“Hun Huna re, Hun Huna… Hun Huna re, Hun Huna… Palki choooleyyy gogon toooleeeyyy (The Palanquin mooovesss under the skkkyyy),” rhythmically chanted the fast-moving group of twelve. A torchbearer bearer in front and one in the back provided the only lights casting dancing shadows of the men and a swinging wooden box amidst them on the pitch-black surroundings in the dead of night, cutting through the wild and scary belly of the Chilapata forest in the mystical northeastern lands of India’s West Bengal state.
The dense forest, rich in wildlife situated in the Dooars region of Alipurduar district forms an ancient elephant corridor between the present-day Jaldapara National Park and the Buxa Tiger Reserve. Back in the fifth century Anno Domini of the Julina calendar the area was home to the largest Rhinoceros populations, which has dwindled much in the modern-day. Leopards, however, have managed to thrive and still continue to be largely found in this jungle domain.
The men were extremely fast as if they were evading something or someone. The soles of their bare feet, as hard as the skin of the One-Horned Rhinoceros found in the region, were adapted to swiftly move across the wild terrain. They moved like the wind, perfect in rhythm with each other, nonstop, and fearless.
The wooden box they carried on their shoulders was one of the oldest modes of transportation for the rich and royalty of the ancient Indian, Egyptian, Chinese, Persian, and Roman populace, and gradually even adapted by the Portuguese people. An antique means of travelling known in India as the ‘palki’ and later renamed by the British colonisers as the ‘palanquin.’
It was a rectangular compartment made of wood with a padded floor, walls, and roof. There were two sliding doors on both sides with shutters or horizontal Venetian blinds that could be opened or closed from inside for the passengers to have a peep at the world outside. Two sturdy wooden poles jutted from the front and back of the cabin, which four carriers placed on their shoulders to carry the human-powered transport.
The name ‘palanquin’ was derived from the Sanskrit word ‘palanki’ meaning bed or couch, which the Britishers much later in history came to call ‘palan queen’ or a bed for a queen. True to its anglicised name the vehicle mostly carried queens, princes, and women of the royal families, and on that chilly night moving through the dark and scary forest it was carrying a similar woman of might.
Aditoh Behara was in his mid-fifties. The man had spent a lifetime, towing members of the royal family on his shoulders as a palanquin carrier. This was a job that was usually inherited, and like him his father before him, and his grandfather before his father to many generations before, perhaps from the time of Ramayana around 250 BC when the first reference of palanquin or the palki can be traced, Aditoh Behara’s family was carrying people on human-powered sedans literally on their heads.
Over the years he had emerged as one of the best palanquin bearers in the Nalraja Garh fort of the Nal King, deep in the jungles of the Chilapata forest. He had mastered and perfected the art of carrying members of the royal family in their Palki’s, getting them across the dangerous jungle and unpredictable terrains.
Carving out a name for himself in a profession considered somewhat debase had not been an easy task for Aditoh to attain. Through sheer hard work, dedication, and intelligence he had created a highly specialised unit of twelve men, who were the fastest and best in carrying a palanquin in the region.
A big part of being a palanquin bearer was about strength, stamina, and endurance, and Aditoh and his men were the strongest in the business. The edge to their trade, however, came from Aditoh’s intelligence. His presence of mind and ingenuity had helped overcome numerous dangers on several occasions on many of their palanquin travels.
Aside from him as the leader, the twelve-strong included, four primary carriers, Giri, Nog, Mohi, and Shila, two reserve carriers, Shoilo and Goda, these six were giants among men, the strongest in the group. They were mainly responsible for carrying the palanquin in turn on their shoulders.
The fastest of the dirty-dozen were the twins Taph and Ogni, the lamp bearers, who were primarily responsible for lighting and tending torches to show the way in darkness. They were highly skilled fire starters, who could perhaps light an ember in the wettest of environments.
Shollo and Teer were highly skilled archers. Their primary duty was to hunt and provide long-distance offensive protection in case of an attack on the group by bandits, enemies, or predators. The last in the band of these merry men was Chula the ever-innovative cook. Though the men had their separate duties, all of them would carry the palanquin whenever necessary.
