Tuesday, May 5, 2026

 The Battle at the Hydaspes Begins

Eratosthenes, you’d cast your scroll—
“Which tale is true? Who played what role?
First mountains shift, then horses die—
Is this not praise dressed up as lie?”

Listen, skeptic. Here’s the knot:
Alexander landed, wet and hot,
With horse and foot in ordered might,
And all the river at his back.

“Charge,” he said. “Do not delay.
We break them now, or hold the way.
If they run, we ride them down;
If they stand, we seize the crown.”

But what of Porus’ son? Some say
He came with chariots in poor array,
Too late, too weak, too rash to bind
The crossing won by sharper mind.

Others say a stronger band
Came hard upon the river strand,
And blows were traded, wounds were dealt,
And Bucephalas himself was felled.

Yet Ptolemy, steadier than song,
Tells it plainer, spare and strong:
The prince arrived when all was done—
Too late to break what had been won.

Three stories drift upon one tide.
Which is truth? The river hides.
Yet this is certain: the king got through.
This too is certain: the danger grew.

So doubt the cave, Eratosthenes.
Doubt the mountain and fantasies.
But battle begun beyond that flood,
On a shore won first by rain and mud—
That is no tale that flattery weaves.
It is what remains when the river recedes.

Prose:
Alexander had crossed with roughly 5,000 cavalry and nearly 6,000 infantry and chose to act at once, trusting speed before the enemy could fully gather. Ancient accounts differ over the role of Porus’s son and the size of the force he brought forward, but the clearest tradition holds that he arrived too late to prevent the crossing. Whatever the details, the essential fact remains: Alexander had secured the far bank and now moved quickly to turn a successful passage into the opening advantage of battle.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Passage of the Hydaspes

 Passage of the Hydaspes

Eratosthenes, you’d shake your pen:
“More fables for the sons of men!”
But thunder does not lie for kings,
And rain can hide the hardest things.

Craterus waited. Meleager stayed.
The king took the keenest edge of his blade—
Companions, Scythians, Bactrian riders,
Archers, guards, and Agrianian fighters.

No drum, no torch. A silent tread
Away from the bank where Porus lay spread.
To grove and bend and island’s breast,
Where skins were stuffed and boats lay dressed.

Then broke the sky. Rain fell like spears.
Thunder swallowed the night’s small fears.
Lightning cleft the dark apart—
Yet still a whisper could set to start
A thousand oars.

At dawn the storm withdrew its hand.
The river lay cold, a sheet of iron.
The sentries blinked and did not see
The first boat slide from the island tree.

Alexander stood in the thirty-oared prow,
With trusted captains beside him now.
They landed—but the ground was wrong:
An island, not the bank they sought.

The flood had drowned the lesser way;
The ford itself had swelled astray.
Horses sank to the bridle’s foam,
And infantry waded breast-deep on.

Yet one by one they gained the shore—
Dripping, cold, but ready for war.
Horse-archers first, the guards behind,
Agrianians on the flanks aligned.

So doubt the cave, Eratosthenes.
Doubt the griffins and golden bees.
But a man who crosses twice in one dark—
By boat, by flood, by unmarked ford—
Who turns the storm into disguise,
And lands on error, yet makes it prize—

That is no eulogy. That is the bone
Of command that makes the unknown stone.
The Hydaspes saw. The rain forgot.
And Porus, far away, knew not
That the fox had already gained the strand—
Wet, but armed, and in his land.

Prose:
Alexander left Craterus and Meleager behind and marched secretly with his best troops to the hidden crossing point. There boats and skin-rafts had been prepared in advance. A violent storm broke over the river that night, and its thunder concealed the sounds of movement and embarkation. At dawn the crossing began. Alexander first landed on an island by mistake, but even the flooded channel beyond could not stop him. Men and horses forced their way through deep water and reached the far bank, where the army quickly formed for battle.

 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Alexander-The Crossing and the Battle Joined

 About Alexander The Great

Alexander-The Crossing and the Battle Joined

The Hidden Bend of the Hydaspes

Eratosthenes, you’d laugh and say,
“More eulogy for the king’s highway!”
But a river bend is a river bend—
No flattery there, no myth to lend.

