DELHI THE CITY OF DJINNS. PART 1.

May 4 2008  | Views 274 |  Comments  (11)
DELHI THE CITY OF DJINNS. PART 1.   Delhi had a great reputation for its enormous wealth and at... Expand

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  Rama Rao Garimella posted 2 mnths ago

Dear Ashish,

I think that next to mark Tully William is the best Indophile. But his genre is history and not politics.

Secondly he writes after doing a lot of research and his writings have a lot of credibility and value. If u do not like him all I can say is let us agree to disagree.

Ramarao.



  ashishdimriwrites posted 2 mnths ago



Dear  Sh.Rama  Rao,
Though  it  was  interesting,  but  it  reminds  me of  R.V.  smith,  a  noted  Delhi  based writer.
If  you  ever  get  a  chance  then  please  read  old  editions  of  Stateman .
I  also  wish  to point  out  Dalrymple  resides in  a  place  near  Mehroulli-  a  historical  place,thus  he  often  uses  his   tete a tete  and  local  gossip   as  serious  historical  writing!

warm  regards,
yours  sincerely,
ashish  dimri



  R-Sharma posted 2 mnths ago

Thanks for the summer tip. Yes, it will be hot in Delhi. My mother has a nerve condition that makes it much worse in winter or even in cooler weather. Besides they are going with a well managed tour group and their stay in Delhi itself is minimal. They will be hitting a couple of hill stations soon. Hopefully it should be okay. 
Thanks again!



  kumud biswas posted 2 mnths ago

Dear Garimellaji, Tagore's poem is prophetic indeed. It was written after the Govt of India Act of 1935 and the communal award when the Congress and the Muslim League had started their quarrel and Jinnah had become adamant about a separate muslim state. The 'shadow of power' is obviously the British.Tagore was concerned more about the future of India. Has his misgiving come true? It is for us to answer this question.  My poem was written when Rajiv Gandhi was the PM. Finally, thanks a lot for the compliments.



  quasimodo posted 2 mnths ago

dear sir,
returning after along absence I see that you continue to be as prolific as ever.Interesting tour,
however as a non dilliwala who has stayed there I wonder whether it is a city of ghosts or lost souls,for in this megapolis,we see acts that seem to indicate that many of them are of lost souls
regards
Q



  Rama Rao Garimella posted 2 mnths ago

My dear kumud biswas amma,

I'm overwhelmed by ur comment in verse. U have verses in ur veins and poetry in ur soul. I doff my hat  to u.

As for the scorching heat of Delhi summer pl see my advice to Ranjini asking her not to send her parents to Delhi at this time of the year.

Tagore's poem cannot be anything other than excellent.

There gathers yet ahead

 A deeper gloom of degenerate days

I only hope that his prophecy of 1937 doesn't come true. Perhaps he must have penned these lines watching the war clouds looming large in Europe in1937.
We r through that and WW III is really frightening but unlikely.
Ramarao.



  kumud biswas posted 2 mnths ago

Day before yesterday I came back from Delhi, now a blazing furnace. By way of a comment let me post here two poems, one I wrote long ago and the other is by Tagore.

BANGA BHAWAN

 

I had been to that deadly city

In sunless December cold ---

Sleepy before sundown the deserted roads

Lined with ghostly trees and haunted steads

Not a single soul abroad ---

I felt myself desolate and completely out of place

Where the infantile regent holds his demented court

With his courtly cronies and jesting clowns

The freshly severed head of a fool

Fallen from grace in momentary whim

On public display

Reminding others not to grow too bold

To threaten the jealously guarded throne

And in the dark dungeon the regent’s next of kin

With eyes gouged out in agony groans

In the hushed harems the eunuchs and omraos –

Those adventuring birds of similar feathers –

Constantly conspire for a coup

To plunder more and for a bigger booty

In its midst, by that parlour of perversity,

Outwardly poor you modestly stand

Banga Bhawan, my home away from home,

Rich in love, compassion and care

To welcome me warmly in your motherly arms

In that outlandish macabre world.

------------------------

 

HINDUSTAN

 

From my boyhood days

I have heard its call again and again –

The land that lies in the west

Where India’s fate

Has danced the dance of death

From age to age

In wild orgies

Resonant with vultures’ cries.

At Delhi and Agra

From the foams of churning time

In arrogance and immense pride

Palaces have sprung up to kiss the skies.

Good and evil standing face to face

Have woven in utter confusion

Of dust and debris

A confusing pattern indeed.

New armies under new flags

Have written stories afresh

Tearing the threads of earlier stories.

 In the dead of night

Brigands have crossed its walls

And broken its gates

Amid the anguished cries

Of those whom they raped

They have fought for the place

And plundered the hungry.

With flaming torches of their treasury of spoils

They have lighted their nights

Now here at last

A vast burial ground spreads

Where the oppressor and the oppressed

Like pawns, black and white,

Once played a game of chess.

Both the victors and the vanquished

Have here buried

Centuries of their victories and defeats

In one common grave.

Now leaning on its broken knees

The shadow of power

 Passes over dying Jamuna’s flow

Leaving a ghostly message

That says –

There gathers yet ahead

 A deeper gloom of degenerate days.

Hindusthan from Nabajatak by Rabindranath Tagore. It was written on 19th April,1937.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



  Rama Rao Garimella posted 2 mnths ago

My dear Ranjini, 

I am glad to hear that ur parents r planning to visit New Delhi. But I would like to caution u that the city for the next few months will be invariably hot, terribly hot and ur parents may suffer sunstroke. It is dry heat and unbearable. suggest they postpone their visit to Nov or December.

With best wishes to all ur family

Ramarao.



  Rama Rao Garimella posted 2 mnths ago

Indu garu,

Some parts of New Delhi r very beautiful. Jantar mantar is one of them.

Thanks for ur comment.

Ramarao



  R-Sharma posted 2 mnths ago

Dear Uncle!
Very timely blog!
My parents are headed for a trip to Delhi in a few days. I must send them your blog.
It neatly summarises Delhi's history in a nutshell. A well-designed nutshell is all they can take considering how difficult it is for them to read stuff online.

George Bush always reminds me of Tughlak for some reason!

Good one!
Ranjini





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