God turns out to be an archer king. And the sacred banyan tree of palliveta fame is next to the main bus station eating up the width of the market road. All through the festival, as in many Indian ritual celebrations, the lines between the sacred and profane, divine and mundane, spiritual and sensual, keep shifting. The vibrant ritual core of the festival is enacted largely within the chuttambalam. Its intensity is manifest as a more popular and democratic choreography of spectacle outside. You sense how the festival churns up the devotional social life of the town, when you see kids playing ball inside the temple grounds. Ordinarily, that expanse is a rare bounded space offering a measured evocation of infinity. There is no lingering in that expanse then, only the quick shimmer of crisp gold-lined saris and the swish of white mundus, during the ritual circumambulation of the inner enclosure. During the festival, however, this space is like Shivaji Park on a Mumbai evening. Men, women, children, old people, day-trippers from nearby towns &mdash and Chandran back from Chennai to reaffirm his roots, like Gopinathan from the Gulf &mdash throng the grounds and the nadapuras where the melam unfolds. And after the first day, the elephants don&rsquot tower so much anymore &mdash they are just the gentle giants watching over the crowd, or being themselves watched as they are bathed and fed &lsquooffstage&rsquo.