Look: a point of land, a grove of trees,
An island silent in the darkling breeze.
Seventeen miles from the shouting crowd,
Where the water curls and the woods are loud.

There the fox prepared his second snare—
No bridge of boats, no trumpet’s blare,
Only the river’s hidden seam,
And a king who trusted more than dream.

He left Craterus, steady and slow,
With horse and phalanx set below.
“Wait,” he said, “till the elephants sway,
Till Porus draws his tusks away.

If all those beasts are led from shore,
Then cross like flood and come to war.
But if he leaves them standing fast,
Then hold your ground and let them last.

Those beasts are weight, and fear, and chain;
Without them, Porus fights in vain.”
And Craterus heard, and the plan was set—
A snare within a snare, a wager yet.

So, doubt the cave, Eratosthenes.
Doubt the eagle and old fantasies.
But a general who reads a river’s face,
Who hides his crossing in a wooded place,
Who parts his army like cards in hand—
No poet forged that from the sand.

That is the geometry of war:
The bend, the island, the silent oar;
The elephants’ terror, the horses’ fear,
And a king who whispers, “I cross here.”

You asked for proof, you asked for fact—
The river still bends in its ancient track.
Some truths are not in books alone:
They live where water turns a throne.

Prose: Alexander’s plan depended on a concealed bend in the Hydaspes, screened by trees and an island far from the main camp. There, he hid the true crossing. Craterus was left behind with strict orders to wait until the elephants had been drawn away, since they were the one element most likely to shatter Macedonian cavalry at the landing. The whole design was precise, patient, and deeply practical: not a leap into myth, but a calculation made from water, ground, timing, and fear.

Who was Eratosthenes?

**Eratosthenes (c. 276 BC – c. 195/194 BC)** was an Ancient Greek polymath: a philosopher, scholar, mathematician, geographer, poet, astronomer, and music theorist. He eventually became the chief librarian at the Library of Alexandria.

Measuring the Earth (c. 240 BC)

By around 500 BC, most ancient Greeks believed the Earth was round, but they had no idea of its size. That changed around 240 BC, when Eratosthenes devised a clever method to estimate the planet's circumference.

Living in Alexandria, Egypt, he learned that in the nearby town of Syene (modern Aswan), the midday sun shone straight down to the bottom of deep wells on the same day each year—meaning the sun was directly overhead. In Alexandria, however, sunlight on that date never reached the bottoms of wells, but instead fell on their sides.

Eratosthenes reasoned that this difference in the angle of incoming sunlight was due to the curvature of the Earth's surface. By measuring this angle, he could relate the distance between Alexandria and Syene to the full circumference of the globe.

On that day, he measured the sun's position in Alexandria and found it to be seven degrees away from the zenith. This meant that Syene must be seven degrees away from Alexandria along the Earth's circumference. Since seven degrees is about 1/50th of a full circle (360 degrees), he multiplied the distance between the two cities—believed to be about 515 miles (830 km)—by 50. His calculated circumference was 26,000 miles (42,000 km), within just five percent of the modern accepted value of 24,901 miles (40,074 km).

Other Achievements and Legacy

Eratosthenes was also the founder of scientific chronology. Using Egyptian and Persian records, he estimated the dates of major events of the Trojan War, placing the sack of Troy in 1184 BC. In number theory, he introduced the **sieve of Eratosthenes**, an efficient method for identifying prime and composite numbers.

Ironically, if later scholars like Ptolemy had adopted Eratosthenes's larger, more accurate figure for Earth's circumference, Columbus might never have sailed west—he would have realized the world was far larger than he thought.

Eratosthenes lived to about 82 years old. He chose to starve himself to death, fearing the onset of blindness.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Alexander’s Bold Move: How Cities Chose to Fight or Surrender

 

Alexander’s Bold Move: How Cities Chose to Fight or Surrender*

The Gates of Tyre

News spread like wildfire from Damascus: the Greeks had captured treasure and dragged enemy messengers away in chains. Some Greek men who used to work for the Persian king now fought for a new leader—Alexander. Two men from Thebes were surprisingly forgiven, because their own city had already been destroyed, and Alexander’s anger cooled. The ambassador from Athens was treated politely, since the Athenians still had some honour left. But the messenger from Sparta was kept apart and treated harshly. The Spartans held a stubborn grudge, and even after Alexander’s big win at Issus, they refused to change their attitude.

