by Ruskin Bond
She was a good lady, but I found it impossible to reciprocate her affectionate and even at times ardent overtures, so I had to ask her to desist from visiting me. The next day she sent her servant down with a small present—a little pot with a pansy growing in it!
On that happy note, I leave Mrs Santra and turn to other friends.
Such as Aunty Bhakti, a tremendous consumer of viands and victuals who, after a more than usually heavy meal at my former lodgings, retired to my Indian-style lavatory to relieve herself. Ten minutes passed, then twenty, and still no sign of Aunty! My other luncheon guests, the Maharani Saheba of Jind, writer Bill Aitken and local pehelwan Maurice Alexander, grew increasingly concerned. Was Aunty having a heart attack or was she just badly constipated?
I went to the bathroom door and called out: ‘Are you all right, Aunty?’
A silence, and then, in a quavering voice, ‘I’m stuck!’
‘Can you open the door?’ I asked.
‘It’s open,’ she said, ‘but I can’t move.’
I pushed open the door and peered in. Aunty, a heavily built woman, had lost her balance and subsided backwards on the toilet, in the process jamming her bottom into the cavity!
‘Give me a hand, Aunty,’ I said, and taking her by the hand (the only time I’d ever been permitted to do so), tried my best to heave her out of her predicament. But she wouldn’t budge.
I went back to the drawing room for help. ‘Aunty’s stuck,’ I said, ‘and I can’t get her out.’ The Maharani went to take a look. After all, they were cousins. She came back looking concerned. ‘Bill’, she said, ‘get up and help Ruskin extricate Aunty before she has a heart attack!’
Bill Aitken and I bear some resemblance to Laurel and Hardy. I’m Hardy, naturally. We did our best but Aunty Bhakti couldn’t be extracted. So we called on the expertise of Maurice, our pehelwan, and forming a human chain or something of a tug of war team, we all pulled and tugged until Aunty Bhakti came out with a loud bang, wrecking my toilet in the process.
I must say she was not the sort to feel embarrassed. Returning to the drawing room, she proceeded to polish off half a brick of ice cream.
Another ice cream fiend is Nandu Jauhar who, at the time of writing, owns the Savoy in Mussoorie. At a marriage party, and in my presence, he polished off thirty-two cups of ice cream and this after a hefty dinner.
The next morning he was as green as his favorite pistachio ice cream.
When admonished, all he could say was ‘They were only small cups, you know.’
Nandu’s eating exploits go back to his schooldays when (circa 1950) he held the Doon School record for consuming the largest number of mangoes—a large bucketful, all of five kilos—in one extended sitting.
‘Could you do it again?’ we asked him the other day.
‘Only if they are Alfonsos,’ he said. ‘And you have to pay for them.’
Fortunately for our pockets, and for Nandu’s well-being, Alfonsos are not available in Mussoorie in December.
You must meet Rekha some day. She grows herbs now, and leads the quiet life, but in her heyday she gave some memorable parties, some of them laced with a bit of pot or marijuana. Rekha was a full-blooded American girl who had married into a well-known and highly respected Brahmin family and taken an Indian name. She was highly respected too, because she’d produced triplets at her first attempt at motherhood.
Some of her old hippie friends often turned up at her house. One of them, a French sitar player, wore a red sock on his left foot and a green sock on his right. His shoes were decorated with silver sequins. Another of her friends was an Australian film producer who had yet to produce a film. On one occasion I found the Frenchman and the Australian in Lakshmi’s garden, standing in the middle of a deep hole they’d been digging.
I thought they were preparing someone’s grave and asked them who it was meant for. They told me they were looking for a short cut to Australia, and carried on digging. As I never saw them again, I presume they came out in the middle of the great Australian desert. Yes, her pot was that potent!
I have never smoked pot, and have never felt any inclination to do so. One can get a great ‘high’ from so many other things—falling in love, or reading a beautiful poem, or taking in the perfume of a rose, or getting up at dawn to watch the morning sky and then the sunrise, or listening to great music, or just listening to birdsong—it does seen rather pointless having to depend on artificial stimulants for relaxation; but human beings are a funny lot and will often go to great lengths to obtain the sort of things that some would consider rubbish.
