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diff --git a/15171-h/15171-h.htm b/15171-h/15171-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c555b48 --- /dev/null +++ b/15171-h/15171-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,20817 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html + PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> +<html> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" /> +<title>Journals of Travels in Assam, Burma, Bhootan, Afghanistan and The</title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + P { margin-top: .75em; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + H1, H2 { + text-align: center; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + } + H3, H4 { + text-align: left; + margin-top: 1em; + margin-bottom: 1em; + } + BODY{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */ + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> +</head> +<body> +<h2> +<a href="#startoftext">Journals of Travels in Assam, Burma, Bhootan, Afghanistan and The, by William Griffith</a> +</h2> +<pre> +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Journals of Travels in Assam, Burma, Bhootan, +Afghanistan and The Neighbouring Countries, by William Griffith, Edited by +John M'Clelland + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Journals of Travels in Assam, Burma, Bhootan, Afghanistan and The +Neighbouring Countries + +Author: William Griffith + +Release Date: February 25, 2005 [eBook #15171] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOURNALS OF TRAVELS IN ASSAM, +BURMA, BHOOTAN, AFGHANISTAN AND THE NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES*** +</pre> +<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p> +<p>This eBook was produced by Les Bowler from the 1847 edition.</p> +<h1>JOURNALS OF TRAVELS IN ASSAM, BURMA, BHOOTAN, AFGHANISTAN AND THE +NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES<br /> +By William Griffith.<br /> +Arranged by John M’Clelland.</h1> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/pf.jpg"> +<img alt="Sketch of William Griffith" src="images/pf.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h2>CONTENTS.</h2> +<p>Notice of the author from the Proceedings of the Linnæan Society, +and Extracts from Correspondence.</p> +<p>CHAPTER</p> +<p>I Proceeding with the Assam Deputation +for the Examination of the Tea Plant.</p> +<p>II Journal of an Excursion in the Mishmee +Mountains.</p> +<p>III Tea localities in the Muttock Districts, +Upper Assam.</p> +<p>IV Journey from Upper Assam towards +Hookum.</p> +<p>V Journey from Hookum to Ava.</p> +<p>VI Botanical Notes written in pencil, +connected with the foregoing Chapter.</p> +<p>VII General Report on the foregoing.</p> +<p>VIII Notes on descending the Irrawaddi from Ava +to Rangoon, written in pencil.</p> +<p>IX Journey towards Assam.</p> +<p>X Continuation of the same, with +Notes on the Distribution of Plants.</p> +<p>XI Journey from Assam into Bootan, +with Notes on the Distribution of Plants.</p> +<p>XII Continuation of the Journey in Bootan.</p> +<p>XIII Return of the Mission from Bootan, with Meteorological +Observations, etc.</p> +<p>XIV Journey with the Army of the Indus, from +Loodianah to Candahar.</p> +<p>XV Journey from Candahar to Cabul.</p> +<p>XVI Journey from Cabul to Bamean—the +Helmund and Oxus rivers.</p> +<p>XVII Journey from Cabul to Jallalabad and Peshawur.</p> +<p>XVIII Journey from Peshawur to Pushut.</p> +<p>XIX On the Reproductive Organs of Acotyledonous +plants.</p> +<p>XX Journey from Pushut to Kuttoor and +Barowl in Kaffiristan, and return to Pushut and Cabul.</p> +<p>XXI Journey from Cabul to Kohi-Baba.</p> +<p>XXII Journey from Peshawur to Lahore.</p> +<p>XXIII Journey from Lahore to Simla.</p> +<p>XXIV Barometrical Heights and Latitudes of places +visited throughout Affghanistan.</p> +<h2>LIST OF PLATES.</h2> +<p>I VIEW FROM NUNKLOW</p> +<p>II THE VILLAGE OF NUNKLOW</p> +<p>III CAPTAIN MATHIE’S CUTCHERRY, THE +BOOTAN HILLS, AND HIMALAYA</p> +<p>IV THE HIMALAYA FROM RANGAGURRAH</p> +<p>V BRAMAKHOOND AND FAQUEER’S +ROCK</p> +<p>VI THE MORI-PANEE AS IT ENTERS THE +KHOOND</p> +<p>VII THE DEO-PANEE AS IT ENTERS THE KHOOND</p> +<p>VIII THE VALLEY OF HOOKUM</p> +<p>IX MEINKHOOM</p> +<p>X VIEW FROM BEESA</p> +<p>XI VIEW ON THE JHEELS</p> +<p>XII THE OK-KLONG ROCK</p> +<p>XIII KULLONG BRIDGE</p> +<p>XIV TASSGOUNG FROM UPPER KULONG</p> +<p>XV CHINDUPJEE</p> +<p>XVI GHUZNEE</p> +<p>XVII BAMEAN IDOLS</p> +<p>XVIII Map of the Khyber Pass</p> +<h2>NOTICE OF WILLIAM GRIFFITH, from the Proceedings of the Linnæan +Society, with a few extracts from his private correspondence.</h2> +<p>“WILLIAM GRIFFITH, Esq., the youngest son of the late Thomas +Griffith, was born on the 4th of March 1810, at his father’s residence +at Ham Common, near Kingston-upon-Thames, in the county of Surrey.</p> +<p>“He was educated for the Medical profession, and completed +his studies at the London University, where he became a pupil of Prof. +Lindley, under whose able instructions, assisted by the zealous friendship +of Mr. R. H. Solly, and in conjunction with two fellow pupils of great +scientific promise, Mr. Slack and Mr. Valentine, he made rapid progress +in the acquisition of botanical knowledge. The first public proofs +that he gave of his abilities are contained in a microscopic delineation +of the structure of the wood and an analysis of the flower of <i>Phytocrene</i> +<i>gigantea</i>, in the third volume of Dr. Wallich’s ‘Plantæ +Asiaticæ Rariores’; and in a note on the development and +structure of <i>Targionia</i> <i>hypophylla</i>, appended to M. de Mirbel’s +Dissertation on <i>Marchantia</i> <i>polymorpha</i>, both published +in 1832. So highly were his talents as an observer appreciated +at this early period, that Dr. Wallich speaks of him as one “whose +extraordinary talents and knowledge as a botanist, entitle him to the +respect of all lovers of the science;” and M. de Mirbel characterizes +him as “jeune Anglois, très instruit, très zélé +et fort bon observateur.”</p> +<p>“His note on <i>Targionia</i> is dated Paris, April 2nd, 1832, +and in the month of May of the same year, having finished his studies +at the London University with great distinction, he sailed from England +for India, which was destined to be the scene of his future labours. +He arrived at Madras on the 24th of September, and immediately received +his appointment as Assistant-Surgeon in the service of the East India +Company.</p> +<p>“His first appointment in India was to the coast of Tenasserim; +but in the year 1835 he was attached to the Bengal Presidency, and was +selected to form one of a deputation, consisting of Dr. Wallich and +himself as botanists, and Mr. MacClelland as geologist, to visit and +inspect the Tea-forests (as they were called) of Assam, and to make +researches in the natural history of that almost unexplored district.</p> +<p>“This mission was for Mr. Griffith the commencement of a series +of journeys in pursuit of botanical knowledge, embracing nearly the +whole extent of the East India Company’s extra-peninsular possessions, +and adding large collections, in every branch of natural history, but +especially botany, to those which, under the auspices of the Indian +Government, had previously been formed. He next, under the directions +of Capt. Jenkins, the Commissioner, pushed his investigations to the +utmost eastern limit of the Company’s territory, traversing the +hitherto unexplored tracts in the neighbourhood of the Mishmee mountains +which lie between Suddiya and Ava. Of the splendid collection +of insects formed during this part of his tour some account has been +given by Mr. Hope in the Transactions of the Entomological Society and +in the eighteenth volume of our own Transactions.</p> +<p>“His collection of plants was also largely increased on this +remarkable journey, which was followed by a still more perilous expedition, +commenced in February of the following year, from Assam through the +Burmese dominions to Ava, and down the Irrawadi to Rangoon, in the course +of which he was reported to have been assassinated. The hardships +through which he passed during the journey and his excessive application +produced, soon after his arrival in Calcutta, a severe attack of fever: +on his recovery from which he was appointed Surgeon to the Embassy to +Bootan, then about to depart under the charge of the late Major Pemberton. +He took this opportunity of revisiting the Khasiya Hills, among which +he formed a most extensive collection; and having joined Major Pemberton +at Goalpara, traversed with him above 400 miles of the Bootan country, +from which he returned to Calcutta about the end of June 1839. +In November of the same year he joined the army of the Indus in a scientific +capacity, and penetrated, after the subjugation of Cabool, beyond the +Hindoo Khoosh into Khorassan, from whence, as well as from Affghanistan, +he brought collections of great value and extent. During these +arduous journeys his health had several times suffered most severely, +and he was more than once reduced by fever to a state of extreme exhaustion; +but up to this time the strength of his constitution enabled him to +triumph over the attacks of disease, and the energy of his mind was +so great, that the first days of convalescence found him again as actively +employed as ever.</p> +<p>“On his return to Calcutta in August 1841, after visiting Simla +and the Nerbudda, he was appointed to the medical duties at Malacca: +but Dr. Wallich having proceeded to the Cape for the re-establishment +of his health, Mr. Griffith was recalled in August 1842 to take, during +his absence, the superintendence of the Botanic Garden near Calcutta, +in conjunction with which he also discharged the duties of Botanical +Professor in the Medical College to the great advantage of the students. +Towards the end of 1844 Dr. Wallich resumed his functions at the Botanic +Garden. In September Mr. Griffith married Miss Henderson, the +sister of the wife of his brother, Captain Griffith, and on the 11th +of December he quitted Calcutta to return to Malacca, where he arrived +on the 9th of January in the present year. On the 31st of the +same month he was attacked by hepatitis, and notwithstanding every attention +on the part of the medical officer who had officiated during his absence, +and who fortunately still remained, he gradually sunk under the attack, +which terminated fatally on the 9th of February. “His constitution,” +says his attached friend, Mr. MacClelland, in a letter to Dr. Horsfield, +“seemed for the last two or three years greatly shattered, his +energies alone remaining unchanged. Exposure during his former +journeys and travels laid the seeds of his fatal malady in his constitution, +while his anxiety about his pursuits and his zeal increased. He +became care-worn and haggard in his looks, often complaining of anomalous +symptoms, marked by an extreme rapidity of pulse, in consequence of +which he had left off wine for some years past, and was obliged to observe +great care and attention in his diet. In Affghanistan he was very +nearly carried off by fever, to which he had been subject in his former +travels in Assam. No government ever had a more devoted or zealous +servant, and I impute much of the evil consequences to his health to +his attempting more than the means at his disposal enabled him to accomplish +with justice to himself.”</p> +<p>“The most important of Mr. Griffith’s published memoirs +are contained in the Transactions of the Linnæan Society. +Previous to starting on his mission to Assam, he communicated to the +Society the first two of a series of valuable papers on the development +of the vegetable ovulum in <i>Santalum</i>, <i>Loranthus</i>, <i>Viscum</i>, +and some other plants, the anomalous structure of which appeared calculated +to throw light on this still obscure and difficult subject. These +papers are entitled as follows:—</p> +<p>1. On the Ovulum of <i>Santalum</i> <i>album</i>. Linn. +Trans. xviii. p. 57.</p> +<p>2. Notes on the Development of the Ovulum of <i>Loranthus</i> +and <i>Viscum</i>; and on the mode of Parasitism of these two genera. +Linn. Trans. xviii. p. 71.</p> +<p>3. On the Ovulum of <i>Santalum</i>, <i>Osyris</i>, <i>Loranthus</i> +and <i>Viscum</i>. Linn. Trans. xix. p. 171.</p> +<p>“Another memoir, or rather series of memoirs, “On the +Root-Parasites, referred by authors to <i>Rhizantheæ</i>, and +on various plants related to them,” occupies the first place in +the Part of our Transactions which is now in the press, with the exception +of the portion relating to <i>Balanophoreæ</i>, unavoidably deferred +to the next following Part. In this memoir, as in those which +preceded it, Mr. Griffith deals with some of the most obscure and difficult +questions of vegetable physiology, on which his minute and elaborate +researches into the singularly anomalous structure of the curious plants +referred to will be found to have thrown much new and valuable light.</p> +<p>“In India, on his return from his Assamese journey, he published +in the ‘Transactions of the Agricultural Society of Calcutta,’ +a ‘Report on the Tea-plant of Upper Assam,’ which, although +for reasons stated avowedly incomplete, contains a large amount of useful +information on a subject which was then considered of great practical +importance. He also published in the ‘Asiatic Researches,’ +in the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal,’ and in +the ‘Transactions of the Medical and Physical Society of Calcutta,’ +numerous valuable botanical papers; but the most important of his Indian +publications are contained in the ‘Calcutta Journal of Natural +History,’ edited jointly by Mr. MacClelland and himself. +Of these it may be sufficient at present to refer to his memoir “On +<i>Azolla</i> and <i>Salvinia</i>,” two very remarkable plants +which he has most elaborately illustrated, and in relation to which +he has entered into some very curious speculations; and his still unfinished +monograph of “The Palms of British India,” which promises +to be a highly important contribution to our knowledge of a group hitherto +almost a sealed book to European Botanists.</p> +<p>“But the great object of his life, that for which all his other +labours were but a preparation, was the publication of a General Scientific +Flora of India, a task of immense extent, labour and importance. +To the acquisition of materials for this task, in the shape of collections, +dissections, drawings and descriptions, made under the most favourable +circumstances, he had devoted twelve years of unremitted exertion. +His own collections, (not including those formed in Cabool and the neighbouring +countries) he estimated at 2500 species from the Khasiya Hills, 2000 +from the Tenasserim provinces, 1000 from the province of Assam, 1200 +from the Himalaya range in the Mishmee country, 1700 from the same great +range in the country of Bootan, 1000 from the neighbourhood of Calcutta, +and 1200 from the Naga Hills at the extreme east of Upper Assam, from +the valley of Hookhoong, the district of Mogam, and from the tract of +the Irrawadi between Mogam and Ava. Even after making large deductions +from the sum-total of these numbers on account of the forms common to +two or more of the collections, the amount of materials thus brought +together by one man must be regarded as enormous. The time was +approaching when he believed that he could render these vast collections +subservient to the great end which he had in view. He had some +time since issued an invitation to many eminent botanists in Europe +to co-operate with him in the elaboration of particular families; and +he purposed after a few years’ additional residence in India to +return to England with all his materials, and to occupy himself in giving +to the world the results of his unwearied labours. But this purpose +was not destined to be fulfilled, his collections have passed by his +directions into the hands of the East India Company, and there can be +no doubt, from the well-known liberality of the Directors, which this +Society in particular has so often experienced, that they will be so +disposed of by that enlightened body as to fulfil at once the demands +of science and the last wishes of the faithful and devoted servant by +whom they were formed. It is hoped too, that the most important +of his unpublished materials, both in drawings and manuscripts, will +be given to the world in a manner worthy of the author and of the rank +in science which he filled.”—<i>Proceedings</i> <i>of</i> +<i>the</i> <i>Linnæan</i> <i>Society</i>, No. xxv, 1845.</p> +<p>To the foregoing brief sketch which was read before the Linnæan +Society at the Anniversary Meeting 24th May 1845, it is scarcely necessary +to make any addition. It is worthy of remark however, as showing +how talents sometimes run in families, that Mr. Griffith was great grandson +of Jeremiah Meyer, Historical Painter to George the Second, and one +of the founders of the Royal Academy. It is also but fair to state +on the present occasion, that he was not himself the only member of +the family who would appear to have inherited something of his grandfather’s +peculiar art, as we owe the transfer of the landscapes to stone, which +add so much to the appearance of the following volume, to the talent +and kindness of his sister.</p> +<p>It may perhaps be acceptable in this place to afford a few extracts +from the private letters of Mr. Griffith, especially those in which +he adverts with a liberality of feeling to his contemporaries, no less +honourable to himself than to the persons mentioned.</p> +<p>The following notes addressed to his uncle, at various periods, exhibit +the sentiments with which he regarded the late Mr. Bauer not merely +as an artist, but original observer.</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p><i>From</i> <i>letters</i> <i>of</i> <i>Mr</i>. <i>GRIFFITH</i>, +<i>to</i> <i>Mr</i>. <i>MEYER</i>.</p> +<p> <i>Mergui</i>: +<i>January</i> <i>17th</i>, 1835.</p> +<p>“My last accounts of Mr. Bauer state him to have been in excellent +health: he had just completed some more of his unrivalled drawings.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Suddya</i>: +<i>December</i> <i>30th</i>, 1836.</p> +<p>“Pray give the compliments of the season to Mr. Bauer, to whom +I look up with the greatest admiration: what a pity it is for science +that such a life as his is not renewable <i>ad</i> <i>libitum</i>. +Tell him that I have a beautiful new genus allied to Rafflesia, the +flowers of which are about a span across, it is diœcious and icosandrous, +and has an abominable smell. How I look back occasionally on my +frequent and delightful visits to Kew.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p>To MRS. H---.</p> +<p> <i>Serampore</i>, +<i>Calcutta</i>: <i>July</i> <i>22nd</i>, 1841.</p> +<p>“I was aware of the departure of Mr. Bauer through the <i>Athenæum</i>, +in which an excellent notice of him appeared. He certainly was +a man to whom I looked up with constant admiration: he was incomparable +in several respects, and I am happy to find, that his death was so characteristic +of his most inoffensive and meritorious life. It is also very +pleasing to me to find that he continued to think well of me. +How I should have been able to delight him had he lived a few years +longer.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Calcutta</i>: +<i>June</i>, 1843.</p> +<p>“Poor Mr. Bauer, we never shall see his like again, I have +seen but few notices of his life, which assuredly is worthy of study. +There is not a place I shall visit with better feelings than Kew, it +has so many pleasant associations even from my school-days.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Calcutta</i>: +<i>December</i> <i>31st</i>, 1843.</p> +<p>“Mr. Bauer is not half appreciated yet; he is considered a +very great artist, but what is that to what he was? But he did +not fight for his own hand, though he worked hard enough in all conscience. +Mr. Bauer in fact preceded all in the train of discovery: he saw in +1797, what others did not see till 30 years after. For instance, +the elongation of the pollens’ inner membrane into a tube, the +first step towards the <i>complete</i> knowledge we now have of vegetable +embryogeny. Unfortunately, Mr. Bauer drew, but did not write, +and when I recall to mind a remark of Mr. Brown, that it was a disadvantage +to be able to draw, I always fancy he had Bauer in his mind’s +eye; for had he been a writer and not a drawer, before 1800, in great +probability we should have known nearly as much of embryogeny as we +do now. But he shut his portfolio, and folks went on believing +the old fovivillose doctrine and bursting of the pollen, which, his +observations of the pollens’ inner membrane, would have destroyed +at once. Then with regard to Orchideæ and Asclepiadeæ, +he was equally in advance: it would be a rich treat if some one would +come forward and publish a selection from his drawings, without a word +of letterpress.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Calcutta</i>: +<i>February</i> <i>11th</i>, 1844.</p> +<p>“Mr. Bauer’s light is not yet set on the hill. +Really when I look back at his works I am lost in admiration, and always +regret that he worked more for others than for himself, and that he +did not use his pen as freely as he did his brush. When, in the +name of all that is generous, will great men think that true greatness +consist in endeavouring to make others more prominent than themselves?”</p> +<p>For some years before his death, Mr. Griffith would appear to have +had a presentiment that he would not be spared to complete the description +of all his collections. On one occasion, when enumerating those +who might contribute most efficiently to this object, in the event of +its not being permitted to himself, he writes:—</p> +<p>“I cannot however refrain from paying my tribute of respect +to Mr. George Bentham, the most industrious, perspicuous, and philosophical +Botanist who has systematically contributed to lessen the difficulties +under which Indian Botanists have generally suffered.</p> +<p>“There are a few others from whom the sincerity of friendship +fully warrants me in expecting every possible assistance: of these Dr. +Wight is already well known, and others are rising rapidly to fill, +I hope, the highest Botanical stations when these shall have been vacated +by the leviathans who now occupy them. Let not the cynic accuse +me of partiality when I mention the names of William Valentine, of Decaisne, +and C. M. Lemann.”</p> +<p>He also delighted to speak and write in terms of the warmest regard +of those to whom he was indebted for facilities in his pursuits. +To Lord Auckland he invariably alluded in terms of the deepest gratitude—“Under +his Lordship’s patronage” he remarks on one occasion, “I +have received such advantages as make me ashamed of the little I have +done, and which are constantly holding up before me my deficiencies +in many branches of enquiry connected with the physiology and distribution +of plants.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p>The following letters are quoted chiefly for the additional information +they afford on the subject of his travels and pursuits. His letters +to Botanists would of course be more important and interesting.</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Suddyah</i>: +<i>16th</i> <i>September</i>, 1836.</p> +<p>“I am anxiously awaiting the arrival of the cold weather, as +on the 1st of November I hope to accompany ----- to Ava, but in the +meantime, I intend proceeding in search of the tea plant to the Mishmee +Hills, especially about Bramakoond, where it is reported to grow. +If I find it there, I will endeavour to trace it up into the mountains, +which form due east of this an amphitheatre of high rugged peaks.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>November</i> +<i>1st</i>, 1836.</p> +<p>“I here write from the foot of the ‘dreaded’ Mishmee +Hills. I left Suddyah on the 15th October, and have already been +to Bramakoond, where I spent three days. I miss you much; you +would have been delighted with the place, which is nothing but rocks +and hills. I am recruiting my resources for a movement into the +interior of the hills, in which I shall follow Wilcox’s route, +taking with me 15 coolies, for whom I am collecting grain. I have +already made considerable collections, chiefly however in Botany, with +a few stones and birds. I hope before my return to have seen Coptis +teeta in flower, and to have proved that the Beese is different from +that of Nepal. I have already seen numbers of the Mishmees who +are civil people. I have however had great difficulties with the +Chief of the Khond, who though apparently friendly, will, I fear, do +all he can to hinder me from getting to Ghaloom, with the Gham of which +place I wish to have a conference.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Noa</i> +<i>Dihing</i> <i>Mookh</i>: <i>January</i> <i>20th</i>, 1837.</p> +<p>“I have just returned from the trip to the Lohit much sooner +than I expected. I saw nothing of any consequence except rapids +which are horrid things, and make one quite nervous. I made a +beautiful collection on the Mishmee mountains, of which more anon. +Many of the plants are very interesting. I was however worked +very hard, all my people being sick: I had even to wash my own clothes, +but I fear you will think I am grumbling: so good-bye.”</p> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Loodianah</i>: +<i>11th</i> <i>December</i>, 1838.</p> +<p>“I arrived here in 14½ days, notwithstanding some delays +on the road, and have put up with Cornet Robinson, Acting Political +Agent. I am not pleased with the up-country, and would rather +live in Bengal, for I cannot abide sandy plains and a deficiency of +vegetation. Loodianah is a curious place, very striking to a stranger, +the town is large, built under official direction, and consequently +well arranged in comparison with native towns: there is much trade carried +on in it, and it has the usual bustle of a large town.</p> +<p>“Capt. Wade’s house is well situated on a rising ground, +and the demesne is a pretty one. Otherwise the country is ugly +enough, and very bare, yet it is here well wooded, in comparison with +what I hear of Ferozepore. Along the face of the hill near the +town, a nullah flows, abounding in fish, of which more anon. The +rock pigeons, or grouse, are very abundant, and there are two species, +one remarkable for the elongated side-feathers of the tail. Both +are beautiful birds, but very difficult of access. Crows, kites, +vultures, adjutants, herons, Drongoles, sparrows, parrots, etc. remain +as before, but most of the less common birds are different from those +to the south; the most European are genuine starlings; and, to my memory +of eight years back, identical with those of Europe. I have already +got thirty to forty species of fish. Cyprinidæ, are by far +the most common; one loach, and one of Macrognathus.</p> +<p>“But as they are all from one water, viz. the neighbouring +nullah, and the Sutledge being five miles off, I shall put them all +into bottles, and send them off before I leave this. The most +edible fish, and one of the most common is the Roh, but it is not the +Roh of Bengal, and might well be called Cyprinus ruber. Burnes +has given I think a drawing of it, which is faithful as to colour. +All the forms will be familiar to you, but I hope there will be some +new species.</p> +<p>“I have made further arrangements, and such as will give you +a good insight into the fish of the Sutledge, as to the number of duplicates!—it +is the safest plan for an ignoramus not to discriminate too nicely. +I am to-day to get large specimens of the Kalabans, Rohi, etc. what +a splendid fish the Rohi is, both to look at and to eat. There +are two or three species of the transparent <i>Chandas</i>, and three +or four Perilamps, six or eight Siluridæ, besides the Gwali, which +is too large; of Ophiocephalus two or three, exclusive of the Sowli, +but all ought to be examined, as there is no relying on native discrimination. +There is a curious animal here burrowing like a mole, but more like +a rat: of this I have not yet got a specimen, although they are very +common.</p> +<p>“I commence with a list of the fish of this place. I +have only to mention that several species are confounded under the name +Bhoor, all the Chandras under Chunda Begla, Loaches under Pote, all +the Perilamps except the Chulwa, which may be from its flavour a <i>Clupeia</i>, +etc. The fact is, that the fishermen are aware of genera, but +not of species, excepting when the distinctive marks are very strong. +The fisherman enumerates forty species, but I have only twenty-six, +I have promised him one rupee when he completes the list:</p> +<pre> Native Name. Family. General size. + +1. Khaila, ) ( 6. +2. Bhoor, ) ( mature. +3. Rewa, ) Cyprins, ( mature. +4. Bangun, ) ( 18 inches, called also Kala Bhans. + +5. Chund Bigla, mature. +6. Ditto ditto, ditto. +7. Ditto ditto, ditto. +8. Pote, Loach, ditto. +9. Mailoa, Perilamps, ditto. +10. Khurda, ditto Trichopterus? +11. Puttra, Salurida, 20 seers. +12. Kuttoa, Ditto, 6 inches. + +13. Ghichila,) Macrognathus( 7 ditto. +14. Bham, ) ( 3 feet. + +15. Nunghree,) ( 6 inches. +16. Nowhan, ) Cyprins, ( ditto. +17. Pootea, ) ( 12 inches. + +18. Seengh, Silurida, 8 inches. +19. Bugarlea, ditto. +20. Mootunna, nearly mature. +21. Bardul, 6 inches. +22. Chilwa, Perilamp,? mature. +23. Nuwha, Esox, ditto. + +24. Gwalee, ) Silurus, ( 2 maunds, +25. Ruttgull,) ( nearly mature. + +26. Chundee Clupeia, ditto ditto.</pre> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Candahar</i>: +<i>May</i> <i>the</i> <i>2nd</i>, 1839.</p> +<p>“We have seen three changes in the geological structure of +the country.</p> +<p>“The Khojah Omrah was chiefly clay slate, and we are now in +another formation, which no one seems to know; but it must be different +as the outlines of the hills are completely changed. We are now +3,500 feet above the sea. The climate is good, and would be delightful +in a good house, but in tents the thermometer varies from 60° to +98° and even 105°.</p> +<p>“I have got a decent collection of plants, only amounting however +to 650 species. The flora continues quite European. I have +some of singular interest. Compositæ, Cruciferæ, and +Gramineæ form the bulk of the vegetation. All fish are very +different from those below the Ghats. I have five or six species +of Cyprinidæ. One very inimitable fuscous loach. There +are few birds, and fewer quadrupeds; in fact the country is at a minimum +in both these respects.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Ghuzni</i>: +<i>July</i> <i>25th</i>, 1839.</p> +<p>“We have been gradually ascending since leaving Candahar, and +are here at an elevation of 7,600 feet. The same features continue. +I have as yet not more than 850 species. The mountains on every +side, and indeed the whole face of the country, is still bare. +Mookloor, a district through which we passed, about seventy miles from +this, is well cultivated and inhabited. There are few birds to +be seen, and scarcely any insects, but there are numerous lizards. +The thermometer varies in tents from 60° to 90°.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Cabul</i>: +<i>August</i> <i>11th</i>, 1839.</p> +<p>“I am encamped close to Baber’s tomb, lulled by the sound +of falling water, and cooled with the shade of poplar and sycamore trees, +with abundance of delicious fruit, and altogether quite happy for the +nonce. I have not yet seen the town which is a strange place, +buried in gardens: but nothing can exceed the rich cultivation of the +valley in which we are encamped. Beautiful fields on every side, +with streamlets, rich verdure, poplars, willows, and bold mountain scenery, +which contrasts most favourably with the dreary barren tracts to which +we have been accustomed. I go with the Engineers to Bamean in +the course of a few days, when we shall cross ridges of 12,000 to 13,000 +feet high.</p> +<p>“I can only find three kinds of fish in this neighbourhood. +I have been making some drawings, and collecting a few plants which +continue to be entirely European.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Peshawur</i>: +<i>November</i> <i>17th</i>, 1839.</p> +<p>“I hope some day or other to turn out a real traveller. +I am now in hopes of becoming a decent surveyor, and before many years +have passed a decent meteorologist. I leave the Army here, and +shall part with it, particularly Thomson and Durand of the Engineers, +with regret. I start in a short time to travel up the Indus with +little before me but difficulties, however <i>à</i> <i>la</i> +<i>renommée</i>. If I can do something unparalleled in +the travelling way I shall be content for a year or two at least.</p> +<p>“I have obtained some few specimens of fossil shells from the +shingly beds of the Khyber Pass. They seem to be a Spirifer with +a very square base, quite different from the common species of the Bolan +Pass, which is like a large cockle, and of which I have one beautiful +specimen. How I regret not seeing Bukkur, for with a few days’ +leisure, a number of fossils might be obtained. The older I grow +the less content am I scientifically: would that I had received a mathematical +education. I was much interested with some quotations from Lyell’s +Elements in a late <i>Calcutta</i> <i>Courier</i>, especially about +the Marine Saurian from the Gallepagos. What further proof can +be wanted of the maritime and insular nature of the world during the +reigns of the Saurian reptiles? What more conclusive can be expected +about the appearance of new species? This point would at once +be settled if the formation of these islands can be proved not to have +been contemporaneous with the Continents. Then the animal nature +of chalk!</p> +<p>“I am doing nothing in botany, but learning Persian, and the +use of the theodolite, with nothing but difficulties to look at all +around. I begin to feel of such importance, (do not think me conceited +in relation to my collections and information on geographical botany,) +that I am not overpleased with the idea of facing dangers alone: however +I suppose every thing is as usual exaggerated.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Bamean</i>: +<i>August</i> <i>3rd</i>, 1840.</p> +<p>“Yesterday I crossed the Hindoo-koosh by my former route, and +this morning while out, i.e. trout fishing, was most agreeably interrupted +by the post. The fishing was ended forthwith. Indeed the +sun in this country even at elevations of 12,000 feet is very hot, and +has excoriated my hands, beautifully white as they were after my sickness, +but not before I had caught 3 barbels, evidently different from those +of the other side of the range. I caught some trout yesterday +evening, it is a most beautiful fish, I was particularly struck with +the size of the eye, its prominence, and expressive pupil, in opposition +to the sluggishness of the eyes of carps.</p> +<p>“It is strange that Botany has always been the most favoured +of the natural sciences, it is strange that in spite of what all do +say it is the least advanced of any. How can I reconcile my own +splendid opportunities with those of more deserving naturalists in other +branches? and I would willingly share them on the principle of common +fairness with others, who I know would turn them to a better account. +Oreinus takes the worm greedily; in the Helmund, 11,000 feet above the +sea, it is abundant. It is the same species I think as that in +the Cabul river; but in the Cabul river, Barbus is the predominant fish: +in the Helmund it is the reverse. How can one account for the +small elevation at which fish are found in the Himalayan? I cannot +imagine it is owing as some think to the relative impetuosity of the +rivers, which after all is only an assumption.</p> +<p>“This Bamean valley is the strangest place imaginable, its +barrenness and the variegated colours of the rocks convey the idea of +its volcanic origin, and give it a look as if it had come out of the +furnace. I cannot make out where the stones so universally found +all over the slopes of the mountains, came from, for very generally +they seem water-worn. I find no great peculiarity in the flora +of this side of the range, except an abundance of odd-looking Chenopodiaceous +plants, probably resulting from the saline saturation of the soil. +There is a very singular spring on the other side of the range, about +11,000 feet above the sea: the water very clear, with no remarkable +taste, but every thing around is covered with a deposit of a highly +ferruginous powder. I shall write next from the fossil locality, +which is said to be about forty miles from this. I am as stout +as ever, but by no means so strong.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Bamean</i>: +<i>August</i> <i>21st</i>, 1840.</p> +<p>“I am now out of the region of trees, excepting a poplar, of +which I will send you a bit, as the same tree grows in much lower places. +The want of rings in wood is by no means unusual in tropical vegetation. +For the production of rings, some annual check to vegetation is required: +their absence is particularly frequent in climbers. The walnut +will not be a good instance, because even if you can get it from Java, +it is a tree that requires cold, and must consequently be found at considerable +altitudes. Your instances must be taken from subjects that can +bear a great range of climate: you have some in the apricot, vine, etc. +I will not fail in sending you what you want from Cabul, and also from +Peshawur, in which almost the extremes of temperature can be contrasted. +I will also get the woods of apricots, cherries, etc., at the highest +elevations on my road back, as I hope to pass through the grand fruit +country of Affghanistan. No Jungermannias are obtainable in this +part, nor anywhere indeed, except towards the true Himalayas. +I do not remember having seen the pomegranate growing at Cabul: the +place is too cold for it. I think however, I can get some from +Khujjah, where snow lies in winter. I leave for the Provinces +early in October, and shall travel 30 miles a day. I want to get +to Seharunpore, 15 or 20 days in advance of my time, as I must run up +to Mussoorie and fish in the Dhoon. I shall be in Calcutta in +all February.”</p> +<pre>* * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Cabul</i>: +<i>September</i> <i>26th</i>, 1840.</p> +<p>“I despatch to-morrow the first of the bits of wood, the duplicates +will be sent on the 28th or 29th: on this latter day I leave for Peshawur, +and right glad am I that the time has come at last. I will send +you the same woods from Peshawur, but shall scarcely be able to send +you pomegranate from any thing like a cold place.</p> +<p>“On receiving your specimens of vine, the following question +occurred to me. If wood is a deposit from the leaves or fibres +sent down from the leaves, how is the presence of wood to be accounted +for in tendrils, which have no leaves, but yet which are evidently branches? +The theory of the formation of wood, which considers it as above, is +deemed ingenious, but it will not I think be found to be true. +The bark evidently has a great deal to say to the matter.</p> +<p>“I shall be most rejoiced at a remote prospect of again setting +to work. I take no interest now in the vegetation of this country. +I hope to be at Loodianah <i>early</i> in November; my present intention +is to run up to Simla, thence to Mussoorie, and descend on Seharunpore. +If I do this, I shall only leave one point unfinished, and that is the +Hindoo-koosh Proper, where however I shall have the advantage of Major +Sanders of the Engineers, who will pick up a few plants for me. +I wish much to take notes of the vegetation about Simla and Mussoorie, +this I can do at a bad season. I shall afterwards be able to compare +the Himalayan chain at very distant points.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Serampore</i>, +-- 1841.</p> +<p>“I will send you to-morrow dissections of Santalum if I can +get a small bottle for them: under ½ inch lens you can easily +open the pistillum of Santalum having previously removed the perianth: +it is a concial body; you must take care to get it out entire, especially +at the base, then place it in water, and dissect off the ovula of which +there are three or four, as per sketch. I shall not say what I +see, as I want to have your original opinion unbiassed, etc.; but whenever +you see the tubes with filaments adhering to their apices, pray mark +attentively what takes place, both at the point and at the place where +the tube leaves the ovulum; your matchless 1/1500 would do the thing. +Try iodine with all such, after having examined them in water.</p> +<p>“Should you find any difficulty in dissecting away the ovula, +light pressure under glass will relieve you. I shall be very anxious +to know what your opinion is, particularly with regard to the tubes +and all adhering filaments; the question now occupying botanists, being +this, is the embryo derived directly from the boyau or is it derived +from some parts of the ovulum?</p> +<p>“I hope you can understand these sketches.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Peshawur</i>: +<i>13th</i> <i>December</i>, 1839.</p> +<p>“What a shame it is that botanists should know nothing whatever +of the formation and structure of wood! They look at a section +of a piece of oak, and imagine they have discovered the secret, and +write volumes on this imagination, yet they have been told over and +over again, that nothing is to be learnt on such subjects without beginning +at the commencement, which they are too idle to do. To name an +abominable Aster, is among them of much higher importance than to discover +the cause of the growth of wood. Medullary rays are most difficult, +because they are very often deficient particularly in climbers. +I am horridly idle, and yet what can I do without books; yet with regard +to books, the more originality we possess, the less we require them? +There is nothing to be got here except a few marsh plants coming into +flower. One beautiful Chara, which might disclose the secret, +had I good glasses, it is a most graceful pellucid form, an undescribed +duckweed, a floating Marchantiaceæ. Would that I was settled +with a Ross on one hand, and a Strongstein on the other, around my collections +with good health and good spirits. Tell ---- I have in view the +division of the vegetable kingdom analagous to radiata, they include +all the Marchantiaceæ, and are, to all intents and purposes, Vegetable +Radiata.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Pushut</i>, +<i>1st</i> <i>march</i> <i>beyond</i> <i>Kooner</i>: <i>January</i> +<i>29th</i>, 1840.</p> +<p>“This will be a letter of odds and ends, you know I was to +return to Jallalabad; well I reached that place, but left the encampment +and crossed the river, where an advance road making partly for the Kooner +expedition were employed, and having originally determined on going +to Kooner, I accompanied them two marches, when they were overtaken +by the army, to avoid which, I halted one day, and on the next proceeded +onwards by the north bank of the river, thus saving all the fords of +this horrid river. I should call it beautiful at any other season. +The road was bad, and the last one and a half mile into camp most difficult, +the path winding round and over spurs of sharp limestone rocks which +must have had abundance of silex in them they were so very hard. +At the very worst part, my headman being in front, all of a sudden I +heard three shots in quick succession with the usual hallooing, and +then I was called on in advance, meeting my headman wounded: he has +lost the two fore-fingers of his right hand. All I saw was three +men scrambling up the face of the hill, on whom I opened a fire as soon +as my guns came up, and had the pleasure of hitting one on the shield.</p> +<p>“Such a scene ensued! for when there are three or four on such +occasions we may reasonably expect thirty or forty, and my object was +to get out of the bad road, and so be close to camp. Some of, +or rather all, my people became dismayed, I had therefore to cheer, +to point my double barrels, and in fact to enact a whole legion. +One fellow tried to shoot me but his powder proved faithful, the others +were wounded: however they kept in sight, and to make matters worse, +in one place within twenty yards, six or seven of my loads were thrown; +evening drawing on, and prospects disgusting, when at last having passed +over one bad part and got down into a ravine, a number of people were +seen closing down on us, but my man had run off to camp, and by shouts +succeeded in calling five or six <i>sepahis</i>, part of the rear-guard, +to our relief, and so we escaped bag and baggage, the rascals making +off when the red coats appeared. I was sick at heart at the loss +of poor Abdool Rozak’s fingers: he is an Arab with an English +heart, bearing his loss most manfully, and when his fingers were removed +expressed anxiety alone about me and my <i>Sundoogs</i> (collections). +Well then, where should I have been had I been assailed as Abdool Rozak +was, I should have been unprepared, and if riding, my mare would certainly +have jumped into the river beneath. Thomson <a name="citation0a"></a><a href="#footnote0a">{0a}</a> +said when he left me, G---, you are rash and Abdool Rozak is rash, take +care or you will get into trouble. My moving about without a guard +was imprudent, and I now return to Jallalabad to get one, or if not +successful to wait there until the spring and its floral excitements +call me out: what I dislike is danger without any recompense, not a +flower is to be had; with excitement it is nothing. I have now +had two escapes, one from the buffalo in Assam, and this, which is a +greater one, because had not the army been delayed by accident at the +ford, it would have been eight or ten miles in advance, and consequently +there would have been no rear-guard at hand.</p> +<p>“The country is disturbed, and one can only stir out in the +valley itself close to camp, which is the more tantalizing as the mountains +are accessible, and covered with forest. Our halt here should +put us in possession of much information respecting these forests. +As it is, I shall leave probably as wise as I came, except in having +ascertained that the change from the well-wooded Himalaya mountains +to those of the Hindoo-koosh, without even a shrub five feet high, takes +place to the east of this. My employment is surveying and collecting +data for ascertaining the heights of the hills around. But wherever +I turn, the question suggests itself, what business have I here collecting +plants, with so many in Calcutta demanding attention? How I am +living! alone, without a table, chair, wine, or spirits, with a miserable +beard, and in native clothes! but one thus saves much time; how unfortunate +that mine now is not worth saving!</p> +<p>“I have been reading Swainson’s volumes in Lardner’s +Cyclopædia, in which there is a little to which severe critics +may object, but a vast deal more that is beautifully sound. I +am quite certain I never appreciated them before. How wonderful +that no one before Macleay and Swainson thought that living beings were +created on one plan. I have imbibed all the important parts with +the hope of bringing them to bear on Botany, which is in a shameful +state. One talks of the typical nature of polypetalous or monopetalous +plants; another ridicules the idea, because as he wisely says, some +polypetalous plants are monopetalous, and vice versa!! he objects, in +fact to what constitutes the great value of a character, <i>its</i> +<i>mode</i> <i>of</i> <i>variation</i>. All Swainson’s propositions +appear to me philosophical and highly probable, but none of the present +generation have eyes young enough to bear such a flood of light as he +has thrown upon them. There are faults I acknowledge, but a man +who writes for money does not always write for fame; rapid writing and +much more rapid publishing is a vast evil, but one which is too often +unavoidable. I have four or five drawings of fish, one of the +spotted carnivorous carp, the most carnivorous type of all except Opsarion, +and perhaps a new subgenus; <a name="citation0b"></a><a href="#footnote0b">{0b}</a> +one of the Sir-i-Chushme and Khyber <i>Oreinus</i>, and a Perilamp with +two long cirrhi on the upper lip. I intend in my travels now I +am alone, to stop at every fertile place. I am ascertaining the +limit of the inferior snow in these latitudes, which I fancy will be +3,500 feet. Is it not curious that here 1,000 feet above Jallalabad +we have had no snow, while at Jallalabad there has been abundance. +I attribute it to the narrowness of the valley at this place, and to +the forest. When I glance at the subject of botanical geography, +how astounding appears our ignorance! we have no data, except to determine +the mere temperature and amount of rain yet men will persist in the +rage for imperfect description of undescribed species, and pay no attention +to what is one of the most important agents in preserving things as +they are in our planet,—i.e. vegetation. On this point Swainson +is less happy than on others when he ascribes such importance to temperature, +and points out the fact that countries in the same latitudes, and having +the same temperatures, produce different animals.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Cabul</i>, +<i>September</i> <i>25th</i>, 1839.</p> +<p>“I am just on the eve of re-entering Cabul from a visit to +Bamean, a singular place on the other side of the Hindoo-koosh, celebrated +for its idols and caves. It has amply repaid a march of 106 miles +and back again. I never saw a more singular place, and never enjoyed +myself more: we crossed several high ridges between 11 and 13,000 feet, +but so poor is the flora that I have only added 200 species to my catalogue, +now amounting to 1200 species instead of 2,400 as I fully expected. +But I must say I was as much pleased at the acquisition of a genuine +<i>Salmo</i> in the Bamean river (which is a tributary of the Oxus,) +as at any thing.</p> +<p>“Unfortunately we were so hurried, that I had only one afternoon +and that an unfavourable one, for indulging in my fishing propensities: +the chief fish seems to come very near the English trout, and so far +as I can judge, is not found on this side the Himalaya. The other +fish of these rivers are a fine Schizothorax or Oreinus, allied to the +<i>Adoee</i>, a flat-headed Siluroid, a loach, and a small Cyprinus. +This is a singular country, quite unlike any thing I have seen, and +as distinct from the Himalaya in its vegetation, etc. as can well be +imagined. Generally it is very barren, and after travelling over +so much of the country I have yet seen only three parts of it decently +cultivated. It is reported to be rich in minerals.</p> +<p>“But it will never bear comparison with Hindoostan. It +is however capable of much improvement. It consists of a succession +of barren valleys, divided from each other by barren ridges, and is +generally deficient in the great fertilizer of all things—water. +There is scarcely an indigenous tree in the whole country, and generally +very few cultivated ones, except about Cabul, although they have poplars +and willows well suited to the climate. It has been subjected +to so much misrule that the natives have become indifferent to its improvement, +(if they ever felt alive to any such interest.) The Zoology is +very poor, quite at zero. There is a species of Ibex, an <i>Ovis</i>, +and a <i>Capra</i>, which from the frequency of their heads and horns +about sacred places and gateways of towns, must be common; but I have +never seen more than a portion of one fresh specimen of the sheep. +Furs are brought from the Hindoo-koosh, but are all too mutilated to +be of any use, except to a Zoologist with antiquarian eyes: one Jerboa. +Hares are rather common in some parts, and about here there is a Lagomys. +Of birds there are but few, but as the vegetation is chiefly vernal, +these creatures may perhaps be abundant. The game birds are quail, +three species of partridge, a huge Ptarmigan? Pterocles of Loodianah. +The fauna is richest in Saurian reptiles, and of these one might make +a very good collection. I have only seen two snakes, and both +are I believe lost.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Mirzapore</i>: +<i>April</i> <i>26th</i>, 1841.</p> +<p>“Request --- to refrain from abusing compound microscopes. +Why should not compound and simple microscopes each have their merits? +Valentine, who is a great authority, and an unrivalled dissector, says, +the simple lens must be suspended. I only wish I could dissect +with a compound microscope: what things might not one get access to. +The simple lens is quite useless with opaque objects; it only does for +transmitted light. Now dissections of opaque objects have been +too much neglected. How odd it is that all improvements are ridiculed +at first.</p> +<p>“I enclose a bit of Sphagnam, a curious moss, with curious +incomplete spiral cells in the leaves. I dare say it will bear +preservation in Canada balsam. I have received a new microscope, +a queer-looking thing, very portable; one object glass of a quarter +inch focus, by Ross; two eye-pieces magnifying linearly 200 to 300 times. +I have put it up, but I am not well enough to decide on its merits. +Now that I have arranged all my things, I am literally frightened at +the work I have to do.</p> +<p>“I am quite annoyed at the idea that German artists make better +microscopes than English. I was aware that the lenses were better, +but otherwise I imagined that any comparison would be vastly in our +favour. I am curious to know the price, and where to apply for +one, as your account makes me quite ashamed of mine. Who knows +what a fine penetrating power of 1100 may not disclose. I am very +much pleased with your idea of anointing cuts with nitrate of silver; +this hint I will bear in mind.</p> +<p>“I enclose the first list of fish, No. 2, not that it is of +much use.—What nonsense it is to collect without knowledge.</p> +<pre>No. Native Name. Family. REMARKS. + +1 Kuggur, Siluridæ. +2 Soonnee, Cyprinidæ, Back greenish, + otherwise pearly-white. +3 Dhurra, Cyprinidæ, Fins reddish, red spot + on opercule, back + greenish-brown. +4 Moogullee, " Perilampoid, Diaphanous, silvery, + head reddish. +5 Peedur, " " Like the preceding. +6 Moorr, " " Ditto ditto. +7 Bhanghun, " " Ditto ditto. +8 Kundura, " Perilampus, Back greenish, + otherwise quite + silvery. +9 Pullee, " " Same as 4,5,6,7. +10 Goolla Ciprinidæ. +11 Khunnuree, <i>Percidæ</i>, Chanda + of Buchanan, Diaphanous. +12 Sur-ri-rha, Cyprinidæ Perilamp, Silvery-green on back. +13 Gundhan, " Perilampoid, Same colours. +14 Mhukk, " " Ditto ditto. +15 Ghurr, " " Ditto ditto. +16 Dhoalee, Ophiocephalus, Colour brown, with + usual marks and bars. +17 Ahaiha, Siluridæ, Diaphanous, 3-5 + irregular longish + stripes. +18 Mhullee, Silurus, Silvery-blueish. +19 Mhoarree, Cyprinidæ, Yellowish-green, fins + reddish. 5 seers. +20 Dhumpurra, " Brownish-green, 6 + seers. +21 Pho-eikee, " Perilampoid. +22 Putollee, Cyprinidæ, Back and sides + light-green. +23 Poapree, " Back greenish-brown, + sides greenish. +24 Shingra, Siluridæ, No stripes, lightly + tinged with brown. +25 Dhimmurr, Silurus. +26 Ghoa-gha, " Back greenish, + punctulate, head + reddish. +27 Mokkhurr, Opiocephalus. +28 Dhujjha, " +29 Thailla, Cyprinidæ, 5 to 6 seers. +30 Mhorakkee, " Much like 19. +31 Singarhee, " Much like 4, 5, 6, 7. +32 Logurr, Siluridæ, 3 to 4 faint punctulate + longish lines. +33 Ghoje, Not noted. +34 Tupree, " +37 Ghunghutt, Perilampus. +38 Soourr, Siluridæ, Diaphanous. Faint + punctulate lines. +39 Soonaree, Cyprinidæ. +40 Phunnee, " Perilampoid. +41 Kutchoo, " Much like the + preceding. +42 Saisurr, " Ditto ditto. +43 Coommee, " Much like no. 4. +44 Saluree, " Ditto ditto. +45 Shumsheer, " So called because of + its voracity, + (Shumsheer a sabre.) +46 Ghora, " Same as Soonee. +47 Saboan, " Same as the preceding. +48 Bhambhun, Cyprinidæ, Same as Dhurra.</pre> +<p>All the above from the Indus, at Shikarpore.</p> +<pre>No. Family. River. REMARKS. + +49 Cyprinidæ, Nari, Small size, colour-silvery, + except upper back, which is + bluish-green. +50 Siluridæ, Mysore. +51 Ophiocephalus, " +52 " " +53 Cyprinidæ, " Same as 49. +54 " Systomus. " A beautiful fish, bright green + back, otherwise bright + orange-red, fins stained with + black colours; fugacious. +55 Cyprinidæ, " +56 " Systomus, " Back greenish, opercle orange + spotted, one black spot near + tail. +57 Percida Chamda " +58 Perilampoid, " +Water of both these rivers, quiescent: bunded up. +59 Cyprinoid, Dadur. +60 " " Same as 54. +61 " Systomus, " Same as 56. +63 Cyprinoid, " +64 " " +65 " " +66 " " Same as 59. +67 Cobites, " +68 Cyprinoid, Bolan, Bluish-green, blue bars and + dots. Takes the fly. +69 Barbus? " Intestines very long, much like + Naipoora. +70 Gonorhynchus? " +71 " " Probably a small specimen of + 69. +72 Cyprinoid, " +73 " Gonorhyncus, Gurmab, Same as 70? +74 " " +75 Cyprinoid, " Closely allied to the Mahaseer. +76 Ditto Mahaseer, " Beautiful fish with + yellow-brown back, golden + sides. Takes fly greedily. +77 " Gonorhynchoid, " +78 " " +79 Silurida, " In Bolan river, deep still + water. +80 Cyprinoid, " In small streams. +81 Macrognathus, " Tenacious of life, belly puffy, + common throughout; a good deal + like a Gudgeon. +82 Loach, Quettah. +83 Cyprinoides, " A beautiful silvery-leaden + backed fish, with a streak of + bright-red along the side. + Common, very like the + preceding: of these Quettah + fish No. 83 is the most common, + 82 the least so. +84 Cyprinus, curious, " + not being a + mountainous form. +86 " " +87 Cyprinoides, Lora, Same mountain form, + Gonorhynchoid. +88 " " +89 Loach, " Ditto ditto ditto. +90 " " Perhaps same as the preceding. +91 Cyprinoides, " +92 " " Like the Adoee. +93 " " Mountain form. +94 " " Large size for the genus. +95 " " <i>Note</i>.—Probable number of + species 47, deducting those + supposed not different +96 Cyprinoid, Urghundab. +97 Loach, " +98 Siluridæ, " +“I subjoin a list given me by a fisherman at Shikarpore, with his divisions into large and small:— +Large. Small. + +Dhumpurra, Ghunghut. +Buree Phookee, Pedir. +Buree Thaillee, Soonnee. +Mhoarrhee, Phokee. +Moukkur, Mogullee. +Gundhan, Dhimmur. +Singaree, Ghoagar. +* Pulla, Khuggur. + Seenra. + Mhorr. + Bhangun. + Ghurr. + Soourr. + Morakee. + Tupree. + Ghogee. + Phopree. + Thaillee. + * Pulla. + Punnotee. + Dhaiee. + Ghogura.</pre> +<p>(I send this list as all the specimens are not lost, and some are +among the plants. Most of the species are, I think, distinct, +and when they have appeared to me not to be so, I have generally noted +it on the spot.</p> +<p>The mountain forms are very distinct, the mouth being under the snout, +or head, the intestines long, peritoneum covered with a black pigment. +These forms commence at Dadur, 800 feet above the sea: this stream abounds +in rapids.</p> +<p>Gurmab is 1,100 feet. Quettah, 5,600 feet. Lora river, +3,600 feet. Urghundab, 3,600 feet.</p> +<p>These lists may be of some small use compared with Burnes’s +collection. To a certain extent they may be useful as showing +the preponderance, etc. of certain forms. You may rely on my distinctions +between Cyprinidæ, Siluridæ, and Percidæ.)</p> +<p>“To-morrow I will send the other list of specimens No. 3, which +will I hope reach you; of all the fish in these parts, the Sir-i-Chushme +and Cabul river <i>Oreinus</i> travels farthest up. I have caught +it at nearly 11,000 feet in the Helmund river. Then come loaches, +and the beautiful trout-like Opsarion; other Cyprinidæ ascend +2,000 or 3,000 feet, the Mahaseer scarcely more. Above that, come +the genuine mountain forms.</p> +<pre>No. Family. Locality. REMARKS. + +1 Cyprinidæ, Streams from A brown fish, with irregular + Oreinus? So-faid-koh, black spots. + +2 Cyprinidæ, " + +3 " " A sombre looking Gudgeon-like + fish, back blackish, sides + yellowish, punctulate with + groups of blackish spots. + +4 Loach, " Colours and patches obscure. + +5 Perilamp, Jallalabad river, Usual silvery-bluish hues. + +6 Cyprinidæ,moun- + tain form, + Schizothorax. + +7 Cyprinidæ, <i>Poo</i>- " Colours obscure, scales + <i>teoides</i>, minute, dorsal spine very + strong. + +8 Cyprinidæ, " A stout fish, of obscure + colours, each scale with a + transverse more or less + wavy red line (like the + Nepoora of Assam), mouth + nepooroid, intestines very + long, very thin, very + frangible, packed in longish + folds, Peritoneum covered + with a black pigment. Herbiv. + +9 Cyprinidæ. Peri- " Back metallic bluish-brown, + lampoid, otherwise silvery. + +10 Cyprinoid, " + +11 " Schizo- " + thorax, + +12 " " " Back greenish, fins reddish, + snout elongated. + +13 " " " Colours brownish, tinged with + yellow; perhaps it is the + same as the Helmund and Cabul + species: intestines packed in + a few folds, moderately long, + 4½ inches longer than body: + diameter of body 2 inches. + Peritoneum with the black + pigment <i>Carneo</i>-<i>herbivorous</i>. + +14 Cyprinoid, " + +15 Ophiocephalus, Jheels, etc, Bus- Colour rather a rich brown, + soollah, pectoral fins barred with + chesnut. + +16 Cyprinoid like a " Back brownish: this colour + Bleak, Schizo- limited to a narrowish line, + thorax, otherwise entirely pearly. + Peritoneum covered with black + pigment. Intestines rather + large, in 3 or 4 folds. + +17 Cyprinoid. A nar- " A very pretty species, + row deep fish. brownish back, marked faintly + Perilamp. An both longitudinally and + Opsarion? transversely with iridescent + patches, abdominal fins + reddish. + +18 Cyprinoid, Jheels, etc, Bus- A handsome species allied to + soollah, very the Mahaseer; back black, + common, otherwise yellowish, fins + tinged with red, scales as it + were bordered with + dusky-black. Intestines + short. + +19 " " An oval, rather thick fish, + of obscure colours. + +20 " Schizo- " An elegant species, back + thorax. obscurely brown, otherwise + pearly. Peritoneum black, + covered with pigment. + Intestines very long and + narrow. + +21 Racoma nobilis<a name="citation0c"></a><a href="#footnote0c">{0c}</a> Lalpoor, Cabul A stout fish, with a large + river, head, not unlike a trout at + first sight Sides bluish + silvery grey, back obscurely + brown, remarkable for + frequent irregular + well-defined black spots, + faintest in small specimens, + fins tinged with reddish. + Head flat at top, with some + spots. Peritoneum with black + pigment. Intestines of large + size, loaded with fat, short, + not twice the length of the + abdomen, cavity loaded with + fat. As usual no cæca. A + remarkable type: aspectu + omnino carnivoris. + +22 Loach, Khyber range A very small and slender + stream, from species, light brown, + Sir-i-Chushme speckled and barred with + spring, temper, brown, attracted + 75°, from immediately by scraping up + limestone rocks. the bed of the outlet of the + spring. + +23 Cyprinid, Orei- Same place, but Back brown, with some + noides, occurs down to iridescent hues, sides + Khyber ghat yellowish brown, dark spots + stream. confined to back and sides, + small but distinct; fins + tinged with reddish. + Peritoneum loaded with + black pigment. Intestines in + short loops across abdomen of + intermediate size, as to + length and diameter. Air + bladder small; very common. + Swarm in deepish pools under + limestone rocks, takes bait, + i.e. offal and worms with + great avidity. Like many + other species, it is asserted + to be the English trout: it + rises to the surface. + +24 Loach, Same place com- Shape subcylindrical, pale + mon, greenish-brown, with very + broad bars of brown, fins + spotted with black, + otherwise fuscescent; at root + of tail a deep black bar. + Head depressed, in old + specimens broad, closely + spotted with black, snout + attenuated, apex with cirrhi; + upper jaw in the centre with + a bony process not unlike an + incisor tooth + +25 Cyprinid, Opsa- " A beautiful trout-like fish, + rion back bluish-black, triangular + bars of azure blackish, + ending in a point towards + glandular line, fins tinged + with orange, tail tipped with + black. Peritoneum spotted + slightly with black. + +26 " Opsarion, " Possibly young specimens of + preceding, colours same but + fainter.”</pre> +<p>* * * * *</p> +<p> <i>Memorandum</i> +<i>on</i> <i>return</i> <i>from</i> <i>Afghanistan</i>.</p> +<p>“As I considered on my arrival at Peshawur in December 1839, +that a great deal remained to be done, I obtained permission to remain +another season in Affghanistan. I immediately mentioned my wishes +of travelling to General Avitabili, who strongly advised me not to attempt +leaving Peshawur in any novel direction, as the whole of his district +was much disaffected. Soon afterwards I heard of an expedition +being on the point of leaving Jallalabad for Kooner, and I determined +on joining it. I re-traversed the Khybur Pass alone, and arrived +at Jallalabad just in time to go in the advance. I was present +at Pushut, 18th January 1840; and on the return of the force I remained +behind with Captain Macgregor. In February 1840 I accompanied +Captain Macgregor to Chugur-Serai, and thence to Otipore or Chugur-Serai-Balu +on the immediate frontier of Kaffiristan, and through his influence +I was enabled to remain there, and to increase my materials in an extremely +interesting direction. I remained about Otipore for some weeks, +making arrangements for penetrating into Kaffiristan and little Cashgur, +and in daily expectation of being joined by the late Capt. E. Connolly; +all my plans, which first seemed to promise success, were completely +frustrated by the disturbances which broke out in Bajore, consequent +on Meer Alum Khan’s absence at Jallalabad. Capt. Connolly +barely escaped with his life from the hands of the Momauds. Meer +Alum Khan found on his return towards his government that he could not +leave Chugur-Serai, and at last, circumstances threatened so much around +Otipore and Chugur-Serai, that Meer Alum Khan insisted on my leaving +Otipore and on returning with him to Jallalabad. I did not leave +a moment too soon, for shortly after, Syud Hoshin turned Otipore by +crossing the hills to the north of Deogul, and very soon possessed himself +of Otipore. Meer Alum and I reached Jallalabad in safety, having +been attacked once on the road.</p> +<p>“I remained at Jallalabad a few days, and was driven thence +to Khaggah by the necessity of obtaining medical aid. I reached +Khaggah in a high fever, and was confined to my bed for six weeks: during +my severe illness, I experienced the greatest kindness and attention +from Dr. Thomson and Dr. Andrew Paton, of the H. C. European Regt.</p> +<p>“Early in July I proceeded to Cabul for change of air, and +as soon as I recovered a little strength, started to join Lieut. Sturly, +who was surveying on the Toorkistan frontier. I met that Officer +at Syghan the day he left to prosecute his surveys, which had been interrupted +by the Kamard disturbances: he was recalled to Syghan, in consequence +of heavier and more serious disturbance.</p> +<p>“I returned to Cabul, as I found it impossible to proceed beyond +Syghan, and then waited with impatience for a season that would enable +me to cross the Punjab without great risk to my still debilitated constitution.</p> +<p>“My establishment of collectors consisted of unintelligent +Affghans, who were particularly prone to abrupt abscondings, and my +supplies of materials and carriage very limited.</p> +<p>“The botanical collection is as extensive as could be expected +from the nature of the country and the climate. It is in excellent +order, consisting of about 1500 species, and a great number of duplicates. +This collection has been formed on the principles which have guided +me on former travels. Those principles I conceive to require the +collection of every form in numbers, and in various localities, so that +the geographical limits of each may be estimated, and the examination +be open. They also require information as to habitat, locality, +climate, whether the plants are gregarious or not, and whether they +contribute to giving peculiar features to the country. I do not +hesitate to say that this collection contains almost all the plants +that existed in flower or fruit along the line of march of the army +between Cabul and Syghan, about Chugur-Serai, Otipore, and Pushut, and +in the neighbourhood of Khaggah.</p> +<p>“The extent over which it was formed is about 1,600 miles, +and on the variety of geographical position a considerable part of its +value depends. If the plants between Cabul and Peshawur are less +rich, as my journeys between those cities always occurred at unfavourable +seasons, the deficiency has been lessened by my friend Dr. Ritchie.</p> +<p>“The Ornithological portion of the collection, consists of +about 350 specimens, is in good order, and contains many objects of +interest, valuable for throwing some light on the geographical distribution +of birds.</p> +<p>“To the fish of the various tracts I paid considerable attention, +but owing to the difficulties of travelling and of climate, the collection +has suffered severely. At Shikarpore I made an extensive collection +of the fish of the Indus. I had collected most of the fish of +the river, of the Bolan Pass, of the streams of Quettah, and of the +Urghundab, near Candahar, unfortunately I relied too much on the preservative +powers of alcohol. Subsequently I took the additional precaution +of preserving skins separately; and it is to these which amount to about +150 specimens, that the collections are chiefly limited. The collections +contain the fish of the Cabul river, between its source near Sir-i-Chushme, +and Peshawur, of the Helmund at an altitude of 11,500 feet, of the Bamean +river, and of the Chenab, Ravee, and Sutledge.</p> +<p>“This collection is particularly interesting, as showing that +while the plants, quadrupeds, and birds of the southern and northern +declivities of the Kohi-Baba, the continuation of the Hindoo-koosh, +are much alike, yet that a total difference exists in their fish.</p> +<p>“Lord Keane, and Sir Willoughby Cotton, left me in complete +possession of my own time, a great kindness due no doubt to the considerate +instructions of Lord Auckland, but for which I was not the less grateful.</p> +<p>“I always found Sir Alexander Burnes very considerate and very +willing to forward my views, and put me in possession of information. +The late Dr. Lord also showed himself anxious to assist me in my duties, +and very kindly asked me to join the Mission to Toorkistan, so suddenly +put an end to by a suspected outbreak in Kohistan.</p> +<p>“To Captain Macgregor I was under great obligations during +the whole time I continued in his district. Through his influence +I was enabled to remain at the outer borders of Kaffiristan; and that +deservedly warm respect which he was held in by all the chiefs, would, +I am confident, have gained me access into Kaffiristan, and towards +Cashgur, at any less unsettled period. I have seen Captain Macgregor +in the closet and in the field, and I cannot sufficiently express the +respect with which I have had cause to regard him in both situations.</p> +<p>“Captain Sanders, of the Bengal Engineers, was always eager +to swell my stock of materials, and during periods of occasional indisposition, +I relied almost entirely on him. Captain Sanders had also made +for me a collection of plants between Candahar and Herat, which, I regret +to say, was nearly entirely destroyed in crossing one of the rivers +on that route.</p> +<p>“It is to Dr. Ritchie, of the Bombay Medical Service, the companion +of the justly celebrated Major Pottinger, during his return from Herat +via Jhomunna, that the Botanical collections are mostly indebted. +Dr. Ritchie not only placed unreservedly at my disposal a very interesting +collection made on that journey, but also a larger one made between +Peshbolak and Peshawur. Both these are of considerable value, +the one shows that the Affghan forms prevail as far as Herat on both +sides of the Paropamisus, the other shows that Affghanistan, even in +its hottest parts, has a majority of European forms. To the contents +of these collections, notes of the localities are also added, enhancing +their value very considerably. I may be excused for adding, that +Dr. Ritchie is acquainted with route surveying; in this and his knowledge +of Botany, he possesses two valuable requisitions of a traveller.</p> +<p>“Dr. Grant, of the Bombay Medical Service, formerly in Medical +charge of Dr. Lord’s Mission, liberally presented me with an excellent +series of specimens from the valley of Syghan.</p> +<p>“While I am beyond measure indebted for Zoological collections, +to Captain Hay, of the European Regiment.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p>“The following notes addressed to Emanuel Fernandez, plant +collector at Malacca, may perhaps be useful as containing instructions +for the collection and transmission of plants and seeds. They +are perhaps worthy of insertion on other grounds, as an example of the +painstaking, and patient manner in which Mr. Griffith made his wishes +known to the persons employed by him in his pursuits.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p><i>To</i> <i>Emanuel</i> <i>Fernandez</i>.</p> +<p>“I have received the open box of seeds, and the large case +of plants, per <i>‘Tenasserim</i>.’ The Ebool seeds +were coming up, the dried plants are in good order, and are of very +good kinds.</p> +<p>“Before you put in the palms and fruits with other collections, +you should see that they are quite dry, as otherwise they rot and injure +the dried plants. When you send up more fruits, etc. put them +into open rattan baskets, so that they may be aired.</p> +<p>“I send a list of palms and <i>rotans</i> wanted very much, +and two more glazed cases for seeds: water the earth inside a day before +closing the boxes and sending them off to Singapore. Whenever +you get any good seeds, dry them, and put them in a letter, directed +to me. Seeds spoil by being kept, particularly if kept among wet +fruits and dried plants.</p> +<p>“If you can get flower-pots in Malacca buy two or three dozen, +and whenever you get seeds sow them in a pot, and keep them, until you +have enough pots filled to occupy one of the cases, then put mould between +the pots, and sow more seeds in this mould, fasten the lid down and +send off the box to Singapore.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>May</i> +<i>30th</i>, 1843.</p> +<p>“The cases of plants, etc. have arrived: the fresh plants were +nearly all dead.</p> +<p>“You planted them very well, and cleverly, but some how or +other the lids of the boxes were nailed down, and so the plants died; +because plants will not live without light.</p> +<p>“Some of the Ebool seeds have sprouted, one Lanjoot arrived +alive, and also the Pakoo Galowe.</p> +<p>“I will send soon two glazed cases, in which you may put plants +as before, and seeds of palms, or any good plants: sow them in the same +manner, and three or four days before the cases are despatched water +the earth and plants moderately; then screw down the lid, when the plants, +if they have rooted in the earth, will not die, because the glass admits +light to them. But to be sure of the plants having rooted, you +must keep the cases with you for three weeks, and if any plants are +sickly, take them out and put in others.</p> +<p>“I send a list: when your next despatch arrives, I will increase +your pay. If you send plenty of seeds, etc. often, that is once +a month or six weeks, I will keep you in my service even if I do not +come back to Malacca.</p> +<p>“I also send a box with a large bottle in it of spirits of +wine, this is for monkey cups (Nepenthes). Take the finest ones +you can get of all sorts, and put them in the bottle, leaves and all, +do not squeeze them into the bottle, then send it to me.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p>“I send two empty glazed cases for plants: when these reach +you, fill them with moist earth and plant in them ripe fresh seeds of +the following palms * * * You need not wait until you have obtained +all, but such only as you can get at once; but remember when you have +got ripe seeds of any kind to sow them in the case. Take care +the earth is not too wet. The seeds you sent, sown in an open +box, came up, and we have now six or seven live Ebools, etc.</p> +<p>“Send me up some ripe fruits and seeds of the Epoo, those you +sent were not ripe. If you can get any ripe ones, also sow some +with the palm seeds.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>Calcutta</i>: +<i>March</i> <i>26th</i>, 1844.</p> +<p>“When you prepare Rotangs do not cut off the stalk of the leaf +close to the stem, but six inches from it, and do not cut off the thorns, +but tie all up in mats or gunny bags: at the same time send the leaves +of each dried in paper like other plants and flowers, all with names +written plainly in English and Malay.</p> +<p>“Send live plants according as you receive boxes for them.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p>“Whenever you find ripe fruits or seeds, dry them in the sun, +and then send them to the Post Office for despatch in paper bags. +Sow palm seeds in open boxes as you did before, the Ebool having come +up.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p> <i>January</i> +14<i>th</i>, 1844.</p> +<p>“The plants dried and living have been received, and do you +great credit. The live plants particularly are in excellent order. +I have sent two more cases, when they reach you, fill them as you have +done before, and despatch them to me. I send some cards on which +you can write the names plainly, and tie them on the specimens. +I will also send you a pocket English Dictionary, and make you a present +of the English and Portuguese one.”</p> +<h2>PRIVATE JOURNALS OF WM. GRIFFITH, F.L.S.</h2> +<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3> +<p><i>When</i> <i>proceeding</i> <i>with</i> <i>the</i> <i>Assam</i> +<i>Deputation</i> <i>for</i> <i>the</i> <i>Examination</i> <i>of</i> +<i>the</i> <i>Tea</i> <i>Plant</i>.</p> +<p><i>September</i>, <i>1835</i>.—We arrived at Pubna on the 9th +of September, and left it on the following morning, pursuing the course +of the Pubna “Karee,” which is exceedingly tortuous and +of about an average width of 100 yards. On the evening of the +10th, we halted in the same river near its termination. This morning +we reached the “Beera,” into which the Pubna Karee enters, +and which at the mouth presents a vast expanse of water. Among +the jheels which occur on every side, we noticed in abundance the <i>Tamarix</i> +<i>dioica</i>. About noon we entered a narrow river, and in the +evening a very narrow creek in which in two places we experienced a +great difficulty in getting the boats along. We noticed <i>Alpinia</i> +<i>allughas</i>, <i>Nymphæa</i> <i>pubescens</i>, <i>Oxystelma</i> +<i>esculentum</i>, <i>Apluda</i> <i>aristata</i>, in abundance. +Up to this period the two most conspicuous grasses continue to be <i>Saccharum</i> +<i>spontaneum</i>, and <i>Andropogon</i> <i>muricatus</i>.</p> +<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>13th</i>.—Arrived at Shiraz-gunge, about +half-past 8 A.M., from which place the people say Jumalpore is a three +days’ journey. The country through which we proceeded after +leaving Shiraz-gunge is nothing but a net-work of rivers, several of +vast size, and low islands, occupied almost exclusively by <i>Saccharum</i> +<i>spontaneum</i>, and in some places abounding in <i>Typha</i> <i>elephantina</i>, +in fruit. We halted at a small village in the evening, where we +procured <i>Centrostachys</i> <i>aquatica</i>.</p> +<p><i>September</i> <i>14th</i>.—Came in sight of distant very +elevated land, which we suppose to be the Kassiya Hills. This +morning (15th) the Hills are very plain, and bear nearly due north. +The country through which we passed yesterday presented no change whatever. +<i>Andropogon</i> <i>muricatus</i> has now nearly left us; but the <i>Saccharum</i> +reaches to a large size, and is incredibly abundant. The natives +use it for thatching their huts. We were visited by a heavy squall +in the evening.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—Strong winds from an easterly direction. +About noon we succeeded in reaching a creek, in which we are completely +sheltered. During our route here, we were employed in examining +a new species of <i>Crotalaria</i>, and one of <i>Mitrasacme</i>! In +pools close to us are <i>Damasonium</i> <i>indicum</i>, <i>Nymphæa</i> +<i>cærulea</i>, <i>Myriophyllum</i> <i>tetrandrum</i>, <i>Polygonum</i> +<i>rivulare</i>, and a species of <i>Villarsia</i>, <i>V</i>. <i>cristata</i>.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Left the creek, and arrived at Jumalpore about +2 P.M.; the cantonment of which occupies the right-hand side of the +Burrampooter, along the bank of which the officers’ houses are +situated; indeed this is the only dry line about the place, as immediately +inland there are nothing but jheels and rice fields. Jumalpore +is about ¾ of a mile from the junction of the Jenai with the +Burrampooter or rather from the point of exit of the former river.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—We left the cantonment about 11 A.M., and proceeded +down the Burrampooter, which is a very uninteresting river, and appears +more like a net-work of water and sand banks; opposite Jumalpore, the +banks are about a mile apart, but the distance between the extreme banks, +leaving the island opposite the cantonment out of the question, is much +more. During the dry weather this part of the river is passable, +and indeed is in some places nothing but a dry bed of sand, so that +people walk across it. During our stay at the above place we met +with many interesting and new plants, among which a new species of <i>Villarsia</i> +occupied the most prominent place. <i>Cyperaceæ</i>, <i>Gramineæ</i>, +and aquatic <i>Scrophularineæ</i> abound. <i>Solanum</i> +<i>spirale</i> occurs in abundance, and the trees commence to be clothed +with ferns. I observed only one <i>Epiphytica</i> <i>Orchidea</i>, +probably an <i>Aerides</i>.</p> +<p>The banks consist hitherto of nothing but sand, covered with <i>Saccharum</i> +<i>spontaneum</i>. <i>Andropogon</i> <i>muricatus</i> is scarcely +to be met with.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—We left Mymensing this morning, and proceeded +down the Burrampooter, the banks of which still present for the most +part nothing but a succession of sandy banks covered with <i>Saccharum</i> +<i>spontaneum</i>. The stream is not very rapid, and the river, +owing to the numerous islands and banks, does not present so imposing +an appearance as the Ganges. For the last week strong easterly +winds have prevailed.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—We entered the mouth of the Soormah, or, as the +natives seem to call it, the Barak. The water of this river or +portion of the Megna? is remarkably clear, compared with that of the +Ganges; as indeed is that of the Burrampooter.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Some time after we entered the Soormah we apparently +left its channel, and up to this morning we have passed through a tract +of jheels with a few clear and very deep channels. The villages +are built on small eminences, and are entirely surrounded with water; +they have the usual form, and those houses adjoining the water have +fences of an <i>Arundo</i>, which they tell us are intended to keep +out the grass. We have since entering these jheels passed through +and between immense beds of vegetation, formed principally of <i>Oplismenus</i> +(Panicum) <i>stagninus</i>, <i>Leersia</i>? <i>aristata</i>, which by-the-bye +is a distinct genus. <i>Villarsia</i> <i>cristata</i>, <i>Nymphæalotus</i>, +Potamogeton, <i>Azolla</i> <i>Salvinii</i>, etc. etc. The only +novel things we have met with are <i>Ischæmum</i> <i>cuspidatum</i>, +Roxb. (sui generis,) and a small grass intermediate between Panicum +and Chamæraphis. The wild form of <i>Oryza</i> <i>sativa</i>, +<i>Panicum</i> <i>interruptum</i> and <i>Leersia</i>? <i>ciliaris</i>, +Roxb. also occur; the two former in abundance. On the more dry +tracts, that occasionally though very rarely occur, <i>Andropogon</i> +<i>muricatus</i> appears. No <i>Saccharum</i> presented itself +since the 28th. High ground was visible yesterday evening, apparently +at a great distance.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>1st</i>.—We have continued to pass through +immense jheels: about 6 A.M. we arrived at Hubbe-gunge, a large native +town, situated on the Barak, which does not deserve the name of a river. +The actual distance from this place to Chattuc is about 42 miles, and +the high land in that direction was faintly visible for about 2 hours +in the morning. The ground to the Eastward is losing the “Jheel” +character, and appears densely wooded, and to the S.E. rather high hills +are visible. Altogether this land of jheels is very remarkable, +particularly on account of the great depth of the water, which except +in one point has hitherto always exceeded 6 feet, and yet the water +has fallen in all probability two or three more. As the head quarters +of tropical aquatic plants, it is well worthy of attention; the profusion +of <i>Leersia</i> <i>aristata</i>, Roxb. is immense, but this is almost +exceeded by <i>Oplismenus</i> <i>stagninus</i>.</p> +<p><i>On</i> <i>the</i> <i>3rd</i> <i>October</i>, we left the tract +of jheels, and proceeded by small rivers, overhung with jungle and fine +bamboos; on the 5th we re-entered the Soorma and proceeded down it to +Chattuc, which is situated on the left bank of the river, and which +we reached in the afternoon. During our passage down the river +we had beautiful views of the mountains, which do not however strike +one with an idea of great height. We could plainly distinguish +two or three waterfalls shooting over scarped precipices.</p> +<p><i>Churra</i> <i>Punjee</i>, <i>October</i> <i>30th</i>.—After +a residence of 20 days here, I wrote to Mr. Solly, stating nothing particular, +except that Bucklandia has coniferous tissue, and that Podostemon will +probably prove Monocotyledonous and allied to Pistiaceæ. +Our stay here has proved a source of great delight, and accumulation +of botanical and geological treasures. The cantonments of Churra +are at an elevation of 4200 feet above the sea, the native village being +situated half way up the ascent which closes in the table-land on which +the cantonment is situated towards the N. and W., and it is hence about +300 feet higher. The country immediately adjoining the cantonment +is flat, with here and there a rounded hillock, destitute of any covering +but grasses and a few low, half shrubby plants. To the Eastward +there is a very deep and beautiful valley, the west side of which in +particular is densely covered with jungle, but this does not contain +any large trees. The opposite side, fronting our bungalow, runs +nearly N. and S., presents a succession of ravines, and a most picturesque +and varied surface. This valley, along the bottom of which as +is usual a torrent runs, opens into the low country at Terrya Ghat, +which is situated at the foot of the ascent to Churra. Directly +to the south, and at a distance of about two miles from the cantonments, +there is another valley likewise occupied below by a torrent fed by +the Moosmai falls. The commencement of all these valleys, that +I have at least seen, is a sheer precipice, which often, and particularly +at Moosmai, assumes the form of a vast amphitheatre, over the brink +of which cascades, especially at Moosmai, fall in tolerable plenty. +It is in these places that the immense depth of the sandstone is best +seen; the depth of the valley of Moosmai is, I am told, 1500 feet, the +country above these precipices is generally level, and is in fact table-land. +The most beautiful valley is at Maamloo, a village to the Westward of +Churra, and about five miles distant. The approach to Churra is +pretty enough, and gives the best view of the cantonment. The +coal mines are to the Westward, and close to Churra. These I have +not yet seen; the coal is of the very best description, it does not +splinter, gives remarkably few ashes, affords an admirable fire and +the best coke. Water-courses are plenty about Churra, but the +body of water is at this season small, although it becomes considerable +after a few hours rain; it is then that the great fall at Moosmai becomes +really beautiful, the water shooting over the precipice and falling +into a bason about 150 feet below. By a succession of these falls, +although of more limited height, it at length reaches the bottom of +the valley. It is only on the precipices about the fall that the +Chamærops appears to grow; at the foot of a precipice a little +to the right (going from Churra,) a tree fern grows, which I have Wallich’s +authority for stating to be Polypod giganteum, a fern which occurred +at Mahadeb, and which I have seen in somewhat similar situations at +Mergui. All my excursions have been confined to this valley and +to the water-courses immediately around Churra; once only have I quitted +the table-land and proceeded to Maamloo, and yet in this very limited +space the profusion of objects has been such as to enable me only to +embrace a very limited proportion. The above excursion proved +very rich. About half way to Maamloo I discovered a solitary tree +fern (<i>Alsophila</i> <i>Brunoniana</i>,) and to the left, and up the +broken sides of the calcareous cliffs that occur here and between Maamloo +and Moosmai, a group of several magnificent specimens, of which on the +succeeding day we brought home three. We saw none above 30 feet, +although the specimen in the British Museum from these hills measures +45. Their axis is of small diameter, and is nearly cylindrical, +the vascular fascicles being disposed in covered bundles, often assuming +the form of a UU near the circumference of the very dense cellular tissue +of which the axis is chiefly composed. Towards the base it is +enveloped in an oblique dense mass of intermottled rigid fibres (roots) +which, as they are developed in the greatest extent, the nearer they +approach the base, give the trunk a conical form. Their growth +is essentially endogenous, and will probably be found when examined +aborigine to approximate to that of Cycadeæ, although these last +are of a more exogenous than endogenous nature. Nothing however +is known of the growth of Palms, Cycadeæ, or tree ferns. +I have above alluded to the calcareous rocks or cliffs; these are of +the same formation with those that occur so abundantly on the Tenasserim +coast, although they are much more rich in vegetation. These I +first saw at Terrya Ghat; like those of Burmah they abound in caves, +and assume the most varied and picturesque forms; they appear to be +the head quarters of Cyrthandraceæ, of which we found a noble +species with the flower of a Martynia growing among the tree-ferns. +They are very rich in ferns and mosses, of which last near the tree-ferns +I gathered four species of four genera without moving a foot. +The cliffs in which, or at the foot of which the coal is found, bound +the Churra cantonments to the Westward. These are chiefly calcareous. +The entrance to Churra lies between this and the precipice at Moosmai. +Very few animals of any description are to be seen about Churra. +I have seen one small species of deer, about half as large again as +the mouse-deer of Mergui, and one young flying squirrel of a greyish +black colour, with a very bushy tail. Leopards are, they say, +not uncommon. Tigers do not generally come so high. Of birds, +I mean about Churra, there are several species of hawks, and their old +companions crows and swallows; but I have seen no sparrows, which is +singular enough. There is one beautiful species of jay, with crimson-orange +beak and legs, and a pretty king-fisher; but, except perhaps in the +valleys, birds, I should say, are very scarce. With respect to +shooting, scarcely any is to be had; wood-cocks are found in the dells +about Churra, but sparingly. I have seen only one snipe and one +quail.</p> +<p>Regarding the natives, I have little to say. They are a stout-built, +squat, big-legged hill tribe: the women in regard to shape being exactly +like their mates; and as these are decidedly ugly—somewhat tartarish-looking +people, very dirty, and chew pawn to profusion—they can scarcely +be said to form a worthy portion of the gentler sex. They appear +to be honest; but that is a quality which, from the example of their +European lords, they are said to be losing fast. They have no +written character; every thing being transmitted by tradition, and performed +by the interchange of tokens. They drink like fish, and manufacture +a bad kind of arrack, the pernicious effects of which were experienced +by the European invalids when the Sanatarium was in existence. +They pay respect to their dead by the erection of a sort of kairns and +large erect slabs of sandstone rounded off at the upper end: of these, +I believe, they put up three or five to each friend, according to their +means and, probably, rank. The Churra people cultivate nothing +but a little cotton, and perhaps a species of Eleasine. They depend +upon the plains for their support and supplies, and this is good management +since rice at Terrya Ghat is sold at 70 or 80 seers a rupee. Their +hire is, considering the cheapness of their food, very expensive; a +man being rated at four annas a day, a woman at three, and a boy at +two. I should add, that they have no caste.</p> +<p>The climate is certainly very cool and cold, the thermometer ranging +from about 56° to 66° in-doors at this time of the year. +The rains are said to be the coldest part of the year; they are excessive, +commencing in April and ceasing in October. It occasionally rains +for fifteen or sixteen days in succession, and without intermission; +and nine or ten inches have been known to fall in twenty-four hours. +Since we have been here, inclusive of this, we have had four days of +wet weather, of which three were continued rain. Both were ushered +in by the sudden irruption of heavy mists from below, which soon spread +over the country, obscuring every thing. These sudden irruptions +occur during the partial breaking up of the rain, during which time +the valleys are completely choked up with dense mists, the summits of +the hills on the opposite side to that on which one stands being alone +visible. After the rains were over, in the first instance, the +plains, or rather the mass of haze hanging over them, presented a most +curious spectacle.</p> +<p>The coldest weather we have yet experienced was at Maamloo, on the +27th, the thermometer at 8 P.M. being at 52°. This is remarkable, +as Maamloo is rather below Churra. There is however a good deal +of wood round the place. <a name="citation7"></a><a href="#footnote7">{7}</a></p> +<p>With regard to Botany, the chief vegetation about Churra, as indeed +is at once indicated by the appearance of the country, consists of grasses. +Along the water-courses, which intersect this portion of the country, +<i>Bucklandia</i> <i>populnea</i>, a species of Ternstræmia, Pandanus, +Eugenia, Camellia, are found; while Compositæ, Eriocaulon, and +ferns abound in the same places. The vegetation of the valleys +is very rich and very varied; and, an affinity is indicated with the +botany of China by the existence of a species of Illicum, I. khascanam, +and several Ternstrœmiaceæ. The great orders are grasses, +ferns, compositæ. During a trip to Maamloo, a beautifully +situated village on the brink of the table-land, we discovered abundance +of the tree-fern <i>Alsophila</i> <i>Brunoniana</i>, the highest of +which measured 25 feet. The appearance of the tree is that of +a palm. The flora surrounding these tree-ferns we found to be +exceedingly rich. Among Nepal ferns, I may mention <i>Anisadenia</i>, +<i>Saxifraga</i> <i>ligulata</i>.</p> +<p><i>Interior</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Khasyah</i> <i>Mountains</i>.—On +the 2nd, we left for Surureem; at which place we halted a day. +Bucklandia here occurs, of a very large size, perhaps 50 or 60 feet. +It is a rugged-looking tree, many of the branches being decayed. +There we observed the first <i>Rhododendrum</i> <i>arboreum</i>. +Our next stage was to Moflong; during our march thither, or rather mine, +I had a fine view of the Himalayas, but not upon the regular road to +Moflong. The European forms certainly increased in number between +Surureem and the above place. Two great acquisitions occurred +on the road; a new Crawfurdia, and a Podostemon which W. has named after +me. This I found in the clear stream adjoining the Bogapanee growing +upon stones, and adhering to them very firmly. It is on the hills +about the Bogapanee that the firs first make their appearance, but do +not attain to any great size. The valley of the Bogapanee is exceedingly +deep, and both the descent and ascent are very difficult.</p> +<p>Moflong is a bleak exposed village and the bungalow or residence +for travellers very bad. The number of European forms we found +to increase considerably about this place. The only woods that +occur are of fir, but the trees are of no great size; their frequent +occurrence, however, stamps a peculiar feature on the scenery. +We here experienced nearly three days of continued rain, and, as the +place is bleak, we were miserable enough. We left for Myrung on +the 9th, and the greater and all the first part of the long march was +very uninteresting. At Mumbree, however, there is a decided improvement, +and the scenery is very good. One here notices the occurrence +of woods—of oaks, etc., and their form reminded me somewhat of +the woods of Buckinghamshire. No woods of fir occur; all the trees +occurring isolatedly. I should mention that the country between +Molee and Moflong is quite peculiar in geological structure, abounding +in Cyanite, the masses of which are of very considerable size. +I imagine that the vegetation farther on in this direction would be +more rich in European forms than elsewhere, at least between Churra +and Mingklow.</p> +<p>Myrung is certainly far superior in every point to any place that +we have yet seen; and, as the climate is peculiarly fine and the bungalow +good, the degree of enjoyment is as great as can be expected. +The features of the country are similar to those of Mumbree. The +groves or woods are composed chiefly of oaks, intermixed with Magnolias, +which attain a very large size. These forests seem all to have +a northern aspect. Orchideæ abound in these woods, and so +far as herbaceous forms go, European vegetation is on the decrease. +From the bungalow one has occasionally a remarkably fine view of the +Himalayas, mountains intercepted by large tracts of very high land, +probably Bootan. The coldest weather we have experienced here +was when the thermometer sank to 46°; even in the middle of the +day the sun is not oppressive. It is singular enough, that the +first attempts, so to speak, at a Fauna occur here. The woods +abound with small birds. I shot one squirrel, with a very short +tail and rounded head. Red deer (the Gyee of the Burmese) occur, +though rarely. Two or three solitary snipes may be found during +a day’s excursion, and perhaps a brace of quail, which are nearly +as large as English partridges. Pheasants are reported to occur +in the woods. I should add, that both here and at Nunklow snipe +of a very large description, and of the habits of the solitary snipe, +are found in small numbers. They are very brown, as large as a +wood-cock, and their cry is that of a common snipe. Lieutenant +Townsend informs me, that these birds are a totally distinct species. +Lieutenant Vetch tells me, that the Khasiyas declare that they are the +females of the wood-cock, in other words, wood-hens, and that in March +wood-cocks abound in the places with these wood-hens. He likewise +informs me, that the only difference he could ascertain to exist between +these birds and wood-cocks, consists in their having very short and +thick legs.</p> +<p>I have seen two of this particular description, but have never shot +any.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p8.jpg"> +<img alt="View from Nunklow" src="images/p8.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>After Myrung one can speak much less in favour of these hills. +Nunklow is a pretty spot, and commands a really magnificent view of +the Himalayas, of the Bootan mountains, and of the plains of Assam. +Altogether this view is the finest which, in my limited experience, +I have ever seen: I did not however like Nunklow, nor do my wishes recur +to it. <a name="citation9"></a><a href="#footnote9">{9}</a> The +route thither is pretty enough, and not fatiguing. I may mention +Nunklow as the station of some fine trees, among which is a Betula, +two Æsculi, oaks, etc. in abundance. The pine is in fine +order, but not large. Much more cultivation is carried on in this +portion of the hills than elsewhere, and paddy is cultivated apparently +to some extent. The temperature is much warmer, and the air by +no means so bracing as that of Myrung. Perhaps at this place the +flora resemble that of lower Himalaya more than other places we have +yet seen. The march from Nunklow to Nowgong is very long, and, +as we started late, owing partly to mismanagement and partly to the +want of coolies, we were most agreeably benighted in the jungle. +The descent is very sudden and commences at Nunklow; the valley, on +the brink of which it is situated, being perhaps 2000 feet deep. +It is in this valley or on its walls that the finest pines we have seen +occur, but even here they do not attain a greater height than 60 feet, +and perhaps a diameter of a foot or a foot and a half. As Mr. +Brown of the Sillet Light Infantry informed me most correctly, many +would make fine spars; but Mr. Cracroft’s language in one of the +Journals of the Asiatic Society when describing these firs, seems rather +overwrought. During our march I picked up a pretty species of +Sonerila. A small stream runs at the foot of the descent, by what +name it goes I know not. Near the Bustapanee, flowing along a +valley about two hours’ walk from the last mentioned water. +Wallich discovered abundance of his favourite and really splendid Polypodium +Wallichianum, which I may accuse with justice of being an additional +reason for our benightment. The stream is really the only respectable +river we have seen, or rather the second one that can be called a torrent, +the other being the Bogapanee. It boils along, and the body of +water is great, even at the season of the year at which we passed it. +It has forced enormous holes, frequently round, in the large masses +of rock that form its bed, and then in and a few yards beyond the bridge +of bamboos by which we crossed, it falls, they say, 70 feet into a fine +bason, which however is only partly visible from above. They who +have been on the edges of this bason say that the fall is really fine; +it certainly has not much of this when viewed from above, neither can +it, I think, even in the rains come up to Mr. Cracroft’s description. +Moosmai is, <i>après</i> <i>tout</i> I will venture to say, the +king of the falls between Terrya Ghat and Ranee Godown. On the +farther side of this water, small trees of Cycas first make their appearance, +but we had no time now or rather then to examine any thing. As +the shades of evening lengthened we quickened our paces, and at last +when it became dark, came up with the coolies in a most rugged road, +and when it was dark, after stumbling about a good deal, I made my way +to the foot of the descent, and reached a small stream, where we made +preparations for a halt, and where we passed the night, during which +we were treated with a slight shower of rain. As the season was +far advanced we all escaped, scot-free, from fever, and reached the +Bungalow called Nowgong about 10 o’clock next morning, where we +spent the day.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p11.jpg"> +<img alt="The village of Nunklow" src="images/p11.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>From this time we were, I believe, all anxious to leave the hills, +which had lost all their charms, although the vegetation was still more +gigantic and interesting. But we were now confined to the road, +which is very good, all digressions being prevented by the thickness +of the jungles, and then in some places swarms of wild elephants. +These animals appear most numerous about Onswye, near which there is +a marshy place literally trodden up by them, and their tracks were so +fresh that no traces of Wallich or his coolies could be identified, +although they had preceded us only about half an hour. It was +in this particular place that I gathered a solitary specimen of <i>Butomus</i> +<i>pygmæus</i>. Beyond Nowgong, saul first comes into view, +and many trees attain a considerable size. Some fine ferns and +two beautiful Acanthaceæ, I may mention, as collected about that +place. We reached Jyrung by an easy march the next day; every +step adding only to a greater renewal of acquaintance with old faces, +or at least old plain plants. Between Jyrung and the foot of the +hills, we fell in with <i>Henslowia</i> <i>glabra</i> in fine flower: +Wallich took many fine specimens, all of which were males. This +species is, as well as the former, liable to deceive one as to the sex +of the plant; but all the seeming ovaries beginning to enlarge are due +to insect bites or punctures. To conclude: at the foot of the +hills we were embraced with <i>Marlea</i> <i>Begonifolia</i>, <i>Bauhinia</i> +<i>purpurea</i>, etc. almost exactly as at Terrya Ghat. Between +the foot of these really delightful hills and Ranee Godown, I fell in +with one plant only, deserving of mention, <i>Dischedia</i> <i>Rafflesiana</i>; +this is worthy of notice, as our Indian Asclipiferous species have not +hitherto been found, I believe north of Moulmain, nor otherwhere than +that peninsula and the archipelago. From Ranee Godown we had the +pleasure of walking nineteen miles to Gowahatty, which place we reached +on the 23rd November.</p> +<p>All I can say in its favour is, that it is very cold in the mornings, +always at this season cool; that it is very pretty, being situated on +the Burrampooter, and surrounded with hills; that the women are good-looking, +and the whole body of officers among the best. Of its botanical +riches I can only say, that in a short afternoon’s excursion we +found <i>Cardiopterus</i> <i>harnulosa</i>, or rather saw it, and a +species of Apocynea in fruit, probably the same with one I have from +Tenasserim, and which is remarkable for the very many fleshy alæ +of its fruit. Gowahatty is particularly known as the station for +<i>Cycas</i> <i>circinatis</i>, one fine specimen of which Captain Jenkins +shewed us, and the height of which is perhaps 20 or 25 feet.</p> +<p>It was dichotomous, but only once. The rings formed by the +scars of the foot stalks, as well as those of the fruit stalks, were +most distinct on the two branches only, and gave them a very rich and +less elated appearance. The examination of this specimen only +strengthens me in my opinion derived chiefly from examination of those +in the Botanic Gardens, that these rings which certainly afford the +age of each branch, one being added of either sort every year, are not +to be distinguished in the stem below its division. So that after +all, <i>Brongniart</i> is only half-wrong, although he is ignorant of +the saving clause.</p> +<p>I may add, that we were on the hills about thirty-eight days, of +which seven and a half were rainy, a proportion of 1 in 5½.</p> +<p><i>On</i> <i>the</i> <i>2nd</i> <i>December</i>, our party left Gowahatty +for Suddiya, on the morning of the 4th I proceeded in advance in Captain +Matthie’s express canoe for Tezpoor, which place I reached on +the evening of the 6th, and at which I met with a most kind reception +from Captain Matthie, Principal Assistant to the Agent to the Governor +General, and in Civil charge of the district of Durrung. Tezpoor +possesses many advantages over Gowahatty, from which place it is about +120 miles distant, that is, following the river. It is situated +on the banks of what was once a portion of the Burrampooter, but which +is now nothing but a nullah, nearly dry at the present season. +It is a completely new place, <a name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12">{12}</a> +Captain Matthie having arrived here about a year since, at which time +it was a complete jungle. Some small hills run along the side +of the nullah, on one of which Captain Matthie’s house is situated. +The clearings have already reached to a considerable extent, and there +are two good roads for buggies. The great advantage it has over +Gowahatty consists in its freedom from fogs, which evidently hug the +Meekur hills on the opposite side of the Burrampooter, bearing about +E.S.E. from Tezpoor. It is perhaps owing to the proximity of these +hills that Nowgong until 10 A.M. appears completely enveloped in fog, +while all round Tezpoor it is completely clear.</p> +<p>From this place the view of the Himalayas and of the intervening +Bootan hills is very fine. The chain is of considerable extent, +and presents three grand peaks, of which the most westerly one is the +largest. They do not appear very distant, and are distinctly seen +at this season at all times of the day. They are more soft and +picturesque towards evening, at which time the different shades are +better developed. The degrees of ascent of the Bootan hills are +well shewn; the hills forming the lowest range being of no considerable +height. It is at once obvious, that the ascent into Bootan from +this place would occupy several days.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p12.jpg"> +<img alt="Captain Mathie’s Cutcherry" src="images/p12.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The view to the S. and S.S.W. is barren enough, and is completely +flat; the country presenting nothing whatever but high grass, with an +occasional peep of the river. That to the north is, owing to the +Himalayas, very striking and picturesque.</p> +<p>Cultivation is carried on to a great extent about Tezpoor, and the +district is populous, although few villages are to be seen, as they +are all concealed among trees. Paddy is the principal grain cultivated, +and this is carried on in low places, which appear on a casual examination +to have been originally beds of rivers. Captain Matthie however +tells me, that many of these have abrupt terminations and commencements, +such may have been old jheels. Sursoo, opium, and sugar-cane are +likewise cultivated, especially the former.</p> +<p>The whole land indeed, with the exception of the rice-places and +the evidently old beds of the Burrampooter, are much more elevated than +the land round Gowahatty. Both Tezpoor and Durrung are consequently +less damp, and more healthy than the above-mentioned place. In +fact, as a residence I would infinitely prefer Tezpoor to Gowahatty. +With regard to the shikar, (shooting) both large and small game abound. +Tigers are frequent as well as bears. Buffaloes are to be seen +on the <i>churs</i> (islands) in large herds. Pea-fowl and jungle-fowl +abound, as well as water-fowl; floricans and partridges, both black +and red, are by no means unfrequent.</p> +<p><i>Upper</i> <i>Assam</i>, <i>Jan</i>. <i>15th</i>.—We arrived +at Kujoo, a rather large village of Singfos, and within half a day’s +journey of which the tea is found in its native state. This is +the first Singfo village I have as yet seen, and is situated on the +skirts of a plain of small extent, and covered to all appearance by +extensive grass jungles, among which trees are interspersed. The +houses are not numerous, but they are of large size, and are raised +in the Burman fashion on piles from the ground. Within one, many +families are accommodated. The people themselves are fair, much +like the Burmese, but still quite distinct. The male dress resembles +the Burmese much; the female is more distinct, consisting chiefly of +a sort of <i>gown</i>; and whilst tattooing is confined to the males +in Burma, it here appears to be indulged in chiefly by the ladies; all +the legs I saw during the day, being ornamented with rings of tattoo. +The men are a stout, rather fine race; free, easy, and independent, +and great admirers of <i>grog</i> in every form.</p> +<p>During our journey hither, and indeed en route from Kujoo Ghat, we +passed over a clay soil and through a dense jungle, comparable to which +I have seen but little. Our direction has been nearly south from +the above place. The jungle consisted chiefly of trees, here and +there large patches of bamboo or tobacco occurring: there was but little +underwood. Among the trees the most gigantic was a species of +Dipterocarpus, probably the same with that I have gathered on Pator +hill, Mergui. We picked up likewise very large acorns with a depressed +lamellated cap, and two fruits of Castanea, one probably the same with +that from Myrung. But of all the vegetation, that of ferns is +the most luxuriant and most varied.</p> +<p><i>Jan</i>. <i>16th</i>.—This day we gave up to the examination +of the tea in its native place. It occurs in a deep jungle to +the south of the village, and at a distance of about three miles from +it. Our route thither lay through first a rather extensive grass +jungle, then through a deep jungle. We crossed the Deboru once +on our route; it is a mean and insignificant stream.</p> +<p>Nothing particular presents itself in the jungle until you approach +the tea, on which you come very suddenly. This plant is limited +to a small extent, perhaps to 300 yards square, the principal direction +being N. and S. It grows in a part of the jungle where the soil +is light and dryish, and throughout which, <i>ravinules</i> are frequent, +due, Mac. tells me, to the effect of rain dropping from the heavy over-shadowing +foliage on a light soil. In addition to this, small mounds occur +about the roots of the large trees; but chiefly around bamboos, which +are by no means unfrequent. This, however, is of common occurrence +in all bamboo jungles. The underwood consists chiefly of Rubeaceæ, +a small Leea, Cyrthandraceæ and Filices, <i>Polypodium</i> <i>arboreum</i>, +<i>Angiopteris</i> <i>orassipes</i>, and a large Asplenium are common. +Among the arbuscles are a large leaved Tetranthera, a Myristica, Anonaceæ, +<i>Pæderioidea</i> <i>fætidissima</i>, foliis ternatis; +stipulis apicee subulata, 3-fidis, etc. And among the forest trees +are a vast Dipterocarpus, the same we met with en route to Kujoo, <i>Dillenia</i> +<i>speciosa</i>, etc. Piper and Chloranthus are likewise not uncommon. +There is no peculiar feature connected with the existence of the tea +in such a place, and in such a limited extent. We were fortunate +enough to find it both in flower and fruit, owing to its site; its growth +is tall and slender, and its crown at least that of the smaller, very +small and ill developed. Large trees are rare; in fact, they have +been all cut down by the Singfos, who are like all other natives excessively +improvident. The largest we saw, and which Wallich felled, was, +including the crown, 43 feet in length. Small plants are very +common, although Bruce had already removed 30,000. Mac. thinks +they grow chiefly on the margins of the ravinules or hollows. +Their leaves were all large, of a very dark green, and varying from +four to eight inches in length. The pith of the tree felled was +excentric, the greater development taking place as usual on the southern +side; it was two and a half inches N., three and a half S.; but about +10 feet above the base this excentricity was nearly doubled. The +wood is very compact, and the tree apparently one of slow growth. +The largest that Bruce has seen, and which he felled last year, was +29 cubits in length. The jungle was so thick that all general +views as to its real extent, and the circumstances limiting it, must +be very superficial. To the East the cessation of the lightness +of the soil and of the hollows is very abrupt, and strongly influences +the tea, only a few small straggles being visible in that direction. +The jungle here was choked with grasses, and the large viscous Acanthaceæ +of which we have elsewhere en route seen such abundance. The tree +evidently, even in its large state, owes little gratitude to the sun, +at least for direct rays, none of which I should think ever reach it. +The Singfos however say, that it will only thrive in the shade. +We halted after gathering a crop of leaves under a fine Dillenia, which +was loaded with its fruit. Here the Singfos demonstrated the mode +in which the tea is prepared among them. I must premise, however, +that they use none but young leaves. They roasted or rather semi-roasted +the leaves in a large iron vessel, which must be quite clean, stirring +them up and rolling them in the hands during the roasting. When +duly roasted, they expose them to the sun for three days; some to the +dew alternately with the sun. It is then finally packed into bamboo +chungas, into which it is tightly rammed. The ground on which +it occurs is somewhat raised above the plain adjoining the village, +as we passed over two hillocks on our route to the tea, and the descent +did not evidently counterbalance the ascent.</p> +<p><i>Jan</i>. <i>17th</i>.—We arrived at Kujoo-doo this afternoon, +having passed through a great extent of jungle, which I am sorry to +say presented the usual features. We crossed the Deboro once during +our march, and several tributary streams which, as may be supposed, +from the size of the <i>larger</i> recipient river, are excessively +insignificant. The soil throughout, a good part seemed to be of +clay. The only plants of interest we found were two Bambusæ +in flower, and two species of Meniscium, and a <i>Polypodium</i> <i>venulis</i> +tertiariis simplicibus. A <i>Sarcopyramis</i> <i>Sonerilæ</i> +was also found, but rather past flowering, and an Acrostichum? or Lomaria? +We did not observe any ravinules or hollows, although mounds were by +no means uncommon.</p> +<p><i>Jan</i>. <i>18th</i>.—We proceeded in a Southerly direction, +and after marching for nearly seven hours arrived at, and encamped on, +a largish plain, on which paddy had been extensively cultivated. +The whole route lay through a vast and deep jungle, the road running +partly on the side of an old bund: part of our road was through very +wet ground, part through rather dry elevated woods, bamboos of two species +occurred abundantly. We saw several vast specimens of Dipterocarpus, +one which had been cut down measured from the base to first branch 110 +feet. Ferns still continue in excess. I gathered another +species of <i>Sarcopyramis</i>; a <i>Goodyera</i>, <i>Chrysobaphus</i> +<i>Roxburghii</i> in flower, but rare; and an Apostasia not in flower.</p> +<p><i>Jan</i> <i>19th</i>.—We reached Negrigam early in the forenoon +although we did not leave our ground before 10 A.M. The road to +the village was pretty good. Negrigam is a largish village on +the north bank of the Booree Dihing, which is here a considerable though +not deep stream. This bank is at the site of the village very +high. The population seemed to be considerable. To the south, +large ranges of hills were visible, the first of which were close enough +to admit of one’s distinguishing them to be wooded to the top. +The inner ranges were lofty. We had some difficulty in ascertaining +where the tea was located, the accounts being rather contradictory. +At length we proceeded up the bed of a small river, Maumoo, which runs +into the Booree Dihing close to the village: after wading along in the +waters for two hours we arrived at a khet where we encamped. The +direction being from Negrigam N.W. along the banks of this stream. +The Pavia I first observed at Silam Mookh, was abundant, and some of +the specimens were very fine, the largest was a handsome, very shady +tree, of perhaps thirty feet high. The only plant of interest +was <i>Gnetum</i> <i>scandens</i>. On a high land bank I gathered +a species of Polytrichum, and one of Bartramia.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>20th</i>.—This morning we crossed the small +streamlet Maumoo, ascended its rather high bank, and within a few yards +from it came upon the tea: which as we advanced farther into the jungle +increased in abundance; in fact within a very few yards, several plants +might be observed. The plant was both in flower and ripe fruit, +in one instance the seeds had germinated while attached to the parent +shrub. No large trees were found, the generality being six or +seven feet high; all above this height being straggling, slender, unhandsome +shrubs: the leaves upon the whole were, I think, smaller than those +of the Kujoo plants. With respect to the plants with which it +is here associated, I may observe that they were nearly the same with +those of the Kujoo jungle, but here there was nevertheless one striking +difference, that the jungle was by no means so dark in consequence of +the smaller size of the jungle trees. The underwood consisted +chiefly of ferns, among which <i>Polipodium</i> <i>unitum</i> was very +common, and a Lycopodium. Bamboos occurred here and there, although +by no means so extensively as at Kujoo.</p> +<p><i>Chrysobaphus</i> <i>Roxburghii</i>, and a new <i>Dicksonia</i>, +<i>D</i>. <i>Griffithiana</i>, Wall. were the plants of the greatest +interest. With regard to the limits of the tea, it is by all accounts +of no very great extent; but this is a point upon which it is difficult +to say any thing decisive, in consequence of the thickness of the jungle. +The space on which we found it may be said to be an elbow of the land, +nearly surrounded by the Manmoo river, on the opposite side of which, +where we were encamped, it is reported not to grow. Within this +space the greater part consists of a gentle elevation or rather large +mound. On this it is very abundant, as likewise along its sides, +where the soil is looser, less sandy, and yellow (McClell.); along the +base of this I think it is less common, and the soil is here more sandy, +and much darker (McClell.) We partly ascertained that it was limited +to the west, in which direction we soon lost sight of it. To the +south and eastward of the elbow of land it is most common, but here +it is, as I have said above, stopped by the river.</p> +<p>The greatest diameter of the stem of any plant that I saw in this +place, might be two or three inches, certainly not more.</p> +<p><i>Nadowar</i>, <i>Feb</i>. <i>17th</i>.—Our route from this +village, at which we were encamped, to the tea locality in the neighbouring +forest, lay for the first time partly over paddy fields, the remainder +over high ground covered with the usual grasses, with here and there +a low strip; all was excessively wet. We next traversed a considerable +tract of tree jungle, perhaps for nearly a mile; this was a drier and +higher soil than the rice ground. On the northern flank of this, +and close to the edge of the jungle we came to the tea, situated on +a low strip of ground.</p> +<p>This plant here occupies an extremely limited space, and its greatest, +and indeed almost only extent, is from south to north. It is in +one spot excessively thick, and many of the plants had attained a considerable +size, but the largest had been cut down, when it was visited by people +from Suddiya in search of tea some short time ago. It had just +passed flowering; all the plants looked well, better I think than those +of Kujoo. The soil was very much like that of the Kujoo and Negrigam +jungles, and was remarkable for its great dryness and looseness, in +spite of the long continued and heavy rains. That near the surface +was dark brown, below yellow brown, and the deeper it was examined the +more yellow it seemed to become. We satisfied ourselves that its +depth extended lower than two feet from the surface. The space +the plant occupies in any numbers certainly does not exceed forty yards +in length, by twenty-five in breadth. About fifty yards to the +north several plants occurred, but the soil here was of a much darker +tint, although it appeared to be nearly as dry as the other. The +accompanying diagram may give some idea of its situation.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>17th</i>.—We arrived at Rangagurrah, the +capital of the Muttack country, and the residence of the Burra-seena +Puttee, or Bengmara. Our route thither occupied us, inclusive +of the day spent in examining the tea at Noadwar, five days. During +the three first, we passed through a low country admirably, and almost +exclusively, adapted for rice cultivation, and consequently abounding +in wild wading birds and water-fowl.</p> +<p>As we approached Rangagurrah the ground became higher, in addition +to which it is better drained. We crossed about two miles from +Rangagurrah a small rivulet, a tributary of the Deboro; no plants but +one of much interest was detected <i>en</i> <i>route</i>. That +one was a fine forest tree affecting damp low places, apparently very +limited in extent. It is a new genus, belonging to Hamemelideæ, +and we have called it <i>Sedgwickia</i> <i>cerasifolia</i>. On +our arrival at Rangagurrah we were met by the Burra-seena Puttee, ‘Big +warrior,’ who escorted us to the houses he had caused to be erected +for us, and which were at a little distance from the village itself. +During our association with him or with his country, he was remarkably +attentive and civil, and as he is an independent man he pleased me much. +On the -- Feb. we reached Tingrei, a poor village about ten miles to +the S.E. of Rangagurrah, situated on the west bank of the rivulet of +the same name, another tributary of the Deboroo. On the same morning +as the march was very short, we proceeded to examine the tea, and the +following day was likewise given up to another examination. The +tea here may be characterised as dwarf, no stems that I saw exceeding +fifteen feet in height; it had just passed flowering. It occurs +in great abundance, and to much greater extent than in any of the places +at which we had previously examined it. But here it is neither +limited by peculiarity of soil or such slight elevation as the place +affords; it grows indiscriminately on the higher ground where the soil +is of a brownish yellow, and on which it attains a larger size than +elsewhere, or on clumps occurring in low raviny ground and associated +with fine bamboos. This ground was intersected by a very tortuous +dry nullah bed, on the banks of which tea was very abundant. On +either side of the jungle in which it is found, extensive clearings +occur, so that it is impossible to say what its original extent may +have been; I am inclined to think, however that its limit was with the +commencement of a small clearing running to the N.W. of a village situated +on the west bank of the Tingrei, and that not much has been cut down.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p19.jpg"> +<img alt="The Himalaya from Rangagurrah" src="images/p19.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The extent may be roughly estimated as follows, reckoning from the +entrance into the jungle in a south easterly direction: the one in fact +of our route from the village to the tea.</p> +<p>S.E. 180 yards, after which it disappears, but shews itself again +sparingly about 100 yards further on, and in the same direction.</p> +<p>To the S. of this I found none, its direction being totally changed; +its general direction being now,</p> +<p>N.W. or N.N.W. in which, and in about 200 yards from the place at +which it ceased towards the south, it becomes very abundant, and continues +so in a</p> +<p>W.N.W. course for about 220 yards.</p> +<p>Thence it appears to be interrupted for the space of 80 or 100 yards.</p> +<p>It then recommences a course</p> +<p>N. by W. for about 100 yards, when it is terminated by cultivated +ground to the east, and low raviny ground to the west.</p> +<p>200 yards to the north, and close to a small village, it is very +abundant, and at least its stumps with numerous shoots, occupy almost +the whole of a small clearing bounded on the N.E. by the rivulet Tingrei. +It may be supposed to extend for a little distance into the contiguous +jungle to the N.W.</p> +<p>On the whole, it may be said to occupy a narrow strip of jungle, +extending from the village Tingrei in a S.E. direction about a ¼ +of a mile. I consider the plants here as finer than in any of +the other tea jungles, the crown being much better developed owing at +least in some parts to the less denseness of the jungle. The fact +of the shoots appearing from the bases of the stems which had been cut +down in the small clearing above mentioned, gave us good opportunities +of seeing the effects of exposure to the sun. This they seemed +to bear well, but the shoots were rather too much elongated, and the +leaves had too much of a yellow tint to indicate that such was their +natural situation. No part of the soil on which tea was found +was like the soil of Nadowar or Manmoo; still, although stiffer than +the others, it was characterised by a certain lightness.</p> +<p>The superstratum was very light, and brownish black, the remainder +yellowish brown, the yellow tints as well as the stiffness increasing +downwards. The soil was here deeper than in any of the other sites.</p> +<p>Many parts of the ground were excessively low, and very probably +inundated during the rains.</p> +<p>From the fact of its occurring in such abundance in the small clearing +to the N.W. of the village, I am induced to suppose that it had at some +period extended down the large clearing which runs 200 yards to the +south of the above village.</p> +<p>The associated vegetation presented no peculiarities; several plants, +with which we had not previously met, occurred. One, a Stauntonia, +was found, which may be supposed from analogy to indicate a certain +coldness of climate. But on the other hand, it was associated +with so many tropical forms that not much reliance can be placed on +this isolated fact.</p> +<p>On the 25th we returned to Rangagurrah, where the elephants and dowaniers +(<i>drivers</i>) were dismissed. On the 26th we commenced returning +by the Deboroo, the descent of which occupied two days and a half.</p> +<p>Here let me express my opinion that in cases like ours, where a set +of men are deputed to examine countries, time spent on rivers is absolutely +thrown away. Of course in many instances such must be the case, +but where it is avoidable, marching, and especially returning by a different +route, should be adopted. Rangagurrah, be it known, is only two +days’ march from Suddiyah in a direct line, yet we have been a +month proceeding by the circuitous line of rivers between these places.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3> +<p><i>Journal</i> <i>of</i> <i>a</i> <i>trip</i> <i>to</i> <i>the</i> +<i>Mishmee</i> <i>Mountains</i>, <i>from</i> <i>the</i> <i>Debouching</i> +<i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Lohit</i> <i>to</i> <i>about</i> <i>ten</i> +<i>miles</i> <i>East</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Ghalooms</i>. +<i>Lat</i>. <i>27°50'</i> <i>to</i> <i>28°10'</i> <i>N</i>.; +<i>Long</i>. <i>95°20'</i> <i>to</i> <i>96°40'</i> <i>E</i>.</p> +<p>I left Suddiya on the morning of the 15th October 1836, and halted +at Noa Dihing Mookh, (river mouth) a place abounding in fish, and promising +excellent sport both in fly and live-bait fishing. The temperature +of the Noa Dihing, an indolent stream flowing over a flat, sandy plain, +was 79°; that of the B. pooter, which falls in large volume rapidly +from the mountains, was 67°. Fish congregate in vast numbers +at the junction of rivers of different temperatures, and are there more +easily captured than in other situations, a fact that ought to be borne +in mind, whether for the mere object of sport or the more practical +purpose of fisheries in India.</p> +<p>The following day (16th) we passed Choonpoora, where the rapids commence, +and where stones first appear; one rapid, a little above Choonpoora, +is severe. There is a severe one also at Toranee Mookh, on which +the Copper temple is situated; and one at Tingalee Mookh, on which Lattow +is situated. The river now commences to be more subdivided; there +is but little sand deposited alone, but vast beds of sand and stones +occur together. The banks are clothed with jungle, and are occasionally +skirted with tall grasses, but the <i>churs</i> or islands disappear +it may be said with the sands, and are only formed in lower and more +distant parts from the mountains, where the velocity of the current +is less. Temperature at 6 A.M. 66°, 4 P.M. 76°, (water +of B. pooter 64.65,) 7 P.M. 72°.</p> +<p>Buffaloes abundant, but I only saw a few.</p> +<p>The most interesting plants were a Cyclocodon, Liriodendron, Sanicula: +32 species were collected.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>17th</i>.—Reached Karam Mookh, about noon. +Rapids much increased, some very severe, especially that opposite Karam +Mookh, which we crossed without accident, although as we crossed a confluence +of two rapids, the water in the middle being much agitated; it was a +wonder that no canoes were upset. The bed of the river is still +more divided, the spots between the streams being for the most part +entirely composed of stones. The lowest temperature of the B. +pooter was 63°. A severe but short rapid occurs at Karam Mookh +itself, the fall being very great, but the body of water small. +The water of this river is beautifully clear. Its temperature +at the Mookh 72°. The jungle extends down to both edges of +the water, and the stream is not divided into branches. My guide +in the evening disgusted me by asking how many days I intended to stop +at the Koond before my return to Suddiya, when I had engaged him expressly +to go into the Mishmee hills, and not merely to Brama Koond, as the +above question implied. But such is the way in which our best +designs depending on native agency are often tampered with. Thermometer +at 8 P.M. 64°. Species of Conaria grow abundantly on the banks!</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>18th</i>.—We are still in the Karam river. +Reached about noon the Kamptee village, Palampan, or rather its Ghat. +This Karam river is tortuous, generally shallow, with a more or less +stony bed; it is nothing more in fact than a succession of rapids, between +each of which the slope is very gentle, so that one makes good progress. +Temperature at 6 A.M. 66° in the canoe; but in the hut in which +I slept, it is as low as 60°. The dews are very heavy, and +the jungle, as before, comes down to the edges of the water, but scarcely +affords any marked feature. <i>Kydia</i> <i>calycina</i> is common, +as is likewise a large Mimoseous tree. There is apparently very +little diminution in the volume of water, though several minor streams +were passed between this and the Mookh. Liriodendron is becoming +more frequent. The views of the mountains are very varied; and +that of the Koond defile or Chasm, very beautiful; water-falls seem +to be distinctly visible down one hill or mountain, in particular. +The finest view however is on the Lohit, opposite Dyaroo Mookh, at which +place the three huge, ever snowy peaks, characteristic of the Mishmee +portion of the mountains, are distinctly seen.</p> +<p>Left the Ghat for the village which is situate on the Dea-soon or +Simaree, which flows into the Tenga-panee, and which is said now to +carry off so much water from the Karam that this river ceases a short +distance above this place to become navigable for boats like mine. +The path we pursued ran in a S.E. or S.S.E. direction for about a mile; +it is good, and leads through a thick jungle: the village contains probably +fifteen houses. The Gohain, or <i>chief</i>, is a most respectable-looking +man, and of very fair complexion. His people are for the most +part stout. The women also of very fair complexion, with their +hair tied in a large knot on the top of the head, in a peculiar way, +putting one in mind of fat Norman damsels. Temperature in the +boat to-day 76°, the sky beautifully clear. The B. pooter +seems still the only river, the temperature of which is always below +that of the air. One interesting Elæocarpus occurred—Petal. +viridibus apice dentatis; calice griseo viridi, <i>vix</i> <i>valvato</i>. +I may remark, that the æstivation of Kydia is scarcely valvate. +I saw a, to me, new kingfisher and wood-pecker. The black and +white kingfisher, <i>Dalcedo</i> <i>rudus</i>, is not found on the B. +pooter beyond the termination of the sand banks.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>18th</i>—Temperature in my hut at 5½ +A.M. is 56°, outside it is 52½°, that of the river water +63°. We left about 8, and proceeded up the Karam, which presented +nothing singular. The volume of water is now less, and rapids +are more frequent: heavy snow is visible from a little above Palampan +Ghat, where the river bends to the northward; and a little further on +a fine view of the Koond occurs. The Chasm is bounded in the rear +by the fine rugged peak so distinctly seen from Suddiya due east. +About 11, we reached the Ghat, beyond which boats, except of the smallest +description, cannot pass; and about 1, started for the Mishmee village +Jing-sha, situated on the Karam. Our course was along the bed +of the river, and nearly due east. Formerly boats were able to +reach the Ghat of the village, but the water has become shallower, owing, +they say, to a larger portion being carried off by the Dea-soon, which +runs into the Tenga-panee. We reached the village Ghat about four +in the afternoon, but our people arrived very little before six o’clock. +The march was tedious and difficult, owing to the numerous stones which +are strewed in the way: and the necessity for crossing the river was +so frequent, that all idea of shoes was quite out of the question. +To increase the difficulty, the stones in the bed of river are very +slippery, and as we crossed rapids, it frequently required some care +to prevent our falling.</p> +<p>We were met by the Gam, or chief, before any signs of the village +there were visible. The population is small; the people fair, +but begrimed with dirt; the dress consists of a loose jacket without +sleeves. The primary article of clothing is indeed so scanty, +that the less one says about it the better. The women are decently +clothed, and have generally enormous calves, certainly bigger than those +of the men: their favourite ornament seems to be a band of silver, broadest +across their forehead, which encircles their head. This village +is close to the hills, and within a day’s journey of the Koond, +at least for a Mishmee. One Assamese slave is among the inhabitants, +who was sold when a boy. A few of the men have Singfo dhaos or +swords, others miserable knives, and some the usual spear so general +with the tribes on this frontier. But in general the weapons of +these people are most insignificant. The view of the hills is +not fine from this place; it is too close to see any of great height, +and they soon disappear to the westward. In the evening that of +the Koond, which bears E.N.E. by N. is fine, particularly one mountain, +which is known at once by its numerous cascades or appearances of water-falls, +which, although they appear like streaks of white to the eye, are distinctly +visible through a telescope. The bed of the Karam is almost entirely +stony, and the immediate banks are clothed with grass. The jungle +is of the usual thick description. The Gam, whose name is Jingsha, +is a respectable looking man, fair in his dealings, and willing to oblige. +They all have tobacco pipes.