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454 pages, Hardcover
First published September 1, 1990
While mother saw to the collecting, sorting and packing of the many things we would have to take with us, Bets and I set about making our own collection of necessities, which were in no way similar. From every one of our special places in and around Delhi we took a souvenir; an amulet that we could look at and touch whenever we fleet homesick for India. A leaf from the avenue of eucalyptus trees in the Kudsia Bagh. Another from the bamboos that had once hidden the stairway to our hideaway on the roof of the ruined gateway. A flake of sandstone and a scrap of marble from the surrounding parapet. Other leaves from the squirrel trees, the peepul behind Curzon House, the lemon, sweet lime and orange trees in the Roshanara Gardens, and neem leaves and rose petals from the cemetery where Nicholson lies buried. We took a sliver of stone from the Kashmir Gate and a piece of bark from a tree in which we used to sit for hours in the back garden of Curzon House; a fallen feather shed by a parrot, a peacock, a jay, a sat-bhai and a dove. A pinch of silver sand from the Jumna, and another, together with the dried and crumpled egg-shell of a river turtle, from Okhla. Red gravel from the Curzon House drive, a pebble from the Ridge, and any number of flowers and grasses, carefully dried- wild ones, picked out on the plains among the ruins of the seven cities. The little dusty yellow balls that are the blossoms of the kikar tree, purple and red bougainvillaea, orange trumpet flowers, petals from roses, canna lilies, jasmine and Lady of the Night, a stick of incense and a tiny bottle of ‘itr (essence of roses), a little packet of dust gathered from the Maidan that lies between the Red Fort and the Jumna Masjid, and a twig from the tree that used to grow through the Cloth Shop near the Clock Tower in the Chandi Chowk, together with many other bits and pieces, some of which, such as a fragment of sandalwood and a lucky blue bead, were given to us by friends in the city or in one or other of Delhi’s public gardens …* Kashmera’s contribution was a little string of scarlet and black jungle seeds, while another friend, Devika… donated a miniature paan box no bigger than a four–anna piece, made of beaten silver and beautifully decorated …these and scores of similar souvenirs were carefully stowed away in a glossy cardboard box that had once held a dozen tablets of Erasmic Soap…and neither Bets nor I would have parted with that assorted collection of dust and pebbles, feathers and dried flowers … That Erasmic Soap box and its precious contents left India with us, and during the lean years that followed it became a kind of talisman…whenever we became homesick or lost or forgotten, we had only to open it and the past was there in our hands. (pp297-8) (* Kashmera reappears below, in the leopard story)The Sun in the Morning is Molly Kaye’s love affair with India, a time of sunshine, flowers, animals, a great sense of freedom; to roam unescorted as her long list attests, have adventures, and let her imagination grow. She knew she enjoyed the privilege of being part of the ruling class in a colourful and vibrant yet foreign land, but for now it was the only place she knew.