THE COMEDY OF ERRORS AND THE EXPLOITATION OF BOONDI. THE CASTAWAY OF THE
DISPENSARY AND THE CHILDREN OF THE SCHOOLS. A CONSIDERATION OF THE
SHIELDS OF RAJASTHAN AND OTHER TRIFLES.
It is high time that a new treaty
were made with Maha Rao Raja Ram Singh, Bahadur, Raja
of Boondi. He keeps the third article of the old
one too faithfully, which says that he “shall
not enter into negotiations with any one without the
consent of the British Government.” He
does not negotiate at all. Arrived at Boondi Gate,
the Englishman asked where he might lay his head for
the night, and the Quarter Guard with one accord said:
“The Sukh Mahal, which is beyond the city,”
and the tonga went thither through the length of the
town till it arrived at a pavilion on a lake a
place of two turrets connected by an open colonnade.
The “house” was open to the winds of heaven
and the pigeons of the Raj; but the latter had polluted
more than the first could purify. A snowy-bearded
chowkidar crawled out of a place of tombs,
which he seemed to share with some monkeys, and threw
himself into Anglo-Saxon attitudes. He was a
great deal worse than Ram Baksh, for he said that
all the Officer Sahibs of Deoli came to the Sukh Mahal
for shikar and never went away again,
so pleased were they. The Sahib had brought the
Honour of his Presence, and he was a very old man,
and without a written permit could do nothing.
Then he fell deeply asleep without warning; and there
was a pause, of one hour only, which the Englishman
spent in seeing the lake. It, like the jhils on
the road, wound in and out among the hills, and, on
the bund side, was bounded by a hill of black rock
crowned with a chhatri of grey stone. Below
the bund was a garden as fair as eye could wish, and
the shores of the lake were dotted with little temples.
Given a habitable house, a mere dak-bungalow, it
would be a delightful spot to rest in. Warned
by some bitter experiences in the past, the Englishman
knew that he was in for the demi-semi-royal or embarrassing
reception, when a man, being the unwelcome guest of
a paternal State, is neither allowed to pay his way
and make himself comfortable, nor is he willingly entertained.
When he saw a one-eyed munshi (clerk), he felt
certain that Ganesh had turned upon him at last.
The munshi demanded and received the purwana,
or written permit. Then he sat down and questioned
the traveller exhaustively as to his character and
profession. Having thoroughly satisfied himself
that the visitor was in no way connected with the
Government or the “Agenty Sahib Bahadur,”
he took no further thought of the matter and the day
began to draw in upon a grassy bund, an open-work
pavilion, and a disconsolate tonga.
At last the faithful servitor, who
had helped to fight the Battle of the Mail Bags at
Udaipur, broke his silence, and vowing that all these
devil-people not more than twelve had
only come to see the fun, suggested the breaking of
the munshi’s head. And, indeed, that
seemed the best way of breaking the ice; for the munshi
had, in the politest possible language, put forward
the suggestion that there was nothing particular to
show that the Sahib who held the purwana had
really any right to hold it. The chowkidar
woke up and chanted a weird chant, accompanied by
the Anglo-Saxon attitudes, a new set. He was an
old man, and all the Sahib-log said so, and within
the pavilion were tables and chairs and lamps and
bath-tubs, and everything that the heart of man could
desire. Even now an enormous staff of menials
were arranging all these things for the comfort of
the Sahib Bahadur and Protector of the Poor, who had
brought the honour and glory of his Presence all the
way from Deoli. What did tables and chairs and
eggs and fowls and very bright lamps matter to the
Raj? He was an old man and ... “Who
put the present Raja on the throne?” “Lake
Sahib,” promptly answered the chowkidar.
“I was there. That is the news of many old
years.” Now Tod says it was he himself
who installed “Lalji the beloved” in the
year 1821. The Englishman began to lose faith
in the chowkidar. The munshi said
nothing but followed the Englishman with his one workable
eye. A merry little breeze crisped the waters
of the lake, and the fish began to frolic before going
to bed.