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>19th</i>.—Halted to enable the people to bring +up the baggage, and we shall in all probability have to halt to-morrow. +I paid a visit to the Gam’s house, Jingshi; it is to the S.E. +of the Ghat, and about a mile and a half distant from it. The +houses are all detached, and almost buried in jungle. Jingsha’s +house is a good one, very long, and well built; he has only about five +skulls. <a name="citation24"></a><a href="#footnote24">{24}</a> +<i>Mont</i> was handed round to the Mishmees in large bamboo cups. +From our encampment, abundance of clearances for cultivation are visible +on the hills. Those to N., S., S.E. are of some extent, and belong +to a Mishmee Gam, Tapa. Some fine timber trees exist on the road +to the village, and a very large Ficus: no particular plants occur except +a Chloranthus, fructibus albis, which is also common towards Palampan. +Thermometer at noon, in imperfect shade, 83°.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>20th</i>.—The temperature of the air at 5½ +A.M. was 57½°. That of water, 60°. I was +obliged to halt again to enable the rice to be brought up. To-day +we gathered on the banks of the Karam, a tree in fruit, Fol. alterna, +impari-pinnata, stipulis caducis. Cymi compositi dichotomi; calyce +minuto, 4 dentato, reflexo; corolla coriacea, viridi, rotata; stamina +4, hypogyna, gynobasi, maxima; carpellis 4, aggregatis, 1, 3, fecundalis, +globosis, atro-cyaneis, baccatis; stylis lateralibus; semen 1, exalbumosum +arbuscula mediocris; one Chrysobalanea? one Ochnacea?</p> +<p>Yesterday they brought me a beautiful snake, Collo gracillimo, colore +pulchre fusco, maculis aterrimis, capite magno; <a name="citation25"></a><a href="#footnote25">{25}</a> +has all the appearance of being venomous. To-day we passed another +place for catching fish: the water is prevented from escaping, (except +at the place where the current is naturally most violent,) by a dam +composed of bamboos, supported by triangles, from the centre of which +hang heavy stones: the fish are prevented passing down except at the +above spot, and here they are received on a platform of bamboo: the +stream is so strong through this point, that when once the fish have +passed down they are unable to return. One of these fish-traps +on a larger scale exists below Palampan.</p> +<p>The Karam debuts from the hills a little to the S. of east of Jingsha +Ghat: the chasm is very distinct. Temperature at 2 P.M. 87°, +at sunset 76°, 8 P.M. 68°.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>21st</i>.—Left the Ghat about 9, and proceeded +over the same difficult ground down the Karam until we arrived at Laee +Mookh. This occupied about an hour; our course thence lay up the +Laee, which runs nearly due east. The bed of the river throughout +the lower part of its course is 60 or 70 yards across: the journey was +as difficult as that on the Karam. Towards 2 P.M. we were close +to the hills, and the river became contracted, not exceeding 30 or 40 +yards across. It is here only that large rock masses are to be +found, but the boulders are in no case immense. We arrived at +the place of our encampment about 4 P.M., the porters coming up much +later. The march was in every respect most fatiguing. Temperature +about 6 A.M. 58°, outside 57°. Water 60°. Temperature +of Laee at sunset 66°. Of the air 71°.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>22nd</i>.—Cloudy: during the night we were much +annoyed by heavy gusts of wind sweeping down the river. Left our +encampment at 7½, and struck into the jungle, the porters still +continuing along the course of the river; after crossing some rising +ground we reached a path, which is tolerably good. Our course +lay about N.E.; we crossed over some low hills, and after marching for +about an hour and a quarter, came upon the Koond Chasm, or great defile; +of which, however, from the thickness of the jungle, we had no view. +We then descended a very steep, but not very high hill, and came upon +the Koond; of which nothing is at first seen but large masses of rock +strewed in every direction. We were accompanied by a number of +Jingsha Gam’s people, and in the evening we were visited by Tapan +Gam himself, with a train of followers. This man assumes the sovereignty +of the Koond. We encamped immediately under the Faqueer’s +Rock, which is known to the Mishmees by the name “Taihloo Maplampoo.” +The south bank is wooded to its brink, but not very densely: it is excessively +steep, and in many places almost perpendicular. The strata composing +it is partly limestone, lying at an angle of 45°, and in many places +at a greater one. The scenery is picturesque and bold: on either +side of the river are hills rising abruptly to the height of a few hundred +feet, but the hills are continued longer on the north side. From +the Rock the river seems to run W.N.W. for a quarter of a mile, and +then bends to the S.W. The breadth of the bed is a good hundred +yards, but the stream at this season is confined to the fifty yards +near the south bank, the remainder being occupied by rocks in situ, +or boulders and sand: the edge of the N. bank is occupied by stunted +<i>Saccharum</i>. The appearance of the water is characteristic, +of a greyish green tinge, giving the impression of great depth. +It is only here and there that it is white with foam, its general course +being rather gentle. It is in various places encroached upon more +or less by the rocks forming its bed, some of which are quite perpendicular. +A little to the west of the Faqueer’s Rock there is an immense +mass of rock in the bed of the river, between which and the south bank +there is now very little water and no current. The rocks are generally +naked; here and there they are partially clothed with Gramineæ, +and a Cyperaceous-looking plant, something like an Eriophorum. +The river, a short distance beyond the Deo-panee, takes a bend to the +north; at the point where it bends there is a considerable rapid.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p26.jpg"> +<img alt="Bramakhoond and Faqueer’s Rock" src="images/p26.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The Faqueer’s Rock itself is a loose mass of rugged outline, +about 50 feet high: access to its summit is difficult to anybody but +a Mishmee; it is, however, by no means impracticable. The path +by which it may be gained, leads from the eastward. At the summit +is an insulated, rounded, rugged mass of rock, on which the faqueers +sit. It is however the descent by the path to the east which is +difficult, and people generally choose another path to the west. +This rock is clothed with ferns epiphytical Orchideæ, an Arundo, +and a few stunted trees are very common at its summit. Between +it and the hill is another much smaller mass, and the intervening spaces +are occupied by angular masses of rock. These spaces both lead +westward to that corner of the river into which the Deo-panee falls. +Eastward they lead to the margin of the bank.</p> +<p>The north face of the Faqueer’s Rock is excavated into a hollow +of the Deo Dowar. It has no resemblance to a Gothic ruin, which +form is, I believe, peculiar to calcareous rocks. It is this rock +which, by its eastern extremity projecting into the water, forms the +reservoirs into which the Deo-panee falls, or rather at this season +runs; the place resembles merely a sort of bay. The water-mark +of floods visible on some of the rocks, is probably eight feet above +that of this time of the year. The reservoir is completed by a +projection from the rocks forming the south bank, but it is almost entirely +abstracted from the stream. The south bank immediately beyond +this is extremely precipitous, and very high. The Faqueer’s +Rock is three-peaked; two peaks can only be seen from the Deo-panee, +the third is the low one to the west, the middle is the highest, and +is perforated: the eastern represents a sugar-loaf appearance. +Two distinct streams run into the reservoirs, the bed of one forms the +second defile before alluded to: this is very insignificant. The +other occupies the corner of the bay, and can only be seen from a low +station on the sand beneath: it is an attempt at a small water-fall.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>23rd</i>.—To-day I have been employed in collecting +plants. Nearly due east of the Koond, and at a distance of about +40 yards, the face of the hill is perpendicular, and in some places +overhanging; its extremity juts out into the stream, which here flows +with great violence; the banks are occupied by masses of rock strewed +in every direction, resulting from a landslip of great size: some of +these masses are enormous. The greater portion of the slip is +clothed with herbage and trees, so that it is of some age, or standing; +but in one place over the river it is clean, as if fresh formed, and +white-looking much like chalk. This cliff in many parts is a dripping +well, particularly in one extremity where a good deal of water falls. +It is clothed with the Eriophorum, which hangs down in long tufts; the +moist parts with an Adiantum much like A. C. Veneris, a beautiful Pteris, +a Pothos or Arum foliis pulchre nigro tinctis, and some mosses; B. speciosa +out of flower, and some Hepaticæ, Ruta albiflora, etc. Between +this and the Deo-panee a small stream enters the Lohit: following this +up to some height, one arrives at a pretty water-fall; here it is inaccessible +in this direction, but by following a branch of the stream to the west, +one may arrive at the summit of the hill, from which however no view +is to be obtained. The summit is ridge-like, and excessively sharp; +the descent on either side almost precipitous. I found several +fine ferns up this hill; at its base an Acer and fine Equisetum.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p27.jpg"> +<img alt="The Mori-Panee as it enters the Khoond" src="images/p27.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The Koond is apparently formed by the Deo-panee and Mori-panee. +In the rains it must be a rather striking object, now however it is +at this season, lost amidst the fine surrounding scenery. How +the Faqueer’s Rock and the rock between it and the Mori-panee +were detached, is difficult to say. It is evident, however, that +formerly the two rivers were not united to form the Koond as at present, +but that they had each their own channels when the Faqueer’s Rock +must have stood between them. In fact both channels, in which +water has flowed, still remain. My broken Thermometer pointed +out the low temperature of the Lohit water, and 208° was the point +at which water boiled in two experiments. All attempts at passing +along the river on this side would be vain, owing to a cliff which is +totally impracticable. The Mishmees know of no rivulet called +the Mtee; probably this has been mistaken for the Mishmee name for water, +<i>Mchee</i>. The way Wilcox went I am at a loss to ascertain; +as he could not have passed the Koond, he must have gone above it; although +the hills are said to be impracticable for loaded coolies.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>25th</i>.—The Koond is obviously little frequented. +I left sometime after the coolies, pursuing the path leading to Ghaloom’s, +which extends to the eastward. An hour and a quarter brought me +again to the Laee-panee, and three hours and a half to Laee Mookh: from +this place to Jingsha Ghat is scarcely an hour’s walk. The +day’s journey occupied about five hours inclusive of stoppages: +the distance is probably about twelve miles. I came to the determination +of returning, owing to the known difficulty of the route pursued by +Wilcox, and the impossibility of making a collection of grain. +The Tapan Gam, or Lord of the Koond, particularly insisted on the impossibility +of ordinary coolies going this way, and as he offered men to bring up +grain from the plains, I at once acceded to his proposal of making a +granary in his village. This man had no delicacy in asking for +presents: he at once said, “You must give gold, silver, and every +thing in the calendar of presents to the Deo,” meaning himself. +As I found it impracticable to satisfy him, I sent him off with a small +present, promising more when he should have amassed the grain. +His brother, a tall, stout, and much more useful man, (as he does not +refuse to carry loads,) on seeing me rub salt on a bird’s skin, +remarked, “What poor devils we are! Bird’s skins with +salt supply the Sahibs with food, while we can’t get a morsel.” +They promised to take me all over the country, and to be my slaves, +if I would point out to them where salt is to be found.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p28.jpg"> +<img alt="The Deo-Panee as it enters the Khoond" src="images/p28.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>I saw nothing particular in the woods. I picked up the fruit +of a Magnolia and Castanea, and observed an arborescent Leea. +Some of the timber is fine. A large Acrotirchea abounds between +Laee and the Koond, as well as Chloranthus. Near the Laee a climber, +the base of whose stem is elephantopoid and enormous considering the +slender stem, is abundant. I could not get any of the leaves. +At the Koond, Buddleia Neemda, a Prunus, etc. occur. Cælogyne +polleniis 4 obovatis, faciebus incumbentibus complanates materie pulverea, +mediocri. Dundoons are rather troublesome; they are flies, and +nearly as large as an ordinary house fly: their proboscis is large, +and leaves spots of extravasated blood where they bite, nearly of the +size of an ordinary pin’s head.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>27th</i>.—My people brought me in a beautiful +snake, <i>Coluber</i> <i>porphyraceus</i>, ventre albo, cæterum +pulchre coccineo-badio, capite lineis nigris tribus quarum centralis +brevior, dorso lineis nigris duabus postea gradatim evanescentibus, +lineis circularibus minus conspicuis, iridibus carneis. <a name="citation29a"></a><a href="#footnote29a">{29a}</a></p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>28th</i>.—Yesterday evening two elephants arrived +with grain, so that I have every prospect of being fairly on my way +in a day or two. Nothing worth seeing has occurred, except a man +who by some accident had the lobe of his ear torn, and had the fragments +stitched together with silver wire.</p> +<p><i>Oct</i>. <i>31st</i>.—Halted at the Laee-panee, and gathered +an Oberonea, and specimens of fish. <a name="citation29b"></a><a href="#footnote29b">{29b}</a></p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>1st</i>.—Dirty weather; rain looking much as +if it were going to continue for several days. There is a small +drupaceous fruit found here and at Beesa, the Singfo name of which is +Let-tan-shee; it is the produce of a large tree probably the fruit of +a Chrysobalanus, testibus stylo <i>laterali</i>, stam, perigynis: cotyledonibus +crispatis. The flavour is acid, rather pleasant, and somewhat +terebinthinaceous.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>2nd</i>.—I thought it best to set off, although +it was raining heavily. Our course lay in an E. direction up the +Karam for about two hours, when it diverged: it thence after passing +through some heavy jungle continued up the steep bed of the now dry +Dailoom; it next diverged again about 2 P.M., when we ascended a small +hill; it continued thence through heavy jungle chiefly bamboo, until +we descended in an oblique manner on the Laee-panee, about a mile up +which we found our halting place. The whole march occupied, including +a few halts, seven hours; and as the pace was pretty good for six full +hours, I compute the distance to be about fifteen miles. Hill +Flora recommenced in the bamboo jungle; two fine species of Impatiens +and several Urticeæ making their appearance; <i>Camellia</i> <i>axillaris</i> +and some fine Acanthacea: the best plant was a species of Aristolochea. +The latter part of the day was fine, and the elephants with grain from +Suddiyah arrived.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>3rd</i>.—Passed the forenoon in ascending the +hill opposite our encampment: it is of no great height, but like all +the others very steep. To the N.W. of this has occurred a large +slip, but long previous to this time; on it two or three Phæniceous +palms may be found. Pandanus still occurs. The hill was +barren of Botany, excepting a few ferns towards base.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>4th</i>.—Left Laee-panee at 9½ A.M., +and reached the encampment at 3½ P.M. Our course diverged +almost immediately from the last encampment, and we ascended for some +time up the bed of a torrent. The first hill we ascended occupied +an hour, and the remainder of the day’s journey consisted of ascents +and descents along the most difficult path imaginable. All the +hills are very steep, and the paths when they wind round these, are +very difficult; a slip would cause a dangerous fall. About 1 P.M. +we reached two or three houses constituting a village.</p> +<p>From this, one has a fine view of the plains, and of the B. pooter +near its exit from the hills: it is much intersected by islets covered +with jungle. Leeches are not very numerous. Dundoons or +sand flies very annoying. I have gathered plenty of plants, especially +ferns. Wallichia continues; <i>Wulfenia</i> <i>obliqua</i>, and +a Companula were the best. At our halting place I found the fruits +of <i>Sedgwickia</i> in abundance. Passed two or three streams. +Found the flowers of a large Loranthus, or rather its very large flowers +on the ground. They are eaten by the natives, but the acidity +is unpleasant, owing to its being mixed with a bitter; the flowers are +two inches long: tubo 4 angulato, basi-coccinescenti, laminis viridibus +interstibus carneis, coccineo lineatis præsenti transverse, antheris +syngenesis. <i>Sarcocordalis</i>, common.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>5th</i>.—Left at half-past 8, and reached extensive +<i>kheties</i> (cultivated fields) with dispersed houses at about 1 +P.M. This place is called Dilling. Our route consisted of +the same fatiguing marching: we passed over some hills, from which we +had fine views. The first gave us a fine sight of the Patkaye +mountains, <a name="citation31"></a><a href="#footnote31">{31}</a> S.E. +of Upper Assam, which reach apparently a great height. The second, +of the plains of Assam. The exact summits of all the hills are +covered with a coarse spicate Saccharum. On one we met with a +Melampyracea. The Botany is improving greatly; two species of +Viola, two fine Cyrthandraceæ occurring. I also noticed +Sedgwickia again, and got abundance of ferns, a Buddleia, and a fine +Amaranthacea. Halted on a cleared ground immediately under the +Red mountain so plainly seen from Jingsha. There is now no appearance +of water-falls on it, but there are several white spots owing to slips: +the brink or brim of this hill is woody, but there is a considerable +space covered only with short grass. The strata are inclined at +an angle of 45°. I here got two or three fine mosses. +All the Mishmees have the idea, that on some hills at least rain is +caused by striking trees of a certain size with large stones, some hills +are again free from this charm; it was ridiculous to hear them call +out not to throw stones whenever we approached one of these rainy hills. +The people appear to get dirtier the farther we advance. I saw +plenty of snow on two high peaks, and had a peep of the Lohit beyond +Brahma Koond. Wallichia continues, as well as Bambusa, Saccharum +Megala. The kheties are either of rice or Cynosurus or Zea. +Tobacco is not cultivated, but left to take care of itself. Buddleia +Neemda and wild plantain continue, the latter is probably a distinct +species; leaves subtis glauco niveis. Pandanus continues. +The name of the Red mountain before alluded to, is Thu-ma-thaya, the +rivulet at its base is Tus-soo-muchee. Tus-soo Dee-ling is the +name of the place; a large mountain bearing N.N.E., is Sun-jong-thaya. +It is obvious that Dee-ling must be of some extent, as my site does +not agree with that of Wilcox. The view to the E. is entirely +limited to Thu-ma-thaya, and to the N.N.E., by Sun-jong-thaya; no B. +pooter is visible, nor is Ghaloom’s house. The snow collects +on the Thu-ma-thaya this month: the clearings for cultivation on the +declivities of Thu-ma-thaya are called Chim-bra: the houses, although +at great distances from the village, are called <i>Yeu</i>.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>6th</i>.—We arrived at our halting place after +a march of seven hours, over a most difficult and fatiguing road: we +skirted throughout the whole time the base of the huge Thu-ma-thaya; +I never saw a worse road, if road it may be called—part of it +lay over places where a false step or slip would be very dangerous, +if not fatal. We came suddenly on the B. pooter; but as the place +was not a good one for crossing, we prepared to go a little higher up +the stream, and though the distance we had to go was not above 100 yards, +yet as the river side was impracticable, it became necessary to ascend +and descend by a most difficult path where a slip would have precipitated +one into the river sixty or seventy feet below. What rendered +this passage most difficult and dangerous, was the jungle which, while +it caused you to stoop, at the same time concealed your footing. +It is one of the characteristics of Mishmees, that they sooner risk +their necks than take the trouble of cutting down underwood.</p> +<p>We have scarcely passed Thu-ma-thaya, so that the distance we have +travelled in a direct line from Deeling must be very small. The +stream of the Lohit is not forty yards broad, but the bed is about sixty. +It has the appearance of great depth, and roars along amidst rocks in +some places in fine style. I here picked up some small branches +of an elm, very like U. virgata: the tree was too late to reach fruit. +I also gathered a fine Acanthacea, and some good ferns. The north +bank of the Lohit here has the same structure as the south at the Koond, +and is perpendicular. The water of the Lohit is certainly much +cooler than any of the mountain streams. Vast blocks of rock, +of many sorts, lie strewed on the south side; one in particular is quartzose, +remarkable for the indentations on its surface. I here gathered +some mosses, and a good Marchantiacea, very nearly allied to Octoskepos, +but culiculate. Pandanus still continues, as also Marlea, Wallichia, +Caryota, and Pentaptera. Passed several streams, and a pretty +fall, the water falling down a cliff almost perpendicular, about 100 +feet high. The Mishmees use the fibres and <i>reti</i> of Caryota +as an ornament to their baskets, from which it likewise keeps the rain. +Wild plantain continues. Our encampment is on a fine bed of sand.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>7th</i>.—Rain throughout the night at intervals, +and sharp cold in the morning; we left at 9 A.M. and arrived at our +encampment about 12 P.M. The first part of our march was very +difficult, it in fact consisted of crossing a precipice overhanging +the Lohit; the difficulty was increased by the slipperiness occasioned +by the rain; no one could pass some of the places unless aided by ratans +fixed to trees, etc. We came to the Sung river about 12 noon, +but were delayed some time in building a bridge. This river appears +to me to be in some places fordable, but the Mishmees say that it is +not; the water is beautifully clear. The first cane suspended +bridge occurs here; I did not fancy it, although I observed the Mishmees +cross, the passage taking barely half a minute. <i>Throughout</i> +<i>the</i> <i>whole</i> <i>time</i> the Mishmees use their legs and +arms, to accelerate or determine their progress; the inclination caused +by the weight is slight. I preferred one of our own erection, +about 100 yards distant from it. The height is not great over +the river, and the width is perhaps thirty yards. The Bourra crossed +after some delay; we were then obliged to make two halts: we followed +the Sung down to its mouth, which is barely 200 yards: its bed is rocky; +at its junction there is a large bay formed, on the N. side of which +is a fine sand bank. The Lohit there runs nearly N. and S., and +is excessively violent in its course, certainly ten miles an hour. +The scenery is pretty, but no hills of great height are seen to any +extent. This is the most romantic spot I have seen in my course +of travels as yet. We forded the bay about its centre, and encamped +on the sand: the path we are to follow is said to be above, and very +difficult. We here gathered some fine ferns and a Bleteoid Orchidea. +A Gentianacea likewise occurred. The Tapan Gam, on my inquiring, +said, that Wilcox passed by the upper path, the Lohit at that time running +under the cliff which forms one side of the bay. <a name="citation33"></a><a href="#footnote33">{33}</a> +The course of the river, he says, has since changed by the occurrence +of a large slip, principally of mica slate.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>8th</i>.—The commencement of our march to-day +was up a hill, the ascent, as in all the other cases, being very steep. +From its summit we could see Dilling in a horizontal distance extremely +near. We then proceeded skirting the hill, and descended subsequently +to the <i>O</i>. rivulet, which is of no size. We then ascended +another considerable height, and found ourselves on the site of Ghaloom’s +old dwelling. The situation was delightful; to the N.E., a high +range was visible, which is covered with snow, the pines on the lower +parts of the ridge standing out, in fine relief. To the N. was +a noble peak bare at its summit, on which snow rests during some months, +its centre being prettily marked out with numerous patches of cultivation. +To the N. again the Tid-ding might be seen foaming along the valleys; +the hills are evidently improving in height and magnificence of scenery. +We reached this at 12 o’clock, our march having lasted five hours. +We thence descended crossing a small stream at the base of the hill, +on which Ghaloom’s former house stood, called the Dhaloom Basee.</p> +<p>I thence proceeded over some nasty swampy ground with a few low elevations +until we reached Ghaloom’s, which we did about 2 P.M. A +small spot was allotted to us some distance from the village, on which +we erected our huts. Ghaloom changed his residence to this place, +owing to the death of two of his people, which was attributed to the +unhealthiness of the former site; but as might be expected from the +nature of the place he has chosen, he has suffered very severely from +fever since his removal. As soon as our huts were built, Ghaloom +and his brother Khosha visited us, preceded by the hind quarter of a +pig. Their appearance is somewhat better than the ordinary run +of Mishmees, but they are just as dirty. Khosha is a little man, +with a mahogany-coloured wrinkled face. Great attention was paid +by their attendants to all they said, and Khosha himself is evidently +the Demosthenes of the Mishmees. When interrupted, he commanded +silence in an authoritative way. Krisong was not present. +Khosha declares that Rooling, the Mezhoo chief, is nobody, and that +Wilcox gave him his present unknown to them. The acquisitions +in Botany consisted of some fine Cyrtandraceæ, a Cymbidium, and +some ferns. One of these Cyrtandraceæ is very singular: +the runners are long, producing one stem with a very small terminal +leaf, and a very large flower. Afterwards this leaf enlarges, +becomes a large cordate Begonioid one, bearing from its bosom apparently +one or two Siliquæ; Pandanus Bambusa continue. The fine +Quercus is common, <i>Megala</i>, <i>Podomolia</i>, Triumfetta, Siegesbeckia. +Cynoglossum, Callicarpa, Urena, Rottlera and several other low tropical +forms continue. The Cymbidioid has pollena 4, incumbentia postice +aliquoties minore, glandula nulla?</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>9th</i>.—Halted. Went to the suspension +bridge over the Lohit, which is about 60 yards across, or double the +length of the one we crossed on the 7th. The passage by Mishmees +takes two, or two minutes and a half, requiring continued exertion the +whole time, both by hands and feet, as above described. Both banks +are very steep, yet the natives are so confident of safety, that of +this bridge only one cane is trustworthy. Bathed in the river, +which is very cold and deep, but comparatively quiet.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>10th</i>.—Went to the Lohit, gathered Cymbidium +giganteum, two or three ferns, and a Rafflesia in its several stages. +I have not however yet seen the perfectly expanded flower, the natives +do not know it, although it must be a sufficiently striking object, +the alabastri before expansion are about the size of an orange. +Went to Ghaloom’s house, which is of great length, built of bamboos, +raised high from the ground, divided into about twelve compartments, +and containing 100 men, women, and children.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>11th</i>.—Left for Khosha Gams; crossed the +Lohit on a raft, and left its banks at noon. Followed the river +for some distance, and then diverged towards the N.W. and reached Khosha +at 3 P.M., the march owing to the heat was very fatiguing. Found +very few plants; noticed a flower of a Ternstrœmiacea nearly allied +to the genus Camellia, cor. rotat. lacin. reflexis, albis fauce carnea. +stam. 00, epipet. anther. erectis-apice dehiscent, and of a large Hibiscus; +the Cælogyne of the Koond was also found. Two species of +Castaneæ occur in these woods, one with very stout thorns to its +cupula, and not eatable fruit; the other has long slender prickles, +and its fruit about the size of an acorn, is eatable, and not at all +disagreeable. On all the hills of any height with grassy tops +Compositæ are among the most striking forms. Areca parva +continues, Pentaptera, and Fici continue. Saccharum Megala very +abundant and fine. Cupuliferæ are becoming more abundant. +The roofs of the houses which are built of bamboo, are covered with +the leaves of the Marantaceous genus—capitulis densis lateralibus +<i>culmis</i> I-foliosis. Buddleia N’eemda and Callicarpa +continue.</p> +<p>Want of means forms the only limit to the number of wives of a Mishmee. +A rich man who has at his disposal numerous cattle, etc, will give 20 +<i>mithuns</i>; <a name="citation35"></a><a href="#footnote35">{35}</a> +but the wife appears to bring with her slaves, etc. as a return. +A poor man will get a wife for a pig. Whatever the number of wives +may be, each will have a separate khetee, (field) and each khetee has +a separate granary. All the wives live in the same house; in fact, +one house forms the village. Theft is punished by a fine inflicted +by a meeting of all the Gams; if the fine is not paid, or the offender +refuses to pay, he is slain in a general attack. Murder is punished +in the same way, but by a heavier fine: adultery against the consent +of the husband, or at least elopement, is punished by death; if with +the consent of the husband, the delinquent is fined. There appears +to be no regular law of succession: the favourite son succeeding without +reference to age.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>12th</i>.—I went out for plants, and descended +to the Paeen rivulet, which is of small size: followed up its course +some way, and then returned over a low hill to Khosha’s. +The guide who was some distance behind, came up with a Rafflesia bud. +I returned with him, and saw it to perfection; he likewise succeeded +in tracing the roots to a gigantic Cissus, the fruit of which I have +before observed is eatable, and not unlike a greengage. I returned +home loaded with this undescribed genus: I found likewise a fine Buddleia, +and Menispermum, with some rare Compositæ, among which was an +arborescent Eupatorium and a gigantic thistle, a Prunus in flower and +fruit, and a neat Liparis, Calamus, Tree-fern, Tupistra, Pandanus, were +likewise observed, and a beautiful Viburnum, Corol sterilibus, 4 phyllis, +foliis niveis carneo venosis: petal fertil calyptratis, deciduis, intus +cæruleo tinctis: staminibus cyaneis, ovariis pallide cæruleis, +stigmatib. carnosis.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>13th</i>.—Opposite Khosha’s, or rather +his granaries to the E. is a high mountain excessively steep, only partially +clothed with trees, and with stunted ones at its summit, which in December +and the colder months is covered with snow: this they call Thaya-thro.</p> +<p>Khosha positively refuses to take me any farther into the interior, +and Krisong begs that I won’t come and see him. It is obvious +that they are under great fear of other tribes. Khosha says, he +should be attacked by all the Mishoos or Mizhoos, were he to conduct +me any farther now, and that very probably the Lamas would attack him +likewise. He says the only chance of success in penetrating to +Lama, is to send previously a present of salt, (about a seer) to all +the chiefs, and request their leave, without which preparatory donation, +they would cut up any messengers he might send. He offers to do +this at any time, and to let me know the result. He declined taking +me to the Chibong Gam, a few days’ journey up the Diree, although +the man is a relation of his own, and a Deboro Mishmee. It is +obvious that there is no chance of getting further at present, nor would +it be fair even if one could bribe them. He says no reliance whatever +is to be placed on Rooling, the Mizhoo who deceived Wilcox, and whom +he represents to be an underhand person. I tried to overcome his +scruples by assuring him that I only wanted to go as far as Rooling, +but he declines taking me. He says I may go any where to the west +of this, but to the north he dare not conduct me. I shall therefore +go to Premsong to-morrow, and if that is not a favourable place, return +forthwith to Ghaloom’s, and thence to Deeling to botanise on Thuma-thaya.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>14th</i>.—Proceeded to Premsong’s, which +we reached in less than two hours. Our march was in a westerly +direction across a hill of some elevation: the remainder of it was over +kheties and level ground. The plants evidently increase in interest +as we advance in the interior, Compositæ and Labiatæ being +most numerous. A large tree occurs not uncommonly, which is either +a Birch or a Prunus, most probably from the venation of its leaves, +the latter; the bark is exactly like that of a Birch. Close to +Premsong’s I gathered a Clematis, Valerian and a fine Botrychium, +a Carex and a Cuscuta. The mountain on the base of which Premsong’s +house is situated, is a very high one; it is the one that is so striking +from Ghaloom’s old site: it is named Laimplan-thaya; its summit, +which is a high peak, is very rugged, partially clothed with vegetation, +in which, as in all the others of the same height autumnal tints are +very distinct. Thai-ka-thaya is a smaller peak to the S.S.W. of +Premsong’s house. One of my Mishmee Dowaniers tells me that +the Mishmee (Coptis) teeta Khosha gave me last evening, is cultivated +near his native place; its flower buds are just forming and are enclosed +in ovate concave squamæ. The leaves are of a lively green, +not unlike those of some ferns, but at once to be distinguished by the +venation; it is very evident that the Mishmees know nothing about the +period of its flowering, as they told me it flowered in the rains, at +the same time as the <i>dhak</i> flowers in Assam; the radicles are +numerous, tawny yellowish, the rhizomata are rugged tortuous, the bark +and pith are of yellow orange colour, the woody system gamboge: this +is the same in the petioles: it tinges the saliva yellow. It is +a pure intense bitter of some permanence, but without aroma: it is dried +over the fire, the drying being repeated three times. Judging +from it in its fresh state, the test of its being recently and well +dried is the permanence of the colors. The <i>Bee</i> flowers +during the rains: its flower, (<i>on</i> <i>dit</i>) is white and small; +they pretend that it is very dangerous to touch, causing great irritation; +both Coptis teeta, and Bee, are found on high hills on which there is +now snow; one of them, the Ummpanee or Moochee, is accessible from hence +in three days.</p> +<p>The Mishmee name for the Teeta, is <i>Yoatzhee</i>; of Bee, <i>Th’wee</i>; +<i>Ghe</i>-<i>on</i> is the Mishmee name for the smelling root, which +the Assamese call Gertheon. The smell of this is a compound of +Valeriana and Pastinaca; it is decidedly aromatic, and not at all disagreeable, +it is white inside and abounds in pith, but has scarcely any taste.</p> +<p>Yesterday evening I visited Khosha’s house, which is of immense +length, and considerably longer, though not so high from the ground +as Ghaloom’s: it is divided into upwards of twenty apartments, +on the right hand side of the passage are ranged the skulls of the cattle +Khosha has killed, including deer and pigs; on the other side are the +domestic utensils, the centre of the floor is occupied by a square earthen +space for fire-place: the bamboos, of which the floor is composed being +cut away. From the centre of each room over the fire-place, hangs +a square ratan sort of tray, from which they hang their meat or any +thing requiring smoke; their cooking utensils are, I believe, confined +to one square stone vessel, which appears to answer its purpose remarkably +well. The women appear to have no shame; they expose their breasts +openly, which from their dirty habits by no means correspond with the +exalted character of the sex. On hills to the N.E. of Khosha’s +first residence, forests are very visible, descending far down the sides.</p> +<p>On an open spot a little distance from Premsong’s, there is +a fine view of the course of the Lohit, and of the more remote (now) +snowy ranges. The hills beyond this exactly answer to Wilcox’s +description, being very high, and all descending as it were unbroken +to the Lohit.</p> +<p>Went out for about two hours over a tolerably level portion of the +hill, covered with Artemesia; found abundance of interesting plants, +Crawfurdia campanulacea, a Clematis, Acer, Prunus, Camellia axillaris, +Cyathea, Myrica, Rhus, Sedgwickia, Polygala, Galium: and a beautiful +very fragrant climbing Composita.</p> +<p>Great part of the side of the hill is covered with a small hard bamboo, +which forms excellent walking sticks. An Urticea foliis peltatis, +was among the novelties. The Paeen Panee forms the nearest ravine. +The Polygonum, paniculis densissimis, is a certain indication of some +elevation. I observed Calamus, and Torenia asiatica. There +is likewise a large Mimoseous plant, which we found in fruit.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>15th</i>.—Spent the greater part of the day +attempting to reach the summit of Laim-planj-thaya, but my guide did +not know the way. We ascended for upwards of four hours, slowly +of course, but were still a long way from its summit. The face +of the mountain is entirely occupied by woods, with but little underwood. +Found abundance of plants, chiefly ferns, only saw 4 Orchideæ, +of which 2 were in flower. The novelties were a Polygonatum, Camellia, +and Quercus lamellata.</p> +<p>I observed no less than 5 Araliaceæ, of which I succeeded in +getting 4: an Acer, probably that from Brahma Koond: and several <i>incertæ</i>. +Near Premsong’s the varnish tree was shewn to me, it is obviously +a species of Rhus. The Assamese name of the varnish plant is <i>Ahametta</i> +<i>Gas</i>. I took specimens of it in fruit.</p> +<p>They obtain the juice by ringing, and the only two specimens I observed +were evidently well drained: no preparation is required for the varnish; +and it is applied one day, the next day is hard; it has a fine polish, +and is of an intense black. It is the same probably with two small +trees I had previously seen in Capt. Charlton’s garden at Suddyah. +Kydia continues; a fine Palm, caudex 8-10-pedali; it probably belongs +to the genus Wallichia? Camellia is only found towards the top; +the Polygonatum also does not descend far. I saw also species +of an undescribed Bucklandia, likewise one specimen which had been damaged: +the capituli pluriflori. Towards the middle a small bamboo becomes +plentiful; the lower joints, from which no branches proceed, are armed +with a verticillus of spines. I did not observe Pandanus, but +it is used for constructing large mats: Megala continues, but not up +the hill.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>16th</i>.—Attempted to ascend Laim-planj-thaya +by the Paeen rivulet which proceeds from the centre, but after proceeding +about half an hour we found our progress effectually stopped by a water-fall, +the sides of the stream being so precipitous as to render all idea of +clambering over, or proceeding round ridiculous. Gathered two +or three rare ferns, and a pretty Lobelia. On our return through +the open grassy parts near Premsong’s, we found a fine Choripetalum +and Crawfurdia campanulacea, beautifully in flower; the flower is rose-coloured. +Anthistiria arundinacea, the same Sambucus found at Suddya, Solanum +10 dentatum, a Kydia and Torenia continue.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>17th</i>.—Left and returned to Khosha’s, +as we were all out of rice, and it was impossible to get anything in +Premsong’s absence. The march on return occupied us about +two hours, but the path was so excessively slippery, owing to the grass +not being cut away on either side and to the dry weather and heat, that +our progress was very slow. Noticed Lactuca exalata and a Rottlera +on the road; more snow has fallen on the hills E.N.E. The descent +on returning, owing to the slippery state of the roads, was more fatiguing +than the ascent. Hedychium angustifolium I also observed on the +road.</p> +<p>I have as yet observed the following grains used by the Mishmees. +1st, Oriza, rice; variety of this called <i>Ahoo</i> <i>Da</i>; 2nd, +a species of Eleusine, <i>Bobosa</i>; 3rd, Zea Mays, <i>Gorm</i> dan; +4th, Panicum Panicula nutanti, densa clavata. 5th, <i>Konee</i>, +Chenapodium sp. panicula simili.</p> +<p>The Mishmee names are as follow: <i>Dan</i>-<i>khai</i> rice; <i>khai</i> +<i>hoo</i>, <i>bobosa</i>, <i>Mdo</i>.-<i>zea</i>, <i>or</i> <i>Maize</i>, +<i>Ma</i>-<i>bon</i>-<i>konee</i>-<i>yo</i> Chenopodium; <i>Thenna</i>, +a kind of Polygonum; <i>Hubra</i>-<i>Aloo</i>, <i>Ghee</i>-<i>kuchoo</i>-<i>shoom</i>, +Sweet potato; <i>Gaihwan</i>, Plantain; <i>Puhee</i> <i>Dhoonhwa</i>, +Tobacco. They likewise cultivate Sesamum.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>18th</i>.—Found more of the Rafflesiacea on +low hills along the Paeen; it was attached to the roots of the same +species of Cissus, on which it was found before. <a name="citation40"></a><a href="#footnote40">{40}</a> +I also gathered a Euonymus and a fine Engelhardtia. The hairs +of the fruits of Engelhardtia create a disagreeable itching. All +the Mishmees decline shewing me the road a foot in advance of this place. +I tried every way I could think of, to overcome their objections, but +to no purpose. They have so little regard for truth, that one +cannot rely much on what they say: I begin to think that it is all owing +to the Tapan Gam, who I suspected was insincere in his professions.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>19th</i>.—Yesterday evening Premsong arrived, +he is a man about 35, the best looking of all the Gams: but has rather +a cunning Jewish face. The brandy I gave him made him at first +wonderfully obliging, for he seemed disposed to enter into my views. +This morning however he came with Khosha and Tapan, by whom it was at +once obvious that he has been overruled; not only will he not take me +to the Lama <i>Dais</i> (plains,) but he won’t even shew me the +road to Truesong’s, a Digaroo, whose village is only distant about +five days’ journey. Premsong I know wishes to go, induced +by the promise of 200 Rs. but he is afraid of incurring the displeasure +of Khosha, etc. I shall therefore return towards Deeling, and +devote a few days to botanising on Thuma-thaya.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>20th</i>.—Returned to Ghaloom’s: gathered +the Martynia, finely in flower, and observed the Rafflesiacea along +the banks of the Lohit.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>21st</i>.—Halted at Ghaloom’s, the Rafflesiacea +is found all about, anth. bilocular, apice poro-gemino dehiscent, pollen +simplex, materie viscosa cohærenti, ovula antitropa, tegumento +unico. Made every arrangement with Premsong. According to +this Gam we are to go up the Diree, and then cross over high mountains, +leaving the Lohit entirely. He says the Lamas wear trowsers, socks +and shoes, and that they dress their hair <i>a</i> <i>la</i> <i>mode</i> +<i>Chinoise</i>; their houses are built on posts, and raised from the +ground: they erect forts like the Chinese, and have plenty of fire-locks. +They have also abundance of cattle, consisting of about seven kinds, +but no <i>Mithuns</i>; and three sorts of Horses, which alone they use +as beasts of burden. Their staple food is Ahoodan. The <i>Mithun</i> +of the Mishmees appears to me intermediate to a certain degree between +the Bison and the wild Bull; their head is very fine, and as well as +the horns that of a Bull, but their neck and body have, so to say, the +same awkward conformation as those of the buffalo. I have not +seen a large living one; the largest head I saw was three feet from +tip to tip of the horns, the diameter of the forehead being probably +about one-third of the above.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>22nd</i>.—Returned to Loong Mockh. I cannot +reconcile Wilcox’s description of Ghaloom’s old site with +the reality, because the scenery is decidedly fine, embracing the Tidding, +and the (in comparison with the near surrounding hills) gigantic Laim-planj-thaya, +which from this presents the appearance of a vast cone with a peaked +summit. Premsong’s village is obviously at a considerable +elevation. Found another Acrostichum, a Bolbophyllum, a rare Aristolochia +foliis palmatis, 7 lobis, subtus glaucis; sapor peracerbus, floribus +<i>siphonicis</i>. The Huttaya I have not seen: it occurs at a +greater distance in the mountains than I have been. In addition +to the plants I have gathered, Asplenium nidus it very common. +Tradescantia and Camelina both occur; Ricinus also occurs, the Mishmees +do not however put it to any use; Melica latifolia is common on some +of the hills. Anthistiria arundinacea occurs in abundance. +Likewise a small Areca and Chloranthus.</p> +<p>It is at Ghaloom’s old site that these hills commence putting +on an interesting appearance, those previously seen, excepting however +Thuma-thaya, being entirely covered with tree jungle; but beyond this +site, the lower spaces unoccupied by jungle become much more numerous. +The Mishmee word for bitter, is <i>Khar</i>. Query—why should +not the name of the plant Coptis teeta, be changed to Coptis amara, +although the species of the genus Coptis are probably all bitter? +Sauraussa and Bombax both occur at Ghaloom’s, as well as Pentaptera; +Sesamum is used for oil.</p> +<p>I should have mentioned the top of the hill, surmounted in going +immediately from Loong Panee towards Ghaloom’s, is occupied almost +entirely by a species of Fraxinus.</p> +<p>On my arrival at Ghaloom’s on the 20th, I found that the coolies +had played me the same trick as they had done previously, though not +to such an extent. Instead of each man having 20 days’ provisions, +scarcely one had more than 5 or 6: as they had 20 days’ given +them in addition to that they would require on the road, it is obvious +they must have thrown much away. Were all the Gams disposed to +take one to Lama, it could not be done with Assamese coolies and, above +all, Seerings or Ahooms are the very worst; and although often good +sized men, they are very deficient in strength. Nagas and Mishmees +are the best, then Kamptees.</p> +<p>I gave before leaving a packet of salt to Premsong, according I suppose +to their own custom of proceeding. Yesterday he went to Roomling, +Krisong’s eldest son, and gained his consent. I mention +this to shew how active he is. He is a friend of the Dupha’s, +<a name="citation42"></a><a href="#footnote42">{42}</a> and to my surprise, +told me he saw Capt. Hannay at Hookhoom, who gave him a jacket, and +tried to induce him to shew him the road to Suddiya. He is certainly +the best of all the Gams, and appears to be very liberal.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>23rd</i>.—Arrived at Deeling after a tedious +march of 8 hours: we did not traverse the two cliffs near the Lohit, +but pursued a longer, but more commodious cattle path: our Mishmees, +however, preferred the shorter one. Gathered Sabia, Martynioidea, +Alsophila, Menispermum at Paeen in fine flower. At Ghaloom’s +old site a large Euphorbia fol obovatis, ramis 4 angulato-alatis occurs, +and Cymbydium giganteum in fine flower. <i>En</i> <i>route</i> +hither I noticed the following; Bauhinia, Hoya, Urtica gigas, Mucuna, +Curculigo, Panax, foliis supra-decompositis, Dalbergia, Laurus, Abroma, +Lactuca exaltata, Uncaria, Siegesbeckia, Megala, <i>Podo</i>-<i>Molee</i>, +and a species subscandent of bamboo, internodiis vix cylindricis, gracilibus; +this is of great use where it occurs, in assisting one’s ascent +and descent.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>24th</i>.—Left about 11 for Thuma-thaya: we +first descended the Dissoo ravine, then up a very steep hill, the top +of which was cultivated, then descended and crossed another stream, +the remainder of our march consisting almost entirely of an uninterrupted +steep ascent: during our progress we gained partial views of the Plains +and the Naga Hills, but on crossing a high ridge on which I observed +Betula Populus? Rhododendrum arboreum, the view to the East and West +was very fine. That to the W. embracing the greater part of the +plains about Suddiya and the Abor Hills, stretching along to S.W. the +more distant Naga Hills. The Lohit could be traced for an immense +way, the Dihong, Dibong, Digaroo, Dihing were all partially visible. +To the N.E. Thegri-thaya was finely seen, then some rugged peaks among +which Laim-planj was conspicuous. It embraced the course of the +Lohit, at least its right bank, ridge surmounting ridge: the loftier +ones tipped with snow; and lastly it was closed by a huge wall, all +covered with snow, especially its peaks, stretching away to the N. +From this we descended to Yen, where, as usual, I took up my quarters +in a granary. During the latter portion of the journey, I gathered +a Passiflora? Lobelia two species, a Scitaminea, Spiræa, and a +curious aromatic plant, pedunculis bracteæ adnatis, bracteis, +coloratis, petal videis.</p> +<p>Codonopsis, etc. Dicksonia, stipitibus atris 3 canaliculatis, frondibus +amplis, 10 pedalibus; in fine fructification; this is the same with +the Manmoo plant. I observed likewise an arborescent Sambucus, +a Bonnaya, a huge Begonia: Coix was seen cultivated.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>25th</i>.—Spent the day in botanising. +Gathered Adamia, some fine ferns, a bamboo, spiculis dense congestis, +bracteis scariosis interspersis, and Schizosfachyum, Nees ab E. etc.</p> +<p>Another and much finer species of the Fumariaceous genus, I found +on Laim-planj, Deutzia, a rare Quercus, a fine species of Antonia, (Br.) +in fruit, a Bartramia, Trematodon, Neckera, etc., noticed a fruit something +similar to that of Combretum, allis 2 maximis, 2 minimis: cotyledonibus +hæmisphæricis.</p> +<p>Saurauja, Prunus: 3 species of Aralia, Castanea, Quercus, etc. +A species of Panicum is here cultivated; the Assamese know it by the +name Cheena, 3 species of Polygonatum, including that from Laim-planj, +one foliis carnosis oppositis. 2 species of Begonia, making altogether +six. The Amaranthacea of Deeling is here found extensively, it +often assumes the form of a climber of considerable size. Musa +farinosa grows to a great size, 20 to 25 feet. Bambusa in flower +has stems about two inches in diameter. Sterculia flowers were +observed on the ground. In the afternoon it rained slightly. +This is the coldest place I have visited on these hills: in the evening +and earlier parts of the night there is a very cold draught down Thuma-thaya.</p> +<p>The Anthistiria found on the more elevated portions of these hills, +is probably different from that of the plains. Urticea are here +found in abundance.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>26th</i>.—This morning the atmosphere being +beautifully transparent, very high land plentifully sprinkled with snow +was visible to the N.W. by W., and to the N.W. a slight peep of the +Himalayas was gained. Started at 9, and commenced the ascent; +we arrived at our halting place at 11½. The greater part +of the march was a steep ascent through dry woods, the ground being +very slippery owing to the leaves. Bucklandia occurs in abundance +and of a large size, and attains a much greater height than Sedgwickia: +found many interesting plants and a small Conifera, probably an Araucaria +or a Taxus.</p> +<p>I continued the ascent until about 12, but the scene had totally +changed; the whole face of the mountain on the S. side being entirely +destitute of trees, and in many places quite naked. The ascent +was not very difficult, and occupied a little more than an hour. +This acclivity is chiefly occupied by Graminea, all past flowering, +all adhering very firmly to the rock, which is quartzose and greyish +blue outside, excessively angular: Gentianeæ 2: a beautiful Campanula, +Hypericum, Viburnum, Spiræa, Bryum Neckera, Pteris, Scabiosa, +some Compositæ, one or two Vaccinioidea, and a curious shrubby +Rubiacea evidently a Serissa, were observed. The top, which represents +a ridge, is partially wooded, the trees being the continuation or rather +termination of the jungle that covers the whole northern face of the +mountain. Here I saw Bucklandia, a Pomacea, Crawfurdia, Deutzia, +Cynaroidea, Viburna 2, some ferns. Brachymeum, Neckera, Lichens +several: a Caryophyllea and a Berberis.</p> +<p>All these were somewhat stunted. The various views were beautiful, +embracing a complete panorama, but unfortunately obscured towards Lama +by trees. The Lohit was seen extensively from the Koond to Ghaloom’s, +and to the plains to an immense distance. The whole range of Abor +Hills and a great portion of the Naga, some of which appeared very high, +were likewise seen: to the S.E. high ridges not far distant and covered +with snow, limited the view; slight snow was visible on the peak seen +from Suddiya. The descent was very tedious owing to the excessive +slipperiness of the grass: it was dangerous, because a slip would have +frequently dashed you to pieces, and in all cases would have hurt one +severely.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>27th</i>.—Descended to Yen: near our halting +place we gathered a fine Pomacea arborea in fruit: a Symplocos, and +observed Wallichioideæ and Calamus. The plants of the greatest +interest gathered were an Acer, an Epilobium, a Hoya grandiflora, Eurya, +Hypericum, a fine Arundo, Bucklandia: Cotoneaster microphylla, a Sabia, +Coriaria, Abelia? a rare Dipodous Orchidea of the same genus as a dwarf +plant of the Cossiya Hills. Rhododendron, scandesent Eleodendron.</p> +<p>The ascent for the greater part is a steep wooded ridge; the first +change indicated or induced by elevation is the diminution of the size +in the trees, and the frequent occurrence of a Betulus? out of flower. +Proceeding onward one comes to a ridge, the S.E. declivity of which +is nearly naked, the opposite being wooded with shrubs, Viburnum, Conaria, +Mespilus, Pomacea, Rhododendron, Rubiacea Serissa, Cupulifera and some +Compositæ occur. Then Arbutus Vaccinium; Nardus: Filix cano-tomentosa, +Lycopodium; Dicranum atratum; one or two Hypna, a Bryum, and Neckera +fusca. Descending slightly from thence the ridge is observed to +be wooded on both sides; it is at the termination of this that we halted. +The ascent is continued up a rock, and the whole of the mountain is, +excepting the ravines, covered with Graminea, Cyperacea, Filix cano-tomentosa, +etc. but the Ericoidea are not so fine. The grasses of the summit +are two Andropogons: an Arundo Festucoidea, Panicum, Isachne, Nardus +ceasing below, it is towards this that Crepis? and Campanula are common.</p> +<p>The Ceratostemmata are found towards the summit, none descend any +distance, except one of Roxburgh’s; they are all generally epiphytes. +Orchidea become more common towards the halting place; beyond this I +observed only two past flowering, one Habenaria, and a Malaxidea; the +others are two Cælogyne, a Dipodious Orchidea, labelli ungue sigmoideo +very common, a Bolbophyllum, and a few ditto epiphytes out of flower, +one terrestrial Bletioidea is common in some places. At our halting +place, I observed an arborescent Araliacea, a Cissus, an Acanthacea +and a Laurinea. A little below, Pandanus occurs here and there, +and attains a large size, the largest in fact I have ever seen. +Castanea occurs about half way up, it is that species with rigid compound +spines to the cupula. I gathered also a fine Geastrum, but the +specimens are lost. Bucklandia occurs extensively; it is a distinct +species owing to its many flowered capitula; Sedgwickia comes into play +towards Yen, where Bucklandia appears to become scarce: a large Vitex +floribus roseo-purpureis is the most conspicuous tree of all, it ceases +towards the summit; Cyathea I observed only above half way. Camellia +axillaris occurs below, but I missed the Laim-planj plant. I may +here observe that almost all plants with red flowers, at least in this +quarter, are acid: the Assamese always appear to expect this, the proofs +are Loranthus, Ceratostemma, and Begonia, in which red is generally +a predominant colour.</p> +<p>Antrophyllum I noticed about Yen; towards Yen, I diverged from the +path to visit the place whence the stones are procured, which the Mishmees +use as flints for striking lights: this stone is found on the S. Western +face of the mountain: the stones or noduli are frequently sub-crystalline, +and are imbedded in a sort of micaceous frangible rock: they are very +common, of very different sizes, with glassy fracture; the best are +hard; the bad easily frangible, their weight is great. The inclination +of this bed is considerable; overlying it at an inclination of 45°, +is the grey quartzose rock which forms the chief part, and perhaps nearly +the whole, of the mountain. The Mishmee name for the noduli is +<i>Mpladung</i>.</p> +<p>In the jungle at Yen occurs a huge Palm evidently Caryota, foliis +maximis supra decompositis; the diameter of the trunk is 1½ to +2 feet. It is said to die after flowering: the natives use the +central lax structures as food. The Yen Gam promises to send me +specimens to-morrow. The Palms I have hitherto seen are Wallichia, +one or two Calami: Wallichioidia trunco 5-10 pedali, and a Phænicoidea, +but this I only saw at the foot of the mountains near Laee Panee, and +the small Areca common about Negrogam. The name of the large Palm +in Assamese is <i>Bura</i> <i>Sawar</i>. All the plants common +to these and the Cossiya mountains, with one or two exceptions, flower +much earlier here, those being all past flowering which I gathered in +flower on the Cossiya hills in November last. This is owing to +the greater cold, and the consequent necessity for the plants flowering +at an earlier and warmer period.</p> +<p>A species of ruminant, or, according to the native account, a species +of Pachydermata called the <i>Gan</i> <i>Pohoo</i>, occurs on Thuma-thaya. +At the summit of the mountain the ground was in one place rooted up, +the Mishmees said, by this animal, which they describe as a large Hog, +but which I should rather take to be a kind of Deer.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>28th</i>.—Returned to Deeling. At the +commencement of the principal descent we gathered Betula and another +Cupulifera, both moderately sized trees. Anthestina arundinacea, +is about this place very common, and an Andropogon, Culmis ramosis which +I had previously brought from the Abor hills. About half way down +by a present of <i>kanee</i> (opium), I succeeded in getting the arborescent +vitex, which is the most striking tree of all when in flower. +Lost sight altogether of Bucklandia, nor did I observe Sedgwickia. +Gathered at the foot of Thuma-thaya a Cælogyne in flower, allied +to C. Gardneriana; Alsophila is common towards the base.</p> +<p>In the evening the Yen Gam came up according to his promise with +the gigantic Palm, with male inflorescence, it is a Caryota; he likewise +brought Sarcocordalis, Rafflesiacea, and a curious pubescent Piper. +He also added the female flowers of another Palm, which, according to +him, is another species of <i>Sawar</i>, or Caryota: the inflorescence +is of an orange yellow. A tree with the habit of Pterospermum +occurs on Thuma-thaya, low down Habenaria uniflora on rocks in the Dirsoo +Panee, or river; Kydia occurs about Yen, but not higher.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>29th</i>.—Reached Laee Panee after a march of +five hours; and without Assamese coolies, it might be done in three. +I noticed below Deeling, but still at a considerable elevation, Crawfurdia +campanu lacea, Adamea, Engelhardtia, Vitex speciosa, and Magnolia in +the order in which they are thus given, Quercus, cupulis echinatis occurs +comparatively low down, Castanea ferox still lower, Dracæna comes +into view towards the base. At the village first reached in the +ascent there is a Meliaceous Azedarach looking tree.</p> +<p>At our old halting place, and which is near Deeling, another <i>Ahum</i>-<i>metta</i> +<i>Ghas</i> was shewn me. This attains, I am told, a large size: +it is not very unlike in habit a Melanorrhæa, and its young leaves +are tinged with red, the mature ones are coriaceous. I have not +seen it in flower; the juice, at least from small branches, is not very +abundant, and at first is of a whitish colour; it is, <i>on</i> <i>dit</i>, +after drying that it assumes the black tint; at any rate it is excessively +acrid, for one of my servants who cut it incautiously, had his face +spoilt for a time: the swelling even after four days had elapsed was +considerable. With this as well as the Rhus they dye the strings +of the simple fibres of <i>Sawar</i>, which they all wear below the +knee: if not properly dried these strings cause some inflammation: the +strings are ornamental, light, and when worn in small numbers graceful, +but when dozens are employed, and all the upper ones loose, they deform +the figure much; some of the women, perhaps anxious to restrain the +protuberance of their calves, tie two or three lightly across the calf.</p> +<p>At Nohun, near Deeling, Cocoloba aculeata, <i>baccis</i> cyaneis +occurs here the same as at Mumbree in the Cossiya hills, and at Suddiya.</p> +<p><i>Nov</i>. <i>30th</i>.—Halted. Put all the grain into +the Tapan Gam’s hands, amounting to 60 maunds. In the evening +received as a present a long sword from Premsong. Found a fine +Impatiens and a shrub coming into flower, Calyce æstiv. valvato? +Stamen 4, connectivo ultra antheras longe producto, ovarium adnatum, +foliis oppositis, exstipulatis. Meyenia coccinea, finely in flower. +An arborescent Urticea (Bæhmeria?) foliis subtus candidis is common.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>1st</i>.—Reached the Tapan Gam’s after +a sharp march of four hours. We are not yet quite at the foot +of the hills. Gathered <i>en</i> <i>route</i> 4 new Acanthaceæ, +not previously met with on this trip, among which is a beautiful Eranthemum. +At Laee Panee one of my people brought me a fine Aristolochia, very +nearly allied to that from Ghaloom’s, but at once distinct by +its ferruginous pubescence, Antrophyum, and a Polypodium not before +met with were among the acquisitions. The Tapan Gam has behaved +very handsomely for a Mishmee, having killed a hog, and given five kuchoos +of beautiful rice, and feasted my people. Found two snakes, which +inhabit the inside of bamboos. Color superne brunneo-cinereus, +margines squamarum nigri, gula nigra, fascicula subtus antea alba, postice +lutescens.</p> +<p>Noticed Jenkinsia near Laee Panee, and some gigantic specimens of +Pentaptera, the Hool-look of the Assamese, the timber of which is used +for large canoes; and Lagerstræmia grandiflora occurs on the banks +of the Kussin Panee.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3> +<p><i>Revisits</i> <i>the</i> <i>Tea</i> <i>Localities</i> <i>in</i> +<i>the</i> <i>Singphoo</i> <i>and</i> <i>Muttack</i> <i>Districts</i>, +<i>Upper</i> <i>Assam</i>.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>2nd</i>.—Returned to Jingsha via Kussin Panee, +or river, and Karam Panee, the march being a tolerably easy one. +Found along the steep banks of the former a fine Meniscium, frondibus +6-8 pedalibus, and an arborescent Polypodium, caudice 12-15 pedali, +partibus novellis densissime ferrugineo-tomentosis; frondibus subtus +glauco-albidis. The caudex is altogether similar in structure +to that of Alsophyla, equally furnished with strong black bristly radicles +towards its base.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>3rd</i>.—Left for Husa Gam’s about 9, +and arrived at the village which is on the Kampai of the Singfos, Tup-pai +of the Mishmees about 4½ P.M. The first part of our march +was to the E. up the Karam, we then traversed for a long way heavy jungle +in a S. direction, and then came on the dry bed of the Kampai, up which +we ascended to the village. Found a Ruellioidea, <i>Cyananthus</i>, +<i>mihi</i>. <i>Oom</i> of the Assamese, with which the Kamptees dye +their black blue cloths. Noticed an arborescent Araliacea inermis, +foliis supra decomposita; panicule patentissima. The Husa Gam +treated us very handsomely forming a striking contrast with the Mishmees; +he declares positively that no tea exists in this direction; I shall +therefore proceed direct from Luttora to Beesa. Roxburghia occurred +on the route. The village is on the left bank of the river: the +direction from Jingsha’s being about N.W.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>4th</i>.—Reached Luttora after an easy march +of three hours and a half, for the most part along an excellent path. +We passed the following villages <i>en</i> <i>route</i> Chibong, Wakon, +Mtarm, and Mcyompsan: three of which are of some size; none however +so large as Nsas. This is the largest Singfo village I have seen, +and probably contains 400 people. This village and all the others +are situated on high ground, the ascent from the Kampai being probably +70 feet. The country consists of level, apparently good soil, +with here and there broadish ravines in which bamboos are abundant. +Cultivation is common, and of considerable extent. On a similar +eminence is situate Luttora, and it has been well chosen, for on both +sides that I approached it, the ascent is steep and capable of being +easily defended; the south side is bounded by the Ponlong Panee, which +runs into the Tenga Panee. If any ascent it is an easy one, and +must be to the westward; to the north, there is a small stream, but +neither this, Ponlong or Tenga are any thing but mere rills, which may +be easily leaped over in the dry seasons. Our route from Nsas +was to the W. of south. No stockades appear to exist in this quarter.</p> +<p>Luttora is not so large as Nsas; formerly the Luttora Gam was the +chief of all this soil, but he has been partly deserted by two bodies +of men who have respectively chosen Nsas and Htan-tsantan.</p> +<p>The Gam visited me in the evening at our halting place on the Ponlong; +he is a large, coarse, heavy-looking man, nearly blind, and excessively +dirty. He proposed of himself to me, to become the Company’s +ryott in accordance with the wish, he said, of the Dupha Gam; but when +I told him he ought to send or go to the Suddiya Sahib, or Political +Agent, he said he wanted to see the Dupha first: he was accompanied +by a very loquacious oldish man, who had just returned from Hook-hoom, +to which place he had gone with the Dupha. They left apparently +not much pleased at my being empty handed.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>5th</i>.—Left at 6½, reached the Muttack +Panee about 8½, having come through much heavy bamboo jungle; +we then ascended the dry bed of the Muttack, and ascended after some +time the Minaboom. This was most tedious, as we continued along +the ridge for two hours; we then commenced our descent, but did not +reach the Meera Panee much before 1 P.M. Down this we came here, +and then along some curious chasms in the sandstone, and encamped about +3. The difference of soil between the Minaboom and the Mishmee +hills is most obvious; on the N.E. declivity there is much soil; but +on the opposite side little but rounded stones which supply the place +of soil, and in places we saw nothing but sandstone conglomerate? or +indurated soil with many boulders imbedded in it, and a blackish greasy +clay slate; while on the Mishmees, on the contrary, all is rock, hard +and harsh to the touch; or where loose stones do occur on the face of +the hills, they are all angular. The vegetation of sandstone is +likewise far more varied; and that of the Meera Panee district, abounds +in ferns, among which is Polypodium Wallichianum. The Tree-fern +of Kujing I observed in the Muttack, Sedgwickia in Minaboom, two Magnoliaceæ, +one bracteis persistent, induratis, and a Dipterocarpus. The chief +vegetation of the ridge consists of grasses, among which bamboo holds +a conspicuous place. A Begonia was common along the Muttack. +The Meera Panee would well repay a halt of two or three days.</p> +<p>At our halting place we met four Burmese, despatched by the Maum, +<a name="citation51"></a><a href="#footnote51">{51}</a> who has arrived +at Beesa on a visit to the Luttora Gam.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>6th</i>.—Reached Beesa after a sharp march of +six hours. Our course lay at first down the Meera Panee; here +I observed more of the Polypodium Wallichianum, which is common throughout +the Singfo hill country, and appears to be used as grog, at least the +juice of the petioles. We then diverged to the westward through +heavy jungle, and the remainder of our march consisted of uninteresting +dense jungle, water-courses, and excessively low places. Observed +Sabia in some of the jungles; the only interesting plants gathered were +an Impatiens and two or three Acanthaceæ. About 2½ +P.M. we came on the Noa Dihing, which is now nearly dry, the water +having flowed into the Kamroop. No boat, not even a dak boat, +can come near Beesa. It is obvious that this river here never +presented any depth, both banks being very low; the bed consists of +small hard boulders.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>7th</i>, <i>8th</i>.—Halted at Beesa.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>9th</i>.—Started for the Naga village, at some +distance, and</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>10th</i>.—Left for Kujoo or Khoonlong, which +we reached about 1, after a march of five hours. At 10, we arrived +at Dhoompsan or Thoompsa, a large village with extensive cultivation. +The remainder of our march was through heavy jungle, many parts of which +were very low, and crowded with a fierce Calamus. The higher parts +abound in a Dipterocarpus, and two Castaneæ. I found many +fine ferns, all of which however we collected last year. Chrysobaphus, +not uncommon. Apostasia rare.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>11th</i>.—Visited the tea in the old locality +at Nigroo. No steps have been taken towards clearing the jungles, +except perhaps of tea. The Gam tells me, that the order for clearing +was given to Shroo, Dompshan, and Kumongyon, Gams of three villages +near the spot. Noticed Dicksonia <i>en</i> <i>route</i>, so that +we must have passed it last year. Æsculus also occurs here.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>12th</i>.—Arrived at Kugoodoo after an easy +march of two hours and a half. At 12, went to see the tea which +lies to the S.S.W. of the village, and about ten minutes’ walk +to the W. of the path leading to Negrogam, and which for the most part +runs along an old bund road. After diverging from this road we +passed through some low jungle, which is always characterised by Calamus +Zalaccoideus; and then after traversing for a short time some rather +higher ground, came on the tea. This patch is never under water; +there is no peculiarity of vegetation connected with it. It runs +about N. and S. for perhaps 150 yards by 40 to 50 in breadth. +The Gam had cleared the jungle of all, except the larger trees and the +low <i>herbaceous</i> <i>underwood</i>, so that a <i>coup</i> <i>d’œil</i> +was at once obtained, and gave sufficient evidence of the abundance +of the plants, many of which were of considerable size, and all bore +evidence of having been mutilated. They were for the most part +loaded with flowers, and are the finest I have seen in the Singfo country. +Young buds were very common, nor can I reconcile this with the statement +made by the Gam, that no young leaves will be obtainable for four months. +From the clearing, the plants are exposed to moderate sun; it is perhaps +to this that the great abundance of flowers is to be attributed. +The soil, now quite dry at the surface, is of a cinereous grey; about +a foot below it is brown, which passes, as you proceed, into deeper +yellow; about four feet deep, it passes into sand. No ravines +exist, and mounds only do about a few of the larger trees. The +soil as usual is light, friable, easily reduced to powder, and has a +very slight tendency to stiffness.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>13th</i>.—Left for the Muttack: our course lay +through dense jungle, principally of bamboo, and along the paths of +wild elephants; these beasts are here very common. We halted after +a march of seven hours on a small bank of the Deboro; the only plant +of interest was my Cyananthus in flower.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>14th</i>.—Continued through similar jungle along +the Deboro; bamboo more frequent. About 2 P.M. we left the undulating +hillocks, and the jungle became more open. At 4, we reached Muttack, +but had still to traverse a considerable distance before we halted at +Kolea Panee. We crossed the Deboro <i>en</i> <i>route</i>; no +particular plant was met with. I shot two large serpents, <i>Pythons</i>; +one 8, and the other 10 feet long. The Kolea Panee is of some +width, but is fordable.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>15th</i>.—After marching for about seven hours, +halted at a small village. The country passed over was, like most +of this part of Muttack, open, consisting of a rather high plain covered +with grasses, T. sperata, Saccharum, and Erianthus, with here and there +very swampy ravines; the soil is almost entirely sandy, light at the +surface; the yellow tint increasing with the depth, which is considerable. +Crossed the Deboro by a rude wooden bridge. I found no particular +plants <i>en</i> <i>route</i>.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>16th</i>.—Reached Rangagurrah, after a march +of about an hour: and halted for the day.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>18th</i>.—Started to visit Sedgwickia at the +wood, where we found it in February last. Reached the spot, which +is at least ten miles from Rangagurrah, in two hours and a half. +The trees had evidently not flowered last year; many of the buds were +of some size, and such contained flower buds, each capitula being in +addition enveloped in three bracteæ densely beset with brown hair. +The natives assured me, it will flower about April, or at the sowing +of <i>halee</i>. When we before found it, the buds were all leaf +buds, which at once accounts for the non-appearance of flowers. +Gathered Sabia in the Sedgwickia wood. The Major <a name="citation53"></a><a href="#footnote53">{53}</a> +arrived before I got back.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>20th</i>.—Revisited the tea locality of Tingrei, +which we reached after a five hours’ march. The portion +of it formerly cleared is now quite clean: all the plants, and they +are very abundant, have a shrubby shady appearance; the branches being +numerous, so that the first aspect is favourable. But one soon +detects an evident coarseness in the leaves, the tint of which is likewise +much too yellow; altogether their appearance is totally unlike that +of teas growing in their natural shade. That part, and the more +extensive one which we first visited in February last, is now clearing; +almost all the large trees have been felled, and all the underwood removed. +The branches, etc. are piled in heaps and set fire to, much to the detriment +of the plants: all the tea trees likewise have been felled. My +conviction is, that the tea will not flourish in open sunshine; at any +rate, subjection to this should be gradual. Further, that cutting +the main stem is detrimental, not only inducing long shoots, but most +probably weakening the flavour of the leaves. It appears to me +to be highly desirable, that an intelligent superintendent should reside +on the spot, and that he should at least be a good practical gardener, +with some knowledge of the science also.</p> +<p><i>Dec</i>. <i>24th</i>.—Reached Suddiya. The country +passed through was, for the first two days, of the same description +as before; i.e. rather high grassy plains with belts of jungle, and +intervening low very swampy ravines. The soil precisely the same +as that of the tea localities. The last march was, with the exception +of Chykwar, through low damp dense jungle.</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p><i>Extract</i> <i>from</i> <i>the</i> <i>Author’s</i> <i>letter</i> +<i>to</i> <i>Captain</i> <i>F</i>. <i>Jenkins</i>, <i>Commissioner</i> +<i>of</i> <i>Assam</i>, <i>regarding</i> <i>the</i> <i>Mishmees</i>. +<i>December</i>, <i>1836</i>. <a name="citation54"></a><a href="#footnote54">{54}</a></p> +<p>“I had thus become acquainted with all the influential chiefs +near our frontier, and by all I was received in a friendly and hospitable +manner. In accordance with my original intentions, my attention +was in the first place directed towards ascertaining whether the tea +exists in this direction or not, and, as I have already informed you, +I have every reason to think that the plant is unknown on these hills. +From what I have seen of the tea on the plains, I am disposed to believe +that the comparative want of soil, due to the great inclination of all +the eminences, is an insuperable objection to its existence.</p> +<p>“As I before observed to you, during my stay at Jingsha, my +curiosity had been excited by reports of an incursion of a considerable +force of Lamas into the Mishmee country. It hence became, having +once established a footing in the country, a matter of paramount importance +to proceed farther into the interior, and, if possible, to effect a +junction with these highly interesting people; but all my attempts to +gain this point proved completely futile; no bribes, no promises would +induce any of the chiefs to give me guides, even to the first Mishmee +village belonging to the Mezhoo tribe. I was hence compelled to +content myself for the present, with obtaining as much information as +possible relative to the above report, and I at length succeeded in +gaining the following certainly rather meagre account.</p> +<p>“The quarrel, as usual, originated about a marriage settlement +between two chiefs of the Mezhoo and Taeen tribes: it soon ended in +both parties coming to blows. The Mezhoo chief, ROOLING, to enable +him at once to overpower his enemies, and to strike at once at the root +of their power, called in the assistance of the Lamas. From this +country a force of seventy men armed with matchlocks made an invasion, +and, as was to be expected, the Taeen Mishmees were beaten at every +point and lost about twenty men. The affair seems to have come +to a close about September last, when the Lamas returned to their own +country. Where it occurred I could gain no precise information, +but it must have been several days’ journey in advance of the +villages I visited.</p> +<p>“It was owing to the unsettled state of the country, resulting +from this feud, that I could gain no guides from the Digaroos, without +whose assistance in this most difficult country, I need scarcely say, +that all attempts to advance would have been made in vain. These +people very plausibly said, if we give you guides, who is to protect +us from the vengeance of the Mezhoos when you are gone, and who is to +insure us from a second invasion of the Lamas? Another thing to +be considered is, the influence even then exercised over the Mishmees +near our boundaries by the Singphos connected with the Dupha Gam; but +from the renewal of the intercourse with our frontier station, there +is every reason for believing that this influence is ere this nearly +destroyed.</p> +<p>“The natives of this portion of the range are divided into +two tribes, Taeen or Digaroo and Mezhoo, these last tracing their descent +from the <i>Dibong</i> Mishmees, who are always known by the term crop-haired. +The Mezhoo, however, like the Taeens, preserve their hair, wearing it +generally tied in a knot on the crown of their head. The appearance +of both tribes is the same, but the language of the Mezhoos is very +distinct. They are perhaps the more powerful of the two; but their +most influential chiefs reside at a considerable distance from the lower +ranges. The only Mezhoos I met with are those at <i>Deeling</i>-<i>Yen</i>, +a small village opposite <i>Deeling</i>, but at a much higher elevation, +and <i>Tapan</i>. I need scarcely add that it was owing to the +opposition of this tribe that Captain WILCOX failed in reaching <i>Lama</i>. +The Digaroos are ruled by three influential chiefs, who are brothers +DRISONG, KHOSHA, and GHALOOM: of these, DRISONG is the eldest and the +most powerful, but he resides far in the interior. PRIMSONG is +from a distant stock, and as the three brothers mentioned above are +all passed the prime of life, there is but little doubt that he will +soon become by far the most influential chief of his tribe. Both +tribes appear to intermarry. The Mishmees are a small, active, +hardy race, with the Tartar cast of features; they are excessively dirty, +and have not the reputation of being honest, although, so far as I know, +they are belied in this respect. Like other hill people, they +are famous for the muscular development of their legs:—in this +last point the women have generally the inferiority. They have +no written language. Their clothing is inferior; it is, however, +made of cotton, and is of their own manufacture;—that of the men +consists of a mere jacket and an apology for a <i>dhoti</i>,—that +of the women is more copious, and at any rate quite decent: they are +very fond of ornaments, especially beads, the quantities of which they +wear is very often quite astonishing. They appear to me certainly +superior to the Abors, of whom, however, I have seen but few. +Both sexes drink liquor, but they did not seem to me to be so addicted +to it as is generally the case with hill tribes:—their usual drink +is a fermented liquor made from rice called <i>mont’h</i>: this, +however, is far inferior to that of the Singphos, which is really a +pleasant drink.</p> +<p>“<i>Religion</i>. Of their religion I could get no satisfactory +information—every thing is ascribed to supernatural agency. +Their invocations to their deity are frequent, and seem generally to +be made with the view of filling their own stomachs with animal food. +They live in a very promiscuous manner, one hundred being occasionally +accommodated in a single house. Their laws appear to be simple,—all +grave crimes being judged by an assembly of Gams, who are on such occasions +summoned from considerable distances. All crimes, including murder, +are punished by fines: but if the amount is not forthcoming, the offender +is cut up by the company assembled. But the crime of adultery, +provided it be committed against the consent of the husband, is punished +by death; and this severity may perhaps be necessary if we take into +account the way in which they live.</p> +<p>“The men always go armed with knives, Lama swords, or Singpho +<i>dhaos</i> and lances; and most of them carry cross-bows—the +arrows for these are short, made of bamboo, and on all serious occasions +are invariably poisoned with <i>bee</i>. When on fighting expeditions, +they use shields, made of leather, which are covered towards the centre +with the quills of the porcupine. Their lances are made use of +only for thrusting: the shafts are made either from the wood of the +lawn (<i>Caryota</i> <i>urens</i>) or that of another species of palm +<i>juice</i>—they are tipped with an iron spike, and are of great +use in the ascent of hills. The lance heads are of their own manufacture, +and of very soft iron. They have latterly become acquainted with +fire-arms, and the chiefs have mostly each a firelock of <i>Lama</i> +construction.</p> +<p>“With <i>Lama</i> they carry on an annual trade, which apparently +takes place on the borders of either country. In this case <i>mishmee</i>-<i>teeta</i>, +is the staple article of the Mishmees, and for it they obtain <i>dhaos</i> +or straight long swords of excellent metal and often of great length; +copper pots of strong, but rough make, flints and steel, or rather steel +alone, which are really very neat and good; warm woollen caps, coarse +loose parti-colored woollen cloths, huge glass beads, generally white +or blue, various kinds of cattle, in which <i>Lama</i> is represented +as abounding, and salts. I cannot say whether the Lamas furnish +flints with the steel implements for striking light; the stone generally +used for this purpose by the Mishmees is the nodular production from +<i>Thumathaya</i>,—and this, although rather frangible, answers +its purpose very well; with the Singphos they barter elephants’ +teeth, (these animals being found in the lower ranges,) for slaves, +dhaws, and buffaloes.</p> +<p>“With the Khamtees they appear to have little trade, although +there is a route to the proper country of this people along the <i>Ghaloom</i> +<i>panee</i>, or <i>Ghaloom</i> <i>Thee</i> of WILCOX’S chart; +this route is from the great height of the hills to be crossed, only +available during the hot months.</p> +<p>“With the inhabitants of the plains they carry on an annual +trade, which is now renewed after an interruption of two years, exchanging +cloths, Lama swords, spears, <i>mishmee</i>-<i>teeta</i>, <i>bee</i>, +which is in very great request, and <i>gertheana</i>, much esteemed +by the natives for its peculiar and rather pleasant smell, for money, +(to which they begin to attach great value), cloths, salt and beads: +when a sufficient sum of money is procured, they lay it out in buffaloes +and the country cattle.”</p> +<pre>* * * * *</pre> +<p>The following is a list of collections of Plants from the Mishmee +Hills to the extreme East, Upper Assam.</p> +<pre> <i>Dicotyledones</i>. <i>Dicotyledones</i>. + + (Ligulatæ, 9) Ericineæ, 7 +Composi- (Cynaraceæ, 4) 89 Verbenaceæ, 8 +tæ, (Corymbiferæ, 76) Boragineæ, 2 + + Labiatæ, 50 +Valerianeæ, 1 Gesneriaceæ, 22 +Dipsaceæ, 1 Acanthaceæ, 38 +Caprifoliaceæ, 6 Scrophularineæ, 19 +Rubiaceæ, 42 Solaneæ, 6 + +Apocyneæ, ) 5 Convolvulaceæ, 8 +Asclepiadeæ, ) Primulaceæ, 1 + +Gentianeæ, 7 Myrsineæ, 19 +Oleinæ, 2 Escalloniaceæ? 3 +Jasmineæ, 6 Malvaceæ, 6 +Campanulaceæ, 7 Cruciferæ, 3 +Lobeliaceæ, 7 Polygaleæ, 1 +Vacciniaceæ, 2 Violaceæ, 5 +Passifloreæ, 1 Begoniaceæ, 6 +Modeccoideæ, 1 Umbelliferæ, 4 +Samydeæ, 1 Araliaceæ, 12 +Ampelideæ, Leea, 6 Rhamneæ, 1 +Balsamineæ, 15 Celastrineæ, 9 +Sileneæ, 6 Amaranthaceæ, 8 +Aurantiaceæ, 5 Polygoneæ, 12 +Meliaceæ, 5 Chenopodeæ, 1 +Sapindaceæ, 3 Plantagineæ, 1 +Acerineæ, 4 Urticeæ, 14 +Malpighiaceæ, 3 Ulmaceæ, 1 +Hypericineæ, 2 Euphorbiaceæ, 21 +Ternstrœmiaceæ, 11 Scepaceæ, 1 +Symplocineæ, 3 Stilagineæ, 5 +Ebenaceæ, 1 Myriceæ, 1 + + (Rhus, 5) Juglandeæ, 1 +Terebin- (Buchanania, 1) Cupuliferæ, 4 +thaceæ, (Phlebochiton, 1) 9 Betulaceæ, 5 + (Sabia, 2) Salicineæ, 1 + +Zanthoxyleæ, 5 Laurineæ, 8 +Conareæ, 1 Hamamelideæ, 2 +Trygophylleæ, 1 Thymeleæ, 1 +Rutaceæ, 2 Santalaceæ, 1 +Ranunculaceæ, 4 Loranthaceæ, 2 +Fumariaceæ, 2 Proteaceæ, 1 +Myristiceæ, 2 Elæagneæ, 1 +Anonaceæ, 4 Aristolochiæ, 3 +Magnoliaceæ, 1 Combretaceæ, 2 +Berberideæ, 1 Chlorantheæ, 1 +Lardizabaleæ, 1 Piperaceæ, 14 +Menispermeæ, 5 Coniferæ, 1 +Rosaceæ, 16 Incertæ, 17 +Leguminosæ, 31 Unarranged, 8 +Philadelpheæ, 2 Ditto, 14 +Saxifrageæ, 3 --- +Melastomaceæ, 9 725 +Onagrariæ, 3 --- +Myrtaceæ, 2 +Cucurbitaceæ, 6 +<i>Monocotyledones</i> <i>Acotyledones</i> + +Smilacineæ, 14 +Dioscoreæ, 1 Pteris, 21 +Peliosantheæ, 5 Blechnum, 1 +Tupistraceæ, 2 Dicksonia, 1 +Commelineæ, 10 Davallia, 12 +Tacceæ, 1 Lindsæa, 2 +Aroideæ, 6 Asplenium 27 +Scitamineæ, 6 Allantodioides, 6 +Orchideæ, 43 Aspidium, 22 +Apostaceæ, 1 Nephrodium, 16 +Palmæ, 3 Cyatheæ, 7 +Cyperaceæ, 22 Trichomanes, 4 +Gramineæ, 73 Hymenophyllum, 2 + --- Gleichenia, 1 + 187 Angiopteris, 1 + --- Botrychium, 1 + <i>Acotyledones</i> Lygodium, 2 + Lycopodium, 6 +Acrostichum, 12 Tinesipteris 1 +Ceterach, 2 Equisetum, 1 +Grammitis, 3 --- +Polypodium, 56 224 +Pleopeltis, 8 Monocotyledones,187 +Niphobolus, 1 Dicotyledones, 725 +Cheilanthes, 3 Mosses + unarranged, + about 50 +Adiantum, 3 ---- +Vittaria, 1 Total, 1186 +Lomaria, 1 ----</pre> +<p>N.B.—The plants enumerated above, were transmitted to the India +House in 1838, together with former collections made <i>in</i> <i>the</i> +<i>Tenasserim</i> Provinces.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3> +<p><i>Journey</i> <i>from</i> <i>Upper</i> <i>Assam</i> <i>towards</i> +<i>Hookhoom</i>, <i>Ava</i>, <i>and</i> <i>Rangoon</i>, <i>Lat</i>. +<i>27°25'</i> <i>to</i> <i>16°45'</i> <i>N</i>., <i>Long</i>. +<i>96°</i> <i>to</i> <i>96°20'</i> <i>E</i>.</p> +<p>We left Suddiya on the 7th of February 1837, and reached Kedding +on the 10th; stayed there one day, and reached Kamroop Putar, where +I found Major White and Lieut. Bigge on the 12th. The jungle to +this place was similar to the usual jungle of the Singpho country, very +generally low, and intersected by ravines. We crossed <i>en</i> +<i>route</i> the Karam river, the Noa Dihing, or Dihing branch of the +Booree Dihing, on which the Beesa’s old village was situated; +and lastly the Kamroop. Kamroop Putar is close to the Naga hills; +it is a cultivated rice tract, on the river Kamroop. This river +is fordable, with frequent rapids. The only curious things about +it are the petroleum wells, which are confined to three situations. +The wells are most numerous towards the summits of the range; and the +place where they occur is free from shrubs. The petroleum is of +all colours, from green to bluish white; this last is the strongest, +partaking of the character of Naphtha, it looks like bluish or greyish +clay and water. The vegetation of the open places in which the +wells are found, consists of grass, Stellaria, Hypericum, Polygonum, +Cyperaceæ, Mazus rugosus, Plantago media, etc., all of which are +found on the plains. One of the wells is found on the Putar, or +cultivated ground; the petroleum in this is grey. The Kamroop +river above this Putar, strikes off to the eastward, and the Kamteechick, +a tributary, falls into it from the south; this last is a good deal +the smaller; the banks of the Kamroop are in many places precipitous. +About two miles from the Putar, a fine seam of excellent coal has been +exposed by a slip: <a name="citation60"></a><a href="#footnote60">{60}</a> +the beds are at an inclination of 45°, and their direction is, I +think, nearly the same with that of the left bank of the river in which +they occur; immediately over the seam there is a small ravine, where +three of the veins are still farther exposed. Caricea, a new Dicranum, +Alsophila ferruginea, Polytrichum aloides, Bartramea subulosa, and Jungermanniæ +are common near this spot.</p> +<p>Left Kamroop on the 19th, and proceeded in a S.W. direction for twelve +miles, when we halted on the Darap Kha, at the foot of the Naga hills, +opposite nearly to Beesala. Nothing of interest occurred.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>21st</i>.—Commenced the ascent, and after marching +about ten miles, halted in a valley near a stream. Temperature +66°. Water boiled at 210½°, giving an altitude +of about 77°, or 383 feet above Suddiya. The road was very +winding, the path good, except towards the base of the hills: the soil +sandy, in places indurated, and resting on sandstone; but there is not +yet sufficient elevation to ensure much change in vegetation. +Found Kaulfussia <a name="citation61a"></a><a href="#footnote61a">{61a}</a> +below in abundance, observed Castanea and a Quercus; three species of +Begonia, and three or four species of Acanthacea. In other respects +the jungle resembles that of the Singpho territory. Dicksonia +is abundant. Dipterocarpus of large size occurs. Caught +two innocuous snakes at the halting place. <a name="citation61b"></a><a href="#footnote61b">{61b}</a></p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>22nd</i>.—The distance of the march is about +12 miles, and we halted after crossing the Darap Panee; some parts of +the route were difficult, at least for elephants. No particular +features of vegetation yet appears. The summit of the higher hills +looks pretty. Tree jungle considerable, open places with low grass, +is the surrounding feature of vegetation. The hill first surmounted +from the halting place is covered with a Camellia or <i>Bunfullup</i>, +(i.e. bitter tea) of the Assamese. The fruit has loculicidal dehiscence. +In habit it is like that of the tea, but the buds are covered with imbricate +scales. At the summit of the hill, it attained a height of 30 +or 40 feet. Begoniacea, Urticaceæ, Acanthaceæ, Filices, +are the most common.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>23rd</i>.—Halted to enable the elephants to +come up; they arrived about 10 A.M. Temperature of the air 75°, +water boiled at 210°, altitude 1029 feet. The Darap is a considerable +stream, but is fordable at the heads of the rapids. Fish abound, +especially <i>Bookhar</i>, a kind of Barbel, <a name="citation61c"></a><a href="#footnote61c">{61c}</a> +which reaches a good size. Clay slate appears to be here the most +common rock, and forms in many places the very precipitous banks of +the river. Alsophila ferruginea, Areca, Calami, Fici., Pentaptera, +Laurineæ, Myristiceæ continue. Kaulfussia assamica, +is common along the lower base of the hills.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>23rd</i>.—Started at 7, and after a march of +five hours, reached the halting place on the Kamtee-chick, some distance +above the place at which we descended to its bed. Distance 12 +miles, direction S.S.E.; crossed one hill of considerable elevation, +certainly 1000 feet above the halting place, which we find by the temperature +of boiling water to be 1413 feet above the sea. The tops of these +hills continue comparatively open, and have a very pretty appearance. +The trees, however, have not assumed a northern character; their trunks +are covered with epiphytes. The Kamtee-chick is a small stream +fordable at the rapids, the extreme banks are not more than 30 or 40 +yards. No peculiarity of vegetation as yet occurs; the fruit of +a Quercus continues common, as well as that of Castanea ferox. +I met with that of a Magnolia; Tree ferns, Calami, Musa, Areca, and +the usual sub-tropical trees continue; Acanthaceæ are most common, +Gordonea plentiful on the open places on the hills, Sauraufa two species, +Byttneria, etc. etc. Altogether, I am disappointed in the vegetation, +which, although rich, is not varied. Wallichia continues common. +A Begonia with pointed leaves, and a Smilacineous plant are the most +interesting, and a large Quercoid Polypodium, the lacineæ of which +are deciduous; and these I found in abundance on the Mishmee hills, +although I did not succeed in getting an entire frond.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>24th</i>.—Marched about ten miles all the way +up the bed of the Kamtee-chick, now a complete mountain stream, the +general direction being S.S.E. Traversed in places heavy jungle, +but for the most part we ascended the bed of the river. The only +very interesting plant was Podostemon, apparently Griffithianum, which +covers the rocks on the bed of the river. The usual plants continue, +viz. Scitamineæ, Phrynium capitatum, Tradescantia, Pæderia +and Isophylla, Pothos 2 or 3 species, Ixora 2, Leea, which occasionally +becomes arborescent. Cissus 3 or 4, Panax ditto, Pierardia sapida, +Elæocarpus, Smilax, Areca, Calami 2 or 3, Asplenium nidus, Fici +several, Pentaptera, Cupuliferæ, the latter rare; Bauheniæ +2, Acanthaceæ, one of which attains the size of a large shrub, +Guttiferæ 2, Phlebochiton, Rottlera, Millingtonia simplicifolia, +Inga, Wallichia, Pentaptera, Malvacea, and Acanthacea convallariæ +flore. I observed Pandanus to be common, (one Sterculia was yesterday +observed). Equisetæ 2, the larger being the plant of the +plains. Erythrina, Lagerstræmia grandiflora. Chondospermum, +Polypodium, Acrostichoides ferrugineum, and the fruit of Cedrela Toona, +Megala. Choranthus was not seen.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>25th</i>.—Proceeded about 100 yards up the Kamchick, +then crossed the Tukkaka, and commenced the ascent of a high hill, certainly +1000 feet above the elevation of our last halting place on the Kamchick: +the lower portion is covered with tree jungle, the upper portion of +the mountain is open, covered with a tall Saccharum and an Andropogon, +among which are mixed several Compositæ, and an Ajuga. Among +the grass, occur trees scattered here and there, chiefly of a Gordonia. +From the summit we had a pretty view of the Kamchick valley, closed +in to the S.W. by a high and distant wall, being part of the Patkaye +range. All the hills have the same features, but it is odd that +their highest points are thickly clothed with tree jungle. Observed +Kydia, Alstonia, <i>Eurya</i>, Triumfetta, Celtis, Engelhardtia, Rhus, +Rottlera, Loranthus, Callicarpa and Dicksonia all at a high elevation, +but this latter is scarce. No pines visible. <i>Dhak</i>, +Fici, Musa farinacea, Bambusæ continue. Compositæ +are common on the clearings. A Mimosa occurs on the summit, and +Andrachne, 3-foliata. Thence we descended for a short distance, +and halted at the foot of the Patkaye near the stream.</p> +<p>Direction S.S.E. Distance four miles.</p> +<p>Elevation 3026 feet. Temperature 66°. Boiling point, +206½°.</p> +<p>All the trees have a stunted appearance.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>26th</i>.—Halted.</p> +<p><i>Feb</i>. <i>27th</i>.—To-day ascended a hill to the W. of +our camp, certainly 500 feet above it; its features are the same, Porana +alata. Bignonia, a Leguminous tree, a ditto Mimosa. Panax, +Lobelia zeylanica, Artemisia, Cordia. Panicum curvatum, Anthistina +arundinacea.</p> +<p>Panicum <i>plicatoides</i>, Smithea, Hypericum of the plains, and +Potentilla, Sida, and Plantago all plain plants, are found at the summit. +To the S.W. of our camp are the remains of a stockade, which was destroyed +by fire, it is said, last year. The only interesting plants gathered +were a Cyrtandracea, Æschynanthus confertus mihi, a Dendrobium, +and a fine Hedychium, beautifully scented, occurring as an epiphyte. +Of Ficus several species are common. On the large mountain to +the N.E., either birch or larches are visible, their elevation being +probably 1000 feet above that of our camp.</p> +<p>The party halted until the 3rd March; I had one day’s capital +fishing in the Kamtee-chick with a running line.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>2nd</i>.—A Havildar arrived, bearing a letter +from Dr. Bayfield, <a name="citation64"></a><a href="#footnote64">{64}</a> +stating that he would be with the Major in two or three days.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>3rd</i>.—Capt. Hannay and I started in advance; +we crossed a low hill, then a torrent, after which we commenced a very +steep ascent. This ascent, with one or two exceptions, continued +the whole way to the top of the Patkaye range, which must be 1500 feet +above our halting place. The features continued the same. +The Patkaye are covered with dry tree jungle on the northern side. +The place, whence the descent begins, is not well defined: at first +winding through damp tree jungle. After a march of four hours +we descended to a small stream, the Ramyoom, which forms the British +boundary; this we followed for some distance through the wettest, rankest +jungle I ever saw: thence we ascended a low hill, and the remainder +of our march was for the most part a continued descent through dry open +tree jungle, until we again descended into the damp zone. We reached +water as night was setting in, and bivouacked in the bed of the stream.</p> +<p>The former vegetation continued until we reached the dry forest covering +the upper parts of the Patkaye, and here the forms indicating elevation +increased. Polygonatum, Ceratostemma, Bryum Sollyanum, and a Ternstrœmiacea +occurred, Epiphytical orchideæ are common, but were almost all +out of flower. Owing to the thickness of the jungle, and the height +of the trees, we could not ascertain what the trees were; but from the +absence of fruit, etc. on the ground, I am inclined to think that they +are not Cupuliferæ. <i>Betee</i> <i>bans</i>, (of the natives) +a kind of bamboo, perhaps the same as the genus Schizostachyum, N. ab. +E. is common all over the summit, and descends to a considerable distance, +especially on the southern side. On this side the prevalence of +interesting forms was much more evident. Along the Kamyoom I gathered +an Acer, an Arbutus, a Daphne. Polypodium arboreum ferrugineum +was likewise here very common. Succulent Urticeæ, Acanthaceæ +swarmed: a huge Calamus was likewise conspicuous. On this side +there is plenty of the bamboo called <i>Deo</i> <i>bans</i>, articulis +spinarum verticillis armatis, habitu B. bacciferæ. Among +the trees on the descent, Magnoliaceæ occur; the petals of one +I picked up were light yellow, tinged with brown in the centre. +A species of Viola occurred low down. I believe it is V. serpens. +On both sides, but especially the south Ceratostemma variegatum occurs; +this is common still lower down the Kamyoom. The trees along this +portion of the boundary nullah, are covered with masses of pendulous +Neckera and Hypna. On the summit I observed two species of Panax, +a fruitescent or arbusculous Composita, Asplenum nidus, Laurineæ, +etc.</p> +<p>The direction of the day’s journey was about S.S.E. The +distance 15 miles.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>4th</i>.—We reached almost immediately the +real Kamyoom, down which our route laid; we halted in its bed at 3, +after a march most fatiguing from crossing and recrossing the stream, +of about ten miles: general direction E.S.E. The features of this +torrent are precisely the same as those of the Kamteechick, but Sedgewickia +is common. I gathered a Stauntonia, Ceratostemma variegatum, and +some fine ferns, and two or three Begoniaceæ, Magnoliaceæ +three species occur, among which is Liriodendron; Cupiliferæ are +common, especially Quercus cupulis lamellatis, nuce depressa; a Viburnum +likewise occurred. The stream is small; the banks in many places +precipitous. In one place great portion of the base of a hill +had been laid waste by a torrent coming apparently from the naked rocks; +trees and soil were strewed in every direction. Clay-slate is +common.</p> +<p>I should have mentioned that Dicksonia occurs at 4000 feet, as well +as (Camellia) <i>Bunfullup</i>, after that the former ceases. +The two Saurauja of Suddiya continue up to 4000 feet of elevation; on +the first ascent I observed a large Thistle, but out of flower. +No cultivation was passed after surmounting the first ascent; we passed +the remains of a stockade on the 4th, in which some Singphos had on +a previous inroad stockaded themselves. The hills are generally +covered with tree jungle, except occasionally on the north side where +they have probably at some early period, been cleared for cultivation. +To this may be added the curious appearance of the trees indicating +having been lopped.</p> +<p>Equisetum continues in the bed of the river. Nothing like a +pine was observed.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>5th</i>.—Proceeded in an E.S.E. direction towards +Kamyoom for a distance of four miles, where we met Dr. Bayfield. +As we found from him that it was impossible to go on, as there were +no rice coolies, etc. to be obtained, we returned to our halting place; +where I remained chiefly from supposing that the Meewoon will start +less objections when he sees that I am in his territory without coolies, +etc. Fished in the afternoon. The Bookhar, or large Barbel +already mentioned, still continues; but there is another species still +more common, of a longer form, ventral fins reddish, mouth small, nose +gibbous rough; <a name="citation66"></a><a href="#footnote66">{66}</a> +it takes a fly greedily, and is perhaps a more game fish than the other. +All the birds inhabiting the water-courses of the north side of the +Patkaye continue. Barking Deer are heard occasionally.</p> +<p>Gathered one fine Bleteoidia Orchidea, racemis erectis oblongis, +sepalis petalisque fusco-luteis, arcte reflexis, labello albido, odore +forti mellis. Engelhardtia occurs here, Pentaptera, Wallichia, +Calamus, Saccharum, etc.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>7th</i>.—To-day the Meewoon arrived, accompanied +by perhaps 200 people chiefly armed with spears; he was preceded by +two gilt chattas. He made no objections to my remaining, and really +appeared very good-natured. The first thing he did, however, was +to seize a shillelagh, and thwack most heartily some of his coolies +who remained to see our conference. He did not stay ten minutes.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>8th</i>.—To-day I examined superficially the +ovary and young fruit of Ceratostemma variegatum, Roxb. The placenta +which is very green, is 5-rayed. The substance of the walls of +the ovary which is thick and white, projects towards the axis not only +between the lobes, but also opposite to each; so that the fruit is really +10-celled, but 5 of the cells are spurious. The production opposite +the placentæ necessarily divides the ovula of one placenta into +two parcels, and these are they that have no adhesion with the axis. +At present I can say nothing about the relative site of the lobes of +the placentæ, otherwise there is nothing remarkable, beyond the +production of the ovary opposite the lobes of the placentæ.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>12th</i>.—Yesterday evening Bayfield returned +alone, leaving Hannay on the Patkaye, unable to come on or retreat, +owing to his having no coolies. It was decided, that there was +no other step left me to follow than going on to Ava, and I thus am +enabled to obey the letter of Government, relative to my going to Ava, +which reached me on the 10th by the Havildar. The Meewoon can +give me no assistance towards returning, although he will spare me a +few men to carry me on to Mogam. For the last three days I have +been indisposed. Altitude 2138 by the Therm. Temp. 208°, +at which water boils.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>13th</i>.—Left and proceeded down the Kamyoom, +or properly Kam-mai-roan, according to Bayfield, in an E.S.E. direction +for about seven miles, when we reached the previous halting place of +Dr. Bayfield. We passed before arriving at this a small Putar +on which were some remains of old habitations; on it limes abound, and +these are a sure test of inhabitation at some previous period.</p> +<p>The vegetation continues precisely the same as that of the Namtucheek, +even to Podostemon Griffithianum, which I to-day observed for the first +time.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>14th</i>.—Proceeded on, still keeping for the +chief part of our march along the Kammiroan. We left this very +soon, and crossed some low hills on which the jungles presented the +same features. We left the village Kammiroan to our right. +We did not see it, but I believe it consists of only two houses. +Passed through one khet, the first cultivated ground we saw after leaving +that on the Kamchick; then we came on to a few more Putars, in which +limes continue abundant. On these I find no less than three species +of Rubus; in those parts on which rice has been cultivated a pretty +fringed Hypericum likewise occurs, and these are the most interesting +plants that have presented themselves. Our course improved much +yesterday; it extended E. by S., and was rather less than seven miles. +Halted at Kha-thung-kyoun, where the Meewoon had halted, and where the +Dupha Gam had remained some time previous. The same vegetation +occurs, Engelhardtia, Gleichenia <i>major</i> longe scandens, Equisetum +both species, Euphorbiacea nereifolia, Dicksonia rare, Scleria vaginis +alatis, Plantago media, Zizania ciliaris, Melastoma malabathrica, Lycium +arenarum, Duchesnia indica, Mazus rugosus, the Suddiya Viburnum, Millingtonia +pinnata, Pentaptera, Erythrina; an arboreous Eugenia fol. magnis, abovatis, +is however new, and Polypodium Wallichianum which occurred to-day growing +on clay-slate. But considering the elevation at which we still +remain to be tolerably high, the products both of the vegetable and +animal kingdom are comparatively uninteresting. There are more +epiphytical Orchideæ on the south sides of these hills, than the +north. Musci and Hepaticæ are common, but do not embrace +a great amount of species. Machantia asamica is common. +Another new tree I found is probably a Careya or Barringtonia; the young +inflorescence is nearly globular, and clothed with imbricated scales. +Sedgewickia has disappeared. No tea was seen. There is but +little doubt that on hills, the ranges of which rise gradually, the +acclimatization of low plants may take place to such a degree, that +such plants may be found at high elevations; can they however so far +become acclimated, as to preponderate? I expected of course to +find the same plants on both sides of the hills, but I did not expect +to find Rottleræ, Fici, tree-ferns, etc., at an elevation of 4000 +feet and upwards.</p> +<p>The fish of the streams continue the same, as well as the birds. +The Ouzel, white and black, long-tailed Jay, white-headed Redstart, +red-rumped ditto, all continue. Water Wagtails were seen to-day. +This bird is uncommon in hill water-courses; one snipe was seen yesterday. +Ooloocks (Hylobates agilis), continue as in Assam. With regard +to fish, both species of Barbel occur; <a name="citation68"></a><a href="#footnote68">{68}</a> +the most killing bait for the large one, or Bookhar of the Assamese, +is the green fucus, which is common, adhering to all the stones in these +hill-streams: it is difficult to fix it on the hook. The line +should be a running one, and not leaded, and the bait may be thrown +as a fly. To it the largest fish rise most greedily; plenty of +time must be allowed them to swallow before one strikes, otherwise no +fish will be caught. All the same Palms continue except Calami, +Areca, and Wallichiana.</p> +<p>Balsamineæ are uncommon. There is one however, although +rare, probably the same as the bright crimson-flowered one of the Meerep +Panee. Urticeæ have diminished; the Suddiya Viola occurred +yesterday, the Asplenium, fronde lanceolat. continues common.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>14th</i>.—Halted. Water boiled 209°. +Temp. 59 and 60°. Elevation 1622 feet.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>15th</i>.—Left the Meewoon about 8, and proceeded +about 100 yards up the Khathing. Thence we struck off, and commenced +the ascent, which continued without intermission for some hours, the +whole way lying through heavy tree jungle. Ascent in some places +very steep. On reaching the summit, or nearly so, the jungle became +more open, and the route continued along the ridge. We then descended +for 50 feet, and halted on an open grassy spot where we ascertained +the altitude to be 5516 feet. Boiling point 202°. Temperature +of the air 63°. The vegetation increased in interest; I noticed +near the Khathing, Buddleia neemda, Pladera Justicioidea, which continues +however all along even to 5000 feet. Thunbergia coccinea, Chondrospermum, +Dicksonia; near and on the summit Magnoliæ and two or three Cupuliferæ, +Daphne Strutheoloides, nobis, Gymnostomum involutum, Berberis pinnata, +the same as the Khasiya one, but scarce. Laurinea arborea, Bambusa +monogynia, Rubus moluccanus: Frutex Ruscordeus, Loranthus, Anthistiria +arundinacea, Melastoma, Cyathea, Compositæ, Conyzoideæ two +or three, Correas one, Hedychium, Eurya, Gleichenia, Hermannia, Lycopodium +ceranium, Hoya teretifolia, Acanthaceæ two or three, Bucklandia.</p> +<p>We thence descended, and after a longish march reached the Natkaw +Kyown, and finally halted on the Khusse Kyown. During this portion +I gathered some very interesting plants, a new Ceratostemma, Adamia, +two or three Orchideæ, a beautiful large flowered Cyrtandracea, +the same Daphne, an Umbellifera. Vaccineaceæ, four species +of Begoniæ, a Viburnum. Crawfurdia and Polypodium Wallichianum, +which roofed in our shed; Musci increased as well as Succulent Urticeæ +in shady places. Smilacinæ were common, especially one at +elevations of from 3 to 5000 feet inflorescentia cernua. The features +are the same, the drier woods crowning the ridges. On the trees +of these, Orchideæ and Filices are common, as well as in low parts +in which Acanthaceæ abound. I saw no <i>Betee</i>-<i>bhans</i> +nor Deo-bhans, (peculiar bamboos). Of the above, Ceratostemma, +Daphane, Smilacinæ, Cyathea, some of the Begoniæ, the large +flowered Cyrtandraceæ, Umbelliferæ are sure indications +of considerable elevation. The course was nearly south. +Distance about 13 miles. Thermometer in boiling water 206°. +Temperature of the air 50½°. Halting place, 3516.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>16th</i>.—Started before breakfast, and reached +the Khusee Kyoung without any material descent. Thence we continued +descending on the whole considerably until we reached Namthuga, at 10 +A.M. Thence the descent increased. Halted on Kullack Boom. +General direction S.; distance 13 miles. Noticed Areca up to 3800 +feet, as well as Cheilosandra obovata, Bletea melleodora, and Begonia +palmata as high as 3000 feet.</p> +<p>At Namthuga a Sambucus, probably S. Ebulus, a Mimosa, Pothos decursiva, +Hedychium, Urtica urens, Gleichenia major, Tradescanthia panicularis. +Between this and Kullack Boom Acanthaceæ are the most common; +Pæderia triphylla appears near the Boom, together with Arum viviparum. +Black Pheasants were likewise heard on our route. On the open +halting place, grasses preponderate. Anthestiria arundinacea, +arbusculous Gordonia, and Saurauja, a Laurinea, Styrax, etc. Æsculus +asamicus is common, and profusely in flower, and Pteris as on Thuma-thaya; +Musa glauca made its appearance. From this open space an extensive +view is obtained of Hookhoom valley, bounding which occurs a range of +hills stretching E.S.E. and W.N.W. These in the centre present +a gap in which a river is seen running S. The view to the E. is +impeded by the trees on that face of the hill. The valley is as +usual one mass of jungle, with here and there clear patches occurring, +especially to the W. of S., but whether from cultivation or not, I am +unable to say. The Namlunai river is visible; winding excessively, +especially to the E.S.E., it appears a considerable stream with much +sand: it passes out towards the gap above alluded to, winding round +the corner of the hills.</p> +<p>During the 16th, my attention was particularly directed towards Tea, +which was said positively to exist. I obtained some of the bitter +sort, or <i>Bunfullup</i>, but the plant which was pointed out to me +as tea certainly was not, although resembling it a good deal. +There is no reason for supposing, that it exists on these hills, and +if tea is brought hence, it is I should think a spurious preparation. +The soil is in many places yellow, in many brick-dust coloured. +If the Tea existed in abundance, I must have seen it.</p> +<p>The hills which confine the valley, at least those which are obvious +outliers of the Patkaye range, are characterised by conical peaks, and +there is a bluff rock of good elevation to the W.S.W. ½ S.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p71.jpg"> +<img alt="Valley of Hookhoom" src="images/p71.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>17th</i>.—Boiled water at 206° Fahr. +Thermometer in the air 61°. Elevation 3270. Commenced +the descent, which continued without interruption to the Loon-karankha, +where we breakfasted. The bed of this, which is a mere mountain +torrent, is of sandstone. Here Ceratostemma variegatum is very +common, and has larger, broader and more obovate leaves, than before +observed; Polypodium Wallichianum, a Begonia and Orchideæ are +common on its boulders. Continued our course at first up a considerable +ascent, thence it was nearly an uniform descent. Crossed the Namtuwa, +along which our course lay for a short time. The latter part was +through low wet jungle, along small water-courses, till we reached the +Panglai Kha, along which we continued for some time. Reached our +halting place on the Namtuseek about 2 P.M. General direction +E.S.E.; distance about ten miles. Noticed Podostemon Griffithianum, +on rocks on the Namtuwa. My collector gathered one Daphne, Acanthus +Solanacea occurred very abundantly, corinfundib. lab super postico, +infer reflexo, laciniis bifidis. Low down observed the usual Dipterocarpus, +Uncaria and Kaulfussia asamica, Dracæna. Mesua ferrea occurred +during the first part of the march. Noticed the tracks of a Rhinoceros. +At 5 P.M. water boiled at 210°. Temperature 69°. +Elevation 1099 feet.</p> +<p>The most interesting plants were an Arum, an undescribed Ceratostemma, +and a Celastrinea.</p> +<p>The collection formed between this place and Suddiya now amount to +about 500 species. The vegetation of the lower portions is the +same, or nearly so, on either side of the hills; but I did not observe +near this the Polypodium ferrugineum arboreum, although there is a small +arborescent species of this genus. On either side, the lower ranges +are clothed with heavy wet tree jungle, the under-shrubs consisting +of Acanthaceæ, Rubiaceæ, Filices, Aroideæ, and Urticeæ; +Kaulfussia does not ascend so high on this side. Acanthacea solanacea +appears peculiar to this side, although there is a species of the genus +on the Kammiroan.</p> +<p>The plants indicating the greatest elevation are Acer, Ceratostemma +miniatum, and angulatum, Vacciniaceæ; Daphne, particularly the +Patkaye one, and D. struthioloides, most of the Smilacineæ, Berberis, +etc. etc. Bucklandia Crawfurdii, Begoniæ, some Viburnia, +Cyathea, etc. of Ceratostemma (Gay Lussacium?) several, perhaps not +less than seven species occur; all have the same habit, and the same +depot of nourishment in the thick portion near the <i>collet</i>. +No Coniferæ exist, although the elevation is more than sufficient +to determine their appearance. In Orchideæ the flora is +certainly very rich, but few species are in flower</p> +<p>(<i>Memo</i>. To compare these elevational plants with those +from the Mishmee hills, on which, speaking from memory, they are more +abundant.)</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>18th</i>.—Left at half-past 6, and arrived +(after halting about one hour and a half) at 3 P.M. The road was +very circuitous, for the first part E. by S., subsequently for some +time N.N.E., and even N.E.; the general direction is perhaps E.; the +distance certainly 18 miles. The greater part of the route lay +through heavy but dryish tree jungle; but during the latter half, and +especially towards Nempean, Putars or cultivated fields increased in +number, and extent. We crossed one stream only. The soil +is yellow and deep, occasionally inclining to brick-red; it is apparently +much the same as that of Muttack. The low spots were uncommon. +We saw only two paths diverging from ours; one of these led to Bone, +which is about two miles from our path, in a south direction, and at +no great distance from the Namtuseek.</p> +<p>The features of the country and its productions are much the same +as those of Upper Assam, indeed strikingly so. During the earlier +part of our march we observed a fine Shorea in abundance; it had a noble +straight stem, but the leaves were too small for Saul. The only +new plants I found were Styrax floribus odoris, ligno albo close grained, +arbor mediocris, a Bæobotrys, two Goodyeræ, a Laurinea, +Sparganium! Tabernæmontana fructibus magnis, edulibus, fol. +obovatis, and a species of Shorea.</p> +<p>I noticed the following plants in the following order from Namtuseek: +Dicksonia, Areca, Calamus, Bambusa, speculis pubescentibus, deformatis, +a species of Phrynium, Pladera justicioides, Chrysobaphus Roxburghii, +Phyllanthus, Embilica, a species of Wendlandia common in places that +appeared to have been formerly cleared; Gnetum lepidotum, Celastrinea +<i>foliis</i> <i>Leguminosarum</i>, Bombax (inerme) Saccharum Megala, +Imperata cylindica, Anthistiria arundinacea, Ingæ sp., Sauraujæ +sp. Entada, Gleichenia, Hermannia, Blechnum orientale, Bæobotrys, +Meniscium 3-phyllum, Sonerila, Acanthus leucostachys, Diplazium of Kujoo, +<i>Podomolee</i>, Saccharum foliis apice spiraliter tortis, Osbeckia, +Rottlera, Lygodium, Rubus moluccanus, Centotheca, Zizania ciliaris, +Viola asamica, Potamogeton nutans, foliis linearibus, Limnophila, Pontederia +dilatata, Lobelia Zeylanica, Hypericum venustum. Panax foliis +supra decompositis spinosis, Callicarpæ 2 spec, Duchesnea indica, +Combretum, Melica latifolia, Magus rugosus, Vandellia peduncularis, +Villarsia pumila, Artocarpus integrifolius, Piper, Lagerstræmia +grandiflora, Roxb. Dillenia speciosa, Spathodea. All these exist +in Assam.</p> +<p>The birds are the same. As for instance, common Maina, Doves, +the Picus of low swampy places, and the <i>Lark</i> of the plains of +Assam. Squirrel, ventre ferrugineo. Black Pheasant, <i>Phasianus</i> +<i>leucomelanus</i>, Laurineæ, Acanthaceæ, Rubiacea and +Filices, are common in the jungles.</p> +<p>The Putars are clothed with the same grasses as in Assam. Imperata +cylindrica, Anthistiria arundinacea, Megala in low places with Alpinea +Allughas, in those lately under cultivation, the Campanula of the B. +pooter occurs, together with Hypericum, Gnaphalium, Poa and Carex.</p> +<p>From the frequent occurrence of these Putars, I should say that the +capabilities of the country, at least the latter half of our march, +improves as far as regards <i>halee</i> cultivation.</p> +<p>Throughout the march nothing occurred to shew that this part of the +valley is inhabited. We passed, however, an old and extensive +burying ground of the Singphos. Of the Putars only small portions +were cultivated, and the crops did not appear to be very good.</p> +<p>Nempean, which is a stockaded village, is about a quarter of a mile +from the encampment of the Meewoon, and about S.E., and within 200 yards +to the N.N.E. is a similar stockaded village called Tubone. Both +these villages are on the right bank of the Namturoon, which is a large +stream, as big nearly as the Noa Dihing at Beesa. B. measured +it, and finds its extreme bed to be 270 yards broad. The volume +of water is considerable, the rapids are moderate; it is navigable for +largish canoes. On this bank, <i>i</i>.<i>e</i>. right, there +is an extensive plain running nearly N. and S.; no part of it seems +to be cultivated. The scenery is precisely the same as that of +Upper Assam, viz. open, flat, intersected by belts of jungle. +With the exception of the W. and the points between this and south, +hills are visible, some of considerable height. To the S.E. there +is a fine peak, which reminds one much of the Mishmee peak, so remarkable +at Suddiya. It is in this direction that the hills are highest.</p> +<p>No tea is reported to exist here. B. met with it on his road +hither, and shewed me the specimen; there is no difference between this +and the Assam specimens in appearance, neither are the leaves at all +smaller. As a new route has been cut out I cannot visit it, but +shall wait until I arrive at Meinkhoom.</p> +<p>The Chykwar Mulberry occurs, and to a larger size than I have seen +it in Assam. The Singphos, however, as they have no silkworms, +do not make use of it; I have seen some little cultivation on the Tooroon +belonging to Bon: Kanee or Opium formed portion of it.</p> +<p>Thermometer in shade at 2 P.M. 85°.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>21st</i>.—7 A.M. Thermometer 60°. +Yesterday at 2 P.M. 86°! under a decently covered shed.</p> +<p>Boiled water at 209½ Fahr. Thermometer 70°, which +gives 1399 feet of elevation.</p> +<p>Started at 9, and arrived at Kidding on the Saxsai, a small stream +which now falls into the Tooroon. Distance about four miles and +a half from Nempean: general direction about S.S.E. The road runs +along the Tooroon S., and a little to the W. of S.; it then diverges +up the Saxsai, which runs nearly W. and E. Near the mouth of the +Saxsai, and about 400 yards above, there is another small stream, the +Jinnip Kha. Both these are on the left bank of the river. +On the opposite side, and about a quarter of a mile, is a village, which +like all the rest is stockaded. Kidding is larger than either +Tubone or Nempean; it is on the left bank of the Saxsai. Rapids +are common in the Tooroon, but are not of any severity.</p> +<p>The vegetation remains in a remarkable degree similar to that of +Assam. The Lohit Campanula is very common in the stony beds of +either river.</p> +<p>Brahminy Ducks seen at Nempean, and the ravenous Geese of Kamroop +Putar. Fished in the Tooroon, and had excellent sport, killing +in the afternoon twenty fishes, average weight half pound; some weighing +nearly two pounds. Three species occurred, and all were taken +with flies; the smallest are a good deal like the <i>Boal</i> of Assam. +The large-mouthed, trout-like Cyprinida <a name="citation74a"></a><a href="#footnote74a">{74a}</a> +occurs, and to a larger size than in the Noa Dihing. The third +is the <i>Chikrum</i> of the Singphos; it is a thick, very powerful +fish, a good deal resembling the Roach: one of two pounds, measures +about a foot in length. Outline ovate lanceolate, head small, +mouth with four filaments; eyes very large, fins reddish, first ray +of the dorsal large spinous. It affects deep water, particularly +at the edges of the streams running into such places. <a name="citation74b"></a><a href="#footnote74b">{74b}</a> +It takes a fly greedily even in quite still water; but as it has a small +mouth, the smaller the flies the better. Black hackle is better +for it than small grey midges. On being hooked it rushes off with +violence, frequently leaping out of the water. It is a much more +game fish than the Bookhar: the largest I took with flies; with worms +I took only one small one. With regard to the Bookhar, it is strange +if it is not found in the streams running through this valley, as in +the Kammaroan it occurs in abundance.</p> +<p>Black and white Kingfisher, <i>Alcedo</i> <i>rudis</i>, Snippets, +Curlews of the B. pooter, with chesnutish back occur in the valley, +together with Toucans: and Ravens occur as in Assam.</p> +<p>At the village of Kidding there are silkworms fed.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>22nd</i>.—Started at 6 P.M., reached Shelling +khet on the Prong Prongkha in about two hours; it is distant about seven +miles. The village is now deserted. The nullah is small, +with a very slow stream; direction from Kidding nearly S.E. It +was at this place that Bayfield got his specimen of tea, but on enquiry +we found that it was brought from some distance; it is said to grow +on a low range of hills. We started after breakfast, and reached +Culleyang, on the same nullah, about 12 o’clock. Total distance +thirteen miles; direction S.S.E. Path very winding. The +country traversed is much less open than that of Nempean, but few Putars +occurred; and the whole tract is covered either with tree or Megala +jungle. Water boiled at Shelling khet at 209½ Fahr. +Temp. of the air 68½°. Elevation 1340 feet. Noticed +but very little clearing for cultivation, neither did the Putars appear +to have been lately under cultivation.</p> +<p>Culleyang is a village containing about eight houses; it is not stockaded, +and has the usual slovenly appearance of Singpho villages. The +natives keep silkworms, which they feed on the Chykwar or Assam morus, +which they cultivate. I noticed likewise Kanee, or Opium, and +Urtica nivea, which they use for nets; Acanthaceæ, Indigofera, +and Peach trees.</p> +<p>Close to the village are the burying places of two Singphos. +These have the usual structure of the cemeteries of the tribe, the graves +being covered by a high conical thatched roof. I find from Bayfield, +that they first dry their dead, preserving them in odd shaped coffins, +until the drying process is completed. They then burn the body, +afterwards collecting the ashes, which are finally deposited in the +mounds over which the conical sheds are erected. Between the village +and the graves I saw one of these coffins which, if it contained a full-grown +man, must have admitted the remains in a mutilated shape; and close +to this were the bones of a corpse lately burnt.</p> +<p>To-day I shot the beautiful yellow and black crested Bird we first +saw on the Cossiya hills, <i>Parus</i> <i>Sultaneus</i>, and two handsome +Birds, <i>Orioles</i>, or <i>Pastor</i> <i>Traillii</i>, quite new to +me, blackish and bright crimson, probably allied to the Shrikes.</p> +<p>Of fishes, Cyprinus falcata, or <i>Nepoora</i> of the Assamese, together +with the Sentooree <a name="citation75"></a><a href="#footnote75">{75}</a> +of the Assamese, both occur. Of plants, we noticed Stauntonia, +Vitis, Cissampelos, Butomus pygmæus, Dicksonia, Hedychia 2, Croton +Malvæfolium of Suddiya, Xanthium indicum; Cheilosandra ferruginea, +Pothos scandens decursiva, etc., Liriodendrum, Kydia. Ficus elastica? +Asplenium nidus, Conyza graveolens, south of the old clearings. +Lemna, Valisneria, Azolla, Æsculus asamicus in abundance. +Limes in profusion near Culleyang; Pæderia fætida and the +other species, Naravelia, Hiræa, Phrynium dichotomum, Gærtnera, +and Carallia lucida. New plants, Ophioglossum, Carex, Gnetum sp. +nov. Choripetalum, and two <i>incerta</i>. Noticed Pladera justicioides +during the first part of the march, and the small Squirrel of Kujoodoo.</p> +<p>Six A.M. Temperature 58½. Water boiled at 210° +Fahr. 8 P.M. Temperature of the air 66. Altitude 1064 +feet.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>23rd</i>.—Started at 6 A.M. and reached Lamoom +about 8, where we breakfasted. Reached Tsilone, the Dupha’s +village, at noon. General direction S.W. Distance about +ten miles. Lamoom is a small <i>un</i>stockaded village on the +Moneekha. Tsilone is a moderate sized Singpho village on the right +bank of the Nam Tunail. The river is of considerable size, with +scarcely any rapids: stream slow. The village is situated on a +rather high bank.</p> +<p>The country continues the same, perhaps a little more open, at least +Putars are of frequent occurrence, although they are all narrow. +Observed Cryptolepis, Celastrus <i>leguminoideus</i> Cuscuta Uncaria +racemis pendulis. Of birds the smaller Maina, common house Sparrow, +blue Jay, and the larger grey Tern occur. We halted on a sandbank +about one mile and a half higher up to the south of Tsilone. New +plants, the Campanula of Chykwar, ditto Lysimachia, Dopatrium, Jasminum, +Rhamnea, Pothos, Lasia, Riccia, etc.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>24th</i>.—Thermometer 58°. Boiling +point 210. Altitude 1064 feet. After a long and hot march +of seven hours we reached Meinkhoon; general direction -- distance 17 +miles. During the first two hours we marched along the bed and +banks of the Nam Tenai, subsequently over grassy plains intersected +by belts of jungle. Country much more open than that we saw yesterday. +To the W. low ranges of hills, about one-third of a mile distant, occurred +throughout the day. We passed two or three small nullahs, in one +of which I observed lumps of lignite.</p> +<p>The Nam Tenai continued a large river, extreme breadth varying from +250 to 350 yards. We crossed at once, about half a mile from our +encampment, deepest part of the ford four feet; its banks are either +thickly wooded or covered with Kagara jungle. The day’s +march was very uninteresting. I observed a few Mango trees, a +Mucuna, Laurineæ are common, as well as a Wendlandia in open grassy +places. Sagittariæ sp. was the only novelty. Noticed +the Hoopoe bird, <i>Upapa</i> <i>Capensis</i>.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p76.jpg"> +<img alt="Meinkhoom" src="images/p76.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>25th</i>.—Meinkhoon is situated on a very small +nullah, the Eedeekha. The village which is large and well stockaded, +is divided into two by this nullah. The population of both cannot, +including children, be less than 200. They belong to the Meerep +tribe. The women wear the <i>putsoe</i> somewhat like those of +Burma, which seems to me quite new in Singpho women; and is not the +fashion with those in Assam. To the S.W. there is a group of somewhat +decayed Shan Pagodas, and a Poonghie house, around which are planted +mango trees and a beautiful arboreous Bauhinia, B. rhododendriflora +mihi, ovariis binis! Around the village is an extensive plain, +and to the S.E. one or two more Pagodas. This Bauhinia has flowers +1½ inches across, calyx spathaceus, petalis, sub-conformibus, +obovatis, repandis læte purpureis, vexillo coccineo-purpureo, +colore saturate venoso, carinæ petalis distantibus, odor Copaivæ! +Stam. 5 declinata, cum petalis, alternantia. Ovaria 2! anticum +posticumque, longe stipetata, difformia superiore minore, aborticate, +ambobus vexillo oppositis! Stylus ruber pallide; stigma capitatum. +One B. variegata, W. Roxb. Fl. Indic. vol. ii. p.319, quamvis auctor +de ovario antico silet.</p> +<p>Two snakes were captured, approaching in shape to the green snake +of the Coromandel Coast. Under surface throughout bright gamboge +colour; upper surface throughout, excepting about a span or less of +the back of the neck, bright ochraceous brown. The space above +alluded to is in one faintly, in the other strongly variegated with +black and white. Irides, gamboge-coloured.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>26th</i>.—Visited the amber mines, which are +situated on a range of low hills, perhaps 150 feet above the plain of +Meinkhoon, from which they bear S.W. The distance of the pits +now worked is about six miles, of which three are passed in traversing +the plain, and three in the low hills which it is requisite to cross. +These are thickly covered with tree jungle. The first pits, which +are old, occur about one mile within the hills. Those now worked +occupy the brow of a low hill, and on this spot they are very numerous; +the pits are square, about four feet in diameter, and of very variable +depth; steps, or rather holes, are cut in two of the faces of the square +by which the workmen ascend and descend. The instruments used +are wooden-lipped with iron crowbars, by which the soil is displaced; +this answers but very imperfectly for a pickaxe: small wooden shovels, +baskets for carrying up the soil, etc., buckets of bark to draw up the +water, bamboos, the base of the rhizoma forming a hook for drawing up +the baskets, and the Madras lever for drawing up heavy loads.</p> +<p>The soil throughout the upper portion, and indeed for a depth of +15 to 20 feet, is red and clayish, and appears to inclose but small +pieces of lignite; the remainder consists of greyish slate clay increasing +in density as the pits do in depth: in this occur strata of lignite +very imperfectly formed, which gives the grey mineral a slaty fracture, +and among this the amber is found. <a name="citation78"></a><a href="#footnote78">{78}</a> +The deepest pit was about 40 feet, and the workmen had then come to +water. All the amber I saw, except a few pieces, occurred as very +small irregular deposits, and in no great abundance. The searching +occupies but little time, as they look only among the lignite, which +is at once obvious. No precautions are taken to prevent accidents +from the falling in of the sides of the pits, which are in many places +very close to each other (within two feet): but the soil is very tenacious.</p> +<p>We could not obtain any fine specimens; indeed at first the workmen +denied having any at all, and told Mr. B. that they had been working +for six years without success. They appear to have no index to +favourable spots, but having once found a good pit they of course dig +as many as possible as near and close together as they can. The +most numerous occur at the highest part of the hill now worked. +The article is much prized for ornaments by the Chinese and Singphos, +but is never of much value; five rupees being a good price for a first-rate +pair of earrings. Meinkhoon is visited by parties of Chinese for +the purpose of procuring this article. There are at present here +a Lupai Sooba and a few men, from a place three or four days’ +journey beyond the Irrawaddi, waiting for amber. These men are +much like the Chinese, whose dress they almost wear: they squat like +them, and wear their hair like them; shoes, stockings, pantaloons, jackets, +tunic. They are armed chiefly with firelocks, in the use of which +at 50 yards two of the men were expert enough. They talk the Singpho +language.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the plains, proceeding to the mines, is unchanged. +Noticed Apluda, a Phyllanthus, Cacalia, Poa, etc. That of the +hills is the same as that of the low ranges before traversed. +The only new plants were a Celtis? a Krameria (the Celtis is the Boolla +of Upper Assam,) Ventilago, Quercus or Castanea, Compositæ, etc. +In the damp places a largish Loxotis, two or three Begoniæ, ditto +Urticeæ occur. I noticed among and around the pits a species +of Bambusa, Celtis, Kydia calycina, Clerodendrum infortunatum, Calamus, +Areca, Dicksonia, Ficus, Pentaptera, and Rottlera. Pladera has +ceased to appear.</p> +<p>Last night a sort of alarm occurred, and in consequence, this evening, +the head cooly gave his orders to his men in the following terms: “Watch +to-night well.” Nobody answering him, he continued, “Do +you hear what I say?” Then addressed himself to them in +the most obscene terms, which habit and uncivilized life seem to have +adapted to common conversation amongst these people without any breach +of modesty or decorum; and amongst the Assamese such expressions likewise +form not an uncommon mode of familiar salutation.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>27th</i>.