Showing posts with label red fort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label red fort. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 July 2020

1986 India I: Delhi, Agra, Fatehpur Sikri

23.10.86 Delhi

Connaught Place has the feel of eternal cricket afternoons – cut grass, dust, heat haze.  Not as squalid in New Delhi as I expected, nor huge number of beggars – a few gypsy/Dravidian women, a few cripples.  Traffic very India – lots of motorised rickshaws, pedestrians going everywhere.  As you walk down the street – incense now and then – everything is garish – trucks, hoardings.  

Delhi old and new, poor and rich.  NB Lutyens' gracious avenues, lawns kept immaculately like Surrey Gardens.  Cows pulling the lawn mower.  Hundreds weeding.   A snake charmer; ants the size of dogs (well, very small dogs).  Rajpath – an architect's dream – an arch like the Arc de Triomphe, mile-long road rising up to government buildings.  Red dust gives way to warm red sandstone buildings – looks like Versailles, but more spacious – the hill is a gift.  Style a mixture of classicism and token Indian.  Lies almost due west, like a church: the sun sets behind it.

Delhi at night – pleasant warmth.  Feels just like Samarkand, Banjul – garish lights, small children, pools of light.  Doesn't feel dangerous – partly because all the people here are small.  Even labourers are half-hearted, thin.  Sikhs are more muscular.

Regal cinema – full – livid-coloured posters; incense burning around.  Connaught Place a huge, dimly-lit amphitheatre.  But not real feeling it is a bustling capital city – everything is on a small scale.  Hotels seem centres of activity, with two or three restaurants, visited by locals.  Restaurants have a huge number of swirling waiters, threadbare linen, dubious cutlery.  Unfortunately, their idea of sophistication is vaguely-Westernised food.  No beef or pork, so chicken, lamb, fish and the music – sitar, tabla, portable harmonium.  Male and female singers.  Maudlin swoopy stuff.  Perhaps this is why the Victorian Raj fared so well in India – they had similar tastes.  Sitar risks a few extreme passages.  Harmonium warbles away.  Female voice very young , very Kate Bush, who uses similar ornaments.

Very strange day – spilling into yesterday, which didn't really exist.  Just travelling in similar metal tubes, with hours shifting constantly.  Having lost time, I have also lost distance.  I have not yet managed to place myself here: it is as I am in a very large Indian film-set somewhere outside Bradford.  Except that the sun is shining, and the temperature in the 80s.

On Indian TV, the language is formal – TV announcer finished with "cheerio and chin up".  Papers and videotext news items read like a gentle parody. 

24.10.86 Delhi

Up to the first class reservation office via rickshaw – typically held together by solder, bits of wire, welding, all on their last legs.  Driving slow-ish, but daredevils – a thousand near-misses – scattering pedestrians.  A wonder they obey the traffic lights.  First class reservations claims to be computerised, but that seems unlikely.  I wanted an Indrail pass, and wandered through administrative bowels of the building.  Lots of ancient typewriters lined up – another reason English will always be the language of administration.  But everyone unphased by strangers wandering – a bit like the sacred cows in the streets.

To New Delhi station, although this is much more Old Delhi, the real Delhi.  There were cows standing amidst bus queues.  A throng around the station.  Few touts or hawkers.  Station itself dark, with people everywhere, sitting, squatting, lying.  Notices directing hither and thither.  The Tourist Office a relative oasis of calm.  Very affable bloke – pointed out that I need a permit to go to Kashmir.  Gave me a slip of paper with the address of the Ministry of Home Affairs, ominously "beyond India Gate".  It proved to be my first real brush with Indian bureaucracy.

I bought the "at-a-glance" timetable.  The ads show the same upper-class 30s English.  Ads for snuff and recondite engineering products, all backed up with exhortation like "Get the best" etc.  Typically Indian printing – poor quality paper, some puce (cf. Suffolk pink), heavy printing, with movable type.  Introduction has some gentle, faded English, meticulously polite.

Lunch at Kwality, a well-known chain.  Nothing special – I think my chicken saved people the trouble of killing it by dying of malnutrition.  The hotel restaurant is better – but not better than my local take-away.  

I went further north for North Delhi station, which is opposite main bazaar.  Very definite change here.  People were living on the streets.  Cooking, washing utensils in puddles, washing themselves from standpipes – a girl wringing out her hair, a main holding up a cloth around himself like on a Cornwall beach.  Everyone cooking.  Everywhere food on sale – fried balls, fresh limes, fruit, daal.  Everywhere tiny stand-up restaurants – often called "hotels" – tin shacks behind shacks, everyone bustling with tiny jobs.  I saw one bloke selling Spirograph drawings – successfully.

Further north, poorer.  There exists a definite hierarchy.  Taxis and motorised rickshaws below Connaught, then motorised rickshaws to North Delhi station, then horse-drawn rickshaws, bicycle rickshaws, something I hadn't seen south.  Then even further, rickshaws with no tires.  The streets were crowded along the walls with people and their possessions – sometimes a tiny pile of bare necessities.  And yet most are modest.  There was little oppressive begging, and people seemed content to live their lives – just in public.  

After lunch, to the Home Affairs Ministry.  First we queued to get in.  Then we queued to get a pass.  Then we went upstairs.  Some queued to get a form; others of us just got it.  The we queued to go to room 2.  And waited.  Unfortunately, at this point the queuing system broke down.  One had to resort to downright cunning.  Eventually we got to the inner sanctum.  And then queued.  When our turn came, a man simply wrote in our passports that we could go to Kashmir.  The form we had filled in was not even glanced at.  Just filed.  I have a horrible feeling this may be the tip of the iceberg.  What was noticeable was that the Indian bureaucracy seemed so huge it was normal.  Forms appeared, books were filled in, people handed out, shepherding in.  You've got to employ 700 million people somehow.

Walk back very pleasant through wide leafy avenues.  Rush-hour – but on a smaller scale because roads are wide, cars are few, and many people use bikes or rickshaws.  Overall effect very human.  Buses are one of the few things which lack much English: just Hindi and numbers.  Rajpath very peaceful as India Gate and government buildings on the hill start to fade in the haze and thinning light.

25.10.86 Delhi 

The day starts early.  By 9am the sun is already strong, though the atmosphere is thick with haze.  The sun also sets early, lending the whole of the latter part of the afternoon a kind of eternal English summer's day quality.  To the tourist office again.  More queues.  But eventually I bought my Indrail pass, and reserved some of the seats.  Despite the frustration of the (Westerner) queues, the officials maintained an even humour.  The respond very well to courteousness.  But nothing is closed.  I obtained only provisional reservations for trains coming from other centres – Jammu and Udaipur.  Pretty brisk work – only two hours.  On the way, I saw my first leper.  His fingers had been reduced to the last joint.

After lunch, I hopped over the wall and went to the International's swimming pool.  Not that I swam.  But 50 Rs. was still good value, allowing me to lounge in the sun in my swimming trunks.  Even just after midday, the sun was very benign.  With palm trees all around and the waiters serving efficiently, it was easy to forget that over the wall lay Janpath Road and the beggars.  I left about 3.30pm; the sun was weak and low, and held little power.  This gentle warmth pervades the rest of the day and early night.

After an extensive coffee break, complete with timeless universal cameo of corner tete-a-tete – "I will be frank – will you be frank?" - I tried to reserve some hotel rooms.  I phoned the telephone desk to book calls through to Srinagar.  Several minutes later, I was told that there were no lines on to Udaipur, Agra.  A strike for a week, evidently.

