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The Towers of Silence (1971)

de Paul Scott

Séries: The Raj Quartet (3)

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8681724,793 (4.05)1 / 123
It is the last, bitter days of World War II and the British Raj in India is crumbling. Ensconced in the Indian Hill Station of Pankot are the English wives, mothers, daughters and widows of the officers embroiled in the ongoing conflict. With their old beliefs and assumptions under increasingly virulent attack, all eyes are upon Captain Merrick and the British military to protect them in this troubled time. But Merrick, though outwardly a consummate professional, is brutal and corrupt, and not even his machinations can stop the change that is swiftly and inevitably approaching, change which is increasingly undermining the old myth of British invincibility...… (mais)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 17 (seguinte | mostrar todas)
It's WWII, in India, and Ghandi Is just getting started. Thus, politics between Indians and the meddling English living there are heating up. Barbie Batchelor gets "retired" from the mission school she is superintending. With no family to go live with, either in India or England, she answers an ad to share a home with another elderly woman who has a house in Pankot, a fictional English"station" in the hills where the meddling English go with their families and servants during the hottest part of the year. She doesn't know what she's getting into. A bittersweet story. ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
Installment number three in Paul Scott’s Indian quartet, The Towers of Silence is a heady and emotionally exacting read. Imagine my surprise when, instead of opening his next installment with the continuing story of Sarah Layton, Scott chooses to bring forward a rather minor character in the person of Barbara (Barbie) Bachelor. Of course, before we have reached the end of the novel, Bachelor is not a minor character at all, she is in fact a crux or hub around which what is happening in India can be observed with candor and some degree of understanding. She is, at the same moment, within the machine and outside it, and her presence represents more of the truth than many of her contemporaries can bear to acknowledge.

A retired missionary, Barbie has come to live as a paying guest with Mabel Layton, a recognized member of the military elite who has herself come to see India in a way that makes her question the life of the British raj and the disdain with which the Indian people have been and are treated. While Mabel can be accepted, because of her position, with whatever strange ideas she may entertain, the same cannot be said for Barbie, and it is the reactions of the other women as much as anything else that drives this story and tells us what ails the British in India.

As in the previous two novels of this series, Paul Scott has delved deeply and with precision into the wound that is festering in India. His ability to show all the ugliness, all the pomp and ostentation, alongside the uncomfortable realization that a way of life is ending and there is little that the participants can do but continue the play until the curtain falls, is masterful. With even the most reprehensible of his characters there is a touch of humanity that begs you to feel a twinge of pity for a life so misspent and deluded.

At the same time, there is nobility on display on both sides of the divide. Barbie Bachelor, I would say, represents a bit of that nobility and a great deal of courage. She faces some difficult truths, along with the slow erosion of her faith in God himself, and she perseveres nonetheless. Her good intentions and loyalty drive her sometime bizarre thoughts and actions. She is at everyone’s mercy and yet she is, without doubt, the most independent and genuine character in this group of lost souls.

Scott’s writing is rich in metaphor and symbolism, and I fear there is no way to catch every nuance or even grand design on a first reading. I found myself wishing to “go back” and read sections of the previous two novels, knowing that what seemed like a minor event in those books had taken on powerful and complicated meaning in this one. One example being the butterfly lace that Mabel owned--lace that was used to make a christening gown and becomes a death shroud for Barbie Bachelor. Thanks to Jean, I was paying special attention to this symbol as it unfolded. The lace was made by a blind woman, we are told, and its intricacies are a bit of wonder for each of those who encounter it; the butterflies unseen unless the lace is moving. It stands perfectly for India, moving forward and unfolding into a new and unique entity, different from what it was before the Raj and different from what it has been under the Raj, but it also stands as a perfect metaphor for the individual life, unfolding as well and sometimes standing so still that it takes on the pallor of death. So many of these people are not moving forward anymore, they are stifled, waiting and not living in any significant meaning of the word.

The language and construction Scott employs is a thing of beauty. This is a history lesson, but there are no long, boring lecture notes here. The story moves effortlessly and the history is so much a part of the action that it melds into the story, piercing the consciousness almost unnoticed. I marked dozens of passages, hoping to sere them into my mind. One which struck me particularly had to do with the picture...the original picture “The Jewel in the Crown” with which we began this adventure:

’One should always share one’s hopes,’ she said. ‘That represents one of the unfulfilled ones. Oh, not the gold and scarlet uniforms, not the pomp, not the obeisance. We’ve had all that and plenty. We’ve had everything in the picture except what got left out.’

‘What was that, Miss Bachelor?’

She said, not wishing to use that emotive word, ‘I call it the unknown Indian. He isn’t there. So the picture isn’t finished.’


The British have had India, they have ruled it, they have used it, but they have never understood it and their greatest failure can be seen in the omission of the main component that should have mattered, the Indian himself.

I mused throughout the book about the significance of its title. The silence? Barbara is a chatterbox, but in the end, even before her death, she is silenced. And she considers the loss of her voice as being as significant to her as the loss of sight to an artist or hearing to a musician. I could not help thinking of the silence before a storm. Everyone is in denial about the changes they see coming and the voices of reason are muffled and unheeded. The moment of silence we so often observe in reverence or remembrance of a loss. The very personal moment of silence at the end:

She raised a questioning or admonitory finger, commanding just a short moment of silence for the tiny anticipated sound: the echo of her own life.