—Left about 7, and proceeded over +the Meinkhoon plain in an easterly direction, in which the highest hills +visible from the village lay. We continued east for some time, +our course subsequently becoming more and more south. On reaching +the Nempyokha, we proceeded up its bed for about two miles, the course +occasionally becoming west. We reached Wollaboom at 12½. +General direction S.E.; distance thirteen miles. The greater part +of the country traversed consisted of low plains, splendidly adapted +for <i>halee</i> cultivation. No villages were passed. Saw +two paths, one leading to the N., one to the S. not far from Meinkhoon; +of these the N. one leads to the hills, the S. to a Singpho village. +And we passed burial places of some antiquity, and considerable extent. +New plants; a Loranthus floribus viridibus, petalis 6 reflexis. +Zizyphoidea, and an arborescent Bignonia foliis cordatis oppositis, +integris, basi bi-glandulosis, paniculis racemiformibus, solitariis +et axillaribus vel terminalibus et aggregatis. Marlea Sporobolus, +Castanea edulis, Pteris dimediata, etc., occurred. Noticed the +tracks of a Tiger, of Elks, and the Peewit or Curlew.</p> +<p>Woollaboom is rather a large village on the Nempyokha, which is here +scarcely 40 yards broad; it is of no depth, and has not much stream. +The villagers are Meereps, but seem to bear a small proportion to their +Assamese slaves. It is not stockaded, but was so formerly. +The Souba, like a Hero and a General, has erected a small stockade for +himself near his house, out of which he might be with ease forced by +a long spear, or a spear-head fastened to a bamboo. He is an enemy +of the Duphas, indeed almost all appear to be so. Whatever events +the return of this Gam to Assam may cause, it appears obvious to me, +that the feuds in Hookhoom will not cease but with his death. +So much is he hated, that B. informs me that his destruction is meditated +directly the Meewoon retires to Mogam.</p> +<p>Water boiled at 210° Fahr. Elevat. 1064 feet.</p> +<p>List of Plants observed in Hookhoom, which occur likewise in Assam.</p> +<pre>Eclipta floribus albis, Dactylon. +Pogonatherum crinitum, Cardamine. +Verbena chamædrys? Sisymbrium. +Phlebochiton extensum, Gærtnera. +Ehretia arenarum, Phrynium capitatum. +Erythrinæ, sp. ----- dichotomum. +Trematodon sabulosum, Hiræa. +Marchantia asamica, Naravalia. +Euphorbiacea nerifolia, Liriodendrum. +Adelia nereifolia, Roxb. Pæderia fœtida, and another. +Spilanthus, Azolla. +Convolvulus flore albo, Lemna. +Mimosa sudiyensis-stipulis am- Conyza graveolens, + plis foliaceis, on clearings. +Vandellia pedunculata, Asplenium nidus. +Bonnayæ sp. fol. spathulatis Ficus elastica. + floribus saturate cæruleis, Kydia calycina. +Cordia of Suddiya, Pothos scandens. +Ricinus communis, (See Journal, Croton malvæfolium. +p.174.) Hedychium. +Buddleia Neemda, Hedychim, bracteis + obtusis, apice + reflexis, concavis. +Urtica gigas, +Plantago media, Dicksonia. +Cotula, 2 species, Phlogacanthus, <i>major</i>. +Coladium nympheæfolium, Vitis. +Millingtonia pinnata, Butomus pygmæus. +Uricariæ sp. Cissampelos. +Saccharum spontaneum, Stauntonia. +Eleusine indica, Apludæ sp. +Cynoglossum canescens, Clerodendrum infortunatum. +Æsculus asamicus, Vandellia pedunculata. +Cynodon, Mangifera indica. +Ardisia fol. obovatis, umbellis Briedelia. + nutanti-pendulis, on the hills. Marlea. +Cheilosandra. Pteris dimidiata. +Loxotis major. Centotheca. +Bauhinia variegata. Castanea edulis. +Cacalia rosea. Sporobolus.</pre> +<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3> +<p><i>Continues</i> <i>the</i> <i>Journey</i> <i>from</i> <i>Hookhoom</i> +<i>Valley</i>; <i>Lat</i>. <i>26°20'</i> <i>N</i>., <i>Long</i>. +<i>96°40'</i> <i>E</i>., <i>towards</i> <i>Ava</i>.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>28th</i>.—Started at 5½ A.M., and arrived +at a halting place at 3½ P.M. General direction nearly +south. Distance 22 miles. Throughout the first part we followed +the Kampyet, on the left bank of which Wulloboom is situated. +We thence diverged into jungle. The remainder of the time was +occupied in crossing low hills, with here and there a small plain. +We halted on a nullah, which discharges itself into the Mogam river.</p> +<p>In the Kampyet I saw abundance of Bookhar fish: these indeed actually +swarm. The country throughout was uninteresting, although in the +tree jungle clothing the small hills we crossed there are noble timber +trees. I saw one of the finest Fici, I ever saw. The Botany +of these hills was very interesting; for instance, a Conifera taxoidea +occurred, a new Cyrtandracea, ditto Acanthaceæ 2, Begoniæ +2, Tankervillia speciosa, a species of Bletea, etc. etc.</p> +<p>I also observed Lindsæa, and Pteris in abundance. Hymenophyllum, +Davallia atrata, Diplazium, Begonia Malabarica? Bambusa spiculis hispidis, +Hypni sp. spinivenio prop. Dicranum glaucum, etc. etc. A fine +Alpinia occurred near Wulloboom.</p> +<p>We observed no other signs of population than an old burial ground, +near where you strike off into the hills.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>29th</i>.—Marched in a southerly direction +from 5½ to 1½ P.M., inclusive of a halt of two hours nearly: +distance fifteen miles. Country, etc. continue the same. +Crossed same nullahs <i>en</i> <i>route</i>, before we reached the Mogam +river at 11 A.M. Our course continued down it for 300 yards; we +then crossed into the jungle, and traversed a low rising ground: subsequently +we descended on the bed of the river. The jungle was for the most +part dry.</p> +<p>Fish abound in the Mogam river; in one place I never saw such swarms +of Bookhar, thousands must have been congregated. The river is +of no great size, the extreme banks being at our halting place about +30 yards distant. No rapids occur here, and the stream is in general +gentle.</p> +<p>Noticed the Shorea, which is the <i>Foung</i> <i>bein</i> of the +Burmese. Some occurred of gigantic size. It is strange, +but a considerable change has occurred in the Flora since we left Hookhoom. +Thus, Jonesia and Peronema, Jack? or at least one of the involucrate +Vitices occurred, as well as a large Byttneria? fructibus echinatissimis. +A climbing species of Strychnos, a Diospyros, a Sapindacea, were the +principal new plants. Dicksonia and Polypodium Wallichianum continue.</p> +<p>Slackia of Cuttackboom has white infundibuliform bilabiate flowers, +tubo brevi, deorsum leniter curvato, lobo medio labii inferioris reliquis +minore, lab. super. intus biplicato, plicis sursum convergentibus, +stam. quinto valde rudimentario, antheris apice cohærentibus. +The new Cyrthandracea of yesterday is suigeneris, Ramondiæ affinis. +Of this there are three species, two of which I have not seen in flower. +Calycis laciniæ lineari-subulatæ. Cor. rotata, subregularis +Stam. 4, subsessilia connectivis amplis, quinto minimo dentiformi. +Stylus declinatus, Stigma subsimplex, Capsula (per junior) siliquosa. +Herbæ vel suffrutices, hispidæ, habitu peculiari. +Folia alterna! vel summa sparsa vel ob approximationem sub-opposita: +intervenia areolata, areolis piliferis, pilis basi bulbosis. Inflorescentia +axillaris, cymosa, dichotoma.</p> +<p>The Tankervellia (or Pharus?) has sepala pet. conformia extus alba, +intus fusco-brunnea, labellum cucullatum, breve, calcaratum; intus inconspicue +bilamellatum; extus albidum margines versus exceptis qua uti intus fusco-sanguineum, +fauce saturatiore. Columnæ albæ clavale sursum subulata. +Anthera fere immersa, Rostellum integrum ut in omnibus glandula orbotis +Pollinia 8. 5 A.M.—Temperature 62. 210.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>30th</i>.—Marched for about thirteen miles +along the bed of the river, and a more uninteresting march I never had. +We breakfasted about four miles from our halting place at the granary +of the Meewoon. The bed of the river continues wider, and more +sandy: the water being in general shallow. The only acquisitions +met with to-day are Grislea, an arborescent Capparidea, and a pretty +Grewia. Of birds, I noticed the Avocet, or curved-billed Plover, +the grey Kingfisher, the green Pigeon, and the snake-bird, Plutus Levalliantia. +The plants occupying the banks and the bed of the river are the same, +viz. Ehretia, Saccharum spontaneum, spirale; <i>Kagara</i>, Erythrina, +Ficus, Gnaphalia, Podomolee, Bombax. Of fish, Cyprinus falcata, +and <i>Nepoora</i> <i>mas</i>, occur in this river.</p> +<p>Temperature at 5¼ A.M. 6l. Water boils at 210.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>31st</i>.—Continued our march down the Mogaung +river, passing through a most uninteresting, inhospitable-looking tract. +General direction S.E., distance fourteen miles. The river is +not much enlarged: it is still shallow, and much spread out, and impeded +by fallen trees and stumps; it is navigable for small boats up to the +Meewoon’s granary. Noticed Æsculus in flower. +Of birds, saw the grey and black-bellied Tern.</p> +<p>The Botanical novelties are an arborescent Salix, a ditto Cordia +floribus suave odoratis, Phyllanthus Embelica.</p> +<p>Saw some cultivation on low hills to the S.E. and E. inhabited by +Kukheens. 1st April. Temperature 63. Water 210¼ +altitude.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>1st</i>.—Started at 5¼. Leaving +almost directly the Mogaung river we traversed extensive open plains, +halting for breakfast on the Wampama Kioung. This we crossed, +continuing through open plains until we came to patches of jungle consisting +of trees, and quite dry. We subsequently traversed more open plains +until we reached the Mogaung river, on the opposite (right) bank of +which Camein is situated. These plains were in many places quite +free from trees; they are, except towards the south, quite surrounded +with low hills, the highest of which are to the E., and among these, +Shewe Down Gyee, from which the Nam Tenai rises, is pre-eminent, looking +as if it were 3000 feet high, and upwards. The hills although +generally wooded are in many places quite naked; and as the natives +say, this is not owing to previous cultivations, I suppose that they +are spots naturally occupied entirely by Gramineæ. The plains +slope towards the hills on either side. They are covered with +Gramineæ; among which Imperata, occasionally Podomolee and Saccharum, +Anthistiria arundinacea, a tall Rottboelia, and Andropogon occur; and +in the more open spaces a curious Rottboellioidea, glumis ciliatis, +is common. In addition a Polygala, a Crucifera with bracteæ +and white flowers, an Acanthacea, Prenanthes? Centranthera tetrastachys +are met with. The trees are quite different from those of Hookhoom; +the principal one is a Nauclea; Bombax, Wendlandiæ sp., a Rhamnea, +Phyllanthus, and Bignonia cordifolia occur; the Nauclea giving a character +to the scenery. The Botany of the patches of jungle is varied. +Strychnos Nux-vomica is common; Congea tomentosa, Engelhardtia, etc. +Bauhinia arborea, and Costus also occur.</p> +<p>Teak occurred to-day for the first time, but not in abundance, neither +were the specimens fine: it was past flowering, it occurred only between +the patches of jungle among grass. I should have mentioned, that +throughout the first portion of the plains traversed, a dioceous dwarf +Phœnix was not rare, as well as an Herpestes. A beautiful +Rose occurs on the banks of nullahs, and at Camein, on the Mogaung river: +it has large white flowers, involucrate; smell sweet like that of a +Jonquil.</p> +<p>The general direction of the march was S.S.E. Distance fourteen +miles.</p> +<p>Camein consists of two stockaded villages: the smaller one being +situated on a small hill on the Endaw Kioung, which comes from near +the serpentine mines, and falls into the Mogaung river here; this has +about twelve houses: the one below about twenty, the inhabitants are +Shans chiefly, and appear numerous and healthy. Assamese slaves +are not uncommon.</p> +<p>Observed the large blue Kingfisher of the Tenasserim coast, <i>Alcedo</i> +<i>sinensis</i>.</p> +<p>The day’s Botany was very interesting, more so than that of +any other days, excepting two on the higher ranges of the Naga hills. +The Crucifera is highly interesting. In the woods Alstonia and +Elephantopus; Salvinia is common in marshes.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Left at 10 A.M., proceeding over the +low hill to the W. of lower Camein; our course continued traversing +low ranges and small intermediate plains, which we skirted. At +noon we reached the Tsee Een nullah, where we found a large party of +Shan Chinese, returning from the mines; they had but few Ponies, and +still fewer Mules. Their dress, appearance, habits, etc. are those +of the lower orders of Chinese. After leaving this our course +continued over similar country, until we reached the Endaw Kioung at +3 P.M., which we crossed, halting on its left bank; it is a stream of +much strength and a broad bed, but shallow. We saw some cultivation +on low hills to the W.N.W., and could distinguish two or three houses; +it is a small village inhabited by Meereps.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the valleys or plains continues the same, but in +addition to the Rottboelleoidea minor, is a curious Andropogon, and +on the skirts of the hills a large Anthistiria; some of the finest specimens +of teak also occurred. Bamboo in abundance; otherwise the trees +are, with a few exceptions, completely changed. A fine arborescent +Wendlandia, Bignonia indica? fructibus siliquo-formibus spiraliter tortis, +arborea, Kydia, Eurya arborea, and many other fine trees occurred, but +these I leave until my return. On one plain I noticed a Cycas, +caudice simplici vel dichotomo, and the Phœnix of yesterday. +In the Endaw Kioung two species of Potamogeton, Azolla, and Pistia, +Villarsia and Ceratophyllum occur.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>3rd</i>.—5¼ A.M. Therm. 55. +Water boiled at 210. Elevation 1064 feet.</p> +<p>Continued our journey over similar country, marching from half-past +5 to 1 P.M., including an hour’s halt. Distance fifteen +miles: general direction S.S.W. Passed many streamlets, and continued +for some time close to the Endaw, which is still a largish river, apparently +deep, with a sluggish stream. The plains continue, but of much +narrower diameter. Met many Shan Chinese and two parties of Mogaung +people returning from the mines.</p> +<p>The most interesting plants of to-day are a Santalacea, a climbing +species, racemis subpendulis, of Citrus—Citrus scandens, Cardiopteris +of which I found old fruit alone, a new Roydsia, R. parviflora mihi.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the plains continues unchanged, a Dillenia with +small yellow flowers is common on their skirts, Bignonia cordata occurs +as a large tree; no one has seen teak. There is something peculiar +in the appearance of the trees of the plains, especially of the Nauclea; +they look scraggy. I picked up the flowers of an arborescent Hibiscus, +and the fruit of Lagertræmia grandiflora.</p> +<p>Halted on an old rice khet, near a pool of tolerably clear water.</p> +<p>Bignonia cordata has sweet smelling flowers, lab. medio labii inferioris +bicristato. Is it not rather a Viticea, owing to the absence of +the 5th stamen? Phlebochiton, Sambucus, Butomus pygmæus. +Many portions of the hills are covered with plantains in immense numbers, +(not Musa glauca). On hills bounding to the south, one or two +spots of cultivation belonging to a village in the interior occur. +The Shans wear curious sandals made of a sort of hemp, at least those +who do not wear the usual Chinese shoes. <i>4th</i>.—5¼ +A.M. Temperature 55½. Water boiled at 210. +Elevation as before.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>4th</i>.—Continued our course through exactly +the same kind of country, the plains becoming much narrower. Reached +the path leading to Keouk Seik after five hours’ marching, and +up to this our course was nearly the same with that of yesterday, between +W.S.W. and S.W. We did not see the village; several (seven or +eight) houses are visible on the hill, which here extends north and +south, and along which runs a nullah, the Kam Theem.</p> +<p>From this place our course continued almost entirely over low hills +not exceeding 800 feet above us, until we halted on the margin of a +plain bounded to the W. by the Boom, which runs N. and S., the direction +being W.N.W. Distance seventeen miles. On our march we met +several parties of Shans, Burmese, and Singphos. The path from +the village to this is much better, and much more frequented than any +of the other parts. Most of the parties were loaded with Serpentine. +Noticed <i>en</i> <i>route</i>, both on the plains and on the hills, +Teak; in the latter situations many of the specimens were very fine. +Another noble Dipterocarpea arborea was observed. I observed Drymaria, +Vallaris solanacea, and a Spathodia, which is common on the plains. +Teak is remarkable for the smoothness and peculiar appearance of its +bark, so that it seems to have had it stripped off.</p> +<p>Gathered on the hills Ulmus and Hyalostemma, the petals of which +are united into a tri-partite corolla, a Cyrtandracea in fruit, and +an Olacinea, floribus tri-sepalis, appendicibus 6 apice fimbriatis, +stam. 3, sepalis oppositis, racemis erectis.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>5th</i>.—Reached the mines after a march of +about four hours; our course was winding, continuing through jungle +and small patches of plain, until we reached the base of that part of +the Kuwa Boom which we were to cross, and which bore N.W. from the place +at which we slept. The ascent was steep in some places, it bore +in a N.N.W. direction, principally through a bamboo jungle. +From a clear space half way up, we had a fine and pretty view of the +hills and plains, especially to the S. and S.E. In the former +direction, and distant about fifteen miles, we saw on our return, the +Endaw Gyee, but we could not estimate its size or figure; it is evidently +however a large sheet of water; the natives say, several miles across. +From the summit, we likewise had a fine view of the country to the E.; +very few plains were visible in this direction. Nearly due east, +and about thirty miles off, was visible Shewe Down Gyee, and this will +make Camein nearly due east also, or E. by S. The descent passed +through similar jungle, that at the foot being damp. The course +continued in a direction varying from S. to W., or rather between these +points, through damp jungle. We then ascended another steep hill, +but not exceeding 5 or 600 feet in height; descending from this, and +passing through low tree and then bamboo jungle, we reached the mines.</p> +<p>The road was, up to the base of Kuwa Boom on the W. side, very good, +thence it was in general bad; wet, slippery, much impeded by blocks +of serpentine, and foliated limestone (Bayfield) crossing several streams, +mountain torrents, the principal one being Sapya Khioung. This +takes its name from a spring of water of alkaline properties, which +bubbles up sparingly from under its rocky bed, and which must be covered +during the rains. The water is clear, of a pure alkaline taste, +and is used by the natives as soap.</p> +<p>The mines occupy a valley of a somewhat semi-circular form, bounded +on all sides by hills clothed with trees, none being of very great height. +The valley passes off to the N. into a ravine, down which the small +stream that percolates the valley escapes, and in this at about a coss +distant other pits occur. The surface of the valley apparently +at one time consisted of low rounded hillocks; it is now much broken, +and choked up with the earth and stones that have been thrown up by +excavating. The stone is found in the form of more or less rounded +boulders imbedded with others, such as quartz, etc. in brickish-yellow +or nearly orange clay. The boulders vary much in size. There +is no regularity in the pits, which are dug indiscriminately; some have +the form of ditches, none exceed 20 feet in depth. They are dug +all over the valley, as well as on the base of the hill bounding it +to the W. and N.W. We could not obtain any good specimens, nor +is there any thing in the spot that repays the visit. No machinery +is used, the larger blocks are broken by fire. But that they are +of importance in the light of increasing the revenue, is evident, from +the fact that B. counted, since we left Camein, 1,100 people on their +return, of whom about 700 were Shan Chinese. The loads carried +away are in some cases very heavy; the larger pieces are carried on +bamboo frames by from two to five men, the lesser on a stout piece of +bamboo lashed to and supported on two cross or forked bamboos, the stouter +joint resting on the bearer’s neck, the handles of the forks being +carried in his hands. The most obvious advantage of this is the +ease with which the load may be taken off, when the bearer is fatigued. +The revenue yielded last year, B. tells me, was 320 viss of silver, +or about 40,000 rupees. The length of the valley from E. to W. +is about three quarters of a mile; its breadth varies from 460 to 800 +yards.</p> +<p>On our return we boiled water at the Soap spring, which is about +50 feet above the mines, Temp. of the air 80½. 2½ +P.M. of boiling water 209. Elevation 1600 feet. And on the +top of Kuwa Boom, which is crossed at a comparatively low place, at +4½ P.M. Temp. of the air 76, of boiling water 207. Elevation +2678 feet.</p> +<p>I can say nothing as to the peculiar features of the vegetation, +in the woods towards Kuwa Boom. I gathered three Aurantiaceæ; +the Olacinea of yesterday is common, a large arborescent Artocarpus +fructibus oblongis sub-informibus, sub-acidulis, ¾ uncialibus; +Teak rarely; Tonabea, noble specimens occur; on the Kuwa Boom, a large +Gordonia arborea, two arborescent Myrtacea, large Mangoes, Bamboo, a +Morinda; Magnoliæcea occurs on its western face, as well as the +Conifera toxoidea before gathered. Dicksonia and Pladera justicioidea +both occur. Dianella nemorosa, etc. The Serpentine is carried +from Keoukseik in boats down the Endaw Kioung, thence to Camein, and +from whence it goes to Mogam, which is probably the principal mart. +Calamus spioris petiolorum uncialibus verticillatis occurs in abundance +in all the damp jungle.</p> +<p>We returned in the afternoon to our halting place of yesterday, from +which the mines are distant ten miles, four of which occur from the +side of Kuwa Boom to the West. The Endaw Gyee is situated on a +plain, but it is enclosed by hills on every side except the S.E. +Those to the south are very high.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>6th</i>.—Returned, diverging from the path +to the village Keoukseik. Noticed Liriodendron, Æsculus, +Achyranthis aspera, Vallaris solanacea, etc.</p> +<p>The village is situated to the S. of the road to the mines; it is +close to the Nam Teen, and on a small elevation; it is stockaded. +The number of houses is about sixteen; of inhabitants, including children, +120: all the houses, except two, being small. The merchants, etc. +employed about the mines, halt on the Nam Theen, which is up to this +point navigable for small boats.</p> +<p>Thermometer 66. 6½ A.M. Temp. of boiling water +210.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>8th</i>.—Reached Camein at noon: halted on +the 7th at our former hut on the Endaw Kioung. The additional +plants noticed are Duchesnia indica, common in wet places; a Bamboo, +paniculis (culmis) nutantibus aphyllis, amplus. Pandanus; Curculigo +pumila, floribus sub-solitarius ante folia, 6 vel. 4 partitis; a Careya, +Dillenia, arborea floribus numerosis parvis luteis.</p> +<p>Æschynomena, Anthistiria arundinacea, Composita arborea, 40-50 +pedalis. Another species of Anthistiria, common on the margins +of hills during the march. Fir trees are reported to exist on +<i>Lioe</i> <i>Peik</i>, which bears South from Kioukseik. Volcanic +hills reported to exist near the Endaw Gyee, but no salt rock occurs. +This mineral is said to be found three days’ march from Kioukseik +on the Nam Theen. The revenue said to accrue from the Serpentine +mines, is probably highly exaggerated; and the supply of the stone is +said to be diminishing yearly. Casually found on the Nam Toroon, +a Sterculia arborea, florib-masculis clavato, infundibul. coccineis, +pubescentibus: a Sophora, floribus albidis pallidissima ceruleo tinctis, +of which the flowers alone were seen; Prenanthis flosentis citrinis, +a Polygala and Hypericum were likewise found.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>9th</i>.—Left Camein at 6, and reached Mogoung +at 6 P.M. after a march of at least twenty-five miles. The course +at first was nearly due east, until we reached the Nam Pong, but subsequently +it became more southerly. Camein bears from this about S.S.E. +The country traversed was the same, generally comparatively open, that +is to say, grassy plains with Rhamnea, Nauclea, Bombax, etc. For +some distance the path extended through shady woods. No villages, +nor any signs of such were observed <i>en</i> <i>route</i>. We +passed many streamlets particularly during the latter half of the march. +Our original intention was to have come to Mogoung by water, and with +this view Bayfield told the man sent by the Myoowook to procure two +or three canoes. At 6 A.M. the Havildar came up to our hut, and +said that the headman of the village was disputing violently about our +taking the boats. Bayfield proceeded down to the river side, where +the Yua Thugee was very insolent, and he and his followers drew their +<i>dhaos</i> (swords) on Bayfield, who slightly pushed the Thugee. +It ended in our going by land. We had previously heard of the +rebellion at Ava: the Thugee’s behaviour evidently arose partly +from this. I did not observe the dispute, as I remained near the +stockade.</p> +<p>Noticed a Lonicera in low places, and the Viola of Suddiya on the +plains, a Cardiopteris, Kempferia, Curcuma, a Bambusa vaginis collo +barbatis, a scandent Strychnos, an Aerides, Ardisiæ 2, some Acanthaceæ, +Loxotis major, Urticeæ 2 or 3, Santalacea as before, Tetrantheræ, +Davallia atrata, Asplenium fronde simplici, etc. etc.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>10th</i>.—We halt, and hear a report of the +death of Mr. Kincaid, and that a Burmese army is <i>en</i> <i>route</i> +here. The whole country is most unsettled, all the Singphos and +Khukeens being in open rebellion. It appears that Thurrawaddi +is meeting with success in his summons for men. No resistance +shewn to his authority hitherto except by one Myoowoon. Our Myoowoon +has absented himself, and the Myoowook determined on surrender. +Bayfield under all circumstances, and failing authentic intelligence +of Mr. Kincaid, resolves on remaining here.</p> +<p>Mogam is a rather pretty town, situated on the right bank of the +Mogoung river, at the confluence of a river 100 yards broad, the water +of which spreads out, in some places, to a considerable breadth and +depth. The country is however low, flooded in the rains, and surrounded +by hills, except in the direction of Shewe Down Gyee. In many +places it is only covered with grass. The town is large, and was +formerly stockaded, the remains of the timber stockade being still visible. +It contains about 300 houses, about 2,500 inhabitants, mostly Shans. +The houses are generally raised, in many cases like those of the Kampties, +the chopper coming low down, shaped like a turtle’s back. +There is a very distinct opening or chasm in the hills between S. D. +Gyee and a low range to the North, but no river makes its exit there. +Sunday, 16th.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>18th</i>.—Halted up to this date, waiting for +information especially regarding the army at Tsenbo.</p> +<p>In this place two fragrant Dipterocarpeæ are found; as also +Bixa, Tamarindus, and Carthamus, which last is cultivated and used both +for food and dyeing. About the Poongie houses some remarkable +Fici occur, the trunk being divided so low down as to give the idea +of a group of several trees. The roots in addition are made to +spread over the conical mounds, thrown up at their bases.</p> +<p>A race of wild-looking short men, called Lupai Khakoos, inhabit this +vicinity, wearing a jacket, and dark-blue cloth with an ornamented border, +worn with the ends overlapping in front. They wear garters of +the Suwa. Their hair is worn either long or cropped, and a beard +is also occasionally worn by the elders.</p> +<p>In this place very few regular Chinese are to be found, and the few +that are here seen, are ultra-provincials; none are acquainted with +the manufacture of tea. This article is procurable here, but at +a high rate; it is sold in flat cakes of some diameter; it is black, +coarse, with scarcely any smell, and in taste not much superior to the +Assamese article; 20 tickals weight sells for 1¼. All the +blue cloths of the Shans are dyed, Bayfield informs me, with Ruellia, +or jungle indigo.</p> +<p>It is with these people that the only trade seems to be carried on, +and this is limited to amber and serpentine. They are very dirty, +and excessively penurious, but industrious. Owing to their habits +and extreme penury, there is no outlet for our manufactures in this +direction; so that I fully agree with Hannay’s statement, that +500 rupees worth of British goods would be unabsorbed for some years. +Rosa is common, also a Rumex; a Sisymbroid plant also occurs. +Among the trees, all which are stunted, Gmelina arborea occurs. +There are some Assamese slaves here among the people, one of them is +said to be a relation of Chundra Kant, the Suddiya chief: slaves are +held in very small estimation with the Burmese. Thus Bayfield +asked his writer, who such a one standing near him was, whether a Shan +or Singpho? The man answered, “My lord, it is not a man; +it is a Waidalee.”</p> +<p>Altogether, Mogoung is an uninteresting place; the surrounding plains +are barren-looking, and inhospitable, and clothed with grass. +Here and there a ragged Nauclea, Careya, etc. is visible with Gmelina +arborea. The undershrubs are chiefly a Rhamnoidea, and a Phyllanthus. +Rosa is common; Rumex and Nasturtium are both met with.</p> +<p>News arrived yesterday evening to the effect, that the King is drowned, +the heir-apparent in the palace: and that Colonel Burney is with Thurrawadi!!!</p> +<p>My collections up to this place amount to 900 species.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>19th</i>.—Left at 12, and halted after having +gone about four miles. The river continues the same as above; +it is a good deal impeded by trees, and much more so by sandbanks.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>20th</i>.—Reached Tapaw in the afternoon; our +progress is, however, very slow the stream being slight, but the river +is much improved; being less spread out, owing to its greater proximity +to the low hills: often very deep, generally clothed with jungle to +the water’s edge. On the hills near Tapaw are some Khukeens +of the Thampraw tribe, and on these hills bitter tea is reported to +be found. This the Khukeens bring down for sale.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>21st</i>.—Continued our course, performing +about twelve miles between 7 and 5, inclusive of one hour’s halt. +At some distance from Tapaw and thence throughout the day, here and +there occur rapids, which are much worse, from the stream being impeded +by large rocks. In some places it is divided, in others, compressed +between hills, and here it is very deep.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>23rd</i>.—Arrived at the Irrawaddi. The +Mogoung river is very uninteresting; the stream being generally slow, +sandbanks very abundant, as well as stumps of sunken trees. At +its mouth it is deep, and about seventy yards across. The banks +are either overgrown with trees or else grassy; the grasses being Arundo +and Saccharum. On the steep banks of the hills where these descend +into the river, ferns are common together with an Amaryllidea out of +flower. Cadaba is common, as well as a large Mimosea. Rosa +continues; as also Æsculus. On the road by which the Chinese +branch off from Tapaw to the Irrawaddi, I gathered an arborescent Apocynea +foliis suboppositis, and a Homalineous tree, floribus tetrameris; Salix +is common all down the river. Teak only occurs occasionally. +In one place I gathered Lonicera heterophylla, a fragrant Valeriana? +and Jonesia in abundance; this last being here apparently quite wild. +Adelia nereifolia, a Ficus, Ehretia arenarum, and the usual sandy plants +occur on the banks. Pistia, Salvinia and Azolla are common.</p> +<p>The Irrawaddi opposite the entrance of the Mogoung river, is 600 +yards across. It is a noble stream; has risen a good deal, and +presents one unbroken sheet of water. The banks are by no means +high, and are grassed to the brink. The water is cold and clouded; +its temperature is 66½°, that of air in a boat 88½. +We reached Tsenbo about 1 o’clock, having passed five or six villages, +mostly small, and inhabited by Shans. Tsenbo numbers about 30 +houses, but these as throughout Burma, as far as we have seen, are small; +it is situated on a low hill on the left bank. Both banks are +hilly, especially the right. The river has risen enormously during +a halt here—many feet. In one hour we found it to rise about +16 inches. At this place I gathered a fine blue Vanda, and a curious +tree habitu Thespiæ: stigmatibus 4. Between this and the +entrance to the narrow defile Kioukdweng, which is about 1½ miles +distant, three villages occur. This entrance is well marked, the +river becoming suddenly contracted from 300 to less than 100 yards. +We halted about 6½ P.M. at Lemar. Noticed four or five +villages between Lemar and the village at the entrance of the defile. +All these villages are inhabited by Poans, a distinct hill tribe. +Passed through two fearful places, one in particular where the whole +body of water rushes through a <i>gate</i>, formed by huge rocks not +50 yards wide.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>24th</i>.—Continued our course, and arrived +at Bamoo about 5½ P.M.; the greater part of the journey extended +through the Kioukdweng, or defile, in which some terrific places occur, +one in particular known by two rocks which are called the Elephant and +Cow. Passed several small villages before we made our exit from +the K. dweng: all inhabited by Poans. Between this and Bamoo the +country along the river is truly magnificent, and is well inhabited. +The largest village contains about 70 houses; at least seven or eight +occur, between the points above noted.</p> +<p>The Kioukdweng is a remarkable and an awful object. The greatest +breadth of the river while confined within this defile does not exceed +250 yards, and in all the bad places it is contracted to within 100, +occasionally 50. From the enormous rise of the river, which, last +night alone amounted to an increase of ten feet, the passage is one +continued scene of anxiety. In the places above referred to the +river rushes by with great velocity, while the return waters caused +on either side by the surrounding rocks, occasion violent eddies and +whirlpools, so as to render the boat unmanageable, and if upset the +best swimmer could not live in these places. The rocks are serpentine +and grey limestone, presenting angular masses which project into the +stream; the former in all places within high-water mark is of a dark-brown +colour. Micaceous slate? likewise occurs, although rarely. +The depth is of course enormous, in the low state of the river, when +Bayfield passed up, in many places no bottom was found, at 25 or even +40 fathoms, and at this season the water had no doubt risen 40 feet +higher. Some idea of the rise that has taken place may be formed +from the fact, that in places where, when Bayfield passed up, the stream +did not exceed 70 yards in width, it was now 200; and of course a rise +of 20 feet in the open river, would determine one of at least 40 within +the K. dweng. After passing the Elephant and Cow, which have the +usual resemblance implied by their fanciful names, the river widens +and becomes tranquil. The whole of this Kioukdweng is truly remarkable, +and in many places very picturesque.</p> +<p>The vegetation is, I imagine, similar to that of the low hills about +Mogoung; but so dangerous was the passage, that I had but few opportunities +of going ashore. The hills are thinly wooded, and all bear many +impressions of former clearings; but the spots now under cultivation +are certainly few. Besides, we must bear in mind, that the spots +cultivated generally throughout thinly populated parts of India are +deserted after the first crop, so that a very limited population may +clear a great extent of ground. Bayfield tells me, and I consider +his authority as excellent, that the population is almost entirely limited +to the villages seen during the passage. These do not exceed twelve, +and they are all small. None of the hills exceed 500 feet in height +(apparently,) they do not present any very peculiar features.</p> +<p>Below the maximum high-water mark the vegetation is all stunted, +at least that of the rocks; a tufted Graminea is the most common. +Adelia nereifolia (Roxb.), a Celastrinea, a curious Rubiacea, which +I also have from Moulmain, two Myrtaceæ, a Rungia, are the most +common. I did not observe Podocarpus. In the occasionally +sandy spots Campanula, the usual Compositæ, Panica three. +Eleusine, Clenopodium, and Atriplex are common, a Stemodia, and Asclepiadea +likewise occur. One Clematis carpellis imberbibus, and the Lonicera +are met with. No mosses appear to occur. One remarkable +tree, <i>Belhoe</i> of Assam, 70 feet high, cortice albido, foliis orbato, +panculis (fructus) pendulis, occurs: it has the appearance of an Amentaceous +tree.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>27th</i>.—We have remained at Bamoo; nothing +appears to have been settled below, and the river is reported to be +unsafe. It has fallen at least three feet since our arrival. +Bayfield measured the left channel yesterday; it is nearly 750 yards +wide.</p> +<p>Bamoo is situated on the left bank, along which its principal street +runs. The town is a very narrow one, the breadth averaging about +200 yards; its extent is considerable, but it scarcely contains 600 +houses, and of these 105 are Chinese, and only has one good street, +<i>i</i>.<i>e</i>. as to length. Neither are the houses at all +good or large, so that the population cannot be established at more +than 3000. I allude only to those within the stockade; out of +this, and close to Bamoo are two or three small villages. The +stockade is of timber, <i>pangaed</i>, or fenced outside for about 30 +yards; it has just been completely repaired, as an attack is expected +from the Khukeens.</p> +<p>The Chinamen live all together, in a street of low houses built of +unbaked bricks; these are not comparable to the houses at Moulmain. +There is but little trade now going on. Within the stockade and +without, low swampy ravines occur, that cannot be but injurious to the +healthiness of the town. The Myoowoon spends all his money in +pagodas, none of which are worth seeing: all the roads and bridges he +leaves to take care of themselves.</p> +<p>The <i>inferior</i> <i>caked</i> <i>tea</i>, sugarcandy, silk dresses, +straw hats, and caps are procurable, but at a high price. Pork +is plentiful, and the bazaar is well supplied with fish. It is +a much more busy place than Mogoung, as well as considerably larger. +The chief export trade with the Chinese is cotton; the revenue however +by no means equals that of the Mogoung district.</p> +<p>The country around is nearly flat; on one side of the stockade there +is an extensive marsh well adapted for paddy. Otherwise the ground +is dry, and tolerably well drained; it appears to have been formerly +wooded; at present the environs are occupied by undershrubs. I +have observed no peculiar botanical feature. Among the undershrubs +are Phyllanthæ 2, Apocynea arborescens, Gelonium, Combretum, Strychnos, +Vitex, Melastoma. When I say undershrubs, I mean that such is +their present appearance. The only new plant is an elegant Capparis, +subscandens, floribus albis, odoratis demum filamentisque purpureo-roseis. +About old Pagodas, Pladera of Moulmain, a Labiata, Stemodia, and Andropogon +occur.</p> +<p>The cultivated plants are those of the coast, Hyperanthera Moringa, +Bixa Orellana, Calotropis gigantea, Artocarpus integrifolia, a Phyllanthus, +Cordia Myxa, Carica Papaya, Citrus medica, Plantains, a large and coarse +Custard Apple, Mango, Zyziphus, Cocos, Taliera, Agati.</p> +<p>The climate is dry and sultry, the diurnal range of the Thermometer +being from 28 to 32°. At this season, viz. at 6½ A.M. +from 66 to 68; 4 P.M. from 94 to 96. North winds are common, daily +commencing from that quarter, or terminating there. They are not +accompanied by much rain, although the weather is unsettled.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>2nd</i>.—A Khukeen whom Bayfield sent for tea +returned, bringing with him many specimens out of flower. The +striking difference between this and the tea I have hitherto seen, consists +in the smallness and finer texture of the leaves. For although +a few of the specimens had leaves measuring six by three inches, yet +the generality, and these were mature, measured from four to three, +by two to three. As both entire and serrated leaves occur, the +finer texture was more remarkable. The bitterness, as well as +the peculiar flavour were most evident. Young leaves were abundant.</p> +<p>The Khukeens make no use of the tea. The Chinese here talk +of this as the jungle tea, and affirm that it cannot be manufactured +into a good article. They talk of the valuable sorts as being +very numerous, and all as having small leaves. Neither here nor +at Mogoung are there any real Chinamen, nor is there any body who understands +the process of manufacturing tea. The caked tea is not made to +adhere by the serum of sheep’s blood, it adheres owing to being +thus packed before it is dry. The plain around Bamoo is intersected +by ravines, which afford good paddy cultivation; no large trees occur +within 1½ miles of the town. At this distance a large Dipterocarpea +is common. In the underwood around the town, a Dipterocarpus, +arbuscula, foliis maximis, oblongo-cordatis, Gordonia, Lagerstræmia +parviflora, Elodea, Nauclea; Leguminosæ 3, Gelonia, Combretum, +Jasminum occur. In the marshes Ammannia rotundifolia, Cyrilla, +Azolla, Marsilea, and Salvinia, Serpicula, Ceratophyllum; a Campanula +<i>arenosa</i> reaches thus far.</p> +<p>Every day indecent sights occur in the river, owing to the women +bathing without clothes, and either with or near the men. They +appear to be indifferent to the concealment of their person, breasts, +and hoc genus omne, being freely exposed. They swim very well, +and in a curious way. They make their escape by squatting down +in the water, unfolding their cloth, and springing up behind it. +As for the men, they appear to take a pride in exposing every part of +their bodies. No gazers-on occur among these people, such not +being the fashion.</p> +<p>The Shan Tarooks who trade with this place use oxen in addition to +other beasts of burden; the breed appears good, resembling the smaller +kind of India.</p> +<p>The Irrawaddi here is between the extreme banks a little less than +1½ miles broad; the channel on which Bamo is situated is the +largest, and is 800 yards across. Two other channels exist, of +which the west is the smallest, and carries off least water. The +river is a good deal sub-divided by sandbanks, but is, compared with +the Burrumpooter a confined river. Since our arrival here it has +sunk several (say five or six) feet, and no longer looks the noble river +it did on our arrival.</p> +<p>The sandbanks when they do exist are either naked, or clothed with +partial and not gigantic grassy vegetation. I have not seen any +thing comparable to the churs of the B. pooter in this respect. +The temperature of the river is not particularly low, and is much higher +now than during the rise. From Bamoo the opening of the Kioukdweng +is not conspicuous, nobody unacquainted with the course of the river +would imagine that it passes through the range of hills to the N. and +NNE. The highest hills visible are to the east. They are +within a day’s journey, and are clothed to their summits. +Some appear 3000 feet high.</p> +<p>Low hills inhabited by wild Khukeens, are visible nearly all around, +except perhaps due west. The wild fierce nature of these people +is attended with a great extent of mischief, quite unchecked, without +eliciting even precautionary measures on the part of the Burmese Government.</p> +<p>There are a few angles in the Bamoo stockade, and these exist because +a straight line cannot be preserved; and large torches are placed out +on levers for illuminating the enemy, and loop-holes are cut through +the timbers; watch-houses are likewise placed at certain points. +There are two rows of <i>pangahs</i> or fences outside, but not the +Singpho pangahs. Notwithstanding all this the river face is quite +defenceless.</p> +<p>The soil is dry and sandy, and cultivation is carried on principally +on the churs. Pumpkins and Gourds are abundant; Yams, (Dioscorea,) +not very good. Rice is sold at the usual price, a basket full +for a rupee. The town is dirty, and not kept in any order.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>6th</i>.—We left Bamoo, and in three hours reached +Kounglaun, a rather large village on the left bank, containing 100 houses, +many of which are respectable, better indeed than any in Bamoo. +It contains many small ruined pagodas. A gigantic tree grows within +the stockade, which is a very poor one. Punica Granatum, and Beloe, +were the only plants of interest observed in the neighbourhood.</p> +<p>We passed several (six or seven) villages, none except one with more +than thirty houses; the one alluded to had sixty. All the houses +continue small. The river is here much subdivided, and in many +places shallow; sandbanks are common. Vegetation of banks is almost +entirely Gramineæ, and coarse strong-smelling Compositæ. +The grasses are different from those previously met with, except the +Arundo. Rosa continues; Salix is common. Between Koungloung +and Tsenkan, which is on the same bank, and close to the entrance to +the Kioukdweng, three villages are met with; but none of any size. +Tsenkan is prettily situated on a high bank, or rather low hill. +The houses are about 100 in number, all poor and small. The stockade +is a miserable affair. There are some good Poonghie houses, and +a very pretty group of pagodas on a small rock. The country is +jungly; just above the town a nullah enters the Irrawaddi: it is down +this that large quantities of teak is brought, from hills two days’ +journey to the eastward; some large rafts were seen, but although some +of the timbers were stout, none were of any great size. I gathered +a pretty Hippocrateaceous plant in the jungles, as well as a Combretum; +a Vitex, an Amyridea, etc. Phrynium dichotomum occurs here; Rosa +continues; Jatropha is cultivated.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>7th</i>.—Started at 5 A.M., and entered the Kioukdweng +almost immediately. We halted about 7, at Tsenbo. Noticed +Æsculus, Sisymbrium, Campanula, Adelia nereifolia, Dillania speciosa, +the usual Compositæ, and largish Dipterocarpeæ. The +river is a good deal narrowed, but never less than 130 yards across, +and as there are no rocks in any direction to impede the stream, the +water flows but slowly and very placidly. Almost all the rocks +forming the hills are grey carbonate of lime. These hills are +covered to high-water mark, with scanty somewhat stunted trees, the +most of which have no foliage. The scenery is by no means so bold +as in the upper K. dweng, although just above Tsenbo, there is a noble +cliff, 300 feet high, and almost perpendicular; under its ledges we +observed great numbers of bees’ nests. The rock when exposed +is rather greyish black, and in many places reddish. Serpentine +occurs, but is not common. A good deal of lime is prepared in +this Kioukdweng, and some portions of it in the rugged serrated appearance, +remind one of the limestone cliffs on the coast. Above Tsenbo +and nearly opposite the cliff, is a small village of eight houses. +Tsenbo numbers fifteen; it is on the left bank, and is a miserable place. +Here we were left by our escort which accompanied us from Tsenkan, and +the Thogee refused positively to give us two or three men to row. +Although master of a miserable hole, he had made preparations for defence, +and had set on foot a custom house. We saw a good many boats passing +up, all evidently containing families moving away from their villages.</p> +<p>In this Kioukdweng a fine Palm exists, which I have never seen before. +Caudex 10-15 pedalis, crassa, petiolorum basibus processibus vestitis, +frondibus pinnatis, 10 pedalibus, pinnis ensifornibus 2 to 2½ +pedalibus, subtus glaucis, diametro 1½ uncialibus, basi valde +obliquis, bilobis! lobo inferiore maximo, decurrenti, uninervi: floribus +in spadicibus nutanti-curvatis, amplis, basi spathaceis spicato-paniculatis. +Florib. masculis polyandris.</p> +<p>Petiol. bases cretosæ, intus processubus atris, subulatis, +longissimis robustis quasi panicillatis.</p> +<p>Habitus quodammodo Wallichiæ. Hab. in Umbrosissimis.</p> +<p>An arbuscula Anonacea, floribus dioicis, Mas. corollæ petalis +apice valvatim cohærentibus, basi apertis, potius distantibus, +Ovariis (fæm) pedicellatis, also occurred.</p> +<p>Fructus elliptico-oblongus, subuncialis, hinc a basi ad styli punctum +linea tenui exsculptus, unilocularis, unisporus. Endocarp, ac +testa viscoso-gelatinosa. Testa ac tegumen intera membr. chartacea. +Albumen copiosum hinc et suturæ fructus oppositæ, profundius +exarat. sectione transversa-reniformi. Carnoso albumeni germen +secus sulcum affixium. Embryo in axi albuminis, radicul super. +Cotyledones foliaceæ, albæ, amplæ, curvat seminis +sequentes: suturæ placental, oppositæ. Ejusdem generis +cum Menispermea: in sylvis Singfoensibus cum Wallichia: vide Icones.</p> +<p>Arrived at Kioukgyee at 5 P.M. Waited on and dined with the +Meewoon, who is a gentlemanly, spare, lively man with grey hair. +Dinner was good, and clean. Preserved dried jujubes from China, +as well as some preserved by himself were very good. Kioukgyee +is on the right bank of the river, which is here undivided by islands, +and about 1200 yards broad. Just above the town there are some +rocks. The number of houses is about eighty-five, most of them +arranged in a broad street running along the river, and the best that +I have seen for some time.</p> +<p>The village is surrounded by a new and wretched stockade, the outskirts +being fenced or <i>pangaed</i>; the people are on the qui vive, and +the whole village seems to be in a constant state of alarm. All +the jungle immediately adjoining the town is cut down; many of the houses +are unroofed, and all the gates are guarded. Visited this morning +the lines occupied by the attacking force; these were not 300 yards +from the village, and occupied the skirts of the jungle: trees had been +felled and earth thrown up, but not in such a manner as to obstruct +in any way tolerably brave men. We saw none of the slain, we may +therefore doubt if there were any, but it was evident from platters, +etc. strewed about, that the flight of the robbers had been very precipitate. +We passed some little distance above this, a holy island, the numberless +small pagodas on which, had a very pretty effect. Close to these +there was a small village, Sheweygyoo, which had been just burnt down +by the Kioukgyee people, for giving assistance to the robbers; this +as well as two other contiguous villages before occupied a good extent +of the left bank, and numbered probably 150 houses. Most of the +inhabitants have retreated up the river.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>8th</i>.—Reached Katha at 6 P.M. Throughout +the day saw little of interest. What we did see, gave evident +tokens of disturbances,: villages deserted; dogs starved, howling piteously; +canoes without owners. At one village a few miles below Kioukgit, +our arrival caused much excitement, and a gun was fired off as a signal +of alarm on our approach.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>9th</i>.—Katha is on the right bank of the Irrawaddi; +it is situated on an eminence, and commands a fine view of a fine reach +of the river; the situation indeed is excellent. It contains nearly +200 houses, but these are not of the better description. To the +west is a fine chain of hills, the lowest ranges of which are distant +about one mile and a half; the highest peaks are perhaps 1500 feet. +No signs of alarm or disturbances are here visible, although part of +the force that invested Kioukgit came from this village. We here +learn the agreeable news that the country below is quiet, and that no +robbers now infested the road. The Thogee is a fine looking young +man; very polite. This village boasts of some pretty pagodas, +well grouped, and a very fine <i>Kiown</i>, the workmanship of which +astonished me, particularly the carving; it is built of teak, the posts +being very stout, and very numerous. Several merchant boats left +before us, apparently anxious for our escort.</p> +<p>Behind the town is a large plain used for the cultivation of paddy. +Otherwise the jungle comes close to the houses, although the larger +trees have been felled for firewood, etc.: the woods are dry, and tolerably +open. In the morning I went out towards the hills; the chief timber +trees are a fine Dipterocarpus, and a Hopea; Pentapetes likewise occurs; +Terminalia Chebula. Gathered a fine Arum, somewhat like A. campanulatum. +An arboreous Gardenia, as at Mergui; Myrtacea, Vitex, Bauhinia of yesterday; +Randia, Andropogon aciculare; some stunted bamboos were likewise observed. +Altogether Katha is the prettiest place I have yet seen. The river +opposite it is confined to one bed, about 500 yards broad.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>9th</i>.—Left at 7 A.M., and reached the mouth +of the Shwe Lee at 1 P.M.; the distance according to B. being sixteen +miles. Passed a few villages, but none of any size; the houses +of all continue of the same description. The river presents the +same features. Salix continues. Sandbanks occupied by annual +Compositæ occur, two Polygona, Campanula, a Ranunculus, much like +that of Suddiya, a Labiata, Paronychia, two Spermacoces; Bombax occurs +just below Katha; Salix and Rosa continue. Shwe Lee is a considerable +river, at the mouth between 4 and 500 yards broad; but one-third of +this is unoccupied by water, and the stream is not deep, although of +the ordinary strength. Above, it narrows considerably.</p> +<p>7½ P.M. Temperature of the air 76°. Of Irrawaddi +74°.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>9th</i>.—Tsa-gaiya. This is a mean village +on the left bank, about eighteen miles from Katha; it is close to a +low range of hills, and occupies part of a plain, which is adapted for +paddy cultivation. Near the village to the North, is a small <i>jeel</i>, +covered to a great extent with a large Scirpus, Jussiæa, Azolla, +Salvinia, etc. Water-fruits are abundant; round this paddy is +cultivated, and they appear to cut it at this time. Low ground +near the jeel is covered with a low, handsome Stravadium or Barringtonia, +as well as a Xanthophyllum, resembling exceedingly in appearance a Leguminosa: +the wood is hard. Calamus is also common. A handsome Nauclea +occurs, and on the grassy margins of the plain a small Euphrasia is +common.</p> +<p>During our stage I observed large quantities of Bombax, and a tree +apparently the Beloe of Assam; the banks were either grassy or wooded, +especially on the right bank, which is skirted entirely by hills of +the same barren looking description. The grasses are all small +compared with those of Assam.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>10th</i>.—Reached Tagoung late in the evening +at 7½: distance thirty-two miles. The river continues the +same; the hills on the left bank are much broken into ravines: all continue +clothed with the same stunted vegetation.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>11th</i>.—Tagoung is a miserable village on the +left bank; it occupies a rocky eminence, and contains less than 100 +houses. It is the most inferior village I have yet seen, the streets +being dreadfully dirty and the houses very mean. We visited an +old pagoda, about a mile from the town, which is surrounded by an antique +wall, much obscured by jungle, and more resembling a bund. On +our route hither we landed at Thigan, a village containing about forty +houses, and prettily situated at the foot of a hill of micaceous sandstone, +on the right bank. At this place are the remains of a fort built +by the Chinese, of slabs of the rock forming the hill. Similar +remains exist at Myadoung, on the opposite bank, as I learn from Mr. +Bayfield. I gathered a Sida, Capparis, Prionitis, Gnaphalium, +and a Xanthoxylia petiolis alatis armata; an Adiantum grows between +the slabs composing the wall. At Tsenkan I observed an Agave, +a different Cactus, a fleshy Euphorbia; and an Ananassa is common all +about.</p> +<p>About Tagoung the botany is varied, and interesting. I gathered +about fifteen plants that had not occurred before, two Poæ, two +Andropogons, a Zanthoxylum, and an Olax. The most interesting +is an Apocynea, floribus infundibulifor. lamina reflexa, fauce squamis +dentatis 10, serie duplici dispositis, interioribus petalis oppositis +et majoribus, antheris, in conum stigma omnino coadunatis. Cotton +cultivated here; plants taller than usual. The villages around +are all forsaken owing to one of them having been attacked by Khukeens, +and two men carried off. Hence the population at Tagoung, although +usually scanty, is now much increased from adjoining places. A +small river falls into the Irrawaddi immediately above Tagoung.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>12th</i>.—Reached Malé about 6 P.M. +Passed <i>en</i> <i>route</i> a few villages, none of any size or importance. +The river varies in width, <i>i</i>.<i>e</i>. the channel, from 400 +to 600 yards. The banks are either alluvial or rocky; and there +are hills on the right bank skirting the river; those on the left, are +more distant and higher. Borassus commences to be common; it is +a taller, and more slender tree than that of Coromandel, and the trunk +is not covered with the persistent bases of the petioles.</p> +<p>The village of Tsebainago is opposite to Malé, and appears +nearly of the same size. Both are situated close to the mouth +of the third Kioukdweng. Malé contains 150 houses, all +small; it is a place of no trade. To the north is a hill forming +the river bank, and covered with pagodas; it is the prettiest place +we observed after Katha. The soil has now put on the dry sterile +appearance of the Coromandel coast, all the trees of which, except the +figs, are common; and often render the banks very pretty. Tectona +of Hamilton is very common; it is a tree not exceeding in height 40 +feet, much resembling in habit the more valuable species; the flowers +are blueish, particularly the villi; the leaves have the same excessive +rough feel. Two other Verbenaceæ, a curious Capparidea, +caule laxo, foliis lineari-oblongis, basi hastato-cordatis, and a Ximenia +are common. On the banks Stravadium, and an arboreous Butea, a +Combretum, are common. Low stunted bamboos likewise prevail; and +all the bushes are prickly. Nyctanthes is cultivated. The +rocks as well as those forming the Kioukdweng, are of coarse sandstone, +here and there affording nourishment to abortive Compositæ, stunted +grasses, Mollugo, etc.</p> +<p>Left Malé, and entered immediately the last Kioukdweng on +descending, or the first defile on ascending against the stream. +This is a pretty passage, and moreover has no dangerous places; the +hills are low, lower than those of the two former passes, consisting +of sandstone partially clothed with the same scanty vegetation, presenting +the same barren appearance. Olax, Fici, Leguminosa, stunted bamboos, +Hippocrateacea, Mimosa, and Stravadium, occur. Celsia on sandy +spots, together with Campanula, but this last is becoming rare. +Adelia nereifolia continues. An arundo occurs on the naked rocks; +Cassia fistula, Tectona Hamiltoniana are also present.</p> +<p>We are much impeded by south-west winds; and owing to this and the +slowness of the stream, we were compelled to remain some time at Thee-ha-dau. +We there had excellent opportunities of seeing the fish, which are so +very tame as to come up to the sides of the boat, and even to allow +themselves to be handled. The faqueers of the place call them +together; but I think they are not much disposed to come from mere calling, +for they seem to require more substantial proofs of being wanted, in +the shape of food: they are found in still water in a small bay, which +is closed up still more from the influence of the stream by a round +island, constructed superficially on a rocky base, and on which pagodas +are built. They resemble a good deal the Gooroa Mas of Assam, +but have no large teeth as this has. They are very greedy, of +a blueish grey colour, occasionally inclining to red; the feelers are +in some forked: they have no scales.</p> +<p>We continued our course when the wind lulled; halted to dine on a +sandbank, and proceeded on afterwards, until we reached Kabuct about +8½ P.M. On the sandbank where we dined I gathered a Crotalaria, +Campanula, Cleome, a Graminea, Polygonum, Cyperaceæ, and a Dentelloidea. +The villages seen were all small.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>13th</i>.—Left Kabuct before 6. Halted +to breakfast on a steep bank, finding it impossible to proceed against +the south-west winds, which have now become prevalent.</p> +<p>At this place, which is hilly, I gathered Gmelina villosa, an Anonacea, +calyce 6 sepalis, cor. tripetala, pet. patentissimis, margine revolutis, +luteis. A Carissa, Grewia, Malpighiacea samaris, 3-alatis, alis +dorsalibus abbreviatis, a curious Graminea, a green Orchidea, terrestris, +bulbosa, flore ante folia evoluta, a Diospyros, Polygala, Plectranthus, +Rungia, Pladera, etc.</p> +<p>Halted at Movo, owing to the wind. This is a very pretty village; +of no great size, and of no importance. A delightful tope formed +by Mango, Fig, and Garcinia, or Xanthochymus, the dense shade of which +is most agreeable; Averrhoa, Ægle Marmelos is cultivated here; +Borassus is common, trunks of which are often of very irregular diameter. +Low grassy places occur running along the back of the village, with +abundance of a Combretum fruticosum; and a nullah at either end of the +village presents many trees on its banks, particularly a very large +and handsome Myrtacea, Hemarthria compressa. Stravadium racemis +longe pendulis.</p> +<p>We were compelled to put into Malá on the right bank, about +a mile above Tsengoo, by a severe storm from the north-west. This +village consists of about forty houses, many pagodas, and has a good +many potteries, and some fine trees. It is at the entrance of +the Kioukdweng. Observed Jatropha Curcas, and Vitex negrendo. +In the evening we proceeded to Tsenbou.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>14th</i>.—Left Tsenbou, and breakfasted at Nbat +Kiown-wa. Just above this are several villages, two of which number +nearly seventy houses each. This is the most populous part I have +seen. To the east of this are the Ruby mines in the Shan hills; +and to the south-east low hills from which the marble is procured, from +which they make the idols. The river features continue the same; +namely, low hills close to the right bank, and more distant as well +as higher ones on the left. On the Shan hills to the east, teak +forests occur; on those to the west, tea also grows. In Polong +tea districts also occur; but the tea is very coarse, and said not to +be drinkable. Hemarthria, and Hoya viridiflora were found.</p> +<p>Here I found Solanum, Tribulus, a Mimosa, lime trees, Carissa, Mimusops, +Stemodia ruderalis now appear. The most interesting is a small +diffuse Caryoplylleous-looking plant, with white Campanulate flowers; +it is probably a Frankeniacea. On the pagodas an Aristella grows. +Certain features prevail in the vegetation similar to those of the Coromandel +coast. Fig trees often surrounded at base with brick-work; this +never lasts long, the roots tearing up the masonry in every direction.</p> +<p>The exit from this 3rd Kioukdweng is very pretty. Tsengru with +its numerous white pagodas; the noble river expanded into a broad bay; +the Eastern hills are very beautiful, and the Marble hills which form +a background to Tsenbou are no less so. The banks towards the +exit from the defile are sloping, often covered with grass. The +Palmyra trees and Fig trees have a very pleasing effect. At Kiougyoung +there is a large brick fort, built by Alompras. The village contains +about 150 houses: no large village is passed between this and Kubuct.</p> +<p>Halted above Sheemnaga to look at Gaudama’s foot, a piece of +workmanship contained in a pagoda; it is a very large foot, with a central +circular impression. This is about a mile below Endawka. +Sheemnaga never contained more than 400 houses, I counted upwards of +180, and although extensive traces of fire, and of new houses existed, +I should reckon it to have contained only about 300. At the Pagoda +I gathered a curious Rutaceous-looking decandrous thorny tree, with +foliis bijugis.</p> +<p>Reached Mengoon about 7 P.M. Landed at the commencement of +the sandstone hills, which in some places assume the form of cliffs: +texture very loose. They are full of holes, and abound with blue +rock Pigeons. Gathered a Murraya. Trichodesma indicus and +Compositæ, Asclepiadea, Calotropis gigantea, and a curious Arenariod-looking +plant.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>15th</i>.—Mengoon boasts of a huge unfinished +Pagoda, consisting as it now stands of an immense square brick mass, +surrounded by four fine broad raised terraces; it would have been, had +it been finished, upwards of 700 feet high. The dome was to have +been with angular sides. Height 170 feet; the basement, as may +be supposed, is immense. The plan or model of it was first built +in a small adjoining grove to the south, by the grandfather of the present +king. The whole kingdom must have been occupied in its erection. +The entrance to it is guarded by two huge Griffins. Several large +bells lie close to it. The country around is hilly; the hills +low, raviny, and clothed with stunted vegetation. Beautiful topes +exist along the river bank, between this and the cliffs before alluded +to; consisting chiefly of fine mango trees, noble Fici likewise occur. +About Mengoon, Jatropha Curcas is common. Gymnemea, Calatropis +gigantea, and Argemone abound. We found a Pergularia, Lippia, +Zyzyphus, and one or two small Euphorbiaceæ. The soil is +dry, sandy, and barren.</p> +<p>We reached Ava about 1 o’clock.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>21st</i>.—Went to Tsegai on an excursion: the +hills in this vicinity are low, none exceeding 300 or 400 feet, dry +and barren, chiefly composed of grey carbonate of lime, and in some +places Kancha occurs. Pagodas are very numerous, but none are +very large, or bearing the stamp of great age. A fine view of +country is however afforded: large plains are seen to the east of the +city, and between the hills and the river two large jheels are visible +from the hills.</p> +<p>The vegetation almost entirely consists of low stunted, very ramous +shrubs, and these are generally thorny. Not a tree visible except +Bombax and Tamarindus, but this last is planted. A large subarboreous +Cactus, spinosus, ramis 4 angulis, is common. Noticed four species +of Capparis, and the following plants, Barleria, Prionitis, Tamarindus, +Ægle, Zizyphus, Cocos; Borassus, Bixa, Cordia, Punica, Ricinus, +Melia Azederak; Citrus Cassia, near houses and on the hills; Euphorbia +2, Ximenia, Cleome, Boerhaavia, Adhatode, Cassia sennoidea, Sidæ, +Andropogon, a lax Linaria common on old pagodas; Calanchoe, Sedum, Pommereulla, +Vinca rosea, Tectona Hamiltoniana, but not of such size as at Malé. +Bambusa stunted and rare, Blepharacanthus, Polygala, Labiatæ 2, +Æruæ, sp. Fici one or two, an Alstonia, Celosia mollugo, +Solani sp. Stemodia, Combretum, Heliotropium indicum, and the Euphorbiacea +of Mengwong. It will at once be seen that the vegetation has some +similarity with that of the Carnatic, for in addition I found Asplenium +radiatum, and Limonea Monophylla, a Carissa, Ximenia, Flacourtia, etc. +etc.</p> +<p>Ava is a fine town, surrounded with an excellent brick wall: the +streets are wide, and kept clean; the houses are regular, and as trees +are interspersed, a pleasing effect is produced. The appearance +is much improved by a lattice before each house. The houses also +are of a superior description, a few only are of brick. The fort +is surrounded by an additional wall, and a broad but shallow ditch. +The palace is a handsome, irregular, gilt edifice; but its precincts +are not kept so clean as they might be. The Shwottoo is a handsome +hall. The town altogether conveys an idea of importance. +The river is about 800 yards broad opposite the Residency; but above, +it is encroached on by a sandbank. Boats are numerous, and opposite +Tsegain there is a busy ferry, especially now the king is at Tsegain. +This is a much preferable place, and rendered much more pleasing by +its superb Tamarind trees, with their most elegant foliage and sculptured +trunks. The plants cultivated about Ava are Palmyra, Cocoa (rare). +Tamarinds abound; Carica Papaya, Punica Granatum; Mangoes, which are +of good description; Cordia, Plantains, Ægle Marmelos.</p> +<p>The country is flat, and destitute of trees to the south and southwest. +The whole of this is cultivated during the rains, chiefly for Gram, +Tobacco, Capsicum, and a Melilotus. At present the plains are +barren, the low places being almost exclusively occupied by a Combretum; +the rest give a new Polygonum, Lippia, 2 or 3 Compositæ, and a +curious dwarf grass. On the walls Linaria is common. Noticed +near one of the gates, Cryptostegia grandiflora; the waste places and +banks are occupied by Argemone, Mollugineæ three, Xanthium, Dentella, +and low annual Compositæ.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>26th</i>.—Visited Tsegain in the evening, and +returned to Ava on the following morning.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>27th</i>.—Noticed Phœnix sylvestris. +The Euphorbia is common; it is not a Cactus, but a species of this genus, +ramis complanatis, is found though not common; as well as an Agave or +Aloe, but this is a doubtful native. Poinciana pulcherrima, both +red and yellow, Rhus? sp. arbuscula, Vallaris solanacea. A small +Lycopodium, Gmelina asiatica? The additional Madras plants are, +Cissus quadrangularis. There is likewise another fleshy species +fol. 3 phyllis, Sarcostemma viminale, Indigofera, Kalanchœ laciniata +is common; so is the white Cyperacea on barren spots! I met with +Sarcostemma ciliatum; Wall.? petalis extus viridescent, intus ciliisque +purpuro sanguinies, but it is rare. Cardiospermum pubescens is +certainly distinct, the flowers are twice as large as those of C. Halicacabum, +fructibus inflatis vix alatis, ovalibus, dehiscentia septicida, septis +axi adnatis, persistentibus. Semin. solitarii centro loculi affixis, +pisiparvi magnitudine, atris.</p> +<p>NOTE.—Where any discrepancy occurs with regard to the native +names in the preceding Journal, it is requested that such may be corrected +from the Report to Govt. Chapter VII. p.115.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p109.jpg"> +<img alt="The view from Beesa" src="images/p109.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h3>CHAPTER VI.</h3> +<p><i>Botanical</i> <i>notes</i> <i>connected</i> <i>with</i> <i>the</i> +<i>foregoing</i> <i>Journal</i>.</p> +<p>(<i>February</i> <i>19th</i>.—The finest view of the hills +from Upper Assam is obtained on a reach or turn of the river just above +Palankar, the river bending to the NNE. Snow is plentifully seen +on one back range from the Sugar-loaf peak. Another reach shortly +after presents a fine view of the Burrampooter chasm, terminated by +the rugged peak so distinctly seen from Suddiyah, due east. This +view might be chosen, as a general characteristic of the Scenery of +Upper Assam.</p> +<p>It embraces the Mishmee mountains to the left, the higher peaks of +which are covered with perpetual snow. These lie to the NNE. of +Beesa. To the east, is the continuation of the Himalaya, to the +South-east and South, the Patkaye, and Naga ranges; the whole forming +a panorama, rarely if any where surpassed in beauty. Temperature. +of the river at 6 A.M. 67°</p> +<p><i>Musa</i>. Many flowers from the axil of a bract; no bractioles +interspersed, hence we may expect racemose or spicate partial inflorescences. +The perianth is unilateral, 5 cleft, the two smaller segments, which +are intermediate, being internal, or belonging to a different series. +Within this petaloid perianth is a membranous one, together with a boat-shaped +bracteolate body, entire. The stamens are five, evidently opposite +to the segments of the petaloid perianth, staminibus adnatis, the sixth +is not developed, but is rudimentary, and exceedly minute, opposite +to the bracteoid body. The carpella three, alternate as they ought +to be with the last series of stamina, and hence they are opposed to +the larger and outer segments of the petaloid perianth, but this last +point deserves further examination.</p> +<p>The base of the bracteoid sepal is filled with a gelatinous, sweet, +transparent, unicoloured ½ fluid.</p> +<p>I am unaware whether this explanation has occurred to any body else.</p> +<p>It is curious as compared with Scitamineæ, in which the posticous +stamen is alone fully developed. Pl. 1. Fig. 3. <i>a</i>. bracteoid +body, <i>b</i>. sterile stamen, c.c.c. outer series, d.d. inner ditto.</p> +<p>The fact of the outer smaller laciniæ belonging to a second +series is not very apparent, but is corroborated by the evidently internal +situation of the bracteoid scale, and by the evidently elevated lines +visible in the inner.</p> +<p>(<i>April</i> <i>3rd</i>, <i>1837</i>.—On march towards the +Serpentine mines) the face of the perianth, corresponds to these smaller +laciniæ.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>7th</i>.—Thunbergia grandiflora has the pedicels +of its flowers twisted, or not twisted, according to the situation of +the flowers. Thus if the flower be so situated that the raceme +has the direction of the axis, or in other words is erect, the pedicel +is straight, but if the raceme, as generally happens, be pendulous, +the twisting of the pedicel is resorted to, to secure the flower that +situation which it would have, were the raceme erect.</p> +<p>The above is obvious in flowers which from elongation of the axis +of inflorescence, have fasciculate or aggregate flowers. An obvious +inference is, that the twisting of the pedicel is not of generic, nor +of specific importance; and that it is capable of being produced artificially.</p> +<p>This resupination is not uncommon in the order; it is most evident +in Thunbergia coccinea, in which the racemes are always pendulous. +There is nothing, at least in this species, in the situation of the +genitalia to account for the resupination.</p> +<p>Pedicelli demum apicem infra articulati, the inflorescence of this +order is always centrifugal, the partial axis being invariably as well +indeed as the general, disposed to dichotomy. Hence the very common +presence of three bracteæ to each flower, the central one presenting +the leaf from whose axil the partial branch springs.</p> +<p>Stipulæ—if the analogy of these be difficult to ascertain, +the structure and functions would appear to be as of leaves, in addition +to the function of protection. In most cases they are certainly +not double organs; in Naucleaceæ they are apparently so. +Can this be explained by supposing them to form a bud with four scales, +the scales instead of being imbricate, being on one plane. Stipellæ +of Leguminosæ are certainly single; these being all probably stipulate +plants, are to be considered as having terminal buds, the buds being +either totally, or partially protected by the stipulæ. The +difficult nature of ochreæ of Polygoneæ is certainly to +be acknowledged, but they are similar to those of Costus, and hence +not stipulæ, but an extension of the margin of the vaginate petiole, +from which veins are prolonged into it; the functions of these are not +stomatose, since they are membranous, the veins being the only green +parts.</p> +<p>I see no reason why the stipulæ of Rosæ are not to be +considered as belonging to, or dilatations of the petiole. They +have no distinct vascular fascicles to indicate a distinct origin. +And further, in Lowea no stipulæ exist.</p> +<p><i>Jonesia</i>: pedicellis apice articulatis, basi bracteolatis, +ideoque infloresc. magis composita esse debet; laciniis anticis? corollæ? +perianth compositum, binatum præbentibus, emarginatio et situs +stam 5ti rudiment. Staminis laciniis alternatis? basi in annulum, +seriem 2 indicantem coalit. <a name="citation111"></a><a href="#footnote111">{111}</a> +The situation of the stamens is somewhat obscure, the two lowermost +however alternate with the segments, the two intermediate being sometimes +sub-opposite.</p> +<p>Of course if they be opposed, the perianth will be referrible to +a calyx if not to a corolla.</p> +<p><i>Lepidostachys</i> or Scepa. Fruit dicarpillary, stigmata +four, hence they are placentary not costoid. bilocular, loculis dispermis, +ovula 2 pend; 1 abortiv. semiunceum, testa vix arillus obsacuit clause +lutescens carnosa et ab nuclei inter adhæren. Rad. sup. +embryo junior viridis.</p> +<p>Stipulæ cad. Gemmam oblegent.</p> +<p><i>Homalineæ</i>, Calycis; laciniæ 4, petal 4, Glandulæ +4 totidem sepalis oppositæ. Connat; stamin 4, petal opposita; +styli 4. Ovar non ext.</p> +<p>Arbor magna. foliis alternis stipulatis, paniculæ racemoso-axillares, +Flores minut. viridescent. Pet. et sep. fimbriat. æstiv. +imbricat.</p> +<p><i>Clematis</i> has semina pendula.</p> +<p>The stipulæ of Ficus obviously belong not to the leaves, their +insertion taking place ½ a line above that of the petiole. +Hence they belong as obviously to the elongation of the axis above the +leaf; their coloration is curious, especially as they are green when +young. Their vernation is conduplicate and plicate.</p> +<p><i>Combretum</i> presents several points in common with Rhamneæ; +valvate calyx, and tendency to want of petals; to Elæagneæ +in calyx and furfuraceous scales; a decandrous Rhamneæ would differ +but little in flowers from Combretum.</p> +<p><i>My</i> <i>idea</i> of the origin of stigmata is proved to be correct +by a Phyllanthus, the carpella of which are ovuliferous below, the upper +part being fleshy, the stigmata are two to each, obviously corresponding +to the placentary inflexions, while the sinus terminating the dorsal +suture is totally naked; it is this which should bear the stigma if +Lindley’s view were correct.</p> +<p>The true place of Moringa seems to be near Xanthophyllum with which +genus it has some remarkable points of resemblance, witness the papilionaceous +corolla; unilocular stamina, their situation, ovary, placentation, and +lastly glandulation.</p> +<p>To this Lindley has made an approximation by placing the order near +Violarieæ. Its chief difference from Polygaleæ, is +habit, foliation, and the perigynous insertion of corolla and stamina, +and consequent union of the sepals. As in Xanthophyllum there +is no albumen.</p> +<p>(An additional Xanthop. which until to-day I have always taken for +a Leguminosa.)</p> +<p><i>Tamarindus</i> cal 4 partitus, sepals 2, superiorib. connatis. +Pet. 3, vexillo, sepalo postico composit; opposit; stamen tria; sepalis +3, inferior opposita. Stylus æstivation deflexus.</p> +<p>Pedicelli apice articulat. Folii petiol. basi articulat. +Stipulæ minimæ stipellæ.</p> +<p>In Jonesia, there are no petals. Humboldtia comes near Tamarindus, +through H. Brunonis, which agrees in calyx and petals.</p> +<p>Thorns of Prionites, what are they? They are axillary, and +yet buds are produced between them and the axis. They have no +connection with the leaves. Were it not for the buds above alluded +to, I should say that they were abortive branches (bearing one pair +of leaves) reduced to spines.</p> +<p><i>Olacineæ</i>. Certainly in habit, corolla, etc. Olacineæ +are allied to Aurantiaceæ, but they are nearer akin to Santalaceæ. +The processes are indubitably modified stamina, with a great tendency +to irregularity; in one species from Tagoung only three fertile, and +five sterile stamina were observed: the three fertile generally, but +not invariably, alternate with the petals.</p> +<p>To Santalaceæ they approach in processes, valvate corolla, +and placentation, also to Loranthaceæ.</p> +<p>Eight stamina thus accounted for; when two opposed to petals, belong +to outer series—also single one.</p> +<p>In Punica, the structure of the ovaria is highly curious. We +find the bottom of the tube is occupied by two cells, partially filled +with ovula, which are attached both to the axis and to the base, as +well as to the lower part of the outer paries of each cell; so far, +it does not depart from the order, for in Aplexus the placentation is +tolerably similar.</p> +<p>Above these two, are 4-5 cells, filled with ovula, which are attached +entirely to the outer wall of each cell, but the placentæ however +would seem to have an obvious connexion with the axis, although this +is very doubtful.</p> +<p>The formation of the stigma decidedly indicates a binary formation +of carpella.</p> +<p>If these 4 upper cells are 4 constantly, and the base of the ovary +is as constantly two celled, then the explanation is sufficiently obvious, +though different from that given by Lindley. <a name="citation113"></a><a href="#footnote113">{113}</a></p> +<p>First, we have in the bottom from which the mere structure of an +ovary is deduced, the normal dicarpellary structure, and there is in +addition a tendency in excess toward a parietal placentation.</p> +<p>The anomalous formation arises first from parietal placentæ +being produced to the axis, and from spurious growth from the sides +of the ovary also meeting in the axis, by which the ovula are divided +into four bundles.</p> +<p>Lindley’s view seems to be questionable, because as in all +cases the styles and stigmata are more permanent than ovaries, there +should be as many styles, etc. as ovaries. 2nd, because according +to this view the placental suture of the carpella would be turned from +the axis, (look at Pomaceæ,) although his view of Pomaceæ +being right would indicate an additional affinity with Mespilus, etc. +which it does in habit and abbreviated lateral branches.</p> +<p>Are all Myrtaceæ dicarpellar?</p> +<p>The true nature of the case is pointed out in the instance cited +by Lindley of a permanent variety of apple, which has 14 cells and 14 +styles! With regard to Nicotiana and Nolana; have these one or +two rows of carpella?</p> +<p>TECTONA.</p> +<p>Arbores, trunco crasso, cito ramoso, cortice albido, lævi, +tenui.</p> +<p>Folia siliceo-aspera, inflorescent dichotoma.</p> +<p>Calyx æstiv. valvat. cor infundibul, subregularis laciniis, +5 rotundatis, demum reflexis æstivat. laciniis super 2, omnino +exterior, facies barbato-villosa.</p> +<p>Antheræ longit dehiscent, stylus stigma simplex.</p> +<p>Pubescentia stellata.</p> +<p>Modo Asclepiadeæ, corolla rotata.</p> +<p>GMELINA VILLOSA.</p> +<p>Lab. super. æstivat. omnino exterior fl. axi fere paralleli, +pedicell apice bibracteolat.</p> +<p>Cal. minim. 5 dentat.</p> +<p>Cor. infundibul campanul. bilab; 4 partit. stigma bilabiat-lab infer +longiore.</p> +<p>AROIDEUM.</p> +<p>Radix maxime napiformis, undique radiculas exserens, et superne e +centro spadicem. Spadix pedunculum 3-uncial terminans, basi squamis +magnis membranaceis, lineari-oblongis stipatus sursum in corpus fungoiden, +capitatum, maximum, purpureo-sanguineum, superficie rugose dilatata.</p> +<p>Ovar bilocul, diovulat.</p> +<p>Medio antheras bipoross confertissimas, sessiles, numerosas, basi +ovaria distantiora gerens.</p> +<p>Ovaria fusco-purp, stylus elongatus clavatus, stigma clavato, capitat.</p> +<p>Odor-floris præserti marcescentis pessimus.</p> +<p>Katha in sylvis aridis.</p> +<p>The fruit of Lagerstramia grandiflora can, I think, be explained +by assuming it to consist of several carpella, which by not becoming +united near the axis, leave an irregular shaped space in the centre; +the placentæ are fleshy, the ovule inserted all around. +This view does not take into consideration the situation of the stigmata. +The deeper sulci visible externally correspond to the inflexions of +the carpellary leaves; in addition to this, the centre of the dorsum +of each of these is marked with a line. <a name="citation114"></a><a href="#footnote114">{114}</a>)</p> +<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3> +<p><i>Report</i> <i>to</i> <i>the</i> <i>Government</i> <i>of</i> <i>India</i>, +<i>12th</i> <i>July</i>, <i>1837</i>.</p> +<p>In the following report, I have divided the marches into series, +corresponding with the countries through which they were made, reserving +a table of the whole for a subsequent part. These series will +be as follows—</p> +<p>1. From Sadiya to Beesa Lacoom.</p> +<p>2. From Beesa Lacoom to Namtusseek.</p> +<p>3. From Namtuseek to Wullabhoom.</p> +<p>4. From Wullabhoom to Mogoung.</p> +<p>5. From Mogoung to Ava.</p> +<h4>I. FROM SADIYA TO BEESA LACOOM.</h4> +<p>COUNTRY TRAVERSED BELONGING TO THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT, AND FORMING +PART OF THE SOUTH-EAST EXTREMITY OF THE VALLEY OF ASSAM.</p> +<p>1. From Sadiya to the Noa Dihing river mouth or Mookh. +Direction east. Distance 6 miles performed in boat, the course +lying up the Burrumpootur.</p> +<p>2. From Noa Dihing Mookh to Rangagurrah on the Noa Dihing. +Direction SSE. Distance 12 miles, course lying along the dry bed +of the Noa Dihing.</p> +<p>3. From Rangagurrah to Moodoa Mookh, on the same river. +Direction south-east, the distance being 12 miles. <a name="citation115a"></a><a href="#footnote115a">{115a}</a></p> +<p>4. From Moodoa Mookh to Kidding. Direction south, the +distance 9 miles, course south-east, along the bed of the Noa Dihing +as far as Wakhet, thence diverging to SSW. through heavy jungle.</p> +<p>5. From Kidding to Namroop Puthar. Direction, nearly +south, the distance being 12 miles, course lying through very heavy +jungle, crosses the Karam Panee, <a name="citation115b"></a><a href="#footnote115b">{115b}</a> +which here is not fordable, and another considerable feeder of the Booree +Dihing, and lastly up the Namroop.</p> +<p>6. From Namroop Puthar to Beesa Lacoom. Direction southwest, +the distance 12 miles, the course extending at first over low hills +and difficult ground, thence through heavy jungle intersected by narrow +plains, lastly chiefly along the banks of the Darap Panee.</p> +<p><i>Nature</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>country</i>.—It will +be seen that with the exception of the three first marches, and part +of the fourth, the country is occupied by the heavy jungle so prevalent +in these parts. The chief difficulties our party experienced arose +from the limited manner in which the jungle had been cut for their passage.</p> +<p><i>Rivers</i>.—The only one not fordable in the above route, +is the Karam Panee, but this does not hold good either above or below +the place I crossed. They all discharge much water during the +rains, and even in the dry season are navigable for small canoes.</p> +<p><i>Villages</i>.—These are as follows:—</p> +<p>1. <i>Digalo</i> <i>Gohain</i> <i>Goung</i>.—On the right +bank of the Noa Dihing it is inhabited by Kamptees lately settled in +our territory, and is a respectable village. The Noa Dihing here +ceases to be navigable even for small canoes.</p> +<p>2. <i>Wakhet</i>.—This is a new but wretched village, +inhabited by Singphos. Wakhet Gam was an adherent of the Duphas, +and is by all account one of the worst-disposed Singpho chiefs. +He is said even at this period still to traffic occasionally in slaves.</p> +<p>3. <i>Kidding</i>.—A temporary village, containing about +10 houses, inhabited by Nagas, now naturalised to the plains.</p> +<p>4. <i>Namroop</i> <i>Puthar</i>.—So called from a plain +on the left bank of the Namroop. The village, which is a mean +and despicable one, is on the opposite bank.</p> +<p>5. <i>Beesa</i> <i>Lacoom</i>.—Is situated on the right +bank of the Darap Panee, which is fordable at the heads of the rapids. +It contains 12 small houses. The Gam is, I believe, an uncle of +the Beesa Gam, and exercises exclusive control over the tribe of Beesa +Nagas. This influence he appeared to exercise to our disadvantage. +He is a discontented man, and his behaviour to our party was very unsatisfactory.</p> +<p><i>Population</i>. <a name="citation116"></a><a href="#footnote116">{116}</a> +—This is scanty enough, particularly when we consider that the +houses in the above villages are much smaller than in the better sort +of Singpho villages. With the exception of the Kamptee village +the average number of people to each house cannot exceed five. +Another small Singpho village exists on the Namroop, about 3 miles from +Namroop Puthar, and not far from the site of the coal mine.</p> +<p><i>Capabilities</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Country</i>.—These +are of the usual description. The soil is productive enough, but +the labour of clearing the drier spots is excessive. Excellent +rice grounds exist in abundance between Beesa Lacoom and Namroop Puthar, +but the cultivation of this, as well as of all the other necessaries, +is limited to the quantity absolutely required. Scarcities of +grain are of frequent, indeed almost of annual, occurrence; and this +is chiefly owing to the pernicious influence of opium or Kanee, to which +all our Singphos are immoderately attached. Of the <i>Mineral</i> +<i>Productions</i>, coal and petroleum were the only ones we met with.</p> +<p><i>The</i> <i>coal</i> <i>occupies</i> the greater portion of a precipitous +part of the sandstone composing the left bank of the river Namroop. +Three large veins have been completely exposed by the cutting away of +the bank. The coal is I believe of good quality. The river +immediately under the veins is very deep, and were it not for the rapids +which intervene between the site of the mineral and the Booree Dihing, +it would be difficult to conceive a spot affording similar facilities +for the transmission of the mineral. I must however, observe, +that even in the dry season the river is navigable for small canoes +as far as the site alluded to. During the rains no difficulty +whatever would be experienced in the carriage, as rafts might be made +on the spot. No use is made of the coal by the natives, nor did +they seem to be aware of its nature.</p> +<p>Of <i>the</i> <i>Petroleum</i> <a name="citation117"></a><a href="#footnote117">{117}</a> +no use whatever is made, although we have ample experience from its +universal use by the Burmese, that it is a valuable product both as +affording light, and preserving in a very great degree all wooden structures +from rot and insects. The springs occur in four different places, +all close to the Puthar: of these three occur on the low hill which +bounds the Puthar to the southern side, and one on the Puthar itself, +at the foot of the range alluded to. The springs are either solitary, +as in that of the Puthar, or grouped, a number together; the discharge +varies extremely from a thin greenish aqueous fluid to a bluish grey +opaque one, of rather a thick consistence: the quantity poured out by +these latter springs is very considerable. On the surface of all, +but especially on these last, an oleaginous, highly inflammable fluid +collects in the form of a thin film. The jungle surrounding the +springs ceases abruptly, the ground around, and among them, being covered +with stunted grass and a few small herbaceous plants. Elephants +and large deer are frequent visitors to the springs; of the former, +the tracts are frequent, and they are sometimes shot here by the natives.</p> +<p><i>Vegetable</i> <i>Products</i>.—The jungles afford several +kinds of bamboo, some of which are of value; generally speaking the +trees are not large, with the exception of a gigantic Dipterocarpus, +wood-oil or dammar tree; of this particular tree I have seen specimens +measuring 100 feet from the base to the first branch. The wood +is of no value, nor have I seen any use made in Assam of the resinous +secretion, which is in great vogue on the Tenasserim Coast for the construction +of torches, etc.</p> +<h4>II. FROM BEESA LACOOM TO NAMTUSSEEK.</h4> +<p>COUNTRY TRAVERSED FORMING PARTS OF THE NAGA RANGE OF HILLS, AND OF +THE SOUTHERN BOUNDARY OF THE VALLEY OF ASSAM: THE NORTHERN SIDE IS SUBJECT +TO BRITISH, THE SOUTHERN TO BURMESE CONTROL.</p> +<p>1st. STAGE.—<i>Halting</i> <i>place</i> in the jungle, at an +elevation of 770 feet above the sea. Direction SSE. Distance +12 miles, course over low hills covered with dense jungle.</p> +<p>2nd. <i>Darap</i> <i>Panee</i>.—Altitude 1029 feet. +Direction SSE. Distance 12 miles, passed over some difficult places; +crossed the Darap twice before we reached the halting place, course +through very heavy jungle, except on the summits of the higher hills, +which are tolerably open.</p> +<p>3rd. <i>Namtusseek</i>, <a name="citation118"></a><a href="#footnote118">{118}</a> +or Tusseek Panee, altitude 1413 feet. Direction SSE. Distance +12 miles, country more open: summit of the hills covered with grass +and scattered trees. The highest hill surmounted was certainly +1000 feet above our halting place.</p> +<p>4th. Namtusseek, or Tusseek Panee, altitude (not observed). +Direction SSE. Distance 10 miles, course almost entirely up the +bed of the river over boulders, occasionally skirting the stream through +heavy and wet jungle.</p> +<p>5th. <i>Yoomsan</i> <i>nullah</i>, near the foot of the Patkaye. +Alt. 3026 feet; direction SSE. Distance 4 miles. Course +for a short time along the bed of the Namtusseek, until we crossed a +small stream, the Tukkakha: then ascended a mountain, about 3500 feet +high; on reaching the summit we descended until we reached the halting +place.</p> +<p>6th. <i>Nam</i>-<i>maroan</i>, or Maroan-kha. <a name="citation119a"></a><a href="#footnote119a">{119a}</a> +Alt. 2500 feet. Direction ESE. Distance 15 miles. +Ascended until we reached the summit of the Patkaye; the ascent was +in some places very steep, and owing to the unsettled state of the weather, +very difficult. Reached the boundary nullah, along which we proceeded +for some time; we then commenced the descent, which was steep, and continued +so, until we reached the Nam-maroan. The extreme elevation we +reached was rather more than 5000 feet. <a name="citation119b"></a><a href="#footnote119b">{119b}</a></p> +<p>7th. <i>Nam</i>-<i>maroan</i>.—Altitude estimated 2000 +feet. Direction ESE. Distance 10 miles, course along the +bed of the stream; ground difficult, and much impeded by boulders.</p> +<p>8th. <i>Nam</i>-<i>maroan</i>.—Altitude not taken. +Direction ESE. Distance 7 miles. Course the same, but of +a less difficult nature.</p> +<p>9th. <i>Khathung</i> <i>khioung</i>. <a name="citation119c"></a><a href="#footnote119c">{119c}</a>—Altitude +1622 feet. Direction E. by S. Distance 7 miles, course continues +along the Nam-maroan, the whole way: ground much less difficult. +Passed close to a Singpho village of two houses; some Puthars which +bore traces of having once been cultivated and inhabited occurred on +this march.</p> +<p>10th. <i>Khussee</i>-<i>khioung</i>.—Altitude 3516. +Direction E. by S. Distance 13 miles, left almost immediately +the Khathung Kioung, and commenced ascending. Ascent in some places +very steep and difficult, and continued until we had reached an elevation +of 5600 feet. The descent then commenced, and continued until +we reached the Khussee-khioung, passing along for some distance the +Natkaw-khioung. The descent was occasionally difficult, owing +to broken ground; tree jungle occurred almost throughout the whole distance.</p> +<p>11th. Kuttack Bhoom. <a name="citation119d"></a><a href="#footnote119d">{119d}</a>—Altitude +3270. General direction S. Distance 13 miles. Left +the Khussee-khioung, but reached it again before long. Continued +to descend considerably, until we reached the Nam-thuga, thence the +descent increased considerably. Halted on an open grassy spot, +from which an extensive view of the valley of Hookhoom is obtained.</p> +<p>12th. <i>Namtusseek</i>.—Altitude 1099 feet. General +direction ESE. Distance 10 miles. Descended from Kuttack +Bhoom, until we reached the Loonkharankha, then ascended considerably. +The descent then recommenced, until we reached the Namtusseek. +Heavy jungle occurred throughout. Path occasionally difficult, +becoming as we approached the base of the range very wet. We crossed +several small mountain streams.</p> +<p><i>General</i> <i>features</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>hills</i>.—The +prevailing formation appears to be sandstone, and connected with this +we have rounded summits, not attaining a great elevation, and a considerable +depth of soil. The lower ranges are throughout covered with heavy +tree jungle. This becomes excessively thick and wet along the +water courses, which are of frequent occurrence towards the base of +the range, both on the northern and southern sides. But from an +elevation of 1000 feet to that of Yoomsan, a great change for the better +takes place on the northern face, the hills being covered with clay, +and generally not very high grass jungle, among which trees are scattered. +This character is particularly evident along both sides of the valley +drained by the Namtusseek of the northern side. The Patkaye is +wooded to its summit; the jungle on the south side being much more humid +than that on the northern. Indeed on this face of the range, with +the exception of the Puthars on the Nam-maroan, scarcely more than two +open spots exist, and both of these are of small extent. Of these +one exists at an elevation of 5500 feet, and one at Kuttack Bhoom.</p> +<p>The paths although very often steep, are easy enough for coolies, +except during wet weather, when they become very slippery. With +some degree of preparation the worst places might be made passable for +lightly loaded elephants, and this would be facilitated by the soft +nature of most of the rocks. The most difficult marches are those +which lie along the beds of the streams, and these, it has been seen, +are far the most numerous; they are particularly difficult for elephants, +the boulders affording a very precarious footing to these weighty animals. +The difficulty is much increased by rain, when even coolies find considerable +difficulty in making any progress. Several elephants accompanied +Major White as far as the Darap Panee, and a small suwaree elephant, +loaded with a light tent, succeeded in reaching Yoomsan. The southern +side of the range is decidedly of a more difficult nature than the northern, +and it is in addition of greater extent: the highest point traversed +is 5600 feet above the level of the sea. The range might be traversed +by a lightly loaded active native in six days.</p> +<p><i>Streams</i>.—These all partake of the usual nature of mountain +torrents; they are all fordable during the cold weather, the principal +ones being crossed at the heads of the rapids. The boundary nullah +is a mere streamlet: it runs between two ridges of the Patkaye: its +course being about ESE. and WNW. Owing to the frequency of the +streams and their mountainous nature, I should imagine that this route +is impracticable during the rains.</p> +<p><i>Villages</i>.—Not a single village or house exists directly +on the route. One small Naga village is visible from the Namtusseek +below Yoomsan, and a detached hut is visible here and there on a high +mountain close to, and NE. of Yoomsan. On the Burmese side there +is, as I have mentioned before, a village consisting of two houses close +to the route. This village has lately been established by some +Singphos from Nimbrung, several marches to the eastward.</p> +<p><i>Population</i>.—I certainly did not see 100 Nagas throughout +the time passed in traversing these hills, although I am satisfied that +every man within a reasonable distance came into Camp in the hopes of +sharing in the extensive distribution of presents. From the appearance +of the country about Yoomsan, and the valley of the Namtusseek, I am +inclined to think that the population was at one time considerable. +The openness of the country, which is as I have previously said chiefly +clothed with grass, and the peculiar and generally imperfect aspect +of the trees, can only be accounted for, by supposing the country to +have been extensively cleared, particularly when it is remembered that +the highest portions of the range are thickly wooded. But allowing +this supposition to be correct, it is no proof, that the total population +has been on the decline, for we must take into account, the wandering +nature of all hill tribes. In forming an opinion of a hill population, +which in all times and places has, in this country at least, been found +scanty, we must take care not to confound the temporary huts, erected +in khets, for the purpose of protecting the cultivation, with actually +inhabited houses; to the former description I think the detached houses +mentioned as being visible from Yoomsan are to be referred.</p> +<p>The Nagas, at least the men, for I saw no women, are a small, active, +large-legged race, with Tartar faces. They are divided into very +many tribes, each of which has some peculiarity of costume. Those +I saw were decidedly inferior to any of the other hill tribes with which +I am acquainted. Their clothing is miserable, the chief protection +consisting of a number of rings, made of rattan, which encircle the +abdomen. They are as usual excessively dirty, and much attached +to the use of tobacco and ardent spirits. Their wants are few, +but even these are miserably supplied. They entertain an unbounded +fear of the Singphos, who appear to make any use of them they think +proper. Their only weapons are spears, Singpho dhas and battle +axes.</p> +<p>The Singphos cannot be considered otherwise than as encroachers. +Invasions of these restless marauders appear not to have been uncommon +up to a late date. The remains of two stockades, in which they +had entrenched themselves were extant, one close to Yoomsan, the other +on the S. face of the Patkaye. I have before said that the puthars +on the Nam-maroan bore evidence of having been inhabited, and apparently +to some extent. But even during the stay of Major White on these +hills, an irruption of Singphos from Nimbrung had taken place, and had +totally unsettled the peace of the native inhabitants. Such things +must be expected to occur, particularly when it is well known that the +Burmese, the only power to which they are subjects, can exercise no +authority over the Singphos in any one direction, except when they have +a large armed force in the valley of Hookhoom.</p> +<p><i>Of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Capabilities</i> of the country it would +be vain to attempt giving an opinion. Scarcely any cultivation +was passed on the route. The soil is generally deep, more or less +yellow, and somewhat clayey; the hollows having a thin superstratum +of black mould. Taking the deserted state of the country into +account, this part of the Naga range is of little importance, except +as forming portion of a most natural and well defined boundary, compared +with other portions of the same range to the westward.</p> +<p><i>Products</i>.—The principal mineral product is salt, an +article which is procured abundantly in some other more available points +of the range. We saw one small spring on the Namtusseek, from +which supplies had been lately taken.</p> +<p><i>Vegetable</i> <i>Products</i>.—Fine timber trees occur here +and there. Oaks, Magnolias and Chesnuts occur not uncommonly, +the Magnolias being of these in this range the most characteristic of +elevation. The horse chesnut of Assam, (Osculus Asamicus mihi) +occurs on both sides of the range, but does not ascend further than +3,000 feet. No Fir trees exist on the route, nor is it probable +that they exist on the range in this direction. One of the most +interesting plants is a new species of tea, which I believe to be a +genuine Thea; it is called Bun Fullup, or jungle tea, by the Assamese, +in contra-distinction to the true tea plant, which is called Fullup. +This species makes its appearance at an elevation of about 1,000 feet, +and is met with as high up as 4,000 feet. It attains the size +of a tree of 30 feet in height; it is used only as a medicine. +No real tea exists on this route; several plants were pointed out to +me as tea, but all were spurious instances. The higher portions +of the ranges have a flora approaching in many instances to that of +northern latitudes. As examples of this, it will be sufficient +to allude, in addition to the trees mentioned above, to the existence +of two species of Daphne, one of Barberry, several species of a genus +nearly allied to the Whortle Berries, a Violet, and several species +of Smilacineæ, to which order the Lily of the Valley belongs.</p> +<p>In concluding this part of my report, I may perhaps be permitted +to advert to the question of the possibility of transporting a body +of armed men into the Burmese dominions by this route. Although +there is nothing in the nature of this portion of the boundary which +would render this operation very difficult, yet considering the state +of the adjoining parts of Upper Assam, and that of Hookhoom, it becomes +almost impracticable. I allude to the extreme difficulty of procuring +grain in Upper Assam, in which, at least around Sadiya, annual scarcities +are by no means uncommon, and to the utter impossibility of drawing +any supplies from Hookhoom in its present miserable state. All +the necessary supplies would require to be drawn from Lower Assam, and +for the transport of these the scanty population of this extremity of +the valley would by no means be sufficient. Bearing on this point +it must be remembered, that from the 1st of April to the 1st November, +these hills cannot be traversed except by their native inhabitants, +without incurring great risk from the usual severe form of jungle fever.</p> +<h4>III. FROM NAMTUSSEEK TO WULLABOOM.</h4> +<p>COUNTRY TRAVERSED SUBJECT TO BURMESE AUTHORITY, FORMING GREATER PORTION +OF THE VALLEY OF HOOKHOONG, OR THE PAEENDWENG.</p> +<p>March 1. <i>From</i> <i>Namtusseek</i> <i>to</i> <i>Nhempean</i>.—Direction +E. Distance 18 miles, crossed the Namtusseek, then passed through +heavy tree jungle, and subsequently over extensive grassy plains.</p> +<p>2. <i>From</i> <i>Nhempean</i> <i>to</i> <i>Nidding</i>.—Direction +SSE. Distance 4½ miles, course along the Namtoroan, thence +up the Saxsaikha.</p> +<p>3. <i>From</i> <i>Nidding</i> <i>to</i> <i>Kulleyang</i>.—Direction +SSE. Distance 13 miles, country covered either with tree or high +grass jungle. Passed a deserted village, Thilling Khet.</p> +<p>4. <i>From</i> <i>Kulleyang</i> <i>to</i> <i>Isilone</i>.—Direction +SW. Distance 10 miles, country rather more open. Puthars +are of common occurrence; passed a small village, Damoon.</p> +<p>5. <i>From</i> <i>Tsilone</i> <i>to</i> <i>Meinkhoong</i>.—Distance +17 miles, course at first along the Namtunai, <a name="citation124a"></a><a href="#footnote124a">{124a}</a> +country open, consisting of grassy plains; several nullahs occur.</p> +<p>6. <i>From</i> <i>Meinkhoon</i> <i>to</i> <i>Wullabhoom</i>.—Direction +SE. Distance 13 miles. Course over plains intersected by +tree jungle, subsequently up the bed of the Nempyo-kha.</p> +<p><i>Nature</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Country</i>.—The valley +of Hookhoong, or as the Burmese call it, in allusion to its amber mines, +Paeendweng, is of small extent. Its greatest diameter is in the +direction of E. to W., <a name="citation124b"></a><a href="#footnote124b">{124b}</a> +its southern termination being within a few miles from Wullabhoom. +It is surrounded on all sides by hills, the highest of which are towards +the NE. and E.; none however would appear to exceed 6000 feet in height; +and from their appearance, I imagine they are wooded to their summits. +The lowest hills are those which form the southern boundary, and these +scarcely deserve the name. From Kuttack-bhoom a fine view of the +valley is obtained; it is here very narrow, and does not I should think +exceed 25 miles in breadth. The features of the country are in +a striking degree similar to those of Upper Assam, that is, it presents +a plain surface intersected frequently by belts of jungle, the parts +at the base of the boundary hills being exclusively occupied by heavy +jungle. The general elevation of the plain above the sea may be +estimated at about 1000 feet, so that it is several hundred feet above +the level of Sadiya. But although this is the case, the valley +of Hookhoom undergoes the same changes during the rainy season as Assam, +the greater part being during that period under water.</p> +<p><i>Of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Climate</i> it is perhaps presumptuous to +give any opinion; it is however by no means so cold as that of Upper +Assam. In April the daily range of the thermometer was very considerable, +from 60° to 88°. The rains set in later than on the northern +side of the Patkaye, and they are said to be much less severe.</p> +<p><i>The</i> <i>rivers</i> are numerous, the principal one is the Namtunai, +<a name="citation125"></a><a href="#footnote125">{125}</a> which subsequently +assumes the name of Kyeendweng. This is in the places I saw it +a large, generally deep and sluggish stream, varying in breadth from +270 to 350 yards. The next in size is the Namtoroan, which has +more of the character of a mountain stream; it is of considerable breadth +(opposite Nhempean it is 270 yards across,) and presents numerous rapids. +Both of these rivers are navigable for boats of some size. The +other rivers are small and insignificant; all fall into the Namtoroan +or Namtunai.</p> +<p><i>Villages</i>.—Of these the following were passed on the +route:—</p> +<p>1. <i>Nhempean</i>, on the right bank of the Namtoroan, is +situated on an extensive open grassy plain, it is stockaded: it contains +about 12 houses, the river is here navigable for middling sized canoes.</p> +<p>2. <i>Tubone</i>, on the same bank, but lower down, and within +quarter of a mile of Nhempean, it is of about the same size, and similarly +stockaded.</p> +<p>3. <i>Nidding</i>, on the left bank of the Saxsai-kha, about +three-quarters of a mile above its junction with the Namtoroan: it is +a stockaded village, and about the same size.</p> +<p>4. <i>Calleyang</i>, on the Prong-kha contains about 8 houses: +it is not stockaded.</p> +<p>5. <i>Lamoon</i>, on the Moneekha, is a very small village, +containing four or five houses: it is not stockaded.</p> +<p>6. <i>Tsilone</i>, on the left bank of the Namtunai. +This is the Dupha Gam’s village: it is of the ordinary size, and +is stockaded in the usual manner.</p> +<p>7. <i>Meinkhoon</i>, on the Cadeekha, by which it is intersected; +it consists of two stockades, separated by the above stream; and contains +about 25 houses, none of which are however large. It is here that +the first Pagodas (Poongye houses) occur. The village is situated +on an open grassy plain of considerable extent.</p> +<p>8. <i>Wullabhoom</i>, on the right bank of the Nemokapy, an +insignificant stream. This village is not stockaded; it contains +about 10 houses, of which several are of the Singpho structure.</p> +<p>The Gam of this village was in expectation of an attack from the +Dupha people, and had in consequence erected a small square stockade +for his own use; he had however built it so small that he might easily +be dislodged by means of a long spear.</p> +<p>In addition to these, there is a village called <i>Bone</i>, on the +Namtoroan; the path leading to this is crossed soon after leaving Namtusseek, +and another stockaded village, on the right bank of the Namtoroan, a +little below the mouth of the Saxsai-kha.</p> +<p>None of the above villages are situated on strong positions. +The stockades are as usual of bamboo, and are but weak defences; the +space between the stockade and the outer palisades is covered with short +pointed bamboos, placed obliquely in the ground: these are called Panjahs +by the Assamese; they inflict very troublesome wounds, and are universally +employed by the Singphos. The interiors of the stockades are dirty, +the houses are built without order, and generally fill the stockade +completely, so that the people inside might be burnt out with the greatest +ease. The average number of houses in each of the above villages, +may be estimated at about 12, of these the largest occur at Wullaboom. +They are built on muchowns, and resemble in all respects those of our +Assam Singphos. They are generally thatched with grass (Imperata +cylindrica. <a name="citation126"></a><a href="#footnote126">{126}</a> +) The larger kinds have invariably one end unenclosed; under this portico, +which is usually of some size, all the domestic operations are carried +on. The Dupha Gam’s is not distinguished above the rest +in any one way.</p> +<p><i>Population</i>.—No country inhabited by sets of petty chieftains +belonging to different tribes, which are generally at enmity with each +other, can be populous; it is therefore with considerable surprise that +I find it stated that the number of houses in the north and eastern +sides of the valley is estimated at not less than 3000, which at the +rate of 7 men to one house, which is, considering the great size of +very many Singpho houses, rather underrated, would make the population +of these portions of the valley amount to 21,000 souls. The part +of the valley which I have traversed, and during which route 75 miles +of ground were passed over, does not present a single sign which, in +the absence of direct evidence, would lead one to suppose that it contained +a considerable population. During the before mentioned marches, +I saw only four paths, crossing or diverging from that which we followed. +Of these, one <i>leads</i>, as I have mentioned, to Bone, one to the +hills on the NE., one to a Singpho village, some miles to the south +of our track, and the fourth diverged from the path leading to the Amber +mines through the village of a chief called Tharapown Hhoung. +The population on the above route of 75 miles, would at the rate of +7 men to one house, and 12 houses to each village, amount only to 840, +but I think that 1,100 or 1,200 would be a fairer estimate. From +Kuttack-bhoom, as I have mentioned, a great portion of the valley is +distinctly seen, and nothing meets the eye but jungle, broken here and +there by the waters of the Namtunai: not a clearing is even visible; +instead of a population of 30,000, as has been stated I should imagine +that the whole valley of Hookhoom does not contain more than 12,000.</p> +<p>The above population consists almost entirely of Singphos and their +Assamese slaves, and these last form a considerable portion. This +was particularly evident at Wulla-khoon, where they certainly out-numbered +their masters.</p> +<p>The Singphos of Hookhoong resemble exactly those located in Assam: +they are however less given to opium eating. They are of the same +indolent habits, and content themselves with cultivating sufficient +grain to keep themselves from starving. The women wear the Thumein, +or Burmese dress, a costume which is entirely unknown among the Singphos +of Assam. The most superior men I saw belonged to the Lupai tribe, +from the east of the Irrawaddi; they had come to Meinkhoon for the purpose +of procuring amber. In manners and dress they resembled the Shan-Chinese, +they were provided with firelocks, in the use of which they were certainly +adroit. The usual weapons of the Hookhoong Singphos are dhas and +spears. I saw very few muskets.</p> +<p>The behaviour of these people was throughout civil, and perhaps friendly. +Their hatred of the Burmese is excessive, the visits of the armed forces +of this nation being most harassing and oppressive. They are sub-divided +into tribes, among whom there is but little unanimity. The Dupha +Gam is much disliked, as he is considered the cause of the visit of +the Burmese. His power has been much exaggerated; he is not capable +of bringing 500 men into the field. So unpopular was he, that +it was reported to Mr. Bayfield, that he was to be cut off immediately +the Burmese force had left the valley.</p> +<p>In giving the foregoing low estimate of the population of the valley, +I believe I have taken into consideration every circumstance of importance. +The occurrence of several old burial places on the route, some of which +are of considerable extent, might be considered by some as a proof, +that the population has undergone a decrease; but I conceive that it +is sufficiently accounted for by the wandering habits of the people.</p> +<p><i>Capabilities</i>.—The greater part of the valley is well +adapted for the cultivation of rice, and as the soil is generally rich, +approaching in external characters to that of some parts of Upper Assam, +particularly Muttack, it is capable of supporting a large population.</p> +<p><i>Products</i>.—Of the mineral productions, the most remarkable +is Amber, for which the valley of Hookhoong has been long famous, and +from the existence of which it derives its Burmese name. The mines +are situated in low, wooded hills, from which they are distant between +five and six miles; of this distance the first three miles traverse +the plain on which Meinkhoong is situated. The pits now worked +give occupation to about a dozen people; they occur on the brow of a +hill: they are square, and of various depth, the deepest being about +40 feet, the diameter not exceeding three feet; the workmen ascending +and descending by placing their feet in holes made in two faces of the +square. No props are used to prevent the sides of the pits from +falling in, the tenacity of the soil rendering this precaution unnecessary. +The instruments used, are small wooden shovels, a wooden crow-bar tipped +with iron for displacing the soil or breaking the rocks, baskets for +removing the substances so displaced, buckets made of the bark of trees +<a name="citation128"></a><a href="#footnote128">{128}</a> for removing +the water which is met with in the deepest pits, and rude levers similar +to those used in Madras for the purposes of irrigation, for carrying +the soil, etc. from the pits to the surface; these however are only +used in the deeper pits, a hooked bamboo answering the purpose in the +shallower ones.</p> +<p>The soil throughout the upper portion, and indeed for a depth of +from 15 to 20 feet, is clayey and red: the remainder consists of a greyish-black +carbonaceous earth, increasing in density with the depth, and being +very hard at a depth of 40 feet. The amber occurs in both these, +the clue to its existence being the presence of small masses of lignite. +The searching occupies but very little time, as the presence of the +lignite is readily ascertained; all I saw dug out occurred as small +irregular deposits; it did not appear to be abundant. The people +appear to have no guide for the selections of favourable spots on which +to commence their operations; but having once met with a good pit, they +dig other pits all around, and often within a distance of two feet from +the first one sunk.</p> +<p>I could not succeed in procuring a single fine specimen; indeed the +workmen denied having found any of value during the last six years! +It is an article in great request among the Chinese and Singphos; at +the pits, however, it is not high priced, and a first rate pair of ear-rings +are procurable at Meinkhoong for 5 tickals; in Assam 10 rupees are occasionally +given. Meinkhoong is annually visited by parties of Shan-Chinese, +for the purpose of procuring this mineral; the caravan at the time I +passed this village had returned, and I believe was met by Mr. Bayfield. +There was a small party of Lupai Singphos from the East of the Irrawaddi, +consisting of a Tsonba and six or seven followers still waiting for +a supply.</p> +<p>The spot occupied by pits is considerable, but three-fourths of these +are no longer worked. Compared with the Serpentine mines, they +are but of small value.</p> +<p>Both <i>Coal</i> <i>and</i> <i>Salt</i> exist in the valley; the +only indication of the existence of the former I saw, was a mass of +lignite in the bed of a nullah between Tsilone and Meinkhoong.</p> +<p><i>Vegetable</i> <i>products</i>.—Fine timber trees, <a name="citation129"></a><a href="#footnote129">{129}</a> +which belong to the same genus as the Saul, occur between Nhempean and +Namtusseek, and elsewhere towards the foot of the hills surrounding +the valley.</p> +<p>The Mulberry of Upper Assam occurs likewise, and the leaves supply +with food a species of silkworm. From the silk a coarse species +of cloth is manufactured, but the use of this appears to be very limited.</p> +<p>Tea appears to be of uncommon occurrence. The only specimens +I saw were given me by Mr. Bayfield, they were procured from low hills +some distance from Shellingket. On this subject Mr. Bayfield made +very frequent and minute enquiries, and the result appears to be that +the plant is of rare occurrence; none exists towards or about the amber +mines.</p> +<p>The Room of Upper Assam (Ruellia Indigofera Mihi) is in use for dyeing +cloths, but not so much so as in Assam.</p> +<p>The cultivated plants are of the ordinary kind; and the produce is +just sufficient to meet the wants of the inhabitants. Owing to +the presence of the Myoowoon’s force, rice was scarce during my +visit; the price was seven tickals a basket, each of which contains +about 30 days’ supply for one man.</p> +<p>The domestic animals are of the ordinary description: fowls forming +the only poultry. But on this subject it is unnecessary to enlarge, +as the habits and manners of the people are precisely the same as those +of the Assamese Singphos.</p> +<h4>IV. FROM WULLABHOOM TO MOGOUNG.</h4> +<p>COUNTRY TRAVERSED FORMING CONSIDERABLE PORTION OF THE MOGOUNG VALLEY, +THROUGHOUT SUBJECT TO BURMESE AUTHORITY.</p> +<p>March 1. <i>Halted</i> on a small stream, a tributary of the +Mogoung river.—Direction nearly S. distance 22 miles, course at +first along the Namphyet, thence over low hills, forming part of the +S. boundary of the valley of Hookhoong.</p> +<p>2. <i>Halted</i> on the Mogoung river.—Direction S. distance +22 miles, over similar low hills until we reached the Mogoung river +after a march of four hours, soon descending into its bed, which we +followed.</p> +<p>3. <i>Mogoung</i> river.—Direction S. distance 13 miles, +course along the bed of the river.</p> +<p>4. <i>Mogoung</i> river.—-Direction SE. distance 14 miles, +course continued along the bed of the river.</p> +<p>5. <i>Kamein</i>.—Direction SSE. distance 14 miles: on +starting left the Mogoung river: course throughout over fine open high +plains intersected by belts of jungle.</p> +<p>6. <i>From</i> <i>Kamein</i> <i>to</i> <i>Mogoung</i>.—Direction +SSE. Distance 25 miles, course over high open plains and dry woods. +Many nullahs occurred on the route: crossed the Mogoung river opposite +to Kamein.</p> +<p><i>Nature</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Country</i>.—The low +hills which are passed before reaching the Mogoung river, are covered +with tree jungle, but they afford scarcely any thing of interest; they +are here and there intersected by small plains, covered with the usual +grasses. <a name="citation130"></a><a href="#footnote130">{130}</a> +The country traversed while following the Mogoung river, is most uninteresting, +the road following almost entirely the sandy bed of the river, the banks +of which are either covered with grass or tree jungle. On leaving +this most tortuous river, the face of the country improved and became +very picturesque, presenting almost exclusively fine high, and rather +extensive plains covered with grass, and partially with trees, while +here and there they are intersected by strips of dry tree jungle. +Low hills are visible frequently, especially to the eastward.</p> +<p><i>Villages</i> <i>and</i> <i>Towns</i>.</p> +<p>1. <i>Kamein</i>, on the right bank of the Mogoung river, at +the junction of the Endaw-khioung, consists of two stockades, one on +a small hill the other at the foot. Both together contain about +32 houses. The inhabitants are Shans. It is a place of some +consequence, as it is on the route from Mogoung to the Serpentine mines. +From Kamein, Shewe Down Gyee, a conspicuous mountain, so called, bears +east.</p> +<p>2. <i>Mogoung</i>, on the right bank of the river of the same +name, just below the junction to the Namyeen Khioung, contains rather +fewer than 300 houses. Although it contains so few houses it is +a place of considerable extent. It is surrounded by the remains +of a timber stockade, similar in construction to those of Burmah proper. +The houses are mostly small, and I speak within bounds when I say, that +there is not a single one that bears the stamp of respectability. +There is a bazaar, but nothing good is procurable in it. Tea and +sugar-candy are rare and high priced. Pork is plentiful. +Mogoung is situated in a plain of some extent, this plain is surrounded +in almost every direction by hills, all of which, with the exception +of Shewe Down Gyee, are low: the nearest of these are about three miles +off.</p> +<p>The inhabitants are mostly Shans, there are some Assamese, the chief +of whom is a relation of Chundra Kant, the ex-Rajah of Assam. +The best street in the town, though one of small extent, is that occupied +by the resident Chinese, none of whom however are natives of China proper. +Of this people I should say there are barely 60 in Mogoung, and, judging +from their houses, none of which are of brick, I should say they are +very inferior to their fellow-countrymen residing in Bamo.</p> +<p>During our stay in Mogoung, which was protracted owing to the disturbed +state of the country, the population was much increased by Shan-Chinese +returning from the Serpentine mines; and as there was a considerable +number of boats engaged by them for the transportation of the Serpentine, +the town looked busier than it otherwise would have done.</p> +<p>The Mogoung, river is here about 100 yards broad, but it is much +subdivided by sand banks: it is navigable for moderate sized boats a +considerable distance above the town. In the upper part of the +course this river abounds with fish to an unprecedented degree; of these +the most numerous is the Bokhar of Assam, and of this I have seen shoals +of immense extent.</p> +<p>The Namyeen is a small and shallow stream. Although from the +extent of the stockade Mogoung has evidently in former periods (during +the Shan dynasty) been of extent and consequence, it is at present a +mean and paltry town. It derives any little consequence it possesses +from being the rendezvous of the Shan-Chinese, who flock here annually +for procuring Serpentine.</p> +<p>The most valuable product of the Mogoung district is the Serpentine; +the mines producing which, we visited from Kamein. The marches +are as follows,</p> +<p>1. <i>From</i> <i>Kamein</i> <i>to</i> <i>Endawkhioung</i>.—Direction +SSW. Distance 10 miles, course over low hills covered with jungle, +with intervening grassy valleys of small extent; crossed the Isee Een +nullah.</p> +<p>2. <i>Halted</i> <i>on</i> <i>a</i> <i>plain</i>, on a patch +of ground lately under cultivation. Direction SSW. Distance +14 miles. Course over a similar tract of country; continued for +some time close to the Endawkhioung; crossed several nullahs.</p> +<p>3. <i>Halted</i> <i>in</i> <i>the</i> <i>jungle</i>.—Direction +WNW. Distance 17 miles. Country the same: we changed our +course on reaching the path which leads to Kionkseik, a Singpho village, +diverging to the N.; halted within a short distance of Kuwa Bhoom.</p> +<p>4. <i>Reached</i> <i>the</i> <i>mines</i>.—Direction +WNW. Distance 10 miles, course over small plains and through jungle +until we reached Kuwa Bhoom, which we ascended in a WNW. direction, +extreme altitude attained 2,799 feet. The descent was steep, varied +by one or two steep ascents of some hundred feet in height. On +nearing the base of the range we continued through heavy and wet jungle, +until we arrived at the mines.</p> +<p>These celebrated Serpentine <a name="citation132"></a><a href="#footnote132">{132}</a> +mines occupy a valley of somewhat semi-circular form, and bounded on +all sides by thickly wooded hills of no great height. To the north +the valley passes off into a ravine, down which a small streamlet that +drains the valley escapes, and along this, at a distance of two or three +miles, another spot of ground affording Serpentine is said to occur. +The valley is small: its greatest diameter, which is from E. to W. being +about three-quarters of a mile, and its smallest breadth varying from +460 to 600 or 700 yards.</p> +<p>The whole of the valley, which appears formerly to have been occupied +by rounded hillocks, presents a confused appearance, being dug up in +every direction, and in the most indiscriminate way; no steps being +taken to remove the earth, etc. that have been thrown up in various +places during the excavations. Nothing in fact like a pit or a +shaft exists, nor is there any thing to repay one for the tediousness +of the march from Kamein.</p> +<p>The stone is found in the form of more or less rounded boulders mixed +with other boulders of various rocks and sizes imbedded in brick-coloured +yellow or nearly orange-coloured clay, which forms the soil of the valley, +and which is of considerable depth. The excavations vary much +in form, some resembling trenches; none exceed 20 feet in depth. +The workmen have no mark by which to distinguish at sight the Serpentine +from the other boulders; to effect this, fracture is resorted to, and +this they accomplish, I believe, by means of fire. I did not see +the manner in which they work, or the tools they employ, all the Shans +having left for Kamein, as the season had already been over for some +days. No good specimens were procurable. The workmen reside +in the valley, drawing their supplies from Kioukseik.</p> +<p>On our road to the mines we met daily, and especially on the last +march, parties of Shan-Chinese, Burmese, and a few Singphos on their +return. Of these in all Mr. Bayfield counted about 1,100, of whom +about 700 were Shan-Chinese: these were accompanied by ponies, which +they ordinarily use as beasts of burden. The larger blocks of +stone were carried by four or five men, on bamboo frames; the smaller, +but which still are of considerable size, on ingenious frames which +rest on the nape of the coolies’ neck; the frame has two long +arms which the bearer grasps in his hand, and which enables him to relieve +himself of his burden, and re-assume it without much sacrifice of labour, +as he props his load against a tree, which is then raised by the legs +of the frame some height from the ground. The valley we visited +affords I believe the greatest quantity of the stone, which is said +to be annually diminishing, neither are pieces of the finest sort so +often procurable as they were formerly wont to be.</p> +<p>The path to the mines is on the whole good; it is choked up here +and there by jungle, and the occurrence of one or two marshy places +contribute to render it more difficult. It bears ample evidences +of being a great thoroughfare.</p> +<p>The greater part of the stone procured is removed in the large masses, +to Kioukseik, and thence by water by the aid of the Endawkhioung to +Mogoung. At this place duties are levied upon it. Hence +almost the whole is taken to Topo by water. From this place the +Shan-Chinese carry it to their own country on ponies.</p> +<p>From the stone various ornaments are made; from the inferior kind, +bangles, cups, etc. and from the superior, which is found in small portions +generally within the larger masses, rings, etc. The stone is, +I am informed by Mr. Bayfield, cut by means of twisted copper wire. +The price of the inferior kind is high.</p> +<p>It is from these mines that the province of Mogoung derives its importance; +so much so, that its revenue is said to exceed that of any other Burman +Province. The sum derived from the Serpentine alone is stated +to be occasionally as high as 40,000 Rs. per annum.</p> +<p>Owing to the avidity with which this product is sought after by the +Chinese, it is highly desirable to ascertain whether it exists in Assam, +which indeed is probably the case. I believe it is reported to +exist near Beesa; at any rate, blood-stone is found in this extremity +of the valley of Assam, and this, in Chinese eyes, is of considerable +value. If the Serpentine is found, specimens should be sent to +Mogoung. As the Shan-Chinese are reported to be a most penurious +race, a small reduction in the price below that of the Burmese, would +suffice to divert the current of the trade into Assam. Another +interesting product, although of no value, exists in the shape of an +Alkaline spring on the Sapiya Khioung, which hence derives its name. +The water of this spring bubbles up sparingly and quietly from under +the rocky bed of the above mountain torrent, it is quite clear, of a +decided and pure alkaline taste: it is used by the natives for the purpose +of washing, and it answers this remarkably well. Of this interesting +spring Mr. Bayfield took specimens for analysis.</p> +<p>Salt is procurable within a distance of three or four days from Kioukseik.</p> +<p><i>Vegetable</i> <i>products</i>.—Teak, and some of it is of +a fine description, occurs both on the route between the Mogoung river +and Kamein, as well as between Kamein and the Serpentine mines. +The natives do not however appear to cut it, probably owing to the want +of water carriage. Fine timber trees, nearly allied to the Saul, +likewise occur on the road to the mines.</p> +<p>I met with the tea but once. This occurred among the low hills +dividing the Mogoung district from the valley of Hookhoong, close to +the Dupai-beng-kheoung, or Tea tree Nullah. There was no difference +in the specimens brought to me from the plant of Assam, with the exception +that the leaves were even larger than in the plant alluded to; it did +not occur in abundance. It exists I believe, in another place +on this route, and among the same hills, but I did not succeed in procuring +specimens. Throughout both routes scarcely any cultivation was +seen. Between the Mogoung river and Mogoung town considerable +portions of some low hills to the East, presented the appearance of +clearings. It must however be observed, that the appearance of +clearings is a most fallacious ground on which to form an estimate of +the population; 1st, owing to the habits of a nomadic population; 2ndly, +because a spot once cleared, keeps up the appearance of a clearing for +a long time; and 3rdly, because some particular spots are, from some +local cause or other, exclusively inhabited by grasses, the prevalence +of which will at a little distance always give one the idea of cultivation.</p> +<p><i>Population</i>.—This in the somewhat extensive tract of +the Mogoung district traversed, is very scanty. That of Mogoung +and suburbs may be estimated at about 1,600, and that of Kamein at 250. +In addition to these places, I have to mention a small Singpho village +of three or four houses, seen on a range of hills during our first march +towards the mines, and bearing about WNW., and Kioukseik. This +latter place we visited on our return from the mines, it is a stockaded +village, containing 16 houses, and about 120 souls. It is situated +about 100 yards from a small stream, the Nam Teen: it is inhabited by +Singphos: it is about a mile from the divergence of the road to the +mines, and bears from this spot nearly due south. During the season +of operations at the mines it is a place of some consequence, as all +the necessary supplies of grain are procured from it. At the time +of our visit, there was a good sized bazaar along the Nam Teen, which +was likewise a good deal crowded by boats.</p> +<p>The neighbouring hills are inhabited here and there by Kukkeens, +the most troublesome perhaps of all mountainous tribes; but there are +some other villages about the lake, called the Endawgyee. We had +an opportunity of viewing from a distance the above lake on our return +from the mines. From an open spot on the eastern face of Kuwa +Bhoom, it bore nearly due south, and was estimated as being 15 miles +distant. We could not distinguish its outline, but we saw enough +to satisfy us that it was a large body of water. It is situated +in an extensive plain near a range of hills, part of which form portion +of its banks. From the same spot we could see Shewe Down Gyee, +the large range from which the Namtunai takes its course, bearing nearly +due east, and at an estimated distance of 35 miles; the situation of +the mines is therefore nearly due east from Kamein.</p> +<h4>V. FROM MOGOUNG TO AVA.</h4> +<p>THE WHOLE OF THE DISTANCE BETWEEN THE TWO ABOVE PLACES WAS PERFORMED +BY WATER.</p> +<p>The time occupied in descending the Mogoung river was three days. +This river is exceedingly tortuous, generally a good deal subdivided, +and its channels are in many places shallow. The chief obstacle +it presents to navigation consists in rapids, which commence below Tapan, +and continue for some distance; these rapids are not severe, but are +rendered difficult by the presence of rocks, many of large size. +These rapids commence immediately the river in its course approaches +some low ranges of hills. Boats of considerable size however manage +to reach Mogoung; they ascend the severer rapids in channels made along +the sides of the river, by removing and piling up on either side the +boulders which form great part of the bed of the river in these places. +The descent is managed in the same way, the speed of the boat being +retarded by the crew exerting their united force in an opposite direction. +On leaving the proximity of the hills, the river resumes its natural +and rather slow character, and towards its mouth there is scarcely any +stream at all. The channels are much impeded by stumps of trees. +The country through which the Mogoung river passes is very uninteresting, +and almost exclusively jungle, either tree or high grass.