Deep in the interior of the southern Indian state of Karnataka is a town called Hampi, a ghost town, for it lies in ruins and is inhabited by untold thousands of murdered phantoms. Five hundred years ago it was a bustling Hindu metropolis, famous for its sacred sculptures and cave temples. Throughout the town winds a placid river, snaking amid tumbled boulders stacked up miraculously to defy gravity, supposedly the leftover debris from Hanuman’s monumental building of the bridge to Sri Lanka to rescue the princess Sita, kidnapped by the demon Ravan.
There
is a cave where Sita is said to have hidden her jewels as a sign to her
husband, Rama, that she had been taken this way. And the town is
dominated by a tall Mandir, covered in effigies, where Rama is said to
have paid homage to a meditating Shiva before continuing on his quest of
defeating the demon and reuniting with his wife. The magical beauty of
the town gave its reigning Hindu monarch much hubris, he was rich,
powerful and superior to the Moslem kingdoms that surrounded his
territory of Hampi. With cruelty and trickery he kept the Muslim
kingdoms divided and quarreling amongst themselves; raiding their
villages he robbed, tortured and murdered them mercilessly. After a
lifetime of oppression the Muslim kingdoms could take no more and, over-coming their differences, they united into one mighty army that
swept down upon Hampi and butchered the bad king’s soldiers, lopped off
his head and slaughtered every other living soul in the vicinity.
In
a few nights hundreds of thousands of Hindu men, women and children
were cut to pieces on the streets, in their homes or praying to their
innumerable gods in the Mandir. All the temples were desecrated, the
icons shattered, gods and devas having their noses, ears, arms, heads
lopped off so that the city lay in ruins with no Hindu gods left intact
to lend protection. As a final curse upon the place a council of Muslim
seers proclaimed a fitting end for Hampi would be to cage within the
city’s boundaries the pagan Hindu’s favorite monster, The Snake Goddess,
who would devour any foolish trespasser into Her domain.
For
hundreds of years the town lay accursed and abandoned, phantoms howled
up the streets and whispered in the broken doorways, flitting in and out
of the moon’s shadows, and reigning over all this was the horror of the
Snake Goddess, slithering, hissing, showing up in the most unexpected
places to kill unwary travelers. The local natives, Hindu and Muslim,
were painfully aware of Her presence and prayed to Her fervently to
leave their families and tribes alone, often sending an unwitting
pilgrim into Her embrace as sacrifice to appease Her hungry wrath. But
all this was kept secret, from fear and reverence, the town slumbered
and was overgrown with jungle and few remembered its history.
The
twentieth century rolled around and in the 1970’s western Hippies
discovered the town’s existence, its bleak beauty, isolation and
squatting potential attractive to their beach-bum ways. They’d heard
about the lost city of Hampi whilst camping naked on the beaches of Goa,
it was arcane, remote, only for the hip cognoscenti, it took many days
travel into the interior of Karnataka, in those Hippie-trail times one
could sit forty-eight hours on cold-concrete waiting for the next bus.
In
1973 when I was 23 I made the tedious journey to the much ballyhooed
sacred city of Hampi. There were no hotels or restaurants, the few who
wandered here lived in the temple-caves amidst the broken iconography,
we carried our own food in and shared it, only occasionally relishing a
beedie and sweet biscuit at the one grungy chai shop by the bridge over
the river. At best there would’ve been 7 Hippies spread out over the
labyrinth of caves; I chose to stay with the one Sadhu Baba in
residence, he was famous for making black clay chillums with a snake
entwined about its barrel, much desired by Western Big Babas who loved
to flourish the fashionable chillums above their heads as they yelled,
“Bam Shankar!” then toking down on the charas mixture within and
breathing out smoke like hell-fire.
And
yeah, I smoked lots of hash with them, I even dropped acid and tripped
wickedly among the amazingly psychedelic statuary and bass reliefs
carved upon every wall in every nook and cranny, an overload of imagery
and myths so that I ending up spewing badly into the river; I felt like I
was vomiting up the entire universe, Big Bang particles, galaxies,
stars, a torrent of seed ideas, Platonic ideals, archetypes, brainwashes
and fixations poured from me so that by dawn my Mind seemed scrubbed,
detoxed, refreshed.
