Slowly Down the Ganges
Travel
Slowly Down The Ganges
Eric Newby
There are many breeds of travel authors. Some like Paul Theroux are,
it seems to me, weary of their travels. They find fault with everything in the
journey. One wonders why do they travel at all. Some like Colin Thubron see
hidden meaning in every sight, every people they encounter. They write heavy,
ponderous prose. Writers like Graham Greene write captivating prose of their
inner journeys, spawned by the travel they have undertaken. Fiction writers
like Somerset Maugham have no patience with landscape. They look for the
vagaries of human nature in the variety of behaviour of people they encounter
in their travels.
Then there are travel writers like Bill Bryson and Eric Newby, who
find incredible humour in every situation, in every place, every stranger, they
come across during their travel. I read Newby’s A Short Walk in Hindukush
about a decade back and was hugely impressed by his suave humour. This
is one of the best travel books I have read. I read Bryson later and found much
similarity in his and Newby’s styles, though half a century’s difference
between two is evident in their prose styles.
In the winter of 1963-64, Eric Newby and his wife undertook a journey
down the Ganges from Haridwar, where Ganga descends onto the North Indian
plains for the first time, to Calcutta which is about 40 miles short of river’s
merger in the Bay of Bengal. They travelled the twelve hundred miles’ length of
Ganga, mainly in boats, but also in trucks, buses, trains and bullock carts,
through the towns and cities along its bank. Newby’s tone is humorous throughout.
His humour is self-deprecatory and tasteful. He describes the difficulties,
which were a plenty. In the beginning of their journey they ran aground sixty-three
times in the shallows of Ganga and covered only a couple of miles in six days.
At every place they faced immense difficulties in hiring a boat. Newbies were
armed with only a little money and a letter of recommendation by the then Prime
Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru. The letter was only a little help at most
of the places. Cawnpore Club would not provide them with accommodation even
when the letter was flaunted, allegedly because Mr Nehru was not a member of
the club and hence could not recommend anyone for favour in the club. Newby
describes his journey and encounters with a charming irreverence. Journey
happened just sixteen years after Indian independence from British. I presume
world was much racist then. But there is not a hint of racism in Newby’s
description of his interactions with Indians. He criticises what he finds
appalling, as most Indians would and praises wholesomely what pleases him. He
has a keen eye and his wry observations are delivered in an enchanting
matter-of-factly prose, that reads fluently, yet is urbane. He eschews being
judgmental, even when he writes about religious, cultural and social issues.
This is a fine travel book, an ideal read for an armchair traveller.
It provides much pleasure and also a little information on recent Indian
history of 1960s.
Sir i feel like reading the book
ReplyDeletestraight away because of the way you have described it. Very nice review.
Please go ahead and pick it up. You wouldn't regret it. And don't miss A Short Walk in Hindukush Either.
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