Good-bye to Dharwar, we are on the
move again, the comparatively cold-weather tourists
take the road south to Bangalore. We jog along
at a respectable rate, not too fast and not too slow,
say forty-five miles an hour top speed, and twenty-five
mean, which allows us to see things to-day and remember
what we saw yesterday.
Before leaving, biked down to the
Native Town of Dharwar, a place full of interest,
picturesque scenes, and somewhat sinister looking
people tried to make a picture of women
and men at a well-head, a magnificent subject, but
too difficult to do in a few minutes. There were
men pulling up kerosene tins over a wheel, hand over
hand, from the cool looking depths of the wide red
sandstone well and filling goats’ skins to sling
on cows’ backs, and women in sombre reds and
blue wrappings, old and young, and rather monkeyish
in appearance; still, some were not altogether bad
looking. One old woman had almost Savonarola
features, and the strip of blue from the sky on her
brown back was telling as she and a young woman leant
and pulled hand over hand at the rope. The water
splashed on to the pavement round the well, reflected
the rich colours of cloth and limb and patches of cobalt
from the sky. The women seem to consider this
is not a bad part of their day’s work; to come
to the well-head and chat with their neighbours and
show off their jewellery, and probably wouldn’t
thank you for a modern engine to pump up the water
in half the time. They are dirty little pigs;
can you make out a little beast to the right, comparatively
a superior, extra well-dressed beauty, with very polished
black hair and a flower in it? No, I am afraid
not; the reduction, or reproduction, obscures her
charm completely. She looks round about her and
rubs a family water pot with a little mud and water
off the road, yet by her religion it would be defiled
if my shadow fell on it.
I came away almost sick with the feeling
of inability to remember all the movements of draperies
and colours; this country needs a Philip and a Velasquez
in one, to do it justice.
On the way home I pass a tank with
two wide nights of steps down to it, banyan trees
hang over it, and monkeys gambol on the ground, and
about the dusty trunks. Up and down the steps
women are passing with stately steps and slow, they
loiter at the water’s edge and gossip, then fill
their dark earthenware bowls, lift them on to their
heads with the help of a neighbour, and come slowly
up the steps. The little brass bowls they carry
on hip or at arm’s length glitter with lights
that hit the eye like electric sparks. One figure
alone would make an artist’s study for days.
The colour from the red soil reflects under their raised
arms and under their cheeks and into the classic folds
of their draperies, strong blue, and deep red, in
their shadows and throw up rich reflections to the
undersides of the wet earthenware bowls; the water
laps over their brims, and the sky reflects like sapphire
on their upper surfaces.... Who will say, that
colour is not the most beautiful thing in the world the
very flower of love and light and fire; the sign of
preponderant katabolism or anabolism as the naturalist
might possibly put it, to be perfectly explicit!
People dined with us, and inside we
had music of the masters by a mistress of music; and
outside, some of us discussed names of stars; and
dogs and jackals were stirred to the depths of their
feelings by the moon: one especially at the end
of the compound howled as if it was in a steel trap.
At the side of the bungalow the guests’ white
cattle slept unyoked in the deep shadows of the trees,
beside their white covered dumbies, all soft and blurred
in silvery haze except where the light fell on a splash-board
and shone like a jewel. And in front of us Eucharist
lilies and China asters drooped their heads and slept.
Though this is an express train we
stop at lots of stations, which, of course, is just
what we want, for there are fascinating groups to study
all the way, and the slight changes in the character
of the country are interesting. We go through
first, what I take to be the black cotton soil, and
later red soil again.
At one little station a Government
official gets out of the train, a Deputy-Commissioner
possibly, a dapper, fair man and a lady, a nurse, a
fair child, and a fox terrier; in the shadow of some
trees I see an escort of lancers and some foot soldiers
waiting. We wonder who they can be, getting out
in such a measureless, monotonous tract of level country.
They seem so fair and isolated in this vast country
of dark people.
... The afternoon passes, and
as the sun goes down the shadows of our carriages
spread wider over the plain. The sky becomes faint
rose in the zenith, over the cerulean above the horizon,
and the white clothes of the shepherds become golden,
and the reds, yellows, and blues of the women’s
draperies become very vivid. We pass herds of
cattle as finely bred as antelopes, all blurred into
the glow of the late afternoon and the red soil.
Then comes almost desert, flat as water, red gravel
with bushes with few green leaves, and here and there
a tree with its white stem gleaming against a long-drawn
shadow. Over the horizon two hill tops show purple
and red, then for ten minutes all flushes ruddy, burning
gold, and vermilion, and the light goes out; and there
follows a cold blackish violet that almost chills
us, till the moon comes in full strength and glorifies
the desert with its frosted silvery illumination.
Little fires begin to burn alongside the railway, and
we see groups of shepherds warming themselves and
cooking. The third class passengers at the stations
are tucking their chins between their knees and pulling
their draperies, most of them scarlet, over their heads,
and with the lamplight from above and the smoke of
the hubble-bubble that floats over them they make
very warm, soft masses of colour.
We stiffer people spread ourselves
out over a space ten natives could sit in, and get
under our blankets and feel uncommonly comfortable,
take one more look at the blurr of moonlight on the
silent waste, and address ourselves to sleep, fondly
hoping we will remember a little of the beauty of
the night ’gainst the “dark days made for
our searching.”
... The night passes, hour after
hour jogging south; at times we hear a
voice calling in the wilderness the name of a station,
which we do not know, and do not care to know; and
there’s a whiff perhaps of burning, a little
like peat, from the fuel they burn here, which at home
the farmers spread on their fields to make them “bring
forth unnatural fruit."