“Is nobody going to do or bring
anything?” said the Englishman, faintly, wondering
whether the local gaol would give him a bed if he killed
the munshi. “I am an old man,”
said the chowkidar, “and because of their
great respect and reverence for the Sahib in whose
Presence I am only a bearer of orders and a servant
awaiting them, men, many men, are bringing now tent-flies
which I with my own hands will wrap, here and there,
there and here, in and about the pillars of the place;
and thus you, O Sahib, who have brought the honour
of your Presence to the Boondi Raj over the road to
Deoli, which is a kutcha road, will be provided
with a very fine and large apartment over which I will
watch while you go to kill the tigers in these hills.”
By this time two youths had twisted
canvas round some of the pillars of the colonnade,
making a sort of loose-box with a two-foot air-way
all round the top. There was no door, but there
were unlimited windows. Into this enclosure the
chowkidar heaped furniture on which many generations
of pigeons had evidently been carried off by cholera,
until he was entreated to desist. “What,”
said he, scornfully, “are tables and chairs
to this Raj? If six be not enough, let the Presence
give an order, and twelve shall be forthcoming.
Everything shall be forthcoming.” Here
he filled a native lamp with kerosene oil and set it
in a box upon a stick. Luckily, the oil which
he poured so lavishly from a quart bottle was bad,
or he would have been altogether consumed.
Night had fallen long before this
magnificence was ended. The superfluous furniture chairs
for the most part was shovelled out into
the darkness, and by the light of a flamboyant lamplet a
merry wind forbade candles the Englishman
went to bed, and was lulled to sleep by the rush of
the water escaping from the overflow trap and the splash
of the water-turtle as he missed the evasive fish.
It was a curious sight. Cats and dogs rioted
about the enclosure, and a wind from the lake bellied
the canvas. The brushwood of the hills around
snapped and cracked as beasts went through it, and
creatures not jackals made dolorous
noises. On the lake it seemed that hundreds of
water-birds were keeping a hotel, and that there were
arrivals and departures throughout the night.
The Raj insisted upon providing a guard of two sepoys,
very pleasant men, on four rupees a month. These
said that tigers sometimes wandered about on the hills
above the lake, but were most generally to be found
five miles away. And the Englishman promptly dreamed
that a one-eyed tiger came into his tent without a
purwana. But it was only a wild cat after
all; and it fled before the shoes of civilisation.
The Sukh Mahal was completely separated
from the city, and might have been a country-house.
It should be mentioned that Boondi is jammed into
a V-shaped gorge the valley at the main
entrance being something less than five hundred yards
across. As it splays out, the thickly packed
houses follow its lines, and, seen from above, seem
like cattle herded together preparatory to a stampede
through the gate. Owing to the set of the hills,
very little of the city is visible except from the
Palace. It was in search of this latter that
the Englishman went abroad and became so interested
in the streets that he forgot all about it for a time.
Jeypore is a show-city and is decently drained; Udaipur
is blessed with a State Engineer and a printed form
of Government; for Jodhpur the dry sand, the burning
sun, and an energetic doctor have done a good deal,
but Boondi has none of these things. The crampedness
of the locality aggravates the evil, and it can only
be in the rains which channel and furrow the rocky
hillsides that Boondi is at all swept out. The
Nal Sagar, a lovely little stretch of water, takes
up the head of the valley called Banda Gorge, and
must, in the nature of things, receive a good deal
of unholy drainage. But setting aside this weakness,
it is a fascinating place this jumbled
city of straight streets and cool gardens, where gigantic
mangoes and peepuls intertwine over gurgling watercourses,
and the cuckoo comes at midday. It boasts no foolish
Municipality to decree when a house is dangerous and
uninhabitable. The newer shops are built into,
on to, over, and under time-blackened ruins of an
older day, and the little children skip about tottering
arcades and grass-grown walls, while their parents
chatter below in the crowded bazaar. In the black
slums, the same stones seem to be used over and over
again for house-building. Wheeled conveyances
are scarce in Boondi city there is scant
room for carts, and the streets are paved with knobsome
stones, unpleasant to walk over. From time to
time an inroad of Bunjaras’ pack-bullocks
sweeps the main streets clear of life, or one of the
Raja’s elephants he has twelve of
them blocks the way. But, for the
most part, the foot-passengers have all the city for
their own.