A walk into town.  Everywhere a-swirl with people.  Connaught Place looks more impressive by night.  By day, the open space in the middle diminishes it; the surrounding buildings fail to bind together.  By night, the garish lights turn it into a huge amphitheatre.  It also forms the perfect space for a passeggiata, and this Saturday evening, many did so.  Most shops stay open to 7pm, some to 8pm.  Hawkers sat everywhere, polishing shoes, selling magazines and books.

Indians in New Delhi are very keen on books.  Mostly, these are British, some quite recent – latest magazines like Business, the Economist, Elle etc.  Even a computer bookstore with a rack of dBase III and C books.  Very aspirational.  Article in Sunday  - Newsweek/Economist type – led with the rise of the middle classes.  It claimed 50-100 million in this bracket, buying cars, fridges, designer clothes.  This is India's great hope, that and its insatiable desire for education.

The outer ring of Connaught Place is another example.  Hundreds of small shops, especially car seat covers, photocopy shops. Bare bulbs burning.  Several cinemas, all with solid names like Odeon, Regal.  Several eateries with lots of Indians.  The main restaurants are nearly empty – too expensive?  

I go to Gaylord.  There seems to be a lot of the Gaylord brand around – ice creams and such-like.  The restaurant is full of ancient semi-splendour, moulded swags on the ceiling, dusty chandeliers, plaster falling off central piers, showing the wood beneath.  Waiters ancient, but with a faded air of gentility.  Linen frayed and crumpled.  Food selection limited as ever, quality indifferent.  The only matter of note was the real spices – lumps of cinnamon, cloves etc.  Everything strangely quiet, as if everyone is waiting, or as if something happened years ago, but now has left everyone behind, still carrying on, but to no point.  I felt that I had been there forever, or for no time.

Walking back the air was still warm.  The shops along Janpath had placed all their wares on the pavement.  They all seemed to be painting their shops.  A festival?  Also, the booksellers had left their books beneath tarpaulin, unguarded.  Is the city really this safe.  It feels it.  

A note on Indian English.  Sunday, the magazine, used the phrase "chucked up".  I thought this was just another error; in fact, this is a real language in the making.  I cam across a book detailing the interesting divergences.  Indian English is not wrong, any more than American English is; just different.

26.10.86 Delhi 

Up betimes.  Indian Times, Sunday edition has pages of "brides wanted" and "grooms wanted". Would-be brides give age and weight, grooms their age and salary.  Women are either fair or homely.  Men and women emphasise their qualifications – women are "convented".  Really no different from the Village Voice personals.

To the Red Fort.  Surprisingly long way out, over the railway, past hovels made of cloth and wattle.  Red Fort area absolutely abuzz with people; real old Delhi.  The fort itself is stunning: huge red walls rising up sheer in an unbroken curtain.  Inside, once you pass the bazaar, all is relatively peace and stillness.  First there is the public audience hall – Diwan-i-Aam.  Today it is rather bleak red stone; once it was draped with fine cloths, and thronged with nobles, the prime minister before the emperor himself.  Today the well-kept grass again feels like an eternal British summer afternoon.

Behind it lies the main area within the fort, another open space with grass, but also with many fountains, sadly not working.  The main focus is the Diwan-e-Khas – the private audience hall.  Again much of the glory has gone – for example, the Peacock Throne; but the pietra dura inlays that remain, the ragged once silvered roof, do at least suggest past wonders.  As well as baths and various pavilions, there is Moti Masjid, the Pearl Mosque.  To enter, I was given over-shoes, and looked rather ridiculous.  The mosque itself is very small and intimate; particularly noticeable was how open it is: the sky forms an important element in the whole.  Interesting how many Indians had brought the family this Sunday.  Outside, there is a throng of hawkers et al.  But as ever, they are remarkably restrained.  I think this may be to do with my deeply black shades: without eye contact, it is hard to make much headway.  

For the same reason, my stroll down Chandni Chowk was uneventful enough, though I drew a few glances – partly because I was about the only white there, and about 6" taller than everyone else.  The usual sellers of water, but also many selling cheap garish posters – some of gods and goddesses, some of a semi-Indianised Jesus, some of saccharine little children.  As with the area around New Delhi station, mostly cycle rickshaws here – and piled with goods so high it passed belief – ten feet of laundry on one, wobbling precariously.

I took one of the rare motorised rickshaws to the Jami Masjid.  Since this cost me 5 Rs., I can't imagine what the bicycles cost.  The Jami Masjid complements the Red Fort.  Both are monumental, one sacred, the other secular; both were built by good ol' Shah Jahan, who seems responsible for many of the best bits of brick and marble in India.

As with the earlier mosque, it is like a cathedral with its roof removed.  After taking off my shoes and wandering around in my socks – again, rather daftly – I entered and brought a ticket for the tower.  There are two great towers flanking the main mosque. To reach it you climb up the wall then along, then up inside.  It is very narrow and very dark – a claustrophobe's nightmare.  At the top there is a low wall then a small balcony with an even lower wall – not for those with vertigo.  Noticeably, the Indians all kept inside; I didn't.

The view is superb.  Every city has one of these vantage points where you can sit and watch it unfold beneath you – the Campanile in Venice, the World Trade Center in New York (and London?).  The Red Fort was seen in its full splendour; nearby there were various parks with palm trees.  To the south-west, the mid-town high-rise developments near Connaught Place could be seen.  In between everything was a jumble of small buildings.  The haze of distance was very noticeable, and the horizon was lost completely  Much of this is smoke: the air is not very clean in New Delhi. The mosque itself is rather dull – with a smell of pigeons and decay.  Because of Islamic ideas, little decoration either.  

The trip back was less a journey, more an odyssey.  The traffic round this area had gone mad.  Everyone pushing and shoving – how bad accidents are avoided, I don't know.  Rickshaw drivers also take great delight in swooping across crossroads, even if they don't have priority.  Never mind overtaking on the inside, or whatever.  And they love their squeaky horns – a characteristic Delhi sound.  Yet the overall effect is comical – all the bicycles and rickshaws careening around like some huge dodgem.

PM to the International for poolside lunch and sunbathe.  I leave as the sun gets low and its rays weaken.  It is still only 3pm.

27.10.86 Agra 

To New Delhi station by taxi – a reasonable 15 Rp (about £1); road very quiet: London is busier than this.  Noticeable that all the hawkers and such like are absent from Chelmsford Road – what a name.  New Delhi station bustling; lots of offers of porterage etc.  Around 6.20am my train arrives. I have – I hope – reserved seat 4 in carriage 1.  There is no carriage 1 – or rather, it is carriage 3.  On the outside by the door is a computer print-out.  It looks strange to see "Glyn Moody" blazoned forth for the world to see.

The carriages are air-con, spacious and non-smoking.  Generally impressive.  Unfortunately, it turned out that the Taj Express was fatally flawed.  It wasn't express.  At about 9am, we stopped; in the middle of nowhere.  At first, it seemed temporary; after an hour or so, it clearly wasn't.  Like half the train, I decided to climb out to investigate.  I think this is the first time I've done this, and it felt very like being in some World War II film.  The train was very long, and people stood along its length.  It was lovely outside, and I was quite content to sit and watch.  Up ahead at the front of the train, some engineering works was going on, trying to fix the electrical conductor.

