Friday, August 25, 2023

The Old Order Changeth.....

Mangalore
5.30 am.  A cloudless sky

I think of Mangalore as a precocious teen that has grown a trifle too soon.  On the main roads, I walk past malls, shut at this early hour, and the rest of urban paraphernalia: endless rows of shops and restaurants, buses rushing by and tall apartment towers with awful names like Elite-something and Vishwas-I-am-Ugly something and an eyesore called Stone Heights, which should be called Stone Heights-of-Hideousness.

So, I turn off the road at the first possibility and enter a side road – of not much help – so, then a side road off the side road.  


It is an entrance into a different, ancestral world; an old stately house, now in ruins, its porch a remnant of colonial grandeur, each window seeking solace in repair.  A cattle trap and a road beyond that is now home to Colocasia.  

A lovely villa called Howzaat! – the owner wants you to know that he lives the game and retired from LIC – and walls of laterite and tile that live, if you know what I mean, carrying a profusion of biodiversity and memories of better days, yet holding tenaciously on to a fragile present.  



Sometime later, I cross the main road and enter another lane and the stately houses live on, here in better, occasionally impeccable, condition.  The designs reveal their vintage, some built in the early years of the 20th century with heavy mortar, thick walls of laterite stone and round pillars, tiled roofs and all-wooden windows, others in the immediate post-colonial years and yet others in the 70’s and 80’s when cement became ubiquitous and grills were implanted in windows.  About the only thing I disapprove of are the needlessly-intricate designs of some of these grills, particularly those that have been added to old homes.  As someone once said, grills are not the main thing, they are the only thing. 
I think that someone was me.

These villas once received the fragrance of the sea each morning and, as I walk, I imagine that old homes and stones have stories to tell; of an era that lived tradition and slow food and joint family, with all its drawbacks and constriction, yet this remarkable town, as it used to be, was far more liberal, evolved and aware in its time.  I imagine stories of drama, valour and intrigue that would be enthralling to hear.  But this is – as you have now guessed - a flight of fancy and morning wanderings of the mind (and absence of tea in the system).  The Rasquinhas and Kamaths and D’Souzas and Pintos and Shenoys who have lived in these homes for generations are some of the brainiest people ever – it’s eating fish every day, no doubt, that endows those brains.

I walk around a cricket field: a charming little building alongside the field houses a Military Hotel (for those from a later era, a Military Hotel is one that serves non-veg, a Hindu MH is one that will not serve beef).  This field has fine banyan trees, ones that regular walkers pay little attention too, and I hear parakeets and mynahs in the canopy. 

A convent with a stunning jackfruit tree by its side, a man walking past with an umbrella – which, this morning, is the pinnacle of pessimism – a white-breasted kingfisher shrieking past on its always-urgent errand, a walker who has spread his morning newspaper out on the stack of stones around a tree.  

And, finally, a God-awful syrupy glass of milky tea. I have forgotten – for once – to pack tea in my luggage, so call this Divine Retribution. 
It’s time to hit the road – rather the rail – again.







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