They do not hurry themselves.
They sit in the sun and think, or put on all the arms
in the family, and, hung with ironmongery, parade before
their admiring friends. Others, lean, dark men,
with bound jaws and only a tulwar for weapon, dive
in and out of the dark alleys, on errands of State.
It is a beautifully lazy city, doing everything in
the real, true, original native way, and it is kept
in very good order by the Durbar. There either
is or is not an order for everything. There is
no order to sell fishing-hooks, or to supply an Englishman
with milk, or to change for him currency notes.
He must only deal with the Durbar for whatever he
requires; and wherever he goes he must be accompanied
by at least two armed men. They will tell him
nothing, for they know or affect to know nothing of
the city. They will do nothing except shout at
the little innocents who joyfully run after the stranger
and demand pice, but there they are, and there
they will stay till he leaves the city, accompanying
him to the gate, and waiting there a little to see
that he is fairly off and away. Englishmen are
not encouraged in Boondi. The intending traveller
would do well to take a full suit of Political uniform
with the sunflowers, and the little black sword to
sit down upon. The local god is the “Agenty
Sahib,” and he is an incarnation without a name at
least among the lower classes. The educated, when
speaking of him, always use the courtly “Bahadur”
affix; and yet it is a mean thing to gird at a State
which, after all, is not bound to do anything for
intrusive Englishmen without any visible means of
livelihood. The King of this fair city should
declare the blockade absolute, and refuse to be troubled
with any one except “Colon-nel Baltah,
Agenty Sahib Bahadur” and the Politicals.
If ever a railway is run through Kotah, as men on
the Bombay side declare it must be, the cloistered
glory of Boondi will depart, for Kotah is only twenty
miles easterly of the city and the road is moderately
good. In that day the Globe-trotter will pry
about the place, and the Charitable Dispensary a
gem among dispensaries will be public property.
The Englishman was hunting for the
statue of a horse, a great horse hight Hunja, who
was a steed of Irak, and a King’s gift to Rao
Omeda, one time monarch of Boondi. He found it
in the city square as Tod had said; and it was an
unlovely statue, carven after the dropsical fashion
of later Hindu art. No one seemed to know anything
about it. A little further on, one cried from
a byway in rusty English: “Come and see
my Dispensary.” There are only two men
in Boondi who speak English. One is the head,
and the other the assistant, teacher of the English
side of Boondi Free School. The third was, some
twenty years ago, a pupil of the Lahore Medical College
when that institution was young; and he only remembered
a word here and there. He was head of the Charitable
Dispensary; and insisted upon, then and there, organising
a small levee and pulling out all his books.
Escape was hopeless: nothing less than a formal
inspection and introduction to all the native physicians
would serve. There were sixteen beds in and about
the courtyard, and between twenty and thirty out-patients
stood in attendance. Making allowances for untouched
Orientalism, the Dispensary is a good one, and must
relieve a certain amount of human misery. There
is no other in all Boondi. The operation-book,
kept in English, showed the principal complaints of
the country. They were: “Asthama,”
“Numonia,” “Skindiseas,” “Dabalaty”
and “Loin-bite.” This last item occurred
again and again three and four cases per
week and it was not until the Doctor said
“Sher se mara” that the Englishman
read it aright. It was “lion-bite,”
or tiger, if you insist upon zoological accuracy.