After a while, a distant hooting could be heard.  People cleared from the track.  I sat where I was: I thought it would be interesting to have several hundred tons of locomotive thundering past me.  It was; the earth shook authentically.  Unfortunately, a fine spray accompanies it.  I had forgotten about the toilets on board.  I confidently expect to contract some appalling gastro-intestinal disease. 

Eventually, we moved off.  We passed through small stations, all very quiet and sleepy – and sometimes literally.  We also passed trains going in the other direction.  Those carrying the workers into Delhi were crowded.  People hung on the outside, and even between the carriages, standing on the buffers.  We also passed a real museum piece: a huge behemoth of a steam train, battered and rusty but noble still.

We finally arrived in Agra some two and half hours late.  The hassling had begun on the train: people offering sightseeing, taxis. Luckily, it was a buyer's market: the main season begins in November.  So it was possible to ignore the rabble – though they were pretty persistent.  I was driven by a typical Sikh to the Clarks Shiraz hotel.  He loved Britain, he said, his father was in the British Army.  And sure enough, there was a Union Jack on the windscreen.  As we drove to the hotel, there were many army stations – Indian now.  The station we arrived at was Agra Cantonment.  With its spacious villas, Agra still has very much the feel of an Army town about it.

Booked in at Clarks Shiraz – for one night instead of two.  Tuesday completely full: mass bookings again – so unsporting.  Spent ages trying to get through to the Taj View Hotel – I was on the point of succeeding, when inevitably I was cut off.  In the end, I gave up, and went down to the swimming pool – fast becoming a pre-requisite in my stays.  Luckily they had a phone down there – of sorts, and I live in the optimistic hope of having a reservation.

I had assumed the sun would fall off in power just as in Delhi, but I realise now that Delhi is not representative, if only because it has so much smog.  Here the sky was slightly hazy, but much more blue.  The sun was stronger, but not fierce.  It is appallingly wonderful to lie out in it at the end of October.

About 3pm, I felt I had to see something of Agra.  Not the Taj Mahal, though.  I felt this with some certainty; I wanted to be fresh for the experience – not tired by delays and frustrations.  So instead I decided to visit Agra fort – yet another fort. There was no motorised rickshaw around, so I took a bicycle one for the first time.  We agreed on  5 Rs., with the possibility of extending the trip.  As soon as I mounted the frail contraption – there is no back support, and precious little to grab onto – I felt mortified with shame.  Here in front of me was a skinny little man, with his stick legs pumping away.  And there I was, a great lump of a Westerner, sitting back like some colonial oppressor.  It was even worse on one of the few hills I'd seen – most of India is completely flat around Delhi.  The poor little man had to get off and push it.  And yet I was a comparatively light load.  Indian think nothing of piling three or four people into these contraptions, plus plenty of baggage.

It was still a strange experience as we passed along to the fort.  Every now and then I caught glimpses of "it" – like temptations, invitations to taste a forbidden fruit.  I resisted.  After a fairly long while – Agra is really very spaced out, we came to the fort.

Initially, it looked almost identical to the Red Fort in Delhi, except that it was even more impressive.  This was partly because it stood in splendid isolation.  It certainly put to shame all our weedy British forts, Windsor only excepted.  Inside was even more miraculous.  Ascending a long ramp and then turning right, you are confronted with Jahangir's Palace, an enormous red sandstone building, with richly textured surfaces, a lawn in front, and all looking strangely quiet.

Entering, you come across a maze of rooms, some derelict, others still showing traces of former glory.  It certainly beats Delhi's Red Fort: it is large and brooding, and very evocative of ancient empires.  In fact, as one began walking through the complex, the scale gradually became clear; it was huge.  Unlike the Red Fort, which was primly guarded everywhere, here you could wander where you like, jump off where you like.  The views over the ramparts towards the Yamuna were stunning – and always with the great white cloud beckoning to the right.  The Yamuna is a classic oxbow, scouring out a huge plain, and leaving behind white earth/sand.  To the left there is a bridge; around it washing had been laid out to dry.

After the palace were the standard two Diwans of public and private audience.  Again, the Red Fort was dwarfed.  It look like some cross between a wooded mosque and Great Court Trinity.  And of course as with most architectures, there has been a constant interplay between sacred and secular.  In this Mughal style, the open air is a critical element.

The public Diwan was huge: a forest of pillars, yet retaining something of its origins in the ornate canopies it must have grown from.  The private Diwan was intimate in comparison, culminating in the tremendous backdrop of the river.  In the courtyard below, the grass had grown lush and a brilliant green.  Around it was the warm rosy stone; above it the hard blue Indian sky.  

Alongside was a small mosque; the Pearl Mosque remained closed.  In the great public Diwan, I felt for the first time near India, and in a foreign ancient land.  Perhaps the time of day helped, with huge, lengthening shadows; the mixed screeches of the grass green parrots and the chittering of the wild monkeys made it memorable, the day's declivity.  The air was hung with Indian scents, and warmth.

I left the fort feeling that I had arrived at last, that Agra was a key, and that the rest would fall into place.  My rickshaw man came to greet me – I had paid him nothing yet – and we went off for a ride through the city.  Or rather a push to begin with, since he had to walk us up the hill.  Old Agra is like those parts in Delhi.  Although everything is drab and dusty and squalid, I like it.  It seems to feel natural: the human equivalent of fractals.  Again I felt totally alien – I was a bit obvious in my shades, shorts and white t-shirt.  We passed all the usual things, plus a few new ones – like a TV repair school.  I wonder whether these streets are universal in India.  One factor which clearly does vary is the use of English.  Noticeable from the train was how Hindi predominated in small villages – but English abounded in Agra, often fractured.  Tomorrow, the Taj Mahal.

28.10.86 Agra 

The morning is warm, and the air clear.  About 9am I hire the same man as yesterday, but the whole day.  We agree on 20 Rs.  Once again, I am appalled by what I am doing.  More, I am appalled by the power I have through my money.  There is no doubt that power does corrupt, money is just the first step.

We arrive after a while at the Taj Mahal.  It is a long way – I am constantly amazed at how far everything is: Agra is so spread out.  From the outside you can see red towers through trees.  As you approach the main gate there is the first glimpse of white through the dark archway.  The white comes as a shock: after all the red stone its candour is disconcerting, ghostly.

Passing through the gateway and standing in its shadow, you get the full first impact of it.  I had expected to be disappointed: almost inevitably meeting an icon face-to-face is often disillusioning.  In this case, there was no disillusionment.  I had expected it to be rather small; it was grand and soaring.  I had expected it to be crowded round with oil refineries or cement works; it stood alone, with only its framing towers and the empty space of the river beyond.  I had expected it to shine with a kind of tinselly sheen like Sacre Coeur; but its surface seemed to be alive with constantly-changing gradations of white and pearl.

The setting was perfect.  As seems often to be the case, the formal gardens were well kept.  In particular, they were lush and green – the Indians seem not to stint with water, which in most countries is a precious luxury to be hoarded niggardly.  There were the same armies of thin men and women plucking at weeds one-by-one and watering each blade of grass.  This seems to be a very Indian solution to its employment:  divide up work to its tiniest unit, and share it out.  As a result, minuscule wages can be paid, and nobody need expend much of their little energy.

