Monsoon! The nymph that envelopes the land and the heavens with her irresistible enchantment!
If an ordinary mortal such as I is bewitched by the beauty
she brings forth and enhances on all that is in Nature- the air, water, sky,
the mountains, the thick green flora and even the often uninviting water
buffaloes that stand in the rain fed fields indifferent and caring the least,
what wondrous creation can she tempt and provoke in a bard!
The monsoon in Kerala is singular. It is awe and inspiring
splendour how she transforms the famished and unquenchable land with her spell.
In one whiff of freshness she carries in her bosom she eclipses the dreariness
and forlorn. Driving through the land after the spell of monsoon rains, with
water dripping from trees that straddle the path, pools of water on the road
and gushing by sides of the road in effusive state, eager to join the larger
schemes elsewhere down, I and C were on a drive some hundred and thirty
kilometers from the dry town in Tamilnad where we then lived.
We had befriended a family whom we have met often before at
the school in Coonoor, but neither they nor we went farther than exchanging
acknowledging nods. However a carnival at the school that lasted a couple of
days brought us together and before we parted they invited us to their home in Kerala
by the foothills of the Western Ghats.
The rains that visit Kerala, particularly the south west
monsoon that tee off in June scatter much relief in the border towns of Tamilnad-Coimbatore,
Pollachi and Tiruppur. The stifling dryness of the summer slowly recedes unable
to confront the wet, bewitching spell of the monsoon rains and the cold air it
throws across the mountains. By the time one crosses the bye- pass highway off
Coimbatore into Kerala, the resplendent rain clouds that hover over the
mountains are a soulful sight. And, as if Nature herself has taken the cue from
the man-made divisions of the State borders, the rains that confined to drizzle
until there begin to lash as soon as one crosses the State border from Tamilnad
into Kerala. It poured and poured in thick drops of shimmering, shiny silver.
It is amazing as to how vegetation changes colour and
radiates a splendiferous hue after a few days of amorous onslaught of the
monsoon. The dark greyish blue clouds impregnated with rain hover low over the
mountains.
On that late afternoon we drove in the sleek Hyundai Accent
we bought a couple of months before. We drove through the rain and the car
tested wonderful endurance on the slippery roads in the rain and the sharp
bends on the road that can be a motorist’s misery. But I loved the drive water
splashing in jet from beneath the car. The stretch towards their house off Palghat,
by the foot hills brought forth the trancing beauty of nature. It was
magnificent display of colours from the heavens - the clouds that engulfed the
mountains and then to the expanse on the foothills. Parrot green, lemon green
and dark and dark green hue of vegetation. Every leaf and bark of plants and
trees were touched by the spell of monsoon and they stood bowed but afresh,
washed anew by the rains. The rivers and rivulets were gushing and torrential.
The rains had ceased lashing, but the land and its creatures
were in eagerness and bated breath waiting for the next spell. Dark grey blue
rain clouds where swirling on the mountains conveying the torrent that would
soon come down from the heavens. Street dogs wet to the bones were running about
and seemed to enjoy the transformed air. A flock of ducks was frolicking in the
muddy waters of the paddy fields and the brook near. Crows wet and drenched in
the rain perched on trees and roof tops pecking their feathers clean.
We had slid down the window panes when the rains stopped and switched off the air-conditioner in the car. It imparted a continuous soothing blast of monsoon air, neither cold nor warm.
The house was cocooned in the middle of a vast rubber
plantation and the drive to the house was through the serpentine drive-way with
strewn bed of fallen leaves and the rubber trees holding aloft dark canopy .The
croaking of the toads lend the silence of the place an oxymoron effect.We seemed to be cut away and mercifully cast away from the civilisation , the monsoon magic was hypnotising then, there!