Next, the young king turned south, following the coast of Phoenicia where the sea meets the rocky shore. The city of Byblos gave up without a fight—its people had been tired of Persian rule for a long time. Sidon smiled and opened its gates wide, welcoming the change. Not every city had to be smashed by siege; some surrendered to a quieter kind of pressure—the hope that new rulers might bring old promises of freedom.

Then came Tyre, a proud island city surrounded by sparkling blue water. Its walls seemed to laugh at both waves and war. Tyre’s leaders sent messengers with sweet words, swearing loyalty from a distance. Alexander made a small request: let him pass through the city so he could honour the Greek hero Heracles with some traditional ceremonies. It seemed humble and respectful. But underneath that request was a powerful message—whoever lets a conqueror worship in their city and light their sacred fires is really letting him take control.

Tyre thought it over, balancing pride against common sense. Letting Alexander in would mean crowning him as lord in their temples and markets. It would seal his victory with holy fire. The choice hung in the salty air: open the gates to their future, or lock them shut against the tide of history. Because once he was inside, no prayer to Heracles could ever turn back what had been set in motion.

Ambassadors, Submission, and the Road to Tyre

From Damascus the tidings spread,
Of treasure seized and envoys led.
Greek men who came to the Persians
Now stood beneath another name.

Two Thebans found a gentler fate;
Their ruined city softened hate.
The Athenian too was held with grace,
For honour still adorned his race.

But Sparta’s man was kept apart,
For Sparta yet with hostile heart
Still watched for war, still would not yield,
Though Issus shook the eastern field.

Then southward moved the conqueror’s gaze
Along Phoenicia’s coastal ways.
Byblos bowed, and Sidon smiled,
Long by Persian masters riled.

Not every gate was stormed by might;
Some opened by a change in sight.
For cities, weary of the chain,
Can welcome what they once found strange.

Then Tyre arose before his way,
Rich and proud beside the bay.
Its envoys came with measured word,
And promised all that they had heard.

He asked to pass, to sacrifice,
To Heracles with reverence due.
A simple wish in outward frame—
Yet crowns and kingdoms hid within.

For who allows the victor in
Admits more than a guest to begin.
In shrine and gate, in rite and fire,
Was sealed the test of lordship’s claim at Tyre.

Friday, May 1, 2026

Mysterious moments in Alexander’s career.

 

Mysterious moments in Alexander’s career.

The visit to Siwa marked one of the most inward and mysterious moments in Alexander’s career. He went not to win land or break resistance, but to seek confirmation of identity. The oracle’s reported recognition of him as son of Zeus-Ammon did not settle the question of who he was; rather, it enlarged it. What mattered was not only what was said, but what the moment allowed him to carry away. From this point onward, Alexander could no longer be understood only as king or conqueror. The desert did not define him, but it deepened the tension between the man he was and the figure he was becoming.

Desert of question

 There are places where the world grows quiet.

Not empty—

There are places where the world grows quiet.
Not empty—
but stripped of distraction.
Where movement slows,
sound fades,
and what remains
is not clarity,
but confrontation.

The desert does not resist.
It does not oppose,
does not argue,
does not answer.
It simply is.

Where nothing speaks,
everything is heard.

Alexander moved toward Siwa
not as a conqueror,
but as a seeker.
Across the sands,
through distances that offered no guidance,
no structure,
no certainty,
he advanced.

This was not a campaign.
It was a turning inward.

The world had long been faced outward.
Now something within
demanded attention.

The oracle waited.
Not as a voice of instruction,
but as a place of encounter.
Men had come there before—
kings, travellers,
those seeking direction,
those longing for confirmation.
But Alexander came with something deeper:
a question
that had followed him from the beginning.

Who am I?

