Colombo: A Novel'Colombo is in the throes of an explosion. Its face changes continuously, its vices are legion, its future as yet obscure and its paths speak of sunlight as well as of shadow...' Carl Muller begins his quasi-fictional portrait of this beautiful, war-torn city by describing the great battles fought over it by European colonizers...In AD 1505, a Portuguese fleet blown off-course took shelter in Galle, overthrew the local kings, fortified Colombo and decided to stay. The Dutch came along, ousted the Portuguese, made Colombo their capital and ruled till the British arrived and sent them packing. Muller intersperses the tales of the past into descriptions of the battles that are being fought in Colombo today--political battles in which vested interests play a major role as well as battles fought on the individual level in the struggle to survive: young women and children turning to prostitution to earn an extra buck, people begging in the streets to make ends meet, unemployed young men turning to crime in frustration, students demonstrating against atrocities, lovers pining for nightfall in order to push away loneliness if only for a few moments...Written in Muller's lucid style, Colomb |
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Page 388
An armed sergeant then escorted him to the Governor and he remained
Angelbeck's 'guest' for several days. Shrewd man that he was, Agnew strolled the
balconies of the Governor's House, observing all the preparations being made for
...
An armed sergeant then escorted him to the Governor and he remained
Angelbeck's 'guest' for several days. Shrewd man that he was, Agnew strolled the
balconies of the Governor's House, observing all the preparations being made for
...
Page 405
While many British soldiers worked desperately to fight the fire which, if
uncontrolled, would have menaced many other buildings in the interior of the Fort
, a group of men rushed the house, panting up burning stairways to find the
governor ...
While many British soldiers worked desperately to fight the fire which, if
uncontrolled, would have menaced many other buildings in the interior of the Fort
, a group of men rushed the house, panting up burning stairways to find the
governor ...
Page 440
Beside the Governor's House, the carriages were drawn up, waiting to move into
line. The stone ramparts, the streets, murmured along with the drums, then
muttered under the strains of the funeral music that keened dolefully. In the
torchlight ...
Beside the Governor's House, the carriages were drawn up, waiting to move into
line. The stone ramparts, the streets, murmured along with the drums, then
muttered under the strains of the funeral music that keened dolefully. In the
torchlight ...
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Contents
The Leafy Mango Tree | 14 |
Harbour Lights | 30 |
Only by Night | 51 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
Angelbeck arms asked bastion blood boat British Buddha Buddhist building called canal Captain carried Ceylon child Church cinnamon coconut Colombo Company dark door dragged Dutch East elephants eyes father fire fish Galle Face Galle Face Green Galle Face Hotel garden Gate girls give Governor Grand Pass guns hands harbour head Hotel Hulft hundred India Jaya Kandy kill king knew Kochchikade Kollupitiya Kotte lake land Legrevisse light live London looked Malays Maradana military Minister mother moved Mutwal night officers Pettah police political port Portuguese Raja Sinha ramparts river road Royal Asiatic Society rupees scream ships Sinhala Sinhalese Slave Island Sri Lanka stands stood Street Tamil tell temples thousand told trade tree Trincomalee troops turned Vesak vessels W.H. Auden wait walk walls watch Wellawatte wife woman