Canticle of the End

Story

Characters

World

Reference

Calcutta 1814 Draft

Description Calcutta in October 1814 is the capital of British India and the seat of the East India Company’s power. The second city of the British Empire after London: a quarter of a million people o

Description

Calcutta in October 1814 is the capital of British India and the seat of the East India Company’s power. The second city of the British Empire after London: a quarter of a million people on the banks of the Hooghly, where Palladian mansions stand within sight of cremation ghats, and the Governor-General dines in a replica of a Derbyshire country house while the monsoon rains hammer the roof.

The city is two cities, overlaid on the same geography, barely acknowledging each other. White Town occupies the southern and central riverfront: grand avenues, colonnaded houses, Government House, Fort_William, churches, clubs. Black Town sprawls north of Lal Dighi: dense, labyrinthine, vibrant, home to the Indian population that vastly outnumbers the Europeans who rule them. The investigators must operate in both worlds. The social calendar traps them in the first. The investigation pulls them into the second. The river connects everything.

Historical Context

The East India Company is not merely present in Calcutta. It IS the government. The Company controls entry to the port, river traffic, military deployment, taxation, justice, and the entire administrative apparatus. There is no “going around” the Company.

Governor-General: Francis Rawdon, Earl of Moira (later Marquess of Hastings), appointed 1813. A veteran soldier, sixty years old, already planning the military campaign against the Gurkhas of Nepal that will launch in November 1814. His attention in October is divided between diplomatic entertaining and war preparations, which means Fort William buzzes with military activity, staff officers are coming and going, and the garrison is on a heightened footing.

The “season”: British Calcutta’s social calendar is governed by the monsoon. June through September: rains, misery, minimal entertaining. When the monsoon breaks in mid-to-late October, the city erupts into social activity. The investigators arrive at the pivot point. The social calendar accelerates around them whether they want it to or not.

The Hooghly River

The river is the city’s artery and the ritual’s transmission medium. Wide enough that the far bank is sometimes hazy. Brown with Ganges sediment, powerfully tidal. Busy with traffic at all hours: country boats, cargo budgerows, passenger boats, fishing craft, ferries to Howrah, ceremonial boats during festivals. During Kali Puja, the river will carry thousands of clay Kali images for immersion, and underneath the devotion, the svarita resonance.

No bridge exists in 1814. Crossing to the western bank requires a ferry or a hired boat. The trip takes 15-30 minutes depending on current and traffic. To reach the Mandir_Mahakali at Baranagar, investigators must cross the river.

Districts

White Town — The European Quarter

The British have built a miniature England in the tropics. Neoclassical mansions with Ionic columns and deep verandahs. Perhaps 3,000 Europeans in a city of 250,000. Everyone knows everyone. A newcomer is catalogued within 48 hours. Privacy is impossible.

Government House — Seat of the Governor-General. Modelled on Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire. The ball takes place here.

Tank Square (Lal Dighi) — Central square. Post office, auction rooms, public notices. News travels from here.

The Strand — Riverfront. Warehouses, docks, customs house. Surlish’s warehouse complex dominates a section.

St. John’s Church — Anglican parish church. Jessop’s domain. Social anchor of the British community.

The Asiatic Society of Bengal — Founded 1784. Oriental manuscripts, natural history collections. One of the few social spaces where European and Indian worlds meet.

Chowringhee — The Residential Quarter

Where the British live. Walled compounds containing bungalows, outbuildings, gardens, stables, and servants’ quarters. Hugh’s compound is here. Several rental compounds available through agency houses.

The Maidan

Vast open ground surrounding Fort William. Riding, walking, military drill. Where Freddy first encounters Sophia, riding alone in the early morning. Neutral ground for chance meetings and private conversations.

Black Town — Indian Calcutta

North of Lal Dighi. Narrow lanes, dense residential quarters, bazaars, temples, mosques. A European in Black Town is conspicuous. Apu is the essential guide.

Barabazar — The great market. Textiles, spices, metalwork. Mullick’s world.

Chitpur Road — Main artery running north through Black Town toward Baranagar. Investigators going to the temple by land must travel this road, observed by Ghosh’s network.

The Ghats

River steps descending to the Hooghly’s waterline. Bathing, washing, cremation, worship, commerce. On Kali Puja night, the burning ghats become sites of genuine devotion, and the svarita carriers embed among the worshippers.

Garden Reach

Downstream of Fort William. Prestigious compounds with river frontage. Ashworth’s residence sits here.

Baranagar

Five miles north of central Calcutta, on the western bank. Settlement centred on its ghats and the Mandir_Mahakali. See the temple entity for detail.

Transportation

Mode Speed Visibility Notes
Palanquin Walking pace Enclosed, bearers visible Standard European transport. A European palanquin in Black Town is still conspicuous.
Carriage Moderate High Requires maintained roads. Fine on Chowringhee, impossible in Black Town.
Horseback Fast High Officers and young gentlemen ride.
On foot Slow Variable Unusual for Europeans of status. Katherine and Varrio might walk. Freddy walking generates comment.
River boat Tide-dependent Low if dressed down The most discreet way to travel.

Surveillance Networks

The EIC administration monitors through the ordinary machinery of colonial governance: customs records, dockside registers, the durwan network. Every compound has a gateman. Gatemen talk to each other.

Ashworth’s reach: Judicial and administrative authority over Baranagar. When Europeans ask questions about temples, he hears about it within 48 hours.

Kaunitz’s surveillance: Operates within British society, observes through social proximity.

Ghosh’s network: Thuggee agents, temple servants, the merchant consortium. Europeans entering Black Town or approaching Baranagar are noted.

The servant network: The investigators’ own servants are the most dangerous surveillance vector. Servants talk. Information propagates through the network in hours.

Weather (October 1814)

Early October (arrival): Late monsoon. Hot (30-32C), extremely humid, intermittent heavy rain. Everything damp.

Mid-October (investigation): Monsoon withdrawing. Rain less frequent. Humidity dropping. Each day slightly drier.

Late October (climax): The first fully clear night. Stars visible. Temperature dropping to 20-22C. And on the darkest, clearest night: Kali Puja.

Notable Features

The Two-World Transition: The hard cut between White Town and Black Town. Crystal glasses to cremation ghats, English conversation to Bengali street noise. Every investigation scene that takes investigators out of the European world should be played as a sensory transition.

The Social Cage: Social events deliver intelligence, contacts, and complications. The engineer met at the ball becomes the climax key. The merchant patron at dinner connects to the journalist’s suppression. The social calendar is a cage that also contains the keys.

The River as Character: The Hooghly should be present in every scene near its banks. It is not scenery. It is the ritual’s transmission medium.

Connections

Appearances

Relationships

  • Contains Mandir Mahakali — The temple at Baranagar Ghat, five miles north on the western bank of the Hooghly
  • Contains Fort William — Military headquarters of British India, star-shaped fortress on the Hooghly's east bank
  • Ritual city Aeternum Choir — One of the eight Grand Canticle ritual cities. The Cycle of Dissolution is planned for Kali Puja, 25 October 1814.