But, on a larger scale, the Towers of Silence are real. They are daunting and large and they loom in the distance, and Barbie sees them surrounded by birds that circle and swoop. The birds are vultures, and the towers belong to the Parsees...the Muslim Indians...and Scott has just foreshadowed his final chapter--India’s final chapter--The Division of the Spoils.

( )
  mattorsara | Aug 11, 2022 |
"Nothing can bring you peace but yourself. Nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of principles."

This is the third instalment of the "Raj Quartet," and again the ripples from the incidents at the core of "The Jewel in the Crown." are still being felt.

We were introduced to Barbie Batchelor in the previous book but there she was but a small bit part player, here she takes centre stage. Barbie is a former missionary teacher who on retirement moves into Rose Cottage in Pankot with the Layton's step-grandmother-in-law Mabel. Many in Pankot were shocked that Barbie should have moved in with Mabel rather than the latter's daughter-in-law,Mildred, and her two daughters but despite some dark mutterings nothing was said. Mabel and Barbie live a quiet rather insular life away from the hustle and bustle of the encampment but Barbie is still generally disliked in particular by Mildred and her daughter Susan, whilst the other daughter Sarah is friendly towards her.

Pankot was largely untouched by the trouble that broke out in Mayapore after the incidents concerning Daphne Manners and Edwina Crane, its residents instead having to rely on rumour and second hand news for its information but Barbie comes to some prominence when she reveals that she knew her fellow missionary, Edwina Crane.

In this novel the reader learns about the courtship of Susan and Teddie and the events that led up to Ronald Merrick, the police inspector at the centre of the Mayapore incident, becoming Teddie's best man. However, central to this book are the parallels between the two ex-missionaries Barbie and Edwina, their gradual decline of confidence in the evangelical rationale of their calling and the loneliness of the British once their work in India comes to an end, in particular as the Second World War also heads towards its conclusion.

Teddie's reaction to Merrick's talk about the Indian National Army which allies against the British with the Japanese makes for interesting reading and rather oddly the meaning behind the previous novel's title is revealed but as with the previous books in this series there is little action here. Instead its strength lies in conversational shifts and character revelations, many of them taking place in Rose Cottage.

This book does its job in advancing the timeline towards the end the war, even if these events remain distant. However, this was also my least favourite so far. In many its disturbing depiction of the breakdown of belief and of order, as a Britain, makes this an unsettling read but I believe that the author attempts to link Barbie's decline with that of the empire and its crown jewel felt, especially considering what had gone before, a bit simplistic and strangely heavy handed. I must admit that the lack of new action was also beginning to frustrate me. On with the final book in the series, here's hoping it goes out with a bang. ( )
1 vote PilgrimJess | Nov 15, 2020 |
(22) The third book in this mesmerizing tale of the end of the British rule of India. These books are so fascinating because they do not move the story far into time but instead retrace much of the time from the last book but through a different optic. This book is primarily through the eyes of Barbie Batchelor, the retired mission teacher, who was Mabel Layton's paying guest. I believe we also get Mildred Layton's perspective as well which gives the reader more of a view into Susan as opposed to Sarah Layton who was the protagonist of the second book. We do also see the aftermath of Merrick's hospitalization as well as Sarah's visit to Calcutta - but not until the end.

This was a quieter book than the first three. I am not sure that it stands alone. I found Miss Batchelor to be such a sad character, so lonely and full of frustrated hopes - she was very well drawn but maybe not as intriguing as our previous protagonists. Scott's prose though is just excellent. Complex, but feels effortless. Evocative, but not flowery. Incredibly atmospheric such that I feel as if I have been living in stuffy Rose cottage in Pankot with the cloying scent of roses, mixed with mildew, and a bit of body odor for the last few weeks.

I would love to see Susan's son and Daphne's daughter as they grow up but I have a feeling we really won't get that. I am not quite ready to leave behind Hari Kumar or Sarah Layton so I hope the 4th book has more of those characters. This series really is in my opinion the best of literary fiction. I look forward to the last installment. ( )
  jhowell | May 11, 2019 |
Brilliant series. This one completed the quartet for me. Of the four it is the least enjoyable for me, but still the within the framework of the quartet it is masterful. ( )
  yhgail | Feb 20, 2019 |
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In September 1939, when the war had just begun, Miss Batchelor retired from her post as superintendent of the Protestant mission schools in the city of Ranpur.
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It is the last, bitter days of World War II and the British Raj in India is crumbling. Ensconced in the Indian Hill Station of Pankot are the English wives, mothers, daughters and widows of the officers embroiled in the ongoing conflict. With their old beliefs and assumptions under increasingly virulent attack, all eyes are upon Captain Merrick and the British military to protect them in this troubled time. But Merrick, though outwardly a consummate professional, is brutal and corrupt, and not even his machinations can stop the change that is swiftly and inevitably approaching, change which is increasingly undermining the old myth of British invincibility...

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