The Age of Kali: Travels and Encounters in India. William Dalrymple

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Age of Kali: Travels and Encounters in India - William Dalrymple страница

The Age of Kali: Travels and Encounters in India - William  Dalrymple

Скачать книгу

c3e-5c46-a774-4a0455a9583f">

      The Age of Kali

      Indian Travels & Encounters

      William Dalrymple

publisher logo

      To JOCK

      who saw the point long before I did

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Dedication

       2 In Rajasthan

       The Sad Tale of Bahveri Devi

       Caste Wars

       Sati Mata

       3 The New India

       Two Bombay Portraits

       Finger-Lickin’ Bad: Bangalore and the Fast-Food Invaders

       4 The South

       At the Court of the Fish-Eyed Goddess

       Under the Char Minar

       Parashakti

       5 On the Indian Ocean

       At Donna Georgina’s

       Up the Tiger Path

       The Sorcerer’s Grave

       6 Pakistan

       Imran Khan: Out for a Duck

       On the Frontier

       Blood on the Tracks

       Benazir Bhutto: Mills & Boon in Karachi

       Glossary

       Index

       By the same author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

      The Age of Kali is a collection of peripatetic essays, a distillation of ten years’ travel around the Indian subcontinent. For six of those years I was based in Delhi working on my second book, City of Djinns, while for the other four I wandered the region, on a more nomadic basis, for a few months each year. My travels took me from the fortresses of the drug barons of the North-West Frontier to the jungle lairs of the Tamil Tigers; from flashy Bombay drinks parties to murderous Bihari blood feuds; from the decaying palaces of Lucknow to the Keralan exorcist temple of the bloodthirsty goddess Parashakti, She Who is Seated on a Throne of Five Corpses. All the pieces are the product of personal experience and direct observation.

      The book’s title is a reference to the concept in ancient Hindu cosmology that time is divided into four great epochs. Each age (or yug) is named after one of the four throws, from best to worst, in a traditional Indian game of dice; accordingly, each successive age represents a period of increasing moral and social deterioration. The ancient mythological Golden Age, named after the highest throw of the dice, is known as the Krita Yug, or Age of Perfection. As I was told again and again on my travels around the subcontinent, India is now in the throes of the Kali Yug, the Age of Kali, the lowest possible throw, an epoch of strife, corruption, darkness and disintegration. In the Age of Kali the great gods Vishnu and Shiva are asleep and do not hear the prayers of their devotees. In such an age, normal conventions fall apart: anything is possible. As the seventh-century Vishnu Purana puts it:

      The kings of the Kali Yug will be addicted to corruption and will seize the property of their subjects, but will, for the most part, be of limited power, rising and falling rapidly. Then property and wealth alone will confer rank; falsehood will be the only means of success in litigation. Corruption will be the universal means of subsistence. At the end, unable to support their avaricious kings, the people of the Kali Age will take refuge in the chasms between mountains, they will wear ragged garments, and they will have too many children. Thus in the Kali Age shall strife and decay constantly proceed, until the human race approaches annihilation.

      In

Скачать книгу