As the leader of the dozen, Aditoh’s responsibility, however, was more than the others, and on that particular chilly winter night, moving fast through the forest he was on a secret mission that would perhaps, forever change his and the lives of his men.
The year is 410 AD, the pinnacle of the ‘Gupta Period,’ the ‘Golden Age of India.’ From the Indus river in the west to the Bengal region in the east, and from the Himalayan foothills in the north to the Narmada river in the south, Chandragupta II, also known as Vikramaditya, the 7th king of the Gupta Empire is ruling the subcontinent.
Vikramaditya’s nephew Sridhar had come to secretly fall in love with Indumati the sixth queen of the Nal King. The queen was just twenty when the Nal Raja was sixty-five. There was no chemistry between the two and the young bride remained unsatisfied and lonely, playing the role of an occasional concubine. This was the reason why she perhaps instantly fell in love with the young and dynamic Sridhar, whom she met just once when the prince had visited the Nal region on a diplomatic trip.
The marriage between the Nal king and Indumati was politically important. She was the daughter of the neighbouring king of Cooch Bihar, and the pact between the two kings was that, as long as Indumati remained a queen of the Nal Kingdom, the king of Cooch Bihar would never try to claim the Nal regions of Chilapata forest.
Now in the dead of night, after months of planning, Indumati was finally escaping from her unsatisfactory life with the Nal King. She and Sridhar had been communication for the past one year through secret messengers, and now she had convinced Aditho Behara her trusted palanquin carrier to help her flee.
Sridhar was waiting for her on a ship a hundred-and-twenty kilometres away from the Chilapata forest at the Dhubri river port on the banks of the river Brahmaputra in the neighbouring Assam state. Now it was all up to Aditoh and his men to ensure that the queen and her lover ultimately united in love’s embrace.
The Nal King, King of Cooch Bihar, and Sridhar were supposed to meet after three days at the Nalraja Gar fort for diplomatic reasons, hence Sridhar’s arrival at the Dhubri port was not unexpected. The news of Sridhar’s ship anchoring on the banks of the Brahmaputra travelled fast to the ears of both the kings in the region, and they expected his arrival on the designated date.
By the end of the first twenty hours of Indumati’s escaping, the Nal King had discovered that her sixth queen was missing. He feared that the rumours that he heard about an affair between her and Vikramaditya’s nephew were really happening.
Coming to know about the missing palki, he rightly guessed the queen’s mode of escape and those who were helping. It was also clear that she had to be heading for the Dhubri port from where Sridhar could smoothly sail through the Brahmaputra permanently taking her away without any worry.
This was a disaster in the making. Maharaja of Cooch Bihar, who always wanted to have the Nal Kingdom would immediately attack if he came to know that his daughter was no more with the Nal King. Sridhar could not be touched, as it would mean open war with Vikramaditya the mightiest emperor in India at the time. The only option that remained was to get back the queen in a manner most clandestine.
For this, the Nal King deployed twenty of his personal guards, a group of highly trained assassins to eliminate Aditho and the palanquin bearers and bring back the queen. The Nal King could not send a larger group or create a ruckus about this as there were many spies of the King of Cooch Bihar in his region. So off went the assassins in their hunt for the palanquin.
The palki journey from Nalraja Garh fort to the Dhubri port was around three nights and three days, and at the end of the trek’s first day and the first night, with the faint rays of light on the break of dawn, the palki crossed the border of the Nal Kingdom on the edge of the Chilapata forest and entered the domain of the Cooch King.
Aditoh signalled his men to take a break. They needed it after twenty-four hours of continuous trekking through the uneven jungle-mountain terrain. He knew that by now the Nal King would have deployed the assassins. He knew that this was the only break he and his men could take, for from now on it would be a race between the stealthy light moving assassins and his slower palanquin bearing band of doomed men.
Looking at his men taking the break, for a moment he thought, that was he doing the right thing risking all of them. Helping the queen was the right thing to do, he loved her like a daughter, and a leader would perhaps sacrifice his men to save his child, though she was not his very own blood and flesh.