There was one incorrigible idiot, a handsome young
man, naked as the day, who sat in the sunshine, shivering
and pressing his hands to his head. “I have
given him blisters and setons have
tried native and English treatment for two years,
but it is no use. He is always as you see him,
and now he stays here by the favour of the Durbar,
which is a very good and pitiful Durbar,” said
the Doctor. There were many such pensioners of
the Durbar men afflicted with chronic “asthama”
who stayed “by favour,” and were kindly
treated. They were resting in the sunshine their
hands on their knees, sure that their daily dole of
grain and tobacco and opium would be forthcoming.
“All folk, even little children, eat opium here,”
said the Doctor, and the diet-book proved it.
After laborious-investigation of everything, down
to the last indent to Bombay for Europe medicines,
the Englishman was suffered to depart. “Sir,
I thank ...,” began the Native Doctor, but the
rest of the sentence stuck. Sixteen years in
Boondi does not increase knowledge of English; and
he went back to his patients, gravely conning over
the name of the Principal of the Lahore Medical School a
College now who had taught him all he knew,
and to whom he intended to write. There was something
pathetic in the man’s catching at news from the
outside world of men he had known as Assistant and
House Surgeons who are now Rai Bahadurs, and
his parade of the few shreds of English that still
clung to him. May he treat “loin-bites”
and “catrack” successfully for many years.
In the happy, indolent fashion that must have merits
which we cannot understand, he is doing a good work,
and the Durbar allows his Dispensary as much as it
wants.
Close to the Dispensary stood the
Free School, and thither an importunate munshi
steered the Englishman, who, by this time, was beginning
to persuade herself that he really was an accredited
agent of Government, sent to report on the progress
of Boondi. From a peepul-shaded courtyard came
a clamour of young voices. Thirty or forty little
ones, from five to eight years old, were sitting in
an open verandah learning accounts and Hindustani,
said the teacher. No need to ask from what castes
they came, for it was written on their faces that
they were Mahajans, Oswals, Aggerwals, and in one or
two cases, it seemed, Sharawaks of Guzerat. They
were learning the business of their lives, and, in
time, would take their father’s places, and show
in how many ways money might be manipulated.
Here the profession-type came out with startling distinctness.
Through the chubbiness of almost babyhood, or the
delicate suppleness of maturer years, in mouth and
eyes and hands, it betrayed itself. The Rahtor,
who comes of a fighting stock, is a fine animal, and
well bred; the Hara, who seems to be more compactly
built, is also a fine animal; but for a race that show
blood in every line of their frame, from the arch
of the instep to the modelling of the head, the financial trading
is too coarse a word the financial class
of Rajputana appears to be the most remarkable.
Later in life may become clouded with fat jowl and
paunch; but in his youth, his quick-eyed, nimble youth,
the young Marwar, to give him his business title, is
really a thing of beauty. His manners are courtly.
The bare ground and a few slates sufficed for the
children who were merely learning the ropes that drag
States; but the English class, of boys from ten to
twelve, was supplied with real benches and forms and
a table with a cloth top. The assistant teacher,
for the head was on leave, was a self-taught man of
Boondi, young and delicate looking, who preferred reading
to speaking English. His youngsters were supplied
with “The Third English Reading Book,”
and were painfully thumbing their way through a doggerel
poem about an “old man with hoary hair.”
One boy, bolder than the rest, slung an English sentence
at the visitor, and collapsed. It was his little
stock-in-trade, and the rest regarded him enviously.
The Durbar supports the school, which is entirely
free and open; a just distinction being maintained
between the various castes. The old race prejudice
against payment for knowledge came out in reply to
a question. “You must not sell teaching,”
said the teacher; and the class murmured applausively,
“You must not sell teaching.”
The population of Boondi seems more
obviously mixed than that of the other States.
There are four or five thousand Mahometans within its
walls, and a sprinkling of aborigines of various varieties,
besides the human raffle that the Bunjaras bring in
their train, with Pathans and sleek Delhi men.
The new heraldry of the State is curious something
after this sort. Or, a demi-god, sable,
issuant of flames, holding in right hand a sword and
in the left a bow all proper.
