When the lights were about to go out on the house of Travancore just before independence, there were three brooding characters in the palace, and a diwan outside, who, by popular perception, was an evil genius. The eldest of them, Sethu Lakshmi Bayi, who ruled the state as a regent, was a de facto monarch since she was the head of the Nair matrilineal family. But she was by then powerless and largely ignored. Her more extrovert cousin, Sethu Parvathi Bayi, the mother of the king, did have her say in matters. The maharajah, Balarama Varma, in his thirties, nursed grand visions for himself and the state and had impetuously declared Travancore라이브 바카라 intention to remain independent over the radio. Much of the blame for the state라이브 바카라 refusal to join the Indian Union went, quite rightly, to the diwan, Sir C.P. Ramaswamy Iyer, who had only recently bloodied his hands in unprecedented carnage of Communists at Vayalar and Punnapra in southern Travancore. The picture at twilight was bleak.