The man knew that the trail his palanquin bearing group was leaving behind was easy to track. Two more days of the journey was still left. The assassins would surely catch up unless they continuously moved and covered the remaining stretch in one-and-a-half days. Still, then it would be a close call for the queen, Aditoh, and his men.
On the second day, the palanquin was spotted moving through the forest of Cooch Bihar, and soon its news reached the ears of the Indumati’s father, who now deployed fifteen of his very trusted warriors to kill Aditoh and his men and get the princess.
The Cooch king planned to keep her daughter hidden, and in turn, demand to see her at the Nalraja Gar Fort where they were supposed to meet after two days. Of course, not seeing his daughter there would allow him to declare war with the Nal King, and thereby fulfil his long desire to raid in and rule the rich Nal region.
Now Aditoh and his men were the prey and the assassins of the Nal Raja and the warriors of the Cooch King the predators right behind closing in on their tail.
At the end of two days and nights, Aditoh and his men had nearly completed the journey. From the top of a hill, far in the distance a few kilometres away they could see Sridhar’s ship at the Dhubri port waiting for them ready to cast its sails and escape with her highness.
Right at the same time Aditoh and his men spotted the Cooch King’s warriors a few kilometres away on the left horizon, and the assassins of the Nal Raja right a few hundred metres behind them.
Aditoh and the Palanquin bearers realised that running was futile, they would never make it to the ship in time. Putting the palki down the men took their final stand.
That day on the hill in front of the Dhubri port on the banks of the mighty Brahmaputra clashed the stealthy assassins of the Nal Raja, the mighty warriors of the Cooch King and the insignificant bearers of the palanquin.
The battle was fierce and bloody. First, the assassins and the warriors teamed up against Aditoh and his men and then they fought amongst each other. After an hour of brutal violence, of metal clashing against metal, of heads bashing against each other, of blades slicing through human flesh, lay the bodies of forty-seven men, some lifeless, some barely breathing, and some severely wounded.
In the centre of this sat the wooded palanquin with its doors unopened. A wounded assassin of the Nal King closest to the wheel-less carriage dragged himself slowly and slid opened the door of the palanquin to have a look at the queen he had come to save.
As the door of the palanquin opened, it revealed an empty chamber with no queen or anyone within.
Miles away on the opposite side of the region on the banks of the river Teesta in the Dharmmapur village Indumati and Sridhar hugged each other united in love’s embrace.
It was clear now that the whole palanquin journey was a diversion. While Indumati along with two loyal servants journeyed westwards from the Nalraja Gar Fort in the Chilapata forest to rendezvous with Sridhar on the banks of the River Teesta, Aditoh and his palanquin bearing men travelled eastwards towards the Brahmaputra, taking away all the heat with them.
The ship that stood on the Dhubri port did not have Sridhar in it but was carrying his brother who met with the Nal Raja and the Cooch King at the Nalraja Gar Fort on the scheduled date and asked forgiveness for his brother not being able to come due to sudden sickness. He further said that Emperor Vikramaditya was pleased with both the kings and agreed not to tax them in any way as long as they never fought amongst themselves.
Sridhar and Indumati escaped, to lead a simple life with the blessings of Vikramaditya in a village somewhere in Uttarkashi. The two kings of North Bengal never fought amongst themselves. Some say that few of the Palanquin bearers even survived the battle that day, however, it is not known who all did. They too like Sridhar and Indumati must have escaped to an obscure life somewhere else.
The palanquin continued to be used as a mode of transportation in India till modern times despite other innovative means of travel being adopted. After the kings, the Britishers, landlords, and the rich extensively used it to move around as a symbol of their status and prowess. The coming of railways and motorised vehicles from the beginning of the mid-nineteenth-century gradually led to the decline in the use of the palanquin.
Today in India the palki is exclusively used in weddings, religious, royal processions, and various socio-cultural ceremonies. It has even found its place on the logo of the Bombay Baroda & Central India Railway, depicted as a tribute to the innovative human mind that has made our journeys faster from human-carried boxes to maglev trains and supersonic planes.