In chief, a dagger of the second, sheathed
vert, fessewise over seven arrows in sheaf
of the second. This latter blazon Boondi
holds in commemoration of the defeat of an Imperial
Prince who rebelled against the Delhi Throne in the
days of Jehangir, when Boondi, for value received,
took service under the Mahometan. It might also
be, but here there is no certainty, the memorial of
Rao Rutton’s victory over Prince Khoorm, when
the latter strove to raise all Rajputana against Jehangir
his father; or of a second victory over a riotous
lordling who harried Mewar a little later. For
this exploit, the annals say, Jehangir gave Rao Rutton
honorary flags and kettle-drums which may have been
melted down by the science of the Heralds College
into the blazon aforesaid. All the heraldry of
Rajputana is curious, and, to such as hold that there
is any worth in the “Royal Science,” interesting.
Udaipur’s shield is, naturally gules,
a sun in splendour, as befits the “children of
the Sun and Fire,” and one of the most ancient
houses in India. Her crest is the straight Rajput
sword, the Khanda, for an account of the worship
of which very powerful divinity read Tod. The
supporters are a Bhil and a Rajput, attired for the
forlorn-hope; commemorating not only the defences
of Chitor, but also the connection of the great Bappa
Rawul with the Bhils, who even now play the principal
part in the Crown-Marking of a Rana of Udaipur.
Here, again, Tod explains the matter at length.
Banswara claims alliance with Udaipur, and carries
a sun, with a label of difference of some kind.
Jeypore has the five-coloured flag of Amber with a
sun, because the House claim descent from Rama, and
her crest is a kuchnar tree, which is the bearing of
Dasaratha, father of Rama. The white horse, which
faces the tiger as supporter, may or may not be memorial
of the great aswamedha yuga, or horse sacrifice,
that Jey Singh, who built Jeypore, did not
carry out.
Jodhpur has the five-coloured flag,
with a falcon, in which shape Durga, the patron Goddess
of the State, has been sometimes good enough to appear.
She has perched in the form of a wagtail on the howdah
of the Chief of Jeysulmir, whose shield is blazoned
with “forts in a desert land,” and a naked
left arm holding a broken spear, because, the legend
goes, Jeysulmir was once galled by a horse with a magic
spear. They tell the story to-day, but it is
a long one. The supporters of the shield this
is canting heraldry with a vengeance! are
antelopes of the desert spangled with gold coin, because
the State was long the refuge of the wealthy bankers
of India.
Bikanir, a younger House of Jodhpur,
carries three white hawks on the five-coloured flag.
The patron Goddess of Bikanir once turned the thorny
jungle round the city to fruit trees, and the crest
therefore is a green tree strange emblem
for a desert principality. The motto, however,
is a good one. When the greater part of the Rajput
States were vassals of Akbar, and he sent them abroad
to do his will, certain Princes objected to crossing
the Indus, and asked Bikanir to head the mutiny because
his State was the least accessible. He consented,
on condition that they would all for one day greet
him thus: “Jey Jangal dar Badshah!”
History shows what became of the objectors, and Bikanir’s
motto: “Hail to the King of the Waste!”
proves that the tale must be true. But
from Boondi to Bikanir is a long digression, bred
by idleness on the bund of the Burra. It
would have been sinful not to let down a line into
those crowded waters, and the Guards, who were Mahometans,
said that if the Sahib did not eat fish, they did.
And the Sahib fished luxuriously, catching two and
three pounders, of a perch-like build, whenever he
chose to cast. He was wearied of schools and dispensaries,
and the futility of heraldry accorded well with sloth that
is to say Boondi.
It should be noted, none the less,
that in this part of the world the soberest mind will
believe anything believe in the ghosts by
the Gau Mukh, and the dead Thakurs who get Out of
their tombs and ride round the Burra Talao at
Boondi will credit every legend and lie
that rises as naturally as the red flush of sunset,
to gild the dead glories of Rajasthan.