I have no intention of adopting a patronizing, moralizing tone. I did, after all, partake of Rekha’s bhang pakoras one evening before Diwali, and I discovered a great many stars that I hadn’t seen before.
I was in such high spirits that I insisted on being carried home by the two most attractive girls at the party—Abha Saili and Shenaz Kapadia—and they, having also partaken of those magical pakoras, were only too happy to oblige.
They linked arms to form a sort of chariot seat, and I sat upon it (I was much lighter then) and was carried with great dignity and aplomb down Landour’s upper Mall, stopping only now and then to remove the odd, disfiguring nameplate from an offending gate.
On our way down, we encountered a lady on her way up. Well, she looked like a lady to me, and I took off my cap and wished her good evening and asked where she was going at one o’clock in the night.
She sailed past us without deigning to reply.
‘Snooty old bitch!’ I called out. ‘Just who is that midnight woman?’ I asked Abha.
‘It’s not a woman,’ said Abha. ‘It’s the circuit judge.’
‘The circuit judge is taking a circuitous route home,’ I commented. ‘And why is he going about in drag?’
‘Hush. He’s not in drag. He’s wearing his wig!’
‘Ah well,’ I said. ‘Even judges must have their secret vices. We must live and let live!’
They got me home in style, and I’m glad I never had to come up before the judge. He’d have given me more than a wigging.
That was a few years ago. Our Diwalis are far more respectable now, and Rekha sends us sweets instead of pakoras. But those were the days, my friend. We thought they’d never end.
In fact, they haven’t. It’s still party time in Landour and Mussoorie.
The Walkers’ Club
THOUGH THEIR NUMBERS have diminished over the years, there are still a few compulsive daily walkers around: the odd ones, the strange ones, who will walk all day, here, there and everywhere, not in order to get somewhere, but to escape from their homes, their lonely rooms, their mirrors, themselves…
Those of us who must work for a living and would love to be able to walk a little more don’t often get the chance. There are offices to attend, deadlines to be met, trains or planes to be caught, deals to be struck, people to deal with. It’s the rat race for most people, whether they like it or not. So who are these lucky ones, a small minority it has to be said, who find time to walk all over this hill station from morn to night?
Some are fitness freaks, I suppose; but several are just unhappy souls who find some release, some meaning, in covering miles and miles of highway without so much as a nod in the direction of others on the road. They are not looking at anything as they walk, not even at a violet in a mossy stone.
Here comes Miss Romola. She’s been at it for years. A retired schoolmistress who never married. No friends. Lonely as hell. Not even a visit from a former pupil. She could not have been very popular.
She has money in the bank. She owns her own flat. But she doesn’t spend much time in it. I see her from my window, tramping up the road to Lal Tibba. She strides around the mountain like the character in the old song ‘She’ll be coming round the mountain’, only she doesn’t wear pink pyjamas; she dresses in slacks and a shirt. She doesn’t stop to talk to anyone. It’s quick march to the top of the mountain, and then down again, home again,
jiggetyjig. When she has to go down to Dehradun (too long a walk even for her), she stops a car and cadges a lift. No taxis for her; not even the bus.
Miss Romola’s chief pleasure in life comes from conserving her money. There are people like that. They view the rest of the world with suspicion. An overture of friendship will be construed as taking an undue interest in her assets. We are all part of an international conspiracy to relieve her of her material possessions! She has no servants, no friends; even her relatives are kept at a safe distance.
A similar sort of character but even more eccentric is Mr Sen, who used to live in the US and walks from the Happy Valley to Landour (five miles) and back every day, in all seasons, year in and year out. Once or twice every week he will stop at the Community Hospital to have his blood pressure checked or undergo a blood or urine test. With all that walking he should have no health problems, but he is a hypochondriac and is convinced that he is dying of something or the other.
