by Viraj
Circar
Being a planter’s child meant that each time I would go back to
boarding school from my summer or winter vacations I would have an interesting
‘animal story’. Most of my friends in school never believed them, but I never
stopped telling them. Thinking back now, as an urban resident, perhaps they did
sound a little fanciful. But, well, enchanting things do happen in enchanted
places.
The Sylee Tea Estate Manager’s residence was a massive two storied
edifice. A fair amount of the weight of the top storey was supported by about
nine fairly slim columns, a design often referred to as a ‘Chang Bungalow’. It
allowed for a bottom area that contained a high ceilinged veranda, and to my
mother’s delight, ample sun and space for her many, many flower pots. My mother
cared deeply for her assortment of flowers and one of her pleasures and
quandaries was always how and where to arrange them. Like an artist, delighting
in their myriad pigments and shapes, she would try all manner of permutations
and combinations depending on the season.
Sylee lay in an elephant’s corridor. It was their forest habitat
that had been cleared by tea entrepreneurs over a hundred and fifty years ago
and the herds continued to make their territorial claim by marching over the
estate premises with scant regard for the carefully laid sections of tea
bushes, labour lines, fencings and drains. When this happened, an ‘elephant
squad’ was called in, which as I remember consisted of a 4X4 jeep with a
carrier or ‘machaan’ on top, on which sat quite a number of people hooting,
whistling and throwing ‘chocolate bombs’ to change the locus of the herd and
send them back to the forest. I was once given permission by my parents to join
the forest officials on the machaan. If I heard myself talking about
being smack-bang in the middle of a herd of about twenty elephants, on a golf
course fairway, trying to trumpet as loud as them, I wouldn’t believe me
either!
Often when we sat in the veranda in the evenings, the cacophony of
frogs and crickets would be accompanied by the snorting and sneezing of
elephants thrashing about in the foliage behind the hibiscus hedges that formed
the perimeter to the bungalow compound.
There was one evening though, that they decided to invite
themselves in.
It had been a rainy day and we were sitting in the veranda having
tea with my father who had just come back from work. The frogs had turned up
their volume, but in that special way it is in the wild, it was as if the
silence had been amplified too, and you could hear the dripping, shuddering
leaves from my mother’s carefully manicured garden all around us.
Suddenly Somra the chowkidaar ran up, steel flashlight and lathi
in hand, and told us with a curious mixture of respectfulness and
impatience that we should run upstairs because the elephants had come into the malibari
(vegetable garden). Food supplies were always short in the forests and herds
regularly came into the estate areas in search of ‘makkai’ (corn) that the tea
pluckers grew in their spare time. Apparently some intrepid elephant had just
discovered our malibari.
Upstairs, from the room directly above the veranda, we waited and
watched with bated breath. The elephants didn’t keep us waiting too long and
before we knew it about six or seven giants lumbered onto the front lawn. I
noticed my father watching with pursed lips as a tusker grazed the Gypsy parked
in the porch, rocking it like a boat on choppy water. Maybe it was our
imagination, but for a few moments after this the tusker seemed to be looking
around, searching for something. My eyes met my father’s. This display of the
consequences of their sheer size had got both of us thinking the same thing.
The nine columns! What if the tusker had developed an itch on its side and was
looking for something to scratch it against? A light rub would bring the whole
bungalow crashing down.
We looked at my mother who was standing behind us, rigid, her
hands covering her mouth. Had the same thing occurred to her? It must have,
because she looked terribly frightened. I reached out for her to put one of her
hands in mine. As it turned out, she had a different fear in her mind. Her
hands came away from her face and both my father and I heard her whisper,
‘Those animals will destroy my flower pots!’
The herd left as peacefully as it had come. In the morning we
surveyed the damage to the bungalow compound. There was surprisingly little,
apart from a tangle of wires where a fencing used to be and a slight dent on
the side of the Gypsy. They seemed to have stepped gingerly around most of my
mother’s plants and flower beds too. As my father and I continued our survey,
we noticed my mother in the front lawn gesticulating excitedly to Biru the headmali
(head gardener). We walked up to her and she pointed out how the wet earth had
been neatly depressed with alternating circles from the elephants’ footsteps.
We looked around to see Biru and a few of the other malis
walking towards us, each with a flowerpot in their hands. They placed them as
per their instructions in the alternating holes, making a pleasant symmetrical,
if somewhat meandering, pattern.
‘Isn’t it great?’ she exclaimed excitedly. ‘I noticed the pattern
last night from upstairs and I was wondering what to do with the extra pots!’
The writer, Viraj Circar |
7 comments:
Viraj..there's magic in the way you've used expressions to make your experience come alive!
God Bless!
Oh yes..we believe you,even though your school friends may have been skeptical.
Thanks, Ranu Auntie! I need a few believers!!
Good to hear from you!
Viraj.
During our stay at Sylee Factory Bungalow next door the elephants frequented to eat ripe Tamarind lying scattered below the trees in the bungalow compound.
Enjoyed your narration....
Viraj, the artist in you leaps out from this article. I can picture everything. Hope to read many more. Maybe some illustrations from you too?
Vivid❣️
A natural writer you are Viraj , comes in the genes ....a superbly told tale , perfect diction ... spontaneous flow ! A visual tale that one not only reads but watches.... and having lived in a Chung bungalow i believe you . Those wild ones invaded labour lines for local brew, bungalows for makai and bananas and found no better place than the smooth chung bungalow pillars to rub their backs. Being cha ka baba or baby is a privilege only Royals have... am i right ? God bless
Vivid and lucid ! Brilliant narration
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