I
even saved a drowning Hippie girl who panicked in waist-deep water and
screamed her tits off while some Indian Hindu pilgrims made picnic
nearby and glumly watched her drown as if they were Eloi from “The Time
Machine”. I rescued her and eschewed the puffing up of my hero chest, my
ego had been attenuated, my hubris quashed, I did it for the sheer love
of life and the humility of a servant, thus I may have been spared the
vengeance of the wrathful Snake Goddess, who lurked in the dark caves
and watched every human act to see if pride intruded. I escaped Hampi
with my skin intact, my Mind emptied, my heart full and from henceforth I
led a life of achievement and adventure for the next 27 years. Then at
the dawn of the third millennium, in 2000, I returned, grown into a big
fool, narcissistic, selfish, headstrong, about to finally meet the Snake
Goddess and receive my come-uppance, as if She’d been waiting for my
flaws to out all that time.
I’d
been called back to India after 21 years of chasing a non-career as an
artist in Auz and was prancing about Goa ecstatically trying to forget
my travails, then moving onto Hampi where I hoped to relive the mystique
of my earlier visit. I had little money and stayed at an inexpensive
ashram where I hoped to find peace and quiet but the Baba in residence
was married with children and they all made an unholy racket day and
night. I was unhappy and restless but somewhat consoled when I met up
with the luscious Nicorette, queen of the zombies, who brought on the
first misadventure. Nic was just as beautiful and as deadly as the Snake
Goddess and possibly awakened Her from slumber and incited Her wrath
for no female could trespass in Her domain who was more hypnotically
gorgeous than She.
We
were trying to get to a trance-party on the far side of Hampi and some
drunken Indians offered us a lift in their jeep, they continuously
maneuvered the car’s seating arrangements so that she was squashed in the front seat between
their lumpy frames and groping hands with me shoved out of the way in
the back, but I kept insisting on sitting in front between them and Nic
or, just as they were settling in next to her in front, I would make her
get in the back with me. For an hour we played musical chairs, the
Indians getting drunker and more uptight, they just couldn’t get their
slippery hands on her big tits and finally they threw us both out of the
car and told us to walk. Though dumped in the middle of nowhere we
breathed a sigh of relief for they probably would’ve raped her and then
sodomized me for good measure, no port too unattractive in an
intoxicated storm.
We
wandered all night under a full moon through the maze of tumbled rocks
and desecrated iconography, occasionally finding a carving of the Snake
Goddess glaring at us from the shadows, the sibilant hissing of the
river following us as we stumbled about entirely lost. I started to lose
heart but Nic is an Amazonian warrior queen, nothing fazes her, she
strode on resolute, confronted every beastly pagan image and laughed in
its face and I hung onto the strings of her One Million Years B.C. fur
bikini. Eventually we came to a huge lagoon that was impassable and I
was resigned to spending the rest of my shortened life there but along
came one of those basket-boats the locals are so adept at paddling and
Nic called to them to rescue us and, for a small fee, they took us to
the other side and safety.
This
escapade should’ve warned me that Hampi had certain dangers always
lurking for the unwary but I was a fool and continued my explorations
while Nic went on her merry way to chase her lotus-eating in other
exotic locales. I could endure the noise of the ashram no longer and had
a rousing argument with the Baba on how he’d lied to me about the
tranquility of his abode; I played the white nabob outraged by the
medieval set-up and possibly raised the dead with my shrieking. I set
off in high dudgeon with my bags to find a cheaper place but as the
ashram was the cheapest I had few alternatives. Then I espied an
ancient, empty temple by the riverside, though creepy like something out
of a Hammer horror film, it was spacious and nobody seemed to pass
close by to bother me so I determined to move in and camp there.
A
local peasant saw me carrying my bags inside and, his eyes rolling,
warned me to stay clear of the place; it was evil, for long it had a bad
reputation for unholy incidents, robbers and worse could come in the
night and murder me. I pooh-poohed his superstitions, I was strong,
brave, rational, nothing could touch me, and besides, I had nothing to
rob. He shook his head sadly at my Western narrow-mindedness and left me
to my fate, the sun was setting and he desired to be safe indoors
before darkness took over.
I
was just turning fifty years old and thought the best part of life was
over, the bloom of my youth withered, I was fatigued, my aspirations
were evaporating, desires ever unsatisfied, I was cynical, nihilistic,
reckless, I’d come back to India not to find my Self but to get lost,
maybe disappear. At dusk I wandered down the main street of Hampi town
to flit amidst the broken porticoes and tumbled, carved stone facades as
if I were a proto-ghost, I could almost see the thousands of shadowy
presences who’d once thrived and been murdered there and with them I
dwelt in sorrow on the frailty of human existence.
