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Delhi: Unknown Tales of A City

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Item Code: NAL706
Author: R.V. Smith
Publisher: Roli Books Pvt. Ltd.
Language: English
Edition: 2015
ISBN: 9789351941255
Pages: 222
Cover: Paperback
Other Details 8.5 inch x 5.5 inch
Weight 280 gm
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Fully insured
Shipped to 153 countries
Shipped to 153 countries
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More than 1M+ customers worldwide
100% Made in India
100% Made in India
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23 years in business
Book Description
About the Author

Ronald Vivian Smith is an alumnus of St John's College, Agra and began writing as a teenager in 1954. He has authored a number of books, including four on Delhi, a romantic novel, Jasmine Nights & the Taj, three volumes of poetry, a collection of ghost yarns, and a profile of the eighteenth-century Smith family he is descended from. As a septuagenarian he does not spend time on a easy chair but in surveying out-of-the-way places for unusual stories that form the grist for weekly newspaper columns, 'Quaint Corner' and 'Down Memory Lane'. This publication of his completes the preverbial baker's dozen.

 

Foreword

l am delighted to introduce this new book by an old friend, R.V. Smith, whose writing and general knowledge of Delhi, his adopted home, is legendary. History runs in the Smith family, who are descended from Salvador Smith (1783-1871), the soldier who trained the troops of Daulat Rao Scindia.

R.V. Smith is the son of the late journalist Thomas Smith (1910- 1995), whose articles in numerous newspapers were always full of interesting snippets about the bits of history that historians usually neglect. His book, Agra: Rambles and Recollections was republished in 2007. R.V. Smith is a worthy successor to his father, and is the author of eight books on Delhi, of which, The Delhi That No-One Knows has become a bestseller.

During his career, R.V. Smith worked for the Statesman, and since retirement has continued to pen articles for the Hindu and the Statesman. He began writing articles on monuments, historical places and the social life in the Walled City of old Delhi in 1958. He also writes poetry and romantic novels, including Jasmine Nights & The Taj. Another novel, on the eighteenth-century courtesan who became the empress, Qudsia Begum is underway. His interest extends to Egyptology, the occult, which led to a book of ghost stories, The Veiled Shadow, and mysticism.

He came to Delhi over fifty-two years ago and slowly grew to love the city. A born romantic, he attended mujras by dancing girls and sat at the shrines of Sufi saints late at night to hear qawwalis. Born in January 1938, he was educated at St Peter’s College, Agra, from where he did his Senior Cambridge and later received the MA degree in English literature at St John’s college. His liking for Delhi was heightened by the fact that it is almost a twin of Agra, his beloved home town, where he still goes to recharge his batteries. The old- world ambience of Delhi intoxicated him and he tried to merge it with his Anglo- Indian antecedents, researching poets like Alexander Heatherley ‘Azad’, a pupil of Ghalib’s nephew, and Benjamin Montrose ‘Muztar’, a pupil of Ustad Daagh Dehlvi.

As a regular Sunday churchgoer, he found that many of the earlier Italian Capuchin fathers had written treatises on Mughal history, medieval life and manners, right up to the aftermath of Great Uprising of 1857. This also gave him material for his own articles. In his long career he has won a Rotary Club award, the Michael Madhusudan award for journalism and the Canon Holland prize for general knowledge. For him Delhi is not a city but a timeless begum who excites love, devotion and nostalgia. She is truly the beloved of all Delhiwalahs but mistress of none.

This is a book to be enjoyed, that will surprise those who believe they already know veverything about their city.

 

Preface

Delhi fascinated me after I had fallen in love with Agra, my birthplace. Though my second home does not have as many monuments as the city of the Taj Mahal, it is fortunate in being the capital of the country and as such the cynosure of all eyes. But its medieval edifices (despite the ASI's efforts) are in need of better preservation. This book is a collection of articles originally written for the Statesman and the Hindu (published between 1990 and 2011), with whose courtesy they are being reproduced under one cover. It is from my father, Thomas Smith, that I inherited interest in old, half-forgotten things and the urge to celebrate 'lost causes and forsaken beliefs'. Besides the Internet, the tendency to stand and stare is also the begetter of knowledge. This is what I, a virtual computer novice have practiced over the decades and the result is before you. My sincere thanks to Roli Books for consenting to publish a rambler's labour of love.

 

Contents

 

  Foreword xi
  Preface xiii
1 A Memorable Halloween 1
2 Afghan Amir's Gateway 4
3 Armenian Seer 7
4 Basai Darapur and its Namesake 10
5 Bird- watching Delights 13
6 Celebrating the Monsoon 15
7 Chehlum with Mahabat Khan 18
8 Christmastime Reminiscences 20
9 Coming of the 'Paharwalah' 23
10 Commemoration of the Durbar 26
11 Evening of Weird Experiences 29
12 Pre-winter Cameos 32
13 Harinagar Ghantaghar 35
14 Jahangir's X'mas Gift 37
15 Waiting for Lakshmi 40
16 Pleasure & Risk of Eating Out 43
17 Preserve these Monuments 46
18 Reminiscences of An Old Mali 49
19 The Beggars' Wedding 52
20 Damari Tales 55
21 Delhi's Poetic Heritage 58
22 Denizens of Viran Wali 62
23 Diwali by Candlelight 64
24 Easter Garden Parties 66
25 Epical Comparisons 69
26 Evenings at Mausiqi Manzil 72
27 Facelift for the 'Mina Bazar' 75
28 Four Stalwarts Delhi has lost 78
29 Graveyards of Delhi 81
30 Guns and Roses 84
31 Halim at a Dawakhana 87
32 Heritage of the Gumbads 90
33 History Enshined in Mosques 93
34 Reminiscences of Nehru 96
35 New Delhi & Old Delhi 99
36 New Year's Eve Rerie 103
37 Phaeton & Austin Yarns 106
38 Pigeon- Fanciers' Day 108
39 Heroines & Bravehearts of 1857 11
40 Holi in the Past 114
41 King's Abode in Danger 117
42 Lady Willingdon's Hindsight 119
43 Redeeming Sher Shah's Legacy 121
44 Rehabilitating the Dead 124
45 Mirza Ghalib's Legacy 127
46 Moonlight Chowk's Many Names 130
47 Mystique of Dak Bungalows 132
48 Names Tell a Tale 135
49 Old Hunting Tower 138
50 Ramzan Aura & Piety 141
51 Recollection on the Mutiny 144
52 Remembering Two Patriarchs 147
53 Reverie on Zafar 150
54 Saga of wells 153
55 Shearing Innocence of the Lambs 156
56 Splendour in the Grass 159
57 Spring Festival 161
58 Tales of Allah Diya 164
59 Tales Ridge Monuments Tell 167
60 Talking Drums 170
61 Temples of Antiquity 173
62 The Fall of the House of Joanides 176
63 The Galis of Delhi 179
64 The Ghostly Trail 182
65 The Battle of 1803 185
66 The Mughal's Rain- Holiday 188
67 The Sirens of Delhi 191
68 Vampires & Phantoms 193
69 Vanished Birdcatcher 196
70 View From the Rugged Heights 198
71 River Swimming Craze 200
72 When Trams Plied 203
73 Windmills to Revive 'The Past' 206
  About the Author 209
Sample Pages

















 

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