There was also water as a major element.  With the fountains turned off, the long artificial pool became a sliver of a mirror, with a phantom Taj within.  Walking towards the monument, I was impressed by the size: it is really big.  All pictures I have ever seen diminish it, make it a sugar confection.  The folly of trying to capture things with cameras.  Gradually the details as well as the overall form begin to emerge: the wild roulades of Arabic script around the frame of the main arch.  But with that an awareness of the four towers.  Take them away, and the Taj becomes a stumpy block on a slab; with them, the whole thing soars to heaven, powered by the towers' pinnacles, which echo the main dome.  And they also serve another purpose: standing at the head of the long pool, the line joining the two tips of the towers on each side meet almost exactly at the base of the arch in the centre.

The towers and the series or arches – the main one with its gentle point, echoed by smaller arches, two of which are seen at 45 degrees – are important, but it is the dome which defines the Taj.  At first, it looks like any other dome, yet there is something infinitely suggestive about it, something appropriately feminine.  Partly it is the gentle curves, culminating in the efflorescence at the top – just like a nipple.  For this is the Taj Mahal's secret: its dome is a perfectly-formed breast.  The breast of a young woman.

The marble itself is beautifully varied with mottling and variations.  This lends a sense of movement to the whole.  The inlays enhance this effect, giving elements of colour which seem to dance over the building.  Apart from the wild Arabic curlicues, the building's decoration is very restrained.  This is particularly so regarding the interior.  The formal coffins are again magnificently inlaid; around the room there is a frieze with yet more text – noticeable is how long horizontal lines flow through large sections of it.  Surrounding them was a fine marble screen, intricately carved.  The real tombs below were even more staid.

It seems that the outside is generally more important than the inside in these Islamic buildings, especially when the outside includes the sky.  So I went outside again and sat and looked.  The Taj itself is framed by the towers, and this ensemble by two further mosque-like buildings.  These are echoed in the middle of the garden, and the Taj Mahal itself is reflected in the huge entrance gate.

Apparently Shah Jahan had intended building another Taj for his own mausoleum, but in black marble, the dark image of his beloved Mumtaz.  The mind boggles.

All the while I was there, people offered to take my photo as if on Brighton beach.  I never fail to be amazed by this desire to have snaps of oneself with a building or landmark in the background.  Inevitably the latter is either invisible or out of scale.  Perhaps it just comes down to something to prove you've been there, as if some synecdoche of the experience were needed to justify the effort.  What of me, then – I who return from these forays empty-handed, but with a head full of memories?  I am regarded as a fool. Worse – nobody here believes me when I say I have no camera, they obviously think I am just trying to avoid paying extra.

Back to my little man outside.  The hill is so steep I get off the rickshaw.  I have to change hotels – inconvenient but not a great loss – I am not impressed by the Clarks Shiraz.   I have reserved at the Taj View – I hope.  It seems miles away.  From the outside it looks quite passable – and it has quite the most splendid commissionaire I have come across in India or elsewhere.  He is got up in brilliant red, is be-turbanned and has a good handlebar moustache.  He salutes grandiloquently as I arrive – a man of perception, obviously.

The hotel is quite good – or rather will be once they have finished it.  As the day wears on it is evident that a lot of work is still being done: the building echoes to a strange Varèse-like score or bangs and knocks and buzzes.  Unlike my father, I do not find this too distracting.  Besides it is cheaper than the Shiraz, and has a pool.

After my morning of culture I felt justified in indulging in a little hedonism around the pool.  Unfortunately, this too turned out to be in a state of flux and incompleteness.  Workmen were scurrying hither and thither.  There were no cushions for the sun-chairs, and the pool…  It was a soupy blue-green, and was already occupied by various animals, including something that looked like a cross-between a huge daddy-long legs, and a pond skater – except that it dived underwater.  Yet people still swam in it.  God knows what they will catch.  I contented myself with dipping in the sun, and was amazed to find myself sweating.  At times the sun really beat down; the difference from Delhi was marked.

After as much sun as I thought was good for me – physically and culturally – I went back into town.  By now, my little man was beginning to get fractious.  We went to the Cantonment station – I wanted to find out about ITDC tours to Fatehpur Sikri.  Since these were too brief I went to the bus station to get details of bus services there.  It was interesting to compare the two transport centres.

The station was touristy – touts everywhere, everything geared to parting people from their Rupees.  There was also flies everywhere.  In contrast, the bus station was local – even to the point of having nothing in English – and purely functional.  

To round off the day, I decided to go to Itmad-ud-Daula.  At this, my little man got really shirty.  He hadn't eaten all day, he said, and had had to pedal a lot (true).  I said I'd give him more – 25 Rs. - and he was appalled.  I said we'd agreed 20 Rs. For the whole day, and he said the rate was 70 or 80 Rs. For a day.  I felt on weak ground.  I tried haggling: 50 Rs., but he was having none of it.  I had to agree 60 Rs. And even this seemed paltry enough.

As we set off for what turned out to be a very long ride to Itmad-ud-Daula, I began to resent this scrawny little man, his greasy hair, threadbare clothes and weak little legs.  After all, he'd got off pretty lightly compared to his fellows: one of them had 10 schoolgirls in his rickshaw; but then again, maybe that's not so bad.  But this switch from guilt to anger – "it's not my fault, it's yours" – is common enough.  Another prerogative and pitfall of power.

As we preceded along seemingly endless streets of shops, all looking exactly the same, I tried once again to understand why, despite their griminess, they were still strangely attractive.  I decided it had to do with the fact that however ramshackle the building was, it was not some new prefab/breeze block job: it had grown organically.  Some were clearly quite old, with remnants of plaster work and mouldings.

Travelling along was also to travel in the land of smell.  India does smell, but not as I expected.  It is the smell of wood-smoke, incense, cooking, cow dung.

Apart from the embarrassment of forcing this poor man to cycle so far, I was also worried about my safety.  Time and again we narrowly missed oncoming traffic.  Everything stacks here: bullock carts are overtaken by rickshaws, who are overtaken by bicycles; they by scooters, and scooters by cars.  All at once, and the same on the other side.  Added to which, everyone cuts corners desperately, and the roads can be very rough, so you have the makings of a nightmare as far as inexperienced passengers are concerned.

It was around 4pm, and we hit the Agra rush hour; forget it, give my London any day.  Bullocks as ever were wandering around; how does anyone know who they belong to?  There were also a few goats.  We went down by the fort, and then towards the river.  There is a splendid Hungerford-type bridge over the Yamuna, a double-decker affair with a rail-track over the road.  According to an inscription, it was opened in 1907 or so, and toll-free.  The journey across it was equally precarious, with everyone overtaking everyone.

We made it to the other side, and were confronted by yet more shops, even poorer, if that is possible.  People were selling rolls of hay for horses, and bundles of sticks.  Wild-looking hairy pigs wandered freely.

As we arrived at Itmad-ud-Daula, I wondered whether it was worth it.  After all, I had seen the Taj Mahal – surely everything would be a disappointment after that?  In the event, it wasn't.  The memorial – which apparently was an influence on the Taj's architect – was quite different in effect.  It was smaller and much more intricate.  In form it consisted of the central building and four squat towers, joined by high walls.  In other words, this building did not soar like the Taj: instead, it had a rather minatory aspect, like a warrior's head peering over the battlements.  But what battlements.  The walls were minutely carved marble screens; elsewhere these were covered with colourful geometric patterns typical of Islamic architecture.  The overall effect was more immediately appealing and interesting than the Taj, though nowhere near so grand.  Inside was rather dull again, but the ceilings were splendid: scalloped forms of great complexity, though now sadly in decay.

But best of all was the setting, a jewel of a garden.  There was the same gate-house followed by a water course leading the eye to the monument.  There were the same flanking buildings.  And the same backdrop of the river.