There
are many chai-shops on this desolate main-street and one of the
specialties available is bhang, a drink made from crushed marijuana and,
hoping for consolation, I drank a few glasses and got quite inebriated,
or stoned shitless in Hampi-hippie terminology. I tripped back to my
temple-ruin abode and lay down dizzily upon my bedroll on the hard stone
floor. Spears of moonlight penetrated parts of the grotto but for the
most it was pitch black and eerily quiet except for the tinkling of the
river nearby. I was somewhat stupefied from the bhang and tried not to
envision ghosts in the shards of moonlight wavering at the edges of the
temple. I sang a jolly song to myself hoping its naiveté would ward off
any malevolent presence.
I
couldn’t fully sleep, just slip in and out of dozing, always aware of
the strangeness of my environment. And as the doze was setting in, an
hallucinogenic dream-state seemed to take over, and I heard a wet
slithering sound followed by a piercing hiss. This snapped me awake, I
sat up with my back against a cold stone pillar, and tried to see into
the dark, to decipher some ghastly creature prowling there waiting for
my vulnerable sleep. But there was nothing, behind me just darkness and
silence, at the front only the carved portico under the moonbeams and
the river gurgling not far off. I tried to stay vigilant but gradually
dozed off again, and just as I slipped under once more came the squelchy
slithering sound, like a long serpentine body dragged across the rock
floor, then furious hissing seemingly in my face.
This
continued throughout the night, I didn’t get a wink of sleep, every
time I dozed off the slithering and hissing came closer and closer, from
the back of the temple towards me, I sat stiff-backed, eye-balls
popping, straining in the dark to see what evil approached my stupid,
hallucinating form. Had the Snake Goddess come to claim my flesh and
soul for daring to camp in Her sacred abode? What silly mumbo-jumbo
nonsense! I’m a scientist, a rationalist, there are no snake goddesses!
Yet I swear I heard these sounds, loud and clear, and even vaguely made
out the horrific outline of Her gory face, just like in a Hammer horror
film, the Gorgon with snakes for her hair, forked tongue tickling my
nose, welling up from my unconscious, trying to turn me to stone.
Whatever
It was, It approached close-by, I could almost feel Its fetid breath
upon me, I held my breath ready to be swallowed whole but not without a
fight, they’d hear my screams all the way to the market place.
Half-conscious I felt It slither past me, undulate up the wall and
across the ceiling, there to hover directly above and drop upon me with
grotesque fangs bared. I snapped alert and gazed up at the ceiling
imagining the horror hanging just above my head. Something fell into my
eye, a piece of grit that flew about the primordial temple in the light
breeze. I rubbed the irritation from my eye and, satisfied nothing else
lurked above, drifted back into my fugue, it was now just before dawn and
I thankfully fell exhausted into a deep sleep.
When I awoke to the glorious light of day my left eye was swollen, I had something in it that no amount of flushing would relieve. While having chai I asked other tourists to look in my eye to see if there was a foreign object lodged within but nothing could be discerned. Back in Auz I went to my G.P. and he informed me I had Blepheritis, caused by a bacterium like a tiny poisonous serpent and almost impossible to cure, I had to scrub my eyelids several times a day for months to gain temporary relief.
Though
life-weary I’ve noticed that when confronted by life-challenging
dangers I’ve fought hard to live, it’s hard-wired into me, no matter the
nihilistic tendencies tugging at my soul. I was made to overcome my
Western spoiled brat ennui, get on with life, overcome obstacles and
enjoy existence to the max. And so I believe I escaped a mental
breakdown in Hampi, if you’re mentally vulnerable India has many sites
to unravel you.
I
didn’t believe in the Snake goddess, I fought off Her superstitious
idea as just a nightmare bogey-woman, maybe a left-over from my
turbulent emotional trauma with my mother in early childhood, and fear
of female sexuality in general. But as mythopoesis for a bacterial
infection, it was a good fit, the Mind is an amazing phenomena and plays
incredible tricks upon us all, especially when it comes to an infinite
universe: nature spirits, gods and goddesses, cults and superstitions,
magical thinking easily takes over.
I’ve
suffered from the eye infection for many years now and it reminds me to
stay strong, walk with care and treat every living creature I meet with
compassion, for all my fuck-ups, many other lost and hard-working
people are far worse off. (I have to carry on like this as I’m a bit of a
curmudgeon and most people get on my nerves, it’s the human condition,
flawed, we’re all in it together.)
If you enjoyed this story please go to the WEB
address above and consider buying my book of tales about growing up
anarcho-queer, rock and roll punter and mystic adventurer in Australia and India
of the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s.