</p> +<p>Only one village, Tapan, is met with; this is small, and is situated +on the right bank; with the exception of its river face it is stockaded. +At this place the Shan-Chinese leave the river, striking off in an E. +direction towards the Irrawaddi, which they reach in one day. +We observed a small Kukkeen village on some hills near Tapan; with these +exceptions no sign of inhabitants occurred until we reached the Irrawaddi. +On the hills above alluded to, the bitter Tea is reported to exist. +The Mogoung river at its mouth is about 70 yards across. The Irrawaddi +even at the mouth of the Mogoung river, and at a distance of nearly +800 miles from the sea, keeps up its magnificent character. At +this point it is 900 or 1,000 yards across; when we reached it, it had +risen considerably, and the appearance of this vast sheet of water was +really grand. Its characters are very different from the Ganges +and Burrumpooter, its waters being much more confined to one bed, and +comparatively speaking becoming seldom spread out. Generally speaking +it is deep and the stream is not violent. It appears to me to +afford every facility for navigation; in one or two places troublesome +shallows are met with, and in several places the channel near the banks +is impeded by rocks. It is only in the upper defile, or Kioukdweng, +that the navigation is during the rises of the river dangerous, and +at times impracticable. On our reaching Tsenbo, which is about +12 miles below the junction of the Mogoung river with the Irrawaddi, +the river continued to rise in a most rapid degree, Mr. Bayfield ascertaining +by measurement that it rose 16 inches an hour. We were consequently +compelled to push on, as we were informed that the next day the defile +would be impassable. The Kioukdweng alluded to commences about +two miles below Tsenbo, the river becoming constricted from 1000 to +150 yards. The rush of water was great, and was rendered fierce +by rocks which exist in the midst of the river. Still further +within the defile the difficulties were increased; at one place the +whole of the enormous body of water rushes through a passage, and it +is the only one, certainly not exceeding 50 yards in width. The +passage of this was really fearful, for on clearing it we were encountered +by strong eddies, backwaters and whirlpools, which rendered the boat +nearly unmanageable. These scenes continued, varied every now +and then by an expanded and consequently more tranquil stream, until +a gorge is passed, well known by the name of the “Elephant and +Cow,” two rocks which are fancifully supposed to resemble the +above named animals; the defile then becomes much wider, and the waters +flow in a tranquil and rather sluggish manner. The depth of the +river in this defile is, as may be supposed, immense; Mr. Bayfield ascertained +during his passage up, at a season when the waters were low, that in +many places no bottom was to be found at a depth of 45 fathoms. +The necessity of this enormous depth is at once evident, and is pointed +out by the configuration of the banks, which are in many places sheer +precipices. Two other defiles exist between Bamo and Ava, of these +the middle or second is the shortest, in both the stream flows sluggishly, +and there is no impediment whatever to navigation. In these the +depth is great, but owing to their greater width, much less so than +in the upper.</p> +<p>The temperature of the waters of the Irrawaddi is as usually obtains, +except during the rises of the river caused by the melting of snow, +when it is higher than usual.</p> +<p><i>Tributaries</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Irrawaddi</i> <i>between</i> +<i>Mogoung</i> <i>river</i> <i>and</i> <i>Ava</i>.</p> +<p>The number of tributaries even to Rangoon is unprecedentedly small: +this tends to increase the astonishment with which one regards this +magnificent river.</p> +<p>The rivers that fall into the Irrawaddi within the above distance +are,</p> +<p>1st. The Mogoung river.</p> +<p>2nd. Tapien Khioung, above Bamo.</p> +<p>3rd. Shewe Lee Khioung.</p> +<p>These are about the same size, and only discharge a considerable +quantity of water during the rainy season. The Shewe Lee at its +mouth, is between 5 and 600 yards wide, but only an inconsiderable portion +of this is occupied by water, and this to no depth.</p> +<p>The great branch from which the Irrawaddi derives its vast supply +of water still remains to be discovered, and will probably be found +to be the Shoomaee Kha. It is evident, at any rate, that the great +body of water comes from the eastward, for between the Mogoung river +and Borkhamtee, in which country Captain Wilcox visited the Irrawaddi, +and where it was found to be of no great size, no considerable branch +finds its way from the Westward: neither are the hills which intervene +between these points, of such height as to afford large supplies of +water.</p> +<p>On the whole it is, I think, probable, that the Irrawaddi is an outlet +for some great river, which drains an extensive tract of country; for +it appears to me that if all its waters are poured in by mountain streams, +a tract of country extensive beyond all analogy, will be required for +the supply of such a vast body of water.</p> +<p>In addition to the above three rivers, few nullahs exist, but these +are scarcely worthy of consideration.</p> +<p><i>Nature</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>country</i>.—From the +mouth of the Mogoung river nearly to Tsenbo the country is flat, and +the banks wooded or covered with grass to the brink. The range +of hills which form the upper Kioukdweng there commence, and continue +for a distance of 16 or 20 miles, during the whole of which they form +the banks of the river. These hills are scantily covered with +trees, most of which are in addition stunted. The vegetation within +the maximum high water mark consists of a few scraggy shrubs. +The rocks composing these hills are principally serpentine, which within +the influence of the water is of a dark sombre brown colour. Limestone +occurs occasionally.</p> +<p>From this Kioukdweng to the second, the entrance of which (coming +from above) is at Tsenkan, the features of the country are of the ordinary +alluvial description, and the river is a good deal spread out and subdivided +by islands, covered with moderate sized grasses. On leaving the +second Kioukdweng the same scenery occurs, the banks are generally tolerably +high, often gravelly or clayey. About Tsagaiya, a few miles below +the mouth of the Shewe Lee, low hills approach the river, and they continue +along one or both banks <a name="citation139"></a><a href="#footnote139">{139}</a> +at variable distance until one reaches Ava. These hills are all +covered with a partial and stunted vegetation, chiefly of thorny shrubs, +and present uniformly a rugged raviny and barren appearance. The +scenery of the river is in many places highly picturesque, and in the +upper Kioukdweng and portion of the second, where there is a remarkable +cliff of about 3,000 feet in height, bold and even grand.</p> +<p><i>Villages</i> <i>and</i> <i>Towns</i>.—These although numerous +compared with the almost deserted tracts hitherto passed, are by no +means so much so as to give an idea of even a moderate population. +From the mouth of the Mogoung river to the Kioukdweng there are several +villages, but all are small, mean, and insignificant. Strange +to say, they are defenceless, although the neighbouring Kukkeens are +dangerous and cruel neighbours. Nothing can be more calculated +to shew the weakness of the Burmese government than the fact, that the +most mischievous and frequent aggressions of these hill tribes always +go unpunished, although a short time after an attack the very band by +whom it has been made will enter even large towns to make purchases, +perhaps with money the produce of their robberies.</p> +<p>The upper Kioukdweng has a very scanty population, consisting of +a distinct race of people called Phoons: who are sub-divided into two +tribes, the greater and lesser Phoons. About 12 villages occur +in this defile, and Mr. Bayfield says that the population is almost +entirely confined to the banks of the river: all these villages are +small.</p> +<p>Between the defile and Bamo a good number of villages occur, the +largest of which does not contain more than 100 houses, the generality +are small and mean. Bamo, which is a place of celebrity, and is +perhaps the third town in Burmah, is situated on the left bank of the +river, which is here, including the two islands which subdivide it into +three channels, about a mile and a quarter in width; the channel on +which Bamo is situated is the principal one. The town occupies +rather a high bank of yellow clay, along which it extends for rather +more than a mile, its extreme breadth being perhaps 350 yards. +It is surrounded by a timber stockade, the outer palisades being well +pangoed; the defences had just undergone repair owing to an expected +attack from the Kukkeens. It contains within the stockade rather +less than 600 houses, (the precise number was ascertained personally +by Mr. Bayfield,) and including the suburbs, which consist of two small +villages at the northern end, one at the southern, and one occupied +by Assamese at the eastern, it contains about 750 houses. These +are generally of the usual poor and mean description; indeed, not even +excepting the Governor’s house, there is not a good Burman or +Shan house in the place. One street which occupies a portion of +the river bank, is inhabited by Chinese, and contains about 100 houses; +these are built of unburnt brick, and have a peculiar blueish appearance; +none are of any size. The best building in Bamo is the Chinese +place of worship. Those occupied by the Burmese have the usual +form. The country adjoining Bamo is flat, dry, and I should think +unproductive; it is intersected by low swampy ravines, one or two of +which extend into the town. To the south there is an extensive +marsh, partially used for rice-cultivation.</p> +<p>The population of Bamo including the suburbs, may be estimated at +about 4500, of whom 4 or 500 are Chinese. The governor is a bigoted +Burman, of disagreeable manners; he expends much money in the erection +of Pagodas, while he leaves the streets, roads and bridges by which +the ravines are passed, in a ruinous and disgraceful state.</p> +<p>The Bazaar of Bamo is generally well supplied: British piece goods +and woollen cloths are procurable, but at a high price: the show of +Chinese manufactures is much better, particularly on the arrival of +a caravan; considerable quantities of Tea are likewise brought in the +shape of flat cakes, of the size of a dessert plate, and about two inches +thick. This tea is of the black sort, and although very inferior +to the Chinese case teas, is a far better article than that of Pollong. +In addition to this, warm jackets lined with fur, straw hats, silk robes, +skull-caps, and sugar-candy are procurable; pork of course is plentiful, +and is excessively fat; grain, vegetables and fish are plentiful. +On the whole Bamo is a busy and rather flourishing place: it derives +its consequence entirely from its being a great emporium of trade with +the Chinese, who come here annually in large numbers; for the accommodation +of these people and their caravans, two or three squares, fenced in +with bamboos, are allotted.</p> +<p>The principal article of Burmese export is cotton, and this I believe +is produced for the most part lower down the Irrawaddi.</p> +<p>The climate of Bamo is in April dry and sultry: the range of the +thermometer being from 66° or 68° to 94° or 96°. +North-westers are of common occurrence in this month, and are frequently +of extreme severity. I saw very little cultivation about Bamo, +some of the ravines alluded to had lately been under rice-culture; the +chief part of the cultivation for vegetables, etc. is confined to the +sandy islands, which occur here and there.</p> +<p>Of the numerous villages passed between Bamo and Ava not one deserves +especial notice, nor is there one, with the exception of Umeerapoora, +the former capital, which contains 500 houses. Shewegyoo, which +formerly occupied a considerable extent of the left bank near the south +opening of the second Kioukdweng had been burnt by the orders of the +Monein Myoowoon, on account of their having supplied troops to the emissaries +of the Tharawaddi. Kioukgyee, the residence of the above governor, +had a short time before our arrival been invested by a force in the +interest of the Tharawaddi, but had been repulsed. The governor +was to proceed with the whole population, amounting to several hundred +souls, to Bamo, to join his forces with those of the Bamo governor. +This part of the country was most unsettled and almost deserted. +On reaching Katha the state of the country was more tranquil, all the +people below this point having espoused the cause of the Tharawaddi. +Katha contains 200 houses, and has a rather respectable bazaar; it is +well situated, and has the most eligible site in my opinion, of all +the towns hitherto seen. The most remarkable object is a noble +Kioung, or Mosque, built by the head-man of the place; this is one of +the finest now existing in Burma.</p> +<p>The only other large place is Sheenmaga, about a day’s journey +from Ava. This is said to contain 1,000 houses. An extensive +fire had lately occurred here. I counted 200 houses, and judging +from the extent of the ruins, I should say it might probably have numbered +between 4 and 500. There are several villages contiguous to this, +and I think that the district immediately contiguous is more populous +than any part hitherto seen.</p> +<p>During the above portion of the journey our halts were as follows:—</p> +<pre> 1. Tapaw. + 2. Mogoung river. + 3. Mogoung river. + 4. Lemar, in the upper Kioukdweng. + 5. Bamo. + 6. Tsenkan. + 7. Kioukgyee. + 8. Katha. + 9. Tsagaya. +10. Tagoung. +11. Malé, at the entrance of the lower Kioukdweng. +12. Kabuet, in the lower Kioukdweng. +13. Malé. +14. Menghoon. +15. Ava.</pre> +<p>This distance down the Irrawaddi may, in a fast boat, be performed +in ten days, but owing to the disturbed state of the country we were +compelled to avail ourselves of the first opportunity that offered to +enable us to reach Ava; in addition the proper number of boatmen was +not procurable, everybody being afraid of approaching the capital even +a few miles.</p> +<p>The chief product I saw was Teak, of this there were large rafts +at Tsenkan and elsewhere. This tree seems to abound in the hills +forming the NE. boundaries of Burmah. I did not, however, see +any of large size.</p> +<p>Tea is found on hills to the east of Bamo, and at a distance of one +day’s journey from that place. Through the kindness of Mr. +Bayfield, I was enabled to procure specimens; the leaves were decidedly +less coarse, as well as smaller, than those of the Assamese plants, +and they occurred both serrated and entire. No use is made of +the wild plants in this direction, and the Chinese at Bamo, asserted +that it was good for nothing. It must be remembered, however, +that none of them had seen the plant cultivated in China. Indeed +the only real Chinaman we saw, was one at Kioukgyee, serving the Myoowoon +as a carpenter: this man had been to England twice, and talked a little +English.</p> +<p>Cotton is, I was informed, extensively cultivated.</p> +<p>But the most valuable product is the Ruby, which is procured from +hills to the eastward of Tsenbo, and which are, I believe, visible from +the opposite town, Mala. From the same place and to the SE., low +hills are visible, from which all the marble in extensive use for the +carving of images, is obtained; this marble has been pronounced by competent +authority to be of first-rate quality.</p> +<p><i>Population</i>.—This must be considered as scanty. +From a list of towns and villages, observed by Captain Hannay, between +Ava and Mogoung inclusive, I estimated the population at 100,000 souls, +but from this one-third at least must be deducted. In this estimate +of the number of houses, Captain Hannay was probably guided, either +by the Burmese census, or by the statement of the writer who accompanied +him. From the numbers given by this officer, in almost every case +one-third, and occasionally one-half, or even more, must be deducted: +as instances, I may cite his statement of the number of houses in Bamo +and Katha.</p> +<p>In almost every case Mr. Bayfield counted all the houses, and in +all doubtful cases, I counted them also at his request, so that I am +enabled to speak with great confidence on this point.</p> +<p>As a collateral proof of the scanty population of this extensive +portion of the Burmese territory, I may allude to the fact that Bamo, +the third place in Burmah, and the emporium of great part of an extensive +Chinese trade, contains only even at the rate of seven souls to each +house, which is two too many, 4,250 inhabitants. The capital may +be adduced as an additional instance; for including the extensive suburbs, +no one estimated it as having a larger population than 100,000. +It must be remembered also, that there is no doubt, but that the banks +of the Irrawaddi are more populous than any other portion of the kingdom.</p> +<p>Throughout the above rather long journey, we were treated, with one +exception, tolerably well; indeed our delays arose from the unwillingness, +real or pretended, of the authorities to forward us on while the country +remained so unsettled. The headman of Kamein on our first arrival +was extremely civil, but on our return after he had received news of +the revolt of the Tharawaddi, he behaved with great insolence, and actually +drew his dha on Mr. Bayfield. It must be remembered however that +he had been brought to task by the Mogoung authorities for having, as +it was said, accepted of a douceur for allowing us to proceed to the +serpentine mines.</p> +<p>The general idea entertained by the people through whose countries +we passed, was, that we had been sent to report upon the country prior +to its being taken under British protection. Of the existence +of this idea, Mr. Bayfield met with some striking proofs.</p> +<p>On reaching Katha our troubles ceased, and these, excepting at Kamein +and Mogoung, only arose from the evident wish of the natives to keep +at a distance from us, and not to interfere in one way or the other. +At Mogoung I consider it probable that we should have been detained +had it not been for the firm conduct of Mr. Bayfield, and his great +knowledge of the Burmese character. At this place the authority +of the Myoowoon, who was absent in Hookhoong, was totally disregarded, +and his brother the Myoowoah, was in confinement, the Shan Matgyee having +espoused the cause of the prince Tharawaddi.</p> +<p><i>Conclusion</i>.—For the brief and rapid manner in which +I have run through this last section of my report, as well as for having +forsaken the arrangement adopted in the previous sections, I trust I +shall be excused. In the first place, this portion of the route +had been previously travelled over by Captain Hannay and by Mr. Bayfield, +by whom much additional information will be laid before Government; +and in the second place, I would advert to the hurried nature of this +part of our journey, and to the disturbed state of the country. +For similar reasons I have only drawn up this account to the period +of my reaching Ava. It will be at once seen that the information +might have been much more extensive, especially as regards the revenues +of the districts, but I abstained from interfering with subjects which +were in every respect within the province of Mr. Bayfield; and the minute +and accurate manner in which this officer performed the duties consigned +to him, reconciled me at once to the secondary nature of the objects +which were left for my examination.</p> +<p>I subjoin a tabular view of the marches, this will not agree entirely +with those given in the body of the report, as one or two of those were +unavoidably short. I give the table to shew the shortest period +in which the journey could be accomplished by an European without constantly +overfatiguing himself. If the total distance be compared with +an estimate made from charts, all of which however are imperfect so +far as the country between Meinkhoong and Beesa is concerned, the tortuousness +of our course will be at once evident.</p> +<pre>Marches. Miles + + 1 From Sadya to Noa Dehing Mookh, 6 + 2 To Rangagurreh, 12 + 3 To Moodoa Mookh, 12 + 4 To Kidding, 9 + 5 To Namroop Puthar, 12 + 6 To Beesa Lacoom, 12 + 7 To Halting place in the hills, 12 + 8 To Darap Panee, 12 + 9 To the Namtuseek, 12 +10 Namtuseek, 10 +11 To the Boundary Nullah, 12 +12 To the Namaroan, 15 +13 Namaroan, 13 +14 To Khathung Khioung, 15 +15 To Khussee Khioung, 13 +16 To Kuttack Bhoom, 13 +17 To Namtuseek, 10 +18 To Nhempean, 18 +19 To Kulleyang, 17 +20 To Tsilone, 10 +21 To Meinkhoong, 17 +22 To Wullabhoom, 13 +23 To Halting place towards the + Mogoung river, 22 +24 Mogoung river, 15 +25 Ditto ditto, 13 +26 Ditto ditto, 14 +27 Kamein, <a name="citation145"></a><a href="#footnote145">{145}</a> 14 +28 Mogoung, 25 + --- +Total number of miles, 378 + +The remaining distance performed in + boats may be thus estimated down the + Mogoung river to the Irrawaddi, 45 + +From the confluence of the Mogoung + river down the Irrawaddi to Ava, 240 + --- + 663 + ---</pre> +<p>Allowing twelve days for the performance of this last portion, which +however is too short a time, the entire distance may be performed in +forty days.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3> +<p><i>Notes</i> <i>made</i> <i>on</i> <i>descending</i> <i>the</i> <i>Irrawaddi</i> +<i>from</i> <i>Ava</i> <i>to</i> <i>Rangoon</i>.</p> +<p><i>28th</i> <i>May</i>.—I left Ava and halted about two miles +above Menboo.</p> +<p><i>29th</i> <i>May</i>.—Continuing the journey, the country +appears flat with occasionally low hills as about Kioukloloing, no large +villages occur; the river is sub-divided by churs; no large grasses +to be seen, and the vegetation is arid. Bombax is the chief tree: +Mudar and Zizyphus occur: Guilandina, Crotolaria a large Acanthacea, +and a Jasminioides shrub are the most common plants: Borassus is abundant: +Fici occur about villages. The banks are generally sandy, not +high.</p> +<p>Yandebo. This is a wretched village; barren plains bounded +to the east by barren rather elevated hills; base jungly. Observed +the tree under which the treaty was signed with the Burmese at the close +of the late war. It is an ordinary mango, near a pagoda on a plain +with two large fig trees. I counted to-day 28 boats sailing up +between this and our halting place of yesterday, mostly large praows. +The banks present few trees, are flat, barren, and from being occasionally +overflowed, adapted to paddy.</p> +<p>Halted at Meengian, which is a middling sized village on the left +bank, about a mile below Tarof myoo.</p> +<p><i>30th</i> <i>May</i>.—I made an excursion into the country +which is dry, barren, and sandy, with a descent towards the banks of +the river. Zizyphus, Acacia, Euphorbia 20 feet high, Calotropis, +Capparis 2, etc., occur all the same as before, only one Ehretiacea +appears to be new. Hares are very common. Likewise red and +painted Partridges, and Quail. Carthamus and Tobacco are cultivated, +specially the latter at Meengian. The most common tree here, is +Urticea procera? which has always a peculiar appearance. The country +towards Pukoko becomes prettier, the left bank wooded, and the ground +sloped very gradually up to Kionksouk, which is barren, and 2,000 feet +high at least, with the slopes covered with jungle.</p> +<p><i>31st</i> <i>May</i>.—Passed Pagam, a straggling town of +some size, famous for its numerous old pagodas of all sorts. The +surface of the country is raviny, and the vegetation continues precisely +the same. Below Pagam, the range of low hills becomes very barren: +altogether the country is very uninteresting.</p> +<p>The low range of hills on the right bank is nearly destitute of vegetation. +The hills present a curious appearance of ridges, sometimes looking +like walls. The country continues the same.</p> +<p>Halted opposite Yowa.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>1st</i>.—A low range of hillocks here occurs +on the left bank, and as in other places, consisting of sandstone with +stunted and scanty vegetation.</p> +<p>Tselow is a large place on the left bank, the river is here much +spread out, with large sand banks. The hills on the right bank +present the same features; passed Pukangnai, a large village on the +left bank. Passed Pukkoko, Pagam, Tselow, etc., the hills about +this last place abound with Prionites. Strong wind prevails.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Yeanangeown 10 A.M. The country +continues exactly similar to that already observed—hillocks intersected +by ravines, loose sandstone, very barren in appearance. Vegetation +is the same, but more stunted; fossil wood is common, especially in +the bottom of ravines. <a name="citation147"></a><a href="#footnote147">{147}</a> +Of fossils very few were seen, but more are to be procured by digging. +The most common trees are Zizyphus, Acacia, and a Capparis: the most +common grass Aristida. Arrived at Yeanangeown, a busy place judging +from the number of boats.</p> +<p>Wind less strong. At 2 P.M. stopped at Wengma-thoat, where +Zizyphus is extremely common. Euphorbia seems rather disappearing.</p> +<p>The plants met with at the halting place six miles above Yeanang, +were Euphorbia, Olax, Zizyphus, Mimosa, Carissa, Ximenia, Prionites, +Calotropis, Gymnema, Capparis pandurata et altera species arborea, Murraya +rare, Gossypium frutex 6-8-petal, Xanthophyllum blue, petiolis alatis +of Tagoung, Sidæ sp. On the right bank flat churs continue +covered with a small Saccharum. Vegetation more abundant and greener +than before. Ficus again occurs and Stravadium occasionally.</p> +<p>Passed 5 P.M. Memboo at a large village on right bank, containing +perhaps 200 houses. The river below this runs between two ranges +of low hills, similar in every respect to those already passed. +A Kukkeen woman was observed, who appeared to have a blue face, looking +perfectly frightful.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>3rd</i>.—Maguay. Reached this place at +8 P.M. It is on the left bank. It is a place of some importance. +Many boats lying in the stream. The country, is of the same dry, +arid description: the banks of the river are however lower than previously +observed.</p> +<p>Passed Esthaiya, a small village on the right bank, at 6 A.M. +Adelia nereifolia continues common in some places.</p> +<p>Dhebalar, Meemgoon, two villages nearly opposite, neither of these +villages large. Ficus and Bombax are common; no Euphorbia was +observed.</p> +<p>We are now evidently getting within the influence of the Monsoon, +as the vegetation is more green.</p> +<p>Passed Mellun, a village on the right bank. The hills on either +side of the river are higher and better wooded than before observed, +and the river itself is not more than 350 yards broad.</p> +<p>Observed gold washers below Meegyoung-yea, where they find gold, +silver, and rubies by washing the sands. Here Bombax is very common +on the right bank.</p> +<p>Passed Thembounwa, a village on the left bank. The country +presents the same ridges of singular hills formed of veins of slaty, +tabular, brown rock, this is very conspicuous at Thembounwa. The +hills on the left bank above Meeaday are very barren; the banks rocky.</p> +<p>Halted at Khayoo, just above Meeaday, at 7 P.M.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>4th</i>.—Passed Teiyet myoo, a village on the +right bank, which seems to have some cotton trade; the houses along +the bank are wretched in appearance. Meeaday was passed during +a squall, I was thus prevented from making any observation on it. +Teiyet is the largest place I have seen. The country we are now +passing is very slightly undulated, soil light and sandy. Fine +tamarind trees occur, also Terminalia. In addition to the usual +plants a Lagerstræmia occurs, which attains the size of a middling +tree, and a frutescent Hypericum, Aristolochia, and Hedyotis occur. +Strong south wind prevails so that we can make no progress whatever, +I therefore went into the jungle and found Stravadium, a fine Bignonia +foliis pinnatis, floribus maximis, fere spitham. infundibulif. subbilabiat. +lacinus crispatis: one or two Acanthaceæ, two Gramineæ, +two Vandelliæ, Bonnaya, Herpestes, Monniera, Rumex, Dentella, +three or four Cyperaceæ, Ammannia, Crotalaria on sand banks, Triga +in woods and Bauhinia, Dioscoria, a pretty herbaceous perennial Ardisia, +etc. We have not made two miles since breakfasting at Teiyet, +about four hours ago. Convolvulus pileatus and dwarf bamboo are +common on the low hills. The Lagerstræmia has petals none, +or minute squamiform.</p> +<p>Reached Caman Myoo, a village on the right bank, at 7 P.M.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>5th</i>.—Many boats are here, owing to there +being an excellent place of anchorage in still water, protected by an +Island, but there are not many houses in the village.</p> +<p>Below, the river again becomes confined between hills, but above +this it expands. These hills are rather bare: no Euphorbia exists, +and the whole vegetation is changed.</p> +<p>Now passing hills, chiefly covered with bamboos. Bignonia crispa +occurs, and a Scilloid plant out of flower is common. Aroideum, +similar to that of Katha, is common, a new species is likewise found, +but it is a Roxburghia, and rare.</p> +<p>Stravadium has very minute stipules, the habit and gemmation is that +of Ternstræmiaceæ, and it perhaps connects this order with +Myrtaceæ; Punica from this is certainly distinct, owing præter +alia to its valvate calyx. Soneratia belongs I suspect to Lythrarieæ, +connecting it with Myrtaceæ.</p> +<p>The Roxburghia above alluded to, is a distinct genus.</p> +<p>Planta quam juniorem tantum vidi vex spithamæa. Radices +plurimæ filiformes, cortice crassa, tenacissima obfibras foliiformas +ad vaginam redacta, superiora petiolique purpureo-brunnei, vernatione +involutiva, flores solitarii in axillis foliorum et vaginarum, albi +carneo tincti. Pedicellis subtereti apice, articulatis, monoicis.</p> +<p>Perianth sub-companulat, 4-sepalum, sepalis lanceolato-oblongis a +medio reflexis, estivat imbricat.</p> +<p>Stam. 4. sepalis alterna, filam subanth. magna, subsagittat, connectivo +magno supra in apiculum longum product, et inter loculos in carinam +(carneam) purpuream, loculi angustissimi, viridis, alabastrus lutescens. +Pollen viridescens. Fæmin flos, infimus, unum tantum vidi +sepala longiora herbacea, stam. 0.</p> +<p>Ovarium compressum, fol. carpell () <a name="citation149"></a><a href="#footnote149">{149}</a>, +stylus conicus, ovar viridis, stigma sub-simplex.</p> +<p>Char. gen. Flores monoici Per. 4, sepalum, stam. 4.</p> +<p>Arrived at Prome on the left bank, the stockade seemed to be out +of repair: the water front of the stockade is about 800 yards in length: +it extends about 200 yards back from the river, and beyond the hill +on which are pagodas: opposite the pagodas it is of brick, and beyond +this a long line of houses or huts extends; there is no appearance of +improvement going on. The hills on the opposite side present the +same features, trees just commencing to leaf; every thing indicates +a temporary sterility caused by the long hot season. Above this +place we passed a village extending 500 yards along the river. +Cocoa trees thrive well here, and are not uncommon. Borassus continues.</p> +<p>Shwe Doung, 6 miles from Prome, is as large as Prome itself: the +country beyond this expands; no hills were seen near this part of the +river; some way below Palmyras are common; Bombax, Ficus, and Tamarind +are the chief trees.</p> +<p>Passed Reedan, a straggling place on the left bank. A range +of hills occur, extending close along the right bank, and which, as +well as the distant ones, are wooded to the summit, as the hills are +on the Malay Coast.</p> +<p>Passed Thengyee, a village on the right bank. Hills at this +place approach close to the river for a short way, but soon cease. +They are covered with Teak, scarped, and many images are carved in the +recesses of the rock, apparently sandstone. Thengyee, just below +this, seems to be a great place for boat-building.</p> +<p>Halted at Talownmo at 7½ P.M.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>6th</i>.—At this place there are no hills near +the river, which is sub-divided by islands. Painted partridge +continues. Kioungee; palmyra trees continue in plenty. Talipat +never seen dead, but with its inflorescence. Passed Meavion and +Runaown. Palmyras here occur: great numbers of boats passing up +and down. Traffic considerable.</p> +<p>Moneu, a village on the left bank, at which many boats were observed.</p> +<p>The river banks throughout are today flat and alluvial, and those +of the Islands are covered with moderate sized grasses; extreme banks +jungly. Palmyras continue.</p> +<p>Halted at Thendan, on left bank.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>7th</i>.—The country here has the usual alluvial +features; few villages are seen, but as the river is sub-divided, one +must not judge from this and the consequent barren appearance, that +the country is less populated than above.</p> +<p>Stravadium is common in the woods: on the banks, noticed Acrostichum +difforme; Epiphytical Orchideæ are common. Urticea fructibus +late obcordatis.</p> +<p>Passed Tharawa, a village on the left bank, and Theenmaga myoo on +the right bank, which seems a large place; here Pandanus commences. +Palmyras were seen, together with a few Areca. At 4 P.M. I saw +at Zulone myoo, for the first time during the descent, a Crocodile, +which is an indication of our approach to the coast. A Bombax +is now common on some of the islands, the banks are now generally grassy.</p> +<p>This Bombax is apparently the same as that of Assam; the river here +resembles the B. pootur about Chykwar.</p> +<p>Halted at a small village about six miles above Donai-byoo near Dollong.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>8th</i>.—Donai-byoo, 7 A.M. This is a +large place, on the right bank, having a good many boats.</p> +<p>Niown Sheedouk on the left bank, three miles below Donai-byoo, is +likewise a large place.</p> +<p>Tides exist here, and their influence extends upwards as far as Zulone, +that is to say, the stream is much diminished during the flood. +Entered Rangoon river at 1 P.M.: it is here not more than 200 yards +broad. Nioungdoa is a middling sized village, situated about a +mile from the mouth or entrance, at which were observed plenty of boats. +The banks of the river are here grassy; tall Saccharum and Arundo occur, +but not so large as those of Assam. The river a small way below +the mouth is not more than 100 yards wide. Bombax and Ficus are +the most common trees: Lagerstræmia grandiflora forms a little +tree jungle: Butea likewise occurs.</p> +<p>Passed Tsamaloukde, a small village on the right bank.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>9th</i>.—Halted at 6 this morning at a small +village on the left bank. The features of the country now become +paludosal. Acanthus ilicifolius, Cynometra acacisides, Cyperaceæ, +Soneralia acida, Avicennia, Stravadium, Croton malvæfolium are +very common, Creni sp. Cæsalpinia, and a leguminous tree, fructibus +1-spermis, drupaceis, Webera, Premna, Cissi sp. potius <i>Vitis</i>, +Clerodendri sp. Heritiera fomes, Flagellaria indica, Hibisci species +populneæ affinis, Arundo, Ambrosinia 2 species.</p> +<p>Country open, low, and quite flat, admirable for rice cultivation.</p> +<p>Crinoid giganteum, Excæcaria, Agallocha, no Rhizophores, Ipomæa +floribus maximis, hypocrateriform, albis, foliis cordatis. Soneratia +apetala less common, but becomes more so as we approach Rangoon, it +is an elegant tree with pendulous branchlets. Heritiera is very +common and conspicuous when in flower, it is then of a yellow brown +tint; Acrostichum aureum, Calamus, and Lomaria scandens occur.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3> +<p><i>Journal</i> <i>towards</i> <i>Assam</i> <i>and</i> <i>to</i> <i>Bootan—contains</i> +<i>notes</i> <i>on</i> <i>distribution</i> <i>of</i> <i>Plants</i>.</p> +<p>Left Calcutta a second time on the 31st August 1837, arrived at Serampore +on the 1st September, and spent the day with the Voights.</p> +<p><i>September</i> <i>3rd</i>.—Continue on the Hooghly: paddy +cultivation prevails and Crotalaria juncea; this last is sown broadcast +in low places, but not quite so low as paddy. Bengallees are but +slovenly husbandmen; grass, etc. collected by them in small cocks, and +covered with a small thatch, which answers its purpose as well as a +narrow brimmed hat would answer that of an umbrella. Broken earthenware +not unfrequently visible in the banks, in some places at the depth of +3-4 feet. Unsettled weather, with gusts of strong wind from the +S. and SSE. Thermometer 78° 82'. The usual Calcutta +birds continue, jackdaw-like crow, Falco pondicherainus, two common +mainas, Ardea indica, and the white one.</p> +<p>Came on the Ganges about noon; on passing Chobda had the horror of +seeing the bodies of burning Hindoos, the friends who are present at +these funeral rites turning them about with sticks, so as to give each +side its share of fire. The women bathe in their ordinary dresses: +these though ample are of fine cotton fabric, so that when wet more +of the shape is disclosed than is deemed desirable in Europe, but exposure +of person has no repugnant effect on Asiatics.</p> +<p>The Matabangah is a small, very tortuous, stream, not exceeding 70 +yards in breadth: the banks are low, either wooded to the edge or covered +with grass, such as Cynodon. Excellent pasturage prevails, as +indicated by the number of cows.</p> +<p><i>Monday</i> <i>4th</i>.—Wind SE. There are not many +villages in the vicinity of the river; passed yesterday Kranighat, where +there is a toll, from which officers on duty are exempt; but as no precautions +seem to be taken to keep the river clear, no toll whatever should be +taken: although the latter is high, the receipts must be very small. +Passed Arskally about noon, the banks are composed occasionally of pure +sand, and the country becomes more open, with very little jungle, much +indigo cultivation occurs. Thermometer 78° 85'.</p> +<p><i>Tuesday</i>, <i>5th</i>.—Wind SW. The country continues +the same as before. At 2 P.M., we reached Krishnapoor.</p> +<p><i>Wednesday</i>, <i>6th</i>.—8 A.M. We left the Matabangah +river and entered a less tortuous nullah. The country continues +the same. Much indigo cultivation still occurs. We saw yesterday +evening a large herd of cows swim across the Matabangah; they were led +by a bull, who kept turning round every now and then to see whether +his convoy was near him. Today I saw a rustic returning from his +labours, with his plough thrown easily across his shoulders; to a strong +Englishman the feat of walking home with such a plough, cattle, and +all would not be very difficult. Indigo is cut about a foot from +the ground, then tied in bundles. Water for steeping it in is +raised from the rivers by something like chair-buckets, only the buckets +are represented by flat pieces of wood, the whole is turned on an axle +by the tread of men; the water is carried upon an inclined narrow plane; +the machine answers its purpose very well, and the natives work it with +great dexterity. At 5 P.M., we came on a stream 100 yards wide, +down which we proceeded.</p> +<p><i>Thursday</i>, <i>7th</i>.—The country continues much the +same. Of birds the black and white peewit is not uncommon;—cormorants, +etc. also occur. P.M. Thermometer 90°.</p> +<p><i>Friday</i>, <i>8th</i>.—The country is more low and more +sub-divided by rivers than before. Abundance of indigo. +Pumps also used, as before observed, for raising water. Passed +Moodoo Kully at 5 P.M., and left its river for a small nullah. +Indigo abundant on all sides throughout the day’s journey.</p> +<p><i>Saturday</i>, <i>9th</i>.—Continue in this nullah. +Country wooded. Phænix sylvestris very abundant: Areca Catechu +also becoming abundant. A good deal of cultivation occurs, mottled +chiefly with sugar-cane and vegetables. The habits of the black +and white kingfisher, Alcedo rudis, are different from those of the +other Indian species: it never perches, choosing rather the ground to +rest upon: it builds in banks: takes its prey by striking it from a +height of 20 feet or thereabouts, previously fluttering or hovering +over it. The size and figure of this bird when resting on the +ground, resembles the two common Indian Terns.</p> +<p>Palms, contrary to what might be supposed from the nature of these +plants, can put forth additional buds;—this is exemplified in +phænix sylvestris, the stems of which are deeply and alternately +notched by the natives for procuring toddy. When this is carried +to a great extent, the tree either dies or a new apex is formed laterally. +The old notches, as might be expected, at length, become much obliterated. +It is from the study of such palms that much light will be thrown on +the growth of monocotyledonous stems. The vegetation of jheels +is now obviously commencing. Pistia stratioles, Nymphæa, +Potamogeton, Potamochloa, Oplismenus stagninus, and Villarsia occur. +Reached Furreedpore at 7 P.M.</p> +<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>10th</i>.—Came on the Paddo, an immense stream +1½ miles wide, with a very strong current, about a mile to the +East of Furreedpore. Lagerstræmia Regina here occurs.</p> +<p><i>Monday</i>, <i>11th</i>.—The country is become much lower +since leaving Furreedpore, and is inundated during the height of the +rains. The peculiar vegetation of jheels predominant; that of +the jungle continues much the same. Plhugoor continues plentiful. +No palmyras. Mangoes plentiful, but small. Passed a deserted +Roman Catholic Chapel, and Priest’s house. White-winged +long-nailed water-hens becoming plentiful.</p> +<p><i>Tuesday</i>, <i>12th</i>.—The country abounds more in jheels: +in many places nothing is visible but water, in which huge plains of +floating grasses occur. The villages are very numerous, and occupy +in fact almost every spot of ground not subject ordinarily to inundation. +Damasonium Indicum, Nymphæa pubescens occur in profusion. +The grass which exists in such vast quantities is, I believe, Oplismenus +stagninus. The water of these jheels is clear, black when deep, +which it often is to a great extent.</p> +<p><i>Wednesday</i>, <i>13th</i>.—Reached Dacca about 2 P.M.: +it is a large and populous place. The numerous grass of the jheels +is sown there: it is the red bearded <i>dhan</i> or paddy grass: of +this vast quantities are cut for fodder, for, the whole face of the +country being overflowed, it follows that the cattle are throughout +the rains kept in stalls.</p> +<p><i>Thursday</i>, <i>14th</i>.—Left about noon, and proceeded +down the Dacca river about 5 miles, then diverged into a narrow creek +running nearly south. Along this were observed fine specimens +of tamarind trees. Stravadium in abundance. Sonninia scandens, +and Mango, both in abundance. Passed at 5 P.M. Neerangunge, a +large native town, and below it Luckepoor. A vast expanse of water +appeared near this, viz., the Megna. A good deal of native shipping +occurs, consisting of brigs: great quantities of rice being exported +from both places. Pelicans I observed here to roost in trees.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p154.jpg"> +<img alt="View in the jheels" src="images/p154.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Friday, 15th.—In the midst of jheels: the whole face of the +country is covered with water several feet deep. Vast quantities +of Oplismenus stagninus still occur.</p> +<p><i>Saturday</i>, <i>16th</i>.—Still in jheels. The same +features continue. The country is still very populous, all the +more elevated spots having villages. Oplismenus stagninus still +prevails in vast quantities.</p> +<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>17th</i>.—Jheels in every direction:—nothing +indeed seen but water, with occasional grassy or reedy, and elevated +spots occupied by villages:—here and there a round-headed tree +springing apparently out of the water. Hills visible to the east. +Cormorants, Ciconia nudiceps, paddy-birds, the common white ones with +black feet, are abundant, and associate in flocks: there is one very +nearly allied to this, which is solitary, having black feet with yellow +toes. The boats of this district are very simple, something like +a Bengal <i>dingy</i> reversed, but they are sharp in the bows and ought +to be fast; their only mode of progression is to be pushed along by +means of poles. There appears to be a great number of Mussulmans, +who would here seem to form the majority of the population. Strong +winds from the south interrupt our progress.</p> +<p><i>Monday</i>, <i>18th</i>.—Delayed by bad weather.</p> +<p><i>Tuesday</i>, <i>19th</i>.—Continued to pass through same +kind of country, but less jheelly. The Cook boat was left behind +on the 17th in a squall, and has not come up yet, so that I dine with +the boatmen.</p> +<p>The black and white long-toed water-hen continues plentiful: when +alarmed by kites, etc. it pursues them uttering a low mournful scream, +until it has succeeded in getting its enemy off to some distance; it +then returns, I suppose to its young; otherwise its cry is something +like the mewing of a cat, or rather a low hollow moan. The hills +are plainly visible to-day, lying towards the north.</p> +<p>The males of the white and black water-hen have tails something like +those of a pheasant. There are two other species: one that is +found on the Tenasserim coast; the other is much larger,—the size, +of a large domestic fowl: one of the sexes, has red wattles on its head. +The white and black one is far the most common; it feeds apparently, +in flocks: the Maulmain one is the least common. These with Ardea +Indica, the white, black-toed, yellow-beaked Ardea, Ciconia nudiceps +a small brown <i>chat</i>?, Pica vagabunda, are the birds of the jheels +or rather the dry spots in them. I saw yesterday a flock of the +black Ibis, flying <i>in</i> <i>a</i> <i>triangle</i> (>) <i>without</i> +<i>a</i> <i>base</i>, the party was headed by one of the white paddy-birds! +Villages have become very numerous, and the population abundant and +flourishing. The cattle are, as I have said, stalled and fed with +paddy grass, quantities of boats being employed for its conveyance. +Oplismenus stagninus appears less common about here.</p> +<p><i>Thursday</i>, <i>21st</i>.—Still among jheels; our progress +is necessarily very slow; we are indeed scarcely moving, there being +no tracking ground: jheels occur in every direction, although the hills +are not 15 miles distant. Pelicans with white and black marked +wings occur, together with the slate-colored eagle with white tail, +barred at tip with black; it is common in the low wooded places surrounded +by jheels. Black-bellied Tern occurs, but not that of Assam.</p> +<p><i>Friday</i>, <i>22nd</i>.—Arundo and two species of Saccharum +occur, among which S. spontaneum, is very common and of large size. +We reached the Soorma river about 12 o’clock, 3 or 4 miles above +Mr. Inglis’s house.</p> +<p>I arrived at Chattuc on the 21st, which place I left for Pundoa the +following day. There are no mountains of this name as would seem +from the habitat of some plants given in Roxburgh’s Flora Indica. +The mountains therein called Pundoa are the Khasya or Cossiah range; +Pundoa, is the name of a village called by the natives Puddoa. +The jheels are for a great part under cultivation. The paddy cultivation +is of two kinds; it is either sown in the jheels just at the commencement +of the inundation, or it is sown on higher portions, and then transplanted +into the jheels. Jarool, Lagerstræmia Regina is the chief +timber, it comes from Kachar; it is a dear and not a durable wood.</p> +<p>Dalbergia bracteata, first appears, on low hills about Chattuc; there +is also a Grimmia here on the river banks.</p> +<p>Porpoises are often seen in the Soorma; alligators or crocodiles, +very rarely.</p> +<p>Jheels continue nearly to the foot of the mountains; these last are +not wooded more than half way up; the remaining wood being confined +to ravines, the ridges appearing as if covered with grass. Here +and there, scarped amphitheatres are visible, down which many fine cascades +may be seen to fall.</p> +<p>Arrived at Mr. Inglis’s Bungalow at Pundoa about 3 P.M., and +here regulated my thermometers; temperature of boiling water taken with +the large thermometer 210½°, by means of the one in wooden +case 210½°, temperature of the air 92½°, red case +thermometer indicated the boiling point at 206°!! nor would the +mercury rise higher.</p> +<p><i>Saturday</i>, <i>23rd</i>.—Commenced the ascent, from Terya +Ghat. Up to which point the country is perfectly flat low and +wet, covered for a great part with gigantic Sacchara; among which partridges +are common. Osbeckia nepalensis, Marlea begonifolia, Gouania, +Bignonia Indica, a Panax, Byttneria, Hedysarum gyrans, Pueraia, Mimosa +stipulacea, a very large Rottboellia, Bauheniæ 2, Bombax, Tetranthera +arborea, Grewia sepiaria may all be observed. On the Terya river +among stones, and where it is a pure mountain stream Eugenia salicifolia, +as in the Upper Kioukdweng, between Terya and the foot of the hills +occurs; Alstonia, Ophioxylon, Trophis aspera, Urtica naucleiflora, Varecæ +sp. Impatiens in abundance, oranges in groves occur; at the foot Cryptophragmium +venustum; rather higher, Argostemma, and Neckera are common; Æschynanthus +fulgens, jack and sooparee commonly cultivated. Then Oxalis sensitiva, +a small tender Lycopodium; pine-apples, Pogonatherum crinitum; Gordonia +soon commences, probably at 400 feet. Polytrichum aloides appears +on banks with Gordonia; Eurya commences above the first cascade. +Choripetalum, Modecca, Sonerila about two-thirds up to Mahadeb, and +Commelina, C. bengalensis, and Anatherum muricatum continue to Mahadeb, +as also Andropogon acicularis, the Impatiens, etc. No change takes +place, in fact the vegetation being all tropical. Up to this place +thick tree jungle continues; the ridges sometimes are covered with grass, +either Saccharum, Anthistiria arundinacea or Manisuris; scarcely any +oaks occur. Euonymus occurs at Mahadeb. Beyond Mahadeb the +scene becomes changed especially after surmounting the first ridge, +the face of the hills is covered with grasses, interspersed with rocks; +the clumps of wooded vegetation being small, irregular, and composed +of barren looking stunted trees.</p> +<p>Above this ridge the country puts on the appearance of a table land. +At Mahadeb, Staurogyne, Ruellia Neesiana, and Cryptophragmium are common, +a little above these is a species of Zalacca; Impatiens bracteata is +very common from near the foot to beyond Mahadeb; but it becomes small +and disappears before Moosmai is reached. Cymbidium bambusifolium +commences 600 feet above Mahadeb. Linum trigynum commences at +Mahadeb; Scutellaria a little above, but I have found this at the foot.</p> +<p>Dianella is found 1,000 feet above Mahadeb, as also Camellia candata; +Plantago, and Eriocaulon 2 sp. appear about 500 feet above Mahadeb; +and continue to Churra. Randia, the common one, is found up to +4,000 feet. Cinchona gratissima appears at Moosmai. The +first Viburnum, also occurs here. Impatiens graminifolia a little +lower. Salomonia, which appears half way to Mahadeb, continues +to Moosmai and Churra, but is stunted.</p> +<p>Vaccinium, Ceratostemma, Crotalaria Hoveoides, Gnaphalia appear towards +Moosmai. Wendlandia at Moosmai. Ruellia persicæfolia +straggles a little lower than these. Smithia commences at Moosmai; +Pandanus also; this is excessively common on hills to the left, towards +the caves. Dipsacus commences above Moosmai.</p> +<p><i>Monday</i>, <i>25th</i>.—Churra is situated in a plain surrounded +in every direction by low rounded hills, except to the E. and SE., on +which side there is a deep ravine, the whole plateau rising considerably +towards the north, in the direction of Churra itself. Ravines +exist here and there; it is along these, and the water-courses, that +the only woody vegetation is to be found. The rest of the surface +is clothed with grasses, of which a number of species exist, they are +chiefly Andropogoneæ. Two or three Osbeckias exist; a Tradescantia +(T. septem clavata) covers certain patches with its bright blue flowers. +Three species of Impatiens, two with bright pink flowers are common. +Spathoglottis, and Anthogonum occur on the flat rocks, which frequently +prevail; Arundinaria is seen every where as well as a Smithia? with +lotus-like blossoms. With regard to birds, the Motacilla or water-wagtails +are seen at Churra and at Pundoa, are generally of yellow colour in +place of white.</p> +<p>The woody vegetation consists of Berberis, Viburnum, Bucklandia, +Cleyera floribus fragrantis, petalis sepalis oppositis, Myrsine and +many others, too numerous indeed to mention.</p> +<p>The woods, towards Churra, assume that rounded and very determinate +form, which is seen so commonly in some parts of England, Bucks for +instance. None of the trees arrive to any great size. The +generality are low, rounded, and stunted. It is in these, that +Quercus, Viburnum, and Pandanus may be seen growing side by side.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>4th</i>.—Took the height of the station, +which I make to be 3,921 feet; temperature 74°; water boiled at +205°; in the small metal thermometer 198°! centigrade 97°; +large metal 205¼°; wooden scale 204°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>5th</i>.—Left for Surureem. On the +first height on which the village is situated, a Potentilla is to be +found, and this becomes more abundant as we continue to ascend. +The next European form that appears, is Fragaria, the height of which +may be estimated at 4,200 feet, this too becomes more common as we ascend; +Caryota may be seen, or at least, a palm tree, in ravines as high as +4,000 feet; Daucus appears at 4,300 feet in grassy plains; Prunella +at about the same, Gerardia at 4,500 feet; Gaultheria and an Impatiens +with very small yellow flowers at 4,800 feet, as well as Othonna.</p> +<p>With the exception of these, the vegetation is much the same as that +about Churra: but the Balsams of that place disappear almost towards +Surureem, as well as the Tradescantia 7-clavata. Plants which +are not in flower about Churra, are found towards Surureem in perfection.</p> +<p>After the first considerable ascent is surmounted, and which is probably +4,750 feet, the country becomes more barren, the grass more scanty and +less luxuriant. Spathoglottis, and Anthogonium disappear; Xyris +continues in abundance, likewise Eriocaulons, especially the middling-sized +one; Bucklandia becomes more common and more developed; a frutescent +Salix commences at 4,800 feet, as well as a Gramen Avenaceum vel Bromoideum.</p> +<p>Surureem is a small village, 100 feet above the rude bungalow, provided +for the few travellers who pass this way; close to it is to be found +Zanthoxylum and Hemiphragma, which last commences at Moosmai. +The simple leaved Rubus of Churra, petalis minutis carneis, has ceased; +a trifoliate one foliis cordato-rotundatis, existing instead. +Most of the grasses continue, but all are comparatively of small stature. +Two new Andropogonoids make their appearance: of Compositæ, a +Tussilaginoid and a stout Senecionidea, the former not uncommon about +Churra, but out of flower. Salomonia ceased.</p> +<p>The height of Surureem I calculate at 4,978 feet; temperature 65° +Fahr.; of centigrade 19°; water boiled at 95½° of centigrade; +203° Fahr., wooden scale; 203½° large metal; small ditto +195½°! Temperature of the air at 6 P.M., 63°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>6th</i>.—Temperature 6 A.M., 63½°. +Left for Moflong. There is a considerable rise at first, then +the country is tolerably level until one reaches the Kala Panee, the +descent to this is about 7 or 800 feet, thence the rise is great, with +a corresponding descent to the Boga Panee, which I estimate at 4,457 +feet, and which is certainly 1,000 feet below the highest ground passed +on this side of the Kala Panee. After crossing this torrent, by +means of a miserably unsteady wooden bridge, the ascent is very steep +for about 1,200 feet, thence there is a small descent to Moflong, which +I find to be 5,485 feet. Most of the plants continue. Tradescantia +and Commelina become much less common towards the Kala Panee, as well +as the Impatiens of Churra, but their place is supplied by others. +Along 100 yards of the Kala Panee, upwards of four species may be met +with. Polygonum (Bistorta) becomes more common on the higher ground +between Surureem and Kala Panee, thence diminishing in size and frequency. +Polygonum Rheoides becomes abundant towards a height of 5,200 feet, +when Pyrus, an apple-like species, and Spiræas make their appearance +at 5,300 feet. On the Kala Panee, Bucklandia re-appears, but thence +would seem to cease: on the brow of the ascent from this, Pedicularis +appears in abundance among grasses, with it <i>Sphacele</i>? At +the same height, which cannot be less than 5,400 feet, Carduus or Cnicus, +appears. Solidago commences in the valley of the Kala Panee, but +becomes more abundant at higher elevations. Sanguisorba appears +at 5,400 feet, but in small quantities, and at this height Anisadenia +recommences. Epilobium appears at 5,300 feet, continues at the +same elevation to Moflong, where it is common. On the descent +to the Boga Panee, an European form of Euphorbia appears at 5,000 feet +with Viola Patrinia and a Galium asperum. Hieracium appears at +about the same height. Cuscuta is very common from 5 to 5,500 +feet, continuing even to Moflong; the scales of this genus are, it appears +to me, mere appendages of the filaments, and not due to non-development +or suppression of parts. Erythrina, which is found about Churra, +is seen on the road to Kala Panee, apparently quite wild; altitude 5,200 +feet: it recommences at Moflong, where it is common about villages, +but never exceeds the size of a small tree. Commelina bengalensis? +continues throughout here and there, and may be found even about Moflong.</p> +<p>The most striking change occurs, however, in the Pines, which, although +of small stature, exist in abundance on the north side of the Boga Panee; +so far as may be judged of by the naked eye, they disappear on this +side, about a mile to the westward, very few cross the torrent, and +few indeed are found 100 feet above its bed on the south side. +I took the height of the bed of this torrent. Temperature of the +air 72°; water boiled at 204°; which gives the height about +4,400 feet. Between Surureem and the Boga Panee, many new plants +occur; grasses continue, as also at Moflong, the prevailing feature. +The principal new ones occur on the descent, consisting of two large +Andropogons, one closely allied to A. schæranthus and a tall Anthistiria +habitu A. arundinacea; a beautiful Saccharum occurs here and there, +especially before reaching the Kala Panee and the Gramina Bromoidea, +which is the only really European form. On the Kala Panee, scarcely +any Podostemon griffithia; except a few small ones, very few signs or +appearance of fresh plants. Along the Boga Panee, among the wet +rocks which form its banks, a fine Parnassia; a trailing Arbutoidea; +a very European looking Quercus; Anesadenia pubescens, a Circæa, +Campanulæ 2, Æschynomene, Crotalaria, a Serissa?; this last +continuing to Moflong, a fine Osbeckia, and Gnaphalium aereonitus may +likewise be found. On the ascent, few new plants occur; Rhinanthoidea, +Osbeckia nepalensis, and capitata, Conyzoidea, Dipsacus, Gnaphalium +foliis linearibus, Crotolaria hoveoides, Colutoidea, Pteris (Aquilina.) +Scutellaria, Potentilla, Smilax occur at 5,000 feet with Plantago, Fragaria +and Artemisia, as well as lower down. The most striking plant +is a Delphinium, which, at about 5,000 feet, occurs stunted; this is +common about Moflong.</p> +<p>Agrimonia range from 3,500 to 5,500 feet, where they are very common, +Hypericum three sorts occur, H. myrtifolium commences, about Churra, +re-occurs here and there on the road to Moflong, about which it is very +common. H. ovalifolium, is more elevational, scarcely descending +below 5,000 feet; H. japonicum is found from towards Mahadeb to Moflong; +H. fimbriatum foliis decussatis, scarcely below 5,000 feet; Leucas galea +brunneo villosa on grassy hills is common towards Boga Panee, and continues +as high as Moflong.</p> +<p>Quercus commences about Mahadeb: a new species occurs on the edge +of woods towards the Kala Panee; altitude 5,000 feet; it nearly commences +with two Rhododendra, which, at least the arborescent one, arrives at +perfection on the Kala Panee.</p> +<p>Viburna continue; Salix (fruticose) commences about 5,000 feet, continues +here and there to Moflong. Buddleia Neemda is found about Churra, +but not commonly; and soon disappears. B. 4-alata commences beyond +the Churra Punjee, and continues as far as Moflong.</p> +<p>Thibaudia buxifolia becomes less common beyond 5,000 feet; other +forms of Ericineæ appear in places about 5,000 feet, Gaultheria +continuing as far as Moflong. Eurya species alterum, commences +about the same elevation, continuing to Moflong.</p> +<p>Three species of Spiræa are found between Surureem and Moflong, +none perhaps below 5,000 feet; Prunella occurs about the same height, +continuing as far as Moflong.</p> +<p>On crossing the Boga Panee, the country becomes perhaps more undulated +and much more barren, scarcely any arborescent vegetation is to be seen, +the little woody vegetation consisting of stunted shrubs. Immediately +around Moflong, the country is excessively bare, not a tree is to be +seen, even the sides of ravines being clothed with stunted shrubs. +Berberis asiatica, Viburna, Spiræa <i>bella</i>? Eurya <i>camellifolia</i>, +Betula <i>corylifolia</i>.</p> +<p>To the north, fine woods are seen, and to the east, fir woods, the +nearest being about 4 miles off. The village is small and wretchedly +dirty, the paths being the worst of all I have seen on these hills. +The houses and the adjoining fields are surrounded with hedges of Colquhounia, +Erythrina, Buddlæa.</p> +<p>In waste places Colquhounia <i>micrantha</i>, Cysticapnos, Verbesina, +Pteris, Davallia, etc. are to be found, as well as Codonopsis viridiflora. +The hills are covered with low grass, almost a sward. On this, +Potentilla, Agrimonia, Geranium as well as in fields, Pisoideum floribus +cyaneis, Campanula, Aster disco azureo may be found; on low spots a +very small Parnassia, and a still smaller Ischæmum.</p> +<p>Ranunculus, one species, but this is uncommon; Delphinium is common +in thickets, etc.</p> +<p>The only cultivation is potatoes, a few years since introduced, and +which answers admirably, some turnips and Glycine tuberosa. Cattle, +goats and pigs abundant.</p> +<p>On the whole this is to be considered as the place where the peculiar +vegetation of Churra, arrives at its boundary, for although many of +the plants of the plains are to be found, they are all in a dwarf state.</p> +<p>Noticed a Hoopoo, but birds in general are not frequent.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3> +<p><i>Continues</i> <i>the</i> <i>Journey</i> <i>towards</i> <i>Assam</i> +<i>and</i> <i>Bootan</i>.</p> +<p>The annexed table of the distributions of plants in relation to altitudes +of the Khasyah mountains may render the subject of the preceding observations +more clear and distinct. The dotted line along the left hand margin +represents the elevation of the mountains, the greater height of which +is something better than 6,000 feet.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g163.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Surureem to Moflong" src="images/g163.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>8th</i>.—Visited the fir wood, which is about +three miles to the eastward; the road runs over the same <i>downey</i> +ground. The first plant that appears is a Boreal Euphorbia, allied +to that previously mentioned. A Sanguisorba of large stature occurs +in low wet places. Epilobum not uncommon. The Pines appear +first straggling, and they only form a wood in one place, and even there +not of much extent; none are of any size. Musci Lichens and fungi +abound in the wood, as also Circæa and Herminium?</p> +<p>Osbeckia Nepalensis, Hedychia 2, a small Goodyera, Tricyrtis Hedera, +Polygonum, Polypodium, Gaultheria, Viburnum, Thibaudiacea fructibus +gratis, subacidis. Eurya, Valeriana, Quercus, may likewise be +found. Salix occurs on the skirts in low places. The hills +around are clothed with grasses, among which is a large Airoidea; in +the low valleys between these, intersected with small water-courses, +three species of Juncus, a curious Umbellifera fistulosa, and Mentha +verticillata, occur. Another Hypericum is likewise found in lately +cleared places.</p> +<p>Some cultivation occurs about the place on the slopes of hills, chiefly +of a Digitaria, sown broadcast, and tied up in bundles when nearly ripe; +together with Glycine tuberosa, and Coix Lacryme.</p> +<p>To the eastward the hills become more rocky, affording little vegetation, +the chief plant is an Othonnoidea; another Herminioidea, and a Habenariod, +both out of flower, may be found, the former on hills, the latter in +low places; a tall Campanula was among the new plants, and an Umbellifera +with curious foliage.</p> +<p>The height of this ridge is 5,768 feet, the temperature being 74°, +and water boiling at 201¾°.</p> +<p>Took the elevation of Moflong bungalow. Temperature of the +air 65°; water boiled at 202¼°; this gives 5,410 feet.</p> +<p>There are several high rounded hills about this place, (one to the +south of the Boga Panee,) the generality of which are more elevated +than those on the northern side; the most conspicuous is the hill near +Moleem, the north face of which is wooded, and which is at least 1,000 +feet above Moflong.</p> +<p>8 P.M. Temperature 58½°. 5 P.M. 65°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>9th</i>.—Rain as usual in the morning. +Thermometer at 7 A.M., 58½°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>10th</i>.—A fine bracing cold morning, with +the thermometer at 53½°. 7 A.M. left for Myrung. +The march to Syung is uninteresting, passing over precisely the same +country as that about Moflong, with vegetation much the same. +A tall Carduaceous tree with pink flowers was found in the swampy bottoms +of the valleys. About Syung, a seneciois tree foliis angustissimus. +It is about this place that the sides of the ravines become clothed +with forest, and from this northward, Pines increase in abundance. +Anthistiria speculis villosissimis continues here and there; a good +deal of cultivation passed on the road, especially under Syung to the +south, where there is a large valley. The chief cultivation appears +to be Coix, Glycine, and some rice, but the produce seemed very small. +At the foot of Syung on the north side, large tufts of Juncus occur, +and on the first ascent another species of Valeriana foliis radicalibus +reniformi cordatus occurs. Urena lobale was noticed as high as +5,300 feet. Between Syung and Myrung, especially about Nungbree, +Parnassia recurs, with another species of Epilobium, Xyris, Juncus, +the Senecioneœ, etc.; a new Impatiens occurs towards Myrung. +Generally speaking, the plants are much the same as those about Moflong; +but several new Compositæ occur.</p> +<p>The road leaves Nungbree to the right, leaving the most interesting +parts of the march behind. Altogether not more than 20 additional +plants occurred in a journey of 6 hours. Many parts are wet and +marshy, and there is an absence of all tree vegetation, until one reaches +Syung. This makes the first part of the way somewhat tedious. +At Syung an Elæagnus occurs; Colquhounia as usual in hedges; Styrax +occurs at foot of the hill the altitude of which is 5,000 feet.</p> +<p>An anemone is common on road sides, especially on this side of Syung; +a new Potentilla occurs; and the only Boragineous plant hitherto seen +by me on these hills, a Cynoglossum closely allied to C. canescens. +The altitude of Syung is 5,594 feet. The temperature being 70°, +and water boiling at 202°. Myrung 6 P.M. Thermometer +65°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>11th</i>.—Myrung 7 A.M. temp. 63° Fahr.; +noon 67°; 6 P.M. temp. 65°; 9 temp. P.M. 62½°. +Weather unsettled, showery, and very cloudy, a very fine view is had +of Bootan and the Himalayas from this place, particularly about 7 A.M. +when the atmosphere is clear, the Durrung peaks being most magnificent. +The vegetation of the hills about here is much the same as about Moflong. +The woods are fine, composed chiefly of oaks; a Magnolia, which is a +very large tree, likewise occurs together with Gordonia, an occasional +Pinus, Myrica integrifolia. The most curious tree is one which +with the true appearance of an Elæagnus, seems to be a Loranthus, +the first arborescent species yet found, although, as one or two other +exceptions occur to parasitism, there is no reason why there should +not be a terrestrial arborescent species, as well as a fruticose one. +The wood to the east of the bungalow, which clothes a deep and steep +ravine, has a very rich flora; a dryish ridge on the other side of its +torrent abounds with Orchideæ, and presents an arborescent Gaultheria. +The ridge in question may be recognised by its large rocks which are +covered with Epiphytes Mosses, etc. In this wood Pothos flammea +is very common, climbing up the trees as well as hanging in festoons. +The marshes which are frequented by a few snipe, present grasses, the +usual Cyperaceæ, Xyris, occurs but is not common; Panicum stagninum? +Eriocaulon spe. fluitans? Burmannia Rungioidea floribus carneis magnis, +Senecionides, Ammannia rotundifolia, Sphagnum, Carduacea floribus roseis, +Limnophilæ sp. Mentha verticillata, and the others previously +found in similar situations. <i>Goldfussia</i> so common about +Churra, recurs here, but rarely.</p> +<p>The wood abounds with several species of birds, among which a green +<i>Bulbul</i> is the most common, then the fan-tailed Parus, with its +coquettish airs; judging from the voice there is a species of Bucco. +Both species of Phænicornis, yellow and crimson, described in +Gould’s Century as male and female, and the black Edolius are +found. The only animals are two species of squirrel, and a genet, +of which I shot one, but although it fell from a height of 70 feet or +so, I could not succeed in securing it; it is a lengthy animal, black +and grey, with a long tail, climbing trees with great facility. +The ring-dove of Churra continues.</p> +<p>The weather during the four days I stayed at Myrung was unsettled; +fine usually in the morning, but cloudy and showery in the evening; +the range of the thermometer from 53°, at 6½ A.M. to 68° +in the afternoon in an open verandah. The place, however, is not +a cheerful one, for the aspect on every side except to the E. and NE. +is dreary, marshes and the usual bleak grassy hills being alone visible. +My favourite spot in this direction would be the Nungbree hill, the +altitude of which, at least of that part over which the road to the +village runs, is 5,439, (or probably 5,700,) temperature of the air +being **, and water boiling at 202½°. There is a beautiful +and very extensive wood at Nungbree, the largest I have yet seen; it +consists, at least at the skirts, principally of oaks; a large Pyrus +is also not uncommon. Eurya, and an arborescent Buddleia likewise +occur.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p167.jpg"> +<img alt="THE OK-KLONG ROCK" src="images/p167.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>At this place Plectranthus azureus makes its appearance, otherwise +the vegetation is that of Myrung; the most remarkable plant is a huge +Sarcocordalis, parasitic on the roots of a large climbing Cissus cortice +suberosa, foliis quinatis, on the wet parts of the wood, especially +towards the mountain foot, mosses abound, chiefly the pendent Hypna +and Neckeræ.</p> +<p>On the 13th, I went to a celebrated rock called Kullung, bearing +about NW. from Myrung, from the heights surrounding which it is visible; +the road runs off from the Nunklow nearly opposite Monei, near to which +village one passes; the village is of no great size, and as well as +others in this direction is inhabited chiefly by blacksmiths, the iron +being procured from the sand washed down the mountain torrents; the +sound of their anvils when beaten is very soft and musical, not unlike +that of a sheep bell. The road to the rock is very circuitous; +it finally ceases, and for an hour one traverses ridges on which no +path exists, having the usual vegetation. The rock is certainly +a vast mass, forming a precipice of 700 feet to the westward, on which +side it is nearly bare of vegetation, gradually shelving to the east, +and covered with tree-jungle, among which huge mosses are to be found. +At its foot some fine fir trees occur, one at its very base measured +nine feet in circumference, but had no great height. The forest +consists of Oaks, Pines, Panax, Erythrina Eurya, Gordonia.</p> +<p>The base of the rock is covered with mosses, Hepaticæ, a Didymocarpus, +Cælogyne and some other epiphylical orchideæ, among others +Bolbophyllum cylindraceum.</p> +<p>All these continue to its apex, except the mosses and Hepaticæ, +which are gained by clambering, and proceeding up fissures clothed with +grasses. The apex is rounded, presenting here and there patches +of grass, Aira, and Nardus, together with a few stunted shrubs—Viburnum, +another Rhododendron, and Didymocarpus common, Cælogyne in profusion, +Bolbophyllum cylindraceum in abundance, mosses, Lichens, an Allium also +in abundance on the slopes, Stellaria in the woods towards the middle.</p> +<p>The view to the westward in particular was pretty, embracing a fine +well-wooded undulated valley, with several villages and a stream of +some size. The plains of Assam and the huge Brahmapoutra were +likewise seen, but not very clearly. The distance from Myrung +to the Kullung rock is certainly not less than eight miles, the time +it took was 4 hours. The altitude of the rock is 5,392 feet, temperature +76°, water boiling at 202½. Wild hog are found round +its base. <a name="citation168"></a><a href="#footnote168">{168}</a></p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>14th</i>.—I left for Moleem, the march is +long and fatiguing; the road leaves the Moflong road at about four miles +from the village of that name, continuing over similar barren hills, +clothed with scanty grass. On reaching Morung firs become common, +but they are small. The view of Moleem, from this direction is +remarkably pretty; the country being better wooded, especially with +young firs, and the effect being much increased by the quantities of +large boulders that occur strewn in every direction. The Boga +Panee is here a contemptible stream, not knee deep. Moleem is +a place of some size on the left bank of the river, occupying the side +of a hill of considerable height. Thermometer 7 P.M. 58°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>15th</i>.—Temp. 7 A.M. 53°, at 3 P.M. +70½°, water boiled at 204°, altitude 4,473 feet, or perhaps +rather more. Walked towards Nogandree; between this and a stream +resembling the Boga Panee there is a pretty valley, the eminences generally +well-wooded with young firs. Pretty and eligible sheltered sites +might here be chosen for a Sanatarium. The vegetation is the same +as that of Moflong—Delphinium, Ranunculus, Anemone, Potentilla, +Tricyrtis, Codonopsis, Lilium giganteum, Spiræaceæ, Viola, +Pyrus, Galium, Carduus, Viburna.</p> +<p>The woods are not very frequent, they consist, when not exclusively +of Pines, chiefly of Oaks and Chesnuts. Underwood almost entirely +of Acanthaceæ. Rhus Bucki-Amelam is common here, an Oxalis +occurs in very shady places with fleshy leaves, it is so large that +it is scarcely referrible to O. corniculata. Berberis asiatica +is very common. 6 P.M. thermometer 58°, 9 P.M. 50½°.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>16th</i>.—7 A.M. 842½°(sic). +Ascended the Chillong hill, which is among the highest portion of this +range, it is said that from this both the plains of Bengal and of Assam +may be seen, not because it overtops all the intermediate ground, but +because that happens in some places to be rather low; the termination +of the 1st elevation above Churra, is seen to be very abrupt, but nothing +can be seen beyond the elevated plateau of this part towards the south. +To the east and west the view has the usual appearance—grassy +valleys and hills—with a great disproportion of jungle.</p> +<p>The summit is gained after an easy march of two hours; the ascent +is gradual. The highest ridge is naked of trees, but to the north +the slope is in one portion covered with heavy tree-jungle, in which +the underwood is as thick as I have ever seen it: it consists of an +Acanthaceous plant; the forest itself of oaks, chesnuts and Rhododendron +arboreum, which last is common on the highest margin. A few Pines +occur, but scarcely above the middle of the hill. To the north +very high ground is visible, as likewise from Myrung, and between this +and Chillong is an elevated plateau which appears to me likewise very +eligible for the sites of European residences.</p> +<p>But many places about Moleem are so, especially towards Nonkreem; +and it is much to be regretted that some situation in this part of the +range had not been selected for the site of a sanatarium instead of +Churra. The Rhododendra were covered with mosses and other epiphytes, +among which Otochilus occurred. Bambusæ, 2 Fici sp. Andropogon, +Gaylussacia, etc. occur about the wood. The vegetation of the +grassy hills was precisely the same, Aroidea, Erianthus, Tofieldioidea, +Parnassia nana <i>potius</i> <i>collina</i>, Sphacelioidea, Osbeckia, +Arbutoideæ, etc. I got scarcely a single new plant; the +best was a fine large Neckera, sect. Dendroidea. The temperature +being 70°: water boiled at 201°, making the altitude 6,167 feet. +No view of any particular beauty was obtained, nor did any thing occur +to repay me for the trouble and fatigue of the journey.</p> +<p>About Moleem an Osmundoid is common enough, but not in <i>flower</i>: +the northern forms are Ranunculus, Anemone, Parnassia, Pyrus, Pinus, +Viola, Galium, Campanula, Clematis, of which an additional species occurs, +Bromoideæ, etc. etc., as at Moflong. I took the height of +this place again; the mean of the three thermometers gave 4,502 feet, +the temperature being at 60°: water boiling at 95°, 203¾°, +204°. It must, however, be remembered that my residence is +not 100 feet above the bed of the Boga Panee, so that it would be easy +to attain an elevation of 5,000 feet in the village itself.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>17th</i>.—I returned to Churra to send away +my collections and to consult with Major Lister as to the routes proposed +for me by Capt. Jenkins, viz. through the Garrows, or through the Cacharees. +Nothing particular occurred en route. I met with Hydrangea exaltata +along a torrent flowing into the main-feeder of the Boga Panee, and +two other Araliaceæ. The highest ground crossed is towards +the ravine of the Boga Panee, and from this a good view of Moflong is +obtained, and also of the Himalayas in clear weather. Cœlogyne +Wallichiana was commencing to flower; this plant occurs in profusion +in some rocky spots about Moflong. The only additional thing I +remarked was, that Luculia scarcely reaches the Kala Panee.</p> +<p>On my return to Churra, a change was observed in the character of +the vegetation, all the Tradescantias had ceased, as well as most of +the Impatientes, and Eriocaulons. The grasses had become more +withered, and the general tint was brown. No kites (Falco milvus) +are to be observed out of Churra.</p> +<p>The plants which were particularly conspicuous about Churra, were +past flowering in the interior; thus Osbeckia Nepalensis? was not to +be met with in flower in the interior, while it is in profusion about +the station. The same may be said of other instances.</p> +<p>After all Churra presents the richest flora of any other place in +the Khasyah hills, because there is a greater extent of wood near it, +than is found in any other locality, much greater <i>altitudes</i> and +deeper descents in its ravines, and it is as it were the transit point +between a tropical or sub-tropical, and a temperate vegetation. +I have no doubt, that within a circle of three miles of Churra, 3,000 +species might be found in one year.</p> +<p>The principal plants pointing out the tropical nature of the vegetation +are Pandanus, which is almost limited to the limestone formation, on +which it is excessively abundant, Chamærops Martiana? which from +its affecting particularly the walls of the amphitheatres so conspicuous +about Moosmai, Mamloo and Surureem, and the depths of whose sides is +probably at Mamloo 1,000 feet, might have been better named. I +have never seen it on any other places. The Alsophila Brunoniana +is likewise apparently confined to the limestone hills, while the tree +fern, Polypodium, is found on sandstone, as well as Impatiens, Tradescantia, +Commelineæ, Eriocauloneæ, Xyres, almost all the grasses, +Melastomaceæ, almost all the Leguminosæ and the preponderance +of tropical Rubiaceæ, which are, however, few, Scitamineæ, +Epiphytical Orchideæ, Urena Labiata, etc. etc.</p> +<p>On the <i>23rd</i> I went to Mamloo, which is about four miles to +the west of Churra. To this place the limestone ridge, extending +from Churra, nearly approaches: its vegetation is not rich but always +stunted: rocky amphitheatres are very remarkable at Mamloo, they are +of excessive depth; their walls being generally perpendicular, often +somewhat overhanging. The manner of their formation is now to +be seen in the amphitheatre immediately contiguous to the village, although +it appears to be very slow. It is thus, bodies of water falling +from the edge of the table land, seem to undermine the sandstone below, +producing land slips, which occur in this manner year after year. +Since 1835, the edge of the Moosmai fall has receded at least 10 feet, +and ample evidence remains of the recession to take place next rains. +This simple undermining will suffice for the formation of ravines, which +are formed by their sides merely slipping down without being carried +away, this last only occurring in the immediate vicinity of the strength +of the torrent. All the different stages may be easily seen. +The edge of the table land I take to have been originally at Mahadeb. +The time that has elapsed between the falling of the first cataract +over its edge, and the formation of the edge over which the waters at +present fall, must be immense, since that edge has now receded several +miles. Allowing the annual recess to be 5 feet, and the distance +5 miles; the time occupied would be 5,700 years: that the time has been +great, is proved by the sides of these places being clothed with large +tree-jungle to the base of the scarp.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>25th</i>.—I went in search of the fossil +marine beach, (found during our first visit in 1835,) but passed it, +and my journey ended at the site of the Jasper beds: this occupies a +ridge where roads strike off leading to the Orange villages, so called +from the groves of orange trees by which they are surrounded, and from +which they derive their name. From this spot, 3 villages are seen +occupying sheltered situations, none much above 2,000 feet in elevation. +Luckily I was accompanied, (although going down I was unconscious of +it,) by a boy who had been with McClelland when he originally discovered +the fossil remains, so I recommenced the ascent, after digging in many +places without any success. The site is scarcely 1,000 feet below +Mamloo, which is 3,153 feet; it is below the ridge along which the road +is visible from the village, and is about 100 yards farther from it +than the second square stone erection. One would imagine that +one was passing through rocks presenting nothing interesting: the rocks +are in many places very hard, particularly when they have been long +exposed to the atmosphere, in which case they are less red than when +sheltered by vegetation, when they are soft and of a reddish colour: +the fossils are by no means frequent, the cylindric <i>tubes</i> appear +to occupy the outer or rather upper surface of the sandstone, in the +interior of which Medusæ or Cyrtomæ are most frequent, accompanied +by shells, some of large size, the largest bivalves resembling <i>scolloped</i> +<i>oysters</i>; the next in size looking like oblong cockles: for only +in one position did I see a conglomeration of minute shells; this occurred +above the others and nearer the jungle. I brought away with me, +two boxes full. Owing to my presuming that I should meet with +water near, I omitted the precaution of taking some with me, so I could +not ascertain exactly the height of the place. All the fossils +are easily friable. <a name="citation172"></a><a href="#footnote172">{172}</a></p> +<p>From the Jasper, which is scarce 1,800 feet in elevation, the following +plants occurred nearly in succession—Holmskioldia, this is scarcely +found above 2,000 feet; Porana in abundance, gradually diminishing above; +Callicarpa arborea abundant, continuing to about 2,200; Triumfetta, +Urena lobata, Arundo the same as above, Melica latifolia, Panicum plicatum, +and one or two other species; a Polygonum, Andropogon, small Commeline, +Leea, Erythrina are very close to the spot, and the only Churra plant, +except the Arundo and Wendlandia is a Labiata, Geniosporum? so is Composita +arborea; indeed the vegetation is almost decidedly tropical. The +following plants are then seen—Tetranthera, Flemingia as at Mahadeb, +Vitis, Drymaria, Panicum eleusinoides, Eurya, Panax foliis decompositis +inermis, Pogonatherum crenitum, Wallichia, which occur before one has +gained an ascent of 2,000 feet: Osbeckia nepalensis descends to this +but in small quantities; then I remarked Bidens, Ætheilema, Caricineæ, +Rottlera, Didymocarpus, Begonia, Cheilanthes dealbata, Stemodia ruderalis? +Scutellaria, Impatiens bracteata, Rungiæ sp. Sida, Elephantopus +sp. and Bambusa, Gordonii occurring there at an elevation of about 2,100 +feet. Then Centotheca lappacea, Deeringia, Panicum <i>centrum</i>, +Gouania, Caryophyllus, which last occurs on all the chain of Himalayas, +and which I have seen as high as 6,000 feet in the Mishmee Mountains, +latitude 28°. Panax foliis palmatim partitis, Clerodendrum +nutans, Ficus feruginea and F. hispida, foliis cordatis, serrato-dentatis: +then Saurauja micrantha; before 2,300 feet were reached. There +Oxyspora sp. paniculis cernius ramis ascendentibus, frutex, Croton of +old, Ruellia persicæfolia appeared, and about 2,400 feet, the +1st Quercus appeared. Here, as at Mahadeb, Ruellia Neesiana became +common, and Linum trigynum, Uncinia, etc. Grasses commence to +preponderate at about 2,800 feet, but not the grasses of Churra. +Holcus, Airoides, etc. not being found, but Panica varia, and Rottboellia +which ceases above this.</p> +<p>At the raised Marine Fossil Beach, a queer Cephalanthus? Legumenosa +arbuscula fol. pinnatis impari (Pongamiæ) Legumenibus secus suturam +quamque alatis, Mangifera indici, Anthistiria arundinacea are found, +and an arbusculous Mimosa, but unarmed. Shortly above this, Holcus, +Andropogons, etc., begin to preponderate, and thence the vegetation +is nearly that of Churra. The woods of Mamloo consist of Bucklandia, +oaks, chesnuts, Panax, Hyalostemma, Eurya, and Oleineœ; Epiphytes +are very common. The most remarkable tree is one foliis alternis +bistipulat; corymbis denis, Calycibus hinc fissis, petalis 5-albis, +Antheræ sinuosæ columna terminans, et ovarium et stigma +occultantes? fructibus pendulis stipilatis ovato oblongis, carpellis +5-latere marginatus.</p> +<p>This has some affinities apparently with Sterculiaceæ; the +flowers are perhaps polygamous.</p> +<p>Here Cypripedium insigne, Venustum, and various other fine Orchideæ +may be found.</p> +<p>The only bird I saw was a Bucco, which in voice resembled the green +one of the plains.</p> +<p>The elevation of Mamloo is 3,153, the temperature being at 7 A.M. +63°. The large metal thermometer rose at the boiling point +to 206¼°: wooden one to 206½°: centigrade 96.7°: +small metal 200°.</p> +<p>One of the most curious places about Churra is situated over the +ridge in which the coal is found; on surmounting this, which is steep +and perhaps 400 feet high, one soon commences to descend gradually until +you come to a water-course; on proceeding along this a short way you +come to a precipice. The water falling over this, has cut a deep +well in the limestone: the road to the bottom is precipitous and dangerous. +On reaching the water-course again no signs of the well are observable, +access to this is gained by subterranean passages, of which two, now +dry, exist. The scene inside is very striking; you stand on the +rugged bottom of the well which is 70 or 80 feet deep, the part above +corresponding to the fall, being of about the same depth; the water +now escapes through a chasm below the bed of the well, the other fissures +or passages being above, and probably now rarely letting off the water. +After a severe fall of rain the scene must be grand.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>4th</i>.—Nonkreem 6½ A.M., thermometer +31°: hoarfrost. Marched hither from Surureem. Vegetation +the same until you reach the Boga Panee, when Delphinium, Anemone, and +Ranunculus make their appearance. On the high ridges before reaching +Boga Panee, found an Astragalus; at Nonkreem, a Scrophularia. +Nonkreem is a curious place, the village of no great size in a valley: +the sides of the valley are covered with boulders; those at the entrance +from Churra of huge size, and thrown together with great confusion. +Pines at this place occur of some size, but they are distinctly limited +in this direction to the granitic formation. The downs have now +assumed a withered wintry appearance. Nonkreem is a great place +for iron; this is found in coarse red sandstone, or it may be fine granite, +forming precipices; this is scraped or pushed down by iron rods, it +is then washed by a stream turned off on to it: the stream is dammed +up, and the irony particles by their weight fall to the bottom: they +are very heavy, of a dull blackish appearance. All the streams +are of a whitish colour, and the rocks are covered with Cælogyne +Wallichiana.</p> +<p>The elevation of Nonkreem is 4,578 feet, the temperature of the air +being 52°. The large thermometer indicated boiling water 203°: +centigrade 96½°: wooden 204°: small 197°. In +the Nonkreem jheel, Alisma, Villarsia! and Potamogeton occur.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>5th</i>.—The march to Suneassa continues +over high downs, the vegetation being precisely as before, viz. Cnicus, +Carduus, Prunella Pedicularis, Gaultheria, Gnaphalia, Bromoid acroideum, +Tussilaginoid Andropogon, Sphacelia Daucas, Hypericum, Hedychium, Polygonum +rheoides, Smithia but rare, Tradescantia clavigera, Parnassia collina, +Pteris aquilina, Euphorbia, Dipsacus, Salix, Osbeckia capitata, Æthionnia, +Eriocaulon, Knoxia cordata, and Campanula. In short, the higher +ridges have the vegetation of those between the Kala and Boga Panee, +the less elevated, that of Surureem. Along the watercourses Pyrus, +Betula, Corylifoliæ, and Eurya.</p> +<p>As one approaches Suneassa the ravines become wooded, and the aspect +of country more diversified. The woods consist of a Castanea, +2 oaks, Rhododendron arboreum and R. punctatum, Panax, Eurya, Thebaudiaceæ +variæ, no less than 4 or 5 of these, one is a Gaylussacia; Saccharum +megala makes its appearance at Suneassa.</p> +<p>This is a small straggling village, on the brow of the ravine of +the same name; it is like Moflong, each house being hidden by hedges +composed as usual of Buddleia, Colquhounii, Solanum spirale? Erythrina, +Ficus, and Rhus. Sugarcane, but of poor quality, is here cultivated, +as well as capsicum, but this is also of inferior quality; the houses +are worse than usual. Near this place several Nunklow plants appear, +as Plectranthus cæruleus, Labiata foliis verticillatis of Suddya. +Its elevation is 4,362 feet, the temperature being in the air, 59°. +Big thermometer boiling point ditto 204°: wooden ditto 204°: +small 198°: centigrade ditto 96°. Pines occur here and +there towards Suneassa, but of no size and no abundance.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>6th</i>.—Left Suneassa and proceeded down +the ravine which is probably 1,200 to 1,500 feet deep. The scenery +is very pretty, the sides being much wooded; the woods open, consisting +chiefly of pines, which are of moderate size, Gordonia, Castanea, and +Quercus: Mimosea occurs, also Saurauja. The grasses are as before, +except that the Anthisteria of Nunklow appears, with Volkameria, Verbena +Primulacæ, and Osbeckia capitate, foliis lineari oblongis, floribus +carneis. Towards the foot, the scenery still improves.</p> +<p>The woods consist of pines and a Quercus foliis castaneæ cupulis +echinatis, Arbor mediocris; the slopes as well as the valley are cultivated +chiefly for rice, this last often assuming the terrace fashion. +The river is of considerable width, 50 to 60 yards, but of no depth: +two here flow together, and at the end of the valley a still larger +stream not fordable in the rains, at least where I crossed, meets it. +On the streams at the base of the Suneassa acclivity, Salix, Ligustrum, +Ficus frutex humelis, and a fine Indigofera occur. Moving thence +along the valley the vegetation becomes tropical, although pines descend +nearly to its level. Pontederia the small one of Bengal, ditto +Sagittaria Vandelliæ, Poæ 3, Apluda, Cyperaceæ, Saccharum +megala, and spontaneum, Elytrophorus, Ammannia, Erianthus, Cnicus! Artemisia +as before, Arundo exalum, Cirsium, Carduus! Scitamineæ 2, Panicum +curvatum, Setaria glauca, Swertia angustifolia! Volkameriæ sp., +Ranunculus hirsutoideus! Zizania ciliaris.</p> +<p>Those marked with (!) have probably straggled down. The cultivation +is chiefly of rice, Eleusine, Coix, and the edible seeded Labiata. +Grasses abound; in addition to those above several new ones occur, Rottboellia +exallata, Anthisteria of Nunklow, Arundinaceæ, Andropogones several, +Saccharum fusco-rubum, 25 species might certainly be collected.</p> +<p>Fine pines occur on the other ascent from its base to apex. +Here also occurs Phœnix pumile, which as well as the Rottboellia, +which I think I have seen in the Mogoung valley (during the journey +to Ava), and Buddleia neemda.</p> +<p>The ascent gained, the country appears level, covered with the usual +grasses. The ravines are well wooded, but few pines occur, although +they may be seen here and there. The woods appear the same as +those of Churra. Pandanus sp. altera? occurs. In one ravine +gathered a new Thebaudiaceæ allied to T. variegata, differing +in its short greenish flowers and its smoothness.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g176.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Nonkreem to Amwee" src="images/g176.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Amwee is situated on an undulated plain or table land; the undulations +are gentle, separated by marshy tracts: no steep ravines occur, the +face of the undulations is covered with grasses, among which are seen +most of the Churra plants, the sides are covered with fine woods with +defined edges, consisting chiefly of oaks, chesnuts and Bucklandia. +The aspect of the country is pretty, resembling some woodland scenery +in the south of England; close to Amwee is a fine stream 40 yards wide, +this winds through the valley, and on its upper part fine cascades occur. +No fish are to be found besides those of Churra. The river is +crossed by a stone bridge consisting of pillars of single slabs of large +size, one measuring 20 feet in length by from 4 to 5 in breadth. +The temperature varies from 50 to 68 during the day in an open verandah. +Fogs are not so common, nor is the rain so heavy as at Churra. +The space being much greater, and the country more level, it would be +better as a sanatarium than Churra, besides which, its access is as +easy, it being reached in one day from Jynteapore. There is, however, +a Toorai about Jynteapore, which is unhealthy. Its altitude is +3,500 feet, or nearly 500 below Churra.</p> +<p>The vegetation is nearly the same as about Churra, some new Castaneæ +and an Elæocarpus occur, and Pandanus of large size in the woods. +Epiphytical Orchideæ abound; Nepenthes occurs here. Altitude +from three observations 3,530 feet: 1st observation 3,439: 2nd 3,597: +3rd 3,624.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>10th</i>.—Joowye: this is north from Amwee, +and about 8 miles distant. Two valleys have to be descended, one +rather steep. The country alters immediately after the 1st ascent, +the woods nearly disappearing except in the more favoured spots. +Pines soon commence. In the second valley, the stream of which +is large, and of which pretty views are to be obtained, the pines reach +on the south side to the bank of the stream, on the north scarcely any +are to be seen. In the woods about Amwee, Eugenia is very common: +noticed on the route Lonicera.</p> +<p>Joowye is the largest village I have seen, it is of great extent +but straggling; near its entrance is a breast-work now nearly complete. +The houses are of a better description than those generally met with. +They are surrounded by wood, especially fine bamboos, in habit not unlike +B. baccifera. They are also surrounded by excellent timber palings. +The people are different from Khasyas Proper—perhaps they are +not so fine a race. Their features approach more to those of Bengallees, +particularly the women, who dress their hair like those of Assam, indeed +the dress generally of both sexes assimilates to that of Assamese, although +their language seems to be Bengallee. In the wood surrounding +this place curious features of vegetation occur, and beautiful lanes +and pathways. One may see a beech now naked of leaves, standing +out in graceful relief close to the elegant foliage of a bamboo. +Bamboos surround all the houses—sugarcane, kuchoos, mustard, hemp, +Musa, Ricinus were observed.</p> +<p>The plants are beech, which is common and of large size. Pyrus +of Moleem, Pinus rare, Marlea begonifolia! Betula corylifolia common. +Verbena chamædrys, Rubi 3 or 4, Tetrantheræ? Rubia cordifolia, +Morus, Cerasus, Panax 3 species, Gleicheniæ 2, Eurya, Juncus, +Ranunculus, Viola, Verbesina of Moflong, Sida, Clematis <i>pubescens</i>, +Caricineæ, Myrica, Gordonia, Polygonum 3, among them Rheoides +Engeldhaardtii common, Viburna 2, Wendlandia, Osbeckia capitata and +nepalensis. The grasses chiefly Andropogons; Mussænda, Bucklandia, +Saurauja, Hiræa, Dipsacus rare, Camellia oleifolia, and C. axillaris, +Begonia laciniata, Ficus, Vitis, Sonerila, Plectranthus azureus, Randia, +Mephitidia, Psychotria, Galium, Clerodendrum infortunatum, Pyrus or +crab, Fragaria, Potentilla, Urena lobata. The diversified nature +of the vegetation, both tropical and temperate, is at once evident.</p> +<p>The altitude is 3,553 feet—temperature of the air 62°; +large thermometer boiling point 205½°: wooden ditto 206¾: +centigrade ditto 96°: small ditto 199½°.</p> +<p>The higher ground about the place is about 4,000 feet: Joowye being +situated in a hollow. Viola and Peristrophe occur.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>11th</i>.—The march to Nurtung occupies +about 6 hours. The country is level, or merely undulated, with +no considerable descent, the steepest being that to the river on which +Nurtung is situated. The vegetation continues the same, the trees +except in the ravines almost exclusively pines, those on the ravines +consisting of oaks, Rhododendra, Betula corylifolia, Betula moroides, +Solidago, Verbena, Primulaceæ, Othonna, occur; Anthistiriæ, +<i>both</i> those of Nunklow are common, Rottboellia Manisuris in low +valleys: here and there Phœnix pumila is common. The country +just before Nurtung is uninteresting, scarcely any thing but grass being +visible in some directions. Indeed it falls off on leaving Joowye.</p> +<p>Rhinanthus, Corolla infundibulif. subbilabiat. lobis 2, superioribus +minoribus, stam. ascendent. stigmati inclusi decurvo.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>12th</i>.—Nurtung is a large place for these +hills, perhaps next in extent to Joowye, it occupies principally both +sides of a sufficiently sheltered hill. The lanes adjacent to +the place are narrow, often very wet, and always very dirty. The +gardens are enclosed with wooden palings and are screened still further +by bamboos. The houses, at least the better order, are still better +than even those of Joowye. The exterior is of the same construction +as all Khasya houses, but the lawns and the comparative cleanliness +of the front makes them look much better. The market, which took +place to-day, is outside the village and close to our bungalow: it is +well attended, but the amount of persons could not exceed 100 to 200, +and these form a considerable amount of all the persons capable of bearing +burdens from the neighbouring villages. The luxuries exhibited +are all Khasyan, consisting of stinking fish, some other things of dubious +appearance and still more dubious odour, millet and the inferior grains, +and the fashionable articles of Khasya clothing and the adjuncts to +that abominable habit pawn eating. There was plenty of noise, +but still order prevailed: no other rupees than the <i>rajah’s</i> +were taken, and even pice were refused. Iron implements of husbandry +of native manufacture were vended, in short all the various luxuries +or necessaries of a Khasya are obtainable.</p> +<p>This place bears evidence of having been ruled over by some chief +pretending to Hindooism. This is observable in the large fig trees +in some of the buildings, in most of the houses in the presence of some +brahmins, in the tanks, and in a sacred lake. At any rate it is +attended with bad effects, and to see a Khasya attempting the formalities +of a rigid Hindoo is ridiculously absurd.</p> +<p>It must be a wealthy place, many of the natives are well off; and +I saw a <i>lady</i> of a decidedly superior nature to the Khasya women, +clad in snow white, reclining in oriental fashion on a platform. +The <i>vegetation</i> of this place forms a curious melange around our +huts: Rhus bucki ameli, two Artimiseæ, Anthistiria arundinacia, +Pteris aquilina, Callicarpa <i>lilacina</i>, Eurya, Bombax, Osbeckia +nepalensis and linearis, Marlea begonifolia, Pyrus, Pinus, Urticia fructibus +aurantiaceus capitulatis, Polygonum rheoides, Rubi 3, Swertia angustifolia, +Polygonum globuliferum, Valerianæ, Cacalia, Randia, Gnaphalia +nervosa, and G. revoluta, Smilax, Plectranthus azureus, Trichosanthes, +Leea, Tradescantia clavigera, Geniosporum, <i>Butea</i>, Hypericum, +Knoxia cordata, Rice cultivation.</p> +<p>Along the path to the village are to be found, Carduus, Myrica crotalaria, +<i>Hacyoides</i>, Cariceneæ, Panicum curvatum, Arundo, Mentha +verticillata, Cyperaecæ usual, Zizania ciliaris, Panax, Wendlandia +<i>Salvinia</i>, Isachne bigeniculata, Betula corylifolia common, Pontedera, +Tetranthera, Erythrina, Celtis, Salix, Buddleia, Gordonia, Calamus abundant, +Juncus, Arum macrophyllum, Cordiaceæ, Urena lobata, Cynoglossum +canescens, Bambusa, Verbesinea, <i>Lavinia</i>, Magnolia of Myrung, +Camellia oleifolia, Gualtheria.</p> +<p>About the village, Porana, Musa, Verbena, Xanthophyllum, Xyris, Urtica +herophylla, Sambucus, etc.</p> +<p>The cultivation consists of rice, millet, Soflong? pumpkins and tobacco; +guavas and oranges, are also to be seen.</p> +<p>Daphne cannabina occurs here, as well as Loxotis obliqua, the Cardaminum, +Plantago, and Martynia.</p> +<p>From a fresh observation and taking the mean, I find the elevation +of Nurtung to be 3,302 feet.</p> +<p>On enquiry I find that Rulung is one march off, that the country +is similar, and that pines grow there to a large size. From this +place to Koppilee river it is said to be nine marches. A fuqueer +from Cutch said several, six to ten—and as the distance is nearly +fifty miles and the ground difficult, he was probably right.</p> +<p>You then come to the Meekir country. To get into Tooly Ram’s +country would require at least nine days, but with loaded people probably +twelve or fifteen. The station between Rulung and the Koppilee +is Hush Koorah. Thermometer varies here from 45 to 85 in the sun, +in shade from 52 to 74.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>13th</i>.—Left for the Borpanee.</p> +<p>The country traversed is easy, consisting chiefly of undulations +covered with grassy vegetation. There are no steep ascents nor +descents; and the only obstacle is the Borpanee. The march is +of about six hours’ duration.</p> +<p>Butea suffruticosa is very common about Nurtung, but ceases soon +after leaving its environs. All the valleys near this place are +cultivated: the ground being now inundated in proportion. Dipsacus +valeriana continued, and a short distance from Nurtung pines become +very common. Thence the country became more undulated and scarcely +a tree was met with: Hedysarum gyrans commenced shortly after leaving +Nurtung: a sure sign of decreasing elevation. The country subsequently +improved, being more diversified with wood: firs became abundant, Callicarpa +arborea commenced. About Nonkreen, a small village to the east, +close to our path the trees became mostly different. Kydia appeared, +a tree like the mango, and some others unknown to me. Bauhinia, +Randia, Phyllanthus Embelica, and a stunted arboreous Symplocos, Anthistiria +arundinacea common, with chesnuts (Castaneæ).</p> +<p>Close to this, Gordonia, pines of some size, Anthistiria arundinacea +and Cassioides. The grasses continued the same, but two new Andropogons +and a small Rottboellia appear; Holcus, Airoides, etc. of Churra have +ceased: the other are Sacchara and various Andropogons. On approaching +a considerable descent the woods became open, consisting at first entirely +of pines, Betula of Joowye, etc. then of pines, Quercus castaneoides +which attains a large size. It was here that the pines became +large, one felled measured sixty-nine feet to the first branch, most +are straight, the greatest diameter not two feet. Gordonia occurred +here of large size, the woods are really delightful, reminding one much +of England. Here Myrica occurs but rarely, Lematula, Flemingia, +Elephantopus, Vanda, Quercus callicarpifolius commences, Biophytum appears +a short distance hence. Also, Liriodendron, Dipterocarpus, Bambusa, +Pinus but of smaller size, Engelhaardtia, Dioscorea, Castanea, Quercus +callicarpa, which is very common.</p> +<p>Here Bombax appears somewhat lower, with it Castanea, Kydia, Gordonia. +No pines now occur except on the neighbouring heights.</p> +<p>The descent to the Borpanee is not great, say 400 feet; on its banks +Thunbergia grandiflora commences, but the Castanea castaneoides of large +size, Camellia oleifolia, Daphne cannabina, Rhododendron punctatum variety. +Engenia Wallichii (which commences), Quercus castaneoides, etc. may +be found along its banks.</p> +<p>This is a large stream, not fordable at any time, nor passable in +the rains; both banks are high, rocks of course break the stream, which +is gentle at the points crossed. Breadth is 50 to 60 yards, the +elevation of its bed is 2,508 feet, water boiling at 207½°: +temperature 74°.</p> +<p>The ascent of the north bank is great, on surmounting it one returns +to grassy undulations, the vegetation of which is the same as before, +Rottboellia of Suniassa as well as Manisuroides here occur. The +village Madan is very small, the people, of course, as they have scarcely +ever seen a white face, very polite and obliging: it is situated on +a hill, but is still below the north bank of the river. Its altitude +is 2,753 feet—temperature of the air 67°: boiling water 207°.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g182.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Nurtung to Madan" src="images/g182.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The birds, as well as those of the Nurtung river, are the water-ouzel, +the greyish-blue water-chat, the red and black ditto with a white head-top, +and the black bird, <i>durn</i>-<i>durns</i> or bird producing that +cry occurs, but not in great numbers. Pea-fowl at Madan. +Elephants are abundant, especially towards the descent to the Borpanee. +<i>Fly</i> <i>wheel</i> (?) insect is here common at Kokreen, a small +village close to Nonkreen. Equisetum occurs along the Boga Panee +as well as a new species of Podostemon, P. fronde profunde lobato, lobis +liniaribus simplicibus vel lobatis saxis arcti adpressis, floribus marginalibus +distiches. Polygala occurs at 3,000 feet and continues higher.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>14th</i>.—The march to Mengtung occupies +about six hours, it is by no means difficult, and the only ascent of +any length is that before descending on Nungtung. Throughout the +1st part, all the bottoms of the valleys are cultivated, thence all +is jungle, either of high grass or of trees.</p> +<p>Near Madan, Arundinaria bambusifolia may be found, although at an +elevation of 2,800 feet, Volkameria is common. The same grasses +continue. In the rice field Butomus lanceolatus, Herpestes, Jussæia, +Juncus, Eriocaulon, Zizana ciliaris.</p> +<p>We then came after traversing such low swampy ground for sometime +to a wood composed of Quercus castaneoidea, of large size; its bark +is thick and somewhat corky, its diameter three feet. Quercus +callicarpifolius appeared soon after, with Polygala linearis, Scitamineæ +are common in the valley. In similar low places, Impatiens graminifolia +of Churra was seen, and Hedysarum gyrans.</p> +<p>Oolooks <a name="citation183"></a><a href="#footnote183">{183}</a> +and parrots are both found: Cnicus floribus roseis, Gerardia, Apluda, +Senecio pubescens, were found in similar spots.</p> +<p>After traversing a low valley with gentle undulations presenting +the usual grasses, we came to a wood presenting many tropical features. +Oaks and chesnuts still continuing to be the usual trees. Much +underwood, consisting of Acanthaceæ, Laurineæ, Anonaceæ, +Rubiaceæ, among which Pœderia triphylla and Mephitidia were +common. Centothca sp., Sarcopyramis, Garcinia, Triumfetta were +observed.</p> +<p>Thence we came to pines. Then a low valley, the altitude of +the stream of which was 1,979 feet, the thermometer being in the air +82°, boiling point 208½°. Then a wood.</p> +<p>In it Castanea ferruginea continued common, Quercus dalbergioides, +Daphne cannabina, Acanthus leucostachyus (1st appearance), Oxyspora +and Polypodium Wallichii were found; ascending a few feet, say 60, Randia +microphyllum, Aneilema aspera, and pines appeared in the woods, with +straight trunks and high branches, occasioned by the abortion of the +lower branches, sometimes dichotomously forked, bark grey, and scaley, +branches horizontal, approximated; cones inclining towards the axis. +The descent occasioned a loss of pines, oaks and chesnuts continuing, +Orthopogon, Pederia triphyllum.</p> +<p>This wood was of great extent, the path running along the precipitous +or steep edge of a very wet water-course. Castanea ferruginea +very common, Cyrtandracea.</p> +<p>Begonia malabarica, Achyranthes, Tradescantia flagellifera, Phlogacanthus, +Acanthaceæ, Sarcopyramis, Magnolia, Eupatorium arboreum, Laurineæ, +Gleichenia minor.</p> +<p>Pinus subsequently appears but is rare, Eurya.</p> +<p>Daphne involucrata, Gaultheria arborescens, Knoxia cordata, Polypodium +arborescens, Thibaudia, Viburni sp., Vareca, Leucas galea brunacea.</p> +<p>Then still gradually ascending, open woods occurred.</p> +<p>Pines, Q. castaneoides.</p> +<p>Thence the ascent is still through open woods of pines. Castanea, +Quercus castaneoides and callicarpifolia, Polygala here appears, Knoxia +linearis, Flemingia, Æschynomene.</p> +<p>On the top no Pines. Oaks, chesnuts, and Gordoniæ appear.</p> +<p>Thence a second but small ascent, pines re-appear with birch, Scutellaria, +Erythrina, Melica latifolia, Epiphytes common, especially on Gordoniæ. +The altitude of the summit before descending on Nungtung was 3,359 feet: +thermometer 75°, boiling point 206°.</p> +<p>The altitude of Nungtung is 2,862 feet, Temp. 64°. Big +Therm. in boiling water 206½°, ditto wooden 207°, small +ditto 201°, centigrade 97¾°.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g185.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Madan to Nungtung" src="images/g185.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Nungtung is a small village not containing more than 12 houses; these +are on michaowns, <a name="citation186"></a><a href="#footnote186">{186}</a> +and are built entirely of bamboos. The doors of curious construction, +consisting of bamboos strung longitudinally over a transverse one, so +that they can be only opened by pushing on one side. The pigs +have similar doors to their houses and appear well acquainted with the +mode of ingress and egress.</p> +<p>Tobacco flourishes here. Here also I saw Sesamum and Ricinus, +sure signs of increasing temperature, Labiata edulis. The first +part of the march lay through an oak and chesnut wood; then through +the valley which is under rice cultivation; then through part of an +oak and fir wood; I then turned off to NNE. traversing undulated hills +entirely covered with grass; here and there an oak and chesnut wood +occurred; this continued until 1 P.M., when the path joined the great +road as it is called, but which is nearly as bad as the Nungtung one. +The marching was very disagreeable, owing to the path being choked up +with grass, particularly in the swampy valley just before Onkreem. +In this valley wild elephants were first seen.</p> +<p>After leaving the halting or resting place under a large oak (Q. +castaneoides) at Onkreem, the path improved and is only rendered bad +by the swarms of elephants, by which animals we were disturbed twice; +it continued until 6 P.M., over undulated ground becoming lower and +lower until we arrived at the large valley of Onswye, which is even +now at this advanced period of the season, the middle of November, considerably +swampy.</p> +<p>Oaks and chesnuts continued, but pines ceased about half way between +Onkreem and Onswye.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g187.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Nungtung to Onkreem" src="images/g187.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g188.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Journey towards Assam and Bootan" src="images/g188.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g189.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient From Onkreem to Onkreem" src="images/g189.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g190.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Journey towards Bootan" src="images/g190.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g191.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Descent into Assam" src="images/g191.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Onswye is a small village, seated on a low hill, and entirely hidden +by trees: the access to it is pretty. Its elevation is 1,632 feet, +temperature 63°. Water boils at 98¾ of centigrade, +small ther. 202½°, big ditto 208¾°, wooden ditto +210°: taking 209° as the mean.</p> +<p>It is a Lalung village. These people have distinct habits and +language from their neighbours: their dress is like that of the Khasyahs. +They approach to Hindoos in not eating cows. They inhabit the +lower northern ranges of these hills, but do not extend further east, +nor into the plains at the foot, and are far less civilized than the +Khasyahs.</p> +<p>They have religious houses or places of worship, deo-ghurs, in one +of which I slept, having it first cleansed, and the deity appeased by +some most villainous music, and a procession of men with knives.</p> +<p>At this village Carica, Ficus elastica, Ficus cordifolius, Ricinus, +Artocarpus intigrifol, Tamarind, Guava, Musa, Solanum Melongena, tobacco, +etc., are cultivated.</p> +<p>Caryophyllea scandens, Desmochæta, Plumbago, Plectranthus azureus, +Phlebochiton, Cassia tora, Orthopogon, Adhatoda, Mangifera, Croton malvæfol, +Hastingsia, Torenia asiatica, Caricinea, Leea, Prunus! Congea! Antidesma, +Rottleria, Clerodendron nutans, Calamus, Xanthochymus. Mesua ferrea, +Garcinia Cowa, Leea arbuscula, Dalhousia, Roxburghia, are found on the +ascent which is moderate and pretty.</p> +<p>The heavy tree or bamboo jungle does not begin until you attain 12 +or 1,500 feet, up to that, the ridges present the former grasses. +Rottboellia, Andropogons, Erianthus, Saccharum, Anthistiria, and the +trees are scattered consisting of Arborescent Leguminosæ, Sterculia, +Cedrela, Semicarpus continues to the tree jungle, but rarely.</p> +<p>The road to the village runs through heavy woods, the plants forming +which I have already mentioned, it is in good order. The village +is a Lalung one.</p> +<p>At Dullagong, which is situated in the plains of Assam, at the foot +of the range the temperature being 66°, 8½ A.M., water boiled +at 211.1° in the large thermometer. 100 centigrade, and above +the boiling point in the wooden. 205½° in the small +metal thermometer.</p> +<p>Between this and Goba, the path is generally through grass or tree +jungle. I noticed Exacum, Careya, Butea arborea, Ficus, Cinchona, +Kydia, Saccharum Megala fuscum masus, Spathodea, Alstonia, Bombax, Semicarpus! +Ægle Marmelos, Emblica, Panax, Elephantopus, and Lagerstræmia +Reginæ succeeds about Goba: and between this and Dhumria, the +country being low and highly cultivated, presents generally the appearance +of one sheet of rice. In this march I observed one or two instances +of the absolute enclosure of Dicotyledonous trunks by Fici. This +enclosure arises entirely from the excessive tendency to cohesion between +the roots and radicles of some of the species of this genus. With +these, an expert gardener might produce any form he likes; the tendency +exists in all to throwing out additional roots; in few only to excess. +In the generality it is limited to the trunk and often to its base. +Nobody can understand this genus who cannot study it from living specimens.</p> +<p>Cardiopterus is very common along the foot of these hills: it abounds +with milky juice, and in habit and some other points approaches nearer +to Chenopodiaceæ than Sapindaceæ.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>7th</i>.—Returned from Jeypore, whither +I had been to report on the Caoutchouc trees. <a name="citation193"></a><a href="#footnote193">{193}</a></p> +<p>These trees appear to be limited to the belt of jungle or toorai +which commences towards the foot of the Aka and Duphla hills, and which +in the part in which I examined them is about 8 miles wide. They +are said to be found likewise among the neighbouring villages, but I +saw no instance of this. They occur solitarily, or at most in +groups of two or three. They appear to be more frequent towards +the immediate base of the hills, and to prefer the drier parts of those +humid and dense forests called toorai. They are frequently of +vast size, and by this as well as their dense head, may be at once recognised +even at a distance of a few miles. Some idea of their size may +be formed from the following measurements of a large one:</p> +<pre>Circumference of main trunk, 74 feet +Ditto, including the supports, 120 “ +Ditto, of space covered by crown branches, 620 “ +Height, ditto ditto, 80 to 100 “</pre> +<p>The roots spread out in every direction on reaching the ground; the +larger running along the surface, their upper portion being uncovered: +occasionally they assume the form of buttresses, but never to such a +marked degree as occurs in some other trees, such as the Simool, Herietiera, +etc. The supports are only thrown out towards the base of the +principal branches, not as in the banian at indefinite distances. +The trunk is a compound one, formed entirely by the mutual cohesion +of roots; not as in almost all other trees by the growth of parts in +an ascending direction. Its aspect is picturesque and varied, +occasionally putting on the appearance of sculpture. It is, I +think, doubtful whether this as well as some other species of the genus +are not to be considered as genuine parasites, at any rate they generally +cause the destruction of the tree on which they originally grew. +If this be the case the parasitism is the reverse of that which occurs +in Cuscuta, in which the plantule draws its first nourishment from the +earth, relinquishing this when sufficiently developed to enable it to +draw its supply from other plants. I may here observe, that parasites +are common on the peepul, contrary to the statement of M. DeCandolle.</p> +<p>The destruction of the foster-mother takes place by the mutual interlacement +of the roots, which descending irregularly, form at first a strong net-work, +subsequently becoming a cylindric binding, in the strongest possible +way to the trunk, and preventing all lateral distinction. The +hollow occupied by the trunk when dead may become filled up, when this +has passed away, by other roots. The adhesion of the roots commences +by abrasion of the bark, the union subsequently becomes of the most +intimate kind. The supports are perfectly cylindrical; they become +conical only towards the earth, on approaching which they divide into +roots: they are strictly descending growths, and as such, under ordinary +circumstances, they never produce leaves, etc. Roots likewise +issue from every section of the bark of sufficient depth to reach the +outer layer of wood, with the outer fibres of which they are obviously +continuous. To such an extent is this carried, that transverse +sections of young supports assume the appearance of coarse paint-brushes +or tails. The lenticells, which are very numerous, have nothing +whatever to do with their production; if the bark remains entire, no +roots are thrown out except by division of the apex. The branches +ascend obliquely, the outermost running nearly horizontally.</p> +<p>The juice is obtained from the larger; that from young parts is less +thick: an exposed semi-denuded root, is selected for transverse incisions +through the bark, from which alone the juice flows, a small hole is +made in the ground immediately beneath the incised parts into which +a leaf, generally of Phrynium capitatum is placed: it is collected in +this simple manner in a very clean state, far more so than that which +can be collected from the tree in any other situation. On issuing, +it is of a very rich pure white; if good, of the consistence of cream: +its excellence is known by the degree of consistence, and by the quantity +of caoutchouc it contains. This is ascertained by rubbing a few +drops up in the palm of the hand, which causes the watery juice to separate +(probably by evaporation) from the caoutchouc which remains in the form +of small, oblong, or round portions; and by kneading this in the hand, +and striking it sharply once or twice with the fist it acquires elasticity, +so that an additional test of excellence is at once pointed out. +Many incisions are made in one tree, the juice flows rapidly at first, +at the rate of sixty drops a minute from an ordinary incision, but this +soon becomes so much diminished that it dwindles to eight. The +bleeding is continued for two or three days, when it ceases spontaneously +by the formation of a layer of caoutchouc over the wound; and it is +to the commencement of this that the rapid diminution in the number +of drops is perhaps to be attributed. The quantity obtained from +one tree has not exactly been ascertained; by some it is stated to be +as much as four or five maunds, while others say that a moderate tree +will only yield one gurrah full, or about ten seers. From the +slowness with which it flows, I should consider half a maund to be a +fair average for each bleeding. The juice is, however, said to +flow faster at night, but this demands verification.</p> +<p>The operation is repeated at the end of eighteen or twenty days. +In seven miles of jungle we observed eighty trees, by far the greater +portion of which were of large size. Lieutenant Vetch has made +a calculation, (on the assumption that they are equally plentiful throughout +Chardowar,) that the number in this district alone is --- trees.</p> +<p>I calculate the number to be about 20,000. There is no reason +for supposing that they are not equally abundant throughout Noadwar, +nor in fact on any line where toorai prevails between Goalpara and Bishnath; +beyond this, however, the increase in latitude may occasion their decrease +both in number and size. On the southern side of the valley there +is every reason to believe it to be equally common. The general +geographic range may hence be said to be in latitude 24°, to 26½° +in longitude. It has been stated by Mr. Royle that it does not +extend beyond Pundua, Jynteapoor, and Churra Punjee, but on no other +authority than that it had not been found elsewhere.</p> +<p>Taking the number of trees at 20,000, and the produce of each from +four bleedings at two maunds, the annual supply that may be obtained +from Durrung may be estimated at 13,000 maunds of the caoutchouc itself, +assuming Dr. Roxburgh’s proportion of one to three to be nearly +correct. Some idea may be formed of the extent to which it is +procurable, when from the mere outskirts of the forest, 300 maunds of +juice may be collected in one month.</p> +<p>On the excellence of the Assam product as compared with that of America, +it does not become me to pronounce. If strength, elasticity, clearness, +and perfect freedom from viscidity, be tests of excellence, then this +product may be considered as equal to any other. It has been pronounced +by persons in Calcutta to be excellent, but no details have been entered +into except by Mr. Bell, who objects to its snapping: if by this we +are to understand snapping on being pulled too much, in contradistinction +to breaking, it only proves its excellence. It is declared to +be inferior to the American by Mr. McCosh, evidently on examination +of the worst possible specimens.</p> +<p>The size of the trees as they generally occur in the limits above +alluded to, entirely precludes all idea of any great liability to be +destroyed by the extraction of juice, the amount of which must be so +minute, compared to that of the whole tree. Still it may be considered +desirable for the security of the tree to limit the bleedings to the +cold months, and this is rendered more necessary by the inferiority +of the juice during the season of active vegetation. And if it +be possible to limit the number of bleedings of each tree to four or +five during the above period, I consider that the present 3,000 stock +cannot fail to be kept up. But to venture on still larger supplies, +to meet the demand for this most useful article, a demand to which limits +can scarcely be assigned, the formation of plantations should be encouraged, +the sites chosen to be near the villages bordering on the line of the +natural distribution of the tree. Propagation by cuttings or layers +cannot fail to be of easy and rapid application; and if we consider +that the tree is the most valuable receptacle of the lac insect, there +is every reason to suppose that the natives will readily enter into +such views.</p> +<p>The jungle in which the tree occurs is of the usual heavy description, +presenting in fact no one feature in particular. The trees are +all of a tropical nature, except towards the foot of the hills, when +two species of chesnut and one of alder begin to shew themselves.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3> +<p><i>Journey</i> <i>from</i> <i>Assam</i> <i>towards</i> <i>Bootan</i>.</p> +<p>Left Gowahatti on the 21st and halted at Ameengong ghat.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>22nd</i>, <i>1837</i>.—Left at twelve and +proceeded to Hazoo, which is nearly due west of Ameengong, and distant +thirteen miles. Road, through grassy plains; much cultivation +throughout the greater part. Passed several villages, and forded +one stream. Hazoo is at the foot of some low hills, on one of +which is a temple of great sanctity with the Booteahs. The hills +above this, as well as between this and Ameengong, abound with Cycas, +many of which were once dichotomous; on these hills a fleshy Euphorbia +likewise occurs, a sure indication of barren soil. Pea-fowl abound. +The light-blue Jay figured in Hardwickii, Sterna, Haliætus pondicerianus, +Chat, Butcher-bird, Edolius, Plovers, Hoopoe, and Ardea indica, were +met with.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>23rd</i>.—Hazoo, a large village, extending +nearly north and south, all the houses surrounded by trees. Areca +bamboos, Ficus elastica, F. indicoides, F. religiosa, Sapotea (Mimusops) +Arborea, Erythrina. Country to the east very jheely, and one huge +expanse of paddy cultivation. Fine Loranthus, Hingtstha repens.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>24th</i>.—Nolbaree, seventeen miles nearly, +N. by W., throughout the latter half of the way, the country consisted +of highly cultivated plains, intersected by bamboo jungles, etc. +Villages very abundant, surrounded by trees, especially bamboos. +The hedges are made of a dwarf Pandanus. Crossed four streams, +two not fordable. Grallatores and water-birds innumerable throughout, +but especially after passing the Borolia, Bec ouvert or Anastomus coromandelianus, +Pelicans, Water-hens, Divers, Ibis bengala, Cigoines (Ardea Pavonia) +Syras, Mangoe-bird, large King-fisher, Hawks abundant, of which we observed +five species; this is, generally speaking, one of the richest parts +of Assam I have hitherto seen.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>25th</i>.—Dum Dummia, distance ten miles, +direction north, country very open, in parts less cultivated than before, +scarcely any jungle towards Dum; this is a straggling place on the banks +of a small stream called Noa Nuddee.</p> +<p>The bamboo continues common, as well as Pandanus, Pterocarpus marsupium, +Bombax, Diospyros ebenum, which are the most common trees. Villages +are very numerous, but as usual, entirely concealed from view by jungle.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>31st</i>.—Up to this morning we remained +at Dum Dummia, and had the Booteas alone been consulted, we should have +remained there till to-morrow. It is a very uninteresting place, +the country consisting of one extensive plain, diversified only by trees +wherever there are villages. There is a good deal of cultivation, +chiefly however, of rice; some sugarcane is visible, but it is of inferior +quality, and evidently not sufficiently watered. Sursoo is considerably +cultivated. The river Noa Nuddee is about seventy yards wide, +with a stream of three miles an hour; it is full of sand-banks and of +quicksands, and is crossed with great difficulty on elephants; by men +it is easily fordable. The only shooting about the place is Floriken, +which are very abundant, ten or twelve being seen in one day.</p> +<p>We left for Hazareegoung, a Bootea-Assam village to the north. +We passed through a similar open country not much cultivated, but overrun +with grassy vegetation. The path was of the ordinary description, +and not kept at all cleared: crossed a small stream twice, with a pebbly +bed and sub-rapids, a sure indication of approaching the hills. +These, in their lower portion, have a very barren appearance, but this +may arise from the cultivated patches: land-slips are of very frequent +occurrence.</p> +<p>The grasses of the enormous plains, so prevalent every where in this +direction, are Kagaia, Megala, Vollookher, Saccharum spontaneum, this +is soft grass, and affords an excellent cover for game, Cymbopogon hirsutum, +which is more common than the C. arundinaceum, Erianthus, Airoides, +Rottboellia exaltata, Arundo, (?) Anatherum muricatum, Apluda, Trizania +cilearis, is common in the old rice khets.</p> +<p>Among these occur a tall Knoxia, Plectranthus sudyensis, and P. uncinatus.</p> +<p>I observed Vareca, Grislea, about Dum Dummia. Elytrophorus +is common in rice khets.</p> +<p>Towards Hazareegoung we came on a high plain, covered principally +with S. spontaneum. Among this occurred Lactuioides, Premna herbacea, +Grewia, with here and there Pterygodium. I observe here Bootea +bamboo baskets made water-proof by caoutchouc; this is a practice much +adopted by the Booteas: and the trees are here. The large coloured +stipulæ are peculiar to the young shoots cultivated, they are +often a span long. The young fruit is enveloped by three large +coloured scales, which originate from the annuliform base; this is hence +a peduncle, not a bracte, as I before supposed.</p> +<p>January 1st, 1838.—Halted.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Marched to Ghoorgoung, a small village, +eight miles from Hazareegoung and nearly due north. We crossed +similar grassy tracts: the country gradually rising as we approached +the hills.</p> +<p>Very little cultivation occurred. Crossed the Mutunga, now +dry, but the breadth testifies to its being a large stream in the rains, +as the boulders do to its being a violent one. The same plants +continue; small jungle or wood composed of Simool. Trophis aspera, +Cassia fistula, Bauhinia, Butea scandens, Byttneria, underwood of Eranthemum, +and another Acanthacea.</p> +<p>About this place Cnicus and Arundinaria occur, and a small Santalaceous +or Olacineous plant, with the habit of a Polygala. Merops apiaster +is very common.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>3rd</i>.—To Dewangeri, distance eight miles.</p> +<p>Our route hither lay for the greater portion up the bed of the Durunga, +the stream of which makes its exit about one mile to the west of Ghoorgoung. +After ascending its bed for some time, the ascent becomes steep, for +perhaps 800 or 1,000 feet, when we reached a portion of Dewangeri, but +two or three hundred feet below the ridge on which the village is situated. +The hills bounding the watercourse are very steep, many quite perpendicular, +owing to having been cut away; generally they are of decomposed granite +as at Dacanara, in some parts of conglomerate.</p> +<p>The torrent contains but little water, and very few fish, the banks +are wooded tolerably well, as soon as the lower barren ranges are past.</p> +<p>At the base Cassia fistula, Leguminous trees, Artemisia, Simool, +Spathodea, Bignonia indica, Sterculia, Cæsalpinea, Phlogacanthus +thyrsiflorus, Pæderia fætida, Eugenia, Rhamnea, Croton malvæfoliis +are found among the usual grasses, which form the chief vegetation.</p> +<p>These continue along the sandy bed for some time, but afterwards +the usual small Andropogons usurp their place. Anthistiria arundinacea +continue longest; with some of the large Saccharum, Rubus moluccanus +soon appears, with Melica latifolia, and a species of Rhus.</p> +<p><i>Leptospartion</i> is very common up to 1,000 feet, Pandanus 3-500 +feet, but soon ceases; the higher precipices abound with an elegant +palm tree, habitu Cocos.</p> +<p>Fleshy urticeæ and Aroideum become common at 300 feet, along +the shaded watery banks, and continue so long as shade and humidity +are found. Equisetum commences at 300 feet, Arundo, Saurauja, +Pentaptera, which last ascends to 1,000 feet, as does Dillenia speciosa, +Castaneæ feorox commences at 500 feet. Between this and +the Choky, Polypodium, Wallichianum arboreum, Davallia grandis, Oxyspora, +Musci, Goodyera, and Composita arborea are found.</p> +<p>At the Choky, the elevation of which is 965 feet, Œsculus begins. +Wallichia,* Œschynanthus, Urtica gigas,* Derngia,* Govania,* Anthistiria +arundinacea, Alstonea, Angiopteris, are found. Grislea is found +as high as 1,000 feet. Ficus obliquissima is found at 300 feet, +and Ficus altera species as high as 700 feet.</p> +<p>At 1,200 feet Rubi sp., Panax, Cordia, are found, and on the steep +ascent, Hastingsia,* Gordonia, Eurya, Corisanthera, Griffithia.</p> +<p>At one place the jack fruits, Ficus elastica, Compositi arborea, +Panax altera species.</p> +<p>Dewangeri occupies a ridge 200 feet above our halting place, the +elevation of which is 2,031 feet. The view to the north is confined +to a ravine of 1,500 feet deep, at the bottom of which runs a considerable +mountain torrent: to the SW. plains are visible, to the east and west +the view is hilly.</p> +<p>The village itself is a poor one, containing perhaps sixty houses, +but these are divided into three or four groups; the houses, with the +exception of three or four stone and lime ones, are of the usual build, +viz. of bamboo, and raised on muchauns. Filth and dirt abound +every where, and the places immediately contiguous to the huts are furnished +plentifully with various ordures.</p> +<p>Along the ridge three or four temples occur, these are of the Boodhistical +form: they are composed entirely of slate, are white-washed; none are +of any size, and the workmanship is rude in the extreme; on each face +of the square basement, slabs of slate with inscriptions are visible, +and in one instance many of these are ranged along a longish wall. +The Pagodas are surrounded with long banners, with inscriptions fastened +longitudinally to bamboos. On the west side of this the view is +remarkably pretty, embracing all the temples, part of the village, and +the Rajah’s house. The hills adjoining being considerably +diversified and remarkable, and for India over picturesquely wooded.</p> +<p>The pucka houses are ungainly structures, the height being out of +all proportion to the width, the walls are very thick, and composed +of slate slabs, the roof is choppered with projecting eaves, the windows +are very narrow. Each has three stories, the middle one being +occupied by the owner, this is divided into several rude compartments, +each of which has one or two balconies.</p> +<p>The steps are rude and awkward, consisting of notches cut into large +blocks. The cooking is carried on, on the ground floor, much to +the edification of the residents above. Dirt abounds in every +direction. The doors are rudely constructed of wood.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>4th</i>.—To-day was occupied by moving up +into the village, in which we occupy a pucka house.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>5th</i>.—Visited the Sooba or Rajah, his +house is very picturesque, reminding me much of the pictures of Swiss +cottages: it is white-washed, with a red belt. The interior is +capacious; the state room has hangings, which are decorated with native +pictures on cloth. At the east end is a recess in which are some +well-executed Chinese statues, the chief figure is of large dimensions, +and is intended to represent the Durmah Rajah, whose statue is supposed +to give infallibility. Two bells were suspended, one from the +centre, the other from the balcony, the tongues of which were long, +of ivory, and moved by a string. The Rajah received us in state, +amidst discordant sounds of horns, pipes, and drums; his followers for +the most part were badly clothed, the few decent looking persons being +only decent externally. He was seated on a raised dais and was +well dressed. He is a stout Chinese looking man, about 50 years +old, and his deportment was certainly easy and dignified. The +meeting was very friendly, but it is evident that we shall be delayed +here at least seven days.</p> +<p>The central room in the Rajah’s house is used as a guard house! +arms were fixed round the walls, but they seemed to consist chiefly +of spears, swords, and bucklers.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>6th</i>.—I walked this morning to a village, +a mile to the west, in which there is a picturesque pucka house of religion. +What pleased me especially was a specimen of a juniper, of extreme elegance, +with drooping branches. The house itself was of the usual form, +and one end was occupied as usual by an ornamental window and balcony. +I noticed in addition Ulmus and Quercus.