Looking down from the terrace's considerable height, the river stretched out before me.  Below, a pig rooted around in the mud, on the opposite bank a herd of oxen were being driven home.  Back towards the bridge, on a huge white sandbank, a group of people worked by huge cans – washing perhaps?  Rows of sheets and clothes lay on the sand to dry.

As the shadows lengthened in this haven, there were the usual screeches of parrots, and monkeys darting back and forth, always with their terribly human movements.  I had seen some in Agra itself, looking like tiny guerrillas, stealthily penetrating the city.  We came back along the road underneath the walls of the fort, which reared up magnificently before us.  You would have to be mad to try to take it from here.  Rush hour had subsided, and in the cooling air glorious scents of grass and earth wafted to me.  

I finally paid off my little man, shamed into giving him 70 Rs.  This kind of power I could do without – I have a feeling you get hardened to it, as I was beginning to.  Not nice.

29.10.86 Agra 

A long, hot lazy morning by the pool  My day is complicated by the fact that I must check out by noon, though my train does not leave until 7pm.  I decide to go to Fatehpur Sikri – the hard way.  There is a tourist coach which leaves and returns too early, and spends too little time there.  Instead, I take the local bus, a mere 4.60 Rs. For an hour's journey.  The bus, like most other mechanical contraptions in India, is held together by pieces of string.  The seats are detachable, and metal edges are jagged.  I am slightly worried by the fact that there are no English signs on the bus: it could be going to Timbuktu for all I know. 

It isn't.  Instead, it is heading out across the totally flat, sandy landscape.  Most of India around here is flat – a bit like East Anglia, only bigger and drier.  We pass through a number of small villages, all looking much the same.  The bus hurtles along in the usual way, overtaking things that are overtaking other things.

Finally, a great curtain of wall hove into sight: Fatehpur Sikri.  This crazy place in the middle of nowhere was once a glorious capital.  Then it was abandoned, and has remained perfectly preserved, as a ghost city.  The village is as fly-blown as you can get.  Before visiting the city I had a Thums Up (sic) – currently my staple diet.  Black swirling masses of flies buzzed insanely around me.  After a few minutes of their endless irritations, I began to believe that they really were the devil's.

Fatehpur Sikri is placed impressively at the top of a hill – one of the few hills around here.  At one end, there is a huge mosque.  The main entrance is reached via one of the most impressive set of steps I know – huge treads, rising up steeply until at the top you are overpowered by the sheer face of the gate.  Despite cajolings by lads trying to get me to hire some overshoes for the mosque, I did not go.  Until I learn a little more about the finer points, all mosques are beginning to look the same to me.

Instead I went on to the city itself.  An embarrassing 1.50 Rs. to get in – less than 10p.  History, like everything else in India, comes cheap.  The first palace consisted of a large quad.  It was perfectly still, and that perfection was matched by the preservation of its buildings.  It was as if they had been built yesterday.  They gave a very strong sense of timelessness, of India the ancient.  And they were blissfully empty of people, so the magic was not broken.

Another thing which makes these Indian monuments so pleasant to wander around is the lack of supervision.  You can get practically everywhere, even to the most dangerous tops of towers.  There is none of this English nannying that we have.  

Round the back of this there was a huge colonnade courtyard, open on one side.  So many of these buildings bore striking resemblance to Oxbridge colleges.  Most of the rest of the buildings were in one large group.  They formed an amazing ensemble.  With their open towers and multi-platform construction, they looked like something out of Escher.  It really didn't matter that I had no idea what these things were.  Unfortunately it is hard to explain this to the importunate, uncomprehending guides whose services I spurned.  I want the experience to be unmediated, not pre-packaged in convenient tourist-sized gobbets.  And I want to move at my pace: even with personal guides there is no way to do this.  Some sights can only be understood by sitting and staring at them for half and hour.

Notable among the group of buildings was a five-storey tower – each storey smaller than the next, the whole effect being one of airy lightness.  The view from the top showed a huge flat plain to the horizon with occasional rocky hills.  One splendid and strange building had a central pillar capped by a platform which was joined by four walkways to the corners of the room.  The pillar was massively ornamented like a chandelier.  It was a wonderful folly.  Other notable elements were a human-sized playing board and a fountain garden with a central area.  Another small canopy had marble struts which made Bernini look staid.

Only one thing marred the overall effect of all this: the unremitting redness of the stone.  The characteristic red sandstone became oppressive.  In this country Chester cathedral is rather too much of a good thing; here it was a hundred times worse.  In a way it suited the heat and the sun.  Above all, it did partly explain why the Taj Mahal is such a shining impactful masterpiece: its whiteness is like a balm to sore, reddened eyes.

1986 India II: Kashmir
1986 India III: Jaipur, Udaipur


More destinations:

Sunday, 31 May 2020

1988 India: Delhi, Jodhpur, Jaisalmer, Varanasi

11.11.88 Delhi

In India again, though exactly where, I'm not sure.  The Connaught Palace Hotel – the Imperial was, unsurprisingly, full – which is near Connaught Place.  I have yet to find out how near.  It is marginally more expensive than the Janpath Hotel – 600 Rp. vs 550 Rp. – but much superior.  It is new and cleaner.  The Rupee has fallen against the pound.  I am about to eat lunch, though my body expects breakfast.

Some thoughts on the way here.  Visiting new countries is like encountering truly interesting people, or reading exciting – intellectually exciting, that is – books: they confront us with their different world-views, they make us think again.  It is hard to say yet whether things have visibly changed in the two years since I was last here.  I certainly have, not least in financial terms.  Now, there is simply nothing here that I cannot afford to do.  Which is rather sad in a way: there are no constraints.

After lunch in the hotel, I sleep briefly.  My room gives out due west, looking over the dusty, scruffy city.  Then, by rickshaw to the Royal Nepal Airlines to confirm my flights.  I am afraid that the sight of terminals in India still gives me pause for thought.  A day of confirming: Indian Airlines at the airport, British Airways later.  In India, you can not only do something, but must keep on confirming you will do it.

I walk back from the Imperial, its renovations finished from my last stop – I hope things are not too different – across the murderous rings of Connaught Place – the drivers really go for you here.  The late afternoon is surprisingly mild.  The dust is rising into the air, masking the sun.  Back in my hotel room, I order my statutory coffee and biscuits and watch the great red sun go down – only to lose it behind the one tall building in my view.  Rich colours, then sudden darkness.

Now I am in the hotel's restaurant; it is deserted apart from me and the musicians doing a sound check in competition with a muzaked "Ständchen".  Everyone is coughing.  Earlier, I had started to plan out the next three weeks; my itinerary looks totally exhausting.  I must be getting old.  I am, however, impressed at my body.  Tuesday night I came down with a wicked 'flu, head pounding and body aching.  It has almost gone now.  I hope.

Curious stepping into Connaught Place again: the poor grass, the poor people lying on it, the litter everywhere.  The crumbling stucco of the incongruous colonnades.  It was instantly familiar, and not at all foreign.  Perhaps I am finding it too easy to adapt to new locales.  The taxi from the airport: so knackered it had the acceleration of a dead slug.  All the gauges – speedometer, fuel et al. - were kaput, the light in the ceiling had been ripped out years ago.  And yet these Ambassadors still keep going.

