Sunday, October 7, 2007

The City of the Lake

I have seen the city of the lake and it is beautiful.
Sunbeams rain reflection upon the surface of the hazel brown water and gleam upon it like firestars in the day. At night, it is the more artificial gems that shine upon a still black plain that the lake creates - pearls scattered on velvet. The hills surround you at every point. They are green in abundance and their foliage dances to the mountain winds sweeping through clouds made of pure wool and gossamer. The sky is always a sharp and stark blue, clear in its colour and crisp in its texture.
Market places are few, but relative to the size of the city, several. Colourful stalls stand short and at shoulder with each other, filled to their gills with woollen, wax and plastic treasures. Candles on a dozen shelves every half meter tell fascinating narratives of grandeur. Figures in black stand in worship, white waves intertwine in elaboration, colours mingle in harmony, treats of pink sprinkled with illuminable delights, ferns and dried floral glory embedded into permanence, sugar encrusted aroma of translucence, glazed fruit, creatures of the forest, characters of a fantasy. Wood broods in its majesty elsewhere, ornamented with metal that is restrained in its yellow blaze.
One turns to the lake again - it is a festival of sails and boats where dragons and swans of exquisite gloss spin and trail making ripples and oars create small splashes that shine like diamonds from where you're looking.
A temple red, exuberant in its music, ringing and streams of small golden lights is near a Gurudwara of pristine white and tunes. The mosque, under renovation is architectural beauty embodied in marble and stone and the minarets are many. The church is resplendant in the hint of a glorious past - gray cool stone and red calming peaks that are led to from a blue metal arch.
The hills around are dotted with habitation in the style of literary towns of the fantasy canon. Red roofs and colours from the entire palette of nature - faint greens, gentle pinks, sparkling whites, candy yellows, sky blues, peaches and oranges, flora and fauna, fragrant mauves and wood.
The market places are alive with the scents of spices and sizzling smoke. Here something steams and is being fried - sauces, chillies, sweet syrups and cream are heady.
The city of the lake is a feast for the senses and the panoramic gaze will settle on nothing - there's a glint of colour after every scene.

4 comments:

Bakarbaaz said...

Your description of Nainital is so beautiful that one can picture it in their heads.... You enabled me to travel in space and time courtesy such an amazing piece of writing....Great job!!!!! keep at it....You would put any travel writer to shame... I suggest that your next book be a travelogue!!!

Ankita said...

hey this description of nainital is exactly what i saw, its truly remarkable a place to visit and you hav put it in the most beautiful way possible. it was an amazing experience to go back in time as i read this article....love the way you express yourself...keep it up..:)

Anonymous said...

hey , you do have a way with words which can make people want to read about places that may not exist and travel to those shangrilas. keep telling stories and weave magic something that you are best at doing.

..A quintessential traveller

Anonymous said...

You have so amazingly and beautifully described Nanital, my fav hill station! You are a great writer so keep writing!
- Mitsi