
The story opens on the restless shores of Pondicherry, a tiny French enclave clinging to the Indian coast. From the moment the narrator’s boat battles towering waves to the narrow pier where a rope‑handed ladder is the only link to land, the scene is alive with the sounds of the sea and the bustle of a bustling market that never truly sleeps. Through vivid details of white‑washed buildings, Indian neighborhoods, and the ever‑present hum of political debate, the listener is drawn into a place where colonial ambition and local tradition collide.
Beyond the harbour, the narrative sketches the complex web of administration that governs this fragment of French India—governors who travel between distant outposts, councils that argue over policy, and a society caught between French law and indigenous customs. The description of bustling bazaars, schoolyards, and the everyday lives of Brahmin families hints at a rich cultural tapestry, while the lingering tension of “political fever” suggests that every decision reverberates far beyond the city’s modest borders. This early glimpse sets the stage for a portrait of a colony striving to define its identity amid external pressures and internal hopes.
Full title
Pondichéry, hoofdstad van Fransch-Indië De Aarde en haar Volken, 1906
Language
nl
Duration
~36 minutes (35K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Distributed Proofreaders Team
Release date
2004-10-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

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