12.11.88 Delhi

Not so impressed with my body as it decides to regress and go through tiresome stages like coughing etc.  Up with difficulty: I hate going east.  The Times of India under my door, its comforting mix of 30s-style English, and pure Indianness.  Then off to the railway station – more preparations.  This time, tickets to Varanasi.  It takes some time getting a look at a timetable.  The Tourist Office at least is better organised than before.  No queuing up several times, and everything is online (DEC kit).  And yet they were unable to book the return leg.  Useful… I thought to get round this using a travel agency next door to the hotel.  They tried, but the old allocation was too small this end; ho-hum… Also rang hotels in Jodhpur today.  Amusing then that my voice has dropped an octave – it is the high frequencies you need for phones… Somebody up there has a sense of humour.  

To the Red Fort.  Delhi is much bigger than I remember.  It takes quite some time.  And the driving seems to get worse – and noisier and smellier.  The Red Fort is packed with people, mostly Indians.  It is warm and balmy, not hot and muggy.  The haze seems very thick.  The gardens and diwans are pleasant, but pale beside those of Agra.  Back and everything early: I need to rise at 3.45am = 10.15pm body time – for the early morning flight to Jodhpur.

13.11.88 Jodhpur

Up at 3.45am, then to the domestic airport.  Surprisingly busy for 5am.  All the security blather is quite comforting.  Lots of Euros here, far more than I saw in Delhi (almost).  

The land over which we fly is so flat and barren, it is disheartening.  Gradually the Delhi smoke haze lifts.  We land at Jaipur, then on to Jodhpur.  Amazing airport – though this is far too grand a word.  It looks like a temporary soup-kitchen-cum-school hall – a rudimentary café, plastic chairs, people milling around.  It is easy to miss it completely until you are on top of it.  A half-hour wait for the luggage – which has to come all of 200 yards.  Then an autorickshaw to my hotel, which is disconcertingly close to the airport – and so far from the city.  It is very modern, with pool, but possesses the characteristic peeling and cracking of all India, however young or old.  It takes an hour before my room is ready.  Before – and after – the sun is so strong yet benign I am forced to sit in it by the pool for a few hours.  Purely restorative, of course.

14.11.88 Jodhpur

For the first time this trip, I remember why I came to India.  Jodhpur fort is stunning.  I had been to the station to buy tickets to Jaisalmer, and stopped off at the tourist bungalow to check on my Indian Airlines tickets.  Too early.  I haggle with an autorickshaw driver: 10 Rp. to the fort.  This seems a lot to me, it is not.  The fort is a couple of miles away, up a long, steep road.

The rock it stands on is impressive, but the screen walls even more so.  If I were a besieger, I would have given up.  As I enter, two musicians – nakers and shawm – play totally apposite music.  Above the filigree stone walls a perfect blue sky.  Well, here I am, on the battlements of Jodhpur.  Huge birds of prey wheel slowly above me.  Below lies the jumbled, bustling city.  Many of the houses are blue rather than whitewashed.  Looks like Cezanne gone mad.  Jodhpur is big.

PM.  Incredible market here, centred on an improbable clock tower like something out of rural England.  The fort looms magnificently above.  It is hot – but pleasantly so – smelly, with a general lively hubbub.  Flies everywhere.  Few tourists – I am enormously visible, but that is life.

These great, stupid cows in the middle of the road, the camel-drawn carts, beggars, old women, bicycles, the motorbike-powered buses.  Everything is stretched beyond reasonable limits – the rickshaws, the animals, the people, the land.  No wonder everything is cracked. It is amazing how all markets look the same: Samarkand, Jodhpur, Guangzhou.  Neat piles of vegetables and fruit: an almost 20th-century obsession with presentation.

Indian cities are bad for tourists: they are too spread out, too empty of incident.  It is not really possible to walk everywhere.  It is almost the ultimate challenge of travel: to be yourself, remain yourself.  If you are away from your daily life, its routines, its contours – who are you?  On your own you lose every more of your sense of self.  It is therefore, paradoxically, the best time for introspection.

Jodhpur Palace.  Rooms full of cradles, howdahs, miniatures, weapons, palanquins.  I am forced to go with a guide, and therefore see nothing.  

A crazy phone call through to Jaisalmer, the Fort Hotel there.  Even though only 300km away, his voice could have come from the moon.  What with my fading but present laryngitis, the hotel operator had to join in on my behalf with his stentorian baritone.  They claim to be full there.  I hope they are lying.  Turning up in the middle of the desert with nowhere to stay should be interesting.  I am lapsing into my old Raj ways: coffee and biscuits brought of an evening to my room as dusk falls.  Very civilised, very me.  I am a quarter of the way round the world from home.

15.11.89 Jodhpur

The day started badly.  My best-laid plans – of taking an extra night at the hotel but leaving for the 11.45pm train – foundered.  I am therefore here on sufferance, a waif.  In the morning, to the Government Museum in the park.  Half an hour early, I stroll round the park in the already pounding heat.  The gardens are reasonably well-tended, with splashes of colour (bougainvillea?).  Old men and children sit around, people on bicycles go about their business.  There seems to be a zoo here too.

Inside the museum – entrance 1 Rp. - it is pretty much as I expected.  Everything old, decaying, tended by tiny, uncaring old men.  Rooms of preserved animals – a scorpion with two tails – sculptures, model aircraft, miniatures, rubbings of engravings.  Nothing held the attention.  Back to the hotel to pack.  Zillions of Japanese around now.  Also, French, Italians, Germans – but not many Brits.  After lunch, I haggle with the autorickshaw boys for an all-in – less successfully than usual.  First to the Umaid Bhawan Palace.  I had seen this pink monstrosity lurking on the brow of the hill facing the fort.  Built ridiculously late in the Raj – 1940s – and designed by a PRIBA, it is huge and ugly and sad.

We cross a courtyard, around whose edges men are repairing gilt upholstery.  Then past cabinets full of glass or silver services; to the ballroom, dark and echoing, with unlit chandeliers; finally to the private theatre.  Everything cold and unlovable.  From the gardens, a beautiful view of the fort. Thither.  Not to see anything in particular, just to finish in the right way.  I sat on the ramparts, looking down on this town, picking out my few landmarks.  The bubbling blue houses I now knew to be Brahmins'.  The clock tower in the market, the Bhawan Palace.  The street cries are clear though not distinct.  A religious functionary is singing.

Wonderful cabaret going on here.  A bunch of Germans arrive, their rooms are not ready.  Irate Englisch-sprechende Panzer commander-type gesticulates wildly.  I fear there may be knock-on effects for my Thursday night stay.  After, there are now three huge groups here.  Bah.

In to town, to obtain berth number at the station.  All the bikes without lights, my driver "car" drives on the right-hand-side if it suits him.  A Sikh grabs a lift.  I say "paying half?", and to my surprise he offers – and pays – 10 of the 30 Rps.  People at their stalls in the pools of light; the evening air dusky and dusty.  It reminds me of Bali, except that the temperature is dropping.  I must not get caught on the train tonight as I did on the way to Udaipur two years ago.

Outside, the groups are eating a hot buffet.  Swallows (swifts?) swoop and skim the pool: mozzies, methinks.  Glad I'm here.  On the way back from the station, I had one of my periodic yummy "isn't life interesting?" attacks: things are looking up. 

16.11.88 Jaisalmer

Jaisalmer is pretty extraordinary.  The long, slow, cold crawl to it was hours across barren desert.  The railway station was far from the town, and nugatory; was this a good idea?  But from the train I saw the city walls, rising up like some vision of Jericho.  Inevitably the hotels I wanted were full, so I have ended up in a Rs. 30 place – no facilities, mandi not WC etc., etc. - but I'll survive.  I hope to take the early morning train, getting back to Jodhpur – and relative civilisation – by early evening.

