Bageecha
The Taj Gardens and the Ingenious Water Devices
The gardens
A green carpet of garden runs from the main gateway to the
foot
of the Taj. In essence, it is a Persian garden, a from born and nursed
to maturity in the desert flat of Persia. Such gardens were introduced
to India by Baber, the first mughal emperor, who also brought with him
the Persian infatuation with flowers and fruit, birds and leaves, symmetry
and delicacy. Unlike other Oriental gardens - especially those of the
Japanese, who learned to accentuate existing resources rather than formalise
them - the Persian garden was artificially contrived, unbashedly man-made,
based on geometric arrangements of nature without any attempt at a "natural"
look.
Like Persian gardeners, landscape artists at the Taj attempted to translate
the perfection of heaven into terrestrial terms by following certain
formulas. In Islam, four is the holiest of all numbers - most arrangements
of the Taj are based on that number or its multiples - and the gardens
were thus laid out in the quadrate plan. Two marble canals studded with
fountains and lined with cypress trees (symbolising death) cross in
the centre of the garden dividing it into four equal squares. The mausoleum,
instead of occupying the central point (like most mughal mausoleums),
stands majestically at the north end just above the river. Each of the
four quarters of the garden have again been sub-
divided
into sixteen flower beds by stone-paved raised pathways. At the centre
of the garden, halfway between the tomb and the gateway, stands a raised
marble lotus-tank with a cusped and trefoiled border. The tank has been
arranged to perfectly reflect the Taj in its waters. A clear, unobstructed
view of the mausoleum is available from any spot in the garden. Fountains
and solemn rows of cypress trees only adorn the north-south water canal,
lest the attention of the viewer would be diverted to the sides !! This
shows how carefully the aesthetic effect of the water devices and the
garden were calculated. The deep green cypress trees with their slender
rising shapes and curving topmost crests are mirrored in the water while
between their dark reflections shines the beauty of the immortal Taj.