June
15 - 30 Issue
Behind the royal facade is a very
real human being.
I've been to London, the cat in the nursery rhyme
said, to look at the Queen. Well, dear cat, if you’re listening, I did not
meet the Queen, but Prince Charles did shake my hand, and equally enthralling,
was the fact that I stomped about his wonderful garden in Highgrove, dressed in
a silk sari and walking shoes!
Well, I’ll start at the beginning
since I have got you curious, I see. There we were, senior journalists from all
over the world, holding in our hands individually addressed invitations to meet
HRH The Prince of Wales, at his Highgrove residence, and a chance to walk
through his treasured gardens.
It was royalty’s way of telling us
They were pleased with the way we and our publications were promoting Britain,
but it was exciting all the same. Especially when we were told that the waiting
list for visits to Highgrove Gardens was three years long.
Of course,
neither royalty nor any of us media people remembered to send a message to the
weather gods about our intended walkabout in the royal gardens, so on the
appointed day, the clouds moved in and the heavens opened, as they know how,
only in Britain. And we blessed the organisers who had warned us to come
equipped with walking shoes.
The garden proved a source of great joy. As
we trudged out into the cold, wet afternoon, umbrellas aloft, looking for all
the world like a bunch of agitated ostriches, the skies held their water. What
started as a ‘might as well get it over with’ routine, soon turned
into an expedition into the unfamiliar and wonderful.
Highgrove is the
Prince’s retreat; his garden is mainly of his own design and creation, and
the many sections are as different, one from another, as his many experiences
across the world.
Thus, we sauntered through his Islamic garden, with
newly-planted Cyprus trees all in a row, along the walled rectangle... A moment
later, we were in a field of tulips, black and yellow, bravely holding their own
despite the wet weather. The mood each evoked was markedly different, and kept
the tedium that sometimes overcomes me in orderly, over tended, gardens well at
bay.
Everything in the garden was innocent of chemicals. Manure and
compost ensured that there was no tainting of the flora, and the flowers grew
bright and smiling on the only food Nature meant them to have. Design and
surprise played an important role; the Vegetable Garden was a maze of clever
design, with a herbarium at the centre; the Temple Garden had a Greek structure
and petrified trees forming natural arbors.
Wonderfully-sculpted bushes and
hedges, strategically-placed man-made toadstools, a seemingly wild arborium...
The garden was full of delights. And I could well imagine the Prince wishing to
spend much more time than his duties allowed him to, in its many enclosures.
ALL too soon, the walk was over, and my shoes were muddy, but my sari had
survived the walk, and I had indeed enjoyed the experience.
Careful not to
disturb the living spirit of the place, I stooped and picked a fallen tulip
petal from the damp soil and placed it in my coat pocket as a memento of my
visit. And then I changed my shoes for delicate golden-heeled sandals and
readied to meet the owner of the magical garden.
We broke into small
groups and waited. I was in almost the last group. I wondered if he would tire
or run out of conversation by the time he reached us. But I needn’t have
worried. The Prince seemed genuinely interested in everyone, and spoke earnestly
to each of us.
The brief meeting with him convinced me that here indeed
was a man of many depths. His easy humour, the sudden flush of colour that
suffused his face when the evening took on a formal note and speeches of thanks
were delivered... All made me like this very human prince, much more than all
that I had heard about him had in the past.
When he decided to make a
formal reply, humour tinged his speech once more, and there was a genuine warmth
of feeling that made us feel welcome.
And then, it was time to leave. The
evening did not seem cold any more. There was an enchantment that was foolishly
apparent, that seemed to include all of us. Stop acting like a fairy tale
character, I scolded myself, as we drove off into the night in our bus.
The reprimand helped bring me down to earth... And then, as I settled down
for the night, I was woken up with a start by a sudden thought. In the
excitement, I had fled the princely residence leaving behind... my walking
shoes!
The Editor
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