</p> +<p>The vegetation hitherto seen about this, consists of mango trees, +several species of fig, among which were Ficus indica, elastica, terminalioides, +Papyrifera, etc. two with cordate leaves occur. Ulmus, Quercus, +Bombax, Juniperus and Pinus, both cultivated. Aralia or Panax, +four or five species, Croton malvæfolium, Justicia, Adhatoda, +Peristrophe, Amaranthaceæ, Artemisia, Urtica urens? and heterophylla, +Pogostemon, Triumfetta, (these occupy the old cleared spots,) Castaneæ +sp.? Artocarpus integrifolium, Erythrina, Sambucus ebulus, Rubi, three +species, Solanum farinaceum, Engeldhaardtia, Pandanus, Leptospartion, +Calamus, Nauclea, Euphorbia carnosa, foliis ligulatis, Artocarpus chaplasha, +the fruit of which is eaten, Phlebochiton extensus, Sedgwickia cerasifolia, +Callicarpa arborea, Porana, Randia, sugarcane, citrons, tobacco.</p> +<p>The fauna contains two or three squirrels, one of which is the small +one of Upper Assam, Trocheloideus, the lesser Edolius or Drongo minor. +Mainas, two kinds, carrion crows, Bucco, Muscipeta flammea, and one +or two other species, Parus, two or three species, kites, large tailor-birds, +sparrows. The black-bird of the torrents, and the usual water-birds, +black pheasants; bulbuls very common, Bucco barbatus, parroquets, barking +deer.</p> +<p>The temperature being 58°61', water boiled at 208°. +The mean of two observations accordingly gives the altitude as 2,165 +feet above the sea.</p> +<p>The number of houses is about 130, but these form two or three detached +villages. The population is considerable, and there is no want +of children. The people are stout and very fair, with ruddy cheeks, +but abominably dirty. Some of the men are six feet in stature. +We had one opportunity of witnessing their practice with the bow, but +only two or three of the dozen candidates were decent shots. The +mark was a very small one, and the distance 120 steps, but none hit +it during the time we looked on, nor even the circular patch of branches, +on which the slab of wood of this form was placed. The practice +was accompanied with the usual proportion of noise and gesticulations.</p> +<p>There is very little cultivation on the hills around, so that this +people are, at least about here, evidently dependent on the plains for +their supplies. The cattle are a good breed, and totally different +from those of the plains. Ponies and mules are by no means uncommon; +there are likewise pigs and fowls, both of which are abundant, and of +fine description.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>16th</i>.—Every thing leads me to conclude +that the Booteas are the dirtiest race in existence, and if accounts +be true, they are equally deficient in delicacy. Although much +beyond other mountain tribes inhabiting either side of the Assam valley, +in the structure of their houses, in their clothing, in their language, +and probably in their religion, they are inferior to them in other points. +Thus their looms are perhaps really primitive, and of the most simple +construction; neither in their weapons of defence are they at all superior.</p> +<p>On the 14th I ascended a peak to the eastward, and certainly 1,000 +feet above the village: on the summit of this, where there were the +remains of an old clearing, I observed Pyrus, Acer, Rhus, Tetrantheræ, +three or four species, Bigonia species picta, Carex, Composita arborea, +Pteris aquilina, Kydia zyziphifolia, Saurauja, Eurya, Mæsa Panax, +Artemisia, Hedyotis scandens, Callicarpa arborea, Camellia, Cælogyne, +Oberonia, Otochilus fuscescens, Ficus, Cinnamomum, Æschynanthus, +Pholidota, Cyrtandra, Piper, Citrus, Corysanthera, Hypoxis, Tupistra, +Bambusa.</p> +<p>Sanicula appeared at 2,500 feet with Bartramea spectabilis, and a +small Ophiorhiza, Acer at 2,800 feet, as likewise Rhopala; at 2,000 +feet, Costus and Abroma, Thunbergia grandiflora.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>19th</i>.—I find that large quantities of +Mungista or madder are sent to the plains from this, where the plant +is very common; it is exchanged for ill preserved salt-fish, one bundle +of madder for one fish. This fish is of an abominable odour, and +probably tends to increase the natural savour of the Booteas, which, +considering their total unacquaintance with soap, is sufficiently strong.</p> +<p>P. tells me that the Kampo country is situated north of this, and +that it may be reached by a Kampo, in twenty-six days.</p> +<p>The language of the people we are now among, is distinct from that +of Assam, as will be observed from the names given to the common grains +cultivated in both countries, their principal grain is barley, which +is of a fine description; very little cultivation being carried on here, +the people drawing all their supplies from the plains. The following +is a list of grains cultivated: those marked * are Cerealea:—</p> +<pre> <i>Assam</i>. <i>Bootea</i>. + +1* Lalkonee dhan, Yungra, )Panici sp. +2* Legaid ditto, Ditto, ) + +3 <i>Boot</i>, Tel, Hnam, A Sesamum. + +4 <i>Cultivation</i> in Upper Assam, Braime, (Polygonum Fago- + (pyrum, grains + (very large. + +5* Bhobosa, Khongpo, Eleusine sp. +6* Goomdam, Peihnam, Zea Mays. +7 Gellei-ma, Linjee, Phaseoli sp.</pre> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g204.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Bootan" src="images/g204.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The palm from the cliffs on the road hither is evidently a species +of Phænix, pinnulis inferioribus spiniformibus reticula copiosa, +pinnulis liniaribus acuminatissimus, apicem versus canaliculatis reticulo +copioso, the height must be about that of a moderate Areca. No +specimens of the trunk, none of flowers and seeds have been brought +to me.</p> +<p>The temples here have a good deal of the Burmese shape, but the dome +is more like that of a Mussulman mosque.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>22nd</i>.—Yesterday evening Mr. Blake’s +Khidmutgar died rather suddenly, he had been ailing for some days, but +apparently not serious; his indisposition was owing to over-loading +the stomach with radishes, etc. in which all partook too freely during +the protracted halt, thus causing a good deal of sickness.</p> +<p>This place is so straggling that it is difficult to make a guess +at the number of the houses, the greater number of the people are temporary +residents and mostly are natives of Kampo,<a name="citation205a"></a><a href="#footnote205a">{205a}</a> +they are more dirty than the Booteas, and seem to have an especial predilection +for begging. When wishing to be very gracious they bow and gesticulate +awkwardly, shewing their tongue at the same time. Their principal +dress is coarse woollen clothes, and in lieu of turbans they wear caps +or hats. Their beasts of burden are principally asses, which are +perhaps, from bad treatment, undersized: they likewise use goats, and +largish animals between goats and sheep in appearance; of these we saw +one male only, it had <i>once</i> <i>spiral</i> horns. Even a +little black kid was not exempt from carrying its share, this was ornamented +by woollen tassels of a red colour, fastened through a hole in the ear.</p> +<p>Pemberton tells me, that most of these people come hither with the +view of going to Hazoo, a place of pilgrimage in Assam; some remain +here as a security for the return of their brethren in three months, +the period during which leave is granted by our friend the Rajah of +this place. Their language is totally different from that of the +Booteas. The day before yesterday an edict against catching fish, +being taken off as I supposed it would be on shewing the Rajah some +flies, Blake and I went down, and repeated our visit yesterday; the +bed of the river at the debouchment of the path leading towards Tongsa, +is elevated 1,431 feet, (70.209.8), <a name="citation205b"></a><a href="#footnote205b">{205b}</a> +it is of no great size, and is generally fordable; the fish are almost +exclusively Bookhar. <a name="citation205c"></a><a href="#footnote205c">{205c}</a> +I saw one or two Sentooreahs, <a name="citation205d"></a><a href="#footnote205d">{205d}</a> +and caught a long thin Bola, <a name="citation206a"></a><a href="#footnote206a">{206a}</a> +beautifully banded with purplish-blue. The Bookhars as usual take +a fly well, especially red hackles; the largest was caught by Blake, +and must have weighed nearly three pounds.</p> +<p>Very little worth noticing occurred in the vegetation. Sedgwickia +is common and of very large size, 2,400 feet above the river, as well +as tree ferns.</p> +<p>Equisetum occurs in the bed of the river; in some places at the same +level a species of Ranunculus, Aroidea, Succulent Urticeæ were +common; along the edges or in the small churs, that have established +themselves here and there, and which are covered with the usual Sacchara, +but of smaller size; Erythrina, Leptospartion, Sambucus, Bœhmeria +tomentosa, Kydia calycina, Grislea, Tupistra, Leea occurred, Ficus elastica +is not uncommon, one specimen presented itself, which had sprung up +on another tree, fifty feet from the ground; this it had destroyed, +and the appearance was singular enough.</p> +<p>The juice is used for water-proofing bamboo vessels. The general +rocks are slate, and this was the only one we saw <i>in</i> <i>situ</i>; +the vegetation is rather barren.</p> +<p>Near the bed of this river, which is called the Deo Panee, I found +a curious Menispermous genus, Columnea, Clypeæ perianthia uncialata, +ore integeriuscula, a Myrtacea, Uncaria, Abroma augusta, etc.</p> +<p>On ascending, Murraya exotica, Magnoliaceæ, Pæderia fætida, +and Bignonia, occurred at low elevations, Lobelia baccata, Wulfenia +obliqua, Costus, Chloranthus, Justicea orchidiflora below 600 feet, +Eurya occurred scarcely below 1,800 feet with Millingtonia simplicifolia.</p> +<p>The cattle here are really noble, particularly the bulls; they are +much like the Mishmee Methuns, but are distinct, <a name="citation206b"></a><a href="#footnote206b">{206b}</a> +they are very quiet.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>23rd</i>.—Left at twelve, and arrived late +at Rydang on a nullah, distant eight miles. Passed no villages, +but passed a bridge erecting over the Deo Nuddee, at which place a Lam +Gooroo or high Priest was employed: vegetation continued the same, and +only two new plants occurred, a Stemodia with large yellow flowers, +and a Begonia, with branched stems. Rydang is 2,404 feet above +the sea (55.208½.) <a name="citation212"></a><a href="#footnote212">{212}</a></p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>24th</i>.—Started early in the morning, (at +8 A.M.) the coolies mostly leaving at daylight. Yet although the +distance was only eleven miles, we did not reach till 5 P.M. and many +of the coolies did not arrive till late at night. The fact is +the ascent was nearly uninterrupted during the day, the highest point +traversed being about 6,000 feet. We then descended slightly to +Khegumpe, our halting place, the altitude of which is 5,395 feet (46.202,) +at the highest point Fahr. thermometer stood at 42° at 1 P.M.</p> +<p>The first part of the road lay over grassy sparingly-forested hills, +until we reached 4,000 feet. Here or a little below this the change +in the vegetation commenced, the first elevational plants being Serissoid; +Gaultheria, and Rhododendron commenced at about 3,600 feet on dry rocky +eminences, which it always prefers.</p> +<p>On the 1st eminence, 600 feet above Rydang or 3,000 feet above the +sea, Quercus, Castanea, Sedgwickia, Polypodium Wallichii, Lobelia, Pyramidalis, +Composita arborea, Gordonia, Pteris aquilina, Anthistiria, Gramen airoides, +Callicarpa arborea, Artemisia, Tephrosia, Flemingia, Govania, and these +continued up to 4,000 feet. We here met with Kampo Tartars with +their laden sheep, the children being generally placed cradle-fashion +on the top of the loads, each in its own basket. Itea macrophylla +occurred at 3,200 feet, with Clematis, Hastingsia, Bignonia, Euphorbiacea, +Briedleia.</p> +<p>At 3,300 feet Kydia zyziphifolia, Rhopala, Composita arborea, Hypericum,* +Triumfetta, Smilax, Indigofera.*</p> +<p>At 3,600 feet, the same with Panax, Wendlandia, Myrtacea arborea, +l. Melica latifolia.</p> +<p>At 3,800 feet, Hedychium, Gaultheria, Habenaria, Serissoides, Gnaphalium, +Gordonia, here very abundant, covered with Lichens and epiphytical Orchidea, +Phyllanthus, Emblica.</p> +<p>At 4,000 feet, Rhododendron arborea, Eugenia, l. Gaultheria arborea, +Echinanthus, Bambusa, microphylla.* The same trees continue.</p> +<p>At 4,200 feet, Hedychium, Briedleia, Pyrus, Ficus,* and Rhododendron +in flower, Gordonia, Itea macrophylla, Pteris aquilina, Osbeckia nepalensis, +Artemisia major, Airoides, Flemingia.</p> +<p>At 4,500 feet, Myrica, Callicarpa arborea, Verbenaceæ, Buddlæoid,* +Ardisia, Mæsa, Panax, Piper, Styrax, Camellia,* Polygonum rhæoides, +Cyrthandra common, Mimosa arborea, Betula,* Ficus, foliis cordatis hispidis, +Kydia calycina, Inga, Rubus moluccanus. Anisadenia, Begonia, Otochilus +latifolius, Tussilaginoides, Neckeræ, Urtica, Gaylussacia, Lobelia, +Panax, Æschynanthus venosus of Churra,* Lycopodium of Surureem,* +Smilax ruscoideus,* Liparis, Rhododendron arboreum verum, Bucklandia +of vast size. Hoya fusca, Ophiopogno, Viola, Hymenophyllum, Croton +heterophyllum, Convallaria oppositifolia, Plectranthus Roylii, Begonia +picta, Isachne, Cerastium, Spiræa, Hedera, Hypericum, Peliosanthes, +Carex gracilis rupium, which commenced at 5,500 feet, Bambusa microphylla.</p> +<p>The forests here were damp and tropical so far as herbaceous underwoods +were concerned, the trees were loaded with mosses chiefly pendulous +Neckeræ and Hypnea, as well as the rocks, Epiphytes were common.</p> +<p>We then continued along ridges about the same elevation, Ranunculus, +Hemiphragma, Thibaudia buxifolia, Polygonum rheoides, Pyrus indica. +Gnaphalium common, Pteris aquilina, Airoides, Artemisia on sunny spots, +Gaultheria, Galium of Churra, Arundo. The trees were about this +all scraggy, but of picturesque appearance. Choripetalum, Panax, +Laurineæ,* Piper, Cissus, Photinia and Gleichenia major, Thibaudia +myrtifolia,* Potentilla, Calophyllum,* Hydrangea arbuscula,* Thalictrum +majus,* Crawfurdia speciosa,* Macrocapnos,* Daphne papyrifera.*</p> +<p>Our march now wound round a huge hill with rocky head, lowering several +hundred feet above us, the road being narrow, rocky, overhanging vast +precipices. All the trees were scraggy, stunted with tufted grasses. +Here about Dipsacus of Churra occurred, Buddleia, Phlomoides, Lonicera, +Rosa, <i>Jubrung</i>, Cheilanthes dealbata of Brahmakund, Asparagus, +Urticea arborea floribus fæm. capitulatis aurantiaces, Spiræa +bella, Hymenopogon, Saxifraga ligularis,* on the rocks Primula,* in +the crevices, with Hydrocotyla, Thalictrum renatum, Umbelliferæ,* +Scirpus, Stemodia, Compositæ, Hypericum, Didymocarpus contortus +of Oklong, Erianthus, Gymnostomum, all these on the bare rocks. +Along the path, Codonopsis, Cnicus, Valeriana, Hardwickia, Lobelia.</p> +<p>Hence we passed along nearly at the same elevation through romantic +paths, the vegetation being European, and comparatively open: the trees +covered with moss, with grassy swards here and there: the scenery was +beautiful, the descent hence to Khegumpa was gradual and easy, along +similar paths.</p> +<p>Noticed the following trees, etc. in the following order: Tetranthera, +Gaultheria arborea, Tradescantia cordifolia,* Acer, Polygala, Deutzia, +Tradescantia, Jasminum triphyllum, Plectranthus azureus, Macrocapnos, +Rubia cordifolia,* Cucurbitacæ Cissampeloid, then forests of Rhododendron, +on the paths Swertia, Potentilla, Fragaria, Alnus Acer folius palmatum +lobatis oppositis, Porana.</p> +<p>This day I gathered about 130 species, the march was really delightful. +The plants marked thus * indicate elevation.</p> +<p>Madder is furnished by both Rubia munjista and R. cordifolia, these +species are quite distinct, the latter affecting greater elevations +than the former, scarcely descending below 4,000 feet.</p> +<p>Scarcely any water occurred on the route; from just above Khegumpa, +a beautiful valley is seen to the left, with a good deal of cultivation. +No large villages were seen.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g210.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Rydang to Khegumpa" src="images/g210.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>25th</i>.—Khegumpa. This is a pretty +place; but the whole country has a wintry appearance from the trees +having mostly deciduous leaves; it is a small village, not containing +twelve houses. Pagodas with the inscription-bearing walls occur +as usual; on a small hill rising from just below the village, a large +house with out-houses belonging to a Lam Gooroo, is the prettiest bit +of architecture I have yet seen. We put up in a small house, of +the usual poor construction, capable of containing four or six people, +the roofs are of wood, the planks being kept down by stones. The +evening was very cold, but the thermometer did not fall below 44°. +Here a solitary specimen of Pinus was seen.</p> +<p>A beautiful tree, with pendulous leaves and cones, which resemble +those of Abies, occurred. Rhododendron is common here. Around +the hut I observed Lobelia, Rumex, Quercus, Ranunculus, Plantago, Leucas +ciliata, Gnaphalia, Rubus, Urtica urentior, Rubi 2, Pteris aquilina, +Geranium, Galium, Artemisia major, Fragariæ, Betula? ramis pendulis, +foliis lineari lanceolatis, <i>Jubrung</i>, Phlomoides, in flower, Spiræa +bella, Tetranthera, Daucus, Gleichenia major, Oxalis corniculata, Dipsacus. +The trees were covered with Lichens; the only cultivated plants I saw, +and of these only straggling individuals, were tobacco and Bhobosa.</p> +<p>In a wood at the base of the hill on which the Lam Gooroo’s +house is situated, Saurauja hispida, and S. arborea,* Woodwardia,* Rubia +cordifolia, Oaks, Spiræa bella, decomposita, Stemodia, Cerasus, +Curculigo, Pogonatherum,* Carduus, Polygonum rheoides, Panax, Bucklandia, +Berberis asiatica and Porana, occurred.</p> +<p>Our march, after passing this hill, commenced by a descent through +a damp wood of Oaks, Eurya. Here Swertiæ 2 occurred on banks. +Clematis verbesina, Gordonia, Erythrina, Myrica. Thence we passed +along a ridge, the forests being stunted and wintry, abounding with +Rhododendron and oaks. Myrica, and pendulous lichens occurred +in abundance, but grasses predominate, chiefly Airoid and Andropogons.</p> +<p>From this to the right was seen a beautiful valley with a moderate-sized +village and picturesque houses, with considerable and very clever cultivation.</p> +<p>Thence we crossed to the other side of the ridge, descending a little +and then continuing through forests of oak, consisting of a species +found on the Khasyah hills, and approaching Q. Robur: as all the leaves +had fallen, the whole appearance was that of winter. Here I shot +the Jay figured in Royle’s work: continuing to descend very gradually, +I observed Epilobium,* Neckera, Fissidens, Brachymenium, Nerioideum +in fruit and half buried in the fallen leaves; a pretty Gentiana, Ruta +albiflora, Potentilla. After passing along this for some way we +commenced a sharp descent. At about 4,800 ft. Vitex simplex, occurred. +Indigofera re-appeared, with Saccharum rubro nitens of Churra, the other +grasses being Andropogons, 2-3, and Orthopogon, Hedychium, Gordonia +soon re-appeared: to the east, cultivation was visible, and to the north, +Pines were visible in every direction stretching away far below us to +a considerable torrent. About one-third of the way down this steep +ravine, at the bottom of which a torrent was heard roaring, Wendlandia, +Spiræa bella, Hedychium, Gaultheria arborea, Aspera Rhododendron, +Pteris aquilina, Artemisia, Saurauja hispida, Indigofera, Eurya, Mimosa +arborea, Mæsa angustifolia of yesterday; Osbeckia nepalensis, +Viburnum, Tetranthera, Ficus, Gleichenia minor, Crawfurdia speciosa, +Polygonum rheoides, were found. Hitherto the woods had been dry, +or rather so, but on turning to the east, we came into damp woods presenting +many tropical features, along which we continued descending gradually +for some time: at the commencement in this, Callicarpa arborea, a weeping +Beech, Dipsacus verbesina, and the Alnus, of Thumathaya occurred, Arbutoideus, +Hydrangea, Urtica heterophylla, Neuropeltoid aromatica. Then below +we came on Piper, Deeringia, Cerasus, Sanicula, Cyrtandracea, Cheilosandra +gracilis, and fleshy Urticeæ. Underwood, herbaceous forms +of Acanthaceæ, Ferns, as Davallia, Asplenium, all more or less +succulent. Darea, Glycine, Buchanania, Saurauja ferruginea, Thalictrum +majus, Pothos, etc. Hypericum, Begonia, Panax terebinthaceus, +Magnoliacæ, Garciniæ, Valeriana cordifolia.* Passing +on at the same elevation, we suddenly rounded a ridge, and in one moment +came on dry, sunny, rocky, grassy ground, the trees being exclusively +Rhododendron, oaks and a few Gordonias with Airoid, Andropogons, Pteris +aquilina: we then came on the brink of the ridge up to which Pinus longifolia +ascends; the elevation of this was 4,132 feet (60.204½.) <a name="citation212"></a><a href="#footnote212">{212}</a> +From this all around Pinus is visible in profusion; we then dipped to +the south, this face being occupied by thick forest, having Rhododendrons +on the skirts. From the above spot Saleeka was visible, with a +fine grove of Pines, it is 1,500 feet, at least above this.</p> +<p>The descent was steep, we soon came on Callicarpa arborea, Celtis +megala, Pogostemon, Stemodia grandiflora; this was about 4,300 feet, +where a clearing had been commenced: close to this I observed Martynia, +Pteris, Composita arborea, Desmodium vestilum, Flemingia, and gathered +at 4,000 feet a Verbenaceous shrub, looking like a Plumbago, and a Bœhmeria; +continuing, without descending much, I came on Pinus, Rhododendron, +Gaultheria.</p> +<p>Loranthus was here a common parasite on Pinus, oaks occurred but +the species was changed; this had small leaves, white underneath; and +descending we continued through pine woods, Artemisia minor, together +with the usual grasses and Aspideium macrosomum.</p> +<p>Here we travelled along a hill just above a ravine. Either +side of this was covered with grasses and pines, the ravine being crowded +with oaks, etc. Panax, and Composita arborea occurred.</p> +<p>A little below this, Hastingsia, common, Desmodium hispidisum, Artemisia +minor, Briedelia, Mimosa, and several Compositæ: we continued +descending very steeply, and observed Holcus elegans, Melica latifolia, +Erianthus Apludoid Circium.</p> +<p>At 2,600 feet, came on Scutellaria; Pines had ceased, but on the +opposite side of the nullah, they descended lower. Knoxia scandens, +Kydia calycina, Hastingsia, Hedyotis linearis, Ficus pedunculis radiciformibus +pendulis, Leguminous trees as Dalbergia, Triumfetta; Bœhmeria, +Asparagus, Buchanania again, Solanum, 10-dentat., Urtica urens,--l. +(66.208½.) <a name="citation212"></a><a href="#footnote212">{212}</a></p> +<p>The altitude of the bed of the Cameon nullah is here, 1,937 feet, +its banks are formed by hills cut away and hence precipitous, those +to the east are covered with Pines, Oaks descend to this. Here +Arundo Karka, Leptospartion, Erythrina, Artemisia major, Solanum farinaceum, +black pheasants of which I shot a male. Ficus Dumooriya, Grislea, +Rhamnoid scandens, Pandanus, Bœhmeria torrentum, Urtica pendula, +Barleria Prionites of Dgin, Sida cuneifolia, Dalbergioid.</p> +<p>Thence we ascended 100 feet or thereabouts, and descended to another +and larger torrent. Anonaceæ, Phlogacanthus thyrsifloris +here occurred.</p> +<p>The bed of this stream is 70 to 80 yards wide, but the volume of +water is inconsiderable. The hills forming the opposite bank are +lofty, not under 4 to 5,000 feet; their bases and the nullah above alluded +to have the vegetation of Dgin, otherwise they are clothed with the +usual grasses and noble Pines. The brown bird with crooked bill +was heard here.</p> +<p>At 500 feet above the torrent Menispermum, Bidens albiflora, Megala, +Leptospartion, Verbenacea, Plumbaginea, Mucuna, Desmodium hispidum and +Ficus were seen as before: Phyllanthus, Emblica, and Grislea occurred +at 800 feet: Grewia at 1,000 feet: and Osbeckia linearis occurred at +1,200 feet in rocky places; with Poa, Cynosuroides of Churra, and Bassia +at 1,300 feet, with Emblica, Labiata sudyensis, Osbeckia nepalensis, +Ficus.</p> +<p>On rounding the ridge to the east, which is 200 feet above this place +<i>Sassee</i>, we came on a forest of oak, Rhododendron, Viburnum, Pothos +pinnatus.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>26th</i>.—Sassee. Our coolies left +us here, they are not very good ones, not equal to Khasyah, they are +however merry, and whistle or sing when tired, their feet are generally +naked, but occasionally they wear leathern sandals. Thermometer +60°: water boiled at 204½°: altitude 4,109 feet.</p> +<p>About this place I first met with Thlaspi bursa pastoris, Malva rotundifolia +also occurs, Ligustrum, Adhatoda! Euphorbia ramis 4-gonis, foliis? in +spinis abeuntibus! Bambusa, Urtica urentior, Geranium, Rumex of Khegumpa, +Pancratium or Crinum! Peristropha triflora, Holcus elegans, Pteris aquilina +both Artemisias, Panicum cynosuroides! Stemodium ruderalis! Callicarpa +arborea! Cerasus, Pyrus indica and malus, Barleria prionitis! Ervum, +Hedychium coronarioides! in wet places, Buchanania, Peperomia, Moschosma! +Dendrobium! Thibaudia myrtifolia, Gordonia, Dioscorcæ! Tetrantheroid +arbor magna, Pinus longifolia, Quercus, 2-sp. Rhus, Citrus also is found. +Thus the mixture of forms is nearly excessive, those marked ! thus indicate +usually low elevations. Rubia cordifolum.</p> +<p>The whole four leaves of this plant are petiolate, but one pair is +perhaps always unequal, one occasionally abortive, I look upon this +as a proof that the so-called stipulæ of Stellatæ are real +leaves. There is this difference then between Rubiaceæ and +Stellatæ, the one has covered buds, the other not. The development +of the lamine before the petiole is particularly conspicuous in this +plant.</p> +<p>Buck-wheat with trisulcate seeds, and Cannabis sativa are found here; +barley is cultivated.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>27th</i>.—Sassee: temperature 58°, big +metal thermometer. Tomato found here; Leptospartion ascends woody +ravines as far as this; of birds, the larger dove is abundant; Verbena +officinalis.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>28th</i>.—On walls about this a Lobelia, +and Stemodia ruderalis occurred. Sassee is a ruined village, said +once to have been large, now containing not more than five or six houses, +an equal number being in ruins.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>29th</i>.—Commenced to descend almost immediately, +until we reached the Giri Nuddee, we then ascended again 5,600 feet, +and continued over excessively precipitous rocky ground, until we reached +the nullah again.</p> +<p>The same vegetation continued until we had descended some hundred +feet. Pinus, Quercus, Rhododendron, Viburnum, Indigofera, Osbeckia +nepalensis, Desmodium, Gaultheria arborea, Rubus, deltoidifolius, Conyza, +Saurauja ferruginea, Crawfurdia speciosa, Labiata sudyensis, Dipsacus +occurs but is rare, Gordonia, Rubus idæus, Gleichenia minor, Pendulous +lichens, Galium asparagus, Engeldhaardtia, Smilax.</p> +<p>The descent was steep. Thibaudia myrtifolia, Peperomia, Stemodia +grandis, Airoid, Otochilus linearis.</p> +<p>At 300 feet Composita arborea, and penduliflora, Polygonum rheoides, +Flemingia, and a cleared spot with Zea Mays. 400 feet Pteris aquilina, +Rubus moluccanus, Aspidium Polypodioides, Lygodium, Aspidium macrosorum, +Moschosma, Mimosa arborea, Millet, Cerasus, Hedyotis, Plectranthus, +Roylia, Knoxia Scandens, Ruta albiflora, Rottlera, commenced at 500 +feet. Stemodia, Hovenia, Cerastium, 4-Ovulatum, Carex.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g216.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Khegumpa to Sassee" src="images/g216.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Carex, Kydia, Jujubifolia, Randia, Hovenia, occurred at 600 feet, +with Rhopala, Panax, Ficus obliqua.</p> +<p>Then shady jungle commenced, underwood of Ferns, Acanthaceæ, +Urticeæ, Andropogons, Stemodia secunda occurred at 700 feet. <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +Hastingsia, Pogostemon, Kydia calycina, Glypea, Curculigo, 750 feet, +with Clematis Cana, Cerasus, Quercus Robur, this came down a ridge. +Rhus acidissima.</p> +<p>Scleria, Lycopodia, Mæsa, Sterculia Balanghas, and Kydia Jujubifolia, +at 900 feet. <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +Phlomoides, Acanthacea specicosa, Pothos pinnatus, Choulmoogrum, Malpighiacea, +at 1,000 feet. <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +Buchanania, Magnolia, Achyranthes, Murraya exotica, Sedgwickia, Urtica +Gigas, Chloranthus inconspicuus, Peliosanthes, Phænix pygmæa, +Hedysarum acenaciferum, at 1,200 feet. <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a></p> +<p>The altitude of the bed here is 3,112 feet (64.206.2: of Woollaston, +6.4.3) <a name="citation217b"></a><a href="#footnote217b">{217b}</a> +and along its banks Cissus, Woodwardia, Megala, Polygonum Rheoides, +Mimosa arborea, Curculigo, Woodwardia, Andropogon fuscum, Conaria, Potentilla, +Rumex, Rubia cordifolia, Drymaria, and Begonia occurred.</p> +<p>The ascent was steep, leading over several land slips, the same vegetation +continuing. Oaks, Pines, Rhododendrons occupying the more exposed +faces, and the usual humid jungle characterising aspects not so much +exposed. Pinus longifolia strays down to within 100 feet of the +nullah. We passed a pretty cascade discharging a considerable +body of water: here at 200 feet <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +above the nullah, I observed Crotalaria juncea, the Betula of Thumathaya, +Quercus lanatus, Leea crispa, Panax terebinthaceus, Indigofera, Scutellaria, +Clematis, Cana, Panax altera, Mimosa, Porana, Arundo karka, Flemingia, +Conyza, Aspidium macrosomum.</p> +<p>At 400 feet, <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +Itea macrophylla, Ficus, Composita arborea. The woods are dry, +but little occurring underneath the trees, except the usual grasses, +Andropogons and Airoides. At 500 feet, <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +Thibaudia myrtifolia, Triumfetta mollis, Composita penduliflora, Lysimachia, +Pinus, Rhododendron. The ground now became excessively rocky, +the road winding along at the same elevation, not more than a foot wide.</p> +<p>At 600 feet, <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a> +Desmodium vestilum, Artemisia, Acanthacea lurida, Gentiana, as before. +Gordonia, Bambusa, Microphylla, Arum viviparum, Tussilaginoid, Wendlandia, +Thibaudia, <i>variegatoides</i>, and a myrtifolia; Sedum, rocks strewn +in every direction covered with Sedum and epiphylical orchideæ.</p> +<p>On rounding a ridge with a north-east aspect we came without altering +our elevation, on a humid jungle. Pothos pinnatus and red, Ferns, +Acanthaceæ, Choripetalum, Calamus, Acrostichea, Blakea, Grammitis +decurrens, Moschosma. We descended through similar jungle with +Pandanus also occurring until we again changed our aspect, when the +oak woods, etc. reverted with Rhododendron and Thibaudia myrtifolia; +again changing, we returned to an intermediate jungle, gradually assuming +all the humid characters of those places passed before. Here I +observed Tupistra, Asplenium nidus, at 200 feet above the bed of a nullah. +Rottleria, Mimosa arborea, Crawfurdia, Speciosa, Zanthoxzlon triphyllum.</p> +<p>Along the bed of this nullah, Crawfurdia speciosa, Potentilla, Choripetalum, +Eurya, Ranunculus, Cardamina, Juncus! Oxyspora, Saurauja hispida, occurred; +some in a sort of marsh, with Thibaudia variegatoides. The places +along which torrents formerly flowed were occupied by Typha elephantina, +Kujara, Megala, Arunda, the Alnus of Bhailseeree, Artemisia major, Rubus +deltoidifolia, (Corysanthera hispida with Juncus;) here Anthistiria +arundinacea, Artemisia minor, Bucco grandis (Bird), Polygonum rheoides, +Bæhmeria torrentum, Gaultheria deflexa, Indigofera, Oaks, Gordonia, +Holcus elegans, Conaria nepalensis in flower, and Erythrina occurred +along the bed, up which we proceeded about a mile.</p> +<p>We then ascended among Pines and Oaks, Callicarpa arborea, and others, +ascending up the humid ravines, which in the rains give exit to torrents—at +300 feet noticed a different Pinus, which is observed in abundance on +a mountain on the opposite side, up which it ascends 2 or 3,000 feet.</p> +<p>Callicarpa azurea, Buddleia Neemda, Eugenia, Serissoides, and the +Saccharum of Churra, occurred here.</p> +<p>The ascent was continual but gradual, rounding the almost precipitous +face of the hill, the path was stony, often loose and frequently not +above a foot wide, with a precipice lowering above and yawning beneath. +The vegetation had, with the exception of the Pines, Oaks, and Rhododendrons, +all been burnt, so that the ascent was uninteresting. As we neared +the summit it became bitterly cold, a strong biting wind nearly cutting +us in two: we reached Bailfa, which is on the summit but sheltered, +at 6 P.M.</p> +<p>Conaria occurs at the top! being more advanced in flower than below; +in one instance with young capsules. I noticed Pogonatherum, Didymocarpus +contortus, Serissoides, Gaultheria fruticosa, Polytrichum fuscum, gathered +at 7,000 feet, previously: at 1,200-1,500 feet above the nullah, Indigofera +reaches the top. In a sheltered place here I found a beautiful +Gaultheria; a small Campanula occurs on the rocks at from 1,000 feet +upwards.</p> +<p>BAILFA or <i>Bulphai</i>.—This place is 6,808 feet above the +level of the sea, yet on the east and south are mountains towering far +above it. Snow is said to fall in February, but sparingly—the +hills around are bleak, thinly vegetated, except those on the south +of the Geerea, which are more wooded. There are only a few houses. +Turnips and barley are cultivated here, and in these fields may be found +a Cruciferous annual, and probably a small species of Lamium. +The chief cultivation is visible in the valleys below. Buckwheat +is among the number.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>29th</i>.—To-day I sallied out a few hundred +yards to the west, on turning over the ridge, the south side of which +is so bleak, thinly covered with Q. lanata and Rhododendrons, I found +myself in a thick shady jungle, the chief tree being a species of oak, +widely different from Q. lanata. The trees and shrubs are loaded +with mosses, especially pendulous Neckeræ, Daltoniæ, Hypne; +Hookeria, Fissidens, etc. occurred on the ground. I imagine, I +gathered twenty-five species of mosses here. Ferns were likewise +abundant; I noticed Daphne papyracea, Berberis asiatica, Conyza nivea, +Smilax ruscoides, Œschynanthus venosus, Hedera, Ophiopogon linearis, +O. latifolius, Cymbidium viridiflorium, Ardisia crenata, Carex, Piper! +Clematis, Gordonia, Spiræa decomposita, Composita volkamerifolia, +Cissus, Smilax, Bambusa microphylla, Viburna, as before. Gaylussacia +serrata and microphylla, the former in fruit. Thibaudia lanceolata, +buxifolia, Gaultheria of yesterday.</p> +<p>On the exposed face Santalacea, Gentiana, Hypericum decussatum of +Moflong, Leucas ciliata, Ischæmum pygmæum, on Rhododendron, +Loranthus obovatus. The mosses of this side were Brachymenium, +Tortula, Famaria, Trichostomum, Neckeræ, Polytrichum fuscum, Zygodon? +Dendrobium and Otochilus, occur here. A stray and small Abies +occurs on the ridge itself.</p> +<p>About the village of Bailfa, occur Urtica urens, Artemisia major, +Saccharum aristatum, Rubus triphyllus, Senecio scandens, Rumex, Chickweed, +Stemodia ruderailis, Lactucoidea murorum, Carduus, Phlomoides, Rubus +deltoidifolies, Achyranthoid, densa.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>30th</i>.—Thermometer at 7 A.M. 40°. +The houses here are roofed with split bamboos, and they are tied on +by rattans, a precaution rendered necessary by the boisterous winds +which prevail. The place is very cold; the thermometer varying +from 40° to 52°; mean temperature of the day 46°.</p> +<p>In the barley fields I noticed Fumariæ sp., Potentilla and +Cynoglossum. Erythrina ascends to this! Pyrus Malus and +Spiræa bella occur.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>31st</i>.—Our march this day commenced with +an ascent of a ridge lying to the north-east of our halting place, this +occupied us some time, and at last we reached a pagoda, visible from +Bailfa, and which is nearly 1,000 feet above that place. Thence +we descended about a hundred feet, through a well-wooded situation. +Emerging thence at about the same elevation, we crossed barren bleak +downs; the ravines being alone wooded, and hence the woods had that +rounded, defined appearance, so remarkable in some parts of the Khasya +hills.</p> +<p>Thence the descent was continued to Roongdong, the march is an easy +one, about seven miles.</p> +<p>The first new plant that occurred was an Allium on rocks, but it +had been dried up by the fires which had bared the surface of the hill +of every thing, except the trees and stouter shrubs, capable of resisting +its action.</p> +<p>Toward the pagoda, on the summit of the ridge, Pendulous lichens +were abundant, Epiphytes were common, consisting chiefly of Orchideæ, +with the 2 Gay Lussacias, Rhododendron punctata, Hymenopogon parasiticus, +Orthodon, Tussilaginoid, Alnus occurred at 7,300 feet. The other +vegetation continued.</p> +<p>At 7,400 feet, a new Quercus appeared, this, which has in its young +state, leaves much like those of the Holly, and may therefore be called +Q. <i>elicifolia</i>! Andropogon, Viburnum cærulium, Neckera, +Bambusa microphylla, Fragaria, Potentilla, Conyza nivea, Scabiosa Spiræa +decomposita, Gillenioides, Smilax ruscoideus, Hyperica of Moflong, Campanula, +Swertia, Dipsacus.</p> +<p>At 7,500 feet, Epilobium, Rosa, Vaccinium cyaneum! Rhododendron coccineum, +Tetranthera.</p> +<p>At 7,800 feet, Abies pendulifolia, Hemiphragma.</p> +<p>At the pagoda, and about it, Grimmia was found on rocks, with the +usual pendulous Neckeræ, Q. ilecifolia, Vibura, Hypericum.</p> +<p>Abies Brunoniana, a large solitary tree, with pendulous branches, +Tetranthera, Laurineæ, Smilax gaultherifolia, Ilex, on the wooded +side of the ridge. Ferns and mosses were abundant, Ilex! Daphne +papyracea.</p> +<p>Eurya, Panax rhododendrifolia, Rhododendron arborea, minus et majus. +The tree of Thumathaya foliis ad apicem ramorum aggregatis, petiolis +colorat., Celastrinea Euryifolia, Tetranthera another species without +leaves. In the more moist places a small Urticeæ, Lonicera +as before, on the exposed side stunted Q. ilecifolia, Dipsacus, Gnaphalia, +Vaccinium cyaneum, and Gramineæ, Hemiphragma, Potentilla, Campanula, +Tussilaginoides. Long tailed grey monkeys.</p> +<p>The ridge we crossed, runs up into a bleak ridge on which are houses, +and which cannot be under 9,500 feet high, about the descent through +the wood, which did not extend many hundred yards. I noticed Galium, +Valeriana, Crawfurdia fasciculata, Sphæropteris Betula corylifolia, +Hypericum, Spiræa gillenioides, Rubus cordifolius, Senecio scandens, +Juncus effusoideus, in wet places, Rhododendron majus, coming into flower, +(flower white) Cerastium bacciferum, arborea, canescens, Cissus, Rubus +moluccanus, Elæagnus, Rubus potentillifolia, Plantago, Ligustrum, +Berberis pinnata and asiatica, which last is generally covered with +lichens.</p> +<p>Xanthoxylum, Lilium giganteum! Polytrichium fuscescens, Trichostomum +anielangioides, Pohlia, on walls and rocks, Adoxa! in wet places under +banks, with a fleshy Urticea: about this was observed the brick-red +and black bird. <a name="citation221"></a><a href="#footnote221">{221}</a></p> +<p>Along the naked ridge and on the downs, which had a most wintry appearance, +and where it was bitterly cold, the Lycopodium of Surureem was found, +also Vaccinium cyaneum, Gnaphalium, Pteris aquelina stunted, Hypericum +of Moflong, Swertia stunted, Hemiphragma.</p> +<p>The defined woods are formed of oaks and stray Abies pendulifolia, +Panax rhododendrifolia, Berberis asiatica, and B. pinnata.</p> +<p>Mespilus microphyllus, Rhododendron minus, and R. arborea, (Euphorbia, +and Juncus on the swards.) Eurya, Gaultheria arborea, Stauntonia. +From this ridge a village near Benka is visible, as well as a large +stream, the Goomrea, and several villages. The one we now inhabit, +being the best looking and occupying a deep valley, is surrounded with +much terrace cultivation.</p> +<p>Descending still farther we left the downs, first coming into the +scraggy woods of Oaks, Rhododendron, Quercus, chiefly Q. robur. +About here we met abundance of people going to Hazoo from Kampo; they +were accompanied with asses chiefly carrying burdens of one maund weight; +few goats; one yak was seen of a black colour; a low compact animal, +much resembling, except in the absence of a hump, the bison: it was +not a handsome specimen. We also passed a village to the left, +containing about twenty houses, here a Nai gooroo, or person of rank, +resides, and here I also got fruit-bearing specimens of Abies pendula.</p> +<p>Noticed, as I descended, Pyrus, Cerasus, Magnoliacea, Gaultheria +arborea and frutex, Pteris aquelina, Quercus sclerophylla of Bulphai, +Viburnum cærulescens and angustifola! Rhododendron minus, Ilex! +Aspid. nidus, Gordonia, Q. lanata, Woodwardia, Rubia albiflora, Gleichenia +major, Pyrus indica. Then we came to a pretty temple built like +a house, with a fine specimen of Cypress pendula, altitude of the place +7,000 feet. From this a fine view of Roondong is obtained.</p> +<p>Still descending a short distance came to another temple, with a +dome of the ordinary form, and a large square terraced basement, and +inscribed slabs in the recesses. Hence the ascent was very steep. +Erythrinum, Buddleia! Indigofera! Spiræa bella, Artemisia major! +Polygonum rheoides! Rubus deltoidens! Curculigo, Conaria nepalensis, +Thalictrum majus! Asparagus, Jubrung! Oxalis corniculata, Clematis cana, +Eurya ferruginea! Santalacea australas, Pyrus malus! Elæocarpus! +Mæsa salicifolia. We then crossed a small torrent, and ascended +about 100 feet to Roongdong; noticed Stemodia grandiflora! Spiræa +bella, Conaria, Erythrium, Elæagnus spinosus, Salix? buds with +velvet or woolly hairs, Martynia! Hedera! Citrus! Woodwardia.</p> +<p>The transitions of the flora were this day well shewn. The +plants which indicated the greatest elevation are, Vaccinium, Abies +Brunoniana, Saxifraga, or Adoxa, Q. ilecifolia, Rhododendron formosum, +R. arboreum majus, Sphæropteris, Ilex, Eurya acuminata? Panax +rhododendrofol., Berb. pinnata and B. asiatica, Mespilus, Microphylla, +Juncus.</p> +<p>The occurrence of the Urticea at such elevation is curious, the proofs +of the wonderful effects of humidity, and non-exposure were particularly +shewn, between the exposed south face of the Bulphai mountain, and the +north-east face which was wooded.</p> +<p>From scarcity of grass, horses were here seen to feed on boughs so +high as to be obliged to stand on stones, to get at their food. +They are likewise fed on maize and tares; the poultry is of a large +brood. The cocks are atrociously noisy, two in particular had +such lengthened, cracked or quavering voices, that they were quite a +nuisance. We put up in the house of the Dumpa or head man. +It is situated on the top of a stony, and a bitter cold place, exposed +to the four winds of heaven. House very large, and our host a +little man with great airs, and a red coat or wrapper of coarse English +cloth, drinks intensely.</p> +<p>During our stay at this place he invited Pemberton and Blake to shoot +pigeons; the poor man thought that they would not be able to hit them, +on finding out his mistake, he put an end to the sport.</p> +<p>Atriplex is cultivated here, Mooreesa of Assam, Hempstee of the Booteas, +though seeds are used as well as the leaves.</p> +<p>The loads of salt brought down by the Tibetans on asses are packed +up neatly in coarse cloths, and weigh upwards of forty seers each.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g224.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Bulphai to Roongdong" src="images/g224.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>1st</i>.—Our march commenced by descending +gradually at first, then very rapidly to the Dimree nuddee: crossing +this at the junction of two streams, we ascended a little and then kept +along the side of the ridge forming the right bank of the nuddee, until +we came over the Monass: thence proceeding about one and a half mile, +we reached Tassgong or Benka which is situated on this river, and about +1,000 feet above it. This we crossed by a suspension bridge.</p> +<p>But little interesting botany occurred to-day: Chenopodium sp. occurs +in fields at Roongdong. The terrace cultivation here had just +yielded a crop of rice, and was now planted with wheat. Agriculture +would appear to be at a low ebb, and if the country is populous, the +people must be half-starved.</p> +<p>Water was abundant throughout the route: the Monass is a large stream, +but not generally very deep, although from its rapidity it must discharge +even at this season a great body of water. Composita penduliflora +descends to the Dimree, the altitude of which is about 3,000 feet, so +in fact did most of the plants found about Roongdong. Pyrus continues +half-way, Rhododendron to the bottom. Hovenia at an altitude of +5,000 feet, Randia—as also Tetranthera oleosa, and a new Flemingia.</p> +<p>At 4,900 feet, <i>Jubrung</i> occurs.—Clematis Cana, Luculiæ +sp., Conyzoidea nivea, Kydia calycina, Mimosa arborea, began at 4,800 +feet: Gaultheria, arborea, Gordonia, descend to the bottom: Crawfurdia +speciosa, Oxyspora, Aspidium, Macrostomium, and Polypodioides, Saurauja +hispida, Hypericum, Spiræa bella, Gillenioinis, Quercus, Rubus, +and Viburnum cærulescens. A tree yielding lac, which had +lately been cut, and Meliaceæ, Rhus triphyllum. Hence some +snow was visible on a lofty ridge above our heads, at least 9,500 feet, +the snow descending a considerable way down ravines. Of birds, +Bulbuls and Bucco, were here observed.</p> +<p>At --- feet, Leguminosa arborea, Loranthus Scurrula, Kydia Wendlandia, +Celtis, Osbeckia nepalensis, a Vitex, Grislea, Pteris aquilina, Indigofera! +Acanthacea cærulea.</p> +<p>At --- feet, Triumfetta mollis, Composita arborea, Pterospermum, +fructibus 10-valvibus, valvis lobatibus, Sem. alatis. Santalacea +australasica, here a large shrub.</p> +<p>At the nullah, Fici sp., Saccharum Megala, Verbenacia? foliis apice +craso lobatis. On the opposite side, Pinus longifolia, to within +200 feet of the nullah, Phlebochiton extensus! Solanum farinaceum! Achyranthes +densa! a Plumbaginacea which is a Pæderioid Rubiacea, and another +Ficus, Hastingsia, Bassia, Labiata Sudyensis, Grislea, very common, +Emblica, Ficus obliquus were found along the road, after crossing the +nullah. The ridge of the mountain was rocky, barren, covered chiefly +with grasses, the Butea of Nurtung, Artemisia minor, Umbelliferæ, +Desmodium vestilum, Kalanchœ, also occurred. At the few +houses below our path, we saw plantains! and bamboos as well as mangoes! +The terraces here are fronted with stones: Lemna occurred in water; +Linaria on rocks; Conaria and a fleshy Euphorbia, this last, about villages.</p> +<p>The occurrence of plantains and mangoes here is curious, and a sure +sign of mild climate, as Kalanchœ is of dryness; nothing could +well exceed the barrenness of the road, from crossing Dumria to Benka.</p> +<p>Benka is a straggling place, built on a ridge overhanging the Monass, +and on exceedingly rugged ground, the north face of the ridge being +nearly equally steep; the southern face, contains about fifty houses, +all of which are small and a few in ruins. The only large house +is the Rajah’s, which is said to be of Chinese construction.</p> +<p>This day the Rajah paid us a visit; a tent was pitched for his reception +on the open ground before our house, consisting of a small silken pall, +with two high silken parti-coloured kunnauts. He arrived about +eleven, preceded and succeeded by followers amounting to less than a +hundred. On reaching the ground, he was carried or shuffled off +his horse and deposited in the tent amid most terrific screechings. +He took an immense time to arrange for our admission. We found +him seated on a shabby throne, with a head priest, a coarse looking +man, on his right, on a less elevated seat. Brass cups, etc. were +arranged before him. Our chairs occupied the left; a present of +fruits, onions, etc., the floor. The meeting was friendly, and +he promised us coolies in two days. He is a youngish man with +a square face, and was well dressed.</p> +<p>After we had taken leave, he feasted his attendants and the spectators +with salt-fish and rice. He departed about 2 P.M. The procession +was as follows, both going and returning—</p> +<p>A large, black, shaggy dog led by a chain.</p> +<p>A drum and drummer; a gong with a melodious sound; a clarionet played +by an old and accomplished musician, rivalling in its strains that beautiful +instrument the bagpipe; a man bearing a wooden painted slab on a pole, +on this was an inscription; a banner looking like a composition of rags; +a white flaglet; fifteen matchlockmen; fifteen bowmen; the Dompa of +Roongdong; five horses and one mule led.</p> +<p>The household; Natchees; guitar; sundries. Personal attendants, +looking like yeomen of the guard in red cloth dresses, variegated with +yellow; the Rajah wearing a Chinese copper hat.</p> +<p>Lastly, the priests, of whom there were about six.</p> +<p>These were the best clothed and best mounted, and evinced satisfactory +tokens of being corporeally well off. Their dress consisted of +a sombre jacket with no sleeves, with either a yellow or red silk back, +over this is a sombre scarf. They are great beggars, and the headman +was well pleased with a present of four rupees. In return, he +gave P. two, B. and myself each one paper of salt, similar to those +given to the lookers-on.</p> +<p>The ponies were all poor, excepting two or three of the Rajah’s +own, which were handsomely equipped; these had their tails raised on +end, exactly like hobby-horses. In addition to this, each was +supplied with supernumerary yâk tails, one on either side.</p> +<p>The whole people collected did not amount to more than 300. +The arms, at least were wretched, consisted of culverins, which went +off with an enormous report, and matchlocks with short rests, like the +end of a pitchfork. The bows were long and good. The helmets +were worn on the head when going and coming, but were allowed to sling +on the back while resting here; they are rude iron things, like bowls, +but covered for some way up the sides with cloth in a most unbecoming +way. Dirt and noise were predominant; the dancing women, evidently +not what they should be, had clean faces, but horridly dirty feet, and +were very plain. The dancing was poor, consisting chiefly of ungraceful +motions of the hands and forearms; the singing pleasing, harmonious +but monotonous.</p> +<p>A peculiar kind of spirit called <i>Chonghoons</i> is in great requisition: +this liquor is pleasant, perfectly clear like whiskey and water, with +a small matter of malt in it.</p> +<p>Fumaria is found here much more advanced than that at Bulphai, Drymaria +ovata. They cultivate one sort of Legume, perhaps more; mangoes, +jacks and pomegranates; all these trees bear fruit towards the end of +the hot weather. A young mango tree was observed with opposite +leaves, uppermost pair one abortive nearly: thus the Mariam of Burma, +may probably present the normal form of foliation. <i>Adoee</i> +fish <a name="citation227"></a><a href="#footnote227">{227}</a> found +in the Monass.</p> +<p>Bheirs, papia, tobacco, banyan, of these last, poor specimens may +be seen here. The place is miserably poor, and as it is reckoned +one of some importance, its condition shows the barrenness of the country. +The Rajah’s house is a large one, apparently consisting of a quadrangle +with an elevated story. News arrived yesterday to the effect that +tumults still prevailed: the Deb it was said had been deposed by treachery: +that a new one had been permanently appointed: but that the usurper +did not wish us to come on. Tongsa, however, said that after we +have come so far, we should advance, and that we may settle our plans +at his place.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>5th</i>.—Left: descended immediately from +the town to the bridge over the Monass. The descent is steep but +winding, the face of the hill being nearly precipitous. Close +to the river we passed a small field of Cajanus, used for feeding the +lac insect. The bridge is a suspension one, the chains, one on +either side, being of iron in square links; the curve is considerable, +in the form of the letter V, the sides being of mat. Hence it +is difficult to cross, and this is increased by the bridge swinging +about considerably: it is seventy yards in span, and about thirty above +the Monass.</p> +<p>The Monass is 1,300 feet below Benka, it is a large river, the banks +being about eighty yards apart, but this space is not generally filled +with water. Its violence is extreme.</p> +<p>We continued along this river some time, gradually rising from its +bed until we ascended nearly 1,000 feet. We continued at this +elevation until we reached Nulka, to which place we descended a little. +The whole march was through a barren, rocky, burnt-up country. +The Monass was in sight nearly the whole distance. Passed two +villages, both small, one on the right and one on the left bank of the +river. No change in vegetation occurred except that we came upon +pines, P. longifolia about a mile and a half from Nulka, coming into +flower. I am almost inclined to think this is different from the +Khasya species, Kurrimia, Indigofera pulchra, Desmodium, Buddleia sp., +were the only plants of a novel nature that occurred. The hills +are chiefly clothed with Andropogoneous grasses, very little cultivation +was observed, but there seemed to be more on high hills to the east.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g229.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Benka to Nulka" src="images/g229.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h3>CHAPTER XII.</h3> +<p><i>Continuation</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>journey</i> <i>in</i> +<i>Bootan</i>.</p> +<p>The following table affords the result of observations made with +the view to determine the relation between temperature and altitude, +in these parts.</p> +<pre> Difference of Difference of Value in height of + Temperature Elevation 1° of Temperature + +Benka and Monass, 13° Fahr. 1,222 feet 94 feet + +Benka and Nulka, 4 = 406 = 01-5/10 + +Benka and Khumna, 13 = 1,110 = 85-5 + +Khumna and Nulka, 16 = 1,516 = 89-3 + +Monass and Nulka, 9 = 816 = 90-6 + +Monass and Khumna, 26 = 2,332 = 89-9 + ---------- + 6)550-8 + ---------- +Mean value of 1° of Fahr. as indicated on the barometer 91-8</pre> +<p>Second series of observation</p> +<pre>Benka and Monass, 13° Fahr. 1,193-4 feet 91-8 feet + +Benka and Nulka, 4 = 367-2 = 91-8 + +Benka and Khumna, 13 = 1,178-1 = 90-6 + +Khumna and Nulka, 17 = 1,557-0 = 91-10 + +Monass and Nulka, 9 = 826-2 = 91-8 + +Monass and Khumna, 26 = 2,386-8 = 91-8 + ---------- + 6)549-8 + ---------- + 91-6</pre> +<p>The Monass is called Goongree by the Booteas; its bed is very much +inclined, and tranquil pools are of rare occurrence: it is not fordable +in any place, although many of the rapids are not very deep. The +singular bridge is said to be of Chinese construction, and that it serves +the purpose of a chief thoroughfare, is a proof of the extremely small +population of the country.</p> +<p>Onions grow at Nulka, plantains, sugarcane, tobacco.</p> +<p>Bheirs are common. Weeping cypress occurs, but stunted.</p> +<p>The entrance to this village on the north-side, is through a square +building, the ceiling of which is painted, and the walls decorated with +figures of deities, white and red.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p230.jpg"> +<img alt="Koollong Bridge" src="images/p230.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>6th</i>.—We descended immediately to the +Monass, keeping along its banks throughout the greater part of the march; +rising however, over one or two spurs that dip into it.</p> +<p>This river varies a good deal in width, its bed, however, is generally +confined, and the stream fierce; occasionally, however it spreads out +and becomes here and there more placid. We continued along its +banks, crossing one or two small streams until 12 o’clock, when +we reached a large torrent, the Koollong, up which we proceeded three +or four hundred yards, but at some height above its bed. We crossed +this by a wooden bridge of similar construction with that over the Deo +Panee, and the idea of which is ingenious. It is nearly fifty +yards wide, and about twenty above the torrent. It is in a bad +state, and unprovided with railings throughout the central level part. +The houses into which the inclined supporting beams are fixed are strong, +and built on rock. The fastenings are altogether of cane, and +the whole presenting the appearance given in the annexed drawing.</p> +<p>Hence we ascended a black, rocky, burnt-up mountain until we reached +Khumna, the ascent amounted to nearly 2,000 feet, and occupied more +than an hour.</p> +<p>But little of interest occurred, in fact I never saw a more barren +country. We passed a small village of two or three houses, and +two good patches of rice cultivation, one just below Nulka, one at Ghoomkhume, +the small village just alluded to.</p> +<p>Pinus longifolia descends nearly to the bed of the Monass, which +below Nulka is about 2,200 feet above the level of the sea. Along +this I noticed Hiræa, Eugenia, Vitis, Jasminum, Pæderia +fœtida, Ficus, Loranthus, Scurrula, Desmodium, Aerides, Vanda, +Flacourtia, Kalanchœ, Leguminosa, <i>Vanillidora</i> <i>of</i> +<i>Solani</i> <i>mookh</i>, Ceanothus, Bergera, Dischidia bengalensis, +Leguminous trees, Euphorbia, Bassia, Cheilanthes of Brahmakoond common, +Coccoloba cyanea. In rice khets at Ghoomkurrah, I found Lemna, +Cardamine, Rumex of Khejumpa, Cirsium decurrens, Gnaphalia, Datura, +Simool in flowers; Spathoidea, Oxalis coriculata, Cannabis, Verbesina.</p> +<p>I observed water-ouzels, bucco, water-wagtails, bulbuls, ordinary +and yellow-rumped.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g232.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Nulka to Khumna" src="images/g232.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Passed cotton cultivation in two places, one close to the Monass, +and one to the Koollong, both equally bad, and observed Begonia edule, +which they call Sheemptsee, and which they eat.</p> +<p>The road to-day was generally good, overhanging in one place the +Monass at a height of forty yards above, and below scarped precipices. +The road here was constructed or supported artificially. Distance +six miles.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>7th</i>.—To Phoollong. Left at 9½ +A.M., and immediately commenced ascending. The ascent was at first +steep, then gradually wound round the Khumna mountain, which was most +barren throughout. The ascent continued but very gradually until +we came near Phoollong, to which we descended, and then ascended about +1,000 feet. About half-way, and when we had ascended perhaps 1,000 +feet, we came on new vegetation, oaks, Rhododendra, etc. as before, +and this continued improving in denseness until we reached the village. +The distance is five miles, ascent about 1,500 feet, but so gradual, +that one would not imagine it more than 800 feet. At Khumna, I +noticed Pinus longifolia, Pyrus malus, Achyranthes dense, Cirrus, Urtica +urens, tobacco, Musa, Datura, Artemisia major. Hogs are fed here +in large circular platters made of stone scooped out.</p> +<p>Commencing the ascent, I observed Ficus cordata of Bhamru, Rhus pendula, +Indigofera <i>elatior</i>, Conaria, Pteris aquilina, Cerasus commenced +at 5,000 feet. Then Desmodium vestilum, Artemisia minor, Conyza +laculia, Rubus deltifolius, Labiata Sudyensis, Acanth. cærulescens.</p> +<p>Quercus robur commenced at about 5,200 feet, but stunted Flemingia +secunda, then Gaultheria arborea, Gnaphalium nivea.</p> +<p>Here there was a high ridge to the right, crowned with a wood of +Q. robur, all the leaves of which had fallen. Myrica, Rhododendron, +Jubrung, Didymocarpus contortus on rocks, Cnicus, Clematis cana, Polygonum +rheoides. At a village here, which contained ten houses, observed +Cupressus pendula, Citrus, wheat, Bambusa, then Juncus. Primula +of the Khasya hills. Q. robur abundant, Composita penduliflora, +Saurauja hispida, Equisetum, Rubus cæsius, Alnus of Thumathaya, +Elæagnus spinosus, E. macrophyllus 5,300 feet: Plantago, Coriaria, +Erythrina, Rhus acidum, Cerastium cœnum, Dipsacus, Viburnum microphyllum, +Rubia cordifolia, Barleria, Tetranthera oleosa, Hedera, Gentiana, Myrsine, +Blasia, Fleshy urticea, Q. robur, Gordonia, Adamia, Neckera jungermannoides +and læta, Primula in abundance, Acorus, Calamus, Scirpus kysoor +of Churra, Gram. latifolia, Andropogonoides of Suniassa.</p> +<p>Coming on a well-wooded ravine close to Phoollong, the first I have +seen since leaving Balphai, found Quercus 2, Castanea, Gordonia, Spiræa +decomposita, and S. Bella, Hydrangea, Rhododendron, Thalictrum, Quercus, +Curculigo, Viburnum cærulescens, Indigofera elatior, Gnaphalium +niveum, Sempervivum on rocks, Panicum eleusinoides, Thibaudia myrtifolia, +Swertia major, Alnus as before, Rubus moluccanus, Salix lanata, Primula +Simsii, Phlomoides, Orthodon.</p> +<p>Throughout the march we observed many detached houses on the mountains +forming the right bank of the Koollong, and much cultivation, all of +the terrace sort. Passed one village beneath us about 700 feet, +containing twelve houses, and the one mentioned above; as usual, ruined +houses occur.</p> +<p>Cattle furnished with litters of leaves; a curious low was heard, +like that of an elephant.</p> +<p>Booteas work their own cotton, much of which is cultivated along +the rivers at low elevations.</p> +<p>Higher land, certainly 11 to 12,000 feet high, was visible to the +north side: on this a good deal of snow was visible.</p> +<p>[Gradient Khumna to Phoollong: g235.jpg}</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>8th</i>.—Towards the morning it commenced +to rain; snow has fallen on both sides the Koollong: it has fallen on +the road we came by yesterday, and on the hills above to within 200 +feet of us, or in some places to the level of this. Exemption +in favour of this place is to be attributed to local causes. The +trees in the neighbourhood are completely covered with it, and it is +said to have fallen here twice during the night,</p> +<p>The Bootea houses are ill calculated for rain, they leak all around +as indeed might be expected, from the nature of the roofs, which consist +of boards, kept <i>in</i> <i>situ</i> by stones. It would be curious +to ascertain the temperature under which snow does not fall, and if +possible the temperature here and among the snow. In the morning, +sleet with a few flakes of snow fell also, but only occasionally.</p> +<p>Snow continued to fall throughout the day, and steadily too: it commenced +slightly: as the cold increased it ceased to melt on reaching the ground, +and at length all around was a sheet of white. The variations +of the thermometer were considerable and frequent, the wind blowing +pretty steadily from the south-east.</p> +<pre>At 10 A.M. 37° Snow commencing. +At 10½ A.M. 36° South-east wind. +At 10¾ A.M. 40° Wind from the north, snow rather heavy. +At 11¾ A.M. 37° South-east. +At 12 Noon 35° ditto. +At 12½ P.M. 36° ditto. +At 2½ P.M. 37° ditto. +At 4 P.M. 39° ditto. +At 6 P.M. 37° ditto. +At 9 P.M. 38° ditto.</pre> +<p>Fine moonlight night. View to the north beautiful; every thing +silvered with snow; the deep and black ravine of the Koollong is particularly +conspicuous, and on some cultivated spots the pendulous cypress with +its sombre head and branches covered with snow, was also remarkable, +altogether a beautiful scene. Larch-like firs were visible 500 +feet over the road leading to this from Khumna.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>9th</i>.—Fine sunny morning: thermometer +at 7 A.M. 35°: at 8 A.M. 42°. Hills around covered with +snow. High ridge to south plainly visible, a good deal of snow +visible. Went out at noon over to the south-east, in which direction +a pine wood was visible; this I ascertained to consist of Pinus or Abies +pendula, which has much the habit of a Larch. The altitude of +this above Phoollong is certainly 1,000 feet; snow covered the ground +in all sheltered spots. The woods here are formed chiefly of Q. +robur, Q. ilecifolia also occurs here and there, Gordonia, Cerasus, +Rhododendron minus.</p> +<p>Mosses and Jungermanniæ abound, and were in high perfection +owing to being saturated with moisture. Polytrichum, Neckera, +Brachymenium, Dicranum, Weissiæ, Fissidens, Hypnum, Didymodon, +Diastoma, Orthodon, were found in perfection. The only new plants +were a Campanula and a Chimaphila, which last was found at 7,000 feet. +Berberis asiatica scarcely occurs below 6,000 feet, Hedera. The +birds seen were the jay, barbet, red-and-black-headed, variegated short-wing, +large ditto of Khegumpa, orange-breasted Trochilus, brown Fringilla, +green woodpecker, black pheasant, and small squirrel of Assam was also +found.</p> +<p>From the fir wood, Tassyassee was distinctly visible, bearing nearly +due south, distance 10 or 12 miles. Koollong was also seen: all +the high ground between that and Bulphai was covered with snow. +The high range to the south is, I think, the same as that which runs +up behind from the pagoda above Bulphai.</p> +<p>A few plants of the Assam Indigo, Ruellia indigofera, are kept here, +and preserved with care, but stunted and obviously unsuited to the climate. +Montario, our taxidermist, says that it is the fourth plant he knows +from which indigo is procured. First, Indigofera—Second, +the custard apple, <i>shereefa</i>—Third, a climbing plant used +in Java, etc. probably Marsdenia tinctoria—Fourth,—?</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>10th</i>.—Fine weather: thermometer at 7 +A.M. 40°. Started at 9 A.M., and reached Tassyassee at 3 P.M.; +the distance being nine miles. We continued throughout nearly +at the same elevation, rounding the hill on which Koollong is placed. +About three miles from this we descended about 500 feet to a nullah, +which we crossed over by means of planks, thence we ascended about the +same height, and continued at nearly our former level until we descended +to the Koollong, which we crossed by the usual form of wooden bridge. +Thence we ascended 400 feet to the village, which is chiefly constituted +by the Rajah’s house, a very large edifice. The Koollong +is still a considerable stream, but appears to be fordable, at least +in the present season.</p> +<p>The vegetation continued the same almost throughout. In ascending +from the nullah above mentioned, we came on plenty of Pinus longifolia, +and on getting still nearer Tassyassee the Abies pendula became more +and more common, until it forms on the opposite bank of the Koollong +opposite this, a large wood; Pinus longifolia disappearing. The +hills continue openly wooded, the woods consisting of oaks, chiefly +Q. robur and Rhododendrons. In the ravines which are thickly wooded, +oaks, chesnuts, Cerasus, Rhododendron arborea, mosses; Panax two or +three species, among which is a new one, <i>P</i>. <i>æsculifolia</i>, +arbor parva armati, foliis 7 digitatis, paniculis nutantibus. +Hydrangea, Viburnum cærulescens, and Microphyllum, Galium, Ferns +abundant, Bucklandia likewise occurred here and there! Tetranthera, +Valeriana, Scabiosa, Conaria, Holcus elegans.</p> +<p>In the broken ground before reaching this, Gaultheria nummularifolia, +Primula minor, in crevices of rocks. In some places Erythrina +was very common, Gentiana, Dipsacus, Sedum and Didymocarpus contortus +on rocks, Saccharum aristatum, Salix lanata, Woodwardia, Primula minor, +which grows in shade on the Khasya hills, is found here in sunny wet +places. The scenery in some places is very romantic, and occasionally +grand; the valley of the Koollong being closed far to the north by a +high ridge and beautiful peaks, all heavily snowed. The Rajah’s +house is visible from a considerable distance. As we approached, +some parts were rugged and bold. Water abundant throughout.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g239.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Phoollong to Tassangsee" src="images/g239.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>11th</i>.—Went out at 1 P.M.; descending +to, and crossed the Koollong, then ascending along its banks for about +a mile.</p> +<p>The bridge over this is about thirty yards wide, abutting from two +houses of ordinary structure, built on solid rocks: the river is underneath +the bridge apparently of great depth; above it is a succession of rapids, +it is even at this, the driest season, a considerable river. The +path leads in a winding direction either over rice cultivation or on +precipitous banks. I noticed Berberis asiatica, pinnata, a Pomacea +spinosa, foliis spathulatis, Stauntonia latifolia, Hedera, Gaultheria +two or three, Thebaudiaceæ, Artemisia major, Erythrina, Primula +Stuartii in abundance, Juncus, Alnus, Myrsina, Prunella in grassy spots, +Rumex of Khegumpa, Daphne papyracæ, Peperomia quadrifolium, Spiræa +bella, Viola, Ophiopogon linearifol., Hypericum, Smilax, Elæagnus, +Conaria, Lonicera villosa, Epilobium sericeum, a common plant in all +watery places, Cardamina Swertia, Viburnum microphyllum. Rhododendrum +arborea and minor, Leucas ciliata, Thistles, Pteris aquilina, Neckeræ, +Osbeckia capitata of Churra, Oaks, Catharinea, Xyris, Gordonia, Fragaria, +Potentilla two, Festucoidea, Cupressus pendula.</p> +<p>The greatest acquisitions were a beautiful pink farinaceous ascapous +Primula, and a new genus of Hamamelideæ. This plant I have +long known, and called <i>Betula</i> <i>corylifolia</i>, as I had only +seen it in fruit, and not examined it; it is found on the Khasya hills +at elevations of between 4,000 and 6,000 feet. It will be worth +dedicating it to some distinguished geologist, thereby associating his +name with that of Bucklandia and Sedgwickii.</p> +<p>No fly-fishing is to be had in this stream, nor indeed in any at +such elevations. The Adoee is found, but always keeps at the bottom, +the structure of its mouth pointing out its grovelling habits. +The Bookhar does not, I think, ascend more than 2,500 feet. Water-ouzels, +white-fronted Sylvia occur. Observed for the first time the religious +vertical revolving cylinders, these revolve by the action of water, +which runs on the cogs of the wheel by means of hollowed out trunks +of trees. Flour mills are common here, the grindstone revolves +on another by means of vertical spokes, which are set in motion by a +horizontal wheel, and moved by a stream let on it in the same way.</p> +<p>Funaria heygrometrina abounds in the larch wood here.</p> +<p>This is a very cold place, although 550 feet below Phoollong: it +is much colder than that place: thermometer at 7 A.M. 34°.</p> +<p>Snow still remains on the height around; heavy snow on the lofty +ridge to the north; strong south-east winds prevail here.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p241.jpg"> +<img alt="Tassgong from the Koollong" src="images/p241.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>12th</i>.—Tassyassy, which is also called +Tassangsee, is a small place apparently consisting of one large house, +belonging to the Soobah, and some religious edifices, the other houses +belonging to it are scattered about among the adjoining cultivation. +The Soobah we have just learnt is absent at Tongsa, so we have no opportunity +of comparing his rank with that of the Tassgong man. His house +is however, much larger; it is situated on a promontory formed by the +debouching of a considerable sized torrent into the Koollong. +The bridge is at the foot of this hill, which is about 400 feet high: +the house is accessible to the north and west only. Half-way up +a high hill to the north-west is a fort! and between the foot of this +hill and the Rajah’s house there is a wall with a tower at the +north-west end, and a house at the south-east. In the afternoon +the weather threatened snow, but it ended in very slight rain.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>13th</i>.—Thermometer at 7 A.M. 33°: +at 9 P.M. 31°: cloudy. Observed Conyza nivea, Composita +penduliflora, Agrimonia, Stemodia grandiflora, a species of Alopecurus +in inundated rice fields, Fragaria, in the wood, Arenaria, Gymnostomum +on the terraces. An Arabis in cornfields with a Viola, probably +V. patrinia, Gaultheria deflexa and Gerardia of Churra. The fir +woods are comparatively bare of mosses and lichens. Shot an Alauda, +a Fringilla, and a curious climber with the tail of a woodpecker, at +least so far as regards the pointing of the feathers, plumage of Yunx, +and beak of Certhia.</p> +<p>Fine cypresses were seen opposite Tassangsee.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>14th</i>.—Left Tassangsee, diverging from +the Koollong at that place, and following the nullah, which falls into +that river below the Soobah’s house. The march was a generally, +continued, gradual ascent; we crossed two considerable streams by means +of rude wooden bridges, and the whole march was a wet splashy one, owing +to the abundance of water. Snow became plentiful towards the latter +end. The direction was west, the distance about seven miles. +We passed two or three deserted villages.</p> +<p>We commenced ascending through woods of stunted oaks, Rhododendrons, +Gaultheria arborea. The chief under-shrubs being Daphne papyracæ, +Gaultheria fruticosa, Primula Stuartii, Lycopodium of Surureem, Thibaudia +myrtifolia continue, the Alnus of Beesa occurred plentifully along the +bed of the nullah. Spiræa decomposita, Valeriana simplicifolia, +Conaria, Scabiosa, Fragaria, Potentilla, Geranium, Artemisia major, +Spiræa bella, Hedera, Viburnum cærulescens, Q. robur, Crawfurdia +speciosa also occurred.</p> +<p>Ascending, the oaks and Rhododendrons became more developed the latter +being the smaller species, Bambusa microphylla, Gordonia, Sphœropteris, +Antrophyum trichomanes, Oxalis major! commenced. Larches on the +opposite side, Saccharum aristatum, Gillenioides, Gleichenia major, +Hemiphragma, Abies Brunonis commence.</p> +<p>At 6,500 feet Smilax ruscoides, Senecio scandens, Lilium giganteum. +The Rhododendrons here are large, forming with oaks, open woods, mosses +and lichens, very abundant. Here we came on snow, with it commenced +Eurya acuminata, Rhododendron formosa, majus, Rhododendron fruticosa +on ruins, Pyrus malus, Dipsacus.</p> +<p>At 6,800 feet, Q. ilecifolia, Q. glauca, Dalibarda, Bambusa very +common, Sphagnum abundant, Rhododendron formosa, majus, Quercus ilecifolia +larger and more common at 7,000 feet, Gaultheria nummulariodes very +abundant, Daltonia, Lomaria of Khegumpa, Gaultheria flexuosa, Thibaudia +acida, Tetranthera nuda, Lycopodium of Surureem, Primula Stuartii, Hyperici +sp., also <i>H</i>. <i>moflongensis</i>, are found up to 7,400 feet, +with Hemiphragma, Elæagnus spinosus, microphyllum, Juncus, Alnus +of Beesa, Saccharum aristatum.</p> +<p>The village is a ruined one apparently, and never contained more +than four or five houses, situated on an open spot, surrounded by woods. +This spot is covered with sward, a fine Q. ilecifolia occurs about the +centre of the village. Its altitude is 7,983 feet.</p> +<p>The vegetation is the same, Abies pendula, Oaks, Rhododendron formosa, +majus, the other has disappeared, Bambusa microphylla, Thibaudia acida, +Primula Stuartii, Juncus.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g243.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Tassangsee to Sanah" src="images/g243.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>15th</i>.—We started very early; the coolies +were all off by 6½ A.M. Our march was first over undulating +ground, either sward or through green lanes. We then commenced +ascending a steep hill visible from Sanah, the face of which was covered +with sward; at the top of this, snow lay rather thick, especially in +the woods. The ascent continued, soon becoming very steep, snow +laying heavily on the path, until we reached the summit of the second +ridge; thence we descended a little, soon ascending again very steeply +until we surmounted the highest ridge. The descent from this was +at first most steep, the path running in zig-zags, and being in many +places very difficult. About 1,000 feet below, we came on sward, +with wood on the right, along which we descended, diverging subsequently +through a thick wood, until we reached sward again. Here the coolies +who had come up had halted, refusing to go on, as it was already dusk. +Learning that Pemberton and B. had gone on, I hurried on likewise, expecting +that the coolies would follow, and continued along the swardy ridge, +the path running occasionally between patches of wood, the descent being +gradual; the path then struck off into wood, and the descent became +rapid. I continued onward, until it was quite dark, and finding +it impossible to proceed, and meeting with no signs of B. and P., I +determined on returning. I reached the coolies about eight, covered +with mud, the path in the wood being very difficult and excessively +slippery. I had nothing but broken crusts to eat; I procured some +sherry however, and my bedding being up, I was glad to take shelter +for the night under the trees. Next morning on overtaking P. and +B., I found that they had remained all night in the wood without any +thing to eat, and without bedding, and that no habitation was near. +We reached the village about 9½ on the 16th, fatigued and dispirited. +Nothing was at hand, and we had no meal until 5 P.M. except some tea, +and an egg or two.</p> +<p>Many of the coolies came up late on the 16th, and some have not yet +arrived (17th.) The distance was fifteen miles, to the halting +place about twelve. The amount of ascent about 4,500 feet, and +descent 6,100 feet, the road being difficult and very slippery: snow +was heavy throughout, and the elevations between 9 and 12,400 feet; +icicles were frequent. The trees were all covered with frost, +and the aspect was wintry in the extreme; luckily there was no wind, +and no snow fell. The summit of the ridge was 12,477 feet high. +No views were obtained throughout the 15th and 16th; the weather being +cloudy and very disagreeable. No bad effects were experienced +from the rarefaction of the air; we all suffered of course from colds +owing to exposure at night, at an elevation of nearly 9,500 feet; the +servants bore it tolerably well.</p> +<p>At Sanah, the altitude of which is 7,983 feet, (Pemb.) I observed +Quercus ilecifolia, on it Neckeræ, Anhymenium, Senecio scandens, +Rhododendron arboreum, majus, Juncus effusus, Swertia, Pendulous lichens, +Dipsacus, Artemisia major, Primula Stuartii, Berberis asiatica, Bambusa +microphylla, Lycopodium of Surureem, Orthotrichum!</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Smilax ruscoideus, Senecio scandens, woods of oak +and Rhododendrons, the ground and the trees covered with mosses. +Gnaphalium, Daphne papyrif., Mespilus microphyllus! Gaultheria nummularioides, +Spiræa gillenioides, and S. bella, Hypericum, Gnaphalium lanceolatum, +trivenum, Sambucus! but withered, Tetranthera nuda of Bulphai, Abies +Brunonis which is probably a Podocarpus.</p> +<p>At 8,300 feet, Tussilaginoides of Churra, Primula Stuartii common +on swards with Swertiæ, etc. as before, Funaria and Weissia Templetonia +common, Sphæropterus! Quercus ilecifolia, Abies pendula, Rhododendron +arboreum, majus! Dalibarda, Rubus, Ilex dipyrena! Rhododendron undulatum!</p> +<p>At 8,400 feet, the road running along, and above a ravine, rocky +ground to the right, Eurya acuminata! Composita penduliflora. +Thibaudia rotundifolia, and in a swampy sward a small dwarfed very narrow-leaved +bamboo, Primula Stuartii, Gnaphalium densiflorum, Swertia monocotyledonea, +Prunella in the woods, Salix lanata, and Panax rhododendrifolia.</p> +<p>Just above this, 8,500 feet, the first Abies cedroides appeared, +soon becoming very common, and extending up to 9,500 feet, its habit +is like that of a cedar, and it is a tall handsome tree, Rubia* cordifolia! +Geranium scandens, Baptisioides.</p> +<p>Crossing a nullah, we commenced a steep ascent, Thibaudacæ +rotundifolia, Abies cedroides, Lomaria of Khegumpa, Crawfurdia speciosa, +Andropogon, Gaultheria nummulacifol. Ilex, Epibolium Vaccinium +cyaneum! Here a sward commenced with vegetation as before, the +summit of this ascent was 9,050 feet. Here Ilex, Daphne papyracæ, +Rhododendron, Scleria, Lomaria of Khegumpa! Primula pulcherrima! Spiræa +bella, Gnaphalium trivenium, Rubus moluccanus, Thibaudia, Ericinea orbiculens, +Spiræa decomposita, Gaultheria, nummulariod., Scutellaria prunella, +Gaultheria flexuosa, Scandent composita, Cerastium bacciferum. +The trees covered with mosses, Neckeræ, Dicranum, Daltoniæ, +Abies pendula ceased, its limits visible below. Hence the ascent +was gradual at first: snow became heavy at 9,100 feet. Hemiphragma, +Rhododendron abundant.</p> +<p>At 9,500 feet, much the same vegetation, Abies densa commenced, cedroides +ceased. Woods entirely of A. densa, with a small baccate-like +deciduous leaved tree. Hydrangea! Spiræacea! Urticeæ?! +Pedicularis elatior.</p> +<p>At 10,000 feet, some trees all covered with frost; snow very heavy, +quite crisp, Juncus niveus, Cerastium inflatum! bamboos, other plants +of 9,500 feet, continue. Old Cretins!</p> +<p>At 11,270 feet, thermometer 39°, the same trees, scarcely any +thing but Abies, Arenoid, Dicranum macrocarpus, Orthotrichum, Lichen +pendulum atratum.</p> +<p>Thence we descended a little, soon to re-ascend.</p> +<p>At the same elevation Parnassia, Epilobium monus, Gnaphalium densiflor., +Vaccinium pumilum, Gentiana, Polygonum(?)</p> +<p>At 11,000 feet, icicles were common, and snow, very heavy. +Woods of some Abies, a species of rose very abundant, a shrub of four +feet high; other plants continue as before.</p> +<p>From this to the summit the ascent was very steep; Abies continues. +Rhododendron(?) very common, with rose, Parnassia, Saxifraga, Composita +arenoid, Gentiana, Polygonum(?), Pedicularis dwarfed, Triticoides, Aroides. +Many pines dead as if blasted. Summit nearly bare of trees, which +appear confined to slopes, Rhododendron very common, Umbellifera crassa, +figured in Royle, Lilium unifloria.</p> +<p>At 12,000 feet, after descent, commenced Hymenophyllum, Xyris on +rocks, Pyrus at 11,500 feet, Rhododendron ellipticum common, summit +strewed with rocks, Rhododendron pumilum.</p> +<p>At 10,000 feet, the Spilus microphyllus, Polygonum, as well as on +ascent Gaultheria nummularioid., swards abounding with Gramen nardoides(?), +Dipsacus minor, Epilobium parnassia, Swertia, Umbelliferæ, Primula +scapigerc. floribus in globum densum, pedalis, Habenariæ herminioid.</p> +<p>At the halting place 9,700 feet, Berberis ilecifolia, Daphne papyracæ, +Thibaudia myrtifolia, Baptisia, Dipsacus, major, Swertim pedicularis, +Andropogones, Ilex dipyrena, Rumex of Khegumpa, Betula, Euonymus cornets, +Abies cedroides, and Brunonis, Geranium scandens, Pyrus, Hypericum moflongensis, +Hemiphragma, Mespilus microphyllus, Panax rhododendrifol., Rhododendron +obovatum.</p> +<p>At 9,500 feet, Rhododendron arborea, majus, Abies cupressoides, Gaultheria +nummularioides flexuosa, Thibaudiacea rotundifolia, Primula Stuartii, +stunted juncus.</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet, Q. ilecifolia, Rhododendron undulatum, Primula pulcherrima, +Tetranthera nuda, Chimaphiliæ! Andropogons, Rhododendron arbor, +majus, common, which varies much in size of leaves, Dalibarda, Smilax +ruscoideus.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, Berberis pinnata, asiatica, Buddlæa purpurea; +Eurya acuminata.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Gnaphalium trivenium, Baptisia, Spiræa, (Gillenioid) +bella, Artemisia major. 7,500 feet, Rhododend. minus arborea, +Leucas ciliata, and woods of Q. robur, as usual deciduous.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g248.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Sanah to Lingè" src="images/g248.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>All the plants above 10,500 feet, had perished, not a single one +being found in flower. The descent was so hurried, that it was +impossible to note down more plants; and the same applies to the descent +to this from the halting place. Starvation being to be added to +discomfort.</p> +<p>Of Rhododendrons, the species observed, may be characterized as follows:—</p> +<p> <i>Floribus</i> +<i>in</i> <i>racemis</i> <i>umbelliformibus</i>.</p> +<p>1. R. <i>arboreum</i>, arboreum, foliis oblongo obovatis, subtus +argenteis.</p> +<p>2. R. <i>ferrugineum</i>, arboreum, foliis obovatis, supra +rugosis, subtus ferrugineis.—No. 654.</p> +<p>3. R. ----- fruticosum, foliis oblongis, subtus ferruginea +lepidotis.—No. 652.</p> +<p>4. R. <i>ellipticum</i>, fruticosum, foliis ellipticis.—No. +653.</p> +<p>5. R. ----- fruticosum, foliis ellipticis basi cordatis subtus +glaucus reticulatis.—No. 659.</p> +<p>6. R. ----- fruticosum, foliis lanceolato oblongis, sub-obovatis, +subtus punctatis.—No. 655.</p> +<p>7. R. <i>undulatum</i>, fruticosum, foliis elongati lanceolatis, +undulatis subtus reticulatis.—No. 656.</p> +<p> <i>Floribus</i> +<i>solitariis</i>.</p> +<p>8. R. <i>microphyllum</i>, fruticosum, lotum ferrugineo lepidotum, +foliis lanceolatis parvis.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>17th</i>.—Snow has fallen during the night +all around, but not within 1,000 feet of us: this will make the snow +line here about 7,300 feet, the village being 6,335 <i>supra</i> <i>marem</i>. +Mildness of climate would appear to be indicated by the abundance of +rice cultivation round this place, chiefly, however, about 1,000 feet +below. In every direction ranges of 9 to 12,000 feet are visible: +villages are very common, especially so in a hollow on the western side +of the ravine of the Kooree, in which I counted sixteen or eighteen; +one containing between thirty and forty houses. The space alluded +to is one sheet of cultivation, chiefly rice and wheat. Lingè +itself is an ordinarily sized village, containing about twelve houses. +The wooded tracts cease for the most part, about 1,000 feet above this. +The face of the country, where uncultivated, being clothed with harsh +Andropogoneous grasses, Salix pendula, Thuja pendula, Pyrus malus, Erythrina, +Quercus, Juncus effusus, Porana of Churra, Plantago, Barleria, Polygonium +rheoides, Stellaria media, Rubus deltifoliis, Cnicus, Rhodod. arboreum +minus, but rare, Smithea occurs also.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>18th</i>.—Our march commenced by a steep +descent on the south face of the hill, the coolies proceeding by a more +direct one to the north, but which was said to be difficult. We +continued descending in a westerly direction, until we came in sight +of the Kooree river which flows along the ravine, and which is a large +stream, one-third less than the Monass. We then turned to the +north following the river, the path running up, about 800 feet above +it. We then came to another ravine, and descended to the torrent, +which we crossed by a rude wooden bridge: then followed again the Kooree, +to the bed of which we descended, and along which we continued for some +time. We then ascended where the banks were of such a nature as +not to allow a path, descending again here and there. Then we +came on the Khoomun, a large torrent, which we crossed by a wooden bridge +about 100 yards above its bed; re-descended to the Kooree, reached its +bridge; and thence descending rather steeply, and for about one and +a half mile to Ling-Ling, or Lengloon, which is plainly visible from +the bridge over the Kooree.</p> +<p>After turning to the north along the Kooree, and indeed after passing +the cultivation below Lingè, which chiefly occupies a sort of +plateau, we passed through a most miserable country, the hills being +rocky, nearly destitute of trees, and chiefly clothed with the usual +coarse Andropogoneous grasses, especially lemon-grass, occurred between +Lingè and Lengloon.</p> +<p>At 5,000 feet, observed Desmodium, Santalacea australasia, Gaultheria +arborea, Indigofera, as before, Clematis cana, Acanthacea cærulescens, +Pteris aquilina, Viburnum cærulescens, Oxyspora, Panicum eleusinoides, +Anthistiria, Conyza, Ficus cordifoliis of Bhamree, Labiata Suddiensis, +Corearia, Rhus pendula, Airoides major, Flemingia secunda and major.</p> +<p>At 4,800 feet, Desmodium vestilum, stunted, Q. robur, Dipsacus, Epilobium, +Elæagnus microphyllus, spinosus.</p> +<p>At 4,600 feet, Sedum, Campanula, Osbeckia capitata, Citrus in villages, +Emblica, Artemisia minor.</p> +<p>At 4,000 feet, Pæderia cyanea, lemon-grass, Panax, Terebinthaceus, +Pinus longifolia, here and there, Ficus obliqua, Grislea, Cirsium.</p> +<p>At the bed of the torrent 4,000 feet, Bassia.</p> +<p>Over the Kooree, Euphorbia antiqorum, a sure sign of aridity. +Didymocarpea contorta, D. canescens, which differs from the other in +being hirsute, Menispermum, Holcus elegans.</p> +<p>Along its bed, Sedum of Phoollong, Eugenia, Achyranthis, Ingoides +arborea, Aspidium polypodioides, Briedleia obovata; Desmodium of Nulka! +Arundo, Buddlæa neemdoides, Jasminum of Benka, Composita, involucri +squamis ciliatis. Rice fields, in these Gnaphalium aureum, Phleoides +of Tassangsee, but in full flower, Lysimachia majus, rugosus, Oxalis +comiculata, Hieracioid, Composita, Lactucoid purpureseus, Ammannia, +Bidens alba, Drymaria.</p> +<p>Then along the wooded banks, Wendlandia, <i>Pomacea</i>? Mimosa arborea, +Camunium, Butea suffruticosa, Pterospermum of Bhamree, Luculia, Ulmus, +as before, Pinus longifolia, Rottlera, Melica latifolia, young plants +of Q. robur on rocks, along with it Goodyera articulata, Urticoid rhombifolia, +carnosa; on rocks up Khoomun, Orthotrichum corcalypta. At the +bridge over this, a Myrtaceous tree and the Simool occur. The +plants occur during the ascent, as in the descent. Water-wagtails, +blackbirds, tomtits, were observed, as also white-pated and white-rumped +water-chats.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>19th</i>.—Ling-Ling or Lengloon.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>20th</i>.—To-day we visited the Soobah, +who is a young man, certainly not more than twenty years old, with a +good humoured countenance. The meeting was cordial but unattended +with any state, and judging from appearances only, this Soobah is inferior +to the others we have seen, and especially to him of Tassgong. +No armed men were present, and the whole bystanders scarcely amounted +to 100. It was agreed that we remain here until the baggage, now +in the rear, arrives. Tonsa is, we hear, only four or five days +journey from this.</p> +<p>The meeting took place in an open plot of ground below the Soobah’s +house and on the skirts of the village, the ground was matted and a +space enclosed with mats: we sat in the open air; the Soobah under a +silken canopy. Altogether he seemed a person of no pretensions, +crowds, speaking comparatively, of priests attended as usual, they were +the slickest looking of the whole, and the greatest beggars. A +hideous party of <i>nachnees</i> were in attendance, and ready to perform +any more pleasing duties they might be required; they were however so +ugly, that not much self-denial was required in declining their offers. +They were dressed in red, with abundance of cumbrous silver ornaments, +and dirty leggings; one was additionally ornamented with incipient goitre.</p> +<p>Sugarcane (but stunted), almonds, or peach, oranges, castor-oil, +datura, pear, simool, may be found here. Oranges are poor enough, +the pear no better. Pinus longifolia, Cupressus pendula, are almost +the only trees: the hills being barren, covered with coarse grasses.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>23rd</i>.—Marched to Tumashoo: our march +commenced with a steep ascent, but which may be avoided by going through +the village, it commenced and continued throughout in the direction +of Lingè, opposite to which place we found ourselves on our arrival, +but on the right bank of the river. The highest part reached, +before we descended to this village, was 6,350 feet, or about the height +of Lingè. The march was nearly six miles, it was easy, +the road being throughout excellent and apparently more frequented than +any we had hitherto seen. Generally we moved along through open +Rhododendron woods, frequently very much stunted, at 6,000 feet. +These were intermixed with Quercus tomentosa. The only spot well +wooded, occurred in the ravines, giving exit to small streams.</p> +<p>The first ascent from Leng-Leng, gave the same vegetation, scarcely +any trees being visible. Tradescantia clavijera of Churra on rocks, +Galium of Churra, Santalacea, Desmodium vestilum, Indigofera canescens, +Artemisia major and minor, Oxyspora, Luculia, Conaria, Sambucus in wet +places, Lobelia pyramidalis, Spiræa bella and decomposita, Thalictrum +majus, Gaultheria fruticosa, Woodwardia, Saurauja hispida, Rhododendron +minus, and lemon-grass, occurred in the order of ascent.</p> +<p>Turning hence along the ridge at the same elevation, Gaultheria arborea, +Quercus tomentosa, Rhododendron minus, Hedychium, Holcus elegans, Leucas +ciliata. In wet wooded spots Gaultheria duplexa, Bucklandia, Viburnum +cærulescens, Polyg. rheoides, Erythrina, Gordonia, Porana, Neuropeltis +aromatica, Catharinea, Thibaudia myrtifolia, in open massy woods of +Rhododendron minus and Quercus tomentosa, Rosa, Cnicus, Pyrus, Gleichenia +major, Agrimonia occurred at the same elevations.</p> +<p>From one spot seven villages were visible, on opposite bank of Kooree +and between Lingè and the Khoomun. A few stunted P. longifolia: +one or two of Abies pendula, occurred 100 feet above the highest point +of the former: at 6,350 feet, woods of the deciduous Q. robur, were +observable.</p> +<p>On the descent at 6,000 feet, Mimosa spinosa, Primula Stuartii, Rhus, +Juncus, and others, as before.</p> +<p>We passed several villages, some containing twenty or thirty houses, +and on halting found ourselves towards the edge of the cultivated tract +alluded to, as seen from Lingè.</p> +<p>Cattle are here kept in farm yards which are well littered with straw; +as in other places they are noosed round the horns: they are fed, while +tied up, on straw of a coarse and unnutritious description, which they +do not seem to fancy much. Pigeons abound, but they are of no use as +they cannot be caught; they may help to feed the sparrow-hawks, which +are generally found about the villages, and which are very bold.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>24th</i>.—Left at 8 A.M. after the usual +trouble about coolies and ponies. We ascended at first about 1,000 +feet, passing over sward with woods of P. longifolia on either side, +crossing the ridge through a hollow, we then commenced a steep descent +to the west, until we reached a water-course, the elevation of which +is about 200 feet below that of Tumashoo. We then struck off, +again to ascend, and continued to do so until we attained 7,800 feet, +from which point we descended gradually at first, then abruptly to our +<i>mokan</i>. The direction was nearly west, the distance 11 miles, +the march pretty easy, as the road was good, and the ascent gradual.</p> +<p>Up to the ravine and indeed throughout, nothing new occurred in the +vegetation. The hill up which we ascended to again descend, was +bare, covered with the usual coarse grasses, Campanula linearis and +C. cana, foliis undulatis, Desmodium vestilum, Santalacea.</p> +<p>In the ravine Gordonia, Photinia, Pothos flammea and another species, +Mæsa, Polygonum rheoides, Ficus of Bhamree, and in the khets Hieraceoid, +Gnaphalium aureum, Ajuga, and Veronica occurred.</p> +<p>Up the first ascent and at about 5,500 feet, there was a field of +peas, in very luxuriant condition. Our road lay through open dry +woods of oaks, either Q. robur or Q. tomentosa, principally the latter, +Rhododendron minus, and Pinus longifolia preponderated in some places, +but few trees of Abies pendula occurred.</p> +<p>The march was so far interesting as establishing nearly the limits +of Q. robur, Q. tomentosa and Q. ilecifolia, which last only commenced, +and then in a small state, at 7,300 feet, I should say that Q. tomentosa +was to it the next indication, as well as Q. glauca. But it must +be understood that only full grown trees are now considered. Mosses +were common in the woods on reaching 6 to 7,000 feet, principally Dicrana, +Hypna, Orthotricha, Pendulous lichens frequent; about 7,000 feet, Primula +Stuartii in its old situations between 6 to 7,000 feet, Hypericum of +Moflong, 7,000 feet.</p> +<p>We crossed several small water-courses, along these, the dry woods +ceased, and the usual humid jungle made its appearance; mosses very +numerous.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/g254.jpg"> +<img alt="Gradient Longloon to Tumashoo" src="images/g254.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The above plants continued throughout, after reaching an altitude +of 6,000 feet, the woods consisting of oaks and Rhododendrons.</p> +<p>The route for the most part wound along the course of the Kooree, +but considerably above, we left this track about 3 P.M. on the river +turning to the southward. Lingè was in sight nearly the +whole day; we have been six days (including a halt) performing what +might with ease be done in one, for there probably is a road in a direct +line between this part and the opposite bank of Kooree. The small-crested +finch, and red-beaked and red-legged fare occurred, the former is a +noisy bird, inhabiting chiefly woods of Q. robur, the flock were loth +to leave one particular spot, so that we obtained five specimens: the +finch occurred at 7,800 feet.</p> +<p>Various temples and walls were passed en route, and a few villages, +with one exception of average small size, were visible in various directions.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>25th</i>.—Our route hence continued for +some time at about the same level, when we descended rather rapidly, +until we reached a considerable stream, the Oongar, which is crossed +by the ordinary wooden bridge; about 200 yards further, it is again +crossed by means of a rude bridge, and the remainder of the march is +a steep, long, and unmitigated ascent. I reached the tent about +5 P.M.; we passed one village situated near the larger bridge, with +this exception the country seemed uninhabited: very little cultivation +was visible in any direction.</p> +<p>The vegetation was the same, for the most part, the drier faces of +the hills being covered, i.e. at about the level of Oongar, with oaks +and Rhododendrons, the wet ravines being more densely, and more variously +wooded. On sward about Oongar, I noticed a Pedicularis, Artemisia +major, Stellaria angustifolia, Berberis pinnata in woods at the same +elevation, Plantago, Crawfurdia speciosa, Rubus deltoideus, Alnus of +Beesa, Otochilus, Gordonia, Lilium giganteum, Bucklandia.</p> +<p>In one spot near this place mosses were very abundant. On one +rock I gathered, Weissioides, Orthodon, Pohlia, Brachymenium bryoides, +Weissia, Bartramioides, Didymodon, Daphne papyrifera, and Eurya acuminata, +this being about the lowest elevation at which I have seen this plant. +In cultivated spots Crucifera, Ervum, and at a temple about a mile from +Oongar, Cupressus pendula, and a juniper, Arbor parva, of aspect scraggy, +trunco lævi, Cannabis, Cerastium canum in cultivated places. +The most common oak was Q. robur. The Jay, larger Brachypodium, +which always goes in large flocks, orange-breasted Trochilus and blackbird, +were likewise seen, as well as the brown finch, which was seen feeding +on Rhododendron minus. On rocky ground I procured a really fine +Acanthus, leaves all flesh-coloured, subscandens, spic. maximis lanato-ciliatis, +tetrastich. on this the black cattle appear to be fed, as large bundles +were brought in at Oongar. In the woody ravines Panax curcasifolia +was common, in these I noticed Cerastium scandens, Elæagnus, Clematis, +Tetrantheroidea habitu, Sedgewickiæ! Orthotrichum pumulum! Phlomoides, +and in wet spots are Epilobium. The descent shewed nothing remarkable: +towards the nullah I noticed Engelhaardtia, tree fern, and Gaultheria +deflexa. Obtained a beautiful woodpecker at 5,000 feet, with the +chesnut-pated lesser tomtit, Yunx, and speckled Brachypodium in woods +here; this last has the habit and manners of the crooked bill of Dgin.</p> +<p>The wood between the two bridges was very pretty and open; the trees +covered with mosses. The ascent shewed nothing remarkable until +2,000 feet had been surmounted, the plants forming the vegetation below +this were Q. robur, Rhododendron minus in abundance, Thibaudia myrtifolia, +Gaultheria arborea, Saurauja hispida uncommon, Viburnum cærulescens, +Conyza nivea, Oxyspora towards the base with paper plant, and Bambusa +microphylla. About 5,000 feet, a Daltonia, D. hypnoides, was found +in abundance both on rocks and trees.</p> +<p>The change takes place about the situation of a spacious open sward; +here the jungle is thick, the trees consisting principally of Q. glauca, +which is a noble tree, with immense lamellated acorns, Pendulous lichens +are here common, Hymenopogon parasiticus, Lomaria of Khegumpa! Berberis +asiatica! Hemiphragma, Gaultheria nummulareoides, Panax Rhododendrifol.</p> +<p>At 7,500 feet, Rhododendron majus appears, the wood preserving the +umbrageous humid aspect, Eurya acuminata, Hydrangea, and about this +snow commenced sparingly, but soon became thick. At 8,000 feet, +Rhododendron undulata, Tetrantheroides baccis nigris. At 9,000 +feet, Rhododendron ferrugineum. The evening now became so misty +that it was impossible to discern any thing; in addition, it was snowing: +these circumstances added to fatigue made me press on for the halting +place, before coming to which I passed through heavy snow.</p> +<p><i>Pémee</i>, where we put up, is a miserable hut, is upwards +of 9,000 feet above the sea, situated on an open sward, now densely +covered with snow, the accommodations being of course very miserable. +Icicles of large size were seen here; and we had nothing but snow for +water.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>26th</i>.—Leaving this, we commenced a long +and at last very steep ascent, the snow increasing in thickness as we +increased our elevation, the march commenced with undulations, but soon +passed off into an excessively steep ascent, in some parts indeed precipitous. +We crossed at twelve and a half P.M. the Pass of Rodoola, on which are +some slabs, with mystic characters, but even here the ascent did not +terminate, but continued, although very gradually for perhaps two miles +more. Before coming to the summit, a small hut is passed. +The descent was at first very rapid, then we proceeded along the side +of the mountain for a long way, at nearly the same level through woods +of Abies densa. On recommencing the descent, swardy patches commenced, +surrounded by fir woods, these increased in frequency. At length +we reached extensive fir woods, from whence a valley was visible, percolated +by a large stream to which we descended over open country with beautiful +patches of firs, and at length over extensive swards. I reached +the village at 5 P.M., after a march of nearly nine hours, the direction +was west, the distance eighteen miles. The road was very bad; +in one place our ponies escaped with difficulty, the road having apparently +fallen in, and the only footing being afforded by the thickness of the +snow: one pony was saved by placing branches under him. The highest +portion of the Pass near the peak was good enough. Snow was heavy on +the road, until we descended into the open fir-wooded country, it became +scanty at 9,500 feet. The day was gloomy and misty, for a moment, +the sun appeared while I stood on the summit, disclosing deep ravines, +one formed by the valley in which we now are, surrounded in every direction +by equally high land, as that on which I stood, and certainly not under +12,000 feet. Nothing visible but dense forests of firs. +The highest point crossed was 12,035 feet, estimating the summit to +be 300 feet above the Pass itself, which is so narrow as scarcely to +admit of the passage of a loaded mule.</p> +<p>In the open spot around the hut, Tofieldioid, which continues as +high as 10,500 feet, Cerastium inflatum, Labiata species, Conecis, which, +as on Dhonglaila, continues up to 12,000 feet, Dipsacus, Prunella, Gaultheria +nummularioides, Pteris aquilina, stunted, Juncus niveus, Gnaphalium. +No firs were visible, but the trees were so covered with snow, that +I was not able to distinguish them.</p> +<p>At 9,800 feet, along an open ridge, Spiræa belloides, Buddlæa, +B. purpurasæ, Khasyanæ affinis, Andropogones, Mespilus microphyllus, +Hydrangea, Taxus, Swertia, Gnaphalium, Thibaudia orbicularis commences, +continuing up to 10,500 feet, Brachymenium bryoides, Bambusa very common, +forming frequently the chief bulk of the forest, even up to 10,500 feet, +Acer arbuscula foliis palmatum lobatis!! Pyrus arbor magna fol. obovat. +serratis subtus albus, fructibus cerasi magnitudinum.</p> +<p>At 10,000 feet, Composita penduliflora! Hemiphragma, Lobelioides, +Brachymenium bryoides, Rhododendron minus ferrugineum, arboreum vel +arbuscula, Rhododendron obovatum, foliis subtus albus, Rhododendron +hispidum, Rosa microphylla, Bambusa, Spiræa of former ascent.</p> +<p>At 10,200 feet, Polygonum, Rheum, Hydrangea! Spiræa belloides, +Hydrangea, Betuloides.</p> +<p>At 10,500 feet, Abies densa, but sparingly, Rhododendron ellipticum, +foliis basi cordatis, Hypericum, Rhododendron microphyllum.</p> +<p>At 11,000 feet, no firs: nothing almost but Rhododendrons, R. ellipticum, +and R. ellipticum foliis basi cordatis.</p> +<p>At 11,500 feet, Vaccinium, foliis ovatis spinuloso-dentatis, atratus +fructex pygmæus repens.</p> +<p>Towards the Pass, the face of the mountain became more and more rugged, +the vegetation more scanty, consisting of nothing but Rhododendrons.</p> +<p>At 12,000 feet, Eriogonum minus, Polygonum, Rheum, Rhodod. microphyllum +and ellipticum foliis basi cordatis.</p> +<p>About the Pass, Trichostomum, <i>Xyris</i>, Abies densa, one small +plant, Rosa, Eriogonum minus, Rhododendron microphyllum and ellipticum +foliis basi cordatis.</p> +<p>On the more level ridge between this Pass and the summit, Rhododendrons +still were most frequent, Triticoides umbellifera of Royle, Eriogonum +majus, woods of Abies densa occurred a little below the path, Gentiana +maxima, 4-pedalis folliculis bipollicaribus, Lilium uniflorum, Potentilla +common between this and 9,000 feet, Rosa microphyllum, Juniperus, Epilobium +minus of Dhonglaila, Rheum. Large black crow, Pedicularis, Saxifraga, +Umbellifera alia, Compositæ, Spiræa.</p> +<p>At the summit, no woody vegetation was visible, except Rhododendrons; +the firs being confined below.</p> +<p>The descent at first through Rhododendron, then for a long time entirely +through vast woods of Abies densa, most of the larger trees of this +are apparently blasted, it has a tabular form, and very sombre appearance, +and can be recognized even at great distances by its black columnar +palm-like appearance.</p> +<p>At 11,000 feet, Acer sterculiacea, Rosa microphylla, Ribes, which +ceases below 10,000 feet, it is confined to the A. densa woods.</p> +<p>At 10,500 feet, Saxifraga, two species on moist banks, A. densa woods, +small Umbellifera.</p> +<p>The sward commences at about 10,000 feet, and is common at 9,500 +feet. It is clothed principally with the small bamboo noticed +in similar places above Sanah. Berberis spathulata commences. +It is with this sward that a new fir, with a larch-like look, which +I call temporarily Abies spinulosa, commences, and continues down to +the nullah, becoming more abundant as A. densa becomes less abundant, +and finally usurping its place entirely. Rhododendron microphyllum +continues to 9,600 feet, at which point Baptisoidea commences.</p> +<p>The vegetation hence to Bhoomlungtung consists entirely of Abies +spinulosa, intermixed with a species very like Abies pendula, this appears +at about 9,500 feet. The sward consists of small grasses, Juncus +niveus, Gnaphalium, Hypericum of Mollong, suffrutex incertus. +Juncus effusus at 9,000 feet, with Prinsepia utilis.</p> +<p>The marked indicators of great elevation are A. densa, Polygonum, +Rheum! Eriogona! Rhododendron microphyllum, ellipticum, and ellipticum +foliis basi cordatis, Epilobium, Triticoides, Holcoides, Umbellifera +of Royle, Saxifragæ, Ribes, Juniperus.</p> +<p>The most marked peculiarity is the comparative absence of A. densa +on the east side of the mountain, and its excessive abundance on the +west. This valley may be justly called the valley of pines, for +in no direction is any forest to be seen but those composed of pines. +The change indeed is extraordinary, in other respects as indicated by +the presence of a new Rosa and Prinsepia utilis. Another peculiarity +is the appearance for the first time of A. spinulosa. The range +of which is between 8 to 10,000 feet; this is a beautiful tree, and +disposed in beautiful groups. The valley altogether is a beautiful +one, and actually repays one for the trouble endured in getting access +to it.</p> +<p>The temperature in crossing the ridge was below that on Dhonglaila, +and below the freezing point at times. No inconvenience was felt +by us from the elevation, but many of our servants suffered probably +as much from fright as cold.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>27th</i>.—Halted.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>28th</i>.—This valley is certainly the prettiest +place we have yet seen, the left bank is particularly level, but neither +are of much breadth, the hills adjacent present rounded grassy patches, +interspersed with beautiful groves of pines. The level space, +as well as the more favourable sites on the slopes of the hills, are +occupied by wheat cultivation, which is carried on in a more workman-like +manner, than any of the previous cultivation I have hitherto seen. +The fields are occasionally surrounded with stone walls, but generally +only protected from the inroads of cattle by branches of thorny shrubs +strewed on their edges. They are kept clean, and above all, manure +is used: it is however dry and of a poor quality, apparently formed +of animal and vegetable moulds. In some of the fields the surface +is kept very fine, all stones and clods being carefully removed and +piled up in various parts of the field, but whether these masses are +again strewed over the ground. The plough is used, and penetrates +to about four inches. Hoes and rakes are also used, but the angle +of the handle is much too acute. Radishes are grown with the wheat: +no rice is cultivated here.</p> +<p>The village Bhoomlungtung, at which we are stationed is on the left +bank of a branch of the Bhoomla nullah, a river of some size, but fordable +in most places, its bed being subdivided. It is 8,668 feet above +the sea. The houses are ordinary, but they are surrounded with +stone walls. Our’s, which is a portion of the Dhumpas or +headman’s, has a court-yard, surrounded by a stone wall, and the +entrance is defended by a stout and large door. The natives invariably +wear dark clothing, the colour being only rivalled by that of their +skins, for I never saw dirtier people. The Bhooteas hitherto visited, +were quite paragons of cleanliness compared to those we are now among. +Half ruined villages are visible here and there, although otherwise +the appearance of the valley is prosperous enough. The valley +is surrounded on all sides by hills of great altitude, the lowest being +10,500 feet high. Snow is plentiful on the ridges, but it does +not remain long below, although falls are frequent. No fish are +to be seen in the river, which is otherwise as regards appearance as +beautiful a trout stream as one could wish to have. The birds +are the common sparrow, field-fare, red-legged crow, magpie, skylark, +a finch which flies about in large flocks, with a sub-forked tail, raven, +red-tailed stonechat, larger tomtit, syras, long-tailed duck, and quail, +which is much larger than that found in Assam. The woods are composed +entirely of Abies pendula, a few A. spinulosa occur, intermixed, but +the woods of the latter species are scarcely found below 9,500 feet. +The ridges are clothed with the columnar Abies densa. In thickets +a smaller Rosa, Rhododendron ellipticum, foliis basi cordatis, Rhododendron +elliptica, foliis subtus argenteis, Rhodod. gemmis viscosis. Berberis +asiatica, Hamamelidea? Bambusa microphyllum, Philadelphus, Thibaudia +orbicularis, Mespilus microphyllus, Taxus or Abies Brunonis, Ilex dipyrena, +occur. The sward shews small grasses, all past flower, Hemiphragma, +Thymus, Dipsacus, Juncus niveus, Gnaphalia 2, 3, Potentilla.</p> +<p>The fields have Crucifera Lamium and Verbascum, a late biennial species, +Caule simplici, Hemiphragma.</p> +<p>The marshy spots abound with Juncus effusus, and shew also a Primula +out of flower, and a Xyris past flowering.</p> +<p>Along the bed of the river, Hippophæ is the most common plant. +Lastly, a few trees occur of Q. ilecifolia, which assumes a very handsome +character, looking much like a Conifera at some distance, one group +occurs near the village, and a solitary tree or two elsewhere. +The other woody vegetables are Rosa fructibus hispidis, Cycnium, Pomacea +arbuscula, and one or two other deciduous shrubs. The willow tree +is also common.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>1st</i>.—Marched to Byagur, we were told that +the march was a short one, and that we should continue throughout along +the Bhoomlungtung river, which is called Tung-chiew. We did keep +along this for about two miles, when we struck off into the hills passing +through a village, we continued rising for perhaps 1,000 feet, when +we descended to a small nullah. Leaving this we commenced an ascent, +and a very long one too, and continued to ascend until we surmounted +the ridge overlooking the river, on which Byagur or Iugur is situated. +To the place we descended, the march was fourteen miles, direction westerly. +Highest ground traversed about 9,500 feet high. Road throughout +winding round and up hills, through woods of Abies pendula: nothing +of interest occurred. Magpies, crows, chatterer feeding on pine +cones, common in woods at 9,000 feet. Passed two or three villages, +all containing ruined houses. Direction we pursued was that of +the Tung-chiew river, until we reached the ridge guiding the Byagur +river to it: their junction takes place two or three miles below this +place, Cycnium occurred on the road in plenty, also Sarcococea.</p> +<p>Horseshoe curlew, the same as we shot at Daimara, common in the Tung-chiew, +along which the chief shrubs are Hippophæ and Elæagnus, +particularly in the islets which are not uncommon in its bed. +The common water wagtail also occurs.</p> +<p>I find that the root of the common Potentilla is used here, as about +Nunklow, as a substitute for <i>sooparee</i>, it is unpleasantly astringent. +Observed Rhododendron microphylla on the loftier ground; very high land, +18,000 feet visible to the south along the course of Tung-chiew, covered +with heavy snow: Abies pendula is occasionally a beautiful tree, 100 +feet high, and in appearance something like a cedar, the finest occurs +at a monastery under a bluff rock, about one and a half mile from Bhoomlungtung +on the Tung-chiew; Daphne papyriferæ occurred at 9,000 feet. +The heaps of earth piled up in the fields before sowing, consist of +burnt rubbish, the ashes are subsequently spread out. The manure +consists entirely of vegetables: here I find that the pine leaves are +piled up, and formed into manure by fermentation.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Byagur, the Soobah’s house is +about 500 feet above us, and is a huge rambling edifice. We are +in a village situated in a rather capacious valley, percolated by a +large river, twice the size of the Tung-chiew, which is crossed by an +ordinary bridge, the river runs close to the hills, which form the left +bank, the right is a sort of plain, occupied by wheat cultivation, and +which has apparently at a former period, been the bed of the river. +In this valley other villages are visible, but they are small, and nothing +indicates either fertility or prosperity. The valley is surrounded +on all sides by high mountains, those towards Bhoomlungtung being lowest. +To the north-east very high land is visible. The ridge which separates +us from Tongse is, in the highest parts, certainly 12,000 feet, and +covered with snow. The people are dirty to an excess.</p> +<p>Crow, sparrow, Alauda, are the birds here. Saw a fox, an animal +of some size, with a beautiful brush. The botany is poor, the +hills are clothed with the usual grasses, abundance of Abies pendula. +The khets or fields present the old Lamium and Crucifera. The +only trees are one of Q. ilecifolia, and one or two of Salix lanata.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>3rd</i>.—Cycnium is found here, but is put +to no use. The crops which are now springing up are very poor, +the soil being extremely bad, they are irrigated by means of canals, +but terraces are not in use, the ground being too level, the embankments +are much smaller than those used in rice cultivation.</p> +<p>The place is bleak in the extreme, and here, as often on the western +face of the Himalaya, at this season a fierce diurnal wind rises directly +the sun gets power, which always blows up the ravines or against the +streams draining these, it dies away towards evening, generally. +It is cold in the extreme, and must check vegetation extremely. +Syras, common here, as at Bhoomlungtung.</p> +<p>The ridge above this which is crossed coming from Bhoomlungtung, +is 9,947 feet high, yet no snow was on the ground. The contrast +between it and Pèmee in regard to snow and vegetation is remarkable; +there the woods were thick, luxuriant, and varied, here nothing is to +be seen but Abies pendula. I consider this a proof that A. pendula +is a native of places below much snow, and that where snow abounds, +it will not be found to extend above 8,000 feet. The dwarf bamboo +of Sanah is common here, covering large patches of ground, Lamium of +Bulphai in the vicinity of temples, and enclosing pagodas. The +people here evince great skill in figures, but none in architecture.</p> +<p>The Soobah’s house, a castellated heterogeneous mansion, spread +over much ground, the defences on one side reaching nearly to the level +of the valley. The Kumpa dogs are fierce and handsome, with the +bark of a mastiff, they are not apparently deterred by threats, but +rather the contrary. A woman with dropsy, wrapped in filthy clothes, +presented herself and evinced great anxiety to have her pulse felt, +but the dirt of her clothes was such, that I made excuses.</p> +<p>Manure for the land consists of pine leaves, etc. mixed with cow-dung. +The cattle are well littered; and grass is here of rather better description: +all cattle are however in wretched condition notwithstanding, and the +cows give very little milk. The houses of the poorer orders, are +unornamented, but those of the better classes are always ornamented +with a belt of red ochre outside. There are no large boulders +in the river here, although it runs with violence. This is owing +to the softness or tenacity of the rocks.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>4th</i>.—Our march commenced with a steep ascent +up the ridge, forming the west boundary of the valley, surmounting this +we proceeded on for some distance at about the same level, and thence +descended rapidly to a nullah. We then ascended slightly, and +subsequently descended to the valley, in which the village Jaisa is +situated. The distance was nine miles; the march was pretty, almost +entirely through fir woods, three villages were visible in a valley +to the left, which is in fact the termination of the Jaisa one, but +beyond the valleys no cultivation whatever was visible.</p> +<p>The first part was up a barren grassy slope, after which we entered +fir woods, these at first were almost entirely constituted of Abies +pendula.</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet Chimaphila, Berberis spathulata, Abies pendula, Bambusa +microphylla of Sanah, Mespilus microphyllus, Rhododendron elliptica, +foliis basi cordatis subtus argenteis, Philadelphus Lycopod. of Surureem, +Gaultheria nummularifolia, Rhododendron viscosum.</p> +<p>At 9,300 feet, Abies spinulosa becomes more common, Rosa hispida +and microphylla! Pinus cedroides commences, Dalibarda, Daphne papyracea, +Thymus, Gnaphalia, Mespilus and Berberis, as before, Potentilla.</p> +<p>At 9,500 feet, snow lying on the path in sheltered places, Euphorbia, +Gaultheria arboreoides, Hypnum rubescens, scolopendrioids, Pteris aquilina, +Melianthus, Rosa, frutex erectus ramis hispidissimis, ramulis subglabratis, +fructibus pendulis glabris, tubo-ovato, sepalis lanceolatis. Salix +arbuscula, gemmis rubur glabris, foliis lanceolatis subtus glaucis, +amentis fæminies pendulis, Bupleurum, Hydrangea, Spiræa +densa belloides! Prunella, Pinus cedroides common at Potentilla.</p> +<p>At 9,700, 9,800, to 10,000 feet, Abies densa, a few trees, as usual +many blasted, from lightning confined entirely towards the summit, Acer +sterculiacea, Aruncus, Thibaudia orbicularis, A. spinulosa very common, +A. pendula ceases, or at most only stunted plants occur, Mespilus microphyllus, +Berberis spathulata, Baptisia, these were very common on west face, +which is level enough and open.</p> +<p>Here also Pedicularis, Bupleurum, stunted Pteris aquilina, Polygonum, +Rheum! Avena! Pendulous lichens luxuriant. Along the level tracts, +the woods consisted entirely of Abies spinulosa, a minute Gentiana common +on the sward.</p> +<p>The descent was steep to the ravine; half-way down A. pendula commenced +to flourish, and towards the ravine it was more common than A. spinulosa; +Rhododendron microphyllum was seen on this face at 9,500 feet, Verbascum +at 9,200 feet, but most of the plants seen on the east face were not +found on this. Acer sterculiacea, however occurred at 9,800 feet, +otherwise pines were the most prominent feature.</p> +<p>At the nullah, Dipsacus, Elæagnus, Salix lanata, Artemisia +major, Daphne papyracea, Rhododendron viscosum, Mespilus microphyllus, +Rosa hispida, spinus acutissimis, Bambusa of Sanah, Plectranthus a large +suffruticose annual species, common in all the same altitudes, were +observed. The subsequent descent was through woods of A. pendula, +with a few of A. spinulosa intermixed.</p> +<p>The limits of A. densa, A. spinulosa and A. pendula, Melianthus, +Acer sterculiacea, Thibaudia orbicularis, A. cedroides, Rosa microphylla, +Pedicularis, Hydrangea, Baptisia, Berberis spathulata were well determined. +They may be expressed as follows: A. densa, 10 to 13,000 feet, A. spinulosa, +9 to 10,500 feet, A. pendula, 6 to 9,000 feet, Melanthus, 9,500 feet, +Acer sterculiaceum, 9,800 to 10,000 feet, Thibaudia orbicularis, 10,000 +feet, A. cedroides, 9,000 to 9,800 feet, Rosa microphylla, 9,800 to +13,000 feet, Pedicularis, 10 to 12,500 feet, Hydrangea, 4 to 10,000 +feet unless two species are confounded, Baptisia, 9 to 9,800 feet, Berberis +spathulata, 9 to 10,000 feet.</p> +<p><i>Jaisa</i> is a good sized village for Bootan, and the houses are +rather large. We were lodged in the castle, a large building, +with a capacious flagged court-yard, surrounded by galleries: we were +housed in the grand floor of the higher portion fronting the gate. +A good deal of wheat cultivation occurs around. The village is +situated in a small nullah, surrounded on all sides by pine-clad hills. +The vegetation is precisely the same as at Juggur, with the exception +of a Ligustrum, which is common along the nullah. Larks, red-legged +crows and ravens, abound here.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>5th</i>.—Our march consisted of a progress +along levelish ground up the river, occasionally rounding small eminences: +we then commenced the ascent of a ridge, the summit of which we reached +about half past-twelve. Snow is common above 9,000 feet. +The descent was steep and uninterrupted from about 2,000 feet, when +we reached a small river. Thence we ascended a little to descend +again, we continued over a ravine at nearly the same level, for some +time proceeding over undulated ground: on reaching the debouchure of +the ravine into a larger one running north and south, we commenced to +descend rapidly until we came to an elevation situated above Tongsa, +to this place the descent was excessively steep. The march was +thirteen miles long, the direction west.</p> +<p>At a temple near Jaisa found the Juniper of Oongar in flower, and +arboreous, attaining a height of about 40 feet. The whole march +up, nearly to the summit, was through pine woods, A. pendula and spinulosa +being intermixed for some time. I noticed Primula globifera, Eucalypta, +Thibaudia orbicularis, Aruncus, Rosa ramis hispidis, Dipsacus, Prunella, +Potentilla, Gnaphalium, Sphagnum, Daphne papyracea, Tofieldia, Gaultheria +nummularoides, as we approached the base of the ridge or rather the +spot at which the ascent commenced. At this place Abies cedroides +commenced, and Abies pendula became uncommon.</p> +<p>On a bank here, I gathered abundance of mosses, Bartramia, Dicrana, +etc. and some Jungermanniæ.</p> +<p>The ascent was through precisely similar vegetation, in one place +it was exceedingly pretty, consisting of sward with pines. Here +snow was lying on the ground in sheltered places to the depth of several +inches. The ground hence was levelish, but between this place +and the summit a rise of a hundred feet took place. Between these +places Abies densa, cedroides and spinulosa, occurred, but this was +uncommon, Rosa ramis hispidis, Salix of yesterday, Bambusa of Sanah, +stunted Pteris aquilina, Betuloidea, Hydrangea, Hypnum rufescens, scolopendrioid +as well as below: Spiræa belloides, Rhododendron obovatum, which +varies on the same plant with ferruginous and white leaves, Sphagnum, +Thibaudia orbicularis. On sward Gentiana minima.</p> +<p>As the snow increased, Abies cedroides became less, Abies densa more +common. At the very summit Parnassia, Polygonum rheum, Composita +penduliflora, Rhododendron hispidum, Berberis spathulata, which had +occurred previously, Vaccinium pumilium, ciliatum, Gentiana minima, +Swertia, Cnicus, Compositæ frequent, Labiata spicata of Dhonglaila.</p> +<p>The descent was at first open, through swardy places: here Acer sterculiaceum, +Geranium scandens, Avena, Abies densa, Juniperus fruticosa, raro arbuscula.</p> +<p>At 9,800 feet, Rhododendron foliis lanceolato-oblongis subtus ferruginea +tomentosis, arborea, became very common, forming large woods, Abies +densa interspersed, Juniperus, Betuloidea which has six or seven layers +of bark, the <i>boj</i>-<i>putah</i> of Hindoostan according to Blake, +Rosa microphylla, Hemiphragma, Daphne papyracea, Dicranum stratum, etc.</p> +<p>At 9,500 feet, Clematis, Berberis asiatica, commences, Betula, common +Andropogoneous grasses.</p> +<p>At 9,300 feet, Primula pulcherrima, Abies cedroides very common, +Abies densa ceasing, Buddlæa purpurescens, Aruncus, Bupleurum.</p> +<p>At 9,200 feet, Lonicera villosa, Vaccinium cyaneum, Bambusa alia, +Abies densa ceasing.</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet, the jungle now became humid, Gaultheria flexuosa, +Mespilus microphyllus, Quercus ilecifolia, Tetrantheroides baccis nigris, +Gaultherium nummularifolia common, Rubia cordifolia! Hydrangea.</p> +<p>At 8,900 feet, Junipers cease, woods of Q. ilecifolia and Pinus cedroides, +Rosa microphylla, shrubby Rhododendrons, that which was arboreous previously +now becoming shrubby, Berberis asiatica, Taxus or Abies brunonis! Lomaria +of Khegumpa, Rhododendron foliis oblongis subtus punctatis ferrugineis, +Rubus, Primula Stuartii! Quercus foliis, Castaneæ, Ilex, Betuloid, +continues.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, Panax rhododendrifolia, Thibaudia obovata, Taxus ophiopogon +angustissimus, Rhododendron formosum majus! Smilax ruscoideus vel gaultherifolia! +Primula pulcherrima, very common.</p> +<p>At 8,200 feet, Spiræa decomposita, Thibaudia obovata very common. +No firs, woods of oaks and Rhododendron majus, Panax rhododendrifolia +and another species; Bambusa.</p> +<p>At the nullah, same vegetation, Tetranthera nuda, Primula pulcherrima, +Valeriana violifolia, Eurya acuminata, Daphne papyrifolia, Fragaria, +Potentilla supina, Rumex of Khegumpa, Poa annua, Stellaria media and +angustifolia, Rhodoracea deflexa!</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, the woods at this elevation have the same characters, +Rhododendron argenteum becomes common, Q. ilecifolia and Castaneæ +facies, both very handsome and large trees, covered with pendulous mosses, +Sphæropteris, Saxifragea viridis, fleshy Urticea, Oxalis major +on sward at the same elevation, Vaccinium cyaneum, Mespilus microphyllus, +Artemisia major, Gnaphalium, Dipsacus, Elæagnus in woods, Tetranthera +nuda, Taxus, Gaultheria flexuosa nummularifolia, Vaccinium cyaneum, +Lomaria, Lonicera villosa, paper plant, Thibaudia orbicularis, Hedera.</p> +<p>At 7,800 feet, towards open barren hills, Indigofera canescens, Q. +robur, Spiræa decomposita, Anthistiria minor, Composita penduliflora, +Alnus of Beesa, Juncus effusus, Viburnum cærulescens, Xyris, Scripus +fuscescens of Tassangsee, Gaultheria arborea and fruticosa, Polygonum +rheoides, Smilax auriculata, Saccharum aristata, Lobelia pyramidalis, +Stauntonia latifolia, Salix lanata, Deutzia.</p> +<p>At 7,500 feet, Quercus tomentosa commences, between this and Tongsa, +Berberis asiatica is very common, Rosa sp., quarta, Cyaneum dycopod. +of Surureem, Ilex dipyrena, Tuipus, Kysoor of Churra, Apple, Gleichenia +major, Rubus deltoideus. In wheat fields, 7,500 feet, Crucifera, +Thlaspa, Lamium, Ervum, are found, Vaccinium cyaneum continues to 7,000 +feet, this Mespilus microphylla, Berberis asiatica, Cycnium, Lycopod. +of Surureem, Ilex, Daphne papyriferæ, are the only elevational +plants found between 8 and 9,000 feet, and which continue low down. +All the others ceased with the jungles.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>13th</i>.—<i>Tongsa</i>: this, although the +second place in the kingdom, is a poor wretched village, the houses, +always excepting the palace, are poorer than ordinary, abounding in +rats, fleas, and other detestable vermin. Our reception would +seem to be uncordial: we are miserably housed in the heart of the village, +which is a beggarly one. On descending the hill some people in +the Pillo’s house behaved very insolently, roaring out, and making +most insolent signs for me to dismount, of which of course I took no +notice: sparrow-hawk was seen at 8,000 feet. There is but little +cultivation, indeed the adjoining hills are barren in the extreme. +The little cultivation there is of barley, which is now in the ear, +and decent enough; the crops being much better than any we have yet +seen, although in many fields it is difficult to see any crop at all. +The village, including the houses on the surrounding adjoining heights +does not contain thirty houses. There is one flock of sheep, which +are in good condition, some small shawl-goats, and a few cattle, but +of a lighter breed than the Mithans, from which they are very distinct, +and which we have scarcely seen since crossing Dhonglaila, the first +high ridge. There is some rice cultivation along the nullah or +torrent, on which the village is situated. Pears, peaches likewise +occur, and are now both in flower. The hills around are bare, +nothing but shrubby vegetation being visible, the tree-jungle not descending +below 7,500 feet, except on one spur to the south-west, on which it +reaches nearly to our present level.</p> +<p>The shrubby vegetation consists of Hamamelidæ, Salix, Gaultheria +fruticosa, Rosa, Rubus, Pomacea, Elæagnus, Berberis asiatica, +among which Artemisia major occurs on sward. Primula Stuartii, +Potentilla and P. supina, Oxalis acetoseltoides, Juncus, Bartramia, +Polytrichum glaucum, Fragaria vesca. In the fields Lamium, Crucifera, +Thlaspi, Gnaphalium aureum, Prenanthoid, Fragaria indica, Viola, Ranunculus, +Oxalis acetosella, Poa annua.</p> +<p>Urtica urens, and urentior occur about the houses, Cupressus pendula +and a Magnoliaceous tree, with exquisitely fragrant blossoms.</p> +<p>The palace is a huge, long, straggling piece of patch-work, of ordinary +construction, and less imposing than that of Byagur, which the Pillo +makes his summer residence on the Bhoomlungtung; it is however ornamented +with three gilt umbrellas. It is situated on the bank of the nullah, +and defended by some outworks, 6 to 700 feet above it; to the east, +these might, from their situation, be easily demolished by stones. +The palace itself is commanded in every direction, particularly by the +hill, along which we came from Jaisa; indeed a person might jump from +the summit of this on to the outpost, and thence on to the palace; so +precipitous is the descent.</p> +<p>The people, above all those hitherto seen, are dirty in their persons, +uniting curiosity with no small share of obstinacy and impertinence +in their manners. The birds are the blackbird, a black mina, the +house-sparrow, sparrow-hawk, larger crow, domestic pigeons, kites, and +hoopoo. The red-legged crows I have heard once, but far above, +nor do I think that they ever visit this. The productions being +essentially different from those of the elevated valleys we have lately +quitted. Can those valleys be the <i>steps</i> to the table-land +of Thibet to which they must be near, and which is reached sooner in +that direction than any other? The idea of the high valleys in +question being steps to table-land is perhaps corroborated by the fact, +that the table-land is said to be within two days’ journey from +Byagur.</p> +<p>Our interview with the Pillo took place on the 15th, it was conducted +with some state, and with some impertinence. The latter was indicated +by delaying us at the door of the audience room, the former by the attendance +of more numerous and better dressed attendants than usual. Two +Pillos were present. The incense as usual was burning, and the +Pillos, both old and new, were seated before some large Chinese-looking +figures. The only novel ceremony was the praying over a mess of +something which I imagine was meant for tea; in the prayer all joined, +when finished the beverage was handed to the Pillos, who, however, were +contented with merely tasting it. Before this some was strewn +on the floor in front, and some to the right of the chieftains. +The castle was in places crowded with people, no less than 5 to 600, +but all were as dirty as usual. None but the immediate attendants +appeared armed. The new Pillo is a dark low-looking man, with +an incipient goitre, the old one a more decent aristocratic looking +person, good-looking and very fair. The presents were of course +beggarly, consisting of indifferent oranges, wretched plantains, sugarcane +of still worse quality, and ghee of an abominable odour.</p> +<p>March 17th.—We still remain here, and do not expect to leave +for two or three days. The weather is unsettled, and the sun increasing +in power daily. The new Soobahs left to-day for their appointments, +with the exception of the Dewangur one. Pigs are here fed on boiled +nettle leaves: old ladies may be seen occasionally busily employed in +picking the leaves for this purpose, and which they do by means of bamboo +pincers or tweezers. A few plantains may be met with here, but +in a wretched state. Rice may be seen 500 feet above this, on +the north of the castle, the slope of a hill being appropriated to its +cultivation; the terraces above, owing to the inclination, are very +narrow, and from the paucity of straw, the crops must, I should infer, +be very poor.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>22nd</i>.—To-day we took our leave of the Pillo, +who received us in a room to the south of the castle. He was friendly +enough, but begged for presents unconscionably. He was surrounded +by a considerable number of more mean-looking persons than ordinary. +On the previous meeting he talked openly of being at enmity with the +present Deb Rajah, but on this occasion he said little on the subject.</p> +<p>The castle is an ill-built, and worse arranged building, the windows +and loopholes being so placed as to afford every facility for shooting +into the air. In a court-yard, several tiger skins brought from +the plains, are suspended.</p> +<p>It now appears that this Pillo, who said previously that the new +Deb was never installed, is himself an usurper, previously handing the +old Deb from the throne. This latter personage appears to be by +far the more popular of the two. The Pillo must now have great +influence, as all the posts in his division, are either held by his +own sons, or by his more influential servants. The sons by the +bye are, so long as they remain in the presence, treated like ordinary +servants. Joongar is held by one of his sons, a lad of about eighteen, +of plain but pleasing appearance and of good manners. He visited +us yesterday, and his newly acquired rank sat easily on him. The +old Pillo no doubt owes his rank to his having been the father of the +lad chosen to be Dhurma Rajah, he is himself very evidently low-born +and low-bred, and compared with the former one, so poor a specimen, +that the greater popularity of the former is not to be wondered at. +From all we have heard, they are contemptible rulers, as they appear +to do nothing but intrigue for power among themselves. Changes +are hence excessively frequent, and were they attended with much bloodshed, +the country would be depopulated.</p> +<p>This evening we had ample proof that the Bhootea houses are not water-proof. +Heavy showers occurred with thunder and dense clouds from the south-west.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>23rd</i>.—We left Tongsa, proceeding through +the castle, and thence struck down to the river Mateesun. The +descent was very steep, and amounted to about 1,200 feet. The +river is crossed by an ordinary bridge, it is a large and violent stream +and contains fish, some of which, seen by Blake, were of large size. +Crossing this, we continued throughout the remainder of the march, gradually +rising along the ridges bounding the Tongsa river. We continued +rising until we reached our halting place, Taseeling. In one or +two places, the road was completely built up; ascending by zig-zags +up, in some degree, perpendicular cliffs. The distance was seven +miles.</p> +<p>Proceeding to the bridge, observed Rubus deltoideus, Pomacea, Quercus +tomentosa, Artemisia major, Cycnium, Gaultheria arborea and fruticosa, +Buddlæa, Quercus altera, Indigofera cana, Gaylussacia serratoides, +Hedera, Thibaudia myrtifolia, Pomacea sauraugifolia, Viburnum cærulescens, +Quercus robur budding, Pterogonium, Fragaria, Duchesnia.</p> +<p>The remaining hills were much similar, generally very bare, clothed +with partial woods of Q. tomentosa, Rhododendron minus; the oak changing +to Q. robur, as we increased our elevation. Near the bridge noticed +Bucklandia, Erythrina, which is likewise found at Tongsa, Mæsa +salicifolia, Urena lobata, Cnicus, Mimosea! Arbuscula inermis, Senecio +scandens in flower, Araliacea subscandens, Didymocarp. contort., a Solenia, +Betuloideus, Panax curcifolia, Alnus, Arundo, Anthistiria arundinacea, +Cerasus, Tricerta unisexualis, at 6,000 feet.