
There is simply no better way to see Rajasthan In fact, it
became so much a part of the local folklore that than by rail. Each destination
is conveniently the painters of the frescos in Shekhawati began to use
the.connected with the other, there are overnighters motif of the train in
their wall paintings, especially when as well as day trains, and because these
are not covering long, linear spaces.busy, commercial routes, there is little
chance of being The railways, in Rajasthan, were privately owned by delayed.
That is the sheer practical side of the arrangements, the maharajas. For people
cut off from the rest of their own but on the other, there is the chaos, colour
and confusion on state, the railways became a link to a life that they could
the trains that is so amazingly

interesting. Women sit in not even begin to imagine. So far, the
camel had truly been groups, their faces veiled, as they bring railway
carriages to the ship of the desert, but now they had an iron monster bloom
with bursts of colour; mendicants move up and down that wheezed and puffed but
carried them across m the aisles; men puff at biris, the leaf-wrapped smokes
they increasing comfort at a small price. The princes, on th .
enjoy, while gazing out at the scenery outside. part, attempted to build as
many railway stations as the The countryside outside offers a glimpse of the
Rajasthan could, so that the hinterlands of the desert were no longer most
visitors never get to experience, because they are neglected. Which is why,
when you sit in your carriage and usually being rushed from one sightseeing
trip to the ~ext. look out at the dunes, the spread of fields, the silhouettes
But the railways bring back the romance of travel, allowing of camels as they
plough furrows through

the sand, at you to experience the people who actually make up
the land. children playing a rudimentary game of cricket by the A railway
journey is no sterile account of a voyage undertaken tracks, and at women
gathered at village wells, you cannot devoid of the living colours and sounds
and tastes in an miss the number of tiny, immaculately maintained enchanted
land because it places the visitor firmly in touch stations which the trains
whiz through. with his environment. Who gets off at these stations? Do trains
ever stop India was one of the first places to g1lin from the here? There are a
large number of small trains that criBs. railways. The British government in
India saw its utility in cross the countryside, the equivalent of what are
called terms of moving soldiers and armamerits, but for the people 'locals' all
over the world. Though they run to schedules,

It became not only a means of transport, but also a symbol and
obviously keep them, the manner in which they roll in. of unity. The great
Indian railways ploughed tracks across and wait intermittently at stations,
seems to create the the soil of the land and knit several mini-cultures
together. feeling of a lackadaisical, whimsical service, all the more.
enchanting for the people crammed there is nothing else to equal such that dips
over a few low sand dunes into the carriages. These are no an experience.. far
in the distance. As you wait for a luxury trains, most having only the How much
have these railways train toCQmein, you will hear the basic second class, most
With benefitted Rajasthan? There is no vibrations first, the initial stir of
wooden seats, though they are now easy answer to that, especially in
excitement. Then, in ihe distance, increasingly padded. These are not the
context where, of course, the shimmering through the haze of the trains your
travel agent will ever practicality is already understood. heat, the diesel
engine will come into book you into, would evellbe shocked But seat yourself at
an isolated view -till a few years ago it would if you asked, but for the
gricer, or station, if you will,

perhaps
With an have been steam -tooting a whistle anyone else who is interested in the
earthen pot of hot, sweet tea in your to clear the tracks before it bustles
!rt'P~t. mm~n!'e of railway im!rnpvs. hand. and gaze out intQ a bQrimn
imI!ort~!1tly up to the platform. As the entire train winds into view, it
brings with it an unexpected rush of adrena1in. Why this should happen is
difficult to explain -trains, after all, are common place all over the world.
But here, in this isolated pocket, it still carries the pioneering spirit that
must have first surfaced in the 19th century. In the rush of people as they
stretch their Jimflg at the platform, fill water bottles, bargain with the
vendors, or embark and disemabark,
the railways as one of the great achievements of mankind is firmly
established. In Rajasthan, the railways are part of the great romance of the
land.