The answer,
if answer there was,
did not come plainly.
Oracles do not define.
They reflect.
They bend language,
shift meaning,
and offer not certainty,
but interpretation.

What is heard
depends on what is carried within.

He was addressed
as son of Zeus-Ammon.
A recognition.
A declaration.
A possibility.
But also a mirror.

To be told you are divine
is not to become it.
It is to choose
what that naming means.

Did he believe it?
The question matters less in fact
than in effect.
For whether he accepted it fully,
partly,
or held it in uncertainty,
the words altered something.

Identity, once expanded,
does not easily return
to its former shape.

There is a silence in the desert
that does not resolve thought.
It deepens it.
Alexander left the oracle
not with answers,
but with something more difficult:
affirmation without clarity.

He had been named.
But not defined.

To be called divine
does not erase the human.
It overlays it.
And in that layering,
a tension begins.
Between what one is
and what one is said to be.
Between lived experience
and rising expectation.
Between the inward self
and the outward image.

The man remains.
The myth begins.

From that point onward,
Alexander would not move
as he once had.
Not only as king.
Not only as conqueror.
But as one carrying
a different weight.

Action becomes symbolic.
Presence becomes meaning.

Yet beneath this elevation,
the original question remained—
unanswered,
unresolved,
unavoidable.

Who am I,
if I am both man and more?

There is no easy answer to such a question.
For identity,
once stretched beyond its old boundaries,
does not return to simplicity.
It becomes layered.
Fragmented.
Elevated—
but also uncertain.
The oracle did not end this tension.
It preserved it.

Silence does not end the question.
It allows it to remain.

Alexander left the desert
not diminished,
not strengthened in any simple way,
but altered.
For he now carried something
that could not be easily set aside:
the possibility
that he was more than he had been,
and the burden
of living within that possibility.

To believe oneself divine
is to move beyond fear.
But also—
beyond restraint.

This is the danger.
Not merely falsehood,
but expansion.
For when a man begins to see himself
as beyond ordinary measure,
he may begin to act
without measure.
The desert does not warn.
It does not correct.
It reflects.

And what it reflects
remains with you.

Alexander returned
to the world of movement,
of battle,
of command.
But he did not return
as he had left.

He entered the desert as a seeker.
He left carrying something
that could not be fully understood.

This was the oracle.
Not a source of clear answers,
but a turning point.
Where silence spoke,
where identity expanded,
where the line between man and myth
was no longer distant,
but present.

The question remained.
And in remaining,
it shaped everything that followed.

Xxx

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

When Alexander defeated the Aspasians (A mountain tribe)

 When Alexander defeated the Aspasians (A mountain tribe)

When the enemy on the high ground saw the Macedonians coming, they came down into the plain because they had much larger numbers and thought the Macedonians were too few to threaten them. But Alexander defeated them easily. Ptolemy attacked another group that was holding a hill. He led his men carefully up the easiest side, leaving the enemy a way to escape instead of surrounding them completely. The fight was hard because the ground was rough and the Indian warriors were stronger than many other local tribes, but the Macedonians still drove them off. Leonnatus also defeated the enemy facing his division. Many prisoners were taken, along with a huge number of oxen, and Alexander chose the best animals to send back to Macedonia for farming.

After this, Alexander marched toward the land of the Assacenians, because he heard that they were preparing to fight him with cavalry, infantry, and even elephants. Craterus rejoined him with heavier troops and siege engines in case they were needed. On the way, Alexander passed through the land of the Guraeans and crossed the difficult river Guraeus. When the local people saw him coming, they did not dare face him in open battle. Instead, they scattered to their cities, planning to defend themselves from behind the walls.

Poetic Stanzas

The foe upon the heights looked down,
And came in pride into the plain.
They trusted numbers, mocked the few,
But soon they learned what skill can do.

Alexander struck and won with speed,
And broke the strength on which they leaned.
Ptolemy climbed where hills stood steep,
Where rough ground made the struggle deep.

The Indians fought with greater force,
More stubborn than the neighbouring hordes.
Yet still the Macedonians pressed,
And drove them from the mountain crest.

