‘A butterfly will still be beautiful’: Ruskin Bond, 92 today, writes about his wartime childhood

It had been a lonely winter for a 12-year-old boy.

I hadn’t really gotten over my father’s untimely death two years previously, nor had I as yet reconciled myself to my mother’s marriage to the Punjabi gentleman who dealt in second-hand cars. The three-month winter break over, I was almost happy to return to my boarding school in Simla – that elegant hill station once celebrated by Kipling and soon to lose its status as the summer capital of the Raj in India.

It wasn’t as though I had many friends at school. I had always been a bit of a loner, shy and reserved, looking out only for my father’s rare visits – on his brief leaves from RAF duties – and to my sharing his tent or air force hutment outside Delhi or Karachi. Those unsettled but happy days would not come again. I needed a friend, but it was not easy to find one among a horde of rowdy, pea-shooting fourth formers, who carved their names on desks and stuck chewing gum on the class teacher’s chair. Had I grown up with other children, I might have developed a taste for schoolboy anarchy; but, in sharing my father’s loneliness after his...

Read more



from Scroll.in https://scroll.in/article/1092945/a-butterfly-will-still-be-beautiful-ruskin-bond-92-today-writes-about-his-wartime-childhood?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=public https://sc0.blr1.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/article/213514-ttgvjawrxr-1779115176.jpeg
via

Post a Comment

0 Comments