</p> +<p>At about the same elevation Rhododendron minus becomes common, Primula +Stuartii, Dipsacus, Verbenacea exostemma, Scleria, Valeriana, Tradescantia +on rocks, with Saxifraga ligularia in full flower at 6,500 feet.</p> +<p>About this, 6,500 to 6,800 feet, Spiræa decomposita, Hamamelidea +here a tree, occasionally but small, Erythroxyloides, Conyza nivea and +communis, Gleichenia major, Parochetus communis on wet dripping rocks, +Woodwardia, Clematis ternata.</p> +<p>At 7,000 feet, Berberis asiatica, Q. tomentosa ceased, its place +being supplied by Q. robur, Verbascum, Juncus, Gaultheria nummularioid, +Mespilus microphyllus, Scirpus fuscus of Tassangsee, Thibaudia gaultherifolia, +Rubia cordifolia, Azalea, and Daphne capitulis pendulis, Ranunculus +uniflorus, Hydroctyle.</p> +<p>Taseeling is situated about 2,000 feet above the Mateesun, on a nakedish +hill; about it there is some cultivation, and one or two villages, one +towards Tongsa and above Taseeling of some size. The place itself +consists of a large house, with some fine specimens of Cypressus pendula, +the east face of the house has the red stripe, indicative of rank. +Its elevation is about 7,300 feet, close to the house I observed the +Lamium of Bulphai, Bursa pastoris, Oxalis corniculata, Cnicus out of +flower, Artemisia major, Fragaria vesca, Daphne pendula and papyracea, +Hemiphragma, Composita pendulifolia, Lycopod. of Surureem, Hypericum, +Berberis asiatica, Juniperus; Barley cultivation, and a Pomaceous arbuscula, +armat. ovar. 5-discretis. The red-legged crow occurs here, and +a thrush much resembling our English one. The raven of course +occurs. A curious opening occurs in the hills at Taseeling, affording +a prospect of the Bag Dooar plains, seven days’ journey distant, +but the road is bad.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>24th</i>.—Leaving Taseeling we commenced to +ascend until we rounded a ridge, when we turned to the west, we then +commenced to descend, but slightly, winding over undulated surfaces +of barrenish hills. After some time we reached heavy tree jungle, +the road proceeding in the same undulating manner, so that it was impossible +to say whether we had risen or descended. About one we came on +the river, up the ravine of which we had been advancing ever since turning +to the west. This stream is of some size, very violent and rapid, +but fordable. Near this is a large pagoda, built after the old +Boodhistical style, and the only respectable one we have yet seen, its +site is pretty, and it is ornamented above with eyes and a fiery-red +nose. Leaving this we ascended along one bank of the river, until +we reached Chindupjee, our halting place; this was distant from the +pagoda three miles, and from Taseeling twelve. This latter part +reminded me of Bhoomlungtung; firs being the prevailing trees, and the +valley having more pretensions to the name than usually happens.</p> +<p>We encamped in a beautiful spot, the house being situated on fine +sloping sward, surrounded by picturesque trees of Q. ilecifolia, a few +tall Cypressus standing up in the centre. The village is a few +feet above, and of average size, although it looks from a little distance +to be of considerable size. The march throughout was beautiful, +especially after entering the wooded tract; this reminded me of the +march near Khegumpa, the woods were here and there very picturesque, +glades and swards abounding, water was very abundant here, and this +no doubt causes the development of so much vegetation.</p> +<p>At 7,800 feet, Thibaudiaceæ very common, Rhododendron two species, +Gaultheria flexuosoides, Thibaudia obovata, Caudata myrtifolia, Hydrangea, +which I find to be a climber, Rhododendron majus, commencing, pine wood; +chatterers heard here. Hills naked or covered here and there with +stunted wood; marshy places common.</p> +<p>At 7,600 feet, Lomaria of Khegumpa, Tetranthera nuda, Sphæropteris, +pear and apple, Q. tomentosa, Magnolia grandiflora begins, Polygonum +rheoides, Daphne pendula, which is used, as well as the other, both +here and in Nepal in the manufacture of paper: brick-red black-pate.</p> +<p>At this same elevation farther on, Rosa hispida! Gillenia, Juncus, +Rhododendron deflexa, Smilax gaultherifolia, Spiræa bella, Dipsacus, +Spiræa decomposita, Ilex, Vaccinium cyaneum, Magnolia grandiflora +very common. The country now becomes more wooded, the woods being +confined to moist ravines, and in other situations where water is very +plentiful, the woods throughout become continuous, and forming the large +forests before mentioned: having the open spaces between the woods covered +with sward, on which Gentiana pygmæa, and Fragaria are very common.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p272.jpg"> +<img alt="Chindupjee" src="images/p272.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>As we approached the wood or forest, Pinus cedroides commenced, and +towards the valley of Chindupjee this species became very common, Rumex +occurred throughout in wet places, also at Taseeling. Geranium +is common also in wet places, Stauntonia latifolia, Potentilla, Duchesnoides, +Tussilago of Churra, on the confines of wood and on it. Here the +orange breasted trochilus occurred. The mass of the wood is formed +of a fine Quercus, resembling Q. glauca, it is a beautiful and a shady +tree. Next to it in abundance is Rhododendron majus, now in full +flower, and forming a beautiful object, Rhododendron minus ceases with +the barrener tracts. Magnolia is very conspicuous; Pinus cedroides +common towards the pagoda; Eurya not rare, Gaultheria nummulifolia continues +throughout, Valeriana violifolia, Oxalis acetoselloides, Bryum, Butia +purpurea, Sambucus, Saxifraga of Bulphai, and another species, Bambusa +microphylla, Swertia, Luzula, Thibaudia orbicularis, Primula Stuartii, +occurred between the commencement of the ascent and the pagoda; at between +7,300 to 7,600 feet, Magnolia odoratis.</p> +<p>At the pagoda and village, Pinus cedroides, P. pendula, Bambusa of +Sanah, Mespilus microphyllus, Magnolia grandiflora, Berberis asiatica, +Q. anthoxylia, Coriaria, Rosa altera of Bhoomlungtung, Elæagnus, +Salix and Allium of Bulphai, occur.</p> +<p>Chindupjee is situated on a rivulet close to the confluence, with +a larger stream. Around it, or at least between the village and +the larger stream, picturesque patches of sward bordered with a very +picturesque oak. Q. ilecifolia occur; this tree predominates all +about the village, it is certainly the prettiest place we have yet seen.</p> +<p>Some cultivation occurs around, chiefly of barley, with a little +portion of radishes. The valley is surrounded by comparatively +low mountains, most of which are rather bare, many are transversely +furrowed on the surface, this may arise from their having been at some +former period under cultivation.—The prevailing trees on the surrounding +heights are firs, Pinus pendula and cedroides. No fish are to +be seen in the river. The birds are the raven, white-necked starling, +<i>bullfinch</i>, crimson and yellow shrikelets, blue tomtits, lesser +ditto with two stripes on the head, white-rumped waterchat, red-tailed +chesnuty sparrow.</p> +<p>The plants are Q. ilecifolia, Magnolia grandiflora, Laurinea, Hamamelidioides, +Castanea aromatica, Pinus cedroides and pendula, Bambusa microphylla, +and B. of Sanah which may be a variety depending on its marshy sites, +Rhododendron minus, Salix, Mespilus microphyllus, Gaultheria nummularoides, +Elæagnus, Marchantia, Swertia, Rumex, Daphne papyracea, Dipsacus, +Artemisia major, Berberis asiatica, Rosa hispida, Rubus cæsius, +Stauntonia latifolia, Tofieldioid of Sanah and Pemee, Taxus, Mespilus +microphyllus, Ilex dipyrena, Oxalis acetoselloid, Thymus, Lycopodium +of Surureem, Juniperus.</p> +<p>Bamboos split and inverted, and then placed in the ground, are used +to scare away beasts from the cornfields.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>26th</i>.—Left at seven and a half and proceeded +along the river which runs by Chindupjee, the path running over the +spurs of the hills, forming its right bank. After proceeding about +four miles, we crossed the nullah, changing our direction, and proceeding +up a tributary, until we reached a prettily situated, and rather large +village, thence we commenced to ascend over naked slopes with intervening +woods, until we reached the base of the chief ascent, which is not very +steep, although of good length, chiefly over naked hills. On reaching +the summit, which is about 10,000 feet high, we commenced to descend, +and the descent continued uninterruptedly and steeply until we reached +Rydang, where we halted.</p> +<p>We passed only one village, which is about five miles from Chindupjee, +and of similar size; but we passed in the more elevated places two temporary +ones, apparently intended for the residence of the herdsmen of yâks +or chowry-tailed cows, as a herd of these animals was seen feeding near +each place.</p> +<p>The march throughout was beautiful, in the more elevated and drier +portions, winding over swardy slopes or through woods of fir trees: +on the descent from 9,000 feet downwards, passing through beautiful +forests, chiefly of oak, and diversified in every possible way. +The long-tailed pie was met with in the first portion, about 7,800 feet, +the speckled chatterers at 8,500 feet, red shrikelet at 7,800 feet, +and a new hawk at 8,300 feet. I observed the water-ouzel again +as high as 8,000 feet. The new plants were a Carex, 6,500 feet, +a sileneous plant past flowering, from the <i>same</i> limestone formation.</p> +<p>At 7,800 feet, and not far from Chindupjee, Pinus spinulosa again +re-appears, it becomes common towards the village alluded to, and continues +throughout the ascent, up to 9,300 feet, P. cedroides was uncommon during +the first part of the march, its place being occupied by P. spinulosa, +afterwards it re-appeared, and continued abundant up to 9,300 feet, +it re-appeared on the descent about the same elevation, and continued +to about 8,000 feet. Abies densa commences at the base of the +chief ascent: at 10,000 feet, it is the only fir to be seen, it descends +but a short way on the Rydang side. In the higher portions it +occurred mixed with a Juniper, which in proper places becomes a small +but elegant tree.</p> +<p>At the village on 7,000 feet, observed Rosa hispida, Ligustram of +Jaisa, Philadelphus, Pinus spinulosa common, as also Pinus cedroides, +Bambusa of Sanah very common. Near this, larks were heard soaring +high above us.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, Pendulous lichens becoming plentiful, Lonicera villosa.</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet, Abies densa appears, Acer sterculium, Betula, Bogh +Pata, Rhododendron fruticosa, foliis ellipticis basi cordatis.</p> +<p>At 9,300 feet, Abies densa common, P. cedroides rare, spinulosa 0, +pendula 0, Rosa hispida, Gaultheria nummularioid, which as usual continued +throughout, Hypnum scolopendroid, Sphagnum, Bogh Pata very common, Rhododendron +foliis ellipticis basi cordatis subtus argenteis, which I found on the +descent as low as 8,000 feet.</p> +<p>At 9,500 feet, Bogh Pata very common, trees covered with Pendulous +lichens, Bambusa of Sanah, Abies densa everywhere.</p> +<p>At 10,000 feet, Abies densa, Juniperus, Rhododendron obovata, foliis +subtus argenteis; I am not sure whether this is a variety or not, but +it indicates greater elevation than the ferruginous one, Rhododendron +gemmis, viscosis, foliis lanceolatis, supra venosis subtus subargenteis +very common, Gnaphalium, Mespilus microphyllus, Rosa hispida, Swertia, +Berberis spathulata, Orthotuck, Cerastum inflatum, Hemiphragma, Bogh +Pata, Primula globifera, Pedicularis, Dicranum nigrescens, etc. Limonia, +Laureah.</p> +<p>Daphne papyraceæ occurs at the same elevation, chiefly on the +side of the descent. From this place an opening is visible to +the north west, occupied by low hills. Juniperus very fine occurs, +Compositæ abundant. Snow lies in the hollows and sheltered +woods.</p> +<p>At 9,600 feet, Lonicera villosa, Rosa microphylla, Buddlæa +purpurescens! Berberis spathulata, Spiræa belloides, Hydrangea! +Rhododendron foliis lanceolatis, etc. as above, forming thick woods, +Abies densa, Bogh Pata, Bambusa, Limonia lanceolata.</p> +<p>At 9,400 feet, Prunella, Cerastium inflatum, Labiata spicata, Baptisia! +High ground 14 to 15,000 feet, is seen forming a lofty heavily snowed +ridge to the north.</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet, Pinus cedroides re-appears, Bogh Pata, Rhododendron +as before, Daphne papyraceæ, Thibaudia orbicularis, Limonia lanceolata, +Dalibarda, Polygonum rheum!</p> +<p>At 8,800 feet, Rhododendron hispida, Abies densa ceased, Limonia +lanceolata common, Lonicera villosa, Rebus triphyllus, Acer! Taxus! +Primula Stuartii! Rubia cordifolia!!</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, Chimaphila, Rhododendron obovata-ferrugina! Pinus +cedroides, here and there, of immense size, diameter of one-six feet, +Lycopodium of Surureem, Bogh Pata, Gaultheria flexuosa, Q. ilecifolia, +also a very large and tall tree.</p> +<p>At 8,400 feet, Taxus very common, Smilax gaultherifolia, Olea, Sarcococea +very common, Thibaudia orbicularis, Laurinea, Hamameloides. Beautiful +glades here occurred, trees covered with mosses: another fine oak, Q. +castaneoides commences, Daphne papyraceæ very common, Composita +penduliflora, Hemiphragma, Rhododendron elliptica, foliis basi, cordatis +subtus punctatis, Ilex! Berberis intermedia, Laurinea uniflora, large +Umbellifera of Rodoole descent.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Acer, Primula Stuartii, Rhododendron majus! R. argentea +commences.</p> +<p>At 7,500 feet, Cedar ceased, Rhododendron majus very common, Taxus +diminishing, Sphæropteris, Ericinia soloræfolia, Lomaria +of Khegumpa, Thibaudia orbicularis ceases.</p> +<p>At 7,300 feet, Berberis pinnata, Spiræa bella, Cycnium, apple +tree. Here we emerged on open space in front of a hill, on which +several detached houses stood, around which Pinus pendula was very common. +Barley cultivation. Several small villages visible around, and +to the north, in front of the snowy ridge, a curious truncated mountain +was seen, its apex covered with snow.</p> +<p>Magnolia! Conaria! Cycnium, Viburnum canescens! Gaultheria arborea, +Berberis intermedia very common, Fragaria.</p> +<p>At 7,200 feet, Q. tomentosa! the others have ceased, Gaultheria fruticosa, +Rhododendron arborea, minus and argentea, in fine flower, Eurya æcuminata, +Smilax, Gaultherifolia, Thibaudia caudata, Q. robur, Gleichenia major, +Salix as before, Artemisia major, Rumex, Valeriana violifolia, Rosa, +Berberis asiatica, Ervicia crucifera, Thlaspi, Callitriche, Calamus.</p> +<p>The curious features are, the absence of Thibaudia obovata on the +descent, and of Mespilus microphyllus, the substitution of Thibaudia +orbicularis, and its low descent, the abundance of Taxus, size of the +cedar and Q. ilecifolia, the re-appearance at same elevation of Magnolia +grandiflora, occurrence of Rubia cordifolia, at such an elevation, etc.</p> +<p><i>Rydang</i> is prettily situated towards the bottom of a rather +narrow valley. There is a good deal of barley cultivation about +it. I also noticed Cycnium, Celopecurus, Acorus Calamus, Corydalis! +Fragaria, Cardamina, Rosa, Berberis, Ilex, Plantago, Rumex, Viola, Artemisia +major, Daphne papyraceæ, Gentiana pygmæa of Khegumpa, Houttuynia! +Pomacea, Callitriche, Dipsacus, Berberis pinnata, Elæagnus, Q. +robur, ilecifolia. Of birds the long-tailed pie! is common. +Berberis asiatica, Viburnum, Caneun, apple, Quercus microcarpus, Orthodon, +Pteris aquilina, Ophiopogon, Angustis, Valeriana violifolia, Urtica +urentium, Stellaria media, Eurya acuminata, Betula.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>27th</i>.—Our march commenced with a steep +descent to the Gnee, a river of average size. We then continued +descending along it for some time, crossing it once on our way: we then +diverged up a small nullah, and then commenced a very steep ascent, +of about 2,000 feet. After attaining this, we proceeded through +woods, or over sward at about the same elevation, still continuing along +the Gnee. We subsequently commenced to descend at first through +fine oak woods, then over barren naked hills. We reached Santagoung, +about three and a half miles distance in a direct line, but fourteen +miles by the road, highest point traversed 8,000 feet; lowest reached +6,000.</p> +<p>During first part of descent, noticed one or two straggling cedars +and Taxus, Primula Stuartii, the woods were formed by Quercus robur, +tomentosa, Gaultheria arborea, Rhododendron minus, Scabiosa reappears, +Clematis nova species, Sambucus, Rubus cresius, Composita pendulifolia, +etc. as at Rydang.</p> +<p>Along the Gnee, the beech became plentiful, as also two Viburnums, +both trees, together with the Cupulifera of Tongsa was here common and +in fine foliage. Juglans, Incerta of Boodoo, Gaultheria, Mimosa +arborea, Cupressus pendula, Conaria, Berberis racemosa and pinnata, +Quercus microcarpus, Woodwardia, Thibaudia myrtifolia, Marlea! Cucurbitaceæ +menispermoides, Alnus of Beesa, Polygonium rheoides, Mespilus microphyllus! +Gentiana pygmæa, Salix, Pyrus. The birds were the usual +water birds, viz. ouzel, slaty-white rump, slaty-red tail, white-pated +chat.</p> +<p>On the smaller nullah Bucklandia, Viburnum microphyllum, Bucklandia!</p> +<p>The ascent was at first through dry woods of Rhododendron minus, +Q. tomentosa, Gaultheria arborea, a Taxus or two occurred at 7,000 feet, +Indigofera cana, Rosa, Gaultheria fruticosa of Sanah aristatum.</p> +<p>At 7,000 feet, the same vegetation continued, Rhododendron minus +very common, Pendulous lichens commencing.</p> +<p>At this elevation, in more moist spots, woods thick, differently +constituted, Quercus glauescense, Castaneoides ilecifolia, here and +there Rhododendron majus, Magnolia grandiflora.</p> +<p>Gaultheria flexuosa, Pinus cedroides rare, Vaccinium cyaneum, Rosa +hispida! Saxifraga! Thibaudia orbicularis and caudata, Mespilus microphyllus, +Azalea, Ilex, Symplocos, Tussalago of Churra, Acer, Thibaudia obovata, +Pendulous mosses abundant.</p> +<p>The remainder of the vegetation afforded little of interest; consisted +of stunted oaks, Q. tomentosa, Gaultheria arborea, Rhododendron minus: +Serissoides reappears near Santagoung, Pinus longifolia, plantains.</p> +<p>The valley to the left towards Santagoung is on the left side well +populated and cultivated.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>28th</i>.—Santagoung, a small village 6,300 +feet above the sea, situated on bare hills, between two loftier ridges. +Country around well inhabited and well cultivated in the terrace style: +villages numerous. Pinus longifolia, Rosa, Azalea, etc. occur +here as before. A lake or jheel was observed 500 feet below the +village, of some extent, formed in a natural hollow, abounding with +Scirpus trigueter of Churra, and Hydropeltis. Water-fowl, snipe, +and red pie-like peewit or plover.</p> +<p>The march commenced with a steep descent, which continued until we +reached the river.</p> +<p>Crossing this we ascended 1,000 feet, and then proceeded in an undulating +manner over naked hills until we reached Thain, distance six miles; +the greatest descent was about 1,800 feet, ascent 1,000 feet; the country +naked; no forest. The hills for some extent towards Thain appeared +from some cause very red.</p> +<p>But little interesting vegetation occurred: noticed a huge Cypressus +pendula, half-way to the Gnee. Vegetation otherwise much the same +as towards Tassgong, Valeriana violifolia, Azalea, Campanula linearis, +Rubus deltoides, Aspidium macroser., Artemisia major, Pinus longifolia +straggling, only plentiful near Thain, Anthistiria minor! Primula Stuartii, +Mimulus, Gentiana pumila, Alnus, Flemingia secunda, Morus rubeseoides, +Salix, Quercus, Viburnum microphyllum.</p> +<p>At the river Cæsalpinia! Ficus obliqua! Desmodium, Salix, Indigofera +cana, Arundo, Luculia.</p> +<p>On the ascent Holcus, Elæagnus, Santalacea, Clematis cana, +Senecionoides, Conyza vulgaris, Emblica, Schænanthus, Phyllanthus +ruber, Q. tomentosa, Desmodium vestilum, Briedleia obovata! Nerium canum, +Euphorbia antiquorum, Jasminum of Benka, Ligustrum conaria, Mesp. microphyllus +(are these two species confounded by me, as the larger-leaved one never +descends so low?), Lerissoides, Osbeckia linearis, Euphorbia, Gordonia, +Gymnobotrys. Red-legged crow; in descent altitude 5,800 feet, +the most common plant is a species of Berberis very nearly allied to +B. asiatica. Rain in the afternoon.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>29th</i>.—Mimulus, Acorus Calamus, Quercus +robur, Rhododendron minus, P. longifolia, Gymnobotrys, Campanula linearifolia, +Rosa tetrapetala, Gordonia, Salix, Verbena officinalis, majus, rugus, +Lemna, Gentiana, Hypericum japonica, Indigofera cana, Schænanthus, +Senecio, Buddlea of Nulka, Pyrus, wheat, Ervum, Vicia, Potentilla, Q. +tomentosa, Cypressus, Ficus, Berberis, Phyllanthus ruber.</p> +<p>Blackbird, sparrow-hawk, and Hoopoe about houses; it has a curious +hoop, varied with a grating chirp.</p> +<p>The blackbird frequents houses here; its voice is very discordant +and singular, sparrow-hawks were seen to pursue wounded pigeons. +Houses few, built of unbaked and large bricks or rather cakes of mud. +The village of Wandipore is visible to the south-west, about one and +a half mile. Snow on ridges to west, all which are lofty. +The country around Wandipore is tolerably populous, though not so much +so as about Santagoung.</p> +<p>We were compelled to halt at Phain or Thain, until the 1st instant, +owing to the admirable management of the Bhooteas. It appeared +at first as if the Zoompoor or Governor of Wandipore was determined +that we should not be gainers in time by not going through his castle, +but subsequently it turned out that the Deb had, with infinite consideration, +wished us to remain in order to rest ourselves after our long journey. +This may have been merely said to shelter the Wandipore man, who had +the impudence to send one evening to us saying, that the Deb and Durmah +were coming to Wandipore next morning, and that we were to meet them +there, and return the same evening to Punukha. This turned out +untrue. Pemberton was at last compelled to write to the Deb, and +the consequence was the arrangement for our advance next morning.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>1st</i>.—The march to Punukha extended over +a most barren dried-up country, the features presented were the same +as those about Phain. We proceeded at first in the direction of +Wandipore, then diverged, proceeding downwards in the direction of the +villages. The remainder of our journey extended either just above +the base of the hills, or along the valley: the distance was nine miles. +The march was an uninteresting one; the only pretty part being the river +that drains the valley, and it is one of considerable size, fordable +in but few places; the rapids are frequent, but the intermediate parts +flow gently. We were all dreadfully disappointed in the capital, +the castle even is by no means so imposing as that of Tongsa or Byagur; +the city miserable, consisting of a few mean houses, and about as many +ruined ones.</p> +<p>The surrounding cultivation is chiefly poor wheat; the hills the +most barren conceivable. On arriving near the palace we made a +detour, to avoid exposure to the usual regal insolence: our plan was +effectual. From some distance I had espied our quarters, and although +our mission is one sent by the most powerful eastern government, yet +we had allotted to us a residence fit only for hogs.</p> +<p>It consisted of a court-yard, surrounded by walls, and what had evidently +been stabling; the apartments were numerous, but excessively small, +the roof of single mats. The place swarmed with vermin. +In this we determined not to stay, and so proceeded to the city, (for +sure there cannot be a capital without a city,) and there, after some +delay, procured two houses, in one of which the present Tongso Pillo +had lodged before his present exaltation. But imagine not that +it was a palace. The two houses together furnished three habitable +rooms.</p> +<p>I imagine not that the houses were procured for us by the local government. +We only obtained them by Pemberton’s liberality was well known. +The Sepoys’ lines were transported hither not by Bhooteas but +by our own people. In addition the people are in many cases insolent, +and it was only after a peremptory message to the Deb, stating what +the consequences would be of such a system of annoyance, that we got +any assistance.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>3rd</i>.—We have heard nothing of the Mutaguat. +It appears that the country is unsettled now. The old Deb having +possession of Tassisudon, and the people here declaring they will stop +all supplies if the Deb does not, according to custom, repair at the +usual period to Tassisudon. A Deewan here, who has held office +under four Rajahs, says, that the present truce is owing to the hot +weather; Bhooteas only admire fighting in the cold season, in conformation +of which, he says that in the cold season the contest will be renewed. +There will then be an additional bone of contention for the present. +Nor should I much wonder if the Paro Pillo then comes forward and takes +the Debship and all away. The Deewan’s account of the past +fighting, places the Bhooteas in a most contemptible light: it appears +that when they fire a gun, they take no aim, their only aim being to +place their bodies as far as possible from the weapon; the deadly discharge +is followed up by the deadlier discharge of a stone. At plunder +they are more adroit.</p> +<p>The following plants may be found about this place; Ligustrum, Salex +pendula, Valeriana orolifolia, Campanula linearis, senecionideæ, +Viola, Jasminum, Rosea, Conaria, mangoe one tree in the gardens, Citrus +two or three species in ditto, Jubrung, Diospyros, Acorus, Veronica, +Ranunculus, Sclerossophalos, Alopecercus, Agrostides, Bombax, stunted +weeping cypress, Pinus longifolia, Punica, Dipsacus, Potentilla, Potamogeton +2, Hypericum japonica, Lysimachia, Chenopod, Ajuga, Anisomales.</p> +<p>Birds—great kingfisher, diver snappet, white-pated rumped chats, +no ouzels. Part of the gardens extend from the palace up the river +to the village; the breadth is fifty to seventy yards, the length 200. +They are surrounded by a dilapidated stone fence. Although an +Assam malee or gardener resides in them, they are kept in miserable +order: the soil seems good, the trees flourishing, mangoe, Diospyros, +Jubrung, oranges, citrons, pomegranates, are the principal trees. +The south side has a streamlet running along it outside the fence, for +the supply of water. This streamlet abounds with Acorus Calamus.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>9th</i>.—Our interview with the Deb took place. +We dismounted at the boards over the streamlets above mentioned, and +then proceeded over the wooden bridge across the Patcheen, which is +here a wide and deep stream: the bridge was partially lined with guards, +in different dresses, few in uniform; it was besides armed with shoulder +wall-pieces, capital things for demolishing friends. We then crossed +a sort of court-yard and then ascended a steep and extraordinarily bad +flight of steps to the door of the palace. Here we found the household +troops all dressed in scarlet with two door-keepers, one seated on either +side of the door: this led us into a quadrangle. The citadel being +in front, the side walls were rather low, although viewed externally +they appear of good height, but the ground of the interior is much raised. +We crossed this diagonally, passed into the opposite quadrangle on the +west side, and thence ascended into a gallery, hung with arms, and filled +with followers, from this we passed after a little delay into the Rajah’s +room.</p> +<p>This was handsomely decorated with scarfs, the pillars were variously +ornamented. The Rajah was seated on an elevated place in the corner, +and appeared a good-looking well-bred man. He received the Governor +General’s letter from P. with much respect, getting up from his +chair: the visit was a short one, and entirely of ceremony. The +presents were deposited on a raised bench in his front. Communications +were kept up by the Deewan and the Zimpay, formerly Joongar Zoompoor +or Governor. On retiring we were presented with fruits, oranges, +walnuts, horrid plantains, ghee, eggs and rice.</p> +<p>The whole business went off very well, no attempt at insolence. +The concourse of people was greater than I expected. Swarms of +Gylongs, the more curious of whom received whacks from leathern straps, +wielded by some magisterial brother.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>10th</i>.—Yesterday we saw the Dhurma, to whom +we had to ascend by several flight of steps, which are most break-neck +things, the steps overlapping in front, and being often lined with iron +on the part most subject to be worn. We found him in the south +room of the upper story of the citadel. We waived our right to +sitting in his presence as the question was put to us with respect and +delicacy. The Rajah is a good looking boy, of eight or ten years +old: he was seated in the centre, but in an obscure part of the room, +and was not surrounded by many immediate attendants. The balcony +was filled with scribes with handsome black, gilt, lettered books before +them. Two other scribes were likewise engaged on our right, noting +down what passed, but they seemed to be very bad writers. The +visit went off well. The room was tastily, but not so profusely +ornamented with scarfs as was the Deb’s.</p> +<p>On returning we found the household guard drawn up in front to prevent +our passing out without paying a fee. This matter was soon settled +forcibly, and the durwan, or door-keeper, lost by his impudence the +present he would otherwise have had from P., besides being in a great +fright lest the affair should be reported to the Rajah.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>11th</i>.—The rains appear to have set in: +the sky is constantly overcast, and showers are by no means unfrequent. +One of our dawks arrived opened: this no doubt took place in the palace, +although the Deb strenuously denies it. Messengers are to be sent +to Tassgoung, where the accident is said to have happened. The +cause of its having been opened, is no doubt the report that there was +a letter in it from the old Deb.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>14th</i>.—A violent squall unaccompanied by +rain, came on yesterday from the west: roofs were flying about in every +direction, and many accidents occurred from the falling of the stones +by which they were secured. Part of the palace was unroofed. +The storm has stopped all our amusements, particularly as the Gylongs +attribute it to our firing. The Kacharies, our servants, were +likewise requested not to play any more on the esplanade. This +is just as it has been in every other place in Bootan, nothing is said +against amusement until the presents have been received, and then we +are requested to do nothing, and the authorities become disobliging!</p> +<p>The potters fashion their earthenware entirely with their hands, +the upper half is finished on a flat board; the lower being added afterwards; +the finishing is done chiefly by a wet rag, the operator revolving around +the pot. The vessels chiefly used for carrying water are oval, +these are covered with black glaze.</p> +<p>Some Didymocarpi very fragrant, one near Chindupjee most grateful, +resembling quince and sandal wood; the odour is permanent, and appears +to reside in the young leaves before their expansion: Iris, Hypericum, +Viola, Ligust., Ranunculus, Verbasena, Gymnostomum, Serratula arenaria, +Veronica.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3> +<p><i>Return</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Mission</i> <i>from</i> <i>Bootan</i>.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>9th</i>, <i>1838</i>.—We left Punukha at twelve, +having been delayed throughout the morning, on account of coolies. +We crossed the palace precints, and the two bridges unmolested. +Our road lay in the direction of our entering Punukha for some time, +but on the opposite bank of the river. We gradually descended +throughout this portion. Then at about eight miles turning round +a ridge, we followed a ravine to the west, some distance above its base, +gradually descending to the watercourse draining it. Thence we +ascended in a very circuitous route to Talagoung, the castle of which +is in a ruinous state: it is visible from the place whence one turns +to the westward.</p> +<p>Up to this point, which was certainly 1,200 feet above Punukha, no +change occurred in the vegetation. The country remained barren, +the ravines in favourable places being clothed with underwood, and as +we increased our elevation, with trees. Noticed a Bupleurum, Viburnum +sp., Ficus obliqua.</p> +<p>At 3,500 feet, Sambucus, Bupleurum sp., Potentilla as before, Gentiana +pinnata, Serissoides, Campanula.</p> +<p>At 3,800 to 4,000 feet, Pinus longifolia more common though still +a stunted tree; Emblica, Pæderia cyaneum, Q. tomentosa, Primula +Stuartii, Parochetus, Pogonantherum, this is a most common grass about +here, it becomes more stunted as we proceed lower, and its extreme elevation +does not exceed 6,000 feet, Acorus very common, Adhatoda!</p> +<p>At 4,000 feet, Simool, Dipsacus as before, Aspidium, Macrodon, Rhododendron +minus re-appears.</p> +<p>On rounding the ridge, although we did not increase our elevation, +the country became more wooded. In some places Q. robur, Gordonia, +Pyrus were common, others and the greater portion were composed of Pinus +longifolia, Bucklandia re-appears at 4,500 feet, Azalea, Saccharum aristatum, +Hedera, Didymocarpus contortus, on rocks.</p> +<p>Towards the nullah we passed a village with some wheat and buckwheat +cultivation; Plantago, Ranunculus, Thymus, were interspersed. +Along the watercourse Symplocos styracifolius, which becomes a middling-sized +tree, was seen, and Stellaria cana, petalis albis profunda partitus, +as well as S. media.</p> +<p>Our section was as follows:</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m285.jpg"> +<img alt="Section Page 285" src="images/m285.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>Telagoung</i> is a middling-sized, dilapidated castle, in which +it is settled the first blood is to be shed in the forthcoming contest, +it is occupied by the old Deb’s men. Up to its walls, thickets +abound, and the fragrant rose was very conspicuous.</p> +<p>Its elevation is about 5,600 feet, yet a Ficus may be seen planted +by the side of Cupressus pendula, and Punica thrives. The change +in temperature was very great. Birds abounded throughout; a new +sombre-coloured dove was shot by P.: the most common birds were the +orange-billed shrike of towards Tumashoo.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>10th</i>.—We left Telagoung at 7 A.M. and descended +instantly to a small nullah, from which we re-ascended. The ascent +continued without intermission, occasionally gradually, but generally +rather steep for three or four hours. The descent occupied about +as long, and about three-fifths the distance, following nearly throughout +a small nullah. Woollakkoo, our halting place, is a good-sized +village, and fourteen and a half miles from Telagoung.</p> +<p>To the nullah I observed Stellaria cana, Berberis asiatica, which +has re-appeared, Erythrina, Rubus deltoid, which is very common all +over these parts and whose fruit is palatable, Uvularia, Swertia plantaginifolia, +Cæsalpinia, Mimulus, and Urtica foliis apice erosis.</p> +<p>The ascent commenced through woods of Q. robur, the shrubs consisting +of Gaultheria fragrans and arborea, a Myrsinea, Thibaudia serrata, whose +inferior limit is here, Rhododendron minus, but not very common. +A good deal of wheat cultivation and of better quality occurred at 6,500 +feet, assuming Telagoung as 5,600 feet, Pteris aquilina common throughout +and up to 10,000 feet.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Taxus re-appears, with Baptisia in flower, Thibaudia +orbicularis, Luzula of Chindupjee, Smilax gaultherifolia, Thibaudia +obovata, Fragaria vesca, which continues throughout, and has a range +of between 3 to 10,000 feet, Bambusa microphylla, and Acer sterculiacea +appear, woods of Q. ilecifolia, up to 7,200 feet, chiefly of Q. robur, +Gaultheriæ two common ones, occur commonly.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, the woods composed chiefly of Q. castaneoides and +glaucum, Q. ilecifolia less common. No Q. robur, path-like glades +and rather open, Pythonium ecaudata, up to 9,000 feet, Primula pulcherrima +very common.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, Saxifraga of Khegumpa and of Chindupjee, Mitella,! +Luzula, Carex, Viola reniformis, Lomaria of Khegumpa, Hedera, Ilex, +Mercurialis, grey lichens.</p> +<p>Taxus, Quercus, Rhododendron, another species foliis subtus ferrugineo-argenteis +floribus rosaceis.</p> +<p>Smilacina, Ophiopogon, Urtica carnosa decumbens, Limonia laureola, +Pythonium ecaudatum.</p> +<p>At the same elevation and indeed below us, but on other ridges, cedars +were seen in abundance: Hydrangea and Hydrangeacea calyptrata, Epilobium +sp. withered.</p> +<p>At 7,800 feet, Aristolochia novum genus, Tritium glaucum, Thlaspi, +Arabis cordata, Loranthus, Symplocos sessiliflora.</p> +<p>At 7,900 feet, Lardizabalea.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Hamiltonia?</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet, Crucifera floribus amplis albis, on mossy banks, with +Mitella, Spiræa densa.</p> +<p>Acer sterculiacea in forests, Cerasi sp. common.</p> +<p>Betula, Ribes, Arenaria, Lilium giganteum, Laurinea, Chimaphila, +Acer.</p> +<p>At 9,300 feet, Rhododendron hispida and rosaceum, Taxus, Pythonium +filiformia, Trillium album, Salvia of Royle, Rhododendron ferrugineo +and obovata, Smilacinia densiflora, Sarcococea, Daphne cannabinum, here +in flower, Anemone, Prunella, Hemiphragma, Cedar, but rare.</p> +<p>At 9,700 feet, Primula Stuartii in flower lower down, but here quite +past, Corydalis linetta, Viola, Juniperus, Viburnum floribus magnis +albis, Rhododendron deflexa, in flower. Acer: 1, vel. 2, Cerasi +sp. altera, Paris polyphylla, and from 7,000 feet, Iris foliis angustis, +Cerasus apetalus gathered below here a shrub, very common, Osmundia +alia, Berberis ilecifolia and integrifolia, Rosa microphylla, Spinis +latis, Baptisia, Corydalis altior floribus luteis, Aconiti sp., Papaveracea +succo aqueo, ferrugineo hispida, capsula siliquosa, 3-valvis, replis +totidem, stigmata radiata, 5-lobo. Prunella, Betula, Ranunculus +minimus, Carex, Mimulus! Sambucus of below, Salvia of Royle, Polytrichum +rubescens.</p> +<p>From the ridge the view to the south is pretty, the country undulated, +either naked and swardy, or clothed with firs.</p> +<p>Abies spinulosa commences: and is soon succeeded by Pinus pendula, +which, as we proceeded lower, soon became the chief tree; Rhododendron +obovata finely in flower, Lilium giganteum common. Trillium stratum, +Ribes lacineat.</p> +<p>Q. ilecifolia re-appears 500 or 600 feet below the ridge, Pinus spinulosa +common, with a Salix, grey pendulous lichens.</p> +<p>At 6,000 feet, P. pendula, Mespilus microphyllus, Larix, Rumex, which +has occurred throughout, Salvia alia viscosa foliis subhastatis trilobis, +Cycnia, Astragaloides! bracteis subvaginant magnis, Rosa latispina becomes +very common.</p> +<p>At 8,800 feet, Hedera, Hamiltonia re-appears, Galium sp., Juncus, +Oxlip, Clematis, Salix, very common.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, a village is seen to the right; Q. ilecifolia is the +chief tree, with P. pendula, Azalea, Baptisia, Pomacea of Rydang, Rhododendron +arbor. minus. Red-legged crow, pine chatterers.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Baptisia continues; all alpine vegetation ceased; +Rhododendron minus continues, Q. ilecifolia, but no Corydalis, Anemone, +Iris, etc. although Oxlip does; Salix continues.</p> +<p>The descent to the halting place is marked by return to the old vegetation +indicated by re-appearance of Elæagnus fragrans and Rosa tetrapetala, +Valeriana violifolia.</p> +<p>Baptisia rotundifolia and oblonga, this last a tree very common, +Pinus pendula chief tree, Pomacea celastufolia, Elæagnus fragrans, +Rosa tetrapetala, very common along the nullah, Baptisia continues low +down, as Oxlip, Stauntonia alba, Viburnum, <i>Asteroides</i>, Jasminum +luteum, Tussilago, Spiræa bella, found about the level of this.</p> +<p>All the monocotyledons have a defined elevation; Smilacina cordifolia +is the lowest, except Uvularia, Lilacineæ and Trillium, are the +highest, not being found much under 10,000 feet. There is an Osmundia +likewise on the ridge, the fronds below are not contracted, it is ferrugineo-tomentosa. +Hemiphragma has a wide range, between 6 and 10,000 feet: Salvia nubigena +of Royle, confined to 10,000 feet, Aconitum, Corydalis lutea, lenella +and cærulea, Prunus penduliflora, Papaveracea, Juniperus, Rhododendron +obovata, Silacinea, Cerasus apetala, Ribes 2, are sure signs of elevation.</p> +<p>If the Mimulus be the same as that from Punukha, it has a very wide +range, as also Lilium giganteum, Pythonium filiformeis, limited, as +well as ecaudata, Crucifera, Anemone, Laurinea, Polytrichium, were all +definite. Mitella ranges between 9 and 9,500 feet, it is strange +that the chief variety in vegetation occurred on the Telagoung side, +on which springs are rare. No Thibaudias occurred on the other +side, Euphorbia was confined to the Woollakkoo side, as also Primula, +etc. etc. The chief cultivation about Woollakkoo is of wheat, +but from the mode of cultivation the plant is evidently adapted for +irrigation; rice is also cultivated. This is perhaps its maximum +height. The hills around are covered here and there with snow, +and must therefore be above 10,000 feet high. The highest were +to the north-west.</p> +<p>The river is of moderate size, fordable in most places, but still +well supplied with wooden bridges. Fish, in shoals too, were seen +here and there.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>11th</i>.—Our march continued down this river +throughout: we left its banks once or twice owing to ascending some +hundred feet above its bed, occasionally it spread out, but generally +was confined between the rocks. Its banks in some places were +planted with weeping willows. The vegetation throughout was much +the same. The most common plants were Rosa, this literally abounds, +Pinus pendula, Viburnum grandiflora, a Symphoria! Cratægus 2 species, +Mespilus microphyllus, Lantonea, Jasminum luteum, Berberis asiatica +and obovata, Plectranthus canus, Elæagnus fragrans, Stellaria +cana, Colquhounia, <i>Indigofera</i> sp. altera, Baptisia did not re-appear, +Euphorbia continues, as does the Celastrus noticed yesterday, which +commences at 8,500 feet.</p> +<p>Cycnia re-appears, it is in fruit, the cotyledons are not conduplicate. +In the fields Stachys, Potentilla (common), Brumus, Lamium of Khegumpa, +Cynoglossum, Thlaspi, Datura in waste places, Conaria, rare, Imperata! +Scabiosa of Bulphai.</p> +<p>A low shrub abounded on the road sides and walls, having all the +characters of Plumbago, a Lantonea likewise abounded, Fragaria, Swertia, +Taraxacum, Cardamina lilacina, Herminu sp., Marchantia, Astragalus, +Ranunculus; Carex, Potentilla supina, Potamogeton, Clematis grata, Poplars +were seen; of these, Taraxacum very common. Quercus robur re-appears +towards Lamnoo, as well as Juglans and Populus.</p> +<p>Weeping cypresses about villages, Hordeum hexastichum is commonly +cultivated, A. Buddlæa floribus lilacinis noticed yesterday was +found, its range is 8,500 to 7,500 feet, Zanthoxyla here.</p> +<p>A cuckoo was shot; this bird would seem to be as in Europe attended +by the Yunx, at least a cry very similar to that of that bird was heard. +Lysimachia of Punukha, Campanula re-appears.</p> +<p>The most common bird is Lanuis. The sombre-coloured dove too +is rather common. The wheat cultivated here is poor, a good deal +of the Bromus occurs with it. Astragalus is common on the borders +of the fields, and in some of them Ervum, Lamium and Vicia.</p> +<p>The whole upper surface of the column of Aristolochia of Telagoung, +is viscid and stigmatic, and likewise the margins of the depressions +in which the anthers are lodged, it is certainly akin to Rafflesiaceæ.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>12th</i>.—Proceeded to Chupcha, our march to, +and indeed beyond Panga, seven miles from Lamnoo, was through exactly +similar country. The hills naked or clothed with firs, the path +lay along the river Teemboo chiefly, but occasionally we met with one +or two stiff ascents. On reaching Panga it was determined to push +on to Chupcha, which was said to be but a short way off; we started, +and descended after some time to the river, above which Panga is elevated +about 1,000 feet. We continued along the river until we commenced +to ascend towards Chupcha, this ascent was very long and rather steep, +the road tolerably good. We found Chupcha to be ten miles from +Panga, and 8,000 feet high, the greatest height we crossed being 8,600 +feet, and this day we were told, that all our climbings had ceased. +The road was generally bad, and well furnished with rocks: in one place +we passed from 100 yards along the perpendicular face of a cliff, the +Teemboo roaring underneath, the road was built up with slippery slabs +of stone. The country was generally very pretty, the scenery along +the river being very picturesque. We passed a waterfall of considerable +size, which is Turner’s Minzapeeza. After leaving Panga +we came on an uninhabited country, nor did we see more than one village, +until we reached the ridge immediately above Chupcha, 1,000 feet above +this, there is a very large village inhabited by Gylongs, the bare summit +of the hill rising an equal height above it; snow visible to the south. +The greatest distance we descended was 6,500 feet, the greatest height +8,500 feet. The distance seventeen miles, the longest march we +have yet had.</p> +<p>The vegetation was nearly the same up to the time we turned off towards +Chupcha, it was characterized by a profusion of Rosa, among which the +Cratæga, Symphorema, (which is less common than towards Woollakkoo,) +Rhamnus, Viburnum grandiflorum, Pinus pendula, Thymus, Cycnium.</p> +<p>In grassy banks of fields between Panga and Lamnoo, Astragalus, Ervum, +Vicia, Aster major, Rumex, Agrostia, in fields Hieraciæ sp., Caricia +sp., Lactuca, Bromus.</p> +<p>Salix pendula about villages. After leaving Panga we came on +to a place called Minzapeeza, here Adiantum, Aspidium? Hamamelidea, +Cedrela? Rhus, Galium, Tussilago, Saxifraga ligularis, Valeriana violifolia, +Smilax flexuosa, Aruncus, Sarcococea, Azalea.</p> +<p>Rhododendron minus recommenced after leaving the river towards Panga, +a straggling cedar or two occurred, Populus rotundifol. very common, +Gaultheria arborea.</p> +<p>About Panga, Lithospermum, Oxalis corniculata, Umbellifera, from +the flowers of which <i>moud</i> is made, Rubus, Arabis, Taxacum, Dipsacus.</p> +<p>Beyond the waterfall the Quercus robur became common, forming beautiful +woods, it continued throughout until we re-descended to the river, range +7 to 7,500 feet. In these woods formed likewise by Pinus pendula, +Convallaria cirrhosa appeared, Rubia cordifolia, hispida, Paris polyphylla, +Aralia cissifolia, Mitella, Ribes! Spiræa, Asparagus, Epipactis, +Avularia, Houttuynia! Arum viviparum on rocks, Duchesmium, Populus oblonga +occurred also, Coriaria! Hedera common, Benthamia common.</p> +<p>On rocks along the river, Peperomia, 4-phylla, Populus oblonga, Acer +sterculiacea! Symphoria alia! Indigofera, Salix, Cedrela, Sassafras, +arbor facie, Gordonia, Vitis, Syringa, Serissa, Buddlæa, Sedum +on rocks, Eriophon ditto, Campanula cana, Pinus pendula, Rosa, Convallarium +cirrhosa, Polygonum robustum, foliis cordatis.</p> +<p>The ascent up to 7,500 feet, was marked by similar vegetation: up +to this point the prevailing shrubs gradually disappeared, they were +never so common as about Panga. Quercus robur having ceased, was +succeeded by Quercus ferruginea, which is much like Quercus ilecifolia, +and has very coriaceous leaves, this again at 7,500 feet, was succeeded +by Quercus ilecifolia, Dipsacus up to this, Pteris aquilina, Gaultheria +arborea.</p> +<p>At 7,600 feet, Rhododendron oblonga, a most beautiful species, Calyce +discoideo commenced, as also Rhodora deflexa and Rhodoracea ochrolenea, +which is, I think, that I before noticed as R. elliptica, foliis basi +cordatis subtus argenteis et punctatis, Euphorbia occurs also here, +as also the Rosa, Berberis asiatica.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, the trees were covered with grey lichens, and assumed +the usual highly picturesque appearance: noticed Primula Stuartii in +flower (Symphoria! ceased), Euphorbia, Gaultheria nummularifolia commences, +Artemisia major, Cratægus odoratus continues, Saxifraga ligularis +common up to this, Ribes commences, Gaultheria of Bulphai, Galum, Hyperici +sp., Lilium giganteum, Clematis grata, Populus species, do not ascend +above this.</p> +<p>At 8,500 feet, Rhododendron minus, Rhododendron oblonga, ochroleucum, +Coccineum appears, Ribes, Smilax sanguinea, Gaultheria of Bulphai very +common, arborea stunted, Limonia major, Clematis grata! Rhododendron +hispida, Potentilla, Pteris aquilina, Berberis asiatica, Mespilus microphyllus, +Gnaphalium, Swertia, Viola, Patrinum! Elæagnus fragrans! Thymus, +which ranges from 6 to 10,000 feet, Euphorbia, Pedicularis, Cycnii sp., +Mimulus, Rhodora deflexa, Pinus pendula, Quercus ilecifolia, both stunted, +Pteris aquilina.</p> +<p>The descent to the village was about 500 feet, Arenarium on rocks, +Mimulus, Viola, Rumex, Juncus, Acorus veronica, Anagallis, Pythonium +of Blake, Euphorbia, Pedicularis, Carex, Mespilus microphyllus: pine +chatterers throughout, at least above 7,000 feet.</p> +<p>The summit, which was certainly 9,500 feet, was completely bare: +Pinus pendula ascends a long way.</p> +<p>Chupcha—Hordeum hexastichor in beautiful order, the chief cultivation. +Red-legged crow; larger dove. The form of the country traversed +is as follows:-</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m291.jpg"> +<img alt="Teemboo to Chupcha" src="images/m291.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>At Diglea we had an opportunity of seeing the mode of building in +this part of Bootan; the houses are made of mud, which is trampled and +beat down by men, who perform sundry strange evolutions while so employed; +the mud is beat down in a frame-work; it is from the different layers +formed that the lines seen outside finished houses result. The +mode is slow, but must give great firmness.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>14th</i>.—Ascended to the Gylong village, above +Chupcha, and then to the naked ridge. The village may be estimated +as being 8,700 or 8,800 feet above the sea, and that part of the ridge +to which I ascended as 9,800 or 10,000 feet. The ascent is uninterrupted +up to the village; it winds through a fine fir wood, after diverging +from the road to Panga, after that it is quite open, scarcely a shrub +being met with until the ridge is surmounted. On turning to its +northern face, woody vegetation becomes pretty abundant, and 500 feet +below, woods occur. This is contrary to what usually happens; +the south faces of mountains being supposed to be better wooded than +the others, but in Bootan the difference would seem to be due to the +piercing winds blowing from south, or up the ravine of the Teemboo. +The scenery was very pretty, both in the woods before reaching the village, +and from the ridge: vast quantities of snow visible to the north and +north-east. I ascended to within 1,000 feet of snow, and I think +that at this season, an elevation of 11,000 feet is required <i>in</i> +<i>open</i> <i>places</i> to secure the presence of snow: it is obvious +that local circumstances, such as shelter, etc. may cause it to descend +nearly to 9,000 feet, and it is as obvious that snow will descend lower +down a mountain of 15,000 feet high than one of 12,000; the difference +in the beds of snow causing a greater reduction of temperature in the +one than in the other. In an isolated mountain, an elevation of +11,000 feet will be required for the presence of snow in May.</p> +<p>At 8,000 feet, Baptisia, Viburnum canum, Umbellifera toxicaria, Colquhounia, +Deutzia, the Symphoria of Teemboo.</p> +<p>At 8,200 feet, Salix, Abies spinulosa straggling, Rhododendron microphylla +commences, the bruised has a terebenthaceous odour, Ilex, Gaultheria +flexuosa, Parus major: variegated shortwing, Papilio machaonires.</p> +<p>At 8,300 feet, Saxifraga ligularis.</p> +<p>At 8,400 to 8,500 feet, Limonia, Viburnum grandiflorum or canum, +Berberis asiatica, Mespilus microphyllus, Populus oblonga, Rhododendron +ochrolena, Clematis grata viola lutea,* Epipactis, Hemiphragma.</p> +<p>At 8,700 feet, Rhododendron microphyllum very common, Ribes, Bupleuri +sp.,* Rosa fructibus hispidis,* Rubia hispida, Sambucus, Berberis integrifolia, +an vero distincta.</p> +<p>At 8,800 feet, Viola pusilla, Fragaria vesca and lutea, Baptisia, +Rosa, Sphærostemma, Clematis grata, Pinus pendula, etc.</p> +<p>At 9,000 feet, commencement of sward, no trees, except stunted shrubs +of Pinus pendula, Mespilus microphyllus, Baptisia, Gnaphalium Pedicularis,* +Rosa, Bistorta,* leaves with margins not united to the margins of pitchers +of Nepenthes and Cephalotus, Pteris aquilina, Prunella, Rhododendron +microphyllum, Euphorbia, Taxaxacum, Potentilla, Thymus, Primula Stuartii.</p> +<p>At 9,100 feet, Hyperica brachiata of Moflong.</p> +<p>At 9,300 feet, Morina Wallichiana, Osmundioid, Dipsacus, Scabiosa? +capitulo nutanta, Verbascum, Juncus, Epilobia sp.</p> +<p>At 9,400 feet, Salix shrubby, Cyperus fuscescens of Tassangsee, dwarfed +Larix.</p> +<p>At 9,500 feet, Anemona aurea commences, covering in some places the +sward; it straggles down in favourable places with Iris angustifolia, +to 9,300 feet, Primula Stuartii, Rhododendron microphyllum, Gnaphalia, +Euphrasia.</p> +<p>At 9,800 feet, southern face of ridge bare, northern thickety, consisting +of Rhododendron fruticosum, foliis ellipticis basi cordatis punctato +lepidotis, Salix, Berberis, Pyrus aria, Bambusa, Tetranthera.</p> +<p>In wet sheltered spots, Iris angustifolia, Aconitum, foliis aconitoideum, +on the sward Euphorbia radians. Below this a little, woods commence +chiefly of Bogh Pata, Cerasus, Salix, Rosa fructibus hispidis, Acers, +Abelia? Viburnum niveum, Hydrangea arbuscula, non-scandens, Berberis +integrifolia. The woods are open, the open spaces occupied by +remains of last summer’s vegetation, as Compositæ, Umbelliferæ, +Aquilegium, a plant five or six feet high, folii aconitoidie, etc. +Epilobium.</p> +<p>Among these in the woods, Trillia sp., Saxifraga reniformis, Liliacea +Brodidoid, Viola, Primula purpurea, a lovely species, Aconiti sp., Papaveracea +hirsuta foliis, Aconitoid very common, Orchideæ, Ribes sanguina, +Composita penduliflora, Arenaria pusilla of above Telagoung, Polygoni +sp., pusilla repens hirsuit foliis cordata ovatis, vel reniformibus +subtus purpurescent, Salvia nubicola? Euphorbia coccinea.</p> +<p>Abies densa appears, as also close to the Gylong village, from this +elevation upwards, it is common.</p> +<p>Abies spinulosa common on north face at 9,000 feet, Abies pendula +ascends on south side as high as 9,300 feet, but is stunted beyond 9,000 +feet, it does not exist on north face.</p> +<p>Primula Stuartii throughout, very abundant.</p> +<p>The plants most limited were Papaveracea, Aconitum folium aconitoideum, +Saxif. reniformis, Primula purpuria, Euphorbia radians, Rhododendron +cereum, mentioned above, and another at 9,800 feet with similar leaves, +but normal flowers, Abelia, Cerasus, Trillii sp., Anemona, Iris, Bistorta, +Ribes, A. densa.</p> +<p>The most dispersed are Euphorbia coccinea, Salix, Bogh Pata, Mespilus +microphyllus, Cyperus fuscus, Primula Stuartii, Rhododendron microphyllum.</p> +<p>Hordeum hexastichum gives fine produce here; nothing can exceed it +in appearance, oats also occur mixed with it, but is not sown, at least, +it occurs rarely on walls, Arabis, Magus stolonifer, Juglans in villages, +(Ribes Juniperus in the Gylong village), Acorus, Carex, Stellaria cana, +Media, Caltha, and Thlaspi.</p> +<p>The temperature is delightful, thermometer 46° at 7 A.M., 52° +in the middle of the day.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>15th</i>.—Left Chupcha for Chuka, distant seventeen +miles. Our march commenced by a very steep and indeed almost precipitous +descent to the nullah, at the foot of Chupcha, of 1,800 feet. +Thence we ascended gradually until we reached a temple visible from +Chupcha, at which place we returned to the course along the Teemboo. +The remainder of the road undulating, varying in level from 6,000 to +6,500 feet, until we commenced the descent to Chuka, which was long +and tedious: we reached this at 5½ P.M. The road latterly +was very bad, we passed Punukha, a small village, about 300 feet below +our path. The mountains closing in the Teemboo continue lofty, +at least 9,000 feet. Iris, cedars, and Abies densa, were common +on the loftier parts.</p> +<p>We passed some beautiful places, indeed the march throughout was +pretty. The vegetation was beautiful, owing to the quantity of +water on the road, a stream occupying each hollow, round many of which +we wound. Glades and pieces of green sward were not uncommon.</p> +<p>The Lamium of Bulphai is found about Chupcha. On the descent +to the nullah the following plants were found.</p> +<p>At 7,000 feet, Iris commences, with a species of Lychnis, ground +bare and rocky, Umbellifera cana, Umb., from which <i>moud</i> is prepared, +common.</p> +<p>At 6,800 feet, Quercus ferruginea commences, on rocks here Stemodium +ruderalis, Santonica of Panga, etc., Convallaria cirrhosa.</p> +<p>At 6,500 feet, Hedera common, Aristolochia tetrarima, Berberis obovata, +Viburnum cærulescens, Filix ferrugineo tomentosa, Pteris dealbata.</p> +<p>Iris common to 6,500 feet, continues lower down, but scarce. +Along the nullah, which is a middling-sized torrent, Rhus, Cederela +toone, Acer sterculiacea, Hamamelis, Fici sp., scandens, Rhus, Juglandifolia! +Populus oblonga, Sassafras, on the ascent to the temple, Populus of +very large size, and the above trees. Fraxinus floribunda, Osmundia +in profusion, Aristolochia tetrarima, Scabiosa of Bulphai, Prunella, +Fragaria vesca, Duchesnum, Sarcococea, Elæagnus fragrans, Galium +of Panga cascade, Corydalis, which continues to Chuka, but is scarce +below 5,000 feet, Deutzia, Lilium giganteum, Uvularia very common, Primula +Stuartii, Woodwardia (scarce), Pythonium pallidium, Campanula cana, +Panax herbacieæ 2 species, Rhododendron agaleoides of ridge above +Chupcha, Buddlæa cana, Ranunculus of Taseeling, Benthamia, Anemona +ranunculacea, Buxus, Delphinum sp.? common, Gaultheria nummularifolia, +Jasminum lutium, Conaria. This ascent was about 500 feet. +Long-tailed pie seen here, red-billed shrikelet, first met with towards +Tumashoo, common now as far down as 4,500 feet.</p> +<p>On passing the temple, or rather before coming to it, we changed +the vegetation which became of the ordinary <i>dry</i> character. +Woods of Q. ferruginea mixed with Pinus pendula, Benthamia, Pteris aquilina, +Viburnum cærulescens, Conaria, Polygonum of Teemboo, Rhododendron +minus, Gaultheria arborea.</p> +<p>The remainder of the march consisted of a series of winding round +spurs: at about an average elevation of 6,000 feet found a Pythonium +foliis pedalis, spad. apice filiformo recurvo, vel erecto, spathe viridi, +Didymocarpea odora contuso terebinthaceo, Solanum nigrum, Succulent +urticeæ, Scabiosa of Bulphai, Gnaphalium, Polygonum globiferum, +Scirpus eriophorus, Hippocratia angulata, Mitella, in damp spots, Cycnium, +but rare, Sarcococea, Impatiens two species, one at 6,500 feet, with +a creeping plant, foliis ranunculaceis floribus solitariis hypocrateriform +albis. No Buxus or Delphinum was observed, in any other glens +than the first crossed. Alnus became common soon, the pines disappeared, +Osmundia common, Primula rotundifolia, Paris polyphylla, Bletia as of +Churra at Punukha, Sphæropteris.</p> +<p>In some places Rhododendron minus common, and with it Quercus ferruginea, +Rubia hirsuta, not uncommon throughout as far as 15,000 feet, Thalictroides +majus, Houttuynia, Betula.</p> +<p>In glades, Smilax gaultherifolia, in a wood round the marsh a Pomaceous +tree: on the march, Swertia, Peloria, Carex stricta, and of Chupcha, +Spiranthes rubriflora, Berberis pinnata, Saxifraga of Bulphai occur +here.</p> +<p>Still further on, the forest assumed the appearance of those towards +Khegumpa. Q. robur, recommences, cedars straggle down; Pinus pendula, +more common, Arenariæ sp., Lomaria of Khegumpa, Hottoneoides ranunculofolia +common, Luzula, Sedi sp., Sambucus common throughout in shady spots, +Radsuræ sp., Daphne papyracea, rare, Acer sterculiacea common, +Sabia, Hydrangeacea calyptrata, Hamiltonia, this last common to 4,500 +feet.</p> +<p>On wet rocks Hutchinsia, Arenaria, succulent Urticea. In woods +Cucurbitacea cessifolia, Ajugæ sp., Polygonum rheoides. +On open spots, Benthamium in flower, Gaultheria arborea, here of large +size, pines cease without changing the elevation, Q. ferruginea ceased, +this is limited to dry spots.</p> +<p>The first change indicated by the appearance of Laurineæ, and +Symplocos among oaks and chesnuts. The woods continued thick for +some time, but on commencing the descent, which is gradual, especially +at first, Q. robur is common, Gaultheria arborea, Rhododendron minus.</p> +<p>At 5,500 feet Hottonia, Rubia hirsuta, Hydrangeacea calyptrata, Phytolacea, +also at 6,500 feet, and as low as 4,000 feet, Senecio scandens, Verbenacea +of Dgin appears, Uvularia, Duchesnia, Polygonum rheoides.</p> +<p>Umbellifera gigantea, Potentilla supina appear, Pythonium recurvum, +Rhus, Dipsacus of Churra, Alnus, Pomacea macrophylla, Stauntonia angustifolia, +Photinea parviflora, Benthamea disappears, in flower at least, Didymocarpea, +Rhamnus, and also at 5,000 feet, Fragaria vesca, in fruit! Paris, +Curculigo pygmæa appears, Sedum continues and ceases at 4,500 +feet, Ranunculus of Taseeling found also as low as 3,600 feet, Daphne +nutans appears. This found first near Taseeling, found as low +as 4,000 feet, Primula Stuartii, Rhododendron minus, Viburnum cærulescens +continue, Thibaudia myrtifolia, Rubus deltoideus appears.</p> +<p>At 4,500 feet, a Malvaceæ Sidoides, Erythrina, Rosa fragrans, +Pythonium sp. majus, spadicis apice filiformi 2-pedali, Incerta of Taseeling, +Ribesioides, Quercus ferruginoides, Indigofera major, Berberis obovata, +in fruit.</p> +<p>At 4,400 feet, Cuscuta, Hamiltonia, Hottoneoides, Daphne pendula +vel nutans, Impatiens, Mimosa, Menispermum tropæolifolia, Celastrinia +sp., Panax crucifolia, Hypericum japonicum.</p> +<p>At 4,300 feet, Conyza nivea, Q. robur, Indigofera major, of Tassgoung, +etc. Gaultheria arborea, Hedychium appears! Buddlæa of Nulka, +Mæsa salicifolia!</p> +<p>At 4,200 feet, Thibaudia lanceolata appears, ranges between 4,200 +and 2,000 feet, Sanicula, Cynoglossum, Zyziphi sp.</p> +<p>Along the bed of the river, Zizyphus arborea, Urtica, foliis apicæ +erosis, Berberis obovata, Erythrina, Artemisia major, Elæagnus +fragrans, and Stellaria cana, occur, the last ranges between 3 and 6,000 +feet, Thlaspi, Polygonum globifera, Dendrobium pictum, Verbenacea of +Dgin, Clematis, petiolis basi connatis demum induratus majus, Magnolia, +Randia of Punukha, Liriodendron tulipif., Apocynum nerufolium.</p> +<p>At Chuka, Ficus elastica, but not flourishing, Musa, Salix pendula, +Phytolacea, Buckwheat, Crucifera cordifructus, Sanicula, Stellaria cana, +Thibaudia lanceolata, Cynoglossum, Vandea, Parkioides common.</p> +<p>The most limited plants are Iris, Silene, Aristolochia tetrarima +vix infra 6,000 feet, Buxus, Delphinioid, Fraxinus non infra 6,000 feet, +Epipactis ditto, Hutchinsia, Lomaria of Khegumpa, Mitella, Carex stricta +of Chupcha, <i>Petunia</i>, Smilax gaultherifolia, Osmundia non infra +5,500 feet, Hydrangeacea ditto, Cucurbitacea cissifolia, found about +Suddiya, etc.</p> +<p>The most diffused, Hottonia, Q. robur, Gaultheria arborea, 5 to 3,500 +feet, Corydalis.</p> +<p>The subtropical forms, Mimosa, Impatiens, occurrence of fleshy Urticea, +Ficus elastica, but not flourishing, Musa, Salix pendula, Buckwheat, +Urtica urens, peaches, Stellaria cana, Crucifera cordifructus, Panax +curcifolia, Andropogon arbusculoid, Rubia cordata.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>16th</i>.—The fort of Chuka not being whitewashed, +is not conspicuous: its situation is strong, and against Bhooteas would +be impregnable. It occupies a low hill arising from the centre +of the valley, one side of which is washed by the Teemboo or Tchien-chiw. +The room we were lodged in was a good one. The village is a mean +one, and consisting of three or four houses.</p> +<p>We crossed the river by a suspension bridge much inferior to that +of Benka, and then rose gradually and inconsiderably, following the +Teemboo. To this we subsequently descended by a most precipitous +road built for the most part on the face of a huge cliff: we reached +the Teemboo at its junction with a small torrent; the tongue of land +here was strewn with huge rocks, and bore evidences of the power of +the torrents, for it evidently had been once a hill, such as that we +had just descended. Thence we continued ascending, following the +river, from which however we soon diverged to our right, but not far. +The road was rugged beyond description. As we approached Murichom, +it improved somewhat, but was still very bad. We reached this +place which is visible for some distance at 5 P.M.; the march being +one of eighteen miles. No villages occurred en route. The +hills were densely wooded to the summits and much lowered in height +than those to which we had been accustomed. Passed two waterfalls, +one less high, but more voluminous than the other, is the Minzapeeza +of Turner; both these occurred on the left bank of the river. +Minzapeeza, is a fall of great height, but the body of water is small.</p> +<p>The vegetation to-day partook much of the subtropical character, +almost all boreal plants being left behind. We ascended and descended +between 3,000 to 4,500 feet near Chuka, Parkioides, Mimosa arborea! +and M. frutex. Magnolia! Rubia munjista, Impatiens! Cucurbitacea!</p> +<p>Oxyspora latifolia! Rosa fragrans, Incerta ribesioides, Piper! Urtica +heterophylla! Wendlandia! Phytolacea, Daphne nutans, Rottleria! Curculigo +orchediflora, Acer, Eurya pubescens, Rhus, Alnus! Adamia, Gordonia! +Q. robur reappears at a lower elevation than before seen: Dipterocarpioides +arbor vasta trunco ramoso! Smilax auriculata! Pothos pinnatifid! Briedlia +oblonga! Corydalis, Dipsacus, Acanthaceæ common, Rubiaceæ +of a tropical character, such as Ophiorhizæ; Celastrus! Pythonium +majus, Tetranthera macrophylla! Quercus coriacea! Gaultheria arborea +scarce, Deutzia on the descent to the Teemboo, Macrocapnos, Sterculia +platanifolia, Melica latifolia! Arundo! Achyranthes densa! Labiata spinosa +of Khegumpa or Phlomis, Labiata, Quercoides. The rocks on the +river side are covered with Epiphytical Orchideæ; Saurauja sterculifolia, +Pythonium pallidum, Elæagnus fragrans.</p> +<p>Along the banks of the Teemboo, Pandanus! Rhododendron azaleoides, +R. pulchrum, Lyellia, Begonia picta, Composita arborea! Ficus! on ascent +above its banks, Dioscorea! Elæocarpus! Acrosticum atratum! Convallarium +oppositifolia, Thibaudia loranthiflora! Pogostemon of Dgin! Leea! +The only northern plant a species of Viola; Otochilus linearis! Entada! +Kydia! Mussænda! Macrocapnos altera of Yen, Callicarpa arborea! +Panax aculeato palmiformis supra decompositæ of Dgin! Solanum +farinacium! Urena lobata! Marlea, Panicum plicatum! Before ascending +to Murichom we made two descents to two streams, crossed by common wooden +bridges: that nearer Murichom being the largest; elevation at 2,500 +feet. Here tree-fern; Pythonium majus, Duchesnia, Lysimacha, Begonia +of Punukha! Caryophyllea scandens, Urtica gigas! Modeceoides exembryonata! +Commelina! Combretum sp.! Bæhmeriæ! Piper spica caudata +pendula and another species!! Euphorbia! Galina of Panga, Croton malvifolius! +Bambusa major! Bauhinia! Engeldhaardtii!</p> +<p>Although we subsequently ascended 1500 feet, very little change occurred: +no re-appearance of tropical forms, Sterculiacea novum of Moosmai, Adamia, +Volkameria! serrata, Triumfetta mollis! Briedlia ovalis of Chilleeri! +Gortnera! Corydalis! Hydrangeacæ! Melastoma malabathrica!</p> +<p>The march was very tiresome, some of the ranges passed were high +and well clothed with firs. Those marked thus* are subtropical +or tropical, and one glance will show their predominance: only Corydalis +straggles down. The woods were in many places damp, in others +dry: it was obvious that less rain had fallen between Chupcha and Chuka, +than in other situations: a large proportion of Laurineæ and Acanthaceæ +appeared in the woods, with Gordonia: the oaks and chesnuts when they +did present themselves bore a tropical form, pointed out by their coriaceous +undivided or merely serrated leaves. I certainly never saw such +a predominance of tropical forms, at such an elevation as 3,500 or 4,000 +feet.</p> +<p>For Lyellia I had been hunting for three years, but never thought +of looking for it at low elevations; as it was I believe given out to +be a native of high places. Of birds, Bucco, Picus intermedius, +green pigeon, azure shrikelet, occurred.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>17th</i>.—Murichom is a small village of eight +or nine thatched houses, it is well and prettily situated: about it +maize and wheat are in cultivation, Ficus, Hoya, Dendrobium, Croton +malvæfolius, Meliacea, Cedrela Toona, orange, Verbesina, Datura, +Artemisia major, Echites, in fact it would be difficult to point out +an elevational plant. The same remark applies to the march to +Gygoogoo, distant twelve miles, and situated 500 feet below the road, +but still it is about the same level as Murichom. The march commenced +with a steep descent, followed by a steeper ascent, then winding along, +in and out, at an average elevation of 5,000 feet. The road was +very bad, rocky and rugged as usual, P. and B. passed the village, and +pushed on to Buxa, a distance of twenty miles, which place they reached +at 7 P.M. At Murichom, Ficus cordata, fructibus pyriformibus, +Clerodendron infortunata, Adamia, Spilanthes, Melastoma malabathrica, +Bignonia, Pentaptera. The Oollook or Simia Hylobates, of Upper +Assam.</p> +<p>Scarcely any thing worth noticing occurred; the vegetation being +precisely the same. No oaks or chesnuts, at least comparatively +few: Elæocarpus, Rhus, Gordonia are the most common trees; Pythonium +common, Hoya rotundifolia. Gygoogoo, a small village of two or +three houses, was passed.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>18th</i>.—Marched to Buxa, ascending from Gygoogoo +over a wretched rocky road, winding in and out. No water was to +be had until we reached a ridge from which to Buxa is one continued +descent. This ridge is between 5 and 6,000 feet, and yet there +is scarcely a change in the vegetation. Pythonium abounded, especially +P. majus, which literally occurred in profusion. The trees towards +the top of the ridge were covered with moss, but all appeared subtropical; +a few chesnuts, E. spinosissima occurred, Bambusa nodosis, verticillatis, +and spinosis.</p> +<p>En route thither, Pholidota imbricata, Thib. loranthiflora, Aralia +terebinthacea, Rottleria foliis peltatis, Ranunculus of Taseeling, Meniscum +majus, Byttneria ferox, Caladium foliis medio discoloratis sæpius +atratis, Gnetum, Ixora, Choulmoogra, Phlogacanthi sp., Corisanthes of +Sudya, Acer platanifolia, Croton foliis oblongis irregularis dentato-lobatis +occurred before, between 2,500 to 3,500 feet, Calamus, wild plantains +as before, Gordonia, Rhus, Mimosa, Rottleria, Wallichia, Sida cuneata, +Tradescantia cordata, Æschynanthus fulgens, et altera, Tupistra, +Lobelia baccifera, Costus, tree-fern, as high as 5,000 feet, Bambusa +fasciculata; of birds, the large Bucco.</p> +<p>At 5,000 feet, Thibaudia serrata, and on this side, as low as 2,500 +feet, myrtifolia, Gordonia, Pythonium majus and medium, cinnamon, Piper, +Acer platanifolia, Mucuna, Angiopteris, Saurauja ferruginea.</p> +<p>At 5,300 feet, Polygonia pinnatifolia, Hookeria macrophylla, Aralia +scandens, etc. as before.</p> +<p>On descent nothing remarkable, except steepness: same vegetation. +Pythonium majus not below 3,000 feet, Guttiferæ at 3,000 feet, +Acanthaceæ, Carduaceus 2,800 feet.</p> +<p>At 2,500 feet, Buchanania undulata, Hyalostemma undulatum, Roydsia.</p> +<p>What can be the cause of this tropical elevation at such altitudes? +Buxa is hot enough for any tropical plants, as jacks, mangoes, Cactus, +etc. are found in fine order. It is not attributable to a gradual +rise, as the ascent from this to 5,500 feet, is excessively steep. +It must be owing to local causes modifying the climate: at 5,000 feet +on the Dgin route, there are many elevational plants, indeed more than +of subtropical.</p> +<p>It must not be forgotten that no Pinus longifolia exists on this +route after leaving Telagoung.</p> +<p>Buxa is a rather pretty place, but as usual poor: the Doompa’s +house is the only decent one in the place, the others, amounting to +eight or ten, are common huts. The big house occupies an elevation +in the centre of the pass, being cut off from the neighbouring hill +on either side by a ravine, one of which is now quite dry, the other +affords a scanty supply of water. The hills are covered with jungle, +the only clearing being about Buxa, and this, except the flat summit +of the hill, is overrun with bushes, Capparis modecea, Croton malvæfolia, +Menisperma tropæolifolia. Bergeræ 2 species, Ixora, +Brucea same as of the plains, Atriplex, Tournefortia of plains, Mæsa +macrophylla, Mimosa scandens, Ficus elastica in good order, jacks, mangoes, +oranges, plantains, Tabernamontana, Calamus, Cedrela Toona, are found.</p> +<p>Black pheasants, Bulbuls, Drongoles, Oorooa, Bucco, green pigeons. +Long-tailed blue-crested shrike, etc. are found here. The Doompa, +or Chong Soobah, is a man of no rank, and the place itself is of no +importance, except as the pass or entrance between the mountains of +Bootan and the plains of Bengal.</p> +<p>The descent from Buxa is gradual at first and not unpicturesque: +after passing a small chokey about half a mile from Buxa, sandstone +of a coarse nature commences. The descent is very steep, and continues +so until within a short distance of a place called Minagoung, at which +the bullocks are unladen at least of heavy baggage. The remaining +descent is very gradual, and continues so for several miles. The +march throughout and until the level of the plains is reached, was through +tree jungle. The underwood being either scanty or consisting of +grass.</p> +<p>On reaching the plains, the usual Assamese features presented themselves, +viz. vast expanses of grass, intersected here and there with strips +of jungle. Reached Chichacootta about 3 P.M.: distance eighteen +miles, of which about fifteen were over either level or very gradually +sloping ground. No villages occurred, and only one path struck +off from the Buxa one. We passed two or three halting places.</p> +<p>The vegetation throughout was subtropical. At the same elevation +as Buxa, noticed Cassia lanceolata, Torenia the common Leucas, Bheir, +Solanum quercifolia, Banyan, Alstonia, Styrax, Caryota, Elephantopus, +Osbeckia linearis, Herminioides, Wedelia scandens.</p> +<p>At 1,500 feet, Celastrus guttiferoid, Malvacea digyna, of which I +found flowers on the path, Kœmpfera terminal, Antidesma, Anthericum, +Echites arborea, Careya, Mimosa scandens, Pavetta, Rubiacea alia, Lepidostachys, +Lagerstrœmia grandiflora, Leea crispa, Costus, Thunbergia grandiflora, +Gordonia, Commelina, Phyllanthus, Briedlia, Dioscorea, Cassia fistula.</p> +<p>As we approached a lower level, the same plants continued: a Dillenia +very common, Urena lobata, Hedera terebenthacea: the root is in some +cases like figs, Spathodea, Nauclea, Sterculia carnosa, foliis palmatis, +Dalbergia, Panax, Semecarpus, Rhaphis trivialis, Cymbid. alvifolium, +Sarcanthus guttatus common, Apocynea fauce, 10-glandulata, Ixora, etc.</p> +<p>Saul was not common, nor did I see one tree of any size; it commenced +about the margin of the Toorai.</p> +<p>Among the grasses forming the underwood of the Toorai and the grassy +masses clothing the plains, Sacchara were the most common and the most +conspicuous: next to these a species of Rottboellia. Sciurus Bengmoria +occurred, Hemarthria, Greweia edulis, Leea crispa, Crinum in the Toorai, +Viburnum of Sudya, Millingtonia pinnata, Volkameria serrata, Labiata +Sudyensis, Mussænda erecta, humilis, Cinchona, Premna herbacea, +Phœnix pumila.</p> +<p>Arrived at Chichacootta, a small village, situated in an open grassy +plain, miserably stockaded; and lodged in a good well elevated house. +The following day started and reached Cooch Behar territory, after crossing +a considerable but fordable stream. The contrast between the desolate +territories of Bootan, and the sheet of cultivation presented by Cooch +Behar was striking.</p> +<p>The same contrast continued until we reached the Company’s +territories, and its less cultivated portions along the bed of the Brahmapootra. +The only plant worth notice on the route, was a species of Swertia; +the vegetation being almost precisely the same as in Upper Assam.</p> +<p><i>Rangamutty</i>, <i>Bhooruwa</i>.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t303.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 303" src="images/t303.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t304.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 304" src="images/t304.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t305.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 305" src="images/t305.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t306.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 306" src="images/t306.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t307.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 307" src="images/t307.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t308.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 308" src="images/t308.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t309.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 309" src="images/t309.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t310.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 310" src="images/t310.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t311.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 311" src="images/t311.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/t312.jpg"> +<img alt="Meteorological Observations 312" src="images/t312.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3> +<p><i>Journey</i> <i>with</i> <i>the</i> <i>Army</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> +<i>Indus</i>. <i>From</i> <i>Loodianah</i> <i>to</i> <i>Candahar</i> +<i>through</i> <i>the</i> <i>Bolan</i> <i>Pass</i>.</p> +<p>I reached Loodianah on the 10th December 1838, after a dâwk +journey of fourteen and a half days. After passing the Rajemahal +Hills, the country presents an uniform aspect, but becoming more sandy +as one proceeds to the northward. The hills alluded to, form a +low range, the only one of any height being that called Pursunath. +They are well wooded, the under-vegetation being grassy. Undulating +ground bare of trees, but provided with shrubs, is passed before coming +on the wooded tracts, the vegetation of these present much similarity +with that of even 31° N. The <i>Dhak</i>, Pommereulla, Zizzyphus, +occurring. The <i>Mahooa</i> occurs in abundance on the hills, +but does not reach much beyond Cawnpore. The country from the +hills upwards, is almost entirely cultivated; very few trees occurring, +and those that do, are almost entirely mango. The Borassus does +not extend in abundance much beyond Benares, but the <i>Khujoor</i> +is found everywhere in sandy soil.</p> +<p>Loodianah is situated about five miles south of the Sutledge, in +the midst of a sandy country, very bare of trees. The fort and +Capt. Wade’s house are situated on a rising ground, at the base +of which runs a nullah, a tributary of the Sutledge. There is +much cultivation about the place, chiefly of grain, barley and wheat, +bajerow, cotton, the latter bad, but there is much land uncultivated. +The surface is often flat and somewhat broken; in such places there +is much of a low prickly <i>Bheir</i>, much used for making fences. +This and <i>Dhak</i> jungle, which occurs in strips, form two marked +features, the <i>Dhak</i> occurs in patches. The grasses, which +occasionally form patches, are Andropogoneous; Anathericum, Pommereulla, +and Eleusine occur.</p> +<p>Sugar-cane occurs; it is cultivated in thick masses, it is poor, +and always fenced with the <i>Bheir</i>.</p> +<p>The most common trees are the mango, Parkinsonia, <i>Babool</i>, +Acacia altera babooloides, a Leguminous Mimosoid tree, Tamarisk, a middling +sized tree and very pretty, Ficus.</p> +<p>The hedges about the cantonments, etc. are formed by prickly pear; +much Ricinus occurs in waste places, and it appears to me to be different +from that to the south.</p> +<p>The most varied vegetation occurs along the nullah, but consists +entirely of aquatic or sub-aquatic plants; among these the most common +are two or three Scirpi, particularly a large rush-like one, a large +Sparganium, a very narrow leaved Typha, Hydrocharis! a pointed leaved +Villarsia, Potomogetons three or four, one only natant; Chara, Naias, +Ceratophyllum, Ulva, Valisneria, Marsilea, Herpestes, Jussieua repens, +Fumaria common in fields.</p> +<p>The town is a large bustling place: the houses low and regular, and +of a somewhat picturesque style, built of brick, the streets are wide +and regular, having been laid out by our officers. There is a +good deal of trade, and the place is filled with Cashmereans, who may +be seen working their peculiar shawls, and producing very beautiful +dyes.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>22nd</i> <i>and</i> <i>23rd</i>.—Violent +south-east winds during the day; abating at night.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>4th</i>.—Arrived at Hurreekee, having halted +on the previous day at Mokhoo, a small village, with the usual style +of mud fort. The marches were as follows: from Loodianah to Ghosepoora +is eight miles; to Boondree, eight miles; Tiraia, ten miles; to Durrumkote, +ten miles; to Futtygurh, ten miles; to Hurreekee, ten miles. Thus +Hurreekee is at least eighteen miles from Durrumkote, although we had +been told it was only five. The country near Loodianah, and, perhaps +as far as Durrumkote, is occasionally very sandy, but beyond that it +is easily traversed by hackeries. Being much less cultivated and +overrun with grasses, among which Andropogons are the most numerous +and conspicuous, these grasses are either coarse and stout or wiry and +fine, should afford excellent cover for game, which however, does not +seem to be very abundant. Very few trees are visible in any direction, +and although neither very much cultivation nor many villages are visible, +it would appear from charts that the country is very populous. +The most interesting plant was a species of Fagonia.</p> +<p>Durrumkote is the largest of the villages we passed, and has a respectable +looking mud and brick fort. Inside the village is filthy; the +houses wretchedly small, and the streets very narrow. It is much +the same sort of village as other Seikh ones. In the bazars cocoanuts +were noticed. All the Seikhs eat opium, and very often in a particular +way by infusing the poppy-heads, from which the seeds have been extracted +by a hole in the side; great numbers of these are found in the bazars.</p> +<p>Hurreekee is on Runjeet’s side. I crossed the Sutledge, +which is between 400 to 500 yards broad with a sufficiently rapid stream, +by a bridge of boats built by the Seikhs, under the superintendence +of Mr. Roobalee. It contained 65 boats, placed alternately up +and down the river; the boats were moored to posts: over them were placed, +both lengthwise and across, timbers, then grass, then soil; many elephants +passed over, until it gave in, but was quickly repaired, and since many +more hundreds of camels, horses, and thousands of people have passed. +The right bank is thirty feet high, the left low and sandy. The +country where uncultivated, is clothed with grasses, and the only trees +visible are perhaps the Pipul; the <i>Jhow</i> occurs but not the Parhass; +a few Bukeens are visible, Ricinus, Salvadora, which is occasionally +a climber, especially at Tiraia. The river rose suddenly on the +night of the 6th and carried away the bridge. The Himalayas had +been seen very distinctly throughout the day, so that the rain must +have been local: the height of the rise was three feet.</p> +<p>We left Hurreekee on the 8th at 10 A.M., the river up to this time +(9th) presents the same monotonous appearance—sandy banks clothed +with grasses, intermixed with <i>Jhow</i> here and there, and occasionally +Æschynomene, and Typha. Very few villages have been passed, +nor does the rare occurrence of topes indicate that there are many near +it. The channel has been throughout much subdivided, and flats +are of frequent occurrence. Yesterday we passed two busy ferries, +at which two or three boats were unceasingly employed, and there was +an obvious demand for more. Black partridges were heard frequently, +black-bellied tern, herons, cormorants, etc. The stream averages +three miles an hour. Parkinsonia was seen near Hurreekee. +Reached Ferozepore at 12½ on the 9th; it is a very busy ghat, +more so than that of Hurreekee: two large godowns were passed on the +Company’s side. The river is wider by 100 yards than at +Hurreekee.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—Reached Mamdot at 9½ A.M. The fort +appears of good size, with high walls: it is about half a mile from +the river. The country continues the same. Some wheat cultivation, +in which Fumaria, Anagallis, Medicago are abundant; Calotropis Hamiltonii +common; some grapes; <i>doob</i> grass wherever there is or has been +cultivation. The only trees I see are Babooloid, but not the true +<i>Babool</i>, which has very odorous flowers, and is always an arbuscula, +a shrubby <i>Bheir</i>, spina una erecta, altera recurvo also occurs; +among the fields, Lathyrus, Aphaca, and a Compositæ which has +the leaves of a thistle, are common.</p> +<p>Halted at Buggeekee, which is, I imagine, the Pajarkee of Tassin’s +Map.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Continued passing down, breakfasting at Attaree: +few signs of villages, but a good deal of cultivation. Persian +wheels not unfrequently employed in raising water from the river: a +short channel having first been cut in the bank, and the banks, when +loose, propped up. Wheat, radishes, etc. Grasses appear +to be much less common, while the <i>Jhow</i> is increasing much. +The river is much subdivided, and the actual banks are scarcely discernible +owing to the want of trees. The soil and current remain the same: +no impediments have been met with by our boats, nor have I yet observed +any to tracking, the grass jungle being easily overcome, and very unlike +that of the Brahmapootra, and the <i>Jhow</i> not reaching that height +necessary to make it troublesome. The Nawab of Mamdot visited +the Envoy today, accompanied by a small party of horsemen. Only +two alligators have been seen thus far: no game even to be heard, and +but few living creatures visible.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—The river becomes even less interesting than before; +the channel is occasionally much narrowed by sands, over one of which +we found yesterday evening some difficulty in passing; it is much more +spread out and subdivided, and from this circumstance, will occasion +difficulty in tracking up. The banks are low and generally within +reach of inundation: scarcely a village is to be seen; and <i>Jhow</i> +is the most uniform feature. Yesterday evening saltpetre was visible +in abundance on some of the higher banks, and on these <i>Phulahi</i>, +<i>Jhow</i>, a Composita, and Salsola? or Chenopodium were observed. +Since the 10th, the few boats seen are of different structure from those +to which we had been accustomed; they are flat, less wide, and much +better fastened together, elevated at both ends; they are propelled +as well as guided by the rudder, which is curved, so as to bring it +within reach of the helmsman, who is on a level with the bottom of the +boat. Very little cultivation: Tassin’s Map of but little +use, as few of the names are recognised by the boatmen or villagers.</p> +<p>Paukputtea was passed to-day; it is the shrine of a <i>fakeer</i>, +and one in great repute, as passing through a particular gate is supposed +to authorize one to claim admittance into Paradise. The Moulavee +consequently has proceeded there in full faith and extravagant joy: +with natives of the east such absurdities are to the full as much believed +by the educated as by the uneducated; indeed the former are much the +more bigoted of the two. The <i>fakeer</i> alluded to, not only +lived for years on a block of wood carved into the likeness of a loaf, +but subsequently suspended himself for several years in a well, without +even the wooden loaf. He is then said to have disappeared, and +is no doubt now enjoying all the pleasures of a Mohammedan paradise. +We were detained by strong winds at a small village opposite Paukputtea, +which is situated on rather high ground, as far as could be judged from +the distance.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—The cultivation round this village consists of +wheat, radishes, a sort of mustard cultivated for its oily seeds, and +the Mehta of Hindoostan. Among the fields I picked up a Melilotus, +a Melilotoid, and a genuine Medicago, which is also found at Loodianah, +both these last are wild, and their occurrence is as curious as it is +interesting; the latter being a decidedly boreal form. In connection +with these annuals I have to observe, that most flower about January +or February, at which time the mornings and nights are the coldest: +also observed Lathyrus cultivated, a Chenopodium was also found, Calotropis, +a large Saccharoid, Amaranthaceæ, were the most common plants, +Gnaphalium, Lippia; <i>Purwas</i>, occurs scantily.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—Detained till 12 P.M. by bad weather. Sissoo +not uncommon but small, <i>Babool</i>, the true sweet scented sort. +The Colocynth seen in fruit much like an apple, not ribbed; it has the +usual structure of the order, viz. 3-carpellary with revolute placentæ, +so much so, that they are placed near the circumference; seeds very +numerous, surrounded with pulp, not arillate: no separation taking place; +oval, brown, smooth. In fields here, a wild strong smelling Umbellifera +occurs, called <i>Dhunnea</i>, used as a potherb, and esteemed very +fragrant by the natives. Besides the absence of an arillus, there +is another anomaly about the above Colycynth, which is, that between +each placenta a broad partition projects from the wall of the fruit, +usually provided with 3-septa, so as to be divided into two chambers, +these contain seeds, the funiculi passing completely through them; seeds +are also contained between the outermost septa and the placentæ +themselves.</p> +<p>Passed two or three villages. The Persian wheels continue in +vogue; their site is always on a sufficiently high and tenacious bank. +I observed some wells, communicating with the river by an archway in +the bank. Most of the cattle are blinded by the conical blinkers +or hoods over the eyes.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—Halted at a village partly washed away, surrounded +by a good deal of wheat and radish cultivation. The mango tree +and Moringa also occur here with the larger <i>Babool</i>, which invariably +has long white thorns. The small Sissoo still occurs. Snake +bird seen, black crowned tern.</p> +<p>The river remains most uninteresting; the banks are low and covered +chiefly with <i>Jhow</i>. In many places recent shells are very +abundant, but do not appear to be composed of more than three species. +Reseda, Oligandra in fields.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—No change in the country. Heavy fog yesterday +morning; to-day strongish north-east winds. Grass and <i>Jhow</i> +about equal.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—Cloudy, drizzling, raw weather; river more sluggish; +more villages and more cultivation: Phascum, and Gymnostomum common +on tenacious sand banks.</p> +<p><i>18th</i>.—Weather unsettled; windy and rainy. <i>Jhow</i> +and grass jungle continue, Tamarisk, <i>Furas</i> fine specimens, Fumaria +continues in fields, Capparis aphylla, which has something of a Cactoid +habit, and whose branches abound with stomata, Reseda.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Weather finer but still cloudy, north-east wind +still prevalent, and impeding our progress in some of the reaches very +much. Salvadora, Capparis aphylla, <i>Phulahi</i>, <i>Bheir</i>, +large <i>Babool</i>, <i>Furas</i>, Ranunculus sceleratus: <i>Jhow</i> +and grass jungle are the prevailing features. Current much the +same, only occasionally sluggish. Pelicans, black-headed adjutants, +(Ardea capita,) wild geese, ducks very numerous in the jheels formed +by alteration in the course of the river; the country is more cultivated, +but as dreary looking as imaginable. Phœnix becoming more +frequent and finer, P. acaulis? likewise occurs occasionally, rather +young <i>Khujoors</i>. We passed Khyrpore about 3 P.M., it seems +a straggling place, stretching along the bank of the Sutledge; there +are a great many <i>Khujoor</i> trees about it, and indeed about all +the villages near it. A little below this large tract, the banks +were covered with a thick <i>Sofaida</i> shrubby jungle, which looked +at a distance like dwarf Sissoo. The country is much improved, +and there is a great deal of cultivation, especially on the left bank.</p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—Continued—the river is very winding, and +its banks present the same features: the immediate ones being covered +with short <i>Jhow</i> or grass, or both intermixed, the extreme ones +well wooded, and well peopled. <i>Khujoor</i> very common. +Yesterday near Khanpore, caught a glimpse of the descent, and to-day +again the ground appears uneven, and almost entirely barren. It +must be within a mile of the Sutledge. The left bank continues +well cultivated. In some of the fields I noticed Medicago vera, +Anagallis, Fumaria, Chenopodium cnicoideus, Prenanthoid, the <i>Furas</i>, +larger <i>Babool</i>, and Calotropis Hamiltonii continue. Radishes +very common, as also <i>Teera</i> <i>Meera</i>.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—Halted about 8 coss from Bahawulpore. The +Khan’s son, a boy of 8 years, came to see Mr. Macnaghten, and +saluted him with “good night,” he was attended by about +twelve indifferent pony <i>suwars</i>, or horsemen. The river +is very tortuous, both banks a good deal cultivated; there appear to +be a good many canals, which have high banks owing to the excavated +soil being piled up: they are 8 or 10 feet deep, and about 20 feet wide, +at this season they are nearly dry, becoming filled during the rains. +The same plants continue—<i>Furas</i>, <i>Jhow</i>, Chenopodia +2, Reseda, Linaria, Malva, Boraginea, Lactucoidea. The wheat throughout +these countries is sown broadcast. Irrigation is effected by means +of small ditches, and squares formed in the fields—each partition +being banked in, so as to prevent communication; when one is filled, +the water is allowed to pass off into its neighbour, and so on. +Irrigation is entirely effected by Persian wheels; the cattle are hoodwinked +in order to keep them quiet: besides from not seeing, they are led to +imagine that the driver is always at his post, which is immediately +behind the oxen and on the curved flat timber which puts the whole apparatus +in motion. Saw a man cross the river by means of a <i>mushuk</i> +or inflated skin. The very common bushy plant with thorns and +ligulate leaves which commences to appear about Hazaribagh and continues +in abundance throughout the sandy north-west, is, judging from its fruit, +which is a moniliform legume—a Papilionacea; the fruit are borne +by the short spine-terminated branches: the stalk of the pod is surrounded +for the most part by a cupuliform membranous calyx. I have only +seen however withered specimens. Reached Bahawul ghat at 1 P.M. +The Khan visited Mr. Macnaghten in the afternoon, his visit was preceded +by one from his Hindoo minister, and another man, Imaam Shah, who is +a very fat ruffianly-looking fellow. The Khan was attended by +numerous <i>suwarries</i>; he is a portly looking, middle-aged man.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—We returned the visit to-day, the Khan having +provided us with one horse and two bullock <i>rhuts</i>: we traversed +the sandy bank of the river for about a mile before we reached the town, +the suburbs of which are extensive, but very straggling, and thinly +peopled. The inner town seemed to be of some extent, the streets +narrow, the houses very poor, and almost entirely of mud; there were +a number of shops, and the streets were lined with men and a few old +women. There is very little distinction in appearance between +the Khan’s residence and any other portion of the town, and I +did not see a defence of any kind. The Khan received us on some +irregular terraces; near his house, the street leading to the private +entrance was lined with his troops, as well as that leading to the terrace, +and this was surrounded with his adherents, variously and well-dressed. +The troops, for such appeared, were decent, and those forming one side +were dressed in white, in imitation of our Sepoys, and the other side +were in red and blue, <i>more</i> <i>proprio</i> I imagine: they were +armed with muskets; the red ones for the most part having muskets of +native workmanship. A royal salute was fired when the meeting +took place, which was on the terrace, and as we proceeded up the street, +a band made a rude and noisy attempt at ‘God save the King.’ +Having had a private consultation, Mr. Macnaghten withdrew with similar +honours, presenting arms, etc. The presents were a handsome native +rifle, with a flint lock, and the fabrics of the city, some of which +called Kharse, were very creditable.</p> +<p>There are a good many trees about the place, indeed these form the +chief mark when seen from the ghat: the principal are mangoes, <i>Khujoors</i>, +Moringas, oranges. The natives are rather a fine race, but dirty: +some of the women wore the <i>Patani</i> veils, or hoods, with network +over the eyes.</p> +<p>Continued down the river; though much delayed by strong south-east +winds. The vegetation, etc. continue the same, Potentilla sp. +in flower, Phascum very common.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Nothing new has occurred: the current is stronger +than above Bahawulpore: the channel continues very winding, and sandbanks +very frequent. <i>Furas</i>, Salvadora, <i>Phulahi</i> very common. +The boats accidentally separated, and we went without dinner in consequence: +came into the Pungnud. The mouths of the Chenab seem to be two, +both apparently of no great size, yet the Pungnud is a noble river, +and although much subdivided by sand banks, is a striking stream, the +waters are very muddy, and when agitated by a strong wind become almost +reddish. The jungle continues much the same: the Sissoid jungle +again occurred to-day, the natives call it <i>Sofaida</i>; it has a +very curious habit, and is gemmiferous, the gemmæ abounding in +gum. Quail, black-grey partridge, hares, continue; a goat-sucker +(Caprimulgus,) was seen.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—The boats joined early this morning: we were delayed +the whole day by strong north-east winds; the whole country was obscured +by the dust.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—The wind abated towards evening, and occurred +again in gusts during the night. This morning we came in sight +of the southerly portion of the Soliman range, by which name however, +these mountains do not appear to be known hereabouts; their distance +must be forty miles at least, yet they appear to be of considerable +height: the range runs north and south nearly. Wheat is here sown +in rows. <i>Khujoor</i>, large <i>Babool</i>, Fagonia, continue, +<i>Jhow</i> very common. Towards evening we came to a subdivision +of the stream following the smaller one in which the current was very +strong; in some places, apparently six knots an hour. We came +to for the evening at a village on the limits of the Bahawul territory.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—We came on the Indus early in the morning and +stopped opposite Mittunkote until 2 P.M., awaiting the arrival of Mr. +Mackeson. The mouths of the Attock river are scarcely more striking +than those of the Chenab; neither is the combined river immediately +opposite Mittunkote of any great size: certainly the stream we followed +was not more than 800 or 900 yards wide, the extreme banks are at a +considerable distance; and half a mile below Mittunkote the surface +of the water must be one and a half to two miles in breadth; the river +is much subdivided by banks, and shallows are frequent, yet some of +the reaches are of great extent.</p> +<p>The banks are low and rather bluff, the vegetation continues the +same, but <i>Jhow</i> is far the most common plant. <i>Bheir</i>, +<i>Babool</i>, and the <i>Seerkee</i> Saccharum continue; the cultivation +is the same; Calotropis Hamiltonii. Mittunkote appears, from a +distance of two coss, a place of some size, with a somewhat conspicuous +dome. Immediately behind it are the Soliman Hills, of no great +altitude; and, except at the bases, which are covered with black patches +of forest, they appear uniformly brown, otherwise there is nothing to +vary the monotony of the scene, scarcely any trees being visible. +On stopping for breakfast, a general scene of embracing among the dhandies +or boatmen and their friends occurred; women were also embraced in the +usual way, but with apparently less tenderness or warmth than the men. +The boats tracking up, have masts, but the goon or rope is seized with +both hands, a plan far less advantageous than that adopted on the Ganges +and Bramahpootra, where the principal tracking is exercised by a bamboo +placed over the shoulder, farthest from the goon.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—No change worth noticing. The current continues +rapid. The hills visible, running parallel to the river, and ending +very gradually. Typha is very common, and in some places Arundo.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—We remain in sight of, and generally continuing +in the same direction as the hills, which run out very gradually indeed. +Scarcely a tree is to be seen, and very few villages. The country +continues to have some vegetation. The <i>Sofaida</i> is now found +in flower, it is the <i>Ban</i> of the natives of these parts; the former +name indicates in Persian, a tree, said to be wild Poplar, with which +this has an obvious affinity. Saccharum <i>Seerkee</i> very common, +growing in tufts and covering extensive tracts. Scarcely any cultivation +is to be seen along the river, and altogether a very small proportion +is rendered available. River very much subdivided: towards evening +the sky is obscured to leeward by the smoke arising from burning jungle. +Waterfowl are very common along the Indus; especially wild geese, which +frequent open streams, whereas ducks, etc. haunt places which only communicate +with the main streams during floods: myriads of <i>Bogulas</i>, (the +general name for herons,) were seen yesterday in a compact body. +The Soliman mountains are by no means rugged, and this only in one or +two places, where they become peaked. In Mr. Elphinstone’s +account of a Journey to Cabul, the limestone said to be found in the +desert contains shells; it would be most interesting to compare this +with the limestone of Churra more especially. Mr. E. also mentions +a wild rue as forming part of the very scanty vegetation of the desert; +the chief plants being <i>Kureel</i>, which is a Capparis; Phoke ---- +and <i>Bheir</i>. Mr. E. also says that the material of which +the tope of Manikyalah is built, resembles petrified vegetable matter, +an observation to be kept in view. The mottled kingfisher occurs +throughout, but is commoner in southern latitudes of India.</p> +<p>Alligators abounded to-day, and it was curious to see them basking +in the sun with flocks of herons so close, that at a little distance +they appeared to be perching on the backs of the alligators, or rather +crocodiles. Again saw a man swim the Indus by means of a <i>mushuk</i> +or inflated skin: he swam very rapidly, and with great ease; half his +body nearly being out of the water; he reclined on the skin and kept +the aperture by which it is inflated in his mouth, carrying his clothes +on his head. Passed Chuck about 4½ P.M. The country +appears populous hereabouts.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—We have seen a good many boats today employed +in carrying grain to the camp; the smaller ones are not unlike Bengal +boats, having a high stern; all on the Indus however have square bows +and flat bottoms.</p> +<p>The <i>Jhow</i> has increased in size in some places as has <i>Sofaida</i>, +which is occasionally a moderate tree, and it is now more advanced in +flowering: the temperature having visibly increased. The river +puts on the same features and is much subdivided; the channels by which +we have come, are not above 400 to 500 yards in breadth, yet there is +often seen to be a waste of low sand banks stretching to a great extent, +and the extreme banks are very remote, so as generally not to be visible.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—Arrived at Uzeeypore about 9 A.M. Here we +found horses and camels for our conveyance to Shikarpore. Uzeeypore +appears to be a well frequented passage of the river, although we did +not see any ferry boats. Bukkur is visible from it, apparently +occupying a hill almost to the extreme right of a low range running +south-west; it is seven or eight coss distant. We left for Shikarpore +about 2½ P.M. and reached about 7 P.M.: the distance is said +to be twenty-four miles; the road is generally very sandy, although +the sand is not very deep; the substratum being solid. We passed +some cultivation and a few villages, at one of which (Khye) there is +a neat sort of fortification; here we changed horses. The jungle +throughout consisted of Furas, Tamarisk, Salvadora, <i>Phulahi</i> parva, +the prickly Leguminosa, with the habit of Fagonia, Calotropis Hamiltonii, +Saccharum.</p> +<p>Shikarpore is not visible until one reaches the clearing around the +town; in the twilight it appears to be a very large place.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>2nd</i>.—We do not proceed to Larkhanu, +as daily news from Hyderabad is expected. I see nothing likely +to interest me about this place; there is absolutely not a flower to +be got any where. The jungles consist of <i>Jhow</i>, small <i>Furas</i>, +<i>Rairoo</i>, a small arbusculoid Mimosa, <i>Kureel</i>, and Ukko, +Calotropis Hamiltonii; <i>Bheirs</i> shrubby; one of the most abundant +plants is the <i>Joussa</i> or prickly Leguminosa, with the habit of +Fagonia; some of the saline loving Compositæ, No. 51, frutex 2-3 +pedalis, foliis carnosis lanceolato-spathulatis, sessilibus. Corymbis +et Cymi axillaribus et terminalibus pauci capitat. Floscules inconspicuis, +also occurs. Near the Shah’s tents there is a grove of <i>Phulahi</i>, +all more or less demolished, and a good many <i>Khujoors</i>. +Hares and grey partridges appear common. The changes of temperature +are very great; in the mornings and evenings it is cold; in the afternoon +the thermometer reaches as high as 82°.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—Shikarpore is getting hotter every day: thermometer +ranges from 40° to 85°.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—The heat continued to increase until the 12th; +the range of thermometer being from 50° to 95°; the evenings +gradually became hotter, and the night although cool, had the peculiar +thrilling coolness of tropical nights.</p> +<p>On the 12th, the barometer commenced falling, and has since continued +to do so. The visible signs of rain have been confined to cloudy +mornings; the fall of the mercury is perhaps connected with the occasional +strong northerly winds, which at times, as last night, blow nearly half +gales. The range of thermometer is now from 55° to 85°. +The change was sudden on the 9th or 10th; the nights were cold, thermometer +at 5 A.M. 34° 36'; and the days were only moderately warm. +The weather now is pleasant. Shikarpore is disagreeable <i>inter</i> +<i>alia</i> from its dust, every thing becoming covered with it.</p> +<p>The suburbs of the city are well wooded, and all such portions are +well provided with gardens. The <i>Khujoor</i> is the most common +tree, the Moringa, mango, <i>Jamun</i>, <i>Bheir</i>, <i>Neem</i>, Cassia +fistula, Sissoo, <i>Peepul</i>, <i>Furas</i>, <i>Phulahi</i>, another +Mimosa and Agati, occur; oranges in gardens, and a Pomaceous tree from +Cashmere, which appears to thrive very well. The cultivation consists +chiefly of wheat, <i>Mahta</i>, mustard, radishes, <i>Soonf</i>, coriander, +beet, <i>Bagree</i>.</p> +<p>In these fields Phascum, Plantago, Ispaghula, Singee, Chenopodiaceæ +1-2, Salsola lanata, and Bœhmeria, may be found; Composita salinaria, +stocks and wall-flowers in the gardens.</p> +<p>The vegetation elsewhere is very scanty; consisting of <i>Jhow</i>, +<i>Bheir</i>, <i>Furas</i>, <i>Ukko</i>, <i>Joussa</i>, Andropogon <i>Seerkee</i>, +<i>Rairoo</i>, <i>Kureel</i>, a low bush called ----, and a Lycium? +Bœhmeria albida.</p> +<p>The town is miserably defended: the streets are very irregular and +very narrow: the houses all of mud, of the usual Scindian form, and +completely irregular. The bazaars or arcades, are mere ordinary +streets, covered in with timbers, over which tattered mats are placed: +in these are situated the Hindoo shops, and in some places darkness +is completely visible. These Hindoos have a peculiar elongated +Jewish aspect, and are reported to be very wealthy. Grain and +cloth are the principal articles in which they deal, and they say the +streets are covered in order that the purchaser may buy with his eyes +half shut. The city is a large rambling place, and each house +deposits its own filth before it. The inhabitants, especially +the Hindoo portion, have a peculiar complexion, and by no means a healthy +one. No one seems to have deserted the town on account of our +approach, neither has fear hitherto prevented them from bringing their +merchandise into camp.</p> +<p>The weather has continued cool: yesterday we had a good deal of rain; +to-day it is very cloudy. The range of the thermometers from 46° +and 48° to 82° outside.</p> +<p>Artificers are not uncommon, as carpenters and blacksmiths, but their +tools are miserable: and there is no such thing as a large saw to be +seen. Wages are high, and from the slowness with which they work, +it is ruinous to employ them.</p> +<p>Left Shikarpore on the 21st and marched to Jargon, 13½ miles, +one of the usual fortified villages of <i>kucha</i> or unburnt brick. +Houses surrounded also with <i>Jhow</i> fences. The jungle and +country precisely the same as that round Shikarpore, road at first bad, +but subsequently good enough: water is to be had very good: at no great +depth.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—To Janidaira, 11½ miles: road excellent +throughout. Country less covered with jungle: features mostly +the same: a curious looking plant occurred plentifully, but to a limited +extent near Jargon and subsequently, as the country became more sandy, +we had abundance of Salicornia, of which camels are excessively fond, +otherwise <i>Jhow</i>, <i>Furas</i>, very common, <i>Rairoo</i>, <i>Kureel</i>, +<i>Ukko</i> throughout; near Jargon, Elrua very common, Chenopodium +cymbifolium throughout.</p> +<p>The soil at first is very fine, finely pulverized, brownish as we +proceeded onwards, becoming more and more sandy. Hills of some +height, apparently very distant, are seen ahead due north, and to the +west. We passed one village to the left, two canals of small size, +and some <i>Bagree</i> cultivation. A small ridge with a hillock +occurred after passing the village, otherwise all was flat. And +about this the jungle was thin, entirely of patches <i>Kureel</i>, <i>Rairoo</i>, +and <i>Furas</i>, Peepul.</p> +<p>We had a violent north wind yesterday evening with some rain.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—To Rogan, distance 11 to 12 miles: country generally +flat, presenting here and there sandy undulations, generally bare of +vegetation. Salvadora, <i>Jhow</i>, <i>Furas</i>, <i>Kureel</i>, +<i>Rairoo</i>, continue; <i>Furas</i> and <i>Rairoo</i> most common; +a new Chenopodium and a Salsola, or a plant of the same genus as that +met with yesterday, swarming in some places, both species were common +in some parts, in others one of the two only occurred. Road generally +excellent, level and unbroken. Two small ghurrees or forts occurred, +with a large patch of cotton, and still larger of <i>Bagree</i>: a small +Sedoid-looking plant with yellow flowers, and one or two other (to me) +novelties occurred: Heliotropium, Fagonia, <i>Joussa</i>, <i>Bheir</i>. +In those parts in which loose sand had become accumulated, it not only +formed banks, but every bush was submerged in it. The fresh sand +must be derived from decomposition of the hard level plain by the action +of the air: yet there should be a regular gradation in size of the waves; +those nearest the windward side of the desert ought to be the smallest. +Rock pigeon of Loodianah seen.</p> +<p>There are two ghurrees or forts at the halting place, both small; +the water is tolerable. The chief trees are Salvadora and <i>Rairoo</i>.</p> +<p><i>24th</i> <i>and</i> <i>25th</i>.—Left in the evening and +marched all night through the desert, which commences within two miles +of Rogan, and towards which place vegetation gradually becomes more +scarce until it disappears entirely. This sandy waste is upwards +of twenty miles in extent: in the direction we traversed it, NW. or +NNW., it is almost totally deprived of vegetation; one or two plants, +such as Salsoloid, being alone observable near its borders. The +surface is generally quite flat, in some places cut up by beds of small +streams: the surface is firm, and bears marks of inundation: tracks +of camels, etc. being indented. We reached Bushore at 5½ +A.M.; the camels performed twenty-six miles in ten hours. We halted +for four hours in the centre of the desert and tried to sleep but the +cold was too great, striking up as it were from the ground. The +camels marched through without halting, and we suffered only one loss +amongst them next day. The occurrence of this peculiar desert +is unaccountable, especially its almost absolute privation of vegetation; +for many other places, equally dry, have their peculiar plants, such +as Salsola, Chenopodium, <i>Furas</i>, <i>Rairo</i>, <i>Ukkoo</i>, <i>Kureel</i>.</p> +<p><i>25th</i>.—Bushore is a miserable place, consisting of the +usual mud houses and defences: the adjacent nullah does not invite attention; +it is however the only seat of wells, which, as in all this country +since leaving Rogan, are of small diameter, from thirty to forty feet +deep, and contain very little water, which also is rather brackish and +well impregnated with sand. The surrounding country is so barren +that it may be called a desert, while the desert itself may be called +the desert of deserts. I should mention that this ceases first +to the west, in which direction shrubs encroach on it. <i>Phulahi</i>, +Evolvulus acanthoides, Tribulus, <i>Kureel</i>, etc. are found about +Bushore, but the prevailing plant is Chenopodium cymbifolium.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Leaving Bushore, we proceeded to Joke, which we +reached late, it being nineteen miles: we lost the road however, which +is in a direct line only sixteen miles. We soon came on a nullah, +or canal, which we followed to Meerpore, a rather large double village, +with a nice grove of <i>Furas</i>, situated on the dry river Naree, +which is as contemptible in size as deficient in water, this is only +procurable by digging wells of thirty feet deep, and even then in small +quantity. Before reaching it, we passed several villages, mostly +deserted and ruined.</p> +<p>The country is frightfully bare of wood; the chief plant is Chenopodium +cymbifolium, and along the canal lemon grass, <i>Kureel</i>, <i>Rairoo</i>, +<i>Joussa</i>, <i>Ukko</i>, <i>Bheir</i>, etc.; near Meerpore a Centaurea, +and Evolvulus acanthaceus. But along the nullah some wood may +be found, stunted though it be, it is chiefly <i>Rairoo</i>. We +left Meerpore and proceeded about one and a half mile from Joke, following +the nullah until we came on a canal in which, from a bund having been +thrown across, there was a puddle or two of water. Here we halted. +Much remains of cultivation is presented about this, chiefly <i>Bagree</i>, +which is perennial. Durand tells me that the sprouts of the second +year are poisonous to cattle, i.e. horses; but this report may have +been given out purposely by the natives. Along the river, <i>Jhow</i> +and <i>Furas</i> occur, in the naked plains, Chenopodium cymbifolium, +<i>Rairoo</i>, and a few <i>Kureel</i>, but they are so naked as to +afford little fodder for the camels: there is a little cultivation of +mustard, and <i>Taira</i> <i>meera</i>. The hills are about twenty +miles off, and appear about 4,000 feet high, they are precipitous, but +the outline is not rugged: they appear perfectly barren. Those +to the north which run nearly east and west are more distant. +No new birds were seen; rock pigeons occur. The soil would be +rich if water were abundant: in the <i>Bagree</i> fields it is of a +cloddy kind.</p> +<p>Reseda, Euphorbia, Salsola lanata, Chenopodium cymbifolium, Evolvulus, +Panicum, and Andropogon occur here. <i>Jowaree</i> sells at twelve +seers a rupee, and <i>Khurbee</i> is very dear. A large plain +occurs here covered with Gramen Panicum, which is in tufts, and has +the appearance of being cultivated.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—Halted at our camp near Joke. The Naree +runs one and a half mile to the westward: its bed is fifty yards wide +and about ten feet deep; the banks are well clothed with <i>Furas</i>. +There is a good deal of <i>Bagree</i> cultivation.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—To <i>Oostadkote</i>, nine and a half miles. +The road is not a made one for the latter one-third. Crossed the +Naree about two miles from our encampment: the country appeared the +same. On arriving near our halting place, green wheat fields, +intermixed with much fresh Chenopodium, Gramen Panicum, Reseda were +most abundant, Chloroideum, Sinapis, Raphanus cultivated with <i>Taira</i> +<i>meera</i>, two Cruciferous plants common, Salsola lanata also occurs. +Water abundant in a channel of fifteen yards wide and three feet deep, +clear and tasteless. <i>Furas</i> the most common shrub. +No grass occurs but the remains of Panicum. Wheat is here sown +in drills, in some places the crop is promising. The country is +evidently occasionally overflowed, witness the indurated surface and +the fissures, which away from the road, renders it bad for camels, being +full of holes.</p> +<p>There are several villages visible round our camp, all of the usual +miserable description, and there is a good deal of <i>Bagree</i> cultivation. +The water does not extend more than a mile; it is eight feet deep, and +about twenty yards wide towards the head, where the bund is thrown across.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>1st</i>.—To Bagh nine and a half miles. +The country is quite similar: the chief plants continue to be Chenopodium +cymbifolium, <i>Kureel</i>, a <i>Rairoo</i>, <i>Ukko</i>, <i>Joussa</i>, +and Salsola robusta, but occur in no great plenty, they and all the +face of the country exhibit marks of inundation. Bagh is visible +a long way off from its being ornamented with a gamboge, or ochre-wash, +otherwise its aspect is poor and muddy. We came on the Naree about +three miles from the town, and as it has been bunded, it is full of +clearish blue water, to a good depth. We encamped about one and +a half mile on the south side of the town. About the head of the +bund there is a good deal of wheat cultivation, and some mustard. +In these <i>khets</i> Reseda is very abundant, Heliotrope is also common; +I picked up a Matthiola and a Pommereulla. The banks of the Naree +are clothed with small <i>Furas</i>, which in these parts are always +encrusted with saline matter, or, as it would seem, pure salt. +Rock pigeons both sorts, Loodianah rats, etc.</p> +<p>Bagh is celebrated for gunpowder; it is a largish, straggling, but +poor place, though thickly tenanted. Its latitude is 29° 1' +20", and is placed thirty miles too far south in Tassin’s +last map. Sugar-candy from Bussorah and cloth, are the principal +articles sold.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—Marched sixteen miles to Mysoor: direction at first +NNW. and latterly west, close to the Brahorck hills. Water is +plentiful in bunds and river, but the country is very very bare, Salicornia +robusta uncommon, Plantago canescens, Poa, Cynodon, <i>Ukko</i> is very +common, otherwise <i>Kureel</i> is the predominant plant. A good +deal of wheat cultivation, every thing depends on water: the wheat along +watercourses is luxuriant, but where water is less plentiful, stunted: +soil the same, a tenacious sandy clay when wet: fields very free from +weeds. Reseda very common, but very small, Heliotropium ditto, +Crucifera hispida ditto. Green wheat a maund for a rupee. +The road or rather country, is intersected here and there by ravines.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—Halted. The nearest range of hills are six +miles off, they have a very peculiar irregular brown appearance. +The higher ones also have a similar appearance; these appear quite precipitous, +and have in some parts a curious crenated outline. The chief vegetation +about this place is <i>Kureel</i>, especially along the river and towards +the bund, which last is well filled with water. <i>Kureel</i>, +<i>Furas</i>, <i>Ukko</i>, very common, Cynodon, Prenanthoid, Poa minima, +<i>Joussa</i>, Fagonia, Saccharum, Nerioid. In the water Scirpus, +Cyperaceus, Charæ two species, Potomogeton two species, Valisnaria, +Typha. On banks, Plantago cana, a curious <i>Sileneacea</i>, a +splendid Orobanche, and a Brassicacea.</p> +<p>The birds continue the same: there is abundance of Fulica, swarms +of waterfowl, herons, plovers, etc.; starlings re-appear.</p> +<p>Some wheat fields well irrigated; most luxuriant <i>Khujoors</i>, +radishes.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Marched to Nowshera, sixteen miles: five first +miles across a plain scantily furnished with <i>Kureel</i>. Sturt +tells me the country looks quite a desert to the eastward from one of +the hills. Thence we came on the hills, through which and the +dividing valleys we proceeded for two miles, thence emerging into a +narrow valley in which Nowshera is situated, drained by the river of +Mysoor, which is an insignificant running stream.</p> +<p>The hills are very curious, totally bare of vegetation, not more +than two or three stunted Chenopodium cymbifolium being seen on or about +them. They do not exceed 300 feet in height; their composition +is various; they are much worn by rain, and the outline although generally +sharp, is often rounded. They present great variety, but chiefly +are of a soft clayish looking substance, distinctly enough stratified, +the uppermost strata being indurated and often quite smooth, and of +a sub-ochreous appearance. The outer ridges on each side of the +range slope gradually outwards, and the surface in these slopes is smooth. +Inside, or towards the inner part of the range, they are generally precipitous, +but beyond the uppermost strata, the exposed face is not indurated, +hence this can scarcely arise from exposure to the weather. In +these places they look much like sandstone, the fragments at the base +of the cliffs are clayey, mixed with brown angular masses, occasionally +shingle, and indeed, a low ridge near the north side of the range is +chiefly of shingle. The direction is NNE., the angle of inclination +of the slopes say 30°. The hills are highest towards the centre, +and here some of the strata are curved.</p> +<p>The plain between this and the main range is much broken by ravines +caused by rain; it is thinly covered with <i>Kureel</i>, Salsola robusta, +Chenopodium, etc. The vegetation along the river is the same as +at Mysoor. Durand finds nummulites, but thinks them brought down +by the river. The strata or rather debris of slips often intersected +by nearly erect projecting lines of a fibrous dyke. There is some +wheat cultivation in the fields, a new Plantago, a Ruta, Silenacea, +a curious Composita, two Boragineæ, Phalaris, Phleum, Avena, two +or three Crucifera, Trigonella, and Melilotus are to be found. +The vegetation elsewhere is much the same, <i>Rairoo</i>, <i>Kureel</i>, +<i>Ukko</i>, Chenopodium, Lycium albidum re-occurs.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Proceeded to Dadur, a distance of seven and a half +miles, nearly north. The country is a good deal cut up by water: +within two and a half miles of Dadur we crossed the Naree, a running +stream, with small boulders, and high clayey banks. The country +improves towards Dadur, topes becoming more frequent. Salsola +lanata abundant: a good deal of cultivation occurs along the river.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—Dadur is a good sized, and more orderly looking +place than Bagh, and is ornamented with well wooded gardens, among which +the <i>Khujoor</i> holds a conspicuous place. An elegant and large +<i>Bheir</i> and a Mimosa, are two other trees of the place; it is situated +on the left bank of the Bolan river. The bed of this river until +the Levee bund was cut, had been dry, but there is now plenty of water +in it. It is in some places much choked by bulrushes, etc., it +is eighty yards broad, and is shingly. Dadur stands nearly on +the end of a good sized plain, surrounded on all sides by hills, of +which those traversed to Nowshera, run NNE. and are lowest. The +main range is four or five miles off. The greater part of this +plain is uncultivated and covered with <i>Rairoo</i>, <i>Kureel</i>, +<i>Joussa</i>, Sal. lanata, and Chenopodium; but along the sides of +the river, as well as near that crossed en route to this place from +Nowshera, there is a highly luxuriant cultivation of wheat, bearded +and beardless, and barley. In some places near the town, are rich +gardens of <i>sonff</i>, coriander, <i>Mola</i>, cress, onions, carrots, +beet, among which a few poppies and Cannabis occur. These, as +well as the fields, are protected with loose <i>Bheir</i> fences. +There are a few small villages around, all of the same kucha or temporary +construction, together with some remains of cotton, which in these parts +is perennial.</p> +<p>There are no wild trees to be found, excepting perhaps an elegant +species of willow. The vegetation of the fields is highly interesting, +consisting of many European forms, similar to those at Nowshera—Avena, +Phleum, Polygonium, Zanthoxyloid, Erodium! Anagallis in abundance, Plantago, +<i>Pecagee</i>, Cynodon two species, Andropogon, Melilotus, Medicago, +Boraginea, Malva, Tetragonolotus, Astragaloides, Sperguloides, Cruciferæ.</p> +<p>In the bed of the river Nerium, Pæderioides, Crotalaria, etc. +of which the former is common every where: Fagonia, Viola found in the +bed of the river crossed en route hither, a very curious plant. +Antirrhenoid was brought from the hills by Capt. Sanders, singular in +the inequality of the calyx and the great development of the posticous +sepal.</p> +<p>Altogether this spot is curious in regard to vegetation, for the +mean annual temperature must be high, and the winter temperature by +no means low enough to account for the appearance presented.</p> +<p>The only novel birds are a jackdaw, with the voice and manners of +the red-billed Himalayan species, and which I have only seen at a distance, +and a different sort of Pterocles.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Proceeded to Drubbee, eight miles from Dadur, +and about three within the range of hills, the plain towards which is +rather elevated, and generally covered with boulders and shingle. +The vegetation of this shingly plain is much the same, Chenopodium, +<i>Ukko</i>, Salsola, <i>Kureel</i>, <i>Rairoo</i>; the most common +shrubby plant, however, is an elegant Mimosa, much like the <i>Babool</i>, +with white thorns; Nerium oleander is also very common along cuts.</p> +<p>In some wheat fields I procured Imperata, a new Plantago, and a curious +Gnaphalium. The entrance to the pass is gradual; the hills almost +entirely bare. I noticed <i>Rairoo</i>, Salvadora, <i>Kureel</i>. +The most novel plant is a curious, erect, bushy, thorny Convolvulus, +which is one of the most common plants farther in. The pass to +Drubbee is wide, say 300 yards; the only obstacle exists in the shingle, +which renders the road heavy. No abutments are present, jutting +out from the hills, the stream is considerable but easily fordable, +and abounds with fish, the Mahaseer, and two or three species of Gonorhynchus. +The hills about Drubbee are not more than 500 feet high. They +are generally of a coarse breccia, the component parts principally limestone; +abundance of nummulites. The chief vegetation of the pass is one +or two Andropogoneous grasses, and Apocynum nerioides. There is +absolutely no fodder for camels, which however, take readily to grass. +Towards the mouth of the pass, Pæderia involucrata, Villarsia, +Lycioid, Stenophyllum and <i>Ukko</i> are common, but they are rare +inside, although the last continues some distance up the hills and attains +a large size, becoming quite arboreous. A Crucifera, a rhubarby +sorrel, a Goodyera, and one or two grasses, were the only additional +novelties met with.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Marched on eight miles, after five of which we +turned to the right, and the pass became and continued narrow, until +we reached our halting place, which is something like what we may suppose +to be the remains of a mountain, still a good deal elevated above the +bed of river. The mountains continued the same in the gorge, until +we came to limestone cliffs, which afforded a peculiar vegetation, Linaria +retephioides, Linaria alia pusilla foliis 5-gonis cordatis, floribus +luteis minutis pubescens, specimen lost, one or two Rubiaceæ, +a Salvia, several very interesting grasses, among which is a Stipa, +a Composita, Santanoides, a curious Capparidea, Cassia, etc. etc.</p> +<p>The hills have increased in height, in many places they were extremely +picturesque, split and divided in every direction. The valley +running off to south on our entrance into the gorge: river diminished +somewhat in size. Jheely spots, with very deep water common, surrounded +with thick Andropogon, Typha and Scirpus jungle. Few fish were +seen and none taken. Can the Mahaseer not reach this? Gonorhynchus +continue, but they never take a fly; Ophiocephalus, <i>Sowlee</i>; turtle +caught by bearers, Silurus. No less than twenty-three plants novel +to me were gathered on the limestone, which looks as bare as the breccia; +all its plants grew in small tufts or singly, and all adhered firmly +to the rock. The only tree which continues is <i>Phulahi</i> or +<i>Rairoo</i>; Convolvulus spinosus very common, a very curious Chenopodioid, +Reseda with Cruciferous qualities.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—Proceeded to Gurmab, eight and a half miles. +Country continues the same. The defile after crossing some rather +broad water three feet deep, opened out into a rather large valley, +near the south end of which Gurmab is situated, and it is <i>ornamented</i> +with a good many <i>Rairoo</i> trees, of indifferent size and appearance. +No change whatever in the vegetation; Salsola prima occurs sparingly.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—Halted at Gurmab. The hills close to our +encampment are of limestone, which is in many places very angular. +Oolite found by Durand in a low range, standing by itself in the valley, +it generally bears a vast quantity of nummulites and madrepores. +A flat discoid organized remain occurs in abundance, and probably belongs +to the same group. <i>Ukko</i>, <i>Rairoo</i>, <i>Kureel</i> rare, +Convolvulus spinosus, Frankenioides, Stipaceum gramen, Euphorbia, Polygonum +rheoides, Salvadora, may be found. Along the water Andropogonoides +2, Typha, Arundo, Juncus, Scirpus juncinus in abundance. In the +water, a new Naias, and Conferveæ. In a ravine near our +camp, I found a Cynoglossum and a curious Periploceous plant, in habit +approaching to certain Aphyllous, true Asclepiads.</p> +<p>A few stunted dates are visible near Gurmab, which is three miles +from Kirtah, and towards the deep water there is a ruin of a single +house. <i>Rairoo</i>, Nerioid, and Lycium albidum are the most +common ground plants. There is only <i>Rairoo</i> for camels, +who do not thrive on harsh grasses, although compelled by hunger to +eat them. Large flocks of Doombah sheep and goats belonging to +Khelat men were met with. Mahaseer in abundance, and very greedy +after a red hackle of fish, Macrognathus and Opheocephalus occur also. +Of birds the white vulture, Alauda cristata et alia, with a notched +beak, a partridge which I had not previously seen, Motacilla alia.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—Proceeded to Beebee Nanee, nine and a half miles +up the valley in which Gurmab is situated. The road tolerably +level and good; boulders not however common. The village of Kuttah, +is one mile to the right, consisting of one ruined house; near the exit +from the valley a burial ground occurs, having flags, or banners, pointing +out the graves, which are covered with heaps of stones. The exit +from the valley is by a narrow pass through a low range of angular limestone, +thence up another narrow shingly valley or narrowish gorge, and over +a small stream of water of ordinary temperature, where we encamped: +in the second valley two spots were observed covered with graves. +Immense flocks of birds were seen on the range to the west of the valley. +In the first valley Pæderia involucrata and Salsola prima, are +the most common plants. On the limestone hills, Convolvulus spinosus, +Frankeniacea, Plantago villosa, and a curious Composita, subacaulis, +involucro foliaceo, of which the single specimen has been lost, a few +<i>Bheirs</i>.</p> +<p>Encamped in a small valley or pass leading to Khelat, a marked one +only a few hundred yards wide. To the west, the hills continue +very barren. Gurmab—this takes its name from the warmth +of the water, which apparently rises in several sedgy spots; the united +waters form a small stream abounding with Mahaseer, Barbus, etc. and +falling into another stream, again meets the main river, which runs +off to the eastward from the place where it is crossed towards Gurmab. +There is no sign of bubbling in the springs, although the water commences +to run visibly from within a few yards. The temperature of one +did not vary from 76°, which must be about the mean temperature +of the place, but the temperature of a deep body of water after the +confluence of several springs was 82°, so that some of them must +hence be of considerable temperature: the highest examined was 81°.</p> +<p>Of three springs examined—the first of these had a temperature +of 82° Fahr.—the second of 77°, these unite to form the +streamlet that runs towards the east—the third spring had a temperature +of 77°: this is crossed on entering the valley from the south, it +runs under a limestone range, and then bends off to the south-east to +unite with the main stream. Cyprinus fulgens and C. bimaculatus +were found in the 82° spring. From the variation in the temperature +of the three, it is obvious that neither represents the mean temperature +of the place.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—To Abigoom, eight and a quarter miles, through +a similar country up a valley in a NNW. direction; the valley is narrowed +towards the middle, and is a plain of considerable inclination, the +chief rocks passed are limestones. No fodder for camels, and little +enough on the road for horses; the chief vegetation consisting of Nerioides, +Pæderia involucrata, and small tufts of <i>Kuss</i>-<i>kuss</i> +grass; Ruwash is common, Lycium album; Salsola prima are not common, +and the <i>Bheir</i> is rare. A new and curious plant looking +like <i>Kureel</i> was found, male flowers with large semi-antheriferous +bearing disc. Apocynum viminale not uncommon, and not ruined by +cattle, Prenanthoid albiflora, Echinopsides, a fine Begonia, B. punicoides, +arbuscula; Salvadora also occurred. The inclined valleys are very +shingly and bouldery. The mountains as barren as ever.</p> +<p>There is at Beebee Nanee a running streamlet, in which small Mahaseer, +Nepuroid, Gonorhynchus and Barbus may be found; also a species of Cancer. +We were encamped close to the cliffy termination of a limestone range, +in which Linaria, Trichodesma, Cynoglossum, Ruwash, Labiata, and a most +singular Telepheoid polygalous looking plant were found. There +is some fodder along the water for horses, but for camels scarcely any: +we accordingly lose six to ten camels now daily. There was a curious +echo from the cliff.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—To-day we halt at Abigoom, which is at the extremity +of an inclined plain, and 2,500 feet above the sea; some of the boundary +hills are considerably higher, the valley is shingly and bouldery, covered +with the usual plants, but more scantily: Nerioid, Pæderia involucrata, +Lycium albidium, Apocynum viminale.</p> +<p>I went to some wheat cultivation yesterday afternoon about two and +a half miles off, in a small valley to the south-east. The wheat +was fine, all bearded, most of the Dadur plant occurred in it with some +curious novelties, Boraginea, Cynoglossum, Compositæ, Cuscuta, +and a new Reseda. The Melilotus and red Anchusoid were not found, +Plantago, were among the most abundant. A single <i>Furas</i> +tree and some <i>Kureel</i> were seen near the wheat. The weather +unsettled; cloudy; rain fell at night and early this morning. +A <i>cafilah</i> or caravan from Candahar with figs and raisins passed +us. Rock pigeon of Loodianah and the small partridge were observed. +There is a streamlet here.