First
published in 1978, this monumental epic sold ¼-million in hardback alone;
paperback sales, especially after the TV series, soared. Justifiably, despite the less than attractive cover from Penguin. Though written in a completely different
style, I feel it can be set alongside Paul Scott’s magisterial Raj Quartet. Set in India during the
time of the British Raj, M.M. Kaye's The Far
Pavilions tells the story of Englishman Ashton Pelham-Martyn from birth in
the 1850s, through the Indian Mutiny until the Second Afghan War, 1879.
Due
to its scale, the story has to be told from an omniscient point of view. Yet
individuals are strongly drawn and felt. This book has been likened to the Gone with the Wind of the North-West
Frontier, and the comparison isn’t far off the mark. Although it’s a love
story, it’s much more besides. It doesn’t pull any punches where brutality in
all forms is encountered during these violent times. It depicts bravery,
generosity, cruelty, honour, devoutness, passion, heroism and self-sacrifice.
The
title comes from the Dur Khaima mountains, the Far Pavilions, with Tarakalas,
the ‘Star Tower’, catching the first rays of the sunrise. Somewhere near was a
fabulous valley dreamed of by Ashton’s surrogate mother, Sita, somewhere to
live in peace and contentment without violence, prejudice and greed…
We
know that politicians don’t seem to read history or learn from it. A year after
this book was published, the USSR effectively invaded Afghanistan. Ashton says, ‘The Afghans may be a murderous
lot of ruffians with an unenviable reputation for treachery and ruthlessness,
but no one has ever denied their courage; or been able to make them do anything
they don’t like doing. And they don’t like being dictated to or ruled by
foreigners – any foreigners!’ It applied in 1979 and, to all intents and
purposes, it applies now.
It
was fascinating to read of places such as Murree, Jamrud fort, Peshawar,
Islamabad – all part of India at the time. In 1969, I went to these places when
they were in West Pakistan, as well as the Khyber Pass, from where we looked
over the plain of Kabul. (See my reminiscences of that visit ‘The Navy Lark up
the Khyber’ pp142-151 in Under the
Queen’s Colours, ‘voices from the Forces 1952-2012’ by Penny Legg).
In places, Kaye’s writing is exquisite, as are the sentiments and characterisations. A few brief examples: As an old sage remarks, ‘I know well that hearts are not like hired servants who can be hidden to do what we desire of them. They stay or go as they will, and we can neither hold nor prevent them. The gods know that I have lost and regained mine a dozen times. For which I have cause to be grateful, for my father lost his once only: to my mother. After she died he was never more than the shell of a man.’
‘The
black stallion’s body and his own were one, and his blood sang in rhythm with
the pounding hooves as the air fled past them and the ground flowed away
beneath them as smoothly as a river.’
‘Below
him a belt of scree fell steeply away down a gully that was bright with
moonlight, and on either hand the bare hillsides swept upwards to shoulder a
sky like a sheet of tarnished steel.’
An
observer’s description of Ashton – ‘…the vulnerability of that thin, reckless
face, the sensitive mouth that accorded so ill with the firm obstinate chin,
and the purposeful line of the black eyebrows that were at odds with a brow and
temples that would have better fitted a poet or a dreamer than a soldier.’ Whoever cast Ben Cross in the role got it very
right indeed.
Here's a bookmark I made for the book...
When
I closed this tome of 960 pages of tightly packed text, I felt slightly bereft.
I seemed to live with many of these characters, and watched them grow older,
live – and die – and now it was over, finished.
At
the back, there are two pages of author’s notes providing relevant real-life happenings
used in the narrative plus a useful 2-page glossary of Indian words and
phrases.
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