Far Pavilions (188 page)

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Authors: M. M. Kaye

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Chota hazri
literally, small breakfast (early morning tea with fruit)

Chowkidar
night watchman

Chuddah
sheet; shawl

Chunam
polished plaster; lime

Chuppatti
flat cake of unleavened bread

Chuppli
heavy leather sandal with studs on sole, worn on the Frontier

Chutti
leave

Dacoits
robbers

Daffadar
sergeant (cavalry)

Dai
nurse; midwife

Dâk
mail; post

Dâk-bungalow
posting- house; rest-house

Dâk-ghari
horse-drawn vehicle carrying mail

Dal
lentils

Dawaza
door; gate

‘Dekho!’
‘Look!’

Dhobi
washer of clothes; laundryman

Dhooli
palanquin

Durbar
public audience; levee

Ekka
light two-wheeled trap

Fakir
religious mendicant

Feringhi
foreigner

Fu–fu band
village band of Indian instruments

Gadi
throne

Ghari
any horse-drawn vehicle

Ghari-wallah
driver of the above

Ghazi
religious fanatic

Ghee
clarified butter

Godown
storage room or shed

Gur
unrefined cane sugar

Gurral
mountain goat

Gurrh-burrh
tumult; noise

Hakim
doctor

Halwa
sweetmeats

Havildar
sergeant (infantry)

Hazrat
Highness

Hookah
water pipe for smoking tobacco

Howdah
seat carried on back of elephant

Hukum
order

Huzoor
Your Honour

Istri-dhan inheritance

Itr
scent

Izzat
honour

Jawan
literally, young man; used for soldier

Jehad
holy war

Jehanum
hell

Jellabies
fried sweets made of honey and batter

Jemadar
junior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry or infantry)

Jezail
long-barrelled musket

Jheel
shallow, marshy lake

Jung-i-lat Sahib
Commander-in-Chief

Kala
black

Khansamah
cook

Khidmatgar
waiter at table

Kila
fort

Kismet
fate

Koss
two miles

Kus-kus tatties
thick curtains made of woven roots

Larla
darling

Lathi
long, heavy stick, usually made from bamboo

Lotah
small brass water-pot

Machan
platform built in a tree for hunting big game

Mahal
palace

Mahout
elephant driver

Mali
gardener

Malik
tribal headman


Maro!
’ ‘Strike!’; ‘Kill!’

‘Mubarik!’
‘Congratulations!’; ‘Well done!’

Mullah
Mohammedan priest

Munshi
teacher; writer

Narwar
coarse webbing

Nauker
servant

Nauker-log
servants

Nautch–girl
dancing girl

Nullah
ravine or dry water-course

Ooloo
owl

Padishah
Empress

Pan
betel-nut rolled in a bay leaf and chewed

Panchayat
council of five elders

Patarkar
small firework

Piara
(-i) dear

Pice
small coin

Pujah
worship

Pulton
infantry regiment

Punkah
length of matting or heavy material pulled by a rope to make a breeze

Purdah
seclusion of women (literally, curtain)

Pushtu
the language of the Pathans

Raja
King

Rajkumar
Prince

Rajkumari
Princess

Rakhri
pendant worn on the forehead

Rang
colour

Rani
Queen

Resai
quilt

Resaidar
junior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry)

Risaldar
senior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry)

Risaldar-Major
the most senior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry)

Rissala
cavalry (regiment)

Sadhu
holy man

Sahiba
lady

Sahib-log
‘white folk’

Saht-bai
‘seven brothers' – small brown birds which go about in groups, usually of seven

Sepoy
infantry soldier

Serai
caravan hostel

‘Shabash!’
‘Well done!’

Shadi
wedding

Shaitan
devil

Shamianah
large tent

Shikar
hunting and shooting

Shikari
hunter, finder of game

Shulwa
sleeved tunic

Sikunder Dulkhan

Alexander the Great

Sirdar
Indian officer of high rank

Sirkar
the Indian Government

Sowar
cavalry trooper

Syce
groom

Tálash
inquiry

Tamarsha
show; festival

Tar
telegram (literally, wire)

Tehsildar
village headman

Tiffin
lunch

Tonga
two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle

Tulwar
curved sword

Yakdan
leather trunk, made to be carried on mules

Yuveraj
heir to the throne

Zenana
women's quarter

Zid
resentment

Zulum
aggression

*
baby; child

*
the Mohammedan Sabbath


Indian infantrymen

*
great man

*
Sleep baby sleep, Butter, bread, sugar, The bread and butter are finished, My baby is asleep.

*
light two-wheeled trap

*
sowars = cavalry soldiers; sepoys = infantry

*
big dinner-parties


bad characters; riff-raff

*
uproar, tumult

*
The battle that gained India for Clive and the East India Company in 1757. (There was a legend that the rule of the Company would only last a hundred years from that date.)

*
Hindu holy man

*
tight-fitting three-quarter-length coat

*
doctor

*
pronounced Ma-darn

*
Be silent!

*
a Hindu form of blessing, literally ‘Live long’

*
cart or carriage

*
village headman

*
1
koss
= 2 miles

*
drivers of horse-drawn vehicles

*
mail carriage (
dâk
literally post, mail, posting-house)

*
sun-blind made of split cane

*
for me too

*
thanks be to God

*
Princesses

*
nonsense (literally, stupidity)

*
kaka = paternal uncle

*
Highness

*
nymphs of the Mohammedan paradise

*
part of the Vedic literature

*
Your honour

*
You have permission to go

*
Literally young men: but also used colloquially to mean soldiers.

*
my son

*
Before India was taken over from the East India Company by the Crown, the title was Governor-General. The last of these was Sir John Lawrence.

*
Fear not. Be strong. Bravo!

*
Thank you

*
Now it is finished

*
Here lies Barbur the great Emperor. May his fame live for ever.

*
Go back and get your muskets. On! On!

*
Forward, brothers. On – Victory to the Guides.

*
strike; kill.

*
Please. Enough. Stop!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

M. M. Kaye was born in India and spent most of her childhood and much of her early married life in that country. Her ties with India are strong: her grandfather, father, brother and husband all served the Raj, and her grandfather's first cousin, Sir John Kaye, wrote the standard accounts of the Indian Mutiny and the first Afghan War. When India achieved independence her husband joined the British Army, and for the next nineteen years she followed the drum to all sorts of exciting places she would not otherwise have seen, including Kenya, Zanzibar, Egypt, Cyprus and Berlin. M. M. Kaye is known world-wide for her bestselling historical novels
The Far Pavilions
and
Shadow of the Moon
(both of which are published in Penguin), and
Trade Wind
; and for her detective novels
Death in Berlin, Death in Kenya and Death in Cyprus
(which are published in one volume by Penguin as
Murder Abroad
), and
Death in Zanzibar, Death in Kashmir
and
Death in the Andamans
(which are published together in Penguin as
House of Shade
). Penguin also publishes three volumes of autobiography:
The Sun in the Morning, Golden Afternoon
and
Enchanted Evening
. M. M. Kaye has also written a children's story,
The Ordinary Princess
(1991).

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