He came to see me once. Unlike Miss Romala, he seemed to want a friend, but his neurotic nature turned people away. He was convinced that he was surrounded by individual and collective hostility. People were always staring at him, he told me. I couldn’t help wondering why, because he looked fairly nondescript. He wore conventional Western clothes, perfectly acceptable in urban India, and looked respectable enough except for a constant nervous turning of the head, looking to the left, right, or behind, as though to check on anyone who might be following him. He was convinced that he was being followed at all times.
‘By whom?’ I asked.
‘Agents of the government,’ he said.
‘But why should they follow you?’
‘I look different,’ he said. ‘They see me as an outsider. They think I work for the CIA.’
‘And do you?’
‘No, no!’ He shied nervously away from me. ‘Why did you say that?’
‘Only because you brought the subject up. I haven’t noticed anyone following you.’
‘They’re very clever about it. Perhaps you’re following me too.’
‘I’m afraid I can’t walk as fast or as far as you,’ I said with a laugh,’ but he wasn’t amused. He never smiled, never laughed. He did not feel safe in India, he confided. The saffron brigade was after him!
‘But why?’ I asked. ‘They’re not after me. And you’re a Hindu with a Hindu name.’
‘Ah yes, but I don’t look like one!’
‘Well, I don’t look like a Taoist monk, but that’s what I am,’ I said, adding, in a more jocular manner: ‘I know how to become invisible, and you wouldn’t know I’m around. That’s why no one follows me! I have this wonderful cloak, you see, and when I wear it I become invisible!’
‘Can you lend it to me?’ he asked eagerly.
‘I’d love to,’ I said, ‘but it’s at the cleaners right now. Maybe next week.’
‘Crazy,’ he muttered. ‘Quite mad.’ And he hurried on.
A few weeks later he returned to New York and safety. Then I heard he’d been mugged in Central Park. He’s recovering, but doesn’t do much walking now.
Neurotics do not walk for pleasure, they walk out of compulsion. They are not looking at the trees or the flowers or the mountains; they are not looking at other people (except in apprehension); they are usually walking away from something—unhappiness or disarray in their lives. They tire themselves out, physically and mentally, and that brings them some relief.
Like the journalist who came to see me last year. He’d escaped from Delhi, he told me. He had taken a room in Landour Bazaar and was going to spend a year on his own, away from family, friends, colleagues, the entire rat race. He was full of noble resolutions. He was planning to write an epic poem or a great Indian novel or a philosophical treatise. Every fortnight I meet someone who is planning to write one or the other of these things, and I do not like to discourage them, just in case they turn violent!
In effect he did nothing but walk up and down the mountain, growing shabbier by the day. Sometimes he recognized me. At other times there was a blank look on his face, as though he were on some drug, and he would walk past me without a sign of recognition. He discarded his slippers and began walking about barefoot, even on the stony paths. He did not change or wash his clothes. Then he disappeared; that is, I no longer saw him around.
I did not really notice his absence until I saw an ad in one of the national papers, asking for information about his whereabouts.
His family was anxious to locate him. The ad carried a picture of the gentleman, taken in happier, healthier times; but it was definitely my acquaintance of that summer.
I was sitting in the bank manager’s office, up in the cantonment, when a woman came in, making inquiries about her husband. It was the missing journalist’s wife. Yes, said Mr Ohri, the friendly bank manager, he’d opened an account with them; not a very large sum, but there were a few hundred rupees lying to his credit. And no, they hadn’t seen him in the bank for at least three months
He couldn’t be found. Several months passed, and it was presumed that he had moved on to some other town; or that he’d lost his mind or his memory. Then some milkmen from Kolti Gaon discovered bones and remnants of clothing at the bottom of a cliff.
In the pocket of the ragged shirt was the journalist’s press card.
How he’d fallen to his death remains a mystery. It’s easy to miss your footing and take a fatal plunge on the steep slopes of this range. He may have been high on something or he may simply have been trying out an unfamiliar path. Walking can be dangerous in the hills if you don’t know the way or if you take one chance too many.