Copyright © 2021 TRISHIKH DASGUPTA
This work of fiction, written by Trishikh Dasgupta is the author’s sole intellectual property. All rights are reserved. No part of this story may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including printing, photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, send an email to the author at trishikh@gmail.com or get in touch with Trishikh on the CONTACT page of this website.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Trishikh Dasgupta
Adventurer, philosopher, writer, painter, photographer, craftsman, innovator, or just a momentary speck in the universe flickering to leave behind a footprint on the sands of time... READ MORE
Trishikh, this is most interesting for me to learn about the Palanquin, as I am reading so many books about India where the Palanquin plays an important role for people to travel from one palace to another and I always wondered about the history about it. Thank you so much for your enlightening post.
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It makes my day Cornelia when someone finds my stories as a means to increase their knowledge on a particular subject of their liking. There is so much more to the history of the ‘Palki,’ I am glad to have been able to uphold a small part of it atleast.
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Reblogged this on Love and Love Alone.
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Namaste Trishikh, You have written a beautifully love story on the single word “ Palanquin”. I am a new fan of your writing, your simple and heartwarming way of expression, ability to create scenes in the readers mind, love and loss, king’s authority and palanquin bearers, everything is wonderful.
You say it’s short story but it is longer than a simple story while reading I did not feel it long and boring. I am reading more of your stories. My name is Lokesh Sastya, from Dhar district of Madhya Pradesh. Your stories are very close to my heart. You’re an amazing personality. My regards 🙏
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Dear Lokesh, you honour me much with your kind words of appreciation. Am really glad that you find my stories so appealing – yes, you have rightly spotted, that they have a lot of emotion in them. I try my best to paint a picture in the minds of my reader as well. I try to keep my stories around 2,000 words, this one however is 2,526 words a bit on the longer side than my usual. Fortunately it is engaging enough to hold the attention of the reader. I look forward to your comments and likes on my other stories as well. I am sure that you would like a few of them.
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Your work is important. When I’ll get the time, I’ll visit them. I don’t want to disrespect your work by just liking them( it takes a few seconds to like a post, I appreciate your efforts).
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Thank you so much Lokesh. I look forward to your comments. Please take your time.
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Interesting and engaging. Truly well written.
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Thank you so much. Am so glad that you liked the story.
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Hello. Good story. And I learned a word new to me — palanquin.
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Glad that was able to share a new word with you. Thank you for the lovely comment.
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Very Interesting!!
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Thanks Arpita.
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Just finished reading the “Palanquin”… Absolutely loved it… The title itself attracted me and then the story was fantastically written… Brilliant ending… Good going Trishikh… All the very Best… 😊😊😊👏👏👏👍👍👍
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Thanks Abhishek. Am glad the title itself was able to attract you. Really appreciate your constant encouragement.
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I had never heard of Cooch Bihar until this post. Thanks for the information
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Yes Cooch Bihar is a beaut place, with some historical heritage too. Glad that you once again got to know something new from my story.
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I always learn something from your stories. I looked Cooch Bihar up and it is very intriguing place.
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Glad to share knowledge. I also do not know much about the place, have always desired to know more about it. This story has also given me the chance to find out a bit more about the place.
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I can tell the culture there is quite old.
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Yes that is true. It is indeed ancient.
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I hadn’t thought about how old that society might be when I was reading the story. I didn’t think of its antiquity until I looked at the pictures.
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Yes indeed there are so many ancient places with so much rich history about which we know so little.
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What a sweet story…love and sacrifice.
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Thanks Marthe, so glad that you like it. Yes love and sacrifice indeed, something that will perhaps always be inspiring.
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Amazing and interesting story. You have reminded me of the Palki days, of earlier India. We don’t see them now, at least not in urban areas.
I was also reminded of some classic movies like, Devdas.
You are a good storyteller. Keep up the good work.
As an online writer, for around nine years, I have written and published some flash fictions, on various websites. Now, I am getting inspired by you, to do some more work in this category of writing.
Thank you for sharing.
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Am glad to have been able to rekindle your desire for fictional online writing. I wish you all the best for this. Thank you so much for your words of encouragement, they too will help me to write more good stories in the coming days. Yes you rightly say, this story helps us visualise a bit about the olden days, the era of the Bengali Babu’s and Zamindars riding on their Palki’s, though this story is based in a time much before those days.