I am now sitting on the roof of the fort, itself perched high above its own walls within the city.  The unbroken horizon is almost flat in all directions.  Tiny dark scrubs dot the desert surface.  Disconcertingly, the railway line ends here, emphasising that this is nowhere.  There are high clouds providing some welcome shielding from the sun's hammer.

Walking through the old town in the fort reminds me of Srinagar – open sewers running in the street, snivelling kids, refuse thrown out of windows.  But even more than Srinagar, this felt about 2000 years ago.  It is all so Biblical.  Some of the buildings are decaying.  Jerusalem after the fall.

Wonderful Jain temples sprout like bushes everywhere.  And everything made from this glorious stone.  This is not the Golden City, it is the Honey City: honeycombs everywhere, dripping with it.  The havelis are extraordinary: and they are so widespread – not just the famous ones.  Everywhere the ornate stonework – like carved wooden screens.  And yet everything is in decay – it is a fossilised world, on the edge of dust.  What was this place like in its heyday?  Pretty impressive, I imagine.  Interesting how the balconies reach out over the space.  The intricate carvings lend themselves to the light which makes the surface bustle.  Reminds me of San Gimignano – the heat, the back streets, the stones.

From the top, having passed through all these empty desolate rooms that were once so rich, I look across to the fort, and over a lumpy sea of sandstone and bricks.  From up here it is easy to pick out the famous havelis; not so easy from below.  One noticeable thing, practically never found: almost no TV aerials. Much of medieval Italy is spoiled by this.

I sit now on the cool roof-top of my Hotel Renuka, an occasional evening breeze wafting my way.  To my left, the fort's walls, to my right the setting sun – not very red, disappointingly.  This place feels very Middle Eastern, not Indian at all.  Partly the camels, but more the whole Holy Land sort of feel.  I confidently expect to go down with some dreadful disease soon: it is a long time since I have been so plagued by flies at a meal.  Unfortunately earlier in the day, I had seen where they had been stamping… Yuk.

The sandstone here becomes quite oppressive, as if the city rose from the sands, and will soon  sink back.  The desert is disturbing.  As I watch the last rays of the sun catch the vertical walls, it reminds me of when I was in San Gimignano, sitting in the fort, watching the sun on the great towers.  But comparing the two, the Italian experience is just so much richer: the art, the culture, the density.  Even things like food: eating good Italian cooking, looking out into the valley, was in its own way a key part of the whole civilised experience.

Having sealed my fate by eating at the Trio Restaurant, it makes sense to limit the damage by eating here again.  Inside, rather than outside [the lights have just gone] is nicer – warm, fewer flies.  There are three musicians playing the usual tabla/harmonium/voice stuff.  Very pleasant too.

This restaurant was also recommended – for what it's worth – by a fellow guest at the hotel.  He and  his lady friend have just returned from four days in the desert – and are ill-ish.  No wonder, some of the garbage they tried.  They youth of today… [lights on].

17.11.88 Jodhpur

Most of today on the slow train from Jaisalmer to Jodhpur.  I slept surprisingly well for my £1.20 accommodation.  Breakfast was frugal but filling – the coffee especially good.  Great fun at the station, trying to find the right coaches – along with a party of assorted WASPs.  Alas, I was stuck with five of them for the trip, including a crazed, fat, Chinese Hawaiian called Edith who wore a turban and had an insane laugh.  Almost as bad was the heat, the dust, the hard seat, the boredom of the endless desert.  Apart from that, OK.  Perhaps it's just old age, but I don't seem to relish these ten-hour train journeys as much as I used to…

Safely at the Ratanada Hotel, an oasis in all this hardship.

18.11.88 Delhi

Travelling is like learning.  It is easy enough to walk through knowledge – facts, a theorem – with a guide or teacher; but is only when you work through it on your own that you understand it.  Similarly, travelling with a guide gives you that superficial acquaintance that is no substitute for journeying on your own and really knowing.

A day of travelling then, with one characteristic incident.  We stopped at Jaipur airport for an hour longer than scheduled: Delhi airport was closed, to allow Mr Gorbachev to fly in.  Strange this: he was here two years ago, again at the same time as me.  He should cast aside his furtive coyness: if he wants to arrange a meeting, he should just come right out and say so.

Delhi seems drab after Jodhpur.  For one thing, the air is so polluted, there is a constant haze.  By the end of the day, the sun has lost all its power.  To the Indian Airlines office, where I boldly pay for my Delhi to Varanasi ticket, even though I am still number 2 on the request list.  Worth a gamble.  I still have my train ticket, though I do not relish another overnighter.  One factor that helped me decide was the absence of accommodation at the Connaught Palace.  India is getting too full.  And no luck in booking in Varanasi.  Ho-hum.

19.11.88 Varanasi

A day of gambles.  I decide to buy a blanket in case I travel by night.  But I am hoping that my request position of number 2 on the flight to Varanasi will get me there.  I go to the airport – a curious feeling since I do not know whether instead I will have to hot-foot it back to Delhi Railway station.  First bad news: the flight is put back to 12.45pm, cutting the amount of time I will have to get to the station.  Second bad news: I am second on the waiting list, true; but only for those travelling Delhi to Varanasi, of which there are four in all.  Three have so far turned up.  I need (a) for the fourth person not to appear and (b) for the request number 1 not to appear. The man is not optimistic.  I cannot tell if I am or not.  But I do know that I am getting uncharacteristically restless.  Partly, I suspect, because I am forcing myself to read my first Anita Desai – totally contentless.  But mostly because I keep looking at the clock, looking to see if the person has turned up.  Every face seems to be my executioner.

Come 12.15pm, and I start to edge towards the counter.  My name is called, I am given a boarding card – I'm through.  And yet I keep expecting that fourth – or first reserve – to turn up, and for my ticket to be torn from my hands.

The flights – to Agra, then to Khajuraho – are like the other internal flights – big bus trips.  Safety precautions are pretty minimal, and the landings are the worst I've encountered: the plane comes in too fast and is effectively dropped on to the runaway.

I am amazed to see the plane half empty: after all the fun.  But things are clarified when we arrive at Agra.  Almost 100 passengers, mostly Italians, pile on.  I fear they may be going to Varanasi, taking valuable hotel rooms.  But they all pile off at Khajuraho.  Unfortunately another party almost as big piles on, definitely going to Varanasi.  These groups do spoil it for everyone else.

The terrain from Delhi to Varanasi is rather more interesting than down to Jodhpur.  A great river – the Ganges – heaves into view, and there are outcrops of hills and lusher vegetation.  Near Varanasi, the Gangetic plain shows itself: well-irrigated arable land.  [It is funny: I am drinking coffee in my room again – but probably the best coffee I've had in India was in Jaisalmer, seemed ready mixed with milk and was deeply satisfying.]

Into Varanasi.  Great fun at the airport, which is some 14 or 15 miles from the city centre.  I had been told by a tourist board chappy that the fee would be 100 Rp.; he suggested sharing.  As it happened, this pair whom I thought were part of a group also asked about taxis, and we agreed to share.  Then the saga began.  One tout offered us 20 Rp. each as a price, but said we had to pretend to be going to his hotel.  At the door of the airport building, it was utter pandemonium.  So many crazed-looking men offering their services, shaking keys and god knows what.  I really experienced information overload: too many competing structures of equal intensity meant that for a minute I was unable to make a decision.  Finally, I decided the only non-contingent solution was to stick with the first bloke, but then he palmed us off onto someone else.  We followed him, with me shouting at him to wait, and to agree the details, knowing that there would be plenty of latitude.