And here’s a tale to illustrate that old chestnut that truth is often stranger than fiction.
Colonel Parshottam had just retired and was determined to pass the evening of his life doing the things he enjoyed most: taking early morning and late evening walks, afternoon siestas, a drop of whisky before dinner, and a good book on his bedside table.
A few streets away, on the fourth floor of a block of flats, lived Mrs L, a stout, neglected woman of forty, who’d had enough of life and was determined to do away with herself.
Along came the Colonel on the road below, a song on his lips, strolling along with a jaunty air; in love with life and wanting more of it.
Quite unaware of anyone else around, Mrs L chose that moment to throw herself out of her fourth-floor window. Seconds later she landed with a thud on the Colonel. If this was a Ruskin Bond story, it would have been love at first flight. But the grim reality was that he was crushed beneath her and did not recover from the impact. Mrs L, on the other hand, survived the fall and lived on into a miserable old age.
There is no moral to the story, any more than there is a moral to life. We cannot foresee when a bolt from the blue will put an end to the best-laid plans of mice and men.
Love Thy Critic
HAVING JUST READ a nasty review of my last book in India Today, I take heart by recalling Hemingway’s direct action against critic Max Eastman in 1937. Eastman had questioned Hemingway’s manhood in his review of Death in the Afternoon, which he had sarcastically titled ‘Bull in the Afternoon’.
When Hemingway saw Eastman, he bashed him over the head with a copy of the book and then wrestled him to the ground. Trouble is, my critic is a woman. I’d lose the wrestling match.
This sort of response is rare, but exchanges between authors and critics can get nasty, with reputations maligned and genuine talents belittled. The worst sort of reviewers are those who make personal attacks on authors, usually a sign of envy coupled with malice. Thomas Carlyle called Emerson ‘a hoary-headed and toothless baboon’ and wrote of Charles Lamb: ‘a more pitiful, rickety, gasping, staggering Tomfool I do not know.’ But we still read and enjoy Lamb and Emerson; who reads Carlyle?
Of Walt Whitman, one reviewer said: ‘Whitman is as unacquainted with art as a hog is with mathematics.’ Swift was accused of having ‘a diseased mind’ and Henry James was called an ‘id
iot and a Boston idiot to boot, than which there is nothing lower in the world’. Their critics have long been forgotten, but just occasionally an author turns critic with equal virulence. There was the classic Dorothy Parker review which read: ‘This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force.’
When brickbats are flung at an author it is usually a sign that he or she is successful, has reached the top. No one received more abuse than Shakespeare. Hamlet was described by Voltaire as ‘the work of a drunken savage’, and Pepys said A Midsummer Night’s Dream was ‘the most insipid, ridiculous play that I ever saw in my life’. Macaulay sneered at Wordsworth’s ‘crazy mystical metaphysics, the endless wilderness of dull, flat, prosaic twaddle’, a description that would aptly describe Macaulay’s own meandering and monotonous style.
Should authors really have to put up with this sort of thing? Politicians do, and actors and sportsmen, so why not writers? As E.M. Forster once said: ‘No author has the right to whine. He was not obliged to be an author. He invited publicity, and he must take the publicity that comes along.’
Of course, some reviewers do go a little too far, like the one who once referred to ‘that well-known typist Harold Robbins’.
That was a remark truly deserving a bash over the head, on behalf of typists everywhere.
Writing for a living: it’s a battlefield!
People do ask funny questions. Accosted on the road by a stranger, who proceeds to cross-examine me, starting with: ‘Excuse me, are you a good writer?’ For once, I’m stumped for an answer.
Those Simple Things
IT’S THE simple things in life that keep us from going crazy.
Like that pigeon in the skylight in the New Delhi Nursing Home where I was incarcerated for two or three days. Even worse than the illness that had brought me there were the series of tests that the doctors insisted I had to go through—gastroscopies, endoscopies, X-rays, blood tests, urine tests, probes into any orifice they could find, and at the end of it all a nice fat bill designed to give me a heart attack.