It was as an essayist that I had embarked
on my great adventure as a journalist 50 years ago; and it was THE
HINDU, one of the finest newspapers in the world then and now, which had
encouraged me to develop my own silky style of
writing English. Since then, till today, the newspaper
has assigned several different roles to me as an amateur
all-round writer.
My very first contribution was an essay titled The Vegetarian, which was published in the Sunday Magazine in December, 1962. Compared to a series of essays which followed (including those on The Marker, The Liftman and The Railwayman, .which I have featured in this blog earlier), it was a rather insubstantial piece of writing, and I never thought it would survive the test of time. But somehow it seems to be still readable, so please do read on!
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THE HINDU
December, 1962
The VegetarianMy very first contribution was an essay titled The Vegetarian, which was published in the Sunday Magazine in December, 1962. Compared to a series of essays which followed (including those on The Marker, The Liftman and The Railwayman, .which I have featured in this blog earlier), it was a rather insubstantial piece of writing, and I never thought it would survive the test of time. But somehow it seems to be still readable, so please do read on!
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December, 1962
THE vegetarian is a specialist. He
specializes in facing problems. Society seems to frown on him,
especially that stratum of it which consists of waiters, headwaiters and
stewards. Whether in this country or elsewhere, whether in a hotel or
in a ship, not a few tough problems beset the man who would insist on
being shown a meatless menu.
Merely telling them what he wants is a
nerve-racking ordeal for the vegetarian in any sophisticated place
where the business of eating is going on. A disgusted waiter breathes
fire over his shoulders, a suave but critical headwaiter looks at him
askance from a distance, and inquisitive neighbors cast furtive glances
at him as the poor vegetarian fumbles with his carte and struggles to select something.
Pot au Feu, Grilled Liver & Onion, Chicken a la Strangano, Prawn Mayonnaise, Lobster au Gratin, Kofta Kashmiri. . .
the vegetarian's head reels. He thinks feebly of the rapture with
which the heroes of P.G. Wodehouse have gone through similar
compilations, but that doesn't help him in the least. Finally, after he
has timidly asked for and eaten the odd item in the list, he notices
that not even the disproportionately fat tip he leaves on the saucer is
able to produce a look of satisfaction on the waiter's face.
This, after all, is just one of those things a man can afford to laugh away, even if he does happen to have a couple of friends watching his performance; but the vegetarian often finds himself in far more sinister predicaments.
He dreads in particular those dinners
which his crazy friends and colleagues seem to be bent on arranging on
every trivial occasion. When they're all still in the lounge sipping
their apertifs, the vegetarian has been betrayed by the busybodies to
the headwaiter, who has an ugly head like a villain's.
The minute you
have sat down at the table, the villain lunges towards you -- and,
fixing you with a pulverizing stare, bellows at you: "Vegetarian, SIR?"
Heads turn towards you, knowing smiles are exchanged between friends,
and you find yourself nodding under a cloud of sweat and apprehension.
Separate dishes are brought over specially for you; you are
deliberately forced to dislocate the pace of the dinner. By the time
the others are starting their second course you have already finished
yours, and the waiters are all glaring at you. You dare not ask for a
second helping; none is offered, presumably because the villain thinks
you couldn't eat more. The chaps on either side of you talk to each other
merrily over your head. You try to smile weakly at their jokes, and
feel like a fool. They're all hacking and chewing ferociously, while
you fiddle with your useless assortment of knives and forks. And
through all this terrible nightmare you are being harassed spitefully by
the villain. He keeps on looking at you menacingly -- and, pouncing
every now and then on careless (or maybe callous) waiters, reminds them
in his stentorian voice: "VEGETARIAN! VEGETARIAN!"
Hotels, after all, have never been as progressive as airline companies in the matter of customer-handling. Vegetarians all over the world have now started feeling a certain pride on seeing the airline companies vying with each other to glorify him. Vegetarian meals on board airliners are no longer concessions, but a legitimate feature. The vegetarian feels confident at last!
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PostScript, 2013
Fifty years are a long span of time even
in the life of a nation or the whole world, leave alone the life of an
individual; and there has been a remarkable upgrading world-wide in the
status of vegetarians during the past half-century. And yet they
continue to face serious problems too now and then, as they did in a dinner organized for an Indian soiree at the recent Cannes film
festival.
But the whole theme seems to call for a fresh commentary now, so let me continue this exercise tomorrow!