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I have said this before, that you have massive talent in your style of writing, and I sincerley hope that a mainstream publisher will take you on very soon. Stay safe my friend
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That would really be a great day. I will explore the possibility after I finish my first 50 stories. Thank you for your appreciation and the lovely mail that you wrote to me.
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Beautiful read, thanks.❤️
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Always a pleasure to be able to share a good story.
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True, that’s the best part.🌺
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What an interesting and riveting story Trishikh! I’m hoping to read more of your writing.
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You are most welcome. So glad that you find my stories interesting. I look forward to you reading more of them. Do visit again and enjoy.
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I certainly will!
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I love this epic tale. As always it is wonderfully written with grand historical details weaved in making it such a compelling read. The twist at the end is great! I did not see it coming. Out of curiosity I Googled the logo of the Bombay Baroda & Central India Railway you mentioned. It is beautiful indeed.
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Dear Halim, when someone Google’s things after reading my stories, it really makes writing them worthwhile. As always I really appreciate you taking the time to read and like my story. You are a very fan who I really look forward to.
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Another adventurous tale. That you would have focused on the palanquin bearers is just wonderful! I never knew the origin of the word “palanquin” or that the job of bearer was typically inherited.
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Thanks Anna, so glad that you like the story. Yes there might be so much of history hidden in so many words, which we do not think so much about but use now and then.
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If you like Motivation & education story & blog.?
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https://rushnaf.data.blog
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Sure, I will visit. Thank you too for visit my blog.
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Nice story 👌
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Thank you for liking my story.
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Thank you so much for considering my blog on your list of recommendation for good blogs. You honor me greatly by doing this. This really makes my day.
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Awesome story… the importance of light
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Thanks Denise. Glad that you liked the story. Yes indeed the importance of light… You can say so. Did not think of this angle though. A great analysis.
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Reblogged this on Ned Hamson’s Second Line View of the News.
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Thanks Ned for the reblog.
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Beautiful story, i could imagine they were running swiftly and silently in the darkness to save the queen in the forest like a group of ninjas. Thank you for this immaculately written Trishikh, i enjoy it so much.
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It’s my pleasure to have been able.to write this story Wayan. I must thank you deeply for appreciating it.
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You have great talent to write great story. I love your stories.
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I really appreciate you liking my stories. Thank you so much dear friend. I am happy that through my stories I have been able to connect with you, someone so far away in a distant land.
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Thank you Trishikh, i am waiting your next post. I am glad i found you here and your beautiful stories.
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Thank you Wayan. In the meanwhile you can read some of my older stories whenever you feel like, I am sure you would love them.
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Yes sure i will do that, it becomes my daily routine now,Thank you Trishikh
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Thank you Wayan. I also suggest that you visit other blogs at WordPress, and like and comment on some of the posts of other people which you find interesting. By doing this others will also come to know about you and visit your blog, who knows they might find your writings interesting like me and start liking your posts and following you.
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Thank you Trishikh for your very good suggestion. I have been doing it. I am so glad i find WordPress and discover many great writers like you here. I am lucky i can read and like and comment on their great works, they inspire me and give me ideas to write. Thank you so much Trishikh for liking my post, it means a lot to me. 🙏
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You are most welcome Wayan. It is my pleasure to learn about the rich culture of your country and its people and the little things that makes your land unique.
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U travel in that coach you’ll require a harem of women as well.
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Yes, very true that this form of transportation was for the rich and fabulous, hence the possibility of a harem for the owners. 😂
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A bumpy road takes on a whole new meaning for the slaves who carried that “coach” on their shoulders.
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Very true indeed.
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Thank you Trishikh for your kind words. I am very happy to hear it.
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Very informative and interesting, I learnt something new today. Thank you!
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Thanks Vishakha for liking the story. Much appreciate your appreciation. So glad that I was able to share a bit of knowledge.
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Pleasure is mine. I’m glad to have discovered your blog..amazing storytelling!
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Thank you so much for your encouragement. Appreciation is a great fuel to creativity. Many more good stories to come, one every weekend, by the best wishes of friends like you and through the will of God.
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Nice narration
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Thanks Subhra.
