Recollections of Calcutta for over Half a Century by Montague Massey
page 14 of 109 (12%)
page 14 of 109 (12%)
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distinct set; while the mercantile people, lawyers, barristers, and
others not in any government service, had their own particular circle. This marked cleavage did not, however, prevent the different "sets" from having quite a good time, and as I have said, even if they did not mix together very closely and intimately, we all in a way knew each other. Forty or fifty years ago, Calcutta was not so lively as it is to-day, especially in the cold weather, but there was one thing in those days which we do not see now. I refer to the regal pomp and circumstance which characterised Government House, and all the functions held there. The annual State Ball was an event which was always looked forward to, and it was a ball at which one could comfortably dance, instead of the crush it had become in the decade prior to 1911. THE "PALKI." Looking back, one of the first things that strikes me is the change between then and now in the matter of locomotion. In my early days there were no taxi-cabs, trams, nor even _fitton-gharries,_ the only conveyances for those who had not private carriages being _palkis_ and _bund-gharries._ It would seem strange to-day to see Europeans being carried about the streets in _palkis_, but half a century or more ago they were by no means despised, especially by the newly-out _chokras_, whose salary was not at all too high. They had to choose between a _palki_ and a _ticca-gharry,_ which were very much alike in shape, the difference between them being that the one was carried on the shoulders of coolies, and the other drawn by a horse. |
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