Here Marie sits chatting with friends on the Amangalla Hotel verandah, Galle, before the start of the festival:
Galle is well-stocked with distinctive colonial period hotels, warehouses, houses etc. Below is a photo of the shuttered verandah of the Galle Fort Hotel (down from the Dutch Reformed Church) where many a lime soda mysteriously vanished:
Looking from the main gate of the Galle Fort towards the Hall de Galle, a venue for many festival events:
Marie senses history: her Srilankan forbears, top legal eagles of 3 generations earlier, would certainly have been familiar with this District Court inside Galle Fort:
The office of an Attorney-at-Law & Notary Public, just inside the main gate. Let's describe it as unpretentious:
I have managed to resist the temptation to add a thought bubble to the following pic of Geoffrey Dobbs and Germaine Greer. I've thought of many. If you have any suggestions, why not add them to the "Comments" at the foot of this blogpost? I may even relent if your idea is seriously fun and reasonably non-libellous...
Most of my photos and comments about the festival can be found here.
Now I reveal the minutiae and grunge of the rest of the trip, but frankly, that's one of the most interesting aspects, yes/no? Noticing detail is a key to writerly credibility.
As an antidote to all that Literature and Intellectual Stuff from the festival, Marie Burrows browses some local dress shops in Main St, Galle, Sri Lanka. One with English signage dubbed itself "Rohan's Highly Fashionable Accessories". A feral cow moo-ed quite anxiously when M dared to approach its shop:
Behind the shop (local lingo: backside) was a squalid dwelling with a door of hessian sacking; it smelled alternately of urine, cooking spices, and grey water:
Weighing watermelons tossed from a truck:
A hotel offering "PACKAGE OR TRANCEPORT ONLY" deals. One has to remember that the word 'hotel' in parts of Srilanka often signifies a small cheap restaurant that doesn't offer accommodation. However, tourist-savvy locals are cottoning on quickly to the West's notion of 'hotel'. Likewise the terms "petrol shed", "bus halt", and "coloured lights" (=traffic lights). Snack foods are"short eats". "Lunch packets" are curry & rice, wrapped in paper and eaten with the (right-hand) fingers, a way of life here.
A toilet bowl showroom adjacent to a florist. Town-planning would be a novelty here, and certainly grasped as an opportunity for corruption:
...a resurrected colonial relic in disarmingly appropriate colours?
This Bajaj 3-wheeler taxi was christened "Queen of the Night". Its proud macho owner fitted it out with a genuine Chinese F1 aerofoil, a ladder just like an SUV, and a fake truck exhaust, not to mention acres of chrome. So cool. Pity about the engine, the smell, the carbon footprint, and the noise:
Roman-style 'over-under' tiles comprise most roof-tops - I hope the fibro underneath is not actually asbestos:
...and the same from inside, looking up through a trapdoor in a ceiling, above an almost vertical wooden ladder:
A gem-polisher works at a local shop as a tourist drawcard:
His handiwork wasn't really so handi:
House for sale in Galle, 1 million rupees. Foreigners can purchase house and land in their own right, unlike here in Thailand:
Chocolate-boxy sunsets behind the mosque, taken from the Ladyhill Hotel, the highest point in Galle:
The view from our room at the historic Closenberg Hotel, Galle. It's quickly obvious to the visitor how our nineteenth century forbears quickly nabbed all the best and breeziest spots along the coast. Hey, who put the Post in Post-Colonial?
Kandyan Dancers drumming loudly and doing acrobatics for a wedding at the Closenberg:
There is still much damage apparent along Srilanka's coast from the 2004 tsunami. Many places have been abandonned, and there are many more graveyards:
There has also been a rash of new building using Aid money, mainly in an area of southern Colombo (probably where there are most votes). I can only applaud disaster assistance of any kind, but the new developments do look rather depressingly grey, barren and soul-less.
More typically, most shanty towns have been privately re-built using foraged materials, with the result that many shacks along the railway look identical to the way they looked when we last did the trip back in 2003:
Feral(?) goats roam the railway tracks foraging god-knows-what to eat: these ones approached us insistently with large golden lakes of imploring eyes:
One of the landmarks of southern Colombo seen from the train is the historic Mt. Lavinia Hotel [photo below]. One of our new friends from the Galle Literary Festival, Shevanthie Goonesekera, has published a wonderfully illustrated book on its history during Ceylon's British colonial period. It is titled Mount Lavinia: The Governor's Palace (Paradise Isle Publication, London, 2006). Obligatory reading for any curious visitor.
Closer to Colombo, the waters of drains feeding into Beira Lake look green and cool - but perhaps it is better to stick to bottled water...
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Marie sashays sassily down the opera staircase and into the ballroom for the benefit of attendant media...