Leonnatus too won his fight,
And scattered all who faced his might.
Many captives now were bound,
And countless oxen gathered round.

The finest beasts the king then chose,
To send where Macedonian farmers rose.
From war he thought also of plough and field,
Of what a distant land might yield.

Then toward Assacenian lands he came,
Where men prepared for war and fame.
With horse and foot and elephants strong,
They waited for the coming throng.

Craterus brought the heavy line,
And engines built for siege in time.
Through Guraean lands the army passed,
Across a dangerous river cast.

The stream ran deep, the stones were round,
And many stumbled on the ground.
But when the people saw him near,
They would not meet his ranks in war.

Instead they fled to guarded walls,
To fight from towers and city halls.

 

he Great Birthday Adventure:

 Publishing of a new book-

The Great Birthday Adventure:

A Summary

The Great Birthday Adventure unfolds as a quietly luminous work of fact and fiction, one that uses the deceptively simple framework of a childhood memory to explore themes of unspoken love, the weight of cultural expectation, and the redemptive power of belated truth. The narrative is framed by an author reflecting on his eightieth birthday, celebrated in the north Indian town of Jammu. What begins as a festive family gathering takes an unexpected turn when a mysterious guest arrives—a woman who, we come to learn, is no stranger at all, but Nancy, a figure from the author's distant past. Through the eyes of the author as a child, we witness the day's stolen sweets, whispered games, and the quiet undercurrent of something unsaid. Only decades later does the full truth surface: Nancy had carried a secret for sixty years—a letter unsent, a confession unspoken—that binds her to the author in ways the child could never have understood.

The novel's central relationship, between the author (referred to in the narrative as Sham) and Nancy, is rendered with exquisite restraint. Theirs is a love shaped by silence, by customs that prized propriety over passion, and by the societal pressures of mid-twentieth-century India. The story never indulges in melodrama; instead, it finds its power in what is left unsaid—the hidden glance, the word withheld, the ache of a feeling too large for the circumstances that contain it. In this, the novel achieves a distinctly Indian sensibility, where family expectations and communal honour often shape personal destiny as profoundly as individual desire.

What elevates The Great Birthday Adventure beyond mere nostalgia is its sophisticated narrative structure. The framing device—an elderly author finally ready to recount the story—allows for a dual perspective: the wonder of the child experiencing the day, and the wisdom of the man who has spent a lifetime understanding its significance. This layering gives the novel its emotional depth. The "adventure" of the title is not one of external action, but of revelation. The true journey lies in Nancy's return, sixty years later, to offer closure through the return of a letter that represents both what was lost and what was, in its own way, preserved.

Thematically, the novel is a meditation on the forms love takes when it cannot be openly lived. Sham's unspoken feelings, Nancy's poetic silence, the weight of customs that prioritise family reputation over individual happiness—these elements coalesce into a bittersweet resolution that feels neither tragic nor sentimental. Some loves, the novel suggests, are destined to become stories rather than marriages. And in becoming stories, they gain a different kind of permanence—one that can be shared, cherished, and finally laid to rest with dignity.

Critical Appreciation

Critically, the novel's greatest strength lies in its tonal consistency. The prose is lyrical without being overwrought, evoking the heat and dust of a north Indian afternoon with sensory precision. The pacing is unhurried, allowing the reader to inhabit the child's perspective fully while never losing sight of the adult's reflective gaze. If the novel has a limitation, it is perhaps that certain secondary characters remain lightly sketched, existing primarily as functions of the central relationship. Yet this too can be read as intentional: the story belongs, after all, to Sham and Nancy, and the world around them recedes accordingly, much as a child's world centres on what captures the imagination.

In its final pages, the novel achieves a quiet transcendence. Nancy, the keeper of the secret and the giver of closure, emerges not merely as a lost love but as a figure of quiet heroism—one who waited six decades to ensure that a truth, though delayed, was not lost. The Great Birthday Adventure reminds us that some secrets are not meant to be buried, but to be held until the moment they can be shared without harm. It is a tender, mature work that honours the complexities of love, memory, and the stories we carry across a lifetime.