Modern India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 495 pages of information about Modern India.

Modern India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 495 pages of information about Modern India.
but American harness and other accoutrements, and as a natural and unavoidable consequence Great Scott won the cup and the purse very easily, and his fleetness was doubtless due to the fact that he was shod with American shoes.  The programme showed that about half the entries were by natives.  His Royal Highness Aga Khan, the Nawab of Samillolahs; Aga Shah; our old friend of the Chicago exposition, the Sultan of Johore, and His Highness Kour Sahib of Patiala, all had horses in the big race.  Some of these princes have breeding stables.  Others import English, Irish, Australian, American and Arabian thoroughbreds.  There was no American horse entered for the viceroy’s cup this year, but Kentucky running stock is usually represented.

There are two race tracks at Calcutta, one for regular running, the other for steeple chasing, and, as in England and Ireland, the horses run on the turf, and most of the riders are gentlemen.  A few professional jockeys represent the stables of breeders who are too old or too fat or too lazy to ride themselves, but it is considered the proper thing for every true sportsman to ride his own horse as long as he is under weight.  The tracks are surrounded by lovely landscapes, an easy driving distance from Calcutta, and everybody in town was there.  The grand stand and the terraces that surround it were crowded with beautifully dressed women, many of them Parsees, in their lovely costumes, and within the course were more than 50,000 natives, wearing every conceivable color, red and yellow predominating, so that when one looked down upon the inclosure from a distance it resembled a vast flower bed, a field of poppies and roses.  The natives take great interest in the races, and, as they are admitted free, every man, woman and child who could leave home was there, and the most of them walked the entire distance from the city.

The viceroy and vice-queen appear in the official old-fashioned barouche, drawn by four horses, with outriders, and escorted by a bodyguard of Sikhs in brilliant scarlet uniforms and big turbans of navy blue, with gold trimmings.  The viceroy’s box is lined and carpeted with scarlet, and easy chairs were placed for his comfort.  Distinguished people came up to pay their respects to him and Lady Curzon, and between visits he wandered about the field, shaking hands with acquaintances in a democratic fashion and smiling as if he were having the time of his life.  It is not often that the present viceroy takes a holiday.  He is the most industrious man in India, and very few of his subjects work as hard as he, but he takes his recreation in the same fashion.  He is always full of enthusiasm, and never does anything in a half-hearted way.  Lord Kitchener came also, but was compelled to remain in his carriage because of his broken leg.  The police found him a good place and he enjoyed it.

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Modern India from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.