India

Wodehouse Visits Shahjahanabad: Exploring Modern-day Old Delhi With Whimsical Wonder

A traveller dons the role of a charmingly befuddled raconteur as he meanders through Old Delhi’s labyrinth, uncovering colonial ghosts, tunnels and eccentric histories—all with a dash of Wodehousian wit and a wink to imperial eccentricity

A street view of Old Delhi with the bulbous dome of Jama Masjid in the far end Photo: Shutterstock
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Up bright and early that day, I took the violet tube of Delhi’s well-kept metro and through what is known as the Heritage Corridor stepped down at the Red Fort junction. Mornings, let me tell you, are the absolute ticket for a trot through Old Delhi—the earlier the better. In the clement light of the morning sun, the decay of decades comes illumined with an unmatched glow, don’t you know. The idea, such as it was, involved ditching the customary guidebook routes and what-you-have, and instead embark off the beaten track to see what spectres of the past a single stretch may evoke.

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