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Many truely events about palanquin I can come to know from your post. Lot of thanks for such a worthy copyright.
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Thank you so much Subhra. Yes, in most of my stories you would find a bit of history.
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I like this story very much.
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Thank you Dawn, it’s one of my favourites too. When I was writing it I did not know how it would end, like most of my stories, however, it worked. So glad that you liked it too.
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The history of India is so long and rich, you will never run out of stories!
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Oh, that is very true Dawn. To add to your thoughts I truly believe that there is a story in everything and everywhere, we just need to find it.
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Wow, Its amazing
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It gives me great joy when someone enjoys one of my stories.
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A very interesting blog. Rich in beautiful engravings and graphics, are the stories a bit from one’s own journey or just from literature?
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Thank you so much for appreciating my stories. They are a mix of personal experiences, real life characters, real places, real events, a lot of history, a healthy dose of fiction, and figment of my imagination. Some of my stories are real and some are fictional. Most of them have a lot of historical facts in them.
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oh, so this is such a confusion of fiction with reality, oh it is very dangerous, because there is a risk that you may not shake it right away and stay in the past, or in another dimension 😂
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What is reality and what is fiction. A good story, I believe should have a lesson, should be inspirational, and able to move emotions. I try my best to do this. It seems to be working. Constant appreciation from friends like you have made writing these stories worthwhile. I try to write and publish one story every weekend. It is free for the world to read. I have no profit angle attached to it. Maybe someday I will publish them into a book, but for now, appreciation such as yours makes my day.
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I am glad that I could have made you a beautiful day. Write, of course you write and don’t stop, but live in a reality that is not as beautiful and interesting as fiction, but it is better to stay in it 😂😊
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Ofcourse. Our roots in reality determines the fruitfulness of our existence.
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😊
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At the beginning I should have read @about me @ you wrote everything there, in fact, I just need to congratulate you on my great fantasy! and unrestrained fantasy! I will be gone, now I know that you live in India, or how you found me
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I came across your content while browsing through the WordPress app. I love food and cooking so liked your content. You have some amazing dishes showcased.
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WOW! Thank you and I’m glad that you like my baking, I didn’t know that my blog “goes “this far😂
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Oh it does. In today’s world of superfast and super-spread internet connectivity nowhere or no one is far.
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👌😊
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I really appreciate your internet friendship, and the likes that you put on my posts. Your work is very good, and I encourage you to continue with the same degree of excellence that you put into all of you work. Please consider how your articles may affect other people, people who live around the world, and that, unfortunately, you will probably never meet. Still, you bless people with you facts and ideas, and will bless even more, as time progresses.
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Reading your words of encouragement at the start of the day gives me great joy and a sense of accomplishment. I shall continue writing and spreading nuggets from India with the rest of the world. I am so thankful for friends like you, who have made my writing journey a success.
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You serve the world well.
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All for the glory of God and the good of humanity.
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Yes! Absolutely.
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In this tale from ancient India, Trishikh, you wrote your story against the backdrop of the detailed landscape of the forests and the royal court events with the hand of a greatly talented storyteller.
The highly anticipated happy ending didn’t disappoint, especially as it came unexpectedly.
Your story slightly reminds me of the European tale of Tristan and Isolde.
Joanna
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Oh! Now that you say, it does ring a bell. I too have read about Tristan and Isolde during my school days. Once again thank you so much for liking and commenting on this story of mine. Always treasure our interactions.
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You are very welcome I prefer your story – happy ending1
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As a writer, I always want to keep the element of surprise with my stories, so that my readers enjoy the unpredictability.
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Excellent storytelling. You bring the reader into the moment.
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Thank you so much. So happy that you could travel to the time and place described in my story through my writing. Treasure your comment.
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Thank you so much for promoting my story in your blog.
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Much appreciate you promoting my story in your blog.
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Absorbing narration. So the Urdu word PALKI (A ceremonial transportation of the bride at the time of Rukhsati meaning farewell from parental home to bridegroom home) is derive from ‘palanquin’
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They are the same word, however the Urdu/ Hindi/ or Bengali word Palki is the original word. The word Palanquin was derived much later from the word Palki.
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