First, he said that the price originally quoted – to go to the Ashok and another hotel on the river – was in fact only for the former.  We re-negotiated, agreed, and moved off.  Then he said that because of the narrowness of the lanes, his car could not actually get to the second hotel.  My companions were outraged, but eventually decided to follow me to the India Tourism Development Corporation (ITDC) office.  We then began the long and incredibly slow journey to Varanasi city centre.  The landscape was lusher than usual, but the hamlets along the way looked depressingly indistinguishable.  Nearer Varanasi itself, the hamlets began to merge into one urbanisation.  

The driving in India never ceases to amaze – and appal – me.  Their concept of left and right hand side of the road is shaky: often they will blithely cut across the incoming stream of traffic, or even drive the wrong way up the inside lane for a way.  They turn whenever, stop whenever, and pull out without signalling.  I'm no chicken when it comes to motoring, but this is pretty hairy stuff.  

Finally we reach the ITCD – after a fairly significant detour to look at two favourite hotels of the driver.  The office closed, but just as we are about to leave, a man appears, and starts offering to phone hotels for us.  We go into his office, dark and full of strange objects, together with the paraphernalia of his job.  He starts phoning: all full.  It is at moments like this that I wonder why I do this; why don't I go on a tour like everyone else, no worries, no hassles?  But I know it is for  precisely these challenges that I do it: my "holidays" are more travelling/travailing: extra juicy problems, more so than in daily life.  I must be nuts.

Finally, the Taj Ganges, the best hotel, ironically, has a room – but only for two nights, not three as I wanted.  So, still a little challenge there, not to mention the problem of getting back to Delhi in time for my flight to Kathmandu…

20.11.88 Varanasi

Problems, problems – just as I want.  No train available Monday, ergo Tuesday.  Which means I'm cutting it fine for the flight to Kathmandu.  However, a plus is an extra day in Varanasi – which I rather like.  

I am sitting now on the banks of the Ganges, a huge rolling river stretching away as far as the eye can see, left and right, and wide.  The steps down are surprisingly steep – perhaps a 50 to 70 feet fall.  The view along the banks is one of the most interesting I have seen, with temples and bathing ghats interspersed with high, veranda'd buildings.  Everything is a-bustle, with boats plying the river, people bathing, stallholders everywhere – apparently today is a festival.  Flowers on sale everywhere, everyone carrying bamboo (?) stalks.  On the opposite bank, crowds of boats and people.

This is the real India.  Moving further south along the ghats, I am now surrounded by the sound of bells: a deep bell above me, presumably religious, and the high tinkling tintinnabulations of the hawkers.  Flowers – bright yellow, orange, red, purple, white – everywhere [a goat has just eaten part of a stallholder's wares; goats, cows, but not camels, here.]

To my left, a high orange-stoned temple, in the characteristic style, topped with small pinnacles – and a tree.  Small temples with statues and garlands along the way.  Everyone wearing the red head spot on their brows today.  Big parasols – like something out of Canaletto.  A mass of roiling people, bright saris everywhere.

These is a lot of mud, high up on the steps – presumably from when the Ganges floods.  Where I came down to the river, they were hosing some of it away.  Nearby, a doorway has HFL and various dates – the flood levels, I assume; they are about 40 feet above the river level… The women washing fully-clothed, the men in their minimal dhotis or undergarments, the kids naked.  Holy men sitting reading, or just wander, chanting.

Now in a small rowing boat, going upstream.  We pass a burning ghat.  There is a small fire, some logs, a man standing by unconcerned.  Then I notice the two human feet stick out at one end.  It is a very strange sight.  No other burnings.

I am sitting now by the pool at the Taj Ganges.  The sun is very pleasant, filtered as it is by the omnipresent haze.  The journey back here was interesting.  The boatman dropped me off by the Golden Temple.  The voyage had been beatifically peaceful.  After passing upstream to nearly the last ghat, we moved across the river to the great sandbank.  Opposite Dashashwamedh Ghat, pilgrims were bathing in the river's waters. The view reminded me of Venice, of Hong Kong.

On land, I go downstream, past another burning ghat – great piles of logs everywhere, a few roaring blazes, but no bodies visible.  As I continue, a man stops me, saying there is a "family burning" up ahead, and that it was forbidden.  Could be.  So I strike off into the maze of alleyways, hoping to make it back to the main street.  But maze it was, and I soon had no idea where I was going. After about ten minutes of non-panicking I finally made it.  But an interesting experience.

Safely ensconced now in my hotel, I am struck again by the chasm which separates having a hotel and not having one: tiny in time, in gesture – yes/no – but a gulf in effect.  Before, you are homeless, doomed to wander an unknown city.  After, you are king of the castle, master of all you survey, a quite at home amidst all the foreigners.  

Another thought: whatever happened to the fourth person on the Delhi-Varanasi flight?  I feel strangely linked to this total stranger.  It makes me think of all the lines and stories which lead to me: the cotton balls which were plucked for my shirt – there were a finite number of them – the rain clouds which produced the Himalayan water which I drink, and so on.  Too many even to think about, let alone know.  Life is about simplifying all these threads.

Back down to the river for a walk downstream.  Past the main burning ghat – lots of bodies.  Then on to quieter ghats.  Late now – 4-5pm.  I take a boat again for half and hour in the dusk. Nearly full moon rising bright opposite the last nacreous touches of the sun.  The Ganges again very peaceful.  People are floating lit offerings on the water.

I take a rickshaw back.  It is now dark.  Without lights, amid the hurly-burly, this could be quite frightening.  The smell of wood smoke all but obliterated by all the noxious fumes – worse than any other big city.  But with all the shops lit by their single bulbs, their neat wares, it looks strangely like Christmas.  The road goes on and on, endless shops, endless stalls selling similar goods.  600 million people – ten times that of the UK.  Will this country ever lift itself out of poverty?  Such a task.  

Civilised: this restaurant has a sitar and tabla playing live.  And Beethoven, Tchaikovsky in the lifts… makes me a teeny bit homesick, culture-sick.

21.11.88 Varanasi

Down on the Ganges.  A great red sun rising over the sandy shore.  Cold.  Many people braving the waters.  Varanasi surprisingly quiet at 6.30 am.  A big red sun turning yellow, but it gives out little heat.  After about 45 minutes on the river, I take a rickshaw back to the hotel – and warmth.

Where I am then thrown out, and take refuge in the Varanasi Ashok, which is nominally 4 star, but a tip after the Taj.  No flights available, so it is 17 hours on the train…

It is interesting speaking English where the language is used as a lingua franca.  It is like being a wizard, eavesdropping on everyone…

22.11.88 Delhi

A long, long day.  In my reasonably crummy hotel until 12 noon, then to the station for 17 hour (nominal) trip.  Shared compartment with jolly young Sharon, a doctor near Varanasi.  Then read for hours, ate, slept reasonably well – after hiring blankets et al.  Aircon is definitely better.

Train 2.5 hours late – so I get to my hotel at 10 am, to leave at 12 noon – for which I pay £25.  But it's worth it for the shave, shower etc.  Now I sit waiting to take off for Kathmandu; is this possible…?

1988 Nepal: Kathmandu, Pokhara

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