen, - it was clean and bright; the windows were decorated with flower garlands. There was no sign of coal or fire. "How do you cook?" I asked. "With solar heat," she said, at the same time showing me the pipe, through which passed the concentrated sunlight and heat. And she cooked something then and there to show me the process. "How did you manage to gather and store up the sun heat?" I asked her in amazement. |
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"Let me tell you a little of our past history, then. Thirty years ago, when our present Queen was thirteen years old, she inherited the throne. She was Queen in name only, the Prime Minister really ruling the country. "Our good Queen liked science very much. She circulated an order that all the women in her country should be educated. Accordingly, a number of girls? schools were founded and supported by the Government. Education was spread far and wide among women. And early marriage also was stopped. No woman was to be allowed to marry before she was twenty-one. I must tell you that, before this change, we had been kept in strict purdah". "How the tables are turned," I interposed with a laugh. "But the seclusion is the same," she said. "In a few years we had separate universities, where no men were admitted. "In the capital, where our Queen lives, there are two universities. One of these invented a wonderful balloon, to which they attached a number of pipes. By means of this captive balloon, which they managed to keep afloat above the cloudland, they could draw as much water from the atmosphere as they pleased. "As the water was incessantly being drawn by the university people, no cloud gathered and the ingenious Lady Principal stopped rain and storms thereby". "Really! Now I understand why there is no mud here!" said I. But I could not understand how it was possible to accumulate water in the pipes. She explained to me how it was done; but I was unable to understand her, as my scientific knowledge was very limited. However, she went on: "When the other university members came to know of this, they became exceedingly jealous and tried to do something more extraordinary still. "They invented an instrument by which they could collect as much sun heat as they wanted. And they kept the heat stored up to be distributed among others as required. "While the women were engaged in scientific researches, the men of this country were busy increasing their military power. When they came to know that the women's universities were able to draw water from the atmosphere and collect heat from the sun, they only laughed at the members of the universities, and called the whole thing 'a sentimental nightmare'!" |
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