</p> +<p><i>18th</i>.—Detained by bad weather, which threatened the +whole of yesterday. The river came down during the night, flooded, +and upset some of the tents, damaging many things, but not carrying +off much. It rained smartly almost the whole night: we moved this +morning to rather higher ground, but not so high as to preclude all +danger should the river rise again. A dawk man arrived last night, +bringing a handful of tulips which he said came from Shal; it is a small +species, foliis subtortis undulatis caule 1-flora, flore amplo aureo +subodora.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Advanced to Sirekhugoor, distance nineteen miles, +ascent throughout on a considerably inclined plain up the bed of a river, +shingly and bouldery; the pass is not much contracted, but a short distance +from Abigoom we parted from every thing like valleys. The vegetation +continues much the same: <i>Kureel</i>, Salsola prima re-occurred near +Abigoom but sparingly, chief vegetation consists of clumps of withered +coarse Andropogons, Nerioides, Pæderia, and Lycium, but less common +than before, while Apocynum viminale, and Convolvulus spinosus have +increased. The bed of the streamlet is until near Sirekhugoor, +chiefly occupied by a large Arundo just past flowering, in which Typha +also occurs sparingly: within 300 feet of the halting place, a solitary +<i>Khujoor</i>, and some wheat cultivation occurs, the latter much behind +that of Abigoom. In the fields Polygala occurred with a Galium; +the most common plant being a Sinapis found at Dadur: some <i>Bheir</i> +trees also occur here; a few Compositæ, Labiatæ, and Cruciferæ, +similar to those at Abigoom, are also found: the novelties were <i>Peganum</i> +which continues throughout the pass, Hyoscyamoid, and one or two Compositæ; +while in water-courses close to it the first dripping rocks occurred +covered with Adiantum and fructiferous mosses, and a curious Primuloid +plant out of flower, with a curious Clematis.</p> +<p>The halting place is at the head of the stream, which gushes copiously +out of a rock; the bed of the river or defile is 100 yards wide: the +mountains immediately adjoining not exceeding 1,000 feet in height, +but the second range is much higher, that to our north being plentifully +sprinkled with snow. These mountains are barren, chiefly covered +with Convolvulus spinosus, which has a different aspect, with a Sytisoid, +handsome silvery shrub, a species of Caragana and Apocynum viminale: +about the spring and in other places there are thick patches of a very +dwarf palm, and a solitary fig tree, a Lycium album continues: the bed +occupied by tufts of coarse Andropogons and Apocynum viminale; about +the spring Adiantum, a small Boraginia, white flowered small Compositæ, +a withered Hepaticum, two or three efructiferous mosses, and the Primuloid +plant. In the stream Chara, Conferva, Peppermint, <i>Beccabunga</i>, +Convolvulus, like C. reptans, Arundo left behind nearly. On the +mountains fragrant Labiatæ, Compositæ, and Umbelliferæ +are commencing. The barometer stood at 25.669; thermometer 64° +at 11 A.M. Many soft rocks occurred: passed a clayey looking one, +with very elevated strata, containing veins of transverse crystals: +the sides of the defile are often precipitous, these are generally formed +of conglomerate.</p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—Continued up the same defile, a gradual ascent, +and about two miles from Sirekhugoor entered the pass by pre-eminence; +very much narrowed, precipitous cliffs on both sides: this continues +for some time. The road good, shingly, but not very bouldery; +very winding, and generally capable of strong defence; much cover exists +from the rugged margins of cliffs, and windings of the road. The +mountains, after four or five miles were passed, gradually receded and +became less precipitous: at length we came to gradually rounded more +distant mountains; then to a small valley; then ascended say 100 feet, +over a low rocky range, and descended into a fine valley, surrounded +by usual barren looking mountains: high ranges to the north and south +covered with snow presenting a beautiful view—and now entered +Khorassan. We were accompanied by several bands of a gypsyish-looking +people, forming parts of a <i>cafilah</i>. They were accompanied +with numerous goats: and camels ornamented with trappings.</p> +<p>Throughout the very narrow portion of the pass the vegetation continues +the same: at Sirekhugoor a Xanthoxylon appears and continues nearly +throughout: this and an oleinous looking small tree are the only arborescent +plants: Apocynum viminale and the other plants of Sirekhugoor continue, +nor did I notice any new ones further than a Sedum, and Tortula. +However fragrant Labiatæ and Compositæ increase in number, +but none are in flower.</p> +<p>As soon as we opened out from the pass, the vegetation almost entirely +changed; the hills assumed a rounded form, covered with low bushes, +and were much less rocky. Umbelliferæ, Labiatæ, and +Compositæ abound, some of them deliciously fragrant: an Astragaloid +spinosus very common, a shrubby Cerasus, Thalictrum, Hypoxis, and small +Cruciferæ abundant. The chief vegetation consists of grasses +in low round tufts; Anemone, Tulipa, etc. all small. After crossing +a low range we came into the valley, which is almost entirely covered +with an Artemisioid odoriferous plant; no verdure was visible, even +on the snowy ranges. We encamped close under a ridge about two +and a half miles to the north of the summit of the pass.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—Halted: there being some water collected in attempts +to form a nullah from the last rain, it is quite brownish and opaque, +but deposits no sediment, and makes good tea, although disagreeable +to drink in any other form. I walked out in the afternoon into +a valley to the west, close to our encampment, and thence ascended a +hill 600 feet high at least.</p> +<p>This valley like the one in which we are encamped is covered entirely +by an Artemisioid, a very fragrant plant, each shrub of which is distinct; +mixed with it are tulips, several small Cruciferæ, and a Fritillarioides.</p> +<p>The same Artemisioid is also the chief plant on all the hills: it +is mixed, but in small quantities with Cerasus pygmæus, Equisetoid, +Caragana, and one or two shrubby Labiatæ; and also especially +above, with a curious Astragaloid looking plant. The herbaceous +plants are numerous, consisting of very fragrant Umbelliferæ, +bursting into leaf; tulips, Fritillarioides, Trichostema, Erodium, Iris, +Thalictrum, Senecio, Boragineæ 2, Gilenacea, several tufted Gramineæ, +Berberideæ, Ranunculoides, Myosotis, Anemone cracea, Asphodeloid, +Mesembryanthoids; of mosses Tortula, Grimmia.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—Proceeded to Sinab, a distance of fifteen and +three quarter miles, up two valleys, no ascents. These valleys +are elevated towards the mountains and generally depressed in the centre: +in some they stretch out a long way from the mountain to which they +may be imagined to belong. The mountains seen from a distance +jutting out from perhaps the centre of a plain, look curious. +The vegetation is generally Artemisioid, and very fragrant: the first +valley in its depressed portions was covered with a Salsoloid looking +plant, to the exclusion of Compositæ, but these last recurred +in the higher parts.</p> +<p>With the Compositæ, swarms of small Cruciferæ occur; +that with purple flowers and pinnatisect leaves being the most common. +Very rugged hills are visible to the north-east and north of our route, +presenting a very different appearance from the usual aspect: they are +steep to the east, and present inclined slopes to the west.</p> +<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>24th</i>.—Halted this day. Little new +occurs in the valley, except a few trees out of leaf and flower, which, +though trees here, yet the species are not so elsewhere. At this +place are the heads of the river of Pisheen, which appear to arise more +artificially than naturally from <i>Kahreezes</i>, or wells dug in a +rude way, and communicating by subterranean channels; those nearest +the natural outlet of the water being the shallowest. The vegetation +is the same; there is a little cultivation, but nothing to indicate +any descent. The amount of population is not great; and the hills +to the west are covered with snow. The chief vegetation is <i>Santonica</i>. +In cornfields Fumariaceæ, Adonis, Cruciferæ, Pulmonaria, +Arenaria, Hordei sp., Tulipa lutea, and Hyacinthus? may be found.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the plains, inclusive of Santonica, consists generally +of three or four small Cruciferæ, Tulipa lutea.</p> +<p>I went to the west towards the snow, and found in the river here +an aquatic Ranunculus, foliis omnibus immersis, floribus albis, Chara +is common; gravelly slopes commence some distance from hills, covered +with Santonica, Astragaloid spinosus, Leguminosæ, a spinous Statice, +Cytisus argenteis, Composita floribunda carnosa.</p> +<p>The mountains are covered with masses of rock. One tree occurs +with a Fraxinus? a Thymeleous looking shrub, Cytisus, Caragana. +The herbaceous plants are very numerous, Compositæ, Cruciferæ, +small Leguminosæ, Berberideæ, Isopyroides, Crocus? Gentiana, +Onosma and other Boragineæ, Umbelliferæ, Silenaceæ, +especially small Arenariæ; Cupressus commences about 6,500 feet, +near the Cypress an Arctium occurred, at least it has the habit of that +genus, Onosma, a curious Boraginea calyce sinubus bidentigeris, demum +plano! ampliato bilabiato! clauso, quasi hastato lobato, nucibus compressis, +2, Sedums 4, Arenariæ, a fine Gentiana, Crocoides, Iris, Ornithogaloides +or Trichonema occurred, with many others. The greatest elevation +attained was about 1,200 feet above the camp. Chikor and the smaller +partridge were seen.</p> +<p><i>25th</i>.—Marched to Quettah, eight and a half miles up +the valley over a delightful road. The valley is cultivated, and +many villages are visible with their orchards, consisting of mulberry +trees, cherries, and apricots, surrounded with mud walls; the houses +miserable, and all trees out of leaf: the crops under cultivation are +more advanced, but depend on irrigation, some salad-bearing plant occurred +cultivated in trenches like asparagus: the fields are clean, and sometimes +well manured. A Veronica allied to V. agrestis, 2 or 3 Euphorbiaceæ, +a very well defined Plantago, Hyacinthus, and a pretty Muscari, were +among the novelties; Juncus, Chara, Carex, occurred in some marshy spots. +I was most struck with the occurrence of at least two species of Lucerne, +or Trefoil: wells are common, and water abundant. The climate +is delightful, temperature 49° at 9 P.M. in a tent.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—I ascended towards a snowy range to the ESE. of +our camp, crossing a cultivated portion of the valley extending to the +gradual slopes so universal between the level portion and the bases +of the mountains, and which are always covered with shingle, and occasionally +much cut up by watercourses. Turning a ridge I ascended up a ravine, +rather wide and easy at first, but becoming gradually narrow, and at +last difficult. On coming to its head I rambled some distance +higher among precipitous rocks, the ground generally covered with loose +shingle, giving bad footing. The rocks too were treacherous, often +giving way under the feet. I was still 1,000 feet from the summit, +which is the second range between our camp and the snow but which is +not visible from the camp. From it I saw the camp, and the valley +of Pisheen beyond the termination of the Tuckatoo range. Water +boiled at 196° 7', making the height about 8,300 feet, in my (new) +Woollaston instrument at 686; temperature of the air 46° 5'. +Nothing occurred to repay me for the fatigue of the excursion. +Junipers or cypress form the chief arbusculous vegetation, but even +these are scanty; they commence at 6,500 feet, and continue to the snow: +Fraxinus occurred about 7,000 feet, and another tree of which I could +make nothing, it being out of flower and leaf. Compositæ +were the prevailing vegetation; but of these, only the remains were +found, which were very fragrant. A large thorny Leguminous shrub +out of leaf, etc. looking much like a Rosa, Equisetoides, etc.; of mosses, +Weissia Templetonii, and Tortula, so that in these there is very little +variety; the debris of one Hepatica occurred.</p> +<p>At the foot of the mountains, the only place out of the valley where +any vegetation is to be found, Asphodelus, radicibus luteis, foliis +triangularibus, a fine plant coming into flower, Cytisus, Caragana, +Narcissus? Cruciferæ, among them a small Draba, Cerasus pygmæus, +Peganum, Salsoloid of Mumzil, Trichonema, Myosotis, Gentiana of Chiltera, +Buddlæa, Carex; indeed the vegetation is precisely the same as +at Chiltera. The only novelty was Bardana in flower, and it proves +to be a cruciferous plant of large size.</p> +<p>On the stony slopes, a shrubby spinous Centauroid, foliis pinnatifidis +glaucis, Cytisus, Caragana, Asphodelus and Cheiranthus are the prevailing +plants. No Santonica is found about here.</p> +<p>A new Iris occurs in abundance: near this in wettish parts of the +valley a Vicia, Muscari, Hyacinthus and others as before. The +chief cultivation is wheat, irrigated in plots: the soil when saturated +with water, forming a clayish, adhesive, finely pulverulent mass, which +cakes on drying. A watermill for flour, having a horizontal wheel +acted on by the stream as in Bootan occurs; the grain drops in from +a pyramidal cone fixed over the two horizontal stones, in the upper +of which there is a hole. The apparatus is very rude.</p> +<p>The height attained by me on the eastern ridge being about 8,300 +feet; that of the 2nd range, will be 9,300 feet at least, and the height +of the peak or highest ridge, cannot be less than 11,000 feet.</p> +<p>30th.—Continue to halt. There is a good deal of cultivation +about this place, but the crops will not be ripe before August: it is +principally wheat; munjit is also cultivated on trenched ground: the +young sprouts have a good salad-like flavour. The Suddozye Lora +runs through the valley, about two miles from the town: it is a small +stream, crowded here and there with bulrushes, sedges, etc. Towards +its banks there is a good deal of Santonica, but elsewhere there is +no good fodder, and wherever this is the case the camels eat Iris, and +destroy themselves. The valley is sprinkled over with villages +and orchards, and is picturesque enough. In one spot, where water +runs over the surface, it is delightfully green and velvety, covered +with short grass and trefoil, Carex, etc.</p> +<p>In cornfields in this direction, Berberidea ranunculiflora is very +common, Muscari, Hyacinthus, Taraxacum, Plantago. Of animals the +Jerboa, sent to Macleod by Mr. Mackenzie, of the Artillery, several +specimens having been caught here: presenting affinities obviously with +the hare, and analogies with the Kangaroo. Macleod has just given +me, from his namesake of the 3rd Cavalry, a tadpole-like animal, very +similar to one from the Khasiya Hills. I fear it is a tadpole, +but I keep the specimen lest it should be a Lepidosiren.</p> +<p>The orchards here consist of cherry, and a pomaceous tree which also +is cultivated at Shikarpore, and on the skirts occasionally of willows, +which, were they unmutilated, would be handsome trees. The Punjabi +name of the pomaceous one is <i>Sai</i>-<i>oo</i>, of the cherry or +plum <i>Aloochah</i>.</p> +<p>Senecionoid glauca is extremely common towards the river, but is +not eaten by camels. In the streams arising from springs a Myriophylloides +is very common; as also in some places, Ranunculus aquaticus, Beccabunga, +Mentha piperitioid, a Sicyoid, Juncus, Coniferæ, and Cariceæ, +all small.</p> +<p>Along the banks of the river, there is a good deal of a small thorny +shrub with white bark and fleshy clavato-spathulate leaves. Themopsis +is extremely common, Crucifera glauca ditto, Peganum less so, Achilleoides +is very common. In damp spots a Lotus (out of flower) occurs. +The ground is covered in many places with an efflorescence of saltpetre.</p> +<p><i>Quettah</i>.—The country was so disturbed throughout the +greater part of the line, and attacks on followers so frequent, that +I did not go out so much during the last few days as I otherwise would. +The only plant that seems to a considerable extent local, is the larger +Asphodel, which is however found occasionally towards Kuchlak. +Within the last few days vegetation has rapidly progressed; the orchards +bursting into leaf, and the whole plain, where uncultivated, is assuming +a greenish tint. I have nothing to add respecting the botany, +except having found Ceratophyllum and two species of Chara, one a very +interesting species from having the joints furnished with semi-reflexed, +very narrow leaves, it is apparently Dioeceous, there is also a Naiad, +much like that found at Dadur. No Lemnæ occur among the +vegetation: there is some sort of pea cultivated: but the chief object +is wheat, then next to it in extent is Lucerne, which is cultivated +in plots; the ground being laid out as in wheat, so as to allow of irrigation.</p> +<p>The climate is variable; rain generally falls every four or five +days, before this happens it becomes hot and hazy, afterwards it is +very cold and clear: the alternations are hence very great. From +the thermometer immersed in the fount of a spring gushing out from a +<i>Kabreeza</i>, the mean temperature would appear to be 56°. +Water running in cuts close to it, was 66°. A Tauschia occurs +in abundance near the spot, and is remarkable for illustrating the nature +of the leaves of the upper parts; it is curious that all such have a +peculiar aspect. (For other plants of this neighbourhood, see +Cat. and Icones.)</p> +<p>The town although the third in Khorassan, is a miserable place and +has a deserted aspect, the houses are of the most temporary construction, +and the hill is crowned by a poor half-ruined <i>kucha</i> fort; the +gates of the town are ornamented with wild goats’ horns and heads. +There is no trade, and the place is stated to be plundered often by +Caukers. Orchards—apricots of large size, and very large +cherry trees, a pomaceous plant with the habit of poplar, occurs; the +Ulmus of this place is one of the largest sized trees; no walnuts.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>6th</i>.—Left Quettah for Kuchlak. We +traversed the sandy plain and then ascended the gravelly slope to the +pass traversed before reaching Kuchlak, the ascent and descent were +about equal, but the former was long and gradual, the latter rapid and +short. The features of the country are precisely the same; the +pass is short, the descent to the ravine, which in the rains is evidently +a watercourse, short and steep, not 100 feet. The mountains forming +the sides are steep; and those to the left, bold and romantic, with +here and there a small tree. The plain of Kuchlak is like that +of Quettah, well supplied with water-cuts and one small canal, but miserably +cultivated, and with very few villages. The hills forming its +west boundary are low, rugged, and curiously variegated with red and +white. Tuckatoo forms part of its eastern boundary: no snow is +visible on its face towards Kuchlak: a few low rounded hillocks occur +in the centre of the valley. The chief vegetation round the camp, +is Santonica. We encamped close to the western boundary of the +valley, about two miles from the grand camp: total distance of the march +thirteen and a half miles. The climate is very hot and variable; +thermometer ranged to-day from 40° to 86°.</p> +<p>The chief vegetation of the gravelly slopes is as marked as ever, +and differs entirely from that of the sandy tillable portion; it consists +of Centaurea fruticosa, C. spinosa, Anthylloides or Ononoides, Astragalus +spinosus, and Staticoides, another thorny Composita occurs, but is not +common, the herbaceous plants are Cruciferæ in large numbers, +as well as Compositæ; of Boragineæ, a good many, some Labiatæ, +a large Salvia: towards the tillable lands or where gravelly places +occur among these, Asphodelus is common with Cheiranthus; one or more +fruticose Dianthi occur in these places, and a curious shrubby Polygonum.</p> +<p>In dry watercourses Cytisus is common, with a host of small Cruciferæ, +Boragineæ, and Compositæ; Papaveraceæ are very common +with Glaucium.</p> +<p>The novelties in the pass were Ficus, Lycium, some grasses, Onosma. +(See Cat. from Nos. 411 to 430,) Marchantiaceæ.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Proceeded to Hydozee, distance eight miles. +The country is very barren, diversified by curious low hills, of a red, +white, or yellowish colour, divided by small bits of plain, which in +some cases were a good deal cut up by ravines. Passed immediately +on starting, the Sudoozye Lora, here a sluggish muddy stream, knee-deep, +twenty yards wide, and in addition to a bad dry cut, we passed likewise +another little stream with a pebbly bottom and rapid current.</p> +<p>The crops composing the very little cultivation seen before arriving, +were backward and scanty: so were those at Hydozee. The chief +vegetation is Santonica; here and there are gravelly spots with Centaurea +fruticosa, spinosa; Statice, Salvia, etc. re-occur. The commonest +shrub along the watercourses is Lycium, with another Lycioid thorny +plant.</p> +<p>The low hills were in some cases stratified, the strata in others +and perhaps in most were indistinct: most were rounded, but the outlines +at a distance were very diversified. The novelties today were +a fine vesicular calyxed Astragalus, an Isatidea, tulip of red, orange, +and yellow, indiscriminately mixed, Papaver Rheas, Cheiranthus lapidium, +Asphodels both sorts, but the second and larger one is uncommon, Iris +<i>Stacyana</i> very common in sandy places, Iris agrestis, most common +about Suddozye, Adonis, and Ranunculus Anemoides occurs. Snow +on north side of Tuckatoo mountain as heavy as on Chiltera; the valley +of Pisheen is here a miserable place, narrower than that of Quettah.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—Advanced to Hykulzyea, distance twelve miles to +the town, about eleven through a similar country with that previously +noted, and until the expanded part of the valley of Pisheen is entered +the aspect is very barren; the road extends between low rounded hills. +After crossing the valley of Hydozyea, three streams are passed, none +of any size. Botanical features continue the same, Santonica being +still the prevailing plant. The curious frutex pluvinatus of Sinab +re-occurred, together with an additional subspiny Astragaloid shrub +and a small Ruta. The hills are covered with distinct small shrubs, +never coalescing into patches. Peganum continues in addition to +the other plants: Glaucioides has aqueous juice, Papaver Rheas ditto, +the other smooth-leaved one has it slightly milky.</p> +<p>Lycium and Tamarisk 4-fida is rather common: Hykulzyea is a far larger +place than Quettah, but miserably defended. The houses are very +inferior, consisting of thatch and mud. The cultivation of wheat +is rather extensive around. Many villages are seen towards the +hills to the north and NNE.; also one or two forts, but not a tree is +to be seen in the valley which is comparatively very large and very +level. The hills to the north have the ordinary appearance; those +separating us from the valley of Hydozyea, more especially the lower +ranges, are so confused that they look like a chopping sea, and present +a red and white colour. The rock pigeon of Loodianah is common +about Hydozyea. A few novelties occurred in the vegetation, the +chief of which being a large Salvoid Labiata, a plant which is very +common throughout Khorassan from Sinab in gravelly spots. Leguminosæ, +Boragineæ, Compositæ, Cruciferæ, and Labiatæ, +are the prevailing plants; Salsola tertia not uncommon. Birds +as before, Alauda cristata, and Sylvioides being the most common; no +red legged crows were seen. Rock pigeons are abundant.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—March to Berumby, distance thirteen miles, the +road very bad in one or two places: the first difficulty being a rather +deep ravine, the second a nullah, with water knee-deep, and very high +precipitous banks, yet both these had to be passed. Much of the +baggage was not up at the encampment until 5 P.M., although we started +at 3 A.M., but the nullah was literally choked up with camels. +No change in the vegetation has appeared, except in the occurrence of +large tracts of Tamarisk, which tree reaches to nearly the same size +as the <i>Jhow</i>. Very little cultivation is to be seen; the +villages are tolerably numerous, especially near the hills forming the +north boundary of the valley.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Entered the pass which is at first wide, with +a gradual ascent, but which soon becomes narrowish, with a good though +gradual and easy ascent: the mountains are of no height, and they are +not generally precipitous: no limestone, but much clay slate occurs. +The ravine up which we passed, or rather watercourse, was well stocked +with Xanthoxylon, some of large size as to the diameter of trunk, but +very stumpy: water is found not far from the entrance: some cultivation +also occurs and one large walled village, Dera Abdoollah Khan, lay to +our left. Not much change in the vegetation: Xanthoxylon is almost +entirely confined to ravines, Cerasus common, and one or two other prickly +shrubs, and a Ruta, Onosma, Linarea, coming into flower, are among the +novelties.</p> +<p>We encamped where the pass becomes narrow, and the ascent steep, +and where water is plentiful, but the stream being soon absorbed does +not appear to run down the main ravine at this season.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Halted, to make the road where the main ascent +commences about 400 yards from our camp, and which is about 300 feet +high; thence there is a descent, and afterwards an ascent to about 600 +feet above the camp, whence the <i>low</i> plains of Candahar are visible, +as well as the range to the north of which Candahar stands. The +road is good compared with places elsewhere to be seen, and for common +traffic on camels may be easy enough; but for guns, it is steep and +difficult. The way it has been made by the Engineers is admirable +and rapid; three other passes without roads, and in their rude natural +state are as yet to be crossed. The pass here is narrow, none +of the hills rise more than 1,000 feet above it, they are easily accessible, +and are composed chiefly of clay slate. Chikores are frequent. +The cuckoo was heard to-day, as well as a beautifully melodious titmouse, +with a black crown: a fine eagle, or falcon was seen.</p> +<p>The hills are as usual barren, all the shrubs are thorny, and all +the plants unsocial, never coalescing into any thing like groups. +The Xanthoxylon is found throughout in ravines up to nearly 7,000 feet, +the utmost height of the pass. Fraxmus of Chiltera also occurs, +Cerasus primus, in abundance, Cerasus alius, tertius, not uncommon, +Berberis! here and there in ravines, Equisetoides, Caraganoides altera; +the most common shrubs of any size are Cerasus primus. The other +shrubs consist of the low customary Compositæ, and Astragaleæ, +Umbelliferæ are common, among which last the Nari, a species of +Assafœtida occurs? A beautiful Iris is common, as well as +tufts of Berberideæ, Asphodelus major, and which is much eaten +when cooked as a <i>turkaree</i> by our hungry followers, Eryngioides, +Aconitoides, a Valeriana, three new small Veronicæ, small Cruciferæ, +Silenaceæ, Boragineæ, and Labiatæ, form the bulk of +the herbaceous vegetation. An Arenarioid, Muscoid, Cruciferæ, +common at the head of the pass. A large Acanthoid leaved Umbellifera, +a Rheoides papillis verrucosum, this is a true Rheum, and when cultivated +becomes the <i>Ruwash</i> of the Affghanistans; it is very common on +the Candahar face of the pass, particularly about Chokey, where it is +in flower.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—Proceeded to Chokey, not quite four miles. +The top of the pass may be reached by three or four passes. I +went by one to the right, which is easy enough, and the descent from +which is much better adapted for camels than the made road, which is +very steep, with two sharp turns, but soft. The descent thence +is gradual, down one of the ordinary ravines, well clothed with the +usual shrubs and Xanthoxylon: our camels were a good deal fagged, but +more from the halt at the pass, where some cathartic plant abounds and +weakens them very much, than fatigue. The view from the top of +the pass is very extensive: the plains are seen to have nearly the same +level, and are divided here and there very frequently to north-east +and north, by the ordinary mountains.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—Halt; water here is not abundant, and is obtained +from driblets and pools; around these, the surface is covered with a +rich sward, which affords fine fodder for a small number of horses. +In the swampy spots, <i>Beccabunga</i>, Anagallis, Mentha, Carex, Glaux, +apparently identical (so far as a memory of 7 years may be trusted,) +with the English plant, the small variety of Leontodon, Medicaginoides, +Phleum, and the very small Amaranthoid, Polygonea, occur.</p> +<p>The hills around Chokey, and below it are rounded, those towards +the pass being more steep. They are covered with Centaurea fruticosa, +and C. spinosa, a favourite food of camels when it has young shoots, +Santonica, Statice, all of which grow precisely as before, Boragineæ, +Compositæ, Labiatæ, and Papilionaceæ, are the predominant +forms, and mostly of the same type: I observe a tendency among Boragineæ +to have cup-shaped nuts. Generally speaking, the plants are the +same as those before found. Rheas, Papaver, Glaucium purpureum, +especially the two last are common, Labiata salvoides, Iris persica, +and crocifolia (rare), Trichonema, Gentiana, Alyssoides.</p> +<p>The novelties were Rheum, Silena fruticosa, Linaria, Ruta, Astragalina, +2 small Silenaceæ, Iris, Glaucium aureo-croceum, a beautiful Boragineæ +with cup-shaped nut, Lotoides, an Hippophaoid looking shrub, Scrophularia +sp. singulous, Malthioloids spiralis, Allium, Glaux, Nitella, etc. +(See Catalogue 482 to 516.) Graminea very common, Rottboellia +and Anthistiria, 2 curious forms, the other more northern, Umbelliferæ +common, Nari much less so than on the south face.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the summit which is nearly 7,000 feet, and of peaks +which rise 600 to 700 feet above the pass, has no change, except the +abundance of Cruciferæ and Muscoides; Cerasus is the chief shrub; +Thymelæus frutex occurs at 6,500 feet. The prevailing rock +is clay slate.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—Marched to Dund-i-Golai, distance fifteen miles, +we first descended gradually to the plain, and then traversed this until +we skirted some low hills, about one and a half mile, from which a pool +of water was situated, where we halted, and which was fed by a small +cut coming from some distance. The road was very good throughout, +the water-cuts although not unfrequent, being either shallow or skirting +the left of the road. The vegetation continued the same as about +Chokey, until the plains were reached, but the prickly shrub, habitu +Berberidioides, became more common in the water-cuts below than I had +seen it before, while Santonia, Centaurea spinosa, and the plants of +Chokey, disappeared as we reached the plain, except some few herbaceous +forms, which continued throughout. I was much indisposed during +this march, and for the time we halted at Dund-i-Golai, a period of +four days, was unable to go out, but Capt. Sanders and my people brought +me many novelties, which I have not yet noted down. The chief +vegetation of the plain is Salsola tertia, the surface is level and +firm, clothed with scattered Salsola and a few stunted herbaceous plants, +among which a yellow Centaureoid, a Crucifera siliquis junioribus clavati +4-gonis, were the most common, there was also a curious Thiscoid looking +plant. A considerable change commenced about the low hills, a +Thymelæus shrub, some curious grasses, an Erodium, a Santonica, +occupying the places of the former shrubs, and Dipsacus or Scabiosa +becoming very common. The height of this place is about 4,040 +feet, the climate most variable. Fahr. thermometer 48° to +105° in single roofed tents. No cultivation seen, a pool of +water is situated near the hill, and a little is reported as situated +half-way between this place and Chokey, this however I did not see. +The country is much parched up, and bears every appearance of always +having been so; no remains of tanks, villages, etc. visible. Painted +partridges were seen; and the eggs of a large bird like a plover? +The wind inclining to be hot, but it is cool up to 7½ or 8 A.M.</p> +<p>Alaudo cristata? and an Alauda with the form of Sylvia.</p> +<p><i>Sunday</i>, <i>21st</i>.—Proceeded to Killa Pootoollah, +a distance of ten miles. The road was good over an open, dry, +level country, but intersected with small cuts: some cultivation was +passed, but no villages. Some little improvement was observed +close to the Garrah hills, which are of the usual description, and of +no great height: a curious slip of the strata exhibited itself, in which +the upper strata are cut away in the centre as if there had been a watercourse +there. Vegetation continues the same. The Thymelæous +shrub and Iris, still occur in sandy spots, Allium and a second species; +Centaureoides, yellow and pink, Thesioides, a curious sand-binding grass, +Salsola tertia most common, and in some open firm places <i>Joussa</i> +reappears as it did at Dund-i-Golai: Anthemis occurs, Rheas, Salvioides +in stony places, otherwise few of the plants of the Pisheen side are +seen; grapes abundant about old and new cultivation, Hordeum, Bromus +several species, Triticoides, etc., in profusion. Passed a deep +well of considerable diameter, which had an open communication with +a widish and deep canal, the only place I have seen that would hold +a good deal of water; it was cut throughout in shingle, and was perhaps +fifty feet in its deepest part.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—Left Pootoollah for Mailmandah, and on our arrival +found some of the troops and the cavalry had passed through and made +a double march to the river Lora, a distance in all of twenty-four miles. +There is a good deal of pure water at Mailmandah running in a cut by +the side of that, which is in the rains a considerable stream, also +one or two <i>Kabreezes</i> about two miles further on, producing excellent +water. The road first led up a ravine of some width, and swardy, +and then over low hills, until we surmounted these to descend into the +valley in which part of the army halted. The country continues +mostly the same; although if possible it is still more barren than before: +the mountains generally are more rugged: the ridges frequently toothed, +and the sides precipitous; not a tree to be seen except a willow near +some water, and a small arbusculoid fig. After passing the halting +place we re-ascended an inclined plane, entered a gorge, and again issued +out of it: after a short time again we entered into another valley drained +by an actual river, <i>really</i> <i>containing</i> <i>water</i>, and +bounded to the west and north-west by curious red low hills, not unlike +an embankment. The vegetation continues much the same: Salsola +tertia very common in some sandy places, Centaurea spinosa, Statice, +Santonia, etc. re-assuming their places on all gravelly slopes: some +novelties occurred as (See Catalogue, Nos. 543 to 574 inclusive,) one +or two new shrubs, Cytisus, etc. The heat continues great; 102° +Fahr. in tents in the middle of the day. We encamped on a flat +ground about 200 yards from the river, which contains a good deal of +water, and has a sluggish stream running to the north, surrounded by +mountains, none of any height. Wheat cultivation, Arundo, Vitex, +Prunus or Cerasus abundant in the pass to the river, and yet the former +does not indicate water as it ought to do, Lycium, Tamarisk, Arundo +on the banks of the river, and Tamarisk in profusion in its bed.</p> +<p>The cultivation on the opposite side of the river is remarkably clear +of weeds, as compared with the cultivation at Quettah, etc. Achilleoides, +Veronica, Iris crocifolia, Phalaris, Chenopodium, Rottboellioides, Hordeum +vulgare, being the only or the chief plants cultivated.</p> +<p>Proceeded next to Dai Hap, thirteen miles, over a similar but even +more barren country, the hills being destitute of all vegetation, except +a few stunted small shrubs, such as Statice. The usual plants +recur with shingle and in sand, the chief is a <i>Santonica</i>, <a name="citation349"></a><a href="#footnote349">{349}</a> +a few novelties occurred, among which is a curious plant, with large +vesiculate petaloid connectiva. See Catalogue, No. 576, et sequent.</p> +<p>The hills continue with toothed ridges, near Dai Hap, where water +is abundant, but not in the form of a river. Thymelæa occurs +in abundance, with a Mimosea fruticosa humilis: a curious hairy-fruited +Polygonum et Peganum, is among the most common plants.</p> +<p><i>25th</i>.—To Khoshab, distance twelve miles, over a large +level plain, either sandy, and then generally cultivated, or gravelly, +and then uncultivated: road open: passed two dry beds of rivers: one +must be of large size, but is very shallow. A new Tamarisk occurs +along it; no trees are visible until we approach Candahar: vegetation +continues much the same. <i>Santonica</i>, (see above) Centaurea +spinosa, Astragalina (Ononoides recurs), Staticoid, Asphodelus, Mesembryanthoid, +Peganum, are the chief plants, especially on gravel; most of the small +Cruciferæ have disappeared, Labiata-Salvioides continues; a curious +subaphyllous Composita occurs, Iris persica is not uncommon; another +Iris is found here and there in profusion, with Gnidia in sandy spots, +Compositæ, Monocotyledons of Abigoon are common in shingle. +New rock pigeons. Fine madder cultivation in <i>khets</i>. +Of birds the yellow hammer occurs. Villages numerous, poor, and +though built of mud and straw yet present abundance of small domes.</p> +<p>In these dry hot plains the prevailing wind is westerly, blowing +very strong in the heat of the day, and having a tendency to become +hot: the thermometer is here 98°. The cultivation of wheat +is very general around our present encampment which is within four miles +of Candahar, the wheat is fine; Lolioides occurs in it.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Halted: Candahar is hid from us by some low hills, +on the surmounting of which a large straggling place is obscurely visible, +interspersed with trees, the valley is much smaller than that in which +we are now, which is very extensive. Munjit cultivation is conducted +by deep trenches, it is a different species I think from that of the +Himalayas. The bed of the Turnuk is now dry and very shallow: +and the hills near us are extremely barren, the chief vegetation being +Pæderioides vestila and Staticoides cymosa, Cheiranthus continues. +The vegetation is very poor as indeed it has been since leaving the +Khojeb Amrah, nor is there any appearance to be seen of a better autumnal +vegetation.</p> +<p>Candahar is visible at a distance of six miles, from some low hills +to the north of our camp.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—Moved to Candahar, skirting the low hills just +mentioned and passed through two villages, a mile from Candahar in a +fine open plain.</p> +<p>Candahar has rather a pleasing aspect; it is situated close to a +picturesque range of hills, and is well diversified with trees, barley +and wheat fields. The slope on which the town stands is a parallelogram; +towers occur frequently along the wall, which is however, of mud, and +not strong; it is surrounded by a ditch utterly insignificant on account +of its narrowness and shelving banks, this ditch is crossed by an insignificant +causeway. The gate at which I entered is oblique, and is defended +by a tower: it leads into the main street which is rather wide and not +very dirty: towards the centre of this you pass under a middling dome, +a street branching off to the right and left; the continuation of the +main street or bazar leads to the <i>topekhanah</i>, or artillery ground, +a small space quite disorderly, containing eight or ten guns, most of +them melted at the mouth; one Sheik 18-pounder of cast iron, another +of English make, 140 years old. From the end of this space you +pass over another similar ditch into the fort, the entrance to which +is covered, affording two or three angles capable of good hand to hand +defence. Passing thence through some spaces occupied by low buildings, +you reach Khoondil Khan’s house, an extremely rude looking place +outside, but very different within. It consists of two houses, +one looking into a small square with a delicious reservoir of water, +and some fine and very green mulberry trees; the ground being laid out +as a garden with sweet-william, etc.; the water is supplied by a small +cut, and is seven or eight feet deep. The garden fronts of both +houses are prettily ornamented, one has a <i>tharkhanah</i>, delightfully +cool; generally the rooms are small, coated with a pretty sort of stucco. +The remaining sides of the square are occupied by offices; small rooms +opening into the garden by lattice work evidently denote a portion of +the <i>zenana</i>. Altogether the Khan must be a man of taste.</p> +<p>The bazars of the city are well thronged, but the shops are by no +means equal to those of Buhawulpoor, and the manufactures, except those +of earthenware, are utterly insignificant.</p> +<p>Tobacco, <i>atta</i>, <i>musallahs</i>, dried fruits, <i>aloo</i>-<i>bokhara</i>, +figs, apricots, raisins, salt, sugar, a green fruit something between +a plum and greengage, meat, onions, salads, <i>dhie</i>, <i>sherbets</i>, +<i>kubabs</i>, wicker-work, singing birds, are offered for sale: also +abundance of Lucerne and some <i>bhoosee</i>. Altogether it is +a busy place, but not so busy as the road near the gate, which is thronged +by followers, and dismounted Europeans, who are forbidden access to +the city without a pass. Tea from Khiva of good quality is procurable +in small quantities. No women but old ones to be seen. The +dress of the inhabitants very often, and in some cases very completely, +approximates to that of the Chinese. The features too of most +are evidently of Tartar cast, and some wear two tails of plaited hair. +Blue seems to be a favourite colour of dress.</p> +<p>The chief trees about the city are mulberry, a few <i>Khunjucks</i>, +which is the Xanthoxylon of Bootan and the Kojhlak passes, occur outside; +willows are frequent, and generally appear to be cultivated, among these +a weeping species here and there occurs.</p> +<p><i>May</i> <i>3rd</i>.—The resources of the city are evidently +small, the only things indeed that appear plentiful are earthenware +and milk: grain is excessively dear, but is reported to exist in considerable +quantities. Khoondil Khan having ordered all those out of the +city, who had not provided themselves with six months’ provisions. +<i>Atta</i> or flour is now selling at two seers a rupee, or 6d per +pound, and every thing is proportionally dear: wood excessively so, +the chief fuel is derived from the <i>Santonia</i>, which in some form +or other appears to constitute a principal feature of the vegetation +of Central Asia, and there is some other wood apparently derived from +some tree I have not yet seen.</p> +<p>Some discontent prevails in the town owing to the high price of provisions, +which is, no doubt, severely felt. The established price of grain +is at the rate of eight seers the rupee, a rate established by the king, +but on occasions like the present there can be no rule. Water +is very abundant, it is to be found within four feet of the surface, +and some regiments have already supplied themselves from this source +by means of temporary wells. The water is excellent.</p> +<p>Asses, ponies, and horses are common, the former are excellent, 150 +rupees is a good price for one; they carry heavy loads with the additional +weight of an Affghan on their back; the ponies or tattoes are less valuable, +but still they are strong.</p> +<p>The horses are indifferent; good, generally speaking, but heavy, +and with little spirit. Excellent milch cows have been procured +for twenty-five rupees, including the calf. Goats are not easily +procurable. Sheep (<i>Doombas</i>) are common, and afford excellent +mutton, they vary in price from two to three rupees.</p> +<p>Tea from Bokhara is procurable in small quantities; its quality is +decent: it was originally eight rupees a seer but is now thirty. +Coarse Russian cloths, and very inferior silks are also procurable.</p> +<p>The great drawbacks are the want of wood, and above all want of inhabitants; +from what I have seen of the cultivation, the soil appears to be very +capable, and well adapted to barley and wheat; rice might also be raised +as a summer crop. With regard to water, if there is a scarcity +of this element, it is due to the indolence of the people. I have +not yet seen any vestiges of buildings, topes, etc. to indicate that +Candahar has ever been a very populous place, the want of trees considering +the ease with which they may be cultivated, is a strong evidence of +the extreme laziness of the Affghans, who appear to me remarkably low +in the scale of civilization; and in personal habits, very generally +inexpressibly filthy.</p> +<p>Poplars, mulberries, and willows are the principal trees: the poplar +is very much akin to the <i>Sofaida</i> of the Sutledge, it is a handsome +tree, with a fine roundish crown. The fruit trees generally appear +small in gardens; lettuces and onions are commonly cultivated, especially +the latter, fields of Lucerne are very abundant, and I believe clover +also; a pony load of the former now costs five annas, but it is sufficient +for a day’s consumption of two or three horses. The pomegranate +attains the ordinary size. In gardens two or three Ranunculaceæ, +Jasminum, pinks, sweet-williams, marigolds, stocks, and wall-flowers, +are common, with a broad-leaved species of flag, the flowers of which +I have not seen.</p> +<p>The crops vary according to the mode in which they have been watered; +if this has been properly done, they are rich. Some of the fields +are tolerably clean, others filled with weeds, among which a Dipsacea, +and one or two Centaureæ are very common.</p> +<p>The villages are not generally defended: each house has its own straggling +direction, is built of mud, and the roof is generally dome-shaped, and +it has its own enclosure within a mud-wall. The houses are very +low, and indicate poverty, and want of ingenuity. The better order +appear always with arched roofs, and none are without picturesque ribs +and recesses.</p> +<p>The vineries here are so well enclosed, that there is no way of access +except by scaling the mud-wall: the vines are planted in trenches; a +row on each side, and allowed to run over the elevated spaces between +the trenches. In one garden pomegranates, a pomaceous tree, and +mulberries, whose fruit is now ripe but quite devoid of flavour, occurred. +A Zygophyllum, a beautiful Capparis, an Anthemis, Marrubium, Centaureoides +2, occurred as weeds, with Plantago, Phalaris, Cichorium.</p> +<p>For an excellent register of the thermometer at this place, I am +indebted to the kindness of Dr. Henderson; the range in the open air +is from 60° to 110°!!!</p> +<p>The variations in the wet bulb are due to the currents of air, which +beginning about 11 A.M., pass into a rather constant strongish west +wind about 11½ or 2 P.M., and even almost become hot. The +climate is excessively dry, as indicated by the effects it has on furniture, +etc.</p> +<p>The difference of temperature between a tent, even with two flies +or double roof, and the open air in free situations, is by no means +great; thus when the thermometer was 105° in part of my tent, it +was scarcely 110° in the sun; in Capt. Thomson’s large tent +102°; placed against the outer <i>kunnat</i>, it rose to 105°. +Hanging free with black cloth round the bulb, 112°. But to +shew the great heating powers of the sun, the thermometer with the bulb, +placed on the ground and covered with the loose sand of the surface +of the soil, rose to 141°.</p> +<p>Black partridges occur in the cornfields here, but in no great numbers. +Much of the cultivation of barley, wheat, and rye, is very luxuriant, +but the proportion of waste, to cultivated land is too considerable +to argue either a large population or active agricultural habits. +Pastor roseus occurs in flocks; it is evidently nearly allied to the +<i>mina</i>. The capabilities of this valley are considerable, +more particularly when the extreme readiness with which water is obtained +in wells is considered, as well as the nature of the soil, which is +well adapted to husbandry. Candahar, viewed from about a mile +to the west of our camp, backed by the picturesque hills (one bluff +one in particular), the numbers and verdure of the trees, the break +in the mountains on the Herat road, presents a pretty scene.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—The installation of the Shah, which took place +to-day on the plain to the north of the city, was a spectacle worth +seeing on account of the grand display of troops; but there were very +few of the inhabitants of Candahar or surrounding villages present. +Mulberries and apricots are now ripening. Rats, a Viverra with +a long body and short legs, tawny with brown patches, face broad, blackish-brown, +white band across the forehead, and white margins to the ears which +are large; storks were seen when alarmed. Pastor roseus occurs +in flocks; magpies, swallows, swifts, and starlings. There is +a garden with some religious buildings, to which an avenue of young +trees leads in a north-east direction from one of the Cabul gates, for +there are two on this face. The buildings are not remarkable; +nor are the trees, which are small; a few planes (Platanus) occur, the +most common is the <i>Benowsh</i>, a species of ash, (Fraxinus) of no +great size or beauty. The elegant palmate leaved Pomacea likewise +occurs, with the mulberry: the marigold is a great favourite.</p> +<p>The fields are now ripening, this being the harvest-moon. Wild +oats occur commonly, although they are not made any use of; the seed +is large, and ripens sooner than any of the others; from the size of +the uncultivated specimens, I am sure that oats would form an excellent +crop.</p> +<p>In the fields Cichorium is very common, and Carduacea, Centaurea +cyanea, Dipsaceæ, and in certain low places an Arundo, are the +most common weeds; two or three Silenaceæ, and Umbelliferæ +also occur. In the ditches Typha, Butomus, watercresses, Alomioides, +Ceratophyllum, Lemna <i>gibba</i>? Confervæ, Gramineæ two +or three, Ranunculus, Potamogeton, one species immersa; Mentha, Sium.</p> +<p>On the <i>Chummuns</i>, which are of no extent, but which are pleasing +from their verdure and soft sward chiefly consisting of Carex, Trifolium, +Juncus rigidus, Santalacea, and Gentiana likewise prevail.</p> +<p>The fields of Lucerne are luxuriant, but require much water, the +price of which is very dear; one ass-load costs eight annas!!</p> +<p>Iris crocifolia is common in old cultivations.</p> +<p>The city is situated at the termination of one of the shingly slopes, +which are universal between the bases of the hills, and the cultivated +portion of the valley. The ditch is hence shingly, whereas an +equal depth in the cultivated parts would meet nothing but a sandy, +light, easily pulverizable brownish-yellow soil, tenacious, and very +slippery when wet. The tobacco crop is excellent.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XV.</h3> +<p><i>Candahar</i> <i>to</i> <i>Cabul</i>.</p> +<p>The good old <i>Moolla</i> of a mosque, to which we resort daily, +gives me the following information about the vegetable products of this +country, from which it would seem, that every thing not producing food, +is looked upon with contempt. The fruit trees, are—</p> +<p>1. <i>Sha</i>-<i>aloo</i>, <i>Aloo</i>-<i>bookhara</i>, (damson), +which has ripe fruit in August, the same time as figs; <i>Zurd</i>-<i>aloo</i>, +(apricot), <i>Aloocha</i>—apricot, <i>Shuft</i>-<i>aloo</i>, another +kind of apricot; <i>Unar</i>, (pomegranate); <i>Ungoor</i>, (grapes); +<i>Unjeer</i>, (guava); <i>Bihee</i>, (figs); <i>Umroot</i>, <i>Toot</i>, +(mulberry); <i>Aloogoordaigoo</i>, <i>Shuft</i>-<i>aloo</i>, all these +<i>Aloos</i> being Pomaceous.</p> +<p>The Elæagnus is called Sinjit: it produces a small red fruit, +used in medicine as an astringent, it ripens in August, and sells at +eight or nine seers the rupee; it is exported in small quantities; but +the plant is not much esteemed.</p> +<p>The <i>Munjit</i> is an article of much consequence; it is exported +chiefly to China and Bombay, some goes to Persia; the roots are occasionally +dug up after two years, but the better practise is to allow them five +to seven: the price is six Hindostanee maunds for a rupee. The +herb is used for camel fodder. The Affghan name is <i>Dlwurrung</i>.</p> +<p>The common Artemisia of this place is called <i>Turk</i>; the camels +are not so fond of it, as they were of the Sinab and Quettah sort; perhaps +this is due to their preferring Joussa, which is found in abundance.</p> +<p>The carrot is called <i>Zurduk</i>; it is dug in the cold months, +and sown in July; three seers are sold for a pice: both men and cattle +use it.</p> +<p><i>Turbooj</i>, (watermelon,) ripens in June; it is not watered after +springing up; four seers are sold for a pice. But I have not seen +much of this fruit.</p> +<p>The wheat is watered according to the quality of the soil, the better +the soil the less water is required, and this varies from four to eight +repetitions of water. <i>Jhow</i> requires two waterings less. +Wheat is considered dear if less than one maund is sold for the rupee. +One year ago, three maunds of barley, and four of wheat were sold for +a rupee.</p> +<p>Iris odora, <i>Soosumbur</i>; (the two kinds, and <i>Datura</i> has +the same name) is indigenous.</p> +<p>The timber trees, or rather trees not producing fruit, and which +the <i>Moolla</i> thinks very lightly of, are the <i>Chenar</i>, (plane), +<i>Pudda</i>, (Poplar?), Baid, <i>Sofaida</i>.</p> +<p>The fig trees are often planted in rows, they are very umbrageous, +and look very healthy. These, and the mulberry, are the most common; +next are the bullace and damson. Neither are worth introducing +to India, nor have I seen any thing yet in the country that is so.</p> +<p>It is certainly the interest of the inhabitants to keep the army +here as long as our commissariat places so many rupees in their hands. +It may indeed be questionable whether with an overpowering army, the +rates paid for grain and other supplies for the troops should not be +established by authority rather than advancing money for grain at exorbitant +rates, when the crops are entirely within the command of foraging parties. +<i>Atta</i> now sells at two and three-quarter seers the rupee, a mere +nominal fall, for the dealers will only give fifteen annas for a Company’s +rupee.</p> +<p>There is a curious <i>hazy</i> appearance of the atmosphere over +the city in the evening, occasioned by fine dusty particles from cattle, +suspended in air; which, from their fineness, are long in subsiding.</p> +<p>This curious hazy weather increases daily, yesterday evening was +very cloudy, and this morning the wind rather strong and southerly up +to 8 A.M.: and at 5½ P.M. the sun is either quite obscured, or +the light so diminished, that the eye rests without inconvenience on +his image. In the morning the wind strengthens as the sun attains +height and power.</p> +<p>The old <i>Moolla</i> says that this weather commences in Khorassan +with the setting in of the periodical rains in the north-western provinces +of India, and continues with them. From the direction of the wind +it is probably connected with the commencement of the south-west monsoon +at Bombay, for the rains at Delhi do not commence before June.</p> +<p>The haze is so strong at times that hills within three to five miles +are quite obscured; it tends to diminish the temperature considerably, +especially between seven and eight of a morning; curious gusts of hot +winds are observed, even when the general nature of the wind is cool.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—A fine and clear cold morning; thermometer 56° +at 7 A.M. in the tent. Air fresh; thermometer 75° at 9 P.M. +A few drops of rain at 12; <i>cloudy</i> <i>generally</i>.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—Thermometer 48° at 5 A.M. Similar weather, +clear and elastic: south winds continue but of less strength.</p> +<p>Easterly wind prevails in the morning up to 9 A.M., after which hour +the westerly hot wind, variable in strength, sets in: the range of the +thermometer is then somewhat increased, although in the house it does +not rise above 90°.</p> +<p>The <i>Moolla</i> tells me, that snow is of rare occurrence at Candahar; +he mentions one fall in about four or five years. The rains last +for three months, and happen in winter. During the winter all +occupations out of doors are suspended, and people wrap themselves up, +and sit over fires.</p> +<p>Clouds are of very rare occurrence, and then only partial.</p> +<p>The clouds, if resulting from the south-west monsoon, ought to be +intercepted by the Paropamisus and Hindoo Koosh, and rain ought to fall +along these and about Ghuznee at this time. In the evening a cool +wind sets in, indicating a fall of rain somewhere.</p> +<p>Rarity of dews in Khorassan: as dews depend on a certain amount of +moisture either in the soil or atmosphere, it follows that in a very +dry climate no dews will occur. The occurrence of the dews here +at this period, is another proof that rain must have fallen somewhere +(to the southward), to which the coolness of the weather is attributable. +Yesterday and to-day, the thermometer at 5 A.M. stood at 48°, 49°; +at 8 P.M. 75°, 72°, the daily range in the mosque is from 70° +to 80°. Capt. Thomson suggests that the dews observed here +are either confined to, or much greater in the <i>Chummuns</i>, in which +the water is very close to the surface, as indicated <i>inter</i> <i>alia</i> +by the green turf.</p> +<p>The kinds of grapes are numerous; those earliest ripe are the black, +and a small red kind called <i>Roucha</i>; which will be ripe in the +latter end of this moon. <i>Kismiss</i> another sort, comes in +July. The <i>Tahibee</i> is the best kind produced here, and the +dearest.</p> +<p>Tobacco is cultivated chiefly along the Arghandab; it is planted +about this season, and gathered in two or three months, and requires +to be watered ten or twelve times.</p> +<p>The barley is now fully ripe, and is generally cut and thrashed in +some places. Pears in gardens are now ripe.</p> +<p>Candahar valley is of great extent to the westward, or south-west +and SSW.</p> +<p>The wasps, with large femora, I observe build their mud nests in +houses. The rarity of Lepidoptera, except perhaps some nocturnal +moths, is curious; Coleoptera are more common, but inconspicuous. +Ants are abundant in the mud walls. A small gnat with large noiseless +wings, is very annoying, and the bite very painful and irritating. +Doves, and wild pigeons are tolerably common, as also crested larks, +and swifts. Abundance of lizards; a venomous snake of brown colour, +having an abruptly attenuated tail.</p> +<p>Every thing that happens shows how credulous, and how unenquiring +we are; and in all cases out of our particular sphere, how extremely +apt most are to give excessive credit, where a moderate only is due. +It is a generous failing which it is difficult to condemn, particularly +with regard to our travellers in this direction. Instance Connolly, +and certainly Gerard whose acquaintance with Burnes and its results +demands attention. It is singular that his name scarcely occurs +in Burnes’ book, although his scientific knowledge and MSS. submitted +to Government, entitle him to be considered an observant, and well-informed +traveller. Pottinger is another instance of what I have said above.</p> +<p>The general opinion is, and it is one which I have not discarded +entirely, that he threw himself into Herat, that he was throughout the +siege daily employed in the front of the garrison, and that it is owing +to his personal exertions that Herat was saved. I hear however +on good authority that he was at Herat accidentally, and wished to leave +it when the besiegers appeared, but was prevented by want of funds. +So anxious was he however to get away, as his leave of absence had expired, +that he was obliged to discover himself to Yar Mahommed, and request +loans to enable him to rejoin India. The Vizier at once secured +him, took him to Kamran, and hindered him from leaving, forcing him +indeed to the dangerous elevation of British Agent at Herat. His +merits, if this be true, rest on very different grounds from those generally +supposed; his courage however has been proved of a high moral cast.</p> +<p>The <i>Joussa</i>, the <i>Moolla</i> tells me, is the <i>Kan</i> +<i>Shootur</i> or <i>Shootur</i> <i>Kan</i>. Burnes’ account +of the <i>Turunjbeen</i> or manna is correct, except perhaps in the +limits he assigns to its production. It is at any rate produced +here and sold in the bazar, its production while the plant is in flower +is curious, and worthy of examination; it may however be deposited by +an insect, in which case the probable period of its production would +be that of inflorescence.</p> +<p>There is some cultivation of Indian corn here, the plants have now +attained one-third of their growth.</p> +<p>Except in the immediate vicinity of the town, nothing can exceed +the sterility of the valley, or rather its desolation: scarcely a plant, +beyond the Peganum and <i>Joussa</i>, is to be found.</p> +<p><i>Khaisee</i>, an excellent smooth skinned apricot, is now ripe, +and is of light yellowish colour, sometimes faintly spotted; it is a +product from grafts, the seeds are useless, as they do not continue +the good qualities of the fruit: it is here grafted on <i>zurd</i>-<i>aloo</i>, +<i>thulk</i>, Potentilla quinquefolia.</p> +<p>Melons and grapes are now coming in; the former, at least those I +have seen, have pale pulp, and are not superior. The grapes first +ripe are the ordinary black sort: we tasted yesterday some very good +ones in the <i>Moolla’s</i> garden. The <i>Kismiss</i> are +especially delicate, and another large sort of very fine rich flavour, +both were rather unripe. Those for packing are still unripe. +The trenches in this garden are very deep: the vines are planted on +the northern face only.</p> +<p>Gardens are very common to the south-west of the town. The +valley of the Arghandab is the most fertile part of Khorassan I have +yet seen. A strip of cultivation extends along the banks of the +river, and from these last not being high, the stream is easily diverted +into channels for irrigation. Seen from any of the neighbouring +hills, the valley presents one uniform belt of verdure, almost as far +as the eye can reach, and the view up and down is of some extent. +The chief cultivation is wheat, barley, and lucerne; <i>Chummuns</i> +also occur. Gardens abound, together with fine groves of mulberry +trees, the former are walled in, and are verdant to a degree.</p> +<p>There is a bluff mountain to the north of Candahar, the disintegration +of which is so rapid, that it is evident from the slope of the debris, +it will in time bury the original structures.</p> +<p>The hills forming the ridge separating Arghandab from Candahar, as +well as all those rugged looking ones about Candahar, are of limestone, +they are much worn by the weather, and full of holes. They are +very barren, the only shrubby vegetation of any size being Ficus, which +may be the stock of the <i>Ungoor</i>, as it resembles it a good deal, +Centaurea spinosa, Pæderiæ 2, Echinops, Pommereulla, one +to two, other Graminæ, lemon-grass, Dianthus, Peganum, Cheiranthus +as before, Sedum rosaceum, Gnaphalium, <i>Hyoceyamus</i>, <i>Didymocarpeæ</i>, +Gnidia, etc.</p> +<p>The Arghandab is a good sized river, with channel subdivided: its +stream is rapid and fordable; no large boulders occur in its bed; the +temperature of its water is moderate.</p> +<p>The fish are a Cyprinus and a Barbus, or Oreinus with small scales, +thick leathery mouth, and cirrhi; a Loach of largish size, flat head, +reddish, with conspicuous brownish mottlings, and a Silurus.</p> +<p>The hills forming the northern boundary of the valley are picturesque, +and of several series, and perhaps the subordinate valleys are not so +large and fruitful in this direction.</p> +<p>Between Arghandab and Candahar, two ranges occur; one interrupted: +the other nearer Candahar has first to be surmounted at a low pass; +the pass is short, rugged and impassable for guns. The inner ridge +is much closer to the cultivated part of the valley than the northern +range.</p> +<p>Between it and the Arghandab, at least six cuts occur: these are +met with generally in threes, and are at different elevations; the inner +one being close at the foot of the hills; great labour must have been +required to make them. Numerous villages, some with flat roofed +houses occur.</p> +<p>Arundo, Salsola, Plantago, P. coronopoid, Cnicus, Juncus, Veronica +exallata, Santalacea, Mentha, Lactucoides, Chenopod. 2-3, Panicum, Samolus, +Ceratophyllum; Salix occurs near the river; apricots, apples, pomegranates, +damsons or plums, bullaces, pears, mulberries and raspberries in the +gardens.</p> +<p>The shingle found about all the hills in Khorassan, can scarcely +be derived from any source but disintegration, it slopes too gradually +and uniformly for upheavement. If my idea is correct, the mountains +will at some period be buried in their own debris, of course inspection +of the shingle will at once point out whether this is true or not, more +especially <i>in</i> <i>all</i> <i>those</i> <i>places</i> <i>where</i> +<i>the</i> <i>rocks</i> <i>are</i> <i>of</i> <i>uniform</i> <i>structure</i>. +There is a curious desert to the south and southwest of Candahar, elevated +a good deal above the valley, quite bare, and stretching a long way +to the westward: it is seen for forty miles along the Girishk road.</p> +<p><i>Curious</i> <i>reflection</i>.—Observed in ghee used as +lamp-oil, a bubble ascending from the surface of the water on which +it floated, met by another descending; the deception of this is perfect. +That it is due to reflection, is apparent from the variation of the +length of the descent, according to the angle under which it is viewed. +When viewed from beneath at a very oblique angle, the descent is complete, +but if viewed parallel to the surface, no appearance of the sort occurs. +The reflection is due to the surface of the ghee which appears to be +more dense than the rest, probably more oily; this mathematical reflection +may suggest others of a moral nature, touching our liability to mistaken +views of things, from observing only one side.</p> +<p>Old Candahar is about three miles to west of the new town; it is +immediately under a steep limestone range, running about southwest, +and not exceeding 500 feet in height. It bears marks of having +been fortified, and at either extremity remains of forts are still visible. +The fort of forty steps is at the north end of the range. The +town is in complete ruins; indeed none of the edifices are visible except +those that occupy the mound of stones, (with which they are partly built) +probably the site of the citadel. On three sides, the town is +fenced by two respectable ditches, the outer one about 50 yards wide; +both are now, especially the outer, beds of marshes; they were supplied +by cuts from the Arghandab river. Wells exist however. There +is one white mosque in good preservation. The works were strong, +and much better than the very indifferent ones of new Candahar; and +the walls of the town were prolonged up the face of the hills.</p> +<p>About Candahar, conical houses occur, probably for granaries. +A curious mosque cut out of the rock in situ, is seen on the Girishk +road, with a flight of steps leading to it, cut in like manner out of +the rock. There is also in the same quarter the fort of Chuhulzeenat, +or forty steps; a work not of very considerable extent; and as in other +Asiatic countries I have visited, troughs are cut in rocks for separating +grain from the husk. But there is no work to be seen indicating +vast labour or any genius.</p> +<p>Some remains of good pottery may be picked up; and the earth of which +the works, etc. were made, is filled with remains of coarse pottery.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—Moved four miles to Shorundab, the country is +very barren: not much <i>Joussa</i>: the water is brackish at our present +encampment, which is within sight of Babawallee.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—Proceeded to Kileeyazim, ten and a quarter miles, +marched at 2 P.M. and reached the place at 6 P.M., the camels arriving +one hour afterwards: the ground is generally good, throughout stony, +difficult in places and undulated, particularly in two situations occasioned +from cuts. There is a square fort, situated at the halting place +with a tower at each corner, and on north face two; as well as towers +at the gate: but without windows. <i>Joussa</i> is abundant, as +also grass along the cuts. Salsola rotundifolia, a Chenopodia, +and a curious prickly, leafless Composita and <i>Joussa</i> occur, the +latter most common, Artemisiæ sp. Also rock pigeons and +the raven. Halted one mile to the east of the fort.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—Proceeded to the Turnuk, near Khet-i-Ahkoond, +distance fifteen and a half miles. The country continues the same, +no cultivation to be seen before reaching the Turnuk. The road +tolerable, over gravelly or shingly ground: it was at first level, until +we reached a mountain gorge, when it became undulated. Passed +the dry beds of two streams, the second the larger: its banks were clothed +with Vitex instead of Tamarisk. At the entrance of gorge a fort +similar to that of yesterday was passed. Scarcely any change in +vegetation. Artemisiæ one or two, Centaurea spinosa, Salsola +cordifolia and aphylla? are the most common plants, Euonymus and Malpighiacea? +Polygonoides, occurred along the nullah, a pretty species of the plant, +Antheris globosis petaloideo-terminalis, in profusion in some places, +literally colouring the ground: close to it another very distinct species, +foliis connatis, floribus albis, a Rubiaceous crystalline looking plant, +another novelty; all the plants about the hills at Candahar continue: +Dianthoid, Statice, Pæderia villosa. Cultivation along the +Turnuk, melons in small trenches, the crops are now cut, <i>Jhow</i> +or <i>gaz</i> along the bank: but there is not much water. The +hills around are apparently of limestone, very picturesque, and presenting +very fine cliffs. The valley of the Turnuk is here very narrow, +and the country very arid looking, completely burnt up. <i>Joussa</i> +rather scarce, <i>doob</i> grass occurs along the river, the water of +which is discoloured.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Proceeded to Shair-i-Suffa, ten miles and six +furlongs. The country continues the same. The road extending +along the right bank of the Turnuk, over undulating ground for one and +a half or two miles, is bad, very narrow, and overhanging the steep +bank of the river, scarcely passable for wheel carriages without preparation. +Vegetation continues precisely the same: little verdure to be seen even +along the Turnuk: the hills desperately barren; a high mound occurs +in middle of the valley near our halting place, well adapted for a fort, +but unoccupied. Small fields of cultivation are now seen. +A small species of mullet occurs in the river: thermometer 101° +at 1 P.M. in the tent.</p> +<p>Nothing can exceed the barren aspect of this valley, which is near +Khet-i-Ahkoond, but at several miles distance, a few trees are visible +in nooks: the only green along the banks of the river, is occasioned +apparently by Tamarisk: the hills are picturesque, rugged, varied with +bold cliffs, the valleys are changed in structure, being now occupied +by rounded undulated ground, instead of hollow basins.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m363.jpg"> +<img alt="River Turnuk banks" src="images/m363.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>July</i> <i>1st</i>.—Proceeded ten miles, and halted on +the Turnuk within one mile of the tower of Tirandaz. The country +continues precisely the same: the road at first is bad, owing to the +inhabitants having tried to flood it. At a distance of six miles +we ascended a small defile without any difficulty; the remainder of +the march being over undulating stony ground: the valley then becomes +narrow, and we again enter into the arable part, which is especially +narrow. The hills present the same aspect. <i>Joussa</i> +very abundant, and also Artemisia, and a Salsoloides flore ochroleuco. +No villages are visible. We are unable to judge of the extent +of cultivation, because the country, which seems uniformly dried up, +is rugged and bouldery: on the right is the old bed of the river, consisting +of dry sand. We crossed one small nullah, when an old fort became +visible on a hill, in the centre of the valley.</p> +<p><i>2nd</i>.—Proceeded to Toot, a distance of eleven miles, +through a similar country; the road dividing at the low hills approaching +the river and forming its banks, which are in places precipitous; the +greater part of the difficulties were avoided by taking the lower route, +that along the hills being impassable for guns owing to the large rocks +scattered in every direction, and detached from conglomerate hills. +Two or three nullahs were passed, one with a little water. The +ground was besides a good deal cut up towards the centre of the valley, +and a water-cut was crossed several times. Owing to the delay +in making the road, the troops did not reach the encamping ground before +8 or 8½ P.M., the camels in some instances not before 12 P.M. +An attack is reported to have been made on the baggage at the river +where the road ascends the cliff: it was prevented by a party of the +13th, who shot two of the marauders. <i>Joussa</i> is plentiful, +and Mentha in flower.</p> +<p>The Turnuk river is 20 feet broad, the current rapid, and the water +discoloured; the banks are sandy, 15 feet high: coarse grass, Clematis +scandens fol. ternatisectis pinnatis. <i>Jhow</i> is abundant.</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—From Toot to ----, nine miles and four furlongs. +Road decent, over the usual sort of ground, except in one place, where +the bank approaches the river; this defile is much shorter and much +easier than that at Tirandaz or rather Jillongeer: a small river with +a little water is crossed: here the road for a very short distance bends +suddenly to a little west of north, but having crossed a narrow and +deep ravine-like cut, resumes its original direction. The country +continues precisely the same, the valley however becomes narrow and +more undulating, while the peculiar limestone ranges appear to be fewer. +Reached the encamping ground in very good time, the vegetation almost +precisely the same as before, but with some willow trees. Many +of the ravines are however, actually covered with thickets, apparently +of the prickly yellow flowered Dioica shrub of <i>Chummun</i>; trees +and these shrubs occupied by thousands of a hymenopterous insect or +fly. <i>Joussa</i> very abundant: a village, the lights of one +were visible <i>en</i> <i>route</i>. The water of the Turnuk is +still very much discoloured, its bed shingly, and the ground near it +much cut up: a mill was passed on the river; the valley here not being +500 yards wide: the climate is more agreeable, though still very hot +in the middle of the day; in the shade, the air continues pleasant up +to 10 A.M. Thunder not heavy, was succeeded by a squall from the +ENE.; little rain fell, but there were clouds of dust.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—Reached Khilat-i-Gilzee, distance thirteen and +a half miles, from our last encampment, direction NE. by E. as before: +the aspect of the country is unchanged, the road became somewhat difficult +about one and a half mile from camp, where a defile exists along the +hills forming the bank of the river; it was however much easier than +that of Botee. Thence we continued over undulating ground, leaving +the Turnuk river to the right, but reverting to it beyond the fort. +Half-way the deep and steep channel of a river presented a serious obstacle; +the country gradually rises until Khilat-i-Gilzee fort is passed, from +thence it descends somewhat. At this place there is a considerable +expanse of irregular valleys; and to south curious low undulated ground +occurs: to the south-east is a patch of table land, which is not an +uncommon form in these parts; some cultivation here exists along the +Turnuk, which runs half a mile below the fort, which is in ruins, occupying +a hill not commanded by any near ones. This is of no great height, +and has two ramifications, and in the centre the remains of a tower.</p> +<p>In the valley extending NNE. two villages with castles occur, together +with a good many low trees. Vegetation the same: a curious Antirrhinoid +plant occurs out of flower, Echinops, Carduacea, and a curious Centaurea. +Wet places abound in Rumex and Tamarisk along the river. Horsemen +were seen after passing the fort: two or three willow trees about the +villages. <i>Jhow</i> or barley is selling for ten seers the rupee, +<i>atta</i> or flour at eight.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—Khilat-i-Gilzee is a very uninteresting place, +with little appearance of cultivation. The vegetation of the undulated +ground continues the same, Asphodelus, Mesembryanthemoides, remains +of Tauschia, and the former Cruciferæ. The Turnuk discharges +a good deal of water much discoloured, and forming a series of constant +rapids. The most common plants are Artemisiæ two or three +species, Centaurea spinosa, Salsola luteiflora, Almond groves, Iris +crocifolia? vel sp. affinis, Asphodelus, Mesemb., Salvioides, Thermopsis, +Cichorium, <i>Joussa</i>, and Mentha recur, the two last in abundance. +The new plants are a Chenopodium, Polygonum, Lotoides, Triticum, Astragalus, +Scirpus, Cæsalpinioides, Centaurea micrantha, and Eryngioides: +a spring occurs in the old fort of Khilat-i-Gilzee.</p> +<p>Indian-corn is just sprouting up, barley and other crops ripe. +Latitude of Khilat-i-Gilzee 32° 7' 30"; altitude, Bar. 24.740: +the climate is disagreeable from the violent sudden extremes to which +it is exposed. West winds during day, and east winds of a morning.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Proceeded to Sir Tasp, ten miles, north-east, road +good over an open undulating country, the only difficulty in the way +arising from a cut with deep holes in it. Vegetation continues +precisely the same: limestone hills less frequent, or at any rate much +less rugged, and the country assumes a much more open character. +Artemisia most abundant, of large size, Cæsalpinia, Euonymus dioica, +Centaurea spinosa, Echinops, new plants two Linariæ, Eryngium, +Verbascum. Altitude 24.505, latitude 32° 12' 22" north. +<i>Atta</i> has risen in price to seven seers a rupee.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Arrived at Nooroock after a march of nine miles; +still extending up the valley in a direction north-east—direct +on the star Capella. The country is undulated; vegetation still +the same. Artemisia most abundant and of a larger size; road good: +no fodder for horses, except along the river: the valley open, distant +hills on either side with a fine range to the north of the camp, apparently +composed of limestone, with abundance of junipers, and the Iris of Dund-i-Golai +very common. Hares, rock pigeons, Alauda. Myriads of Cicada, +and the Jerboa rat. The Turnuk river is again occasionally in +sight, valley apparently little cultivated. Stipa very common, +as well as Iris, Festuca vivipara, Astragali sp., and Artemisia. +Cloudy evening, followed by a stormy night; wind southerly.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Reached Tazee, eight miles seven furlongs from +Nooroock: direction still the same, no change: the road good, extending +over an undulated country, except one or two small nullahs with rather +steep banks. A range of mountains seen to the north, called Kohi-Soork, +continue forming a long line, the southern boundary of which is broken: +we are encamped opposite a valley running east, presenting much cultivation: +several villages indicated by distant <i>smoke</i>: some trees are seen +here and there: the face of the valley is rather green, indicating more +water than usual. Vegetation is precisely the same; no <i>Joussa</i> +or other fodder for camels than Artemisia and spinous Compositæ. +Morning very cloudy and cold at 12 P.M. The plants met with are +Chara, Naiad, Polygoni 3, Malva fl. amplis lilacinis, on banks of river.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—<i>Shuftul</i>, five miles: the direction lay towards +the star Capella: road bad, requiring to be made over three difficult +ravines, all forming beds of torrents descending from the Koh-i-Soork. +The country otherwise presents the same features. The Turnuk runs +close under the southern boundary of the valley, and is here a pretty +stream of considerable body. <i>Joussa</i> grows abundantly on +its immediate banks, together with excellent grass and some clover, +one or two new Compositæ, one of them a Matthiola, otherwise Artemisiæ, +Stipa, Centaurea spinaceis herb. Astragalus, and Peganum, are +the most common; Muscoides, Plantaginacea reoccur, a curious <i>leaved</i> +Composita?</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—Halted yesterday, and went out along the banks +of the Turnuk: where I found twenty-six species not obtained before. +Some cultivation was observed, but as usual weedy, abounding with two +species of Centaurea. In ditches two species of Epilobium, Sparganium, +Mentha, Polygonum natans, Ranunculus aquaticus, Lotus, Carex, Astragaloid +on swards, on the sandy moist banks of the Turnuk: Epilobium, two Veronicæ, +several Cyperaceæ, 2 or 3 Junci, Cyperus fuscus. Alisma +abundant in swamps: small partridges: no chakor: hares, swifts, rock-pigeons. +Springs of beautiful clear water: temperature not changeable, 59°; +two small platiceroid fishes in it; tadpoles. Temperature of the +river 78°. The fish of this river are the same as those of +the Arghandab, the large Cyprinus takes Cicada greedily. The vegetation +of the hills is the same: Cerasus pygmæus and canus, common; the +novelties were a fine Composita, Plectranthus, Ephedra in fruit, Artemisia, +and Astragal., formed the chief bulk; <i>Joussa</i> is common on the +river sides.</p> +<p>This place is 150 feet above the last, yet the increased elevation +is not appreciable to the sight: the tents of the army at the Tazee +encampment are distinctly visible. <i>Atta</i> sold, at eight +seers yesterday, barley sixteen seers for the rupee. Where the +sellers come from I know not. <i>Atta</i> was fifteen seers, but +it was soon made eight by the approach of the army, and to-day it has +risen to four and a half.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Proceeded to Chushm-i-Shadee, ten miles six furlongs, +direction the same: road good, not requiring any repairs; it continues +up the valley but at a greater distance from the river than before; +the valley is enclosed in hills on both sides. Koh-i-Soork, the +northern one, is not very high, but bold and cliffy, with very little +cultivation: the country is less undulated. Chushm-i-Shadee is +a beautiful spring, not deep, but extending some distance under ground; +large-sized fish are found in it: apparently Ophiocephali, but only +parts of their bodies can be seen. Indian-corn and madder are +cultivated: a new Asteraceous flower was found. Passed a small +eminence in the centre of the valley, about three miles from Chushm-i-Shadee. +<i>Joussa</i> very abundant. Temperature of spring 59°.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Reached Chushm-i-Pinjup, six and a half miles, +direction more northerly; keeping Capella a little to the right: the +country is precisely the same, the road good, one or two easy ravines; +one with water in it.</p> +<p>The valley is rather wider, soil much less shingly, and capable of +cultivation; several patches of trees are visible in many directions, +indicating villages. We encamped opposite the entrance or gap +between the mountains forming hitherto the southern boundary, and a +more lofty range is seen running parallel with them, about east and +west. This range is of considerable height; presenting a <i>peculiar</i> +<i>slope</i> rising almost half-way up, and very conspicuous: four forts +are seen in this direction; together with several patches of trees, +and a good deal of cultivation, but nothing to what might exist. +Artemisia is the chief shrub; several good springs occur: clover, and +good grass are both abundant for a small party; <i>Joussa</i> in cultivation. +The mountain range to the north is very fine, and apparently of different +formation from the others; here and there whitish patches occur. +There is a very evident slope, which is very gradual from the northern +range to the <i>peculiar</i> slope of the southern.</p> +<p>Several springs of fine water occur: the temperature of which is +60°. Fish are abundant about the mouths of these springs, +which are like caves; their waters form one of the heads of the Turnuk, +along them Mentha, Gramineæ 2, Plantago major, Centaurea magnispina, +Compositæ, Trifolium. In the spring Polygonum natans, and +P. graminifol., Chara, Cyperacæ.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m368.jpg"> +<img alt="Peculiar slope" src="images/m368.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—Gojhan, the distance to this place is 12 miles +6 furlongs: it is not within sight of the Turnuk, though still up the +valley of that river, with the same boundaries: a few ravines were crossed +but they were not difficult: the road, otherwise level, turning most +of them, and capable of easy transit. One small stream was passed, +when we encamped on a small cut with excellent water: the banks as usual +clovery and grassy; opposite this are two villages on either side of +a gorge in the northern boundary, both apparently fortified; the one +to the north of the gorge is of large size. The country is not +shingly, but the soil is mixed with small pebbles; to our right is a +bold hill; vegetation the same. <i>Bicornigera</i> planta is very +common, and a good deal of madder cultivation occurs; wheat and barley +all cut and thrashed or trodden out: <i>atta</i> selling eight and a +half seers the rupee. Thermometer at day break 49°, the west +winds continue strong: they arise about 11 A.M. and continue till sunset, +sometimes even a little later; they are not hot.</p> +<p>This place, and its environs, is one of the most promising looking +I have seen; the whole face of the country being perhaps capable of +cultivation. No <i>Joussa</i> seen except perhaps among the cultivated +fields; grass is plentiful enough for a small force, and <i>Boosee</i> +likewise.</p> +<p>Quails were seen on the march at some distance: it seems to be a +great country for potash, and perhaps for camphor, which is evidently +abundant in one species of Artemisia.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—Proceeded to Mookhloor or <i>Chushm</i>-<i>i</i>-<i>Turnuk</i>, +twelve and a half miles; direction about NNE. The country is the +same, but the road is more raviny: certain passes occur about three +miles from Gojhan, presenting a fine defile, and some smaller ones afterwards. +Vegetation continues the same. Artemisiæ, Astragali, and +Peganum, are most common; observed a new Astragalus. The valley +is much wider after passing Gojhan; the southern boundary is not so +distinct, owing to the haze: there is not much cultivation, which appears +to be confined to the slopes under the hills. Mookhloor is situated +under a fine limestone cliff; and an excellent stream of water occurs +here, and abundance of fine grass along the humid banks: along this +water villages are abundant, they are all fortified. Trees are +plentiful, indeed after Candahar and Arghandab, this is the best looking +place we have seen: the view is not distinct however, owing to the haze +above alluded to: beyond the water, lies a vast and barren plain. +Fish are abundant in the stream, and vegetation luxuriant along its +margins. This stream divides into two or three branches, which +are all soon choked up with sedges, etc., a cut carries off the greater +part of the water, the slope is to the south, or a little to the west +of south.</p> +<p>Typha angustifolia occurs in profusion, Mentha, Cochlearia, Epilobiæ +2, Calamus abundant, Cyperaceæ in profusion, Ranuncul. aquatic, +Alisma ditto. The vegetation of the plain where we are encamped +is chiefly Artemisia.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—Halted: and I here ascended the hills overhanging +the heads of Turnuk where many villages are visible along its branches, +fifty may be counted, but it is not known how many of these are in ruins, +the villages occur at little distances from each other; the valley is +very broad. These hills, which are of conglomerate limestone, +except about the upper one-third, which is simple limestone, have no +peculiar vegetation. Ficus is the only moderate sized shrub, Asphodelus, +Lameoides, Salvia alia, which must be a beautiful species, Labiatæ +cæspitosa, Bæhmerioides, Pommereulla, and several grasses, +Compositæ, Linaria, Senecionoides glaucescens of Quettah, Dianthoides +frutex alius congener, Staticoides alia, Composita Eryngifolia, Eryngium, +Astragali 2, Umbelliferæ 2-3, Hibiscus vel Althæi, Rutæ +sp.; Frutex pistacioides, Sedoides rosaceus, Onosma, Verbascum, Dipsacea, +Cerasus pygmæus, canus, Scrophularia tertia, Compositæ, +Labiatæ, and grasses, are all the most common plants.</p> +<p>The novelties along the water are a pretty species of Astragalus, +in turf a Triglochin and Typha in flower, Potamogetons 3-4, and Ecratophyllum +occur: barley is now selling at sixteen seers, wheat at eight seers +for a rupee.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—Reached Oba-kahreeze, the distance of which from +the last encampment being fourteen miles. The country is open, +but very uninteresting; the boundary hills are scarcely discernible +owing to haze: the road is good, and a few small hills occur here and +there. Vegetation is comparatively scanty; Astragalus novus, common; +the chief plants, however, is another Artemisia of much more medicated +qualities than those previously met with, that is, less fragrant, Peganum +common. Water is plentiful enough, but fodder is scarce, and scarcely +any <i>Joussa</i> occurs; but a good deal of cultivation was passed, +consisting of madder, barley, and wheat. A few trees were observed +here and there marking the sites of villages. The country is much +poorer than that at Mookhloor, but almost the whole expanse of plain +is capable of good cultivation: soil pebbly. Fowls a good many +are procurable. Apricots are also brought for sale, but very inferior: +a striking boundary hill to the north presents a rugged, lofty aspect, +not less in the peaks than 4,000 above the plain; several ranges occur, +but those to the south are low, rounded, and small; rounded clumps of +Astragali are seen.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—Proceeded to Jumrat, 12 miles and 2 furlongs, +our direction lying to the north of the star Capella. The country +continues to present a similar aspect: valley expanded, road tolerable, +several ravines and beds of dry watercourses, with sandy bottoms; indeed +as compared with yesterday, the soil is much more sandy and less pebbly. +Vegetation is the same, no more dense aggregations of Artemisia fruticosa +are seen, but the plants consisting of scattered Artemisia of yesterday, +barely suffruticose, Peganum, Astragalus, Astragaloid Muscoideus, and +Senecio glaucescens. A good deal of cultivation occurs on both +sides of the slope towards the southern boundary, which is here lofty, +presenting the usual limestone characters. Many villages are seen, +all fortified, and about Jumrat there is the appearance of much population. +Jerboas, ravens, rock pigeons, and wild pigeons, are common; hares are +uncommon. Very few trees are to be seen, but there is abundance +of good water and grass along the margins of the cut. Sheep are +also to be had, but they are small, and goats for one rupee each, large +sheep two rupees: <i>dhal</i>, <i>atta</i>, barley procurable; and Herat +rugs.</p> +<p>To-day the native troops were put on short rations of twelve <i>chatacs</i>; +servants, etc. on eight. Horsemen to the number of 100? came to +meet the Shah, all mounted on decent ponies, but quite incapable of +coping with our irregular horse. Barometer 23.305, thermometer +87°, Wooll. new thermometrical barometer 697.6, old 595.8.</p> +<p>From 11 P.M. to 12 P.M. heavy rain; very heavy for about twenty minutes, +with a threatening aspect in the horizon at 7 A.M. to south by east, +from which direction the rain came: thunder and lightning; latter very +frequent.</p> +<p><i>18th</i>.—Entered the district of Karabagh, distance to +our present place of encampment from that we had left eight and a half +miles. The road decent, traversing several watercuts, one or two +ravines, and a small stream, indeed water becomes more abundant to-day +than in almost any other march: our direction lay the same as before, +but as we approached the low hills, separating us from Ghuznee plain, +we proceeded more east in order to turn them. The features of +the country are the same, together with the vegetation, the only novelty +being a genuine Statice and a Cruciferous plant, which I observed at +Mookhloor, and a Composita, Echinops spinis radiantibus continued. +The medicated suffruticose Artemisia: <i>Joussa</i> in old cultivation, +and Peganum are the most common plants.</p> +<p>Grass abundant along the cuts and streamlets, mixed with a pretty +new Astragalus, and the Astragalus of Mookhloor, <i>Composita</i> <i>depressa</i>, +etc.</p> +<p>The valley narrowing, we halted at the foot of low hills, which we +are yet to traverse; the ground about our camp stony and barren, producing +Astragalus, thorny Staticoides, Centaurea spinosa, Verbascum, and Thapsus.</p> +<p>The soil of the plain good and deep, as instanced by ravines, and +the deep beds of streamlets. Cultivation is abundant, villages +numerous, and, as usual, all walled; their form generally square, with +a bastion at each corner, and often two at each face, in which there +is a gate. The people are very confident of their own security +in these parts, crowding to our camp with merchandise. The country +continues bare of trees, except about some of the villages; northern +boundary hills lofty; a curious snow-like appearance is occasionally +produced from denudation of land slips, like a long wall running along +one of the ridges: southern hills distant, presenting limestone characters.</p> +<p>The articles sold in camp yesterday, were <i>atta</i> (wheat) eight +seers, barley sixteen <i>chenna</i>, sugar three to four seers. +Lucerne abundant, at one rupee four annas a bullock load, <i>soorais</i>, +<i>kismiss</i>, three to four seers, <i>zurd</i>-<i>aloo</i> twelve +seers, dried <i>toot</i> or mulberry one and a half seers for a rupee, +but these are insipid, very sweet, but also very dirty, <i>pistacio</i> +nuts one seer: crops not yet cut, but ripe.</p> +<p><i>Kupra</i>, cloth of common quality, as well as a black kind called +<i>soosee</i>.</p> +<p>Barometer, mean of three observations (12 P.M., 1 P.M., 2 P.M.) 23.433, +thermometer 85° 6'. Wooll. new therm. bar. mean of two +observations, 699.1, old, 597.5. Lichens abundant on black <i>limestone</i>? +rocks. On hills about camp, Labiata nova, and a curious tomentose +plant were the only novelties.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Proceeded to Argutto, distance nine miles, direction +easterly, the country continues unchanged until we ascended gradually +the end of the low ridge between us and Ghuznee. The slope was +very gradual: the road towards the foot generally sandy, and in some +places very bouldery: on surmounting the ridge, which was not 300 feet +above the plain, we descended a trifle, and encamped in an open space +with hills to the north; this place slopes to the south into the valley +up which we have come for some marches. The valley in this upper +portion is not so fertile as the lower parts we have seen lately, still +there are a good many forts, and some cultivation: one or two cuts were +passed, and water is abundant at our halting place in cuts, or <i>Kahrezes</i>, +as well as in a small torrent with a shallow bed. Several forts +were seen on the north side, situated in the small ravines of the hills, +they are however, mostly ruined. No change in the vegetation. +Jerboas not uncommon. An Accipitrine bird, the same as that obtained +at Shair-i-Suffer.</p> +<p>Horsemen, about thirty, were seen on the hills; they descended thence +and skirted the base in number; when they were pursued by our cavalry, +but escaped through a ravine which Sturt says, leads into a fine plain +with many forts. The 4th brigade joined with the Shah’s +force. I observed to-day a curious monstrosity of an Umbelliferous +plant, in which the rays of the umbellules are soldered together; forming +an involucre round the immersed central solitary female, the male flowers +forming the extreme teeth of the involucre.</p> +<p>Detached thermometer 83° 3', attached ditto 83° 3'; barometer +23.262, mean of three observations: old therm. bar. 597.2, new ditto +696.9. Abundance of villages throughout the part of the valley +running east, and then north, and many trees.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p373.jpg"> +<img alt="Ghuznee" src="images/p373.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—Proceeded to Nanee, distance eight to ten miles, +bearing north-east; after descending slightly from the ground we encamped +on, and turning the east extremity of its slope, the road is good, sandy +and shingly, running close to low undulated hills. No change in +vegetation. Encamped on undulated shingly ground formed from low +hills to the north, about half a mile off: Ghuznee is thence visible, +situated close under a range of hills, the walls high, having many bastions, +and one angle on the south face. Abundance of villages and topes +or groves about the valley closing up with irregular barren mountains. +Picquets were seen about five miles from our camp, but no appearance +of an army about Ghuznee.</p> +<p>The valley up which we have come since leaving Mookhloor, runs opposite +this place, from nearly east to north, and apparently, terminates beyond +Ghuznee; it is highly capable, is well inhabited and much cultivated. +So are all the valleys that we have seen on surmounting the boundary +ridges: the villages occupy each indentation of the valley, as well +as its general level.</p> +<p>Barometer at 1 P.M. 23.336, thermometer 91°: new thermometric +bar. 697.1, old 597.2. Latitude mean of three observations 33° +24' 26" North.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—Moved to Ghuznee, ten miles six furlongs. +Cavalry in very regular columns on the left; infantry to the right, +and the artillery in the centre; the park bringing up the rear: to the +last moment we were not aware whether the place would hold out or not. +The Commander-in-Chief and staff moved far in advance to reconnoitre +until we entered a road between some gardens, at the exit of which we +were almost within range of the town; here we halted; a fire was soon +set up against us from gardens to our left, and somewhat in advance, +but all the shots fell far short. On the arrival of the infantry, +the light companies of the 16th, the 48th were sent to clear the gardens, +which they easily did, although from being trenched vineyards, walled +and <i>treed</i>, their defence might have been very obstinate. +In the mean time the guns on the south face of the fortress opened on +us, and our artillery forming line at about 800 yards range, opened +their fire of spherical case and round shot in return; other guns in +the fort then opened and a sharp fire was kept up on those in the gardens +by <i>jhinjals</i> and <i>pigadas</i>, who when hard pressed took refuge +in an outwork or round tower. The fire from the south-east extremity +was soon silenced <i>pro</i> <i>tempore</i>, the shrapnel practice being +very effective. The howitzer battery on the extreme left of the +artillery line was too great a range, and with the exception of one +gun, all the shells fell short. In the <i>mélee</i>, the +Zuburjur 48-pounder, was dismounted, and carried with it a considerable +portion of the wall of the citadel where it is built upon a scarp in +the east face. After some further firing, the troops were withdrawn +almost without range, but sheltered by gardens and broken ground. +From 9 A.M. the engineers with an escort reconnoitred the place, and +having ascertained that the only practicable point of attack <i>with</i> +<i>our</i> <i>means</i> was the Cabul gate, we were moved off, and marched +to the new ground in the evening. Owing to the difficulty of crossing +a river and several cuts which intercepted the way, and formed the worst +road for camels and guns I have yet seen, much of the baggage was not +up till twelve next (i.e. this) morning.</p> +<p>One European was killed, accompanying the escort. Graves severely, +and Von Homrig slightly wounded, a <i>golundauz</i> lost his leg, and +a few others were wounded. Their gun practise in the fortress +improved much towards the end, and against the reconnoitring party, +was said to be good.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—The ground we now occupy is the mouth of the valley, +up which the Cabul road runs: our camp stretches obliquely across this; +the Shah’s camp taking a curve and resting by its left on the +river. On our (i.e. the sappers) right, is a range of hills, from +the extremity of which the town is commanded; between us and the range +in question, the 4th brigade is stationed, and on the other side, the +remainder of the infantry. We are it seems within reach of the +long gun, which has been remounted, and occasionally directs its energies +against the Shah’s camp. The night was quiet, the troops +completely knocked up by the fatigues of the day, the distance we came +(to the right) was certainly six miles, and that by which the infantry +moved to the left, was still more.</p> +<p>The gardens between us and the town are occupied by the enemy, but +the village of Zenrot on the ridge, is not. Large numbers of cavalry +are seen on the other boundary range of the valley, opposite our encampment, +certainly 2,000; this is probably the other son of Dost Mahommud, who +left the fort with the Gilzee cavalry on the night of our march to Ghuznee, +for the purpose of attacking our baggage; they were easily driven from +the ridge, which is now occupied by our horse.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Ghuznee was taken this morning by a coup-de-main, +the whole affair was over in half an hour from the time the gate was +blown open; there was, however, a good deal of firing afterwards, and +some of the inhabitants even held out throughout the day, and caused +almost as much loss as that which occurred in the storm. The affair +took place as follows: the guns moved into position between 12½ +and 2½ P.M., and about 3 P.M. commenced firing at the defences +over the gate: under cover of this fire the bags of powder, to the amount +of 800 lbs. were placed against the gate by Captain Peat, the hose being +fired by Lieut. Durand. In the mean time the road to the gate +was occupied by the storming party, the advance of which was composed +of the flank companies of all the European Regiments. The head +of the advance was once driven back by a resolute party of Affghans, +who fought desperately hand to hand, but a jam taking place, the check +was only momentary. After clearing the gate, the enemy must have +become paralysed, and both town and citadel were gained with an unprecedentedly +trifling loss. None of the engineers, or of the party who placed +the bags, were touched, although from the enemy burning blue lights +they must have been seen distinctly: two, of a few Europeans who accompanied +Capt. Peat were shot; one killed. During the day a great number +of prisoners were taken, among whom was Dost Mahommud’s son; a +great number of horses also fell into our hands.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—Ghuznee: by this morning at 9 o’clock every +thing was quiet, and the last holders-out have been taken; strict watch +is kept at the gate to prevent plunder, dead horses are now dragged +out, and dead men buried: the place looks desolate, but the inhabitants +are beginning to return. It appears to me a very strong, though +very irregular place, the stronger for being so: the streets are very +narrow, and dirty enough, houses poor, some said to be good inside, +it is a place of considerable size, perhaps one-third less than Candahar. +It is surrounded by a wet ditch, of no great width, the walls are tall +and strong, weakest on the north-east angle immediately under the citadel; +parapets, etc. are in good repair. The loop holes are however +absurd, and even when large are carefully screened. The ditch +is crossed at the Cabul gate by a stone bridge. The Zuburjur is +a very large gun, but almost useless to Affghans, who are no soldiers. +Every side of the town might have been stoutly defended.</p> +<p>The view from the citadel is extensive and fine, the mountains to +the north and north-west extremely so, and seem crowded in the view, +while the river and its cultivation add novelty to an Affghan landscape; +many villages are visible in every direction, surrounded with gardens +and orchards.</p> +<p>There is a good deal of cultivation all round the town, which is +situated on a sloping mound, separated by the ditch from the ridge forming +the northern boundary of the valley, up which the Cabul road runs; there +is a small mosque on this ridge, and below it, within 400 yards of the +ramparts, a small village, from which the attack was best seen. +The gardens are as usual walled, and are all capable of irrigation, +the plots being covered with fine grass or clover. Apples, apricots, +pears, and plums much like the Orlean’s plum, a sort of half greengage, +bullace, Elæagnus, and mulberries, are the principal fruit trees; +of these the pear is the best, it is small but well flavoured; the others +are indifferent. There are many vineyards dug into shallow trenches: +the plum is allied to the egg-plum, but altogether there are four kinds.</p> +<p>The chief vegetation of the uncultivated ground is a small Salsola, +Salsola luteola, this is mixed with Peganum, Santalaceæ, Senecionoides +glaucescens, Umbelliferoid bicornigera, Composita, having the decurrent +part of the leaves dislocated and hanging down. Centaurea spinescens, +Linaria, <i>Joussa</i>, and one or two Astragali.</p> +<p>The vegetation, with the exception of an Artemisia indicæ similis, +a Malvacea, and an Orobanche growing on Cucumis sp., is precisely the +same as that met with from Mookhloor hither, Cichorium, Polygonum graminifolium +natans, and two others, Rumex, Mentha, Epilobium micranthum, Dandelion, +Plantago major, Panicum.</p> +<p>There are two kinds of willow trees; Thermopsis is not uncommon, +Centaurea magnispina and Zygophyllum of Candahar are very common, Sisymbrium, +Lophia, Hyoscyamus, Centaurea cyanea, Tauschia. Magpies, Hoopoes, +Pastor roseus. Corvus corax, etc., along the water-cuts.</p> +<p>Some fine Poplars occur at a village, or rather a Fuqeer’s +residence; about one and a half mile to the south-west of the town on +the road to Candahar, and about it, one or two Carduaceæ, one +a fine one, to be called C. zamufolia, Pomacea acerifolia, also in gardens: +among the cultivated plants are maize, fennel, aniseed? Solarium, Bangun! +Madder, the beautiful clover of Mookhloor, lucerne, melons, watermelons, +cresses, L. sativum, radishes, onions, beetroot.</p> +<p>There are no ruins indicating a very extensive old city. About +our camp are the remains of bunds and old mud walls; near us, and between +us and the city, are two minars, with square tall pedestals, of burnt +brick, about 100 feet high, and 600 paces apart: there is nothing striking +about them, although they bear evidences of greater architectural skill +than any thing I have seen in the country, excepting the interior of +Ahmed Shah’s tomb. The base is angular, fluted, and equals +the capital, which is but little thicker towards its base. They +are brick, and derive their beauty from the diversity in the situation +of the bricks. The one nearest the city is the smaller, and appears +perfect, it is likewise provided with a staircase: the larger one is +broken at the top of the capital.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—I went to see Mahmoud of Ghuznee’s tomb, +which is situated in a largish and better than ordinarily built village, +about two miles from the Cabul gate, on the road to Cabul, at a portion +of the valley densely occupied with gardens. The situation is +bad, and the building which appears irregular, quite unworthy of notice; +it is situated among the crowded houses of the village, and to be found, +must be enquired for.</p> +<p>At the entrance of the obscure court-yard which leads to it, there +is a fine rivulet that comes gushing from under some houses, shaded +by fine mulberry trees; in this court are some remains of Hindoo sculpture +in marble; the way there leads past an ordinary room under some narrow +cloisters to the right, then turning to the left one enters another +court, on the north side of which is the entrance to the tomb; there +is no architectural ornament at all about it, either inside or out. +The room is an ordinary one, occupied towards the centre by a common +old looking tomb of white marble, overhung by lettered tapestry, and +decorated with a tiger skin: over the entrance, hang three eggs of the +ostrich, for which the natives have the very appropriate name of camel +bird, and two shells, like the Hindoo conches, but smaller. The +roof is in bad order, and appears to have been carved. The doors +appear old; they are much carved, but the carvings are effaced; they +are not remarkable for size, beauty, or mass; and appear to be cut from +some fir wood, although the people say they are sandal wood. The +tomb strikingly confirms the idea that the Putans became improved through +their connection with Hindoostanees, rather than the reverse; the tomb +is unworthy of a great conqueror.</p> +<p>I then ascended the ridge, and descended along it to the picquets +on the flank of our camp. This ridge, like all the low ones from +Mookhloor to this place, is rounded, very shingly, and generally on +the northern face, is partly covered with rocks, apparently limestone. +The vegetation presents nothing unusual, with the exception of a very +large Cnicus, Cnicoideus zamiafolius, capitulis parvis, an Umbellifera, +a Scutellaria, Dipsacus; otherwise they are thinly scattered with two +or three Astragali, two or three Artemisiæ, among which A. gossypifera +is the most common, Labiata fragrans of Karabagh, Senecio glaucescens, +Compositæ, Eryngioides, Centaurea alia, magnispinæ affinis, +Santalacea, Leucades, Onosma major, et alia, foliis angustis, Echinops +prima, Sedoides, Cerasus, Canus pygmæus, Dianthoides alia.</p> +<p>The view from this ridge is beautiful, it shows that three valleys +enter the Karabagh one about Ghuznee, the largest to the eastward; then +the Cabul one, then that of the Ghuznee river. The slope of this +valley from the mountains to the river, presents a very undulated appearance. +The cultivation is confined to the immediate banks of the river, which +is thickly inhabited, and to most of the ravines of the mountains, shewing +that water is generally plentiful. The river is to be traced a +long way by means of the line of villages and orchards which follow +its banks.</p> +<p>The mountains are very barren, much varied in the sculpture of their +outlines, and are by no means so rugged as those of limestone in the +Turnuk valley. The lofty one which presents the appearance of +a wall near its ridge, and of snow, alluded to during the march hither +on the 18th ultimo, is still visible. Considerable as is the cultivation, +it bears a very small proportion to the great extent of waste, and probably +untillable land, untillable from the extreme thinness of the soil and +its superabundant stones. Cratœgus occurred near Mahmoud’s +tomb, also Centaurea cyanea.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—Halted: nothing new; botany very poor; poorer +than ordinary.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Moved to Shusgao, distance thirteen and three-quarter +miles, direction still the same, or, to the north of the star Capella. +The road extends over undulating ground, is cut up by ravines, but easily +traversed, ascending and descending; then crossing a small valley, at +the north-east corner of which the ghat is visible: the ascent to the +mouth of this gorge equals apparently the height attained before descending +into the valley. The pass is narrow, the sides steep but not precipitous; +the hills are not very rugged, and they are generally thinly clothed +with scattered tufted plants; the pass gradually widens, and has a ruin +or remains of a small fort-like building as at the entrance. This +ruin, or fort, looks down into a poorly inhabited, poorly cultivated, +Khorassan valley: road good, with a gradual ascent for one and a half +mile from the exit of the pass, where we encamped, about five miles +on the Cabul side.</p> +<p>The Botany is rather interesting, the general features are the same +as those of the hills round Ghuznee; the most common plants Senecionoides +glaucus, Plectranthus of Mookhloor in profusion, a new densely tufted +Statice very common, Verbascum, Thapsioides, Linaria, Artemisia very +common, Cnici, two or three of large stature, Astragali, two or three, +Asphodelus luteus, Labiata of Mookhloor, Santalacea, Dipsacus, <i>Thymus</i>, +Lotoides, Staticoides major.</p> +<p>In the undulated ground before reaching the valley preceding the +pass, a fine tall Cnicus occurs, also Plectranthus; Peganum is very +common.</p> +<p>About our halting place the same small Artemisia and Composita dislocata +occur in profusion; Cnicus zamiafolius, Dianthus aglaucine, <i>Astragalus</i>, +a peculiar prim-looking species. Leguminosæ, Muscoides two +or three, very large Cnici, Plectranthus, Iris out of flower, Astragali +alii, 2-3.</p> +<p>Cultivation consisting of mustard and very poor crops, of which wheat +is the principal: a few ordinary villages are seen with good and abundant +supplies of water; the country notwithstanding is inferior, as compared +with that about Ghuznee. The soil coarse and gravelly, or pebbly. +Thermometer 47° at 5 A.M.</p> +<p>After descending from the gorge, the summit of which may be estimated +at 400 to 500 feet, the ascent is considerable: barometer standing at +1½ P.M. at 22.323; thermometer 86°; so that the extreme ascent +since leaving Ghuznee has certainly been between 1,100 to 1,200 feet.</p> +<p>The inhabitants are coming into camp with articles for sale, as lucerne, +clover, coarse rugs, and sheep.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—Proceeded to Huftasya, eight and a quarter miles, +direction about the same, continuing down a narrow valley with a well +marked and tolerable road, extending over undulating ground, having +a slight descent throughout: the centre of the valley is cultivated, +villages extend up the ravines of the northern side. We halted +near several villages, with a good deal of cultivation around, consisting +of beans and mustard. But few trees are seen about the villages, +and there is no change in vegetation: water abundant from covered <i>kahreezes</i> +or wells, which generally flow into small tanks.</p> +<p>The slope of the southern boundary is undulated, that of the northern +though generally flat and uninteresting, yet near us becomes very bold +and rugged, but its ravines and passes are easily accessible.</p> +<p>Shusgao—The plants found here about the cultivation, are Achillæoides, +Asteroides, Plantago major, Hyoscyamus, Tanacetoides, Artemisia, Trifolium, +Taraxacum, Mentha, Phalaris, Rumex, the small swardy Carex of Chiltera, +Astragalus, calycibus non-inflatis, tomentoso villoso, this last with +Composita dislocata is common on shingly plains.</p> +<p>On slopes of hills Leucades, Cerasus canus, pygmæus rare, Dianthoides, +Plectranthus very common, Cnici 3 or 4, Labiata of Mookhloor, Senecionoides +glaucescens common, Artemisia, sp. very common, Staticoides of Dhun-i-Shere, +Anthylloides, Verbascum.</p> +<p><i>Hyoscyamus</i>. The circumcision of the capsule of this +genus is apparently in connection with the peculiar induration of the +calyx of the fruit; its relations to the capsule is so obvious that +its dehiscence is the only one compatible with the free dissemination +of the seeds, <i>the</i> <i>calyx</i> <i>remaining</i> <i>entire</i>. +<i>Hence</i>? the induration of the calyx should be the most permanent +if it is the cause, but to obviate all doubts, both calyx, fructus induratus, +and capsula circumscissa, should enter into the generic character; the +unilaterality of capsules, and their invariable tendency to look downwards, +or rather the inferior unilaterality, may likewise reasonably be considered +connected with the same structure of calyx, as well as the expanded +limb of the calyx.</p> +<p>The indurated calyx is the cause, because although circumscissa capsula +is by no means uncommon, and in others has no relation to the calyx, +yet in this genus it has such, and should have in every other similar +case.</p> +<p><i>August</i> <i>1st</i>.—Hyderkhet, distance ten and a half +miles down the same valley; the road is bad and after crossing the undulating +terminations of the southern slope, very stony and bouldery; in several +places it is narrow and uneven. The country is well inhabited, +and very well cultivated, particularly towards the bed of the river, +which is here and there ornamented with trees. Numbers of villagers +are seen on the road as spectators. Beans very abundant, mustard +less so, excellent crops of wheat; the fields are well tilled, and very +cleanly kept: this portion of the valley, though small, is perhaps the +best populated and cultivated place we have yet seen: the descent throughout +is gradual: the boundary hills, at least lower ranges present a very +barren character, covered with angular slaty fragments. Some tobacco +cultivation.</p> +<p><i>2nd</i>.—Shekhabad, nine miles and six furlongs, direction +north-east by east. The road throughout is rather bad, particularly +in places near the Schneesh river, which has a very rapid current. +We left this on its turning abruptly through a narrow ravine to the +south: towards this, the valley narrows much; we then ascended a rising +ground, and descended as much or perhaps less until we reached the Logur, +a river as large almost as the Arghandab, this we crossed by a bridge +composed of stout timbers, laid on two piers composed of stones and +bushes, and tied together by beams: the cavalry and artillery forded +below, and above the bridge. Crossing the bed which is low and +well cultivated, chiefly with rice, we ascended perhaps 100 feet, and +encamped on undulating shingly ground; we then passed much cultivation +on the road: villages are plentiful, and often placed in very narrow +gorges unusually picturesque for Affghanistan; one scene was especially +pretty, enclosed by the high barren mountains of the southern boundary, +in the distance a village or two, and the Schneesh, with banks well +wooded, and willows in the foreground.</p> +<p>The aspect of the hills, except some of the distant ranges, is however +changed; quartz has become very common among the shingle, with reddish, +generally micaceous, slate: the mountains are rounded, and easy of access: +very poorly clothed with vegetation. The course of the Logur is +nearly north and south.</p> +<p>There are some villages about this place, with lucerne, clover and +bearded rice of small stature.</p> +<p>The elevation of the country is here about 100 feet below our camp, +which is about half a mile from the river. Barometer 182, 23.362; +thermometer 95°; latitude 34° 5' 30".</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—Halted: the Logur river discharges much water; +the whole of the tillable portions of adjacent banks are not under cultivation, +the rocky sides to the south composed of micaceous slate, are very precipitous; +these mountains were originally rounded, but are now formed into cliffs; +willows and poplars are abundant along the river. But the vegetation +of the cliffy sides scarcely presents any change, except in a Salvia, +a Ruta, a small withered Leguminosa; the other plants are Polygonacea +frutex uncommon, Senecionoides, Salvia Horminum common, Artemisia two: +the usual one very common, Asphodelus, Mesembryanthoides, and luteus, +several Compositæ, two or three Cnicoidei, a Pulicaria, etc. of +the same section, Cuscuta, Linaria angustifolia, Stipa, several withered +grasses, Dianthoides, Scrophularia, Allium, Cerasus canus, pygmæus +uncommon, Sedoides, Boragineæ, Boraginis facie common, Leucades, +Astragali, three or four, Onosmæ 2, angustifolia and majus, Scutellaria, +Equisetoides, Ephedra.</p> +<p>Anthylloides, Plectranthus common, Peganum uncommon, Staticoides +major, Compositæ dislocata common.</p> +<p>In the swardy and wet spots along river, the usual plants occur; +the novelty being a Hippuris out of flower, Plantago, Glaux, Chara, +Alisma, Tamarisk, Salix, Trifolium fragiferum, Thermopsis, Cyperacea, +Triglochim, Equisetum. The <i>Nuthatch</i> found in the cliffs, +cultivation occurs.</p> +<p>To-day news arrived of the flight of Dost Mahommud to Bamean, with +3,000 Affghan Horse. Captain Outram sent in pursuit. The +Shah joined us, attended by perhaps 2,000 Horse, and people are said +to be flocking into our camp from Cabul.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—Proceeded to Killa-Sir-i-Mahommud, distance ten +and a half miles, direction north by east, the park of artillery, etc. +remaining behind, the road for the first half extending over undulating +ground to the head of the valley, then becoming level and good with +some inferior cultivation: the valley is dry and barren. We encamped +on stony ground forming a slight eminence under a beautiful peak, certainly +4,000 to 5,000 feet above the plain, and hence 12,000 to 13,000 feet +above the sea. The valley at the base of the hills is occupied +by a few villages, but generally speaking little population exists in +these parts. No change in vegetation; at the level part of the +march the Chenopodiaceæ of Karabagh is very common.</p> +<p>The 2,000 Dooranees who joined the Shah yesterday dwindled down to +300 by the evening, and the camp was fired into at night. There +is some cultivation about this, chiefly of mustard, carrots, millet +and Panicum, Setaria.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—To Maidan, distance eight miles? direction at first +as before, but after crossing the river due north, we continued down +the valley, passing some villages and cultivation consisting of beans, +etc.; water being abundant about three miles from camp, forming a small +brook, which falls into the Cabul river at the end of the valley. +Before reaching this we crossed a low spur, and then descended into +Maidan valley: which presented a beautiful view; much cultivation, and +trees abundant along the Cabul river.</p> +<p>Crossing this which is a rapid current one foot deep, twenty yards +wide, running south, or in the contrary direction to that which is given +in Tassin’s Map, we ascended an eminence on which a ruinous stone +fort is built, we crossed this eminence between the fort and main ridge +and descended into a valley again, keeping above the cultivation at +the foot of the east boundary range, for about a mile, when we halted. +The ruins of a stone bridge exist over the river, one arch remaining +on the left bank.</p> +<p>The valley is the prettiest we have seen, the hills to the west and +north being lofty and picturesque; one to the latter direction presenting +an appearance exactly like that of snow on its ridge, quite white, but +not changing even at noon, nor occupying such places, as it would do +if it were snow. The mountains, except those to the west, are +not boldly peaked, the valley is prettily diversified with wood, all +of the usual sombre cypress-like appearance, from the trees, especially +poplars, being clipped. Cultivation and water both plentiful: +villages and small forts numerous, with very barren mountains. +This was the place where Dost Mahommud was to have fought; he could +not have selected a better, the ridge entering the valley, and the passage +of the river, as well as that of the fort would have afforded good positions: +a road however runs round the base of the eminence on the river side. +By swamping the valley, or cutting a canal, and entrenching himself +he might have caused great difficulties. Apples are abundant here, +rosy and sweet.</p> +<p>Cultivation of the valley consists of wheat, barley, Cicer, not <i>chunna</i>, +maize, rice, carrots, beans, peas.</p> +<p>The river side is well furnished with willows and poplars, Salix +viminea also occurs; the villages are generally square, with a bastion +at each corner, and loopholes. Cyprinus microsquamatus, <a name="citation383"></a><a href="#footnote383">{383}</a> +common.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Arghundee, distance eight miles, direction for +the first fourth of the way NE., then considerably to the eastward, +when we soon left the valley and commenced with an ascent over a low +ridge by a vile stony road over undulating ground. On reaching +the ridge a similar descent took place, where the road becomes less +stony, but much intersected by ravines. We encamped about three +miles from the ridge, in a rather barren narrow valley. Nothing +of interest occurred on the road, except Dost Mahommud’s guns, +which are the best I have seen in the country. The hills to our +north crowded closely together, the inner ranges are very high, with +the appearance of snow.</p> +<p>Hindoo-koosh is dimly seen in the distance to the eastward. +In some streams water birds, particularly the small kingfisher of India +are seen. The Hoopoe is common, Merops, Pastor, and ravens. +New plants a Boragineæ floribus infundibuliformis, tubiformibus, +lœta cæruleis, venosa roseis, melons. Snow on the +Hindoo-koosh: rain in the afternoon, and at night a heavy thunderstorm +to the north.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Kilah-i-Kajee, lies one mile to the eastward: distance +of to-day’s march, nine miles? one continued but gradual descent +over a bad, frequently very stony road, not much water. Direction +at first ENE., then on descending into the first valley, due east or +even to the south of east, we encamped in the centre of a well-cultivated +valley; near dense gardens, having good apples; apricots indifferent. +Hindoo-koosh is here more distinctly visible with several ranges interposed; +the outline is rugged, highest point presenting a fine conical irregular +peak towards the south-east.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Halted: encamped close to gardens and rich cultivation. +The fields are separated by rows of poplars, willows, and Elæagnus; +scenery pretty from abundance of trees with rice fields interspersed +among woods; the umbrageous banks of the rocky river of Cabul, are quite +of unusual beauty for Afghanistan: extensive fields of cultivation lie +in this direction, as well as across the valley in the direction of +Cabul, consisting of rice in great quantities, mixed with much of a +Panicum stagninum, lucerne, carrots, peas, quantities of safflower, +which appears to me to be of a different species, wheat and barley both +cut, the rice is just in flower.</p> +<p>In orchards, hazel-nuts, apples, pears, etc. some of the fruit excellent, +particularly pears, but generally they are coarse; apples beautiful +to look at, but poor to the taste, excellent but too luscious plums, +good grapes, excellent and fine sized peaches, melons as good as those +of Candahar, water melons, cherries of very dark colour.</p> +<p>Some change is to be observed in the vegetation, see Catalogue, two +or three Labiata, an Ononis, an Aconite, Tussilago? etc. among the most +striking, Ammannia and Bergioides, remarkable as tropical forms, but +it is now hot enough for any plant: rice fields crowded with Cyperaceæ +and Alisma.</p> +<p>Cratægus oxycantha, or one very like it. The poplar here +grows like the Lombardy one, either from cropping or crowding; its leaves +(when young) are much smaller! and at this stage it might easily be +taken for another species.</p> +<p>Heliotropium canus common. The large poplar when young, or +even when matured, has its younger branches with terminal leaves like +the sycamore. The pomaceæ-foliis palmatis subtus niveis +of Quettah and Candahar are nothing but this poplar in its young state!! +Nothing can exceed the difference between the two, both in shape and +tomentum.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Halted since 10th at Baber’s tomb, situated +at some fine gardens, or rather groves very near the summer-house of +Shah Zumaun, and to the right of the entrance into the town. It +is a delightful residence, and for Afghanistan, a paradise. There +are some tanks of small size, around one of which our tents are pitched +under the shade of sycamores and fine poplars; the tank is fed by a +fall from a cut above its level, and which skirts the range of hills +at an elevation of fifty feet in some places from its base. The +tomb of Baber is poor, as also is the so-called splendid mosque of Shah +Jehan, a small ordinary open edifice of coarse white marble. In +the gardens, one finds beautiful sycamores, and several fine poplars +both round the tank and in avenues. Below them a Bauhinioid fruit +was found, together with abundance of hawthorn, roses, and jasmines.</p> +<p>The view from this spot is beautiful, as fine as most woodland scenery. +The view from Shah Zumaun’s summer-house is also extensive, and +not to be exceeded as a cultivated woodland scene; it is variegated +with green swardy commons, presenting all sorts of cultivation; with +water, villages, abundance of trees, willows, poplars, hedgerows, and +by the grand but barren mountains surrounding it, the Pughman hills, +which must be at least 13,000 feet above the sea.</p> +<p>The entrance to Cabul on this side, is through a gorge flanked by +hills; these to the left are low, those to the right reaching 1,000 +feet, through which the Maidan river, here called the Cabul river, runs; +it may be 100 yards wide. The river is subdivided, and crossed +by a ruined stone bridge of many arches, one parapet of which (the outer) +is continuous with the wall before mentioned. The gorge is occupied +by cultivation of several kinds, having the city wall at its termination, +running irregularly across the valley. A village is situated between +the entrance of the gorge and the wall. There are no defences +to the city worth mentioning: one enters immediately into narrow dirty +streets, with here and there a fever-breeding stagnant sewer; while +the streets are narrow, the bazars are good, of good breadth, well covered +in by flat ornamented roofs: the shops are clean, and well laid out. +Shoemakers and leather-workers, and fruiterers, are the most common: +there are armourers, blacksmiths, drapers and bakers. Hindoos +and Mussulmen intermixed, form the population. There is great +bustle and activity, everywhere profusion of fine fruit, especially +melons, grapes, and apples are presented.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—I ascended this morning the ridge above us, up +which the wall runs; the ascent is, after surmounting the summer-house +of Shah Zumaun, considerably steep, and very rugged. The highest +position of the wall is 1,150 feet above the city. It is eight +feet high, and six or seven thick, composed of slabs of the micaceous +slaty stone of the place, cemented by mud, with a parapet of two feet, +generally of <i>kucha</i>, or mud, with loopholes, and bad embrasures. +It is furnished with bastions, but is now in a ruinous state. +It is a work completely thrown away. To the south, the wall bends +eastward, and is continuous with the outworks of the upper citadel; +to the north it dips into the gorge, and re-ascends the hills on the +opposite side.</p> +<p>From the peak, (which is not the highest point of the ridge, there +being two higher to the south, on the nearest of which is a mound, and +a small pillar) a beautiful view is obtained of Cabul, its valley, and +its mountains, together with the far more beautiful valley in which +the army is encamped.</p> +<p>The town itself presents an irregular outline, and is, with the exception +of some gardens towards its northern side, some lucerne fields near +its centre, and one or two open spots of small size, densely crowded +with the usual terraced-roofed, <i>kucha</i>, or mud houses, which are +so close, as to show no streets whatever.</p> +<p>There is not a single conspicuous building in it, with the exception +of the lower Bala Hissar and a mosque of small size on the right bank +of the river, occupying an open space near a garden, which alone renders +it distinct.</p> +<p>The Bala Hissar occupies the eastern corner: its outworks are regular +enough. It is surrounded by the remains of a wet ditch; its works +have been lately improved. Excepting the part occupied by the +Shah, etc. the space is crowded by houses exactly like the town. +The fort to its south and commanding it completely, is the upper citadel, +and is altogether out of repair; this continues the defence formed by +the wall. The walls of the city themselves are not distinguishable, +excepting those of the nearest quarter, occupied by Kuzzilbashes. +The river intersects the town, it is crossed by two, three, or perhaps +more small stone bridges, and runs nearly due east, and may be traced +almost to the foot of the eastern boundary range. From near the +mosque a fine straight road runs NNE. or thereabouts, with avenues of +trees of small size near the town. Two other roads are visible +on the east side; one is continuous with that which runs along the north +face of the lower citadel, it runs due east; and the other slopes towards +this, and meets it about two or three miles from the city at the end +of a low range of hills.</p> +<p>The valley is not so well cultivated as ours, (i.e. the one in which +the army is encamped) nor by any means so well wooded; it appears bare +some way from the city, but this may arise from the stubble of the prevailing +cultivation of wheat and barley. There is abundance of water, +the only distinct <i>Chummun</i> is to the south of the citadel, it +is now under water.</p> +<p>Some low isolated hills or ranges are interspersed in the valley; +of these the largest is that running nearly parallel to the central +road; the next is due north of the city, and midway between it and the +salt-water lake which stretches several miles along the north of the +valley, and which appears to be a large body of water.</p> +<p>The boundary hills are generally fine; to the east is a high scarped +bold range, running nearly due north and south, its terminations being +plainly visible; near its southern end commences the ridge that forms +the oblique south boundary of the valley, and which runs up towards +the south into a fine broadly conical peak, very conspicuous from Arghandab. +To the north are the fine Pughman mountains; these run east and west: +they are of great elevation, and of fine outline, presenting here and +there appearances of snow. To the west is the walled ridge, not +exceeding 1,300 feet in its highest point above the general level; this +is interrupted by the Cabul river, and never reaches such elevations +again; before ending to the north, it sends off a spur to the east.</p> +<p>Beyond the eastern boundary, glimpses of the Hindoo-koosh are obtainable.</p> +<p>To the west, there are no very high hills visible, excepting the +western part of the Pughmans; those of our valley are not exceeding +2,000 feet in height, and are low to the south, in which direction the +Maidan river flows into the valley. Beyond the highest point of +the walled ridge, are several crowded high mountains.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the western hills is not peculiar, Echinops, a +tallish Carduacea, Carduacea alia, Senecionoides, Astragali, Artemisiæ +2, Statice of Dhuni pass.</p> +<p>Leucades, Labiata of Karabagh, Gramineæ, several small Compositæ, +foliis dislocatis, Leguminosa, fructu echinatis, Santalacea, Asphodelus +luteus, Ruta angustifolia, Umbellifera, foliis maximis of Chiltera, +a very stout plant, with a very medicinal gum, a new Polanisioid, a +Centaureoid, and a fine Carduacea are to be found in it.</p> +<p>A Marmot, the size of a large rat, is also found here, the large +specimens are of a reddish tinge, the small ones of a blackish.</p> +<p>The bazars are crowded all day, and in the morning are obstructed +from asses loaded with wood. Most things are procurable; the cloths +seen are mostly the indifferent common kind of cloth related to the +Seikh Puttoo; camel hair <i>chogas</i>, posteens or coarse blankets; +these last indicating very cold winters: there are not many other things +peculiar—long knives, and the shoes and boots are among the most +so, and wretched silk handkerchiefs.</p> +<p>The most common grapes are the <i>kismiss</i>, a long coarse grape +which answers for packing, a round, very sweet, purple grape, with large +seeds, and small seedless ones intermixed, are all capable of being +much improved by thinning, and a huge, tough-skinned, coarse, purple +grape, of good flavour.</p> +<p>The best peaches have a green appearance, even when ripe; the ordinary +ones are coarse, and not well-flavoured; but the Affghans are quite +ignorant of the art of packing fruit, and hence most are bruised.</p> +<p>Two sorts of apples are common, both rosy; one very much so, but +much inferior to the other.</p> +<p>Pears principally of two kinds, both allied to the common pear in +shape; the large ones are very coarse, but well adapted for stewing.</p> +<p><i>Aloocha</i> excellent for jellies, as also the cherries: most +kinds of plums are now out of season.</p> +<p>The melons vary much in quality, the watermelons are generally better, +and vary less: the muskmelons I have here seen, are ruined by inattention +to the time of gathering; some are very fine, the pulp is never very +deep coloured; it is very rarely green; some of the Kundah sort are +very good; this and the <i>turbooj</i> are both excessively common. +The usual Cucurbita is cultivated, as well as the other common cucumber, +pumpkin, Luffa fœtida, and L. acutangula.</p> +<p>Cabbages common, beet root ditto, <i>bangun</i> ditto, excellent +spinage (Spinaceæ).</p> +<p>All sorts of spices procurable, but they are generally old: sugar +very good, is sold in flat candied cakes, one and a half inch thick; +<i>koorool</i> in small cakes resembling chunam.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XVI.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Cabul</i> <i>to</i> <i>Bamean—The</i> <i>Helmund</i>, +<i>and</i> <i>Oxus</i> <i>rivers</i>.</p> +<p><i>24th</i> <i>August</i>, <i>1839</i>.—Left Cabul for Bamean, +and marched to Urghundee.</p> +<p><i>25th</i>.—To the Cabul river, distance twelve and a half +miles; diverged from the Cabul road at Urghundee Chokey, striking obliquely +across a ravine that debouches into the main valley at this point. +The course of the river ENE. or thereabouts, then we entered a ravine +to the west side of the river, and commenced ascending the pass, which +is not difficult, and although rather steep at first, subsequently it +becomes merely undulated, the surrounding hills of the pass have the +usual character, but are separated by mere ravines. Vegetation +very scanty; Senecionoides very common, as also <i>Joussa</i> and Statice +of Dund-i-sheer; here I noticed the Solora found in the wood at Kilatkajee. +The Barometer at the summit of the pass, 22.148: thermometer 60°. +An extensive view is had from it, up the Cabul river, the valley of +which is well cultivated, but presents nothing very striking in its +neighbouring mountains. Great numbers of sheep passed us going +towards Cabul, also numbers of Patans with their families, all on camels, +than some of which last nothing could be finer. The women’s +dress consists of loose gowns, generally bluish, with short waists coming +almost up under the arms, and leggings of folded cloths; they are a +gipsy-like, sun-burnt, good looking people. Numbers of asses laden +with grain were also passed. At the halting place indifferent +apples only were to be had. Slight rain fell in the afternoon +from east, then it became heavier from west.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Distance eight miles, the road lay along the Cabul +river up a gentle ascent, over undulated ground; features of country +the same, villages, etc., abundant. Heavy rain set in from the +west after our arrival at the encamping ground at 4 P.M., with thunder. +Night hazy, heavy dew.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—To Sir-i-Chushme, distance ten miles, direction +continues easterly up the Cabul river valley: features the same; road +generally good, here and there stony, crossed a large tributary falling +into the Cabul river, from the north at Juljaily, a large village, the +largest in the valley, and very pretty. Poplars and willows in +plenty along river. Near Sir-i-Chushme the valley becomes narrow; +the river passing through a gorge, on the left side of which on rugged +rocky ground, are the remains of a tower. The rocks here are mica +slate, reposing at a considerable angle, occasionally nearly vertical. +The surface is thinly vegetated, Silenacea, two or three <i>Muscoides</i> +(981), Scrophulariæ sp., common, etc. (see Catal. 971, etc.) +Beyond, the valley again widens, presenting similar features to those +just mentioned. To the right side of the valley there is a beautiful +narrow ravine, bounded on the south with springs, to the north by a +noble bleak rugged ridge, with much snow; it has the usual features, +namely, a shingly inclined plane between huge hills. The village +of Sir-i-Chushme is built on a rising ground or small spur, surrounded +by numerous springs which supply the source of the Cabul river; the +bed of which above them is nearly dry. The springs abound with +the usual water plants, a Cinclidotoid moss in abundance, a Celtoid +tree stands over one spring; Peganum continues. A shallow circular +pool occurs at the foot of the hills, on which the village is built; +it is crowded with the peculiar Cyprinidæ of these parts, <a name="citation390a"></a><a href="#footnote390a">{390a}</a> +some of which attain three pounds in weight, as also a small loach. +<a name="citation390b"></a><a href="#footnote390b">{390b}</a></p> +<p>The cultivation throughout this valley is good. The soil is +however heavy, but in places it gives way to a brown mould: rice is +cultivated up to Julraiz, but not beyond, millet (Setaria), Indian-corn, +lucerne, mustard, beet root; beans and peas are very common.</p> +<p>Great pains are taken with watercuts, which are led off into each +ravine that debouches into the valley, at elevations of sixty to eighty +feet above the river; opposite each, the river where led off is bunded +across. The watercuts or courses are in some places built up with +stones. Apricot trees continue, also mulberries near Julraiz, +but they are not productive.</p> +<p>Timber is cut in good quantities, and is floated down in the spring +to Cabul. We continue to meet flocks of sheep and camels with +Patans, Momums, and Ghilzees going to Cabul, thence to Julallabad; after +selling their produce at Cabul, they return in the summer to the same +pasturages.</p> +<p>The oxen used to tread out corn are muzzled: grain is winnowed as +in Europe by throwing it up in the wind, the corn falls nearest the +wind, the coarse chaff next, then the fine chaff. Sir-i-Chushme +is about the same height as the pass into the valley of the Cabul river.</p> +<p>English Scrophularia were observed to-day at Julraiz. We obtained +all provisions cheap at this place, but of very inferior quality compared +to Cabul.</p> +<p>The most common plants are Senecionoides and Plectranthus; Artemisiæ +one or two, some Carduaceæ. Very few novelties occur: hedges +of Hippophæ and roses, Salvia very common to-day; asses were seen +laden with dried <i>Ruwash</i> leaves.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—To Yonutt, twelve miles, continued for a short +distance up the Sir-i-Chushme valley, then we diverged to the north-west, +still following the principal streamlet up an easy defile; on reaching +a beautiful <i>kila</i>, differently ornamented from the usual form, +we diverged along the same ravine much more to the west. We continued +doing so for five or six miles, passing a little cultivation in every +possible spot capable of it, and four or five forts. The ascent +then commenced to be steeper, still continuing up the watercourse which +was very small; this we soon left, passing over five ridges of easy +access, the third being the highest. Barometer 20.365: thermometer +80° at 10½ A.M.; after this we descended the 5th ridge or +kotal, 200 or 300 feet, which is very steep, having a watercourse at +its bottom; direction of stream lies to the north, thence ascending +we again descended gradually over an open stony ridge, until we reached +the fort of Yonutt, where we encamped near a green wet spot, visible +for some distance.</p> +<p>The road here and there was bad owing to stones; except at the last +kotal, or ascent, it was nowhere very steep, but difficult enough for +camels, especially up the ascent of the 1st kotal. It lay up a +ravine not unlike others we have seen, the ascent being considerable, +but gradual, when we left the watercourse, however, we came on a different +country, very elevated (1st kotal not under 10,000 feet), longly <i>undulated</i>, +the mountains generally massive, rounded, here and there rising into +peaks, especially to the south, near Yonutt, where there is a fine ridge +not under 14,000 or 15,000 feet, rugged with spots of snow; the mountains +to north of this are more rounded; slate and limestone abundant, but +not a tree from the base of the 1st ascent. The ascent is very +practicable, the road is made, or artificial in many places, soil soft +and broken: there is water at seven miles from Sir-i-Chushme, and even +at the foot of the 1st kotal, at least there are two or three of the +usual villages; there is one with its wall demolished. Many granite +blocks are strewed on the road. For ponies and horses, even laden, +the road is very easy, but for draft it is difficult. We experienced +a cold cutting west wind from 11 A.M. Grass is plentiful along +all the moist spots, but it is useless as the camels prefer the Carduacea +of this place, though a bad fodder for them.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m392.jpg"> +<img alt="Sir-i-Chushme ridges" src="images/m392.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Not much change was observed in the vegetation for half-way up the +1st kotal or ascent; willows and poplars continue to nearly one mile +from the last village. Here and there along the ravine or streamlet, +Salvia is very common, Senecionoides, Bubonoides on rocky ground, Sinapis, +Verbascum decurrens used in the Himalayas for German tinder, Statice +of Dund-i-Shere, Muscoides of yesterday, Urtica of Cabul, Malva rotundifolia, +Hyoscyamus 1-labiat., Polygonum prostratum of shingly spots, Composita +dislocata, Leucades, Boraginea, Boraginis fasciæ <i>of</i> <i>before</i>. +About Kila Moostaffur Khan a coarse tufted grass, Centaurea oligantha +common throughout, first found at Khilat-i-Gilzee; Onosma major, Cochlearia, +Dianthoides. Chenopodium diclinum, villosa, Astragali 2-3, Cichorum, +Linaria angustifolia, Euphorbia angustifolia, Marrabium, Hyoscyamus +of Quettah, Testucoides annua appears about here, Epilobium minus, Rumex, +Lactuca fol. cost. subtus spinosis, Melilotus, Silene angulata, Arenaria, +calyce globoso inflato, Echinops of Cabul. The water plants are +precisely the same as those of Cabul.</p> +<p>For new plants see Catalogue 980, etc.</p> +<p>Summit of 1st kotal Statice of Dund-i-Shere, Statice grandiflora, +Dianthoides, several Astragali, one with the pinnulæ dentato serratis, +petiola spinosa, a tufted Monocotyledonous plant with terete canaliculate +subulate leaves, <i>Salvia</i>, Gramen alterum, Composita dislocata, +Carduacea, this is the most common plant on the open rounded parts, +while the others occupy the rocky sides of the hills. The vegetation +is however very poor.</p> +<p>Cultivation various, as seen in different stages along the gorge +up to the ascent. Thus, people are seen ploughing for the next +year’s crops amidst stubble fields, and lucerne; but above and +throughout the ascent, no crops are cut, while the wheat and barley +on the descent are in the ear: mustard very common. Several encampments +of what are badly called black teal, and paths are to be seen very frequently +over the hills in most directions, together with flocks of sheep. +A large road leading off to the south-west from the summit is seen; +from this our road is well-marked.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—Halted: every tillable spot is made use of about +Yonutt, where there is a fort with forty families. The crops are +chiefly wheat and a four-awned barley, the grain is fine though scanty, +and the plants are of stunted growth. Ravens the same, round-tailed +eagle as at Urghundee, and Percnopterus, wagtails, three kinds of Conirostres, +and an Alauda are found here, one or two Sylviæ. The sward +about this place is abundant, affords good pasturage for a few horses, +and water is plentiful. This sward is chiefly occupied by a Leguminous +Caraganoid shrub, rather thorny, and not unlike some species of Barberry +in habit, this is abundant, and is first met with in the ravines beyond +the Oonnoo pass, Cyperaceæ, viz. 2-3, Carices, small grasses, +Leontodon, Astragaloid cærulens, Trifolium album, Composita corona, +Cnicus acaulis, and Gentiana pusilla, compose the sward chiefly; in +the drier parts of it there is a very fine Carduacea, which appears +very local.</p> +<p>The hills about are all either clay slate, pure slate, or micaceous +slate, the strata generally vertical.</p> +<p>Descended the ravine which the rivulet passes down, to where it joins +the Helmund, the hills bounding it are of no great height, but the slips +are sometimes bold. The Helmund runs between rocky cliffs, its +bed not much broader than the stream, the water is clear, rapid, and +the column considerable.</p> +<p>This gorge is picturesque, the sides being generally precipitous.</p> +<p>The plants of these hills are, Umbelliferæ very common, Statice +2, Carduacea, Ephedra, Labiatæ of Karabagh vel similia, Arenarioid +out of flower in the crevices, a large Mattheoloid, Leucades, Dianthoides +foliis undulatis, Artemisiæ two or three, one a peculiar one, +No.--a shrubby Astragalus, stunted scraggy Polanisia of Cabul? Campanula +of Karabagh in the bed of the stream, Cnicus of Kot-i-Ashruf, and Salvia +are excessively common, Artemisia pyramidalis, two or three: mosses +occur on the banks, and several Gramineæ, see Catalogue 1,005, +etc. Cnicus alius, Verbascum.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m393.jpg"> +<img alt="Helmund gorge" src="images/m393.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—We continued ascending gradually, crossing a low +ridge covered with sward, and then descended to surmount another ridge, +which appeared to me to be as high as the top of the Oonnoo. We +thence descended, crossing several small ridges; and, at about the distance +of five miles from the commencement of the day’s journey, suddenly +turned north, entering a gorge of the usual structure, drained by a +small stream, and thence came on the Helmund, not much increased in +size as compared with the point at which we had seen it first, but in +a comparatively wide and partly cultivated ravine, containing three +or four ruined forts. We continued a quarter of a mile down the +Helmund, then ascended up a considerable stream through a similar gorge, +until we reached an encamping spot, after performing thirteen and a +half miles. The barometer at the Helmund stood at 21.206, thermometer +63° in sun.</p> +<p>Kohi-Baba is first seen from the first ridge, but it is seen beautifully +from the second, and still better from some distance beneath this; it +is a noble three-peaked ridge, the eastern peak is the largest, and +of angular, conical shape. The other two are rugged; the central +one is perhaps the highest; the lower portions cliffy, evidently slaty.</p> +<p>The river up which we came after leaving the Helmund, is fully equal +to that in size; it is very rapid: the ravine is very narrow, occasionally +widening into swardy spots. We encamped nearly opposite Kohi-Baba, +the conical peak of which here seems a huge rounded mass, with heavy +patches of snow, particularly along the northern ridge: the second range +to the south is very precipitous and cliffy: at this place a small streamlet +falls into the river from the direction of Kohi-Baba.</p> +<p>No particular change in vegetation is observed: two or three Umbelliferæ, +a Scrophularia, Geranium, Ranunculus aquaticus, Herba immersa, foliis +anguste loratis, Potentilla, <i>Panserina</i>, a new Graminea.</p> +<p>The most common plants are still Carduaceæ and Salvia; Rosa +occurs also, (Senecionoides ceased some time before) Statice, Scutellaria +common, Verbascum, Euphorbia linearifolia, Linaria ditto, Mentha: no +change in water plants, or in those of the sward, Chenopod. fæmin. +villos, coarse grass, No. 998, common; the chief new feature is <i>Ruwash</i>, +the dead red leaves of which are abundant. Two villages were passed +after leaving the Helmund, both ruined, yet all spots cultivated, several +with Cicer. Watercourses as high up cliffs and hills as 100 feet +above the river.</p> +<p>A dreadfully cutting dry wind blows down the ravine, and in our faces +all the way. Limestone cliffs occurred, about which the vegetation +became rich, more especially near a bridge consisting of trees thrown +across a narrow portion of the river, at a point where the stream is +very deep; near this are two willow trees of a different species. +A fine Rosa, a new Epilobium, Aconitum, Salisburifolium, a small Crucifera, +one or two Compositæ, a curious Polygonum, a Rumex, a Dianthus, +Silene, three or four Umbelliferæ, among which is the yellow Ferula? +of the Kojhuk pass, two or three new Leguminosæ, Saponaria, Silenacea +inflata, Cerastium may be found among them, or in the fields close by.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—We ascended the high bank or cliff over the bridge, +and continued up the ravine which lies over the river, but whose bed +is too narrow for a road: we passed two or three villages, the road +undulating over ground covered with granite boulders, or rather small +masses, rounded only when exposed to weather; the bottom of each undulation +is covered with sward and giving exit to a small stream; sometimes we +came on the bed of the river. At six and a half miles we came +on a fort, used as a custom house, and diverged again to the east up +a ravine; the Arak road continuing along the river. We passed +another fort, and then commenced the main ascent of Hajeeguk. +In a ravine to the left, 100 feet above us, was a large mass of half +frozen snow: barometer at the foot of main ascent 20.320, thermometer +80°. The ascent is rather steep, but easy enough: barometer +19.755, thermometer 80°. Thence the descent was steep for +about 800 feet, and then gradual for four or five more, when we encamped +on sward. From the top of the pass we had a beautiful view of +the <i>ridge</i> of Kohi-Baba, running about WNW., presenting a succession +of fine bold rugged peaks, the conical mass was not seen well, as there +is heavy snow on it, and on some other parts of the ridge.</p> +<p>Water is plentiful in all ravines, the lower parts of which are covered +with swardy grass. Cultivation is less advanced than at Yonutt, +consisting chiefly of barley; every capable spot is made use of. +Boulders of antimony, also a large mountain close to, and on the right +of our camp composed of this ore, which is very heavy; a ruined fort +on the hill near us, shewing again how some of these ridges become disintegrated. +A <i>cafila</i> passed with huge loads of cloths of various sorts, carried +on asses, going to Bamean: they paid toll I observed at Choky fort.</p> +<p>The vegetation in the snow ravine was rich, and varied in the swardy +spots: Ranunculi 2, Swertia 2-3, Gentiana a fine one, Junci, Carices, +Euphrasia, Triglochin, Veronica as before, Cardaminoides; near the snow +in sward, a pretty Primula in flower; two other Pediculares. A +Brynum on the dry parts of the ravine, two Astragali in flower 2-3, +Cruciferæ, Echinops, Carduaceæ, Silene pusilla, Stellaria, +Campanula odorata, Rutacea about springs, Parnassia? Astragali 3-4, +in flower, long past this elsewhere, Thalictrioides, Secaloides.</p> +<p>See Catalogue Nos. --- of exposed face; Staticoides of Yonutt, Graminæ +998, Carduaceæ very common, Statice aliæ rare.</p> +<p>The hill over which the pass runs, is chiefly covered with a herbaceous +Carduacea out of flower in profusion, one or two Astragali, an Artemisioid, +small Compositæ, and the abundant Carduaceæ of Yonutt, Astragaloid +pinnulis on the west side, <i>Koollah</i> <i>hujareel</i>, Statice, +Macrantha dentatis; a spinous leaved Carduacea, different from the Zamea +leaved ones out of flower, Gramin. 998 common, Chenopodioid? Arenaria +spinosa, Onosma, Carduacea alia, two or three Astragalus primus. +Altogether the vegetation is different from that of Oonnoo, in the comparative +absence of Statice, Dianthoid, and Astragali.</p> +<p>Similar swardy spots occur on the west of the pass, a large Swertia, +Caraganoid, Carices, etc. as before, Gentiana of Yonutt, a new Potentilla, +Salix fruticosa; here also occurs the first Orchidea I have seen in +Khorassan: it belongs to the tribe Orchis, but is out of flower. +On the 1st of Sept., I re-crossed Hajeeguk, directing my way again into +the snow ravine from the top of the pass, and found a number of plants, +for which see Catalogue. A Campanula abundant about springs at +12,400 feet. The vegetation of the ravine close by the little +fort is rich, and would repay two or three days’ halt, as it runs +a long way up the antimony hill, Swertia in profusion, Geranium also, +Stellaria, a fine Conyzoidia.</p> +<p>I had here an opportunity of observing the curious effect of a patch +of snow in retarding vegetation, all the plants about, being as it were +a spring flora, even such as at similar elevations elsewhere, were all +past seed; such as Astragalus primus. Again, why do some plants +flower sooner at such elevations than at other lower places? such as +Cardamine, here past flower, but not commencing at Cabul; is it because +this plant will flower in the winter in Cabul? so there may be a law +requiring such plants to flower in wintery situations by a certain time? +The idea is perhaps absurd, as their growth depends exclusively on the +power of the sun.</p> +<p><i>September</i> <i>1st</i>.—After re-crossing Hajeeguk we +continued our march to Sohkta, five and a half miles. The road +continued along a considerable descent throughout, at first down the +valley in which we had halted to the west, thence down the large Kulloo +valley in a northerly direction; towards the mouth of first ravine or +valley it is bad, passing across a land slip, then it crosses the bed +of a huge torrent falling at a great rate, and obstructed with boulders; +the right bank, a high almost precipitous mountain, the left a high +aggregate of granitic and other boulders. Water abundant, divided +into three streams or so: this torrent comes direct from the nearest +portion of Kohi-Baba, which appears of easy descent, presenting beautiful +peaks. The road then keeps along left bank, undulating over the +ravines, down which water flows from the hills on the eastern side; +some of these are very steep, and the road itself is infamous, as may +be supposed, crowded with boulders, and impracticable for wheeled carriages: +one precipitous ravine we passed through, the rocks consisted of blackish, +curiously laminated, and metallic looking stone. On descending +one steep ravine, we then came on the road leading up to the Kulloo +mountain, where we halted.</p> +<p>A good many villages, with forts, as usual were passed; the cultivation +more advanced than at our last halt, crops consisting chiefly of barley. +One good fort was observed close to our halting place opposite the direction +of the small Kulloo ravine; across the valley a well marked road is +seen running up a part of Kulloo ridge, at a lower elevation than that +which we crossed.</p> +<p>Poplars and willows occur in the large valley, particularly towards +Sohkta, a small orchard of stunted mulberry trees. Cultivation +consisting of peas; barley of fine grain, resembling wheat when freed +from the husk.</p> +<p>The plants of the valley of Kulloo were badly observed, as I was +greatly tired and fatigued. Polygonum fruticosum re-occurs, Silene, +Clematis erecta, Tragogopon, Salvia but less common, a curious Cruciferous +plant, Lactucacea purpurea of Cabul, Chenopodium villosum fæmin. +Dianthus, Saponaria, Lychnis inflata, oats common in fields, the common +thistle, Urtica, Caragana abundant along the bed of the river, Papaver. +On rocks about camp, 2 Salsolæ, Glaucum, Umbelliferæ of +the Yonutt ravine, Artemisiæ, Rosa <i>Ribes</i>! Scrophularia +alia.</p> +<p>The valley is very narrow at camp, the river running between precipices, +in some parts passable without wetting the feet.</p> +<p><i>2nd</i>.—From Sohkta Kullar-Rood to Topehee, eight and a +half miles. The road lay in a northerly direction for a quarter +of a mile, then turning up a steep ravine, with an ascent for 800 feet; +then small descent, then levellish, until we came to a black cliff, +over which another steeper but longer ascent extended, then it became +levellish for some distance; two other moderate, extended, longish ascents, +led us to the summit, which is 500 feet higher than that of Hajeeguk. +The descent continued steep and most tedious on reaching the precipitous +ravine of Topehee, the road wound over small spurs, until we came to +a grove of willows near the village. The road although steep is +not bad, the soil being soft, that of the upper parts and of the descent, +even annoying from the sand, both might with little trouble be made +easy, but especially the descent.</p> +<p>The mercury of the Barometer on the summit at 11 A.M., stood at 19.513, +at 11½ A.M., 19.506, Thermometer 66°.</p> +<p>The camels all came up but one, though very slowly; to them as to +us, the descent was more tiring than the ascent.</p> +<p>From the summit a fine view of Kohi-Baba was obtained, running to +NW. by N. To the NE., another high range, but not so marked as +Kohi-Baba, was seen running in a similar direction; on this, two considerable +peaks present themselves, but only visible when lower down.</p> +<p>A splendid view of the Bamean valley is here obtained. We have +now obviously passed the highest ranges: to west where the country is +low and flat; to the north, the mountains indistinctly visible, are +beautifully varied, presenting rugged outlines 10,000 feet above Bamean, +also a view of an unearthly looking mountain, most variedly sculptured, +is obtained, with here and there rich ravines and columnar sided valleys, +presenting tints very varied; in those of the lower ranges, rich rosy +tints are predominant; also niches in which gigantic idols are plainly +seen: also a view of Goolghoolla, looking as it is in reality, a ruined +city: a fine gorge apparently beyond the Bamean river, and a large ravine +due north, by which I expect the Bamean river reaches the Oxus; not +a tree is to be seen, except a few about Bamean. The whole view +is indescribably volcanic, barren yet rich, requiring much colouring +to convey an idea of it.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p398.jpg"> +<img alt="Bamean Idols" src="images/p398.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>To the top of the pass it is three and a half miles; the character +of Kulloo mountain is different from that above described, it is rounded, +and composed of a curious compact slate, towards the summit well covered +with plants, large tufts of Statice, two or three kinds, two undescribed; +immense quantities of Artemisia, coarse tufted grasses, Onosma, Carduacea +herbacea of Hajeeguk, uncommon; Triticoides 998, not common; Alium fusco +purpurea common. A few exposed rocks occur on the summit. +The ravines are all dry, there being no water or very little in them, +and no cultivation; thus the contrast visible on both sides of the Kulloo +river which runs round the foot of the mountain, is remarkable. +Vegetation being distinct on either side.</p> +<p>Yet the ravine of Topehee shows, that when exposed to the action +of water, this rock becomes very precipitous, cliffy, easily dislocated: +the latter part of the road winds over a portion of this. Chakor, +Ptarmigan a fine bird, voice somewhat like that of a vulture, to which +it is perhaps anologous.</p> +<p>About Sohkta or in ravines, Euphorbia linearifolia, Ephedra, Asteroides, +Rosa Ribes, Composita dislocata, Artemisiæ, Aster pyramidalis, +Chenopodium villosum fæm., Senecionoides.</p> +<p>Scutellaria, Scrophularia, Santonicoides, Polygonum fruticosum, Salvia, +Artemisia linearifolia, Centaurea angustifolia, Cochlearia, Umbelliferæ +of Yonutt, Stellaria, Glaucium, Labiata nova, Hyoscyamus minor, Lactucacea, +Linaria, Salsola elegans, Marrubium, common thistle, Rumex, Potentilla +anserina, Sinapis of Siah-Sung ravine, Berberis, Secaloides, Statice, +<i>Marmots</i>, Statice glauca pedunculata, Stipha of Nakhood, Aconiti +sp., Ferula? Spiræa facie frutex, Ribes, Muscoides.</p> +<p>First ridge Dianthoides, Statice three to two glaucous species, one +sessile the other pedunculate, Ferula, Scutellaria, Labiata trumpet-shaped +calyces, Astragali, Diacanthus, Stipa, Ribes, Arenaria spinosa, Triticum +carneo pubescens, Pulmonaria corolla trumpet-shaped, Salvia sparingly, +Pommereulla, Artemisia in profusion, Spiræoides, Chenopodium villos., +fæmin. parvus, Leguminosæ two or three, <i>Ruwash</i> sparingly.</p> +<p>Not much change beyond 12,000 feet, at that height Glaucium in abundance, +with a few Hyoscyamus parvus, Borago.</p> +<p>Labiatifol, inciso dentatis occurs throughout, Sinapis of Siah-Sung +straggles to 12,000 feet.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m399.jpg"> +<img alt="Topehee cliffs and ravine" src="images/m399.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The same vegetation continues down to Topehee; on the red hills over +its ravine, the plants are different. Portulacea cana, several +pretty Salsolæ, a Polanisia occurs, with Statice two or three, +a straggling Astragalus, Ferula, Peganum re-appears! Cerasus canus, +Carduacea Frutex of Mailmandah, fructibus combretiformibus, Muscoides +which is a Sedum, Polygon. fruticosum common, the usual plants of cultivation, +etc. etc.</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—We proceeded from Topehee to Bamean, a distance +of twelve miles, for two and a half miles down Topehee ravine. +The road is a decent descent, although steepish: from thence turning +abruptly at the Bamean valley, we cross the river, which is of considerable +size, but fordable, although rapid. The road then extends along +the left bank, not in the valley which is occupied by cultivation, but +winding over and round the bases of low hills and cliffs, forming a +northern boundary; throughout this part the road is villainous, often +impeded by huge blocks. After a distance of about ten miles it +improves, the valley expanding into a cultivated plain.</p> +<p>Topehee valley narrows towards its mouth or exit, which is walled +in by high, red, raviny cliffs; above, in its upper parts it is well +cultivated with beans, barley, wheat, and oats, and contains two villages: +it opens into the Bamean valley at a village also called Topehee, there +the Bamean valley is well cultivated, with oats intermixed with barley +or wheat, trefoil, etc., it then narrows, forming the bed of a ravine +occupied by Hippophæ, Tamarisk, etc., then it widens again.</p> +<p>The structure of the hills is curious, and generally exhibiting the +appearance of having been much acted on by water. They are often +cliffy, composed either of limestone or a soil of red clay, with which +salt occurs in abundance, conspicuous from the white appearance, or +springs. Crystals of carbonate of lime are frequent, limestone, +or coarse conglomerate with large rounded stones, occurs; together with +a curious laminated clayey rock, with white and ochraceous layers intermixed. +The tints most various, as well as the sculpture of the mountains: here +ravines representing tracery occur: there, columnar curiously carved +cliffs, exhibiting all sorts of fantastic forms: here, as it were, a +hill thrown down with numberless blocks into the stream, scattered in +every direction; and here, but this is rare, very red horizontal strata, +colours various, generally rosy, especially the clayey cliffs: here +and there the colour of the rock is ochraceous, at one place its structure +is slaty. The curious intermixture of these colours owing to the +weather, is striking.</p> +<p>From the head of two of the ravines by which considerable torrents +flow into Bamean river, beautiful views are obtained of the Kohi-Baba, +whose peaks according to native authority, stretch sixty miles to the +westward of Bamean, without much diminution in height. The scenery, +however, is less beautiful after emerging into the widened part of the +valley, where the hills are less varied both in form and tints, than +they are in lower parts: fine views however of Kohi-Baba are occasionally +had.</p> +<p>Salsolæ are the prevailing plants of the rocky sides of the +valley, Clematis erecta common, here and there a small Statice.</p> +<p>Caves occur throughout the wide portion of the valley, but chiefly +on the northern side; they also extend a little way into the narrow +portion, where they seem to be excavated into clayey-looking, red, earthy +limestone, or more commonly conglomerate, of coarse grey, or reddish +colour.</p> +<p>The caves are most common in two cliffs composed of conglomerate +mixed with transverse strata of the same rock, 3,400 feet high, presenting +a rugged outline; and between the two, which are 800 yards apart, large +idols are carved. These cliffs in some places have suffered little +from the action of the elements, as testified by the perfect nature +of the opening of the caves, and the corners, etc. of the niches enclosing +idols; in others they are furrowed by the action of water; in others +again slips have taken place to such extent in some, as to cause the +fall of all their caves, or of their greater portion, thus exposing +the galleries, etc.</p> +<p>The base of the cliffs is irregular, formed of the same conglomerate +and clay, but covered more or less by boulders, evidently brought down +by the river; by these many caves are choked up, so that originally +the cliff might have been perpendicular to the edge of the base, and +if so, the caves in the cliffs, and the idols, are of later date than +those of the rugged base. But more probably the cliffs, and the +caves, are much as they were originally, the boulders having been a +subsequent deposit.</p> +<p>The western corner of the cliff beyond the large idol, is much destroyed; +on this, the force of the current would have acted: a breakwater occurring +along the returning face.</p> +<p>The caves are very numerous, but are confined chiefly towards the +base of the cliffs, not scattered over them as I believe Burnes represents. +These are of no size, finish, or elegance, and it is only their number, +and the extreme obscurity of their history, that makes them interesting; +the roofs are usually arched, and the walls are often supplied with +niches, and covered with a coating of tar of some thickness, and intense +blackness. The galleries are low, arched, and admit one person +at a time, or a line of persons with ease; they often form the ascent +to the upper caves now inhabited, but originally they were enclosed +in the rock, they are defended in such cases by a parapet.</p> +<p>The largest caves are those about the idols, but I see none of any +size. They are often domed, the spring of the dome is ornamented +with a projecting frieze, some of these are parallelogramic, in one +instance with an ornamented border thus.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m402.jpg"> +<img alt="Part of a frieze in caves near Bamean" src="images/m402.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Some of the caves are situated as high as, or even above the tops +of the idols; all parts within the rock are lighted by small apertures.</p> +<p>Access to the large idol is destroyed; the smaller one is gained +by a spiral staircase of rude construction, and by galleries. +The floor of the galleries is rugged, the steps and the cement of the +conglomerate having worn out from between the masses of rock. +The images all occupy niches in the face of the hill: two are gigantic, +the rest not very large. They are generally in the usual sitting +posture, and rather high up, while the larger ones are erect, and reach +the base of the cliffy portion of the rock. They are all male, +and all obviously Boodhistical; witness the breadth, proportion, and +shape of the head, and the drapery; both are damaged, but the smaller +is the more perfect, the face of the large one being removed above the +lower lip; the arms are broken off, showing they were occupied by galleries. +The drapery is composed of plaster, and was fixed on by bolts which +have fallen out, leaving the holes. The arms in the smaller one +are supported by the falling drapery. The height of the large +image in the niche is 135 feet.</p> +<p>The pictures are much damaged, the plaster on which they were painted +being mostly very deficient, all the faces are damaged by bullets or +other missiles: their execution is indifferent, not superior to modern +Burmese paintings; the colours however are good, the figures are either +grouped or single, and one is in the style of the time of Henry VIII, +with a hat and plume, others represent groups flying—one a golden +bird, another a man with a hemispherical helmet, all are much damaged. +The hair in some is dressed as in the modern Burmese top-knot, often +surrounded by a circle.</p> +<p>Otherwise the niches are not ornamented, except in one instance, +as above alluded to; the head of the smaller figure was formerly covered +by the roof, as evident from holes or troughs for timbers in the gallery. +These holes are now inhabited by pigeons, and the lower ones by cows, +donkeys, fowls, kids, dogs; some are filthy apertures blocked up by +stone and mud walls; the doors irregular, and guarded between two giants.</p> +<p>An old tope occurs near some small figures, it is composed of stones +very much disintegrated, with curious blocks of <i>kucha</i> work, and +large Babylonish bricks; the smaller figures are much destroyed, some +completely; all are in alto-relievo.</p> +<p>The plants about Topehee valley, are Cichorium, Centaurea lutea, +Berberis common, Salvia, Cicer cultivated, Lucerne, Centaurea angustifolia, +Cnicus of Koti-Ashruf, ditto of Karabagh hills, Triticum, Asteroides, +Avena, Centaurea glauca, the common thistle, Ephedra, Mentha, Rumex, +Melilotus, Medicago, Artemisia pyramidalis, Lychnis inflata, Saponaria, +Bromus, Verbascum, Cerasus canus, Ferula, Statice, Salsola, Astragalus, +Polygonum fruticosum, Composita dislocata, Clematis erecta, Clematis +alia, Echinops, Leucades, Pulicaria fragrans, Hyoscyamus parvus, rare; +Geranium, Rosa, Fabago of Maidan, fructi echinatis, Arundo, Hippophæ.</p> +<p>Halted at Bamean till the 6th, and inspected Ghoolghoola or Bheiran, +which presents extensive ruins: those of the city are almost destroyed; +but those of the citadel are more perfect, and situated on a mound 300 +feet high, which still stands with steep banks or fortifications, apparently +of Kafir origin, generally <i>kucha</i>, with bases formed of boulders. +Three lines of defences remain on the valley side; and the remains of +a ditch 50 feet broad at the mound on the east side. <i>Pucka</i>, +or burnt bricks are common among the debris, also pottery, but this +is of the ordinary sort: I observed but few <i>pucka</i> bricks in the +fortification on the west side. Great masses of rocks have been +thrown about near the building of the fort, and some of the lower bastions +were built on these masses. The mound is chiefly occupied by Salsolaceæ, +some of which exist in profusion. Nothing seems to be known about +the history of the place, except that it was built by <i>Julal</i>, +to whom the Mahommedans fix <i>Ud</i>-<i>deen</i>.</p> +<p>Quails are abundant in the fields about Bamean; it is a curious thing +that in many of these fields oats far preponderate over other grain; +yet they are not cut, although all the seeds have fallen out of the +ear! Can it be cultivated solely for the straw?</p> +<p>Fine groves of poplars occur about certain portions of the valley; +from beyond this to the south, a beautiful view is obtained, embodying +the cliffs with the large image, and the back hills whose varied surface +and tints it is impossible to describe, so as to convey a correct idea +of their fine effect. The poplar grove contains some ordinary +Mahomedan <i>tombs</i>. The trees are the P. heterophylla, but +the leaves are much smaller and more silvery underneath than usual; +a beautiful poplar of large size and unencumbered growth, of the same +sort occurs in the ravine beyond the small image. Abundance of +wild sheep’s heads are preserved about all the sanctified buildings, +together with a few of those of the ibex, and fewer of the wild goat. +The plants of Bamean require no specification, the hills are very barren, +chiefly occupied by Salsoleæ, of which 6 or 7 species occur.</p> +<p>The water plants continue the same as at Cabul; Hippurus and Triglochin, +Mentha, Cochlearia, Naiad? Potamogeton of Siah-Sung, Polypogon.</p> +<p>The other plants are those found in cultivation, and present no change, +Anchusoides alba, abundant. Choughs very abundant; wild pigeons, +ravens, Laurus; the nuthatch, a noisy but not unmusical bird, Chakor, +together with small partridges, but these are rare; several Conirostres.</p> +<p>The greatest curiosity is a genuine trout, <a name="citation404"></a><a href="#footnote404">{404}</a> +this appears rare, the spots are very bright, the largest caught was +only six pounds in weight. I could not take any even with the +fly; but I caught with this, Schizothorax, or one of the universal Khorassan +Cyprins.</p> +<p>The range of the thermometer is great; before sunrise it varies from +28° to 30°! in the sun in midday it is 100°! when there +is no wind, and the mornings are delightful.</p> +<p>One of the long-tailed clumsy Brachypodiums occurs in the fields: +bears also are found here.</p> +<p><i>Joussa</i>, Mentha, Tanacetoid, Polypogonum, Cichorium, Plantago, +common thistle, Potamogeton longifolium, Labiata arvensis of Yonutt, +Centaurea lutea, Cyanea angustifolia, Cochlearia, Hippuris, Ranunculus, +Potamogeton pectinata, Triglochin, Convolvulus arvensis, acaulis, Glaux, +Capparis of Arghandab, Centranthera pinnatifida, Malva rotundifolia, +Asteroides, Lactuca purpurea.</p> +<p>Salt is obtained in some places from the red earth, as also alum +an earthy substance of a whitish or brown colour, and irregular surface, +sent in quantities to Mindosh, called Zak.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—To Zohawk, down the valley two miles beyond the +mouth of Topehee ravine, or embouchure of the Kulloo-Rood. The +angle is occupied by a Kafir fort called Kojhuk, of very large size, +situated on a precipitous dusky-red and very high rock, facing towards +both rivers; the defences reach down the eastern face of rock to the +Kulloo bed, and are in good preservation, more ornamented than the modern +fort, and better proportioned. A pretty grass sward occurs here, +with Tamarisk.</p> +<p>The fort must have been of great size, and is chiefly weak, <i>i</i>.<i>e</i>. +to a native army, from depending on the river for supplies of water, +for it is commanded from the opposite sides of either ravine. +The bed of the river under the east face, presents the remains of outworks +to protect the supply of water, which is perhaps a sign of its being +a recent structure?</p> +<p>The works are good, much better than those of the Affghans, the view +of the fort from half a mile down the Bamean river, with the sun gilding +the ruined battlements, while the precipice contrasts with it its dusky-red +colour, is beautiful.</p> +<p>The Bamean river, especially after receiving the Kulloo-Rood, is +of considerable size, but fordable at the head of most of the rapids, +its course is rapid, and its waters greyish, while those of the Kulloo +are quite colourless; its bed is of some width, presenting a capital +road over green sward, with plenty of willows, Lycium, Hippophæ, +Berberis, and Tamarisk.</p> +<p>About one mile east of our camp, its ravine turns to the south. +Wild ducks, quails, chakor, and trout occur whose haunts are in holes, +and taking the worm are easily caught.</p> +<p>This fort of Kojhuk is as well worth examining as any place we have +seen, the dusky-red rocks are coarse conglomerate. A violent wind +prevails up the ravine, commencing about 2 P.M. A curious staircase +situated at the corner towards Bamean, ascends through rock, the bottom +of which is defended by a bastion and round wall; near, or close to +this a slip has occurred, destroying part of the wall and blocking up +one exit.</p> +<p>Ascended the cliff by the gateway of the Kulloo valley, and found +the line of fortifications, with good loop-holes and parapets extend +two and a half miles up, a few houses likewise occur. The path +leads through the face of the solid rock: abundant defences, with arched +buildings occur above: this cliff is almost totally separated from the +upper citadel by a ravine: the citadel has four lines of defences surmounting +a steep ridge with outworks on the Kulloo river, the bed of which is +60 yards broad.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Proceeded to Erak, six miles. We crossed +the Kulloo-Rood, and immediately ascended its right bank, 100 feet high; +then descended into the ravine up which we continued, then leaving it +we struck over the spur of a high mountain; the ascent being about 1,000 +feet, thence we commenced a steep descent, of 5,600 feet into the Erak +valley, up which we proceeded for two miles distance and encamped. +From the top of the pass, a fine view is obtained of Kojhuk, and the +valley of the Bamean river, presenting a rich and varied surface beyond +description, with beautifully sculptured rocks, of purplish-red colour, +which are seen up the Kulloo, close to Kojhuk.</p> +<p>The hills and ravines are however very barren, nothing but Salsola +occurs. At the top of the pass a section is partly laid open, +shewing a mass of conglomerate, twenty to thirty feet thick, resting +on red clay. This conglomerate being less acted on by water than +the clay, the rocks often assume curious shapes, and are occasionally +even fungiform.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m406.jpg"> +<img alt="Sculptured rocks near Kojhuk" src="images/m406.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>We observed here a new partridge, at least one to which we were not +accustomed; it is almost the size of chakor, black on the back, with +a grey neck, and very shy; chakors abundant here in coveys. The +valley of the Erak is very narrow, but well cultivated, and with a good +many villages.</p> +<p>All the mountains in this direction have rounded shapes or outlines, +the precipices variously curved, the surfaces are thus formed by the +action of water on the outer strata; when this is once exposed, the +changes appear often rapid, as may be imagined in a country of such +low winter temperature. Caves occur in the Erak valley, chiefly +situated in a dirty white conglomerate.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m407.jpg"> +<img alt="Erak ravine" src="images/m407.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Halted and encamped eight miles up the Erak ravine +on a swardy spot: the road easy, ascent bad in some places, but generally +good, particularly for the latter part of the march: the rocks in some +places rising in abrupt rugged cliffs, generally rounded, slaty. +We passed one mass of snow about two miles from camp, botany good, especially +about the snow; so much so, that it employed me all day.</p> +<p>Caragana appears at about 10,000 feet, a Tamerioid of large stature +in abundance, Asphodelus, not as I thought a Mesembryanthemum, but a +beautiful and very distinct species; see Catalogue for other plants.</p> +<p>Our camp is within one and a half mile of the head of the Erak ravine, +where snow occurs in two large masses; patches of snow also occur on +the ridge or a little below it; these ridges rise about 1,200 to 1,500 +feet above us.</p> +<p>Unsettled evening, snow during night on all the ridges about us with +frozen sleet in camp. Thermometer at 6 A.M. 31°.</p> +<p>Large round-tailed eagle seen.</p> +<p>Barometer 20.164, thermometer 61°; boiling point of Wollast. +new thermometer; barometer 650, old ditto 555.3.</p> +<p>Swardy plants. Parnassia, Swertia, Gentiana, Carices, Composita +coronata, Primula, Labiata, Menthoides, Caprifoliacea! Pedicularis, +Umbelliferæ.</p> +<p>Plants of hill sides Asphodelus, Leguminosæ alter, a Nakhood +Moschata, Nakhood Labaria violacea, Mulgedioid, Euphorbia, Astragalus +prior, alter., Pedicularis, Onosma versicolor, Boraginea, stamens exserted.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—Proceeded to Kurzar, eight miles up a ravine to +the left or eastward, about one and a half mile, then the steep ascent +of the pass; thence the descent was as steep for 800 feet, then gradually +down a swardy ravine until we came to the Kurzar ravine, which we followed +till we reached the Choky. The road good; the ascent for 1,000 +feet is very steep, the soil good, hills rounded, here and there slate +rocks outcropping. No change in vegetation. Passed a mass +of snow: abundance of snow on the summit where the mercury in the Bar. +stood at 19.200; thermometer 58°; boiling point of Wollast. new +thermometer; Bar. 648.5, old 539.1, this being the highest spot we have +visited.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the summit presents no change from that of the +rocks and hill sides 1,500 feet below. There is a good deal of +vegetation, Carduaceæ, Statices, Astragali, a few tufted grasses +forming the great bulk, <i>Nakhood</i> rare on the Kurzar side, 500 +feet down, Statice becomes most abundant, it is curious that on the +sward of this side, neither Fumariaceæ, nor Campanula were observed, +Silene fimbriata one species.</p> +<p>Caragana all about, even at Kurzar in ravines; Primula abundant, +also Swertiæ, generally all four plants are found at the Hajeeguk +snow ravine, and may be found between this and Erak, with some interesting +novelties. The distance to Bamean by both routes is within two +miles of the same, the Kulloo-Rood being the shorter, but Hajeeguk the +best road. That of the Kulloo river is followed to Zohawk. +The weather unsettled with showers of hail, clouds and sunshine: and +heavy gusts of wind occasionally from Kohi-Baba, whose eastern extremity +comes in sight after entering the <i>Kurzar</i> ravine. No view +from the summit of the pass.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m408.jpg"> +<img alt="Pass between Erak and Kurzar" src="images/m408.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Pedicularis, Campanula, Rubiaceæ, Hippuris in flower, Phleum, +Carduacea of Yonutt, Cnicus of Koti-Ashruf, Pulmonaria, corolla tubiform. +Euphorbia linearifolia, Composita dislocata, Cardamina lutea.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—Proceeded to the Helmund, thirteen and a half +miles; the only novelty met with is a curious spring about half-way +between Siah-Sung halting place, and the Helmund consisting of limpid +water emitting a copious ebullition of gas, not water, as the overflow +is very small; a copious deposition of fine red earth is formed all +round, which looks especially bright in the springs themselves. +The water possesses a peculiar acid taste.</p> +<p>Quails abundant, especially about this place, the water of the Helmund +is very clear and affords excellent fishing with worms which are greedily +taken, and also with the fly, particularly towards evening, by a species +of Gonorhynchus.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Returned to the foot of the ascent of the Oonnoo, +nine miles: nothing new having been met with, except that Kohi-Baba +is seen to great advantage, from the higher ridges of this pass. +On going to Bamean we saw it for the first time from the ridges beyond +Yonutt, badly from the first, but beautifully from the second ridge. +The weather continues as usual threatening in the evening, clearing +up after sunset: there is less snow on Kohi-Baba now than when we went.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Proceeded to Sir-i-Chushme, eight miles, which +was one continued descent. Passed Killa Moostaffur Khan, built +by a Kuzzilbash; it is the prettiest fort in the country. The +common Carduacea disappears below 9,500 feet, Cnicus of Koti-Ashruf +commences here.</p> +<p>Temperature of the spring at Sir-i-Chushme, 55° (1½ P.M.); +that at Kallo, on the other side of Hajeeguk, 45°.</p> +<p>All crops are cut, and the ground ploughed or preparing; in one place +the young wheat is springing up; but the country generally looks very +brown, and the hills small. Abundance of black teal. Plectranthus +reappears at the foot of Oonnoo, Verbascum rare, if any, on the Tartary +side of the Hindoo-koosh. Abundance of Loaches or Balitora in +the streamlets arising from the springs.</p> +<p>13th.—Proceeded to Julraiz, eight and a half miles, having +passed a waterfall, as well as abundance of people going to Jallalabad. +Bar. 22.760 at noon; Ther. 75°.</p> +<p>14th.—Proceeded to Koti-Ashruf, where there is excellent fishing +with worms, the fish however did not take a fly, though they often appeared +at the surface: a large headed Silurus occurs, but I was unable to procure +a specimen.</p> +<p>15th.—Proceeded to Arghundee, where we met the Bamean force.</p> +<p>16th.—Proceeded to Topehee Bashee.</p> +<p>17th.—Returned to Cabul. Eryngium is rare between the +foot of Oonnoo and Moostaffur Khan’s fort.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XVII.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Cabul</i> <i>to</i> <i>Jallalabad</i> <i>and</i> <i>Peshawur</i>.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>7th</i>.—Proceeded to Bhootkhak, nine and +a half miles from Cabul, and seven from our camp: the direction lay +easterly. A canal and a river were both crossed by bridges, the +latter of stone, but much needing repairs: the country generally marshy: +the marshes were crossed by a causeway of stones, rough and broken here +and there. The road is one apparent continued slope to this, but +the Barometer gives no indication of any difference of level. +The march proving uninteresting, and the country an uniform brown and +barren tract.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Proceeded to Koord Cabul valley, the distance of +which from the place we left being eleven miles: first having rounded +a spur extending from the south boundary of Cabul valley, we then entered +a narrow ravine, chiefly occupied by a small stream, which we crossed +several times. The mountains being chiefly of limestone, then +becoming slaty, very precipitous, rugged, and barren; on emerging from +this very tedious ravine, we entered on some sward with plenty of Tamarisk, +and Salix vimenea. Koord Cabul valley is a frightfully barren, +and very stony place; the chief vegetation of the valley, as also of +the ravine, being Artemisiæ, in which there is abundance of Carduacea +subspicata from Baber’s tomb.</p> +<p>The road throughout is indifferent, but only so from the stones, +the largest of which would require removal, and there are not more than +two or three difficult rocks in the way, these however might be avoided +by keeping in the bed of the stream. There are two ruined stone +walls thrown across the ravine, the remains merely of the very few villages +of Koord Cabul. A high truncated mountain stands to the south, +on which some patches of snow are visible.</p> +<p>The mountain forming the east wall of the ravine is the subconical +one, seen to such advantage from Arghundee, it is of limestone, quite +precipitous, with a few large bushes of, I do not know what; none of +them being within reach,—Ilex, and <i>Cupressus</i>.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—To Tazeen, the road for seven miles extends over +somewhat undulated ground, generally good; but here and there stony, +with a gradual but almost imperceptible ascent, until the top of the +pass is reached; from this, the view of Tazeen valley, and the summit +of the Sofaid-Koh is good.</p> +<p>Thence the road extends over ascents and descents, three of which +have considerable, and stony inclinations, then it enters the ravine +drained by a small stream, and continues down it until we enter Tazeen +valley.</p> +<p>Two streams are passed in the ascent; the first, near the former +halting place, flowing, where it is crossed, between slaty cliffs of +no height; the second one, small, frozen, and not sufficient to supply +a large party: there is however a spring a short way below the summit, +although very small. Temperature 58°. The rocks forming +the narrow ravine are very rough and slaty: limestones presenting the +usual characters.</p> +<p>This march has been said to present a very bad road, but it is not +the case, at least in comparison with many of the Affghan roads, distance +twelve and a half miles, the time it takes for camels to perform the +journey is six hours. The road, where not stony, is very well +beaten.</p> +<p>No change is observed in the features of the country until the opposite +side of Tazeen valley is seen, and the summit of the Sofaid-Koh: here, +wonderful to relate! are abundance of firs extending down and along +the ridge to some distance, but not forming forests.</p> +<p>Otherwise the vegetation consists of Senecionoides, <i>Astragali</i>, +<i>Rosa</i>, Statice 2-3, Artemisiæ, and Plectranthus, which last +is very common in the ravine leading to Tazeen valley, which is drained +by a small stream. Here also Carduacea, and Onosmoid angustifolia +occur!</p> +<p>In this ravine, Xanthoxylon of Kojhuk, a willow, Rosa, and a distinct +Ilex, occur, forming chiefly a shrubby vegetation. Ilex is also, +so far as can be judged from appearance, the bushy thing seen on the +limestone hill at our last halt, also Cupressus, a fine specimen of +which I found on limestone at about the height of the top of the pass, +(22.76 Bar.) Ther. 60°, with a very small Spiræa.</p> +<p>The large-winged vultures of Arghundee are common here. Some +ruined villages were passed, a mosque stood near one of these, two and +a half miles from last halt, little cultivation in the Tazeen valley, +and in the centre of this, two villages with orchards are visible.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m411.jpg"> +<img alt="Pass between Koord Cabul and Tazeen" src="images/m411.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—Tried to get to the firs, but failed.</p> +<p>The lower hills, and indeed the range between the valley and the +fir range, are conglomerate, easily disintegrated, then limestone, which +often occurs quite vertical. Some of the hills are red, others +brown, in one instance the coloured substance is interposed between +strata of limestone, which last have alone withstood the effects of +climate, this range is as high as the Koord Cabul pass.</p> +<p>Ilex very common, and much used for charcoal, the trunk being eight +to ten inches in diameter; almost all are pollarded. Pomacea common +at 500 feet above this, Plectranthus, Senecionoides.</p> +<p>Artemisiæ, Astragali, Statices, Rosa, bastard indigo, Cerasus. +The orchards are now assuming their autumnal tint, Salvia pinnata, Canus +aliusque, <i>Ruwash</i>. Chough, ravens, nuthatch, and chakor +here occur. Heavy snow is observed on the eastern portions of +Hindoo-koosh, which are quite barren. The best way to the fir +tract I find on enquiry will be to follow the bed of the stream up to +it. Fields are being now ploughed and sown. Thermopsides +very common here in old cultivation: it affords decent fodder for camels.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—To Barikab, distance ten and a half miles; the +road extending down the Tazeen ravine, over a tract with a considerable +descent for about nine miles; on passing a long dark looking rock and +its spur, the road then leaves the bed, and ascends over low undulations +of easily detachable conglomerate, and sand; then a short but rather +steep ascent occurs for 200 feet, passing over an easily friable sandstone, +either existing as grains slightly adherent, or caked; thence the descent +passes over the preceding sort of conglomerate, to an abominably barren +ravine, drained by a very small stream.</p> +<p>The road only once leaves the bed of this ravine, but soon rejoins +it before finally turning off.</p> +<p>The mountains present the same features; where no outcrop of strata +occurs, they are rounded, brown, and very barren, with here and there +an Ilex; towards the end of the raviny part in one or two places, more +wood than usual occurs, forming scattered thickets. Fraxinus, +the older branches of which have much smaller leaves, Thymelia of Chiltera, +Cerasus canus, and alius, Senecionoides, Compositæ, Artemisiæ, +Polygonum frutescens, which last is not uncommon throughout. Equisetoides +becomes common towards the black rock.</p> +<p>Where the road turns off from the ravine, a <i>Khubar</i> or tope +occurs, shaded with two or three large Xanthoxyleæ now in fruit, +called <i>Khinjuk</i>.</p> +<p>Snow visible from Barikab to the north, but generally in ravines. +The country continues abominably barren, we passed the entrance of the +Lutabund pass, near the black rock, but without seeing it: no difficulty +occurs on the road, except from the jolting of stones. There is +however no forage to be had at the halt, and but little fodder. +A sprinkling of holly-looking bushes are seen extending over the lower +ranges of Hindoo-koosh.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Jugdulluck, ten and a half miles from our last +encampment; on leaving Barikab we commenced ascending, winding over +undulating ground for a short distance, until we reached the main ascent, +which is short, but moderately steep: thence we descended steeply for +perhaps 500 feet, hitherto the road extended over sand hills, with quantities +of stones. On reaching the foot of the steep descent, we then +descended gradually over a long stony inclined plane, then entered undulating +ground, descending from which the road took us over a small stream, +which we followed up, soon entering a gorge, up which we continued till +we reached Jugdulluck. This gorge is the finest and boldest we +have seen, the rocks forming precipitous cliffs 2,400 feet high, which +often hem in the road, and confine it to a breadth of a few feet, sufficient +merely for a gun to pass.</p> +<p>On emerging from this we reached the tope of Jugdulluck, now a grove +of mulberry trees, surrounded by the remains of a wall.</p> +<p>The country, until we entered the gorge, presented the same features +as before, being frightfully barren. Passed a spring of water +at the foot of the main descent where there is level ground sufficient +for a small party, afterwards we passed a smaller spring containing +less water, but situated in much better ground than Barikab.</p> +<p>The vegetation of undulated ground continues unchanged, very poor +and stunted; in ravines below the main descent, Stipa is very common; +in others, a large Andropogon occurs near the mouth of the gorge along +the bed of the river, also <i>Jhow</i> in patches, and one patch of +Donax.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the gorge is more varied; two small trees occur, +one the <i>Khinjuk</i>, and it is the commonest, the other a Terebinthacea; +Thymelæa of Chiltera is common, Ephedra, Ilex occurs but is less +common than on hills.</p> +<p>Along the water to which it gives exit, and which is abundant, the +usual Cyperaceæ, Junceæ, Gnaphalium, Potentilla, and Epilobium +occur as at Cabul; the place is chiefly remarkable for two or three +Saccharoid grasses, Stipa common, Polypogon, Donax, Dracocephala of +Quettah and the Bolan pass, Spiræa, Typha, young Tamarisks.</p> +<p>Chakor, large vulture, ravens; a woodcock rose from a dripping rock, +covered with a tropical Andropogon in dense patches. Adiantum, +Rubus, Erythrea, Labiatæ two, common; Salix.</p> +<p>The gorge appears to be a distinct formation of sandstone, slate, +and limestone: on the way to it, we continued over the sand and conglomerate +hill, which again recur at Jugdulluck, with plenty of Holly.</p> +<p>The Sofaid-Koh is visible from the main ridge: it is a ridge running +perhaps SW. to NE., tolerably covered with snow, as barren as any others: +a few fir trees are found in the direction of Tazeen: are these confined +to the sandstone formation? little grass, a few rice fields, bad forage.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m414.jpg"> +<img alt="Pass and gorge, Barikab to Jugdulluck" src="images/m414.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Halted at Jugdulluck. Small partridges are +common: observed a curious Certhioid creeper, whose flight is like that +of the Hoopoe; it is scandent over rocks.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—To Soorkhab, twelve and a half miles over a similar +country: region of Hollys continues; we first passed up a ravine, then +over undulating ground, until the summit of the pass is reached. +From this a fine view of Sofaid-Koh is obtained, the lower ranges in +some places being black with firs; thence a continued descent, varied +here and there by small ascents over undulating ground, we at length +came to a ravine filled with bulrushes: we followed this, leaving it +near the halting place, and winding over rocky ground and a bad road, +we descended to the bed of the river. The road good, though stony +here and there, but nowhere so, to such an extent, as the previous marches.</p> +<p>Hills precisely similar to those already passed, either sandy, easily +friable, or conglomerate, held together by sandy cement. Vegetation +continues the same; <i>Baloot</i>, or oak, is said to be abundant though +I did not see it; Daphne, and Xanthoxylon, compose the chief shrubby +vegetation; Saccharum here and there. Small partridge very common. +The greatest ascent is 5,600 feet. No grass for forage; several +very small streamlets were passed en route, so that a small party might +halt anywhere.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m415.jpg"> +<img alt="Ascent and descent Jugdulluck to Soorkhab" src="images/m415.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The beautiful Himalaya looking range Sofaid-Koh, runs east and west; +it is very high, in the back ranges with very heavy snow on both ridges, +and peaks. The view from the pass shows a rapid fall in the country +to the eastward, which still continues hilly, and very very bare. +Large coarse grapes are had here, also pomegranates: some <i>seedless</i> +rice cultivation occurs since we descended to Jugdulluck.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—We proceeded nine and a quarter miles, throughout +until reaching a grove near Gundamuck: the road lay over undulating +ground, is more sandy than stony, and in two or three places it is raviny, +and requires to be made. Then the road emerges into a fine sort +of valley, dipping down to a small stream with many sedges. In +the bed of the stream, willows occur, and mulberries about it: we then +ascended and halted just beyond the ascent. Water and <i>dhoob</i> +grass are both plentiful, as well as supplies of grain, pomegranates, +and grapes, as yesterday; <i>Bajree</i>.</p> +<p>A fine view is obtained of Sofaid-Koh, which forms the southern boundary +of the valley; many villages, with cultivation in a very sandy soil. +Small partridge very abundant. A fox observed. The ravines +wherever there is water, crowded with Typha, and Saccharum; oaks are +seen in abundance on the mountain to the south; left the Soorkhab river +after fording it near yesterday’s camp; the bridge is quite useless +for cattle, as the ground is rocky and broken on this side, no pains +having been taken to carry the work to the road; cypresses, planes and +mulberry trees in the gardens: Cannabis, also one patch of cotton cultivation +was passed.</p> +<p>No descent, but rather small ascent on the whole, say 200 feet, the +ascent from the principal nullah crossed being equal, though much shorter +than the descent to it.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m416.jpg"> +<img alt="Soorkhab to Gundamuck" src="images/m416.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—We halted: many rivulets descend near us from +the Sofaid-Koh; and the water in these is beautifully clear; many villages +and mills with several beautiful spots occur, well shaded with trees, +poplars, mulberries, and figs. The objects of cultivation are +millet, Indian-corn, rice, and wheat; this last just sprung up: many +<i>bedanah</i> pomegranates, but none I think of superior quality.</p> +<p>All the low hills here, and indeed between us and the boundary ranges +of the valley, are of sandstone, generally very slightly held together, +here and there more firm, and distinctly stratified towards the upper +surface. The surface consists of conglomerate, formed of boulders +imbedded in the same kind of sandstone as that below; often very friable, +occasionally it is as hard as flint. In the sandstone below, a +few stones occur here and there; but I saw no fossils. The upper +surface of these hills is remarkably stony, all the stones being more +or less rounded.</p> +<p>Several new plants were found in these ravines, a Lythrum, a very +aromatic species of Compositæ, Samolus in some of the swamps with +Typha, which swarms in every ravine and ravinelet, Rubus, Clematis, +Bergia, Ammannia, Lythraria, Chara, Xanthium.</p> +<p>The plants of tropical forms are, Celosia of Digera! Polanisia, Andropogons, +two or three.</p> +<p>The tropical cultivation consists of cotton, the usual annual sort; +Indian-corn, Pennisetum, and rice.</p> +<p>The fish are, four kinds of Cyprinidæ, including one Oreinus, +and one loach.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—Proceeded to Futtehabad, eleven and a half miles. +The road leaves the valley after crossing a stream with a ruined bridge, +like that at Soorkhab, but of two arches, and ascending a little way, +then winding along over undulating very stony ground; this continues +until we descend steeply and along the Neemla valley, a mere ravine, +historically interesting, as the field on which Shah Soojah lost his +kingdom in 1809, and for a fine tope of trees: then crossing a streamlet, +we ascend a little way over sandstone, then another stream, which we +follow for 500 yards, and ascending a little, we proceed thence to camp, +along a slight slope of very stony, generally <i>very</i> <i>level</i> +ground, where we halted on a rivulet with a wide grassy bed, Lythrum +growing around.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m417.jpg"> +<img alt="Gundamuck to Futtehabad" src="images/m417.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>No change appears in the vegetation: the surface very barren in stony +parts, chiefly Artemisia, Saccharum, Andropogon albus, in ravines, Capparis +common, also Ærua and Lycionoides.</p> +<p>The northern boundary of the valley is comparatively low, and from +Sofaid-Koh to this is an uniform slope, broken by ravines; here and +there by small hills; ravines occasionally dilating into small valleys, +the only parts in which cultivation is to be seen. This is so +far different from the usual formation where the valleys occupy the +level tract between the slopes from either boundary range. Neemla +is a very confined space for any thing like the battle said to have +taken place here, the rising grounds inclosing the small space being +too much broken for cavalry.</p> +<p>The rocks consist of conglomerate at top, below sandstone, layers +of both alternating near the surface: a break occurs (nearly opposite) +in the hills, this break is minutely undulated. <a name="citation417"></a><a href="#footnote417">{417}</a> +Rock pigeons were seen on the march by Thomson, and small partridges. +I find that though to our senses there was comparatively but little +descent, that the barometer and thermometer indicate one of 1,500 feet. +The Neemla river must be the boundary between the hot and cold countries +alluded to by Burnes.</p> +<p>In spite of this descent, and our small altitude, about 3,000 feet, +but little change if any occurs in the vegetation, and none in the general +features of the country; the Apocynea of Dadur and Bolai (Nerioides) +has re-appeared.</p> +<p>At this season (October), throughout the way we came from Cabul, +there is a curious white efflorescence covering the Shootur Kari, I +do not know what it is, but it is not Conferva. A good deal of +forest is seen on some of the ranges to the north of this, bearing from +camp about NNE., certainly not firs, perhaps oaks.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Yesterday we went to the Soorkhab, which runs +east and west along the northern boundary of the valley; half the distance +down the bed of this stream the ground is strewed with boulders, thence +to the hills, and excepting the bed of the Soorkhab, is one sheet of +cultivation, consisting of large quantities of cotton and sugar-cane, +this latter of small size, and not very juicy, castor-oil plant, Corchorus +(<i>Pat</i>), <i>Sun</i>, Tel., radish, and among the other plants cultivated, +the Mudar is common: Nerioides of Dadur; Epilobium sp. is the chief +Boreal form. This is one of the richest districts I have seen.</p> +<p>Trees—Bukkhien, <a name="citation418"></a><a href="#footnote418">{418}</a> +<i>Furas</i>, Ficus, Cupressus, with much rice cultivation.</p> +<p>The vines are trained on mulberries, as Burnes says, or the Lilyoak. +Pomegranates are also to be mentioned among the fruits of this place.</p> +<p>The Soorkhab river is not seen after leaving the place of the same +name; after it crosses the road, it runs due north through the mountains, +in a narrow, almost inaccessible bed; its waters are of a reddish colour.</p> +<p>The villages here are larger, and not so fortified as those about +Cabul. Balabagh stands on a high bank of conglomerate, overhanging +the Soorkhab, and is in danger of being cut away by the river. +The peasantry are civil, and unarmed. Ravens, quails, <i>minas</i>, +sparrows, and a beautiful swallow were seen about the Soorkhab river; +the latter, with metallic blue on the back of the head, crown of head +tawny, tail short, two exterior feathers elongated into beautiful almost +setaceous bodies, exceeding the length of the bird. This swallow, +or one with a similar tail, was seen by Sanders on the Helmund, at Girishk.</p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—We proceeded to Sultanpore, eight and a half miles, +passed Futtehabad, thence a gradual descent over a very stony slope +to the halting place, where the valley becomes narrow, and water plentiful +in a small stream. Willows, mulberries, ashes. Two large +pollards at Futtehabad.</p> +<p>The vegetation consists of Gramineæ in patches, Ærua +Nerioides, and Mudar.</p> +<p>Sultanpore, is a village of some size, situated about a mile north +from the road, and contains many Hindoos. All villages here crowded +with highish two or three-storied houses, something like Shikarpore: +they are surrounded with gardens and mud walls, apricots, mulberries, +greengages, pomegranates in profusion; the cultivation very rich as +yesterday, and there is an air of repose about the villages unusual +in this country. Tobacco. The rice-pounder or <i>dekhee</i> +I observe is here lifted by treading on it with the foot, as in Hindoostan. +The country hereabout, has the advantage of being well watered. +<i>Isain</i>, Dolichos sp. occurs.</p> +<p>Trees as before: the plane flourishes, fine ones were seen growing +around a Hindoo Zearut, where there is a double spring of water with +a copious ebullition of gas. The temperature of this is said to +be hot in winter. Salsola common, <i>Joussa</i>, a curious Ericoid +plant was observed, Typha angustifolia, latifolia ceased since we left +Gundamuck; Isachne, Pulicaria, Epilobium, Sagittaria, Cyperaceæ, +Marsilea! Polygonum, Ranunculus sceleratus, Lythrum, Lemna, Alisma, +Menthoid, a Cuscuta common on cotton plants, as at Futtehabad, several +tropical grasses, Aristida, Poa, and Andropogon appear.</p> +<p>Descent though almost unappreciable, yet amounts to 1,000 feet. +Bulbul and Parus common, as well as doves and ravens; quails are scarce.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—To Jallalabad, eight and a half miles, the road +keeping along the southern edge of the valley, occasionally extending +over small undulations sometimes stony, more often sandy.</p> +<p>Typha latifolia occurs in profusion along parts of Futtehabad nullah, +general features the same otherwise, Ærua and Nerioid are common +on stony parts, and fewer coarse grasses.</p> +<p>Cypresses in gardens, also <i>khujoors</i>. Starlings.</p> +<p>The entrance to Jallalabad, or rather to its suburbs, presents the +usual desolate, disorderly appearance, of such places in this country; +the ruined walls to the city; the sandy barren soil, and the odious +looking low hills between it and the Sofaid-Koh, present as sad and +melancholy a picture as could well be met with. The same desolate, +disorderly, dirty appearance is to be met with in most Asiatic capitals, +particularly those that have been subjected to independent misrule: +while the more distant surrounding villages look cheerful, and as clean +as can be expected: the appearances immediately around the chief towns +are always bad. To what is this owing? is it to their being more +completely under the thumb of a rapacious governor? to the insecurity +of property, or to defect in the laws? or to all these causes together?</p> +<p>At Cabul it was just the same, particularly on the Peshawur side, +where stagnant pools, half destroyed mosques, and mutilated trees present +a total contrast to the smiling valley of Kilah-i-Kajee.</p> +<p>At Shikarpore the same.</p> +<p>The most common fruit tree in the gardens here is a sweet lime: grapes +are brought in from the villages of Sofaid-Koh, they are the same sort +as those at Gundamuck: Narcissus, Rosa, Cerasi sp., Mirabilis, stock, +Cupressus, mulberry also in gardens, <i>Bheir</i> of waste places, Salsola, +Artemisiæ, two or three: Kochia villosa, Peganum, Ærua, +Croton of Candahar, Ricinus, <i>Joussa</i> of wet places, Lippia, Typha +latifolia, angustif., Azolla, Riccia, Cyperaceæ, several Lythrarieæ, +Potamogeton, three species. The fish here will not take a fly, +and the bottoms are too foul and stony for worm-fishing, the largest +sort of fish is somewhat like a Barbel. Jackdaws and Corvus, alter +atratus, dorso ventre griseo: very few quails. <i>Furas</i> common.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—To Ali-Baghan, distance six and a half miles, +road winding, generally good: after it crossed the dry bed of the nullah, +it then becomes rather undulated extending over raviny ground; it then +crosses the broad bed of the stream, in which there are swarms of bulrushes, +then the same sort of sandy ground leads to camp, which is near the +village Ali-Baghan.</p> +<p>The river here is much increased, much more deep; banks alluvial, +steep; soil deep. Chenopodium sp., very common, but too much eaten +up to be recognized, also Salsolæ sp.</p> +<p>Nothing new observed. We passed the break above-mentioned in +the northern hills, whence issues the Coomur Nuddee. Serratuloides +very common in sandy undulations. Porcupines and foxes. +Beds of grass in islands of the river Barikab.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—We proceeded to Bankok, twelve and a half miles +from the encamping ground, having turned nearly due south, in order +to avoid the slope, which is seen in this direction from Jallalabad; +then a valley, with low hills on either side, is passed; then the road +ascends over undulating ground, until 500 feet is gained; then a long +and gradual descent is traversed over a very stony plateau.</p> +<p>No water nor cultivation on the road, nothing can exceed its barrenness. +Ærua Nerioides, Lycioides, Andropogon albus, are the principal +plants on the plateau; Kochia common, and a few straggling <i>Bheirs</i>, +small rock pigeons. Geology unchanged, sandstone and conglomerate, +with enormous boulders.</p> +<p>We passed the gorge through which the Cabul river runs. The +road, by this is said to be only six miles, but is only passable by +pedestrians and horsemen.</p> +<p>One village of some size is situated in the south towards Sofaid-Koh; +from the plateau as well as from our camp, a curious and characteristic +scene is visible to the north, showing a barren lofty range with peculiar +undulations at the base, as well as the isolated hills jutting up above +its surface: the trees and villages being confined to the course of +the river which may be thus traced by its fertility. In this last +direction there is a good deal of <i>Abadi</i>, but nothing comparable +to that about Jallalabad.</p> +<p>At camp Serratuloid australasicus, very common, as indeed it was +yesterday; <i>foliis</i> <i>verticalibus</i> in consequence of both +surfaces being stomatose, the base of the leaf is so twisted as to present +each surface equally to the light. It is curious that all such +leaves have the veins prominent on both surfaces, showing a relation +between the veins and the stomata, the more stomata the larger veins.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—To Bassoollah, eight and a half miles, the road +for guns is good throughout; better perhaps than any yet met with, from +the soil being sandy. We came by a straighter road, and a very +bad one, instead of diverging to the south, and rounding a range of +hills, we entered these, and passing through a gorge coming upon marshy +ground, running for some distance along the Cabul river, to which we +were here quite close. Passed several villages about the mouth +of the gorge, which is a short one.</p> +<p>The general features of the country continue the same; we crossed +a nullah near the camp, and another near the gorge, six miles from camp, +towards this last, grass covers the plains, though of a coarse kind; +Ærua Nerioides most common on the barren ground.</p> +<p>We observed on the way a new Pterocles, and passed an old tope situated +on a low ridge.</p> +<p>The gorge is rather pretty; the Cabul river runs close, along the +foot of a range, forming the northern boundary of the place, where Bassoollah +is situated, this is also a pretty place, with much good grassy ground +for encamping on.</p> +<p>The country under Sofaid-Koh presents a long strip of cultivation, +with many villages: hills barrener than ever, chiefly limestone. +Very little snow here observed as on the eastern face of the high peaks +of Sofaid-Koh, compared with the quantity visible on the face towards +Jallalabad.</p> +<p>About half-past two, a slight shock of an earthquake was felt, presenting +a rumbling noise, very audible, proceeding from east to west.</p> +<p>Between the village and the river, an extensive strip of level land +occurs, with sandy soil well adapted to rice, of which quantities are +grown. The crops are now ready for the sickle, and some partly +cut: much of this land is occupied by a marsh choked with bulrushes +of both sorts, Typha latifolia being the most common; Cyperaceæ +abound, Marsilea in profusion, Azolla, Mentha, Epilobii sp. as before, +Lemna, Valisneria <i>verticillata</i>? Sium., Sagittaria, Pulicaria, +Chara, Lippia, Monniera, <i>Jhow</i>.</p> +<p>The river runs close under the hills, which are very barren, its +course is rapid, cataracts also are of frequent occurrence transmitting +a great body of water; no fish are visible. Some cotton and maize +and <i>Toot</i> cultivation. <i>Furas</i> the only trees.</p> +<p>The mountains slope off from Sofaid-Koh in distinct groups, and are +seen to advantage, broken in some places into undulations: about the +centre of the slope an irregular strip of village forts and cultivation +is extended. The course of the Cabul river in many places is curious; +flowing between singularly round ranges. Snipe common; quail rare. +Erythræa common on moist sward.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Proceeded to Lalpore, the country undulating, +the road skirting the stony portions of the plain is bad to Hizarnow, +three miles from thence it is very stony, thence continuing on the skirts +of the hills, which are principally slate, and passing through a small +ravine, it then extends over sandy or stony ground, until the Chota +Khyber is reached: this is a narrow, but short, and not very steep pass; +slate rocks compose the upper parts, and are entirely disintegrated, +thence they descend at once into the plain opposite Lalpore; the distance +of the march is eleven miles, the road generally decent.</p> +<p>Much rice cultivation occurs, and much land, it must be confessed, +also occupied by marshy ground, Typha, etc. The same plants continue; +Butomus trigonifolius not uncommon.</p> +<p>On the slate rocks of Buttencote Kochia recurs, Heliotropium luteum, +Nerioides, and Lycioides of Shikarpore are found.</p> +<p>Near Hizarnow, Serissa, Acaciæ sp., which is the black wood +of Madras; Sissoo, and <i>Bheirs</i>. Hizarnow is a large place, +curiously occupying receding slopes of the base of a low range of hills, +but it must be dreadfully hot. We passed several <i>Kaburistans</i> +with pollarded, stunted, excavated <i>Furas</i> trees. One mile +before Hizarnow, a curious hill of slate occurred, covered with boulders.</p> +<p>The road is very winding in consequence of its following the bases +of the hills forming the southern boundary of the valley. The +Cabul river is visible almost throughout the whole march.</p> +<p>All houses in the villages are now roofed in this part of the country +with straw. Starlings observed in swarms.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—Halted at Lalpore, this is a very busy large place: +the houses are one-storied, and flat-roofed. The only peculiarity +being occasional square towers. The river is here quite open for +commerce downwards, and is well adapted to small canoes: the stream +is rapid and crossed by a ferry.</p> +<p>On rocks under which the river flows near this, a species of Fissidens +occurs, where the rocky surface has passed into sand. Glycyrrhiza, +Rubus, Artemisia, Asparagus, Pommereulla, Andropogon albus, Arundo, +Cyrthandracea, an Hyoscyamus of the Bolan Pass, Beebee Nanee, Heliotropium +flavum.</p> +<p>It would be curious to enquire why the powers of variation change +so completely in the different families? Thus for instance in +Orchideæ, no character can be taken from the vegetation with some +limitations, and none from the fruit or seeds; two products in most +orders very fruitful in discriminating marks. This leads one to +the idea that in monocotyledonous plants, the fruit is very generally +of limited powers of variation; witness Orchideæ, Gramineæ, +Smilacineæ, etc. this idea deserves to be followed out as much +as possible. The river at the ferry is 100 yards wide, and twelve +feet in the deepest part, the current five miles an hour, but confined +to one and a half towards its centre.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>1st</i>.—Marched ten miles: the road from +the camp extended up an acclivity, the ground becoming more broken than +usual to the mouth of the ghat, which is four miles distant; thence +up to the ghat which resembles much the Bolan Pass, it extends up an +inclined plane over a shingly road. The ghat is rather wide throughout, +and all the features are the same as the Bolan Pass, slate rocks most +common. We passed on the way a large and a deep but dry well, +ascribed to the <i>kafirs</i>; and near it the ruins of a fort built +half-way up a small mountain, the top of which is level with the ghat.</p> +<p>Vegetation to the ghat unchanged. In the ghat Capparis as before, +Lycioides, Chamærops, Andropog. albus, Schænanthus, <i>Bheir</i>, +Nerioides, Pommereullioid, Andropogonea, appear at once, Ærua, +Asparagus.</p> +<p>At 300 feet up, Mimosæ sp., foliis tomentosis, occurring here +and there. Heliotropium flavum, Plectranthus lavandulosus, Scrophulariæ +sp.</p> +<p>At 500 feet, Dodonæa: this is very common, and being very green, +gives the ghat a pretty appearance.</p> +<p>At 600 feet, a curious pomaceous looking Rhamnaceous plant is found.</p> +<p>The most common plants are Nerioides, Andropogon albus, <i>Bheir</i>, +Chamærops, Dodonæa.</p> +<p>The bed of the ghat is formed of debris from the boundary hills, +this bed is very thick, and the particles have the appearance of being +carried to their present situation by water.</p> +<p>Our halting place is a confined irregular piece of ground, water +abundant, but no grass, except coarse Andropogon; no fodder, except +<i>Bheir</i> and Mimosa.</p> +<p>I ascended in the evening the ridge to the south, and which is 1,200 +feet above the road, to the ruins that run along the summit. The +ridge, like all others in this neighbourhood, is rugged and much distorted, +the top is limestone, much varied and weathered; then slate masses of +greenstone occur towards the base.</p> +<p>The vegetation is chiefly at the summit. Schænanthus, +Periploca, Dodonæa, an arbuscula nova, Euonymus, Chenopodiaceæ. +Below this, (but the elevation is scarcely sufficient to form any difference,) +and along the water, Euonymus, Adhatoda, Buddlæa cana or Syringia, +Rhamnacea, Periplocea, Linaria, Labiatæ, 2-3, Pistacea, Roylea, +Acanthoides, <i>Urticea</i>! habitu, U. pendulifloræ, Vitex, Convolvulus +spinosus of Bolan, Sempervivum, Stapelioides used as a vegetable, and +for fever by Hindoos, Artemisiæ, Solanum sp.</p> +<p>Along water, Adiantum, Mentha, Epilobium, Verbena officinalis, Solanum +nigrum, Jacquinifol. pinnatif. spinosus about cultivation.</p> +<p>On slaty rocks which form the bed of the ravine or ghat, Dodonæa, +Hyoscyamus, and Cyrthandracea are found.</p> +<p>The building consists of a wall near the edge of a ridge, which terminates +some twenty feet from the steep precipice of 300 to 500 feet: it is +200 to 300 yards in length, and is terminated at either end by two towers, +both of which are ruinous, it is built of slabs and rough blocks of +limestone, between which are layers of slate, much like the Bactrian +pillar, and very superior to modern buildings: what its use was, it +would be difficult to conjecture as it is out of musket shot of the +ghat, which it only commands by being above it. There is no water +on the top, nor is there any well-marked path up to it: curious mortar-like +excavations were observed in a mass of limestone just below, probably +for pounding rice. Up the ravine are remains of terraces formerly +used for cultivation, but now mostly disused. At 700 to 800 feet +above the ghat the ravine abounds with the Ficus of Gundamuck; this +and the Adhatoda or <i>Rooss</i> are perhaps cultivated: the ravine +is pretty well entangled with Ficus and brushwood. It consists +of metamorphosed rocks and excavated limestone; some mosses occur, and +Adiantum abounding.</p> +<p>From the ridge, a rather extensive view to the south is obtained, +extending to the Khyber fort, which is of the ordinary square form, +and just below it, a tower and house. To the east, and all around +a good deal of cultivation occurs; also several high ridges, say 7,000 +feet; one terminating 4,000 feet above us, presents a very rugged outline +with the appearance of rather large trees. The road up to the +ghat is visible, as well as the <i>Choky</i> and a fort, with a small +sheet of cultivation to the eastward. Beyond this a ravine, then +two other ridges, of which the nearer one is high. The Cabul river +passes to the NNW., and Lalpoor lies to the north. One peak and +a small piece of ridge of Hindoo-koosh, white with snow, is seen very +distinctly though distant, it must therefore be very lofty; far more +so than any part we have seen to the westward.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/p425.jpg"> +<img alt="Khyber Pass" src="images/p425.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>Description</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>annexed</i> <i>map</i> +<i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Khyber</i> <i>Pass</i>.</p> +<p>A. Kumdhukta. By this is Abkhanah route.</p> +<p>B. Little Khyber ghat, on Peshawur side.</p> +<p>C. Khyber ghat, entrance on the Jallalabad side.</p> +<p>D. Kurraha route.</p> +<p>E. Direction of Sofaid-Koh in the distance.</p> +<p>F. Flagstaff in the middle of the Pass.</p> +<p>The ground between the dotted lines and river, on the south, is, +or has been cultivated. The ground near the river on the north +side is covered here and there with brown grass. About the Flagstaff, +sand and short dried up grass occur.</p> +<p>The general character of the hills in every direction except the +snowy range, is bluffly rounded, very bare, and brown, with here and +there a shrub.</p> +<p>That which Burnes calls Noorgil, is the range of Kareaz, and is distinct +from Koonur. Kashgur lies beyond the snowy range.</p> +<p>The inhabitants of the mountains, like those of Lalpoor, wear sandals +made of the fibres of Chamærops, which is common: one plant of +Ephedra used <i>for</i> <i>snuff</i>?</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—Proceeded to one mile beyond Ali-Musjid. +The ascent commences immediately where the <i>Choky</i> is seen from +the camp, by a very good road cut out of slate rock; the rocks are steep +on both sides, and very zig-zag; a short partial descent in one place +occurs to a small pool of water. From the <i>Choky</i>, a descent +takes place by a similar road for perhaps two miles, until the ravine +which we left at camp is turned; this is thence followed, occasionally +leaving it where the road is bad and runs through low rugged hills. +The road then after passing some of the old ruins opens out into a space +with cultivation. Close to this is the highest spot of the pass, +surrounded by low hills, none higher than 500 feet. Cultivation +occurs especially at Lal-Ghurry Beg, a space of some size, containing +several villages, of the usual Khyberry form, namely, surrounded by +low, quadrangular walls, with a thin square tower and very broadly projecting +eaves. A short distance from its summit, just after passing the +villages, and before entering the ravine which leads us to our present +camp is a Khyberry tower, built on a fine Bactrian tope, which is nearly +half ruined; on the top of this a dome of good proportions is built +on a double-terraced foundation.</p> +<p>This gives a rude idea of what the tope was originally, now half +the dome has fallen down.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m426.jpg"> +<img alt="A Khyberry tower" src="images/m426.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The entrance to the ravine gradually becomes narrower, the bed is +stony, very winding, and narrow. Bold precipices of limestone +cliffs ascend on either side of Sir-i-Chushme; then a little below, +very copious springs issue from limestone. The temperature of +the principal spring is 75°; it contains abundance of fish—a +loach and cyprinoid. Passed some ruined fortifications on the +right, leading down to water, evidently <i>kafir</i> works; then we +enter a narrow but short gorge, occupied by the stream; a few more turns +and you come on Ali-Musjid. No change occurs in the vegetation, +bare rocks at the summit of which the Bar. stood at 26.72. Andropogons +and Artemisiæ are the chief plants.</p> +<p>In the gorge downwards, Acacia occurs in abundance, with Adhatoda, +and otherwise the shrubs of Lundyakhana occur in abundance, and Adiantum +about the spring.</p> +<p>After passing the fort, the rocks open out into a ravine, with low +undulated hills on every side, covered with the usual vegetation; Astragalus +one species.</p> +<p>At Lal-Ghurry Beg, one Khinjuck tree, Elæagnus, occurred; and +grass in very small stacks, well pressed and covered with a thatch of +bushes and a layer of dirt.</p> +<p>There is excellent fishing in the stream. Loaches, Perilamps, +and especially an Oreinus? swarming at Sir-i-Chushme, and taking worms +very greedily.</p> +<p>No forests whatever visible in this direction; the arborescent vegetation +being confined to scattered and small trees.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—We halted near Jumrood, after a march of ten miles +and one furlong. This place is situated at the mouth of the pass, +within sight of the Seikh camp at Jumrood. Marched down to the +ghat, which is generally speaking narrow and very strong, opening out +here and there, into easier parts extending down the stream all the +way; this stream loses itself suddenly, but after a little distance +it is replaced by another from the right, where ravines enter: here +the pass is well adapted for pillage, elsewhere the sides are so steep, +that robbers could not dispose of their plunder. At the mouth, +the pass opens out into a good breadth, with an even, small, shingly +bottom. At Kuddun the Seikh troops were drawn up to compliment +the C. in C., one regiment met us shortly before to protect the baggage. +Maize cultivated. At the mouth, the Khyber is more difficult than +any other pass, except the Bolan: perhaps it is much narrower than that, +except just above Sir-i-Bolan.</p> +<p>No change in vegetation, one or two new plants occurred, viz. a Labiata, +and a treelet, foliis linearibus oppositis, Jasminacea aspectu, Baloot, +Vitex common, Salix, and shrubs as before, Veronica, etc.</p> +<p>The Khyber mountains viewed from the mouth of the pass are brown, +and dotted with peculiar looking trees.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Proceeded six and a half miles to near the ruins +of an old tope; first, down the nullah, then by the fort of Futtygurh, +a Hindoostanee mud fort with high parapets, two lines of works, and +a <i>pucka</i> citadel with embrasures for guns on a commanding mound: +thence we passed over a gentle slope with a good many scattered <i>Bheirs</i>, +<i>Kureels</i>, Ærua, Mudar, etc. to camp, where the ground is +very rough and stony, abundant water obtained from a cut with sheets +of maize cultivation. Fossil shells, Pterocles, found in arenaceous +limestone (Durand).</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—To Peshawur, eight and a half miles, over a sandy +plain; road bad, intersected with cuts and ravines; three canals had +to be crossed by small bridges which occasioned a good deal of delay +to the camels. Passed the Seikh lines, between the fort and north +face of town, and encamped on east face opposite the Governor’s +house: three gibbets were passed, with twelve persons hanging from them, +some of old date.</p> +<p>In the evening we had a gay party at M. Avitabili’s, who is +a fine looking man, with an intelligent Italian countenance.</p> +<p>In a room gaudily decorated and painted, was the following very appropriate +motto—</p> +<blockquote><p> Donec eris felix multos numerabis amicos.<br /> + Tempora si fuerunt nubila, solus eris.</p> +</blockquote> +<p>If this was true in Rome, and is true in Europe, to what extent does +its truth not reach in this country. In the evening we were entertained +with dancing and fireworks; excellent dinner and admirable bread.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—To-day the atmosphere is hazy, but the snowy range +is not topped with clouds. It is curious enough that the part +which is most exposed to our view, and which bears about north-east, +is generally clouded throughout the hotter parts of the day, while apparently +equally high peaks in other directions remain clear.</p> +<p>It is curious that in Khorassan remarkably few climbing plants occur, +and of these, the chief form is Cuscuta.</p> +<p>Botany here at this season is a non-entity, in the marsh close to +the fort, there occur some few plants, the chief European forms being +Veronica. Ranunculus sceleratus is now coming into flower, Typha +angustifolia abounds, with Arundo, also Sparganium, Sium, Butomus trigonifolius +common; otherwise Cyperaceæ, <i>Epilobium</i> <i>out</i> <i>of</i> +<i>season</i>! Ranunculus aquaticus is most abundant; two species of +Chara, or rather 1 Chara, and 1 Nitella, the last a beautiful species, +Marsilea in profusion, Azolla common, Lemna two or three species, one +<i>new</i>, a floating Marchantiacia, Nelumbium occurs, but only as +a cultivated plant.</p> +<p>Of two Boreal, or European forms found in sub-tropical countries, +that form is the most northern which flowers, etc. in the coldest season, +hence Veronica and Ranunculus are more northern than <i>Epilobium</i> +in this particular district. The most elevational plant at Cabul +is Cardaminoidea, floribus luteis, this flowers at high altitudes in +August and September, and at Cabul shows no symptom of flowering even +in October; it is there a winter plant? The same is true of Hippuris, +which to flower at Cabul requires a greater degree of cold than is obtainable +during the summer months.</p> +<p>What I have said of Epilobium above, is true of Typha and Arundo, +both now passed flowering, and both found in India, to a considerable +extent.</p> +<p>Royle’s idea of the comparatively greater extent of distribution +of water plants is not I think correct, in the sense he seems to entertain +it; to be so, the species should be the same, which they are certainly +not. It is only with pre-eminently aquatic forms that the annual +temperature can be more equalised than obtains with strictly terrestrial +plants. The humidity which may appear connected with the rapid +evaporation in these countries, and which obtains? in the vicinity of +all bodies of water, may account for the appearance here of Arundo, +etc. All genuine aquatic types have leaves involute in vernation?</p> +<p>The least valuable of all northern forms, are those associated with +cultivation, especially if they be annuals, because in the first place +they may be acclimated species, a circumstance of great importance; +and in the second, because if annual, they are confined to the cold +season. All such forms have probably migrated into these countries, +they have come from the westward: this shows us why at almost equal +elevations they are most common, the nearer we approach to the elevated +regions towards the west, because it is self-evident that the nearer +we approach the regions whence they have migrated, the more abundant +and diversified will the migrating plants be, only particular species +having the power of extending the range of migration.</p> +<p>When all the Indian plants hitherto met with, have been tabulated; +when all their respective heights at which they have been found have +been determined; when their more strictly geographical sites have been +fixed; when we have some data as to the quantity of humidity pervading +their localities; then, and not till then, shall we be able to legislate +for the geography of Indian botany.</p> +<p>The Botanist who travels without the means of determining these points, +destroys half the value of his collections.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>16th</i>.—Yesterday was very raw and cloudy, +to-day clear as usual, towards 1 P.M. a strong north-east wind occurred +for a short time as usual, because once or twice before, it occurred +after threatening weather.</p> +<p><i>Rationale</i>.—It blows from the nearest snow to supply +the rarefied air in the valley heated by the sun, even now tolerably +powerful; it blows for some days so long as a vacuum is formed, and +discontinues when clouds again appear; hardly so, as it before only +blew for three or four days, although several more elapsed before clouds +re-appeared: it may however be dependent on each fresh fall of snow +in the hills.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Cloudy morning, forenoon fine, clear and calm.</p> +<p>Mosses are the analogues of Zoophytes; these analogies are to be +looked for in the most striking and most constant parts of the organization +of the divisions of nature.</p> +<p>Marchantiaceæ are the representatives of radiate animals, another +reason why Jungermanniaceæ are to be separated from them.</p> +<pre>Hence, Radiata, = Marchantiaceæ. + “ Zoophyta, = Musci.</pre> +<p>I am quite convinced that the true subordinate groups of Acotyledones +are far from being discovered.</p> +<p>Are the sheaths found on certain radicles strictly confined to monocotyledonous +plants. There is this certain about them, that they depend on +the presence of vascular tissue, from which the radicles or the divisions +of each root originate: see young Hyacinth roots, grown in water.</p> +<p>Although the sheaths cannot exist without a positive cuticle, their +existence does not depend so much on its presence as on the direction +of the adhesive powers of its component parts: witness certain forms +of Marchantiaceæ, and the vaginate forms, as Azolla, Lemna, etc. +Also the sheath may not have adhesive powers at its apex to prevent +the escape of the radical at that point: witness Hyacinth roots? +We may imagine a case in which the primary radicle may be without a +sheath, while its divisions shall have them, this depending on the want +of adhesion of the cuticle over the original one.</p> +<p>The emerged and immersed leaves of plants are well worthy of examination, +since Microphytum proves that stomata do not depend on the presence +of a cuticle as Brongniart supposes: their presence is united with, +or allied to an amount of density in the cellular tissue, sufficient +to prevent the due aeration of the inner cellules, without direct communication +with the atmosphere. Vide Musci!! Hence the inner tubes +of the leaves of the generality of aquatic plants, (exception Eriocaulon +fluitans.)</p> +<p>What is the cause of the plurality of radicles in certain species +of Lemna, and their blank in others? It will be necessary on this +point to examine well the sheaths of Azolla, and to look at the Mergui +Æschynanthus.</p> +<p>The formation of Affghanistan is very curious: it consists of a wide +extent of country, variously elevated steppes being separated by ridges +usually very accessible, generally isolated. The mountainous part +varies as to its formation, but there is no variety in the declivities +and acclivities forming the lower elevations, which are composed of +conglomerate; nor is there much in the usually narrow strip at the lowest +portion of each steppe or valley, which is very generally the only cultivatable +portion.</p> +<p>In the Khyber ghat the ridges are either of limestone or slaty rocks, +between which conglomerate occurs of various thicknesses; this being +dependent on the angle of the mountains forming the sides of the ghat: +it is from this conglomerate in such places consisting usually of a +loose texture that the very excellent roads (for mountainous passes) +are naturally made by the draining streams, which are only periodical. +The conglomerate consists of water-worn stones of all sizes, even boulders +are not unfrequent, yet the wearing is such as occurs in courses now +filling the beds of torrents. The conglomerate increases in density +and adhesion towards Lalpoor, and in many places is exceedingly hard.</p> +<p>Whatever the country may have been previously, one might explain +its present appearance by supposing it to have consisted of a tolerably +level extent of conglomerate, with here and there a strip of soil in +the lowest part of each portion, and that the elevation of the mountain +ridges was of subsequent occurrence: this would account for the formation +of the lower slopes, and the frequent isolation of small eminences of +the same character as the neighbouring mountains. It will account +for the appearance of the conglomerate in every ravine until the top +of the culminating point is reached.</p> +<p>As the mountains were elevated, portions of conglomerate would be +detached, and these resting again on all suitable places, would account +for the existence of conglomerate on certain parts which are flatter +than usual.</p> +<p>Whirlwinds are common about Cabul, commencing as soon as the sun +has attained a certain degree of power.</p> +<p>In all cases they assume the shape of a cone, the point of which +being a tangent on the earth’s surface: the cone varies in shape, +is generally of a good diameter, occasionally much pulled out, some +being 2,300 feet in height, the currents are most violent at the apex.</p> +<p>They come and go in all directions, even after starting, not always +preserving the original direction. They are less common on days +in which winds prevail from any given direction, and vary much in intensity +from a mere breeze, lightly laden with dust and with no tortuosity, +to a violent cone of wind, capable of throwing down a <i>soldari</i>.</p> +<p>Northerly winds are prevalent here from 1 or 2 P.M. until 8 +or 9 P.M., occasionally they only commence in the evening, when they +are obviously due to the rarefaction of the air of the valleys by the +great heat of the sun, amounting now to 100° at 3 P.M., and the +vacuum being supplied by gusts from the high mountains to the north +and north-east.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XVIII.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Peshawur</i> <i>to</i> <i>Pushut</i>.</p> +<p><i>January</i> <i>8th</i>.—At Ichardeh. Between Busoollah +and Lalpoor are three curious low ridges, none above sixty feet high, +and all of small extent; they are covered with fractured masses of rock +of the same size as those strewn so liberally about the shingly slopes; +but they are much cleaner or fresher looking, and appear to me less +worn. Whence do they derive their singular situation? They +occur in such numbers, that one would at first think they originated +from a mass of ruins, but the ridges present scarcely any surface for +buildings to stand upon, certainly not to such extent as would account +for the abundance of these fragments.</p> +<p>About Huzarnow and on both sides, low ridges of sand occur. +In this sand graves are usually dug, and in some places to an extent +indicating dreadful devastations from disease, each grave is headed +by a stone, and about every ramification of the irregular size of the +burial ground, there is a building of the usual mud structure, designed +for a mosque, but not domed as is customary in Mussulman cemeteries, +but ornamented with flagstaffs bearing white bits of cloth. These +low sand ridges are often very much undulated; they consist of a very +fine powder, and at Huzarnow are evidently of the same nature as the +cultivated soil: they are neither in attachment as it were to the neighbouring +hills, nor distinct from them, but always have some communication with +the shingly slopes, to which they are evidently inferior.</p> +<p>So that the base of Khorassan may be taken to be the tillable portions, +over which occur, to a vast extent, the shingly very barren slopes, +which every section shows to be nothing but a mass of debris, resting +on the mountain rocks.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—Ali-Baghan. To this the road is good, along +the right bank of the river, wherever it does not wind along over the +spurs forming a considerable part of the march. To the first point +where this occurs, it extends over the same sort of plain as that about +Ichardeh; keeping rather close to the bank of the river, it is good, +also through the valley of Gundikuss, and from near the <i>Choky</i>, +to Ali-Baghan.</p> +<p>The first rocky ridge is about three-quarters of a mile in length, +and is not very difficult; at the end near Gundikuss, is a curious ruin +built into the stream, where the latter runs with violence on the rocky +bank: it consists of a broadish pathway, with a wall on the river side, +breast high; the masonry is good and solid, of the usual Bactrian materials, +but well cemented; it has mostly been ruined by the river, only one +end being perfect. Although the materials are <i>Bactrian</i>, +the contour is Mussulman, and I was told by some people that it was +a Mussulman erection: originally it perhaps extended all along this +part, as slight traces here and there are discernible; for what use +the original structure was intended I know not, as there are no remains +visible of a fort.</p> +<p>The inlet of Gundikuss is well cultivated, the village itself a large +straggling one, built close under a ridge.</p> +<p>From this to the <i>Choky</i> the path is rocky, and in many places +very bad, consisting of a series of ascents and descents, and winding +round spurs; in the worst place, the path almost overhangs the river +200 feet above its bed, and it is very hard and very rocky. The +distance between ten or eleven miles, the road is impracticable for +guns, etc. nor could our camels with loads well get over it.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—To Camp at the Bussout river, nothing remarkable +occurred; immense quantities of Serratuloides on the sandy raviny parts +of the road. Crossed the river on the usual <i>mussuck</i> rafts, +the animals forded it, at the quiet head of a rapid, water breast deep: +this river is smaller than that from Kooner.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—To Bussout, five miles. A village passed +about one and quarter mile up Kooner ghat, here a mile broad. +No change in the features of the country, which throughout is well cultivated; +here and there abundance of sedges, in the low ground; plenty of watercuts, +but none of any great size: road worse at the entrance of the ghat rounding +the east boundary, but guns might avoid this ground by keeping towards +centre of the ghat.</p> +<p>12th.—To Sha-i-wa, distance 8 miles. The road after turning +the angle of Bussout ghat, passed entirely through cultivation, villages, +trees and inhabitants more numerous than in any other place, cuts numerous, +but the road altogether from this cause and the cultivated fields very +bad. Rubus found along cuts at Chunar-Bukkeen. <i>Toot</i>, +<i>Phænix</i>. Vines numerous, of large size, running up +mulberry trees; forests seen on Kooner mountain? <i>Umlook</i> +and <i>Julghogal</i>, very common grain, very dear. The women +are generally clothed in dark blue <i>Noorgul</i>. The road now +extends up a gorge to our front, named Durrah.</p> +<p>Gooraiek fort on the opposite side.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—Halted. River much clearer than that of +Jallalabad; its bed affords abundance of large grass.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—Rejoined camp, keeping on the north bank of river. +The road passed over tillable recesses among the hills forming the north +boundary of Kooner valley, and over the spurs dividing these, of which +the first is short but bad, the last is a mile long, road infamous, +narrow, rocky, and in some places overhanging the river. I was +attacked about a mile and a half from camp, my servant Abdool Boyak, +the bravest and most trustworthy Asiatic I ever saw, wounded, losing +the two first fingers of his right hand; this was opposite the old Fort, +Noorgul, which is a dilapidated <i>kafir</i> ruin on a low island in +the centre of the valley and river, a strong position. <a name="citation435"></a><a href="#footnote435">{435}</a> +Other ruins occur on the road, one near Sek-Syud, the spur being covered +with its remains.</p> +<p>After leaving Deh-Syud, the valley becomes contracted; the river +occupying almost all its level portion, being much spread out, and with +numerous grassy islands; the cultivation occurring in the recesses between +the banks of the rivers and the glacis slopes.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—To Kooner, the road passes to Noorgul, an old +<i>kafir</i> fort, done up and occupied by Kooneriles, to its south-west, +three-quarters of a mile a hostile fort is situated. The ferry +is about two miles from Noorgul, and is with difficulty fordable: the +streams, three in number, the last almost brim full, and very rapid; +thence to Kooner is over a cultivated country.</p> +<p>Noorgul is on a commanding position, the ground rising gradually +on all sides to it; the valley here is very narrow. Observed Cnicus, +Fumaria, Lotus, Anagallis cærulea, and Veronica agrestis, springing +up: trees continue the same to about Kooner: some fine plane trees observed.</p> +<p>All the mountains are wooded at a certain height, and in greater +quantities, very different however from Himalayan forests, being dotted +in parts, rather than uniformly clothed with forest, Andropogon one +of the ordinary spring forms: the <i>churs</i> or islands in the river +are also covered with Andropogoneous vegetation.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—To Pushut, or rather to within one mile of it, +rain throughout the day accompanied by an unpleasant wind down the valley. +Road except for the first mile, during which it passed through cultivation, +troublesome, otherwise with the exception of two ravines, at one of +which the horses were taken out of the guns, very good: valley narrow, +say three miles, the boundary ridges to the north presenting as it were, +truncate faces to the valley, all the mountains at certain heights are +well wooded.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—Rain continued since, almost without intermission, +very dirty weather, but no wind.</p> +<p>Snow on the hills around, almost within 1,500 to 2,000 feet of this, +the mountains to the south are well wooded, the woods occurring here +and there in forests; snow is said to fall here occasionally.</p> +<p><i>18th</i>.—The attack took place this morning, and failed +on account of the weather, which was sufficient to damp any thing, and +which prevented the powder bags from exploding, as well as a second +cask of cartridges. The men were withdrawn about twelve, rain +pouring down, ammunition of the guns being expended, and that for musquetry +quite useless; a few more rounds would have demolished the entrance +gateway and brought it down bodily; loss severe, twenty five men killed, +thirty-two wounded, several dangerously. The fort was well defended, +and evidently by a mere handful of people.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Last night the fort was evacuated as well as that +on the opposite side, and the Syud has made off into the hills. +It cleared up in the morning but is now as threatening as ever, the +ditch of the fort is twelve or fifteen feet deep, but like all Affghan +ditches it is narrow. The parapets were very slight, so that a +more powerful battery would have kept down their fire completely; no +injury had occurred to the inner gate except its being off one of its +hinges, or rather out of one of its sockets. The entrance <i>was</i> +<i>thus</i> <i>round</i> <i>the</i> <i>gate</i>, not through the gateway: +it was protected by a thick screen of brushwood and mud, all of the +shots from the second position had lodged in the wall close to the side +of the gate; every thing was carried off, except a little grain, and +some gunpowder.</p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—Continued rain.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—Snow within 500 feet.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—Moved camp.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Continued rain and sleet, almost passing into +snow.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m436.jpg"> +<img alt="Section of Kooner valley" src="images/m436.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>Desideratum</i>.—Required to ascertain positively whether +the shingle and boulders are in all cases not derived from the boundary +mountains: that they are not in many cases is clear, witness the declivities +of slate rocks, totally incapable of assuming the form of boulders. +The proportions of the cultivated to the uncultivatable land is previously +given rather in favour of the tillable portion, this is always a light, +almost impalpable powder, consistent when wetted: generally the soil +owes any fertile qualities it has here, to the presence of water; thus +the Dusht-i-Bedowlut produces nothing beyond its indigenous plants from +having no water.</p> +<p>The transition from the extremely bare mountains of the Hindoo-koosh +as seen on the road to Bamean, to the well wooded ones of the Himalaya, +takes place at Jugdulluck, the hills, round which, produce plenty of +Baloot: in this direction, the forests become much thicker as we proceed +to the eastward. There is a mountain near Jallalabad, which at +once arrests the attention from its being wooded. Nothing like +it occurring between this and Cabul, on any part of the chain of mountains +distinctly referrable to the Himalayas. Wooded as this is, it +is nothing to the woods on the mountains about Pushut, the size of these +has been well demonstrated by the late snows: some bare places occur, +which appearances, Abdool says are from cultivation of Kohistanes. +Baloot abounds, Dodonea also is now coming into flower! a curious fact +pointing out its northern qualifications, although in form it is very +like a Mergui Dodonea.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—A clear day after a night of heavy rain, still +no appearance of settled weather; walked in the afternoon towards the +Dhurrah at the south side of the valley. The bouldery slope presented +an abrupt bank of a considerable angle, and its limits were most marked +from that of the tillable soil; as we approached the foot of the ghat, +the fragments became larger, they are angular, and have been little +if at all worn; thence I walked eastwards to a small isolated ridge +of limestone, perhaps a mile from the foot of the boundary chain, and +returned to camp. In this direction, which is that of the torrents, +occasionally rushing out of the Dhurrah, the transition between the +mountain slope, and the tillable soil, was gradual, the action of water +carrying farther down small fragments, and turning some of the fields +into a sandy shingly soil: the depth of the beds of these torrents here, +is perhaps four feet, the section being a mass of very unequal fragments.</p> +<p>I am not certain whether these fragments are derived from the mountains +or not, they seem to be too varied, and too widely spread for that, +although the course of the occasional torrents must vary very much.</p> +<p>Another puzzling thing is, that in the section afforded by the ditch +of the fort, and which is seventeen feet deep, the shingle underlies +the tillable soil.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the slopes here partakes of the nature of the Khyber +pass, the prevailing feature consists in coarse tufts of Andropogonous +grasses, Lycioides occurs, also Periplocea, also Cryptandoid, Euonymus, +these are on the cliffy ridge of limestone alluded to, 2 sp. of Astragalus, +Solanum jacquini? Schænanthus, Sedoides pictum very common, a +small fern, apparently a Cryptogramma, Grimonia, Tortula, a Bryum, three +or four lichens, one Marchantiacea found under boulders or in crevices +of rocks, one Salsola, Fagonia, Dianthoid, Statice common, Onosma, Artemisia +one or two, a large Cnicoid.</p> +<p>The only new feature is a shrubby dwarf fragrant Composita, foliis +albis subobovatis, dentatis grossiusculi margine revolutis.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—A break after a very wet night, cloudy throughout +the day.</p> +<p><i>25th</i>.—A fine day, particularly towards evening, beautifully +clear.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—No rain, but very cloudy, cold north-east wind.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—Rain very threatening, a disgusting country in +which it is impossible to take exercise without a strong guard: no means +of access to the beautiful forests visible in several directions, and +the natives are so intractable that it is impossible to induce them +to bring in specimens of their various trees, the only things about +which I am anxious.</p> +<p>In the meantime I have begun to use the theodolite, and getting approximations +to the height of those peaks remarkable for their features of vegetation.</p> +<p>It is curious that no pines are visible on any range south of the +Kooner river, until we reach those heights on the opposite side of a +very conspicuous ravine, up which the Bajore road runs. To the +north, on all the ranges of sufficient height, fine forests are visible, +especially of firs, other large-crowned trees exist, forming the bulk +of the forests, below the limit of the pines, but never grouped as those +are, but occurring isolatedly, these I call generally, <i>Baloot</i> +woods, i.e. Quercus <i>Baloot</i>.</p> +<p>The only means I have of gaining any idea of the composition of these +forests, are derived from the twigs and branches, which are used by +the natives as pads for the loads of <i>wood</i> which they bring into +for sale, and which almost consequently are from the lowermost limits +of woody vegetation. To go among the woods unguarded, is impossible, +and secondly, the weather is very bad.</p> +<p><i>Memoranda</i>.—That it cannot always be deficiency of soil +which causes the extreme barrenness of the usual Khorassan mountains, +because on the Kalo Pass to Bamean, nearly 13,000 feet high, the soil +is abundant; but in this case, height may interfere.</p> +<p>It is obvious between Kooner and Cabul, that the transition from +absolutely treeless mountains to well-wooded ones occurs nearer to Kooner +than Cabul, because the Hindoo-koosh about Cabul, and to the eastward, +is said to be treeless.</p> +<p>How interesting will the examination of these woods be, how different +will be their flora from that of Khorassan proper!</p> +<p>To define the Khorassan Province also, by its being destitute of +wood or trees. Note its passing off from this character between +Ghuzni and Quettah, see Marryott’s letter about Kooner, compare +with <i>Mazenderam</i> <i>forests</i>. Fine plane trees occur +here, all the vines are trained on mulberries. What is Burnes’ +holly oak, or lily oak?</p> +<p>Rubus occurs, Ranunculus stolonifolia, a cold season plant, Euphorbia +ditto, and the usual Peshawur forms.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—Fine weather; clouds however, still flying about.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—A fine morning; in the afternoon threatening, +night cloudy, all the clouds come down the ravine! except when the wind +occasionally shifts to west.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Fine weather, although still unsettled. +I procured the other day a few specimens of trees from the hills to +the south of this, among these which amount only to a few, are one Myrtus, +an Olenia, both of which bear me out in assuming that the woody vegetations +of these hills will present a curious transition between the genuine +Australio-European and the Himalayan forms.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—Almost every isolated rock in this country is +covered with ruins which vary much in extent, and are often barely perceptible, +but careful looking will detect them in all situations about gorges, +and such places. From the rivers running under rocks, the paths +which must be resorted to, at least at this season, are very difficult. +It would be curious to speculate on the different state of preservation +of these ruins, and the singular people to whom they are due.</p> +<p>The soil of this valley is very deep in places: in one place on the +opposite side of the river, it is twenty-five feet at least, the depth +obviously diminishing towards the bed of the river, or the lowest part +of the valley.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m440.jpg"> +<img alt="Section through river valley" src="images/m440.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>In this valley, at least about here, curious round thatched huts +are visible about villages, intended for religious females, they are +closed except at a small door.</p> +<p>Cotton much cultivated.</p> +<p>The <i>Jala</i>, or float skins used for crossing rivers, are inflated +by <i>bellows</i> of the usual description, this causes delay as some +require to be inflated very often owing to the eagerness of those who +want to be ferried over, and who rush indiscriminately on the <i>Jala</i> +which, from the rafts being few and far apart, occasion delay; such +ferries were not intended for impatient travellers; nothing can show +the want of intelligence of the people more than this abominably slow +method of crossing rivers; here, there is little excuse for it, as wood +is abundant.</p> +<p>The Culminating peak to the west of the north Dhurrah, shows that +here, as elsewhere, snow lies longer on the north than south sides: +it also affords a curious instance of the various disposition of snow: +those angles of its faces presented to the south having none, or little +snow; or does this depend upon the faces having different declivities?</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>1st</i>.—First part of last night clear; +but the wind shifting from west to north-east, has again thoroughly +clouded the sky, night beautifully clear, no rain, and no wind during +the day.</p> +<p><i>2nd</i>.—A windy but clear night, succeeded by a beautiful +morning, wind as usual, north-east or thereabouts, i.e. down the river.</p> +<p>I have seen it mentioned somewhere, that in arid climates the only +support of vegetable life exists in the dews, which are hence, at least +in the cases alluded to, supposed to be providential adaptations to +supply certain deficiencies. But considering that dews consist +of nothing but a deposition of moisture: it follows that in very arid +climates, as there is no moisture, so there can be no dews. For +the deposition of a dew, the fist essential thing, is moisture, either +in the ground or in the air, this last may have been derived from the +ground. If neither the ground nor the air contain moisture, no +dews can exist, this is the case in Khorassan.</p> +<p>Throughout the whole campaign no dews were noticed, although the +nights were almost uniformly serene and calm, and the time chosen for +marching, would have certainly brought us in contact with them had they +been deposited. Dews therefore do not form in Khorassan, <i>with</i> +<i>these</i> <i>exceptions</i>, that wherever from the nature, and the +level of the soil, water was found very near the surface, dews were +deposited; as on the <i>Chummums</i> or low marshy pasturages at Candahar, +Cabul, etc.</p> +<p>But even these were trifling, the aridity of the air being too great +as compared with the small extent of Chummums, to allow the deposit +of any considerable portion of the moisture it had derived from the +ground.</p> +<p>So that aridity, instead of being adapted to dews, is a serious obstacle +to their ever appearing. With the rarity of dew, that of hoarfrost +which is nothing but frozen dew, may be associated; nor does hoarfrost +often occur, because in Khorassan it rains in the winter too freely, +particularly in all such places whose elevation is not sufficient to +cause the formation of snow, and hence where other circumstances are +favourable for hoarfrosts, <i>they</i> <i>are</i> <i>too</i> <i>much</i> +<i>watered</i> as it were, and seldom occur. With extreme aridity, +Khorassan unites extreme electricity, the casual friction of woollen +cloths, especially those of camels’ hair being accompanied by +discharges sufficiently startling. The same thing happens when +caressing dogs or horses. I could never fill the barometer without +experiencing a shock as the mercury approached the <i>bottom</i> <i>end</i> +of the tube, which (when nervous) used to endanger it.</p> +<p>It is this extreme aridity that gives Khorassan so rich a spring +flora, this season being that of rain, of melting of snow, and the ground +being well moistened.</p> +<p>It is this extreme aridity that necessitates the abundance of bulbous +plants in Khorassan, these deposits of nutrition existing even in several +of its Compositæ.</p> +<p>Query—Why are Carduaceæ, (Artemisia) so adapted to aridity?</p> +<p>The region of Carduaceæ, commences about Ghuzni, and extends +to <i>Maidan</i> or Cabul, it is at its maximum about Shaikabad and +Huftasya. The abundance of Carduaceæ on the higher grounds, +as for instance towards Bamean, belong rather to a vernal flora.</p> +<p>I hope to be particular in hereafter comparing the floras of all +the deserts? and to notice the absurd remarks of some travellers in +Khoristhan, on the domesticated parasitic nature of the watermelon plant, +on the Hedysarum Alhagi, <i>Shooturkari</i>.</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—Fine moderate north-east wind, very clear.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—Over-clouded.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—Rain.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Unsettled.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Rain, thunder, distant lightning occasionally last +night.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Fine: ice in the morning, thermometer five feet +from the ground 35° at 7 A.M.</p> +<p><i>9th</i>.—Fine diffused clouds last night, succeeded by a +strong northeast wind.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—Fine.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Fine in the morning, then threatening.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—Quite over-clouded, north-east wind. The +inferior level of snow is now several hundred feet above that which +it was at first.</p> +<p>Oxalis corniculata in abundance, what an universal plant this is.</p> +<p>All the natives of these parts wear sandals, those about the Khyber +being made of the leaves of a small Chamærops, which is common +on the rocks of those mountains.</p> +<p>A proof of the extreme want of useful plants is seen in the fact, +that baskets are scarcely ever seen, all the loads of flour, etc. being +invariably carried in skins.</p> +<p>Leopards’ skins for the purpose are obtained from Chugur Serai, +Pullung and also Sofaid-Koh.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—The troops marched on their return. A lark +very much like the English species occurs in flocks; it is a stupid +bird, although obviously aware of its resemblance to clods of earth, +which it makes use of on every occasion when a little frightened. +The Gypaëtos is also found here; it feeds principally on carrion. +I observed Trichrodroma for the first time here to-day, this bird is +by no means a powerful climber; indeed the individual seen to-day could +only cling, he was employed about sand banks of the irrigating canals, +etc. hopping from one likely spot to another, clinging here and there +momentarily, and always aiding himself in his inclined position by a +flutter of his wings; holes seemed always to attract him. It is +by no means a shy bird. I should observe however that I have seen +this species running up and down cliffs, so that perhaps the rather +loose sand would not give firm hold to his claws.</p> +<p>As I mentioned elsewhere, this bird is allied, at least in analogy +to Upupa, it has its precise habit of flight and a good deal of its +habits in looking for food, although the Hoopoe pokes about in the ground, +or rather hammers the ground alone. It is however fond of building +in holes of walls, it breeds at Punukka, in April.</p> +<p>I observed, and shot a weasel, or a <i>mungoose</i> to-day, whilst +it was employed feeding on the cast away skin of a goat or sheep, so +that some of these creatures evidently feed occasionally on carrion, +although they are said to live upon live prey.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XIX.</h3> +<p><i>On</i> <i>the</i> <i>Reproductive</i> <i>Organs</i> <i>of</i> +<i>Acotyledonous</i> <i>plants</i>.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—Fine weather, the sun daily increasing in power, +is having a remarkable effect on the peculiar spring vegetation, but +this is not sufficiently developed to bring in the corresponding birds +and insects. Gypaëtos is common now about the dead camels.</p> +<p>On the low east ridge, along the path that leads over the river, +ruins of ancient times are discernible, this only adds another to the +many proofs of similarly situated ruins, that the people who built them +have been located about Cabul, Jallalabad, and Peshawur, certainly not +about Candahar.</p> +<p>In the soil between the rocks, and in their crevices saturated with +moisture, most of the plants are just sprouting. Trichonema, Crocus, +and one or two other monocotyledons, Labiatæ? Sedum three or four +species, exclusive of Sedoides foliis deltoides sphathulatis, and a +Stapelioid Asclepias, are to be found. I also got a new fern, +the fourth species out of 1,300 sp. it is a Ceterach or Grammitis, a +curious stalked snuff-ball, and one or two other Fungi, with an inverted +cap, were met with.</p> +<p>In the fields a young Ranunculus in profusion, Veronica agrestis, +Euphorbia, Festuca annua?</p> +<p>Kochia spinosa, and a curious Mathioloid are among the few wild plants +to be found about Pushut.</p> +<p>It would be a curious circumstance if all indusiate ferns were to +be found reducible to a <i>marginal</i> <i>production</i> of the reproductive +apparatus. I will bear this in mind, as certain forms of Pteris +or its affinities lead me to suspect that in these tribes the indusium +may be a long way from the margin, and yet be, quoad origin, marginal; +this section illustrates my meaning.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m444.jpg"> +<img alt="Fern sections" src="images/m444.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The transition to this might reasonably be suspected. The philosophy +of ferns is most ill understood, the higher points connected with them +have been quite neglected, and botanists in this as in other departments +of the science have been contented to confer names on certain external +forms, without sufficient regard to structure.</p> +<p>To-day I commenced examining Adiantum, with the view of determining +if possible the nature of its reproductive organs, and the mode in which +they are impregnated, if they are impregnated at all.</p> +<p>As I had long been aware that the fructification of each frond is +a thing to be determined at a very early period, and that if not determined +then, it is never likely to be determined afterwards, my attention was +directed more strongly, if possible, than it would have been otherwise, +to examining the subject at the earliest possible stage of its development.</p> +<p>The first piece examined gave me the idea that I had trouvé +le nœud de l’affairé; the second made me doubt this; +the subsequent ones went far to disprove it.</p> +<p>I was immediately struck with the resemblance of those organs, called +ramenta, to what are fairly assumed to be the male bodies, in certain +other families of the same grand division; and I at once came to the +conclusion, that the barren fronds, were barren, because almost destitute +of these ramenta; and that as these ramenta were confined to the base +of the stalk, that is, to the part below its first ramification, an +obvious necessity existed for the peculiar nature of the vernation.</p> +<p>Further examination of the thing, especially of the base of the stipes +and the adjoining part of the rhizoma, threw me back almost into my +original difficulties. I find that the rhizoma is entirely covered +with ramenta, which are brown, much detached at the base, and obviously +represent a low form of leaf, i.e. in appearance, perhaps partly in +function, but not in structure. Among these, mature ramenta at +the punctas of prolongation, which appear to be very irregular, are +concealed, others much smaller, and much narrower, (which bear as obvious +a resemblance, or even more so to the male organs of certain other orders,) +than the ramenta on the stipes. These are never entirely brown, +the end cell alone is coloured, but though occasionally tinged with +brown, they are filled with some fluid (even this is not so at first,) +but do not appear to open. I believe that subsequently all become +highly tinged with brown, but what increase of growth they subsequently +undergo, I know not. The terminal cell is always solitary, very +often attached to the one next it, which is generally single, obliquely +placed, occasionally looking like the dimidiate calyptra capping a young +seta. The number of cells forming the base, or dilated part varies, +but is always small in proportion to the larger ramenta, or protecting +scales: these last have a single terminal cell, which in fact must be +the same in every really cellular growth <i>sooner</i> <i>or</i> <i>later</i>, +the last degree of formative power being the production of a single +cell.</p> +<p>At a subsequent period, still an early one, the terminal cell is +fuscous-brown, and this colour then extends to the next in various degrees, +but if it reaches the basilar ones at all, it does so at late periods. +The base of the terminal cell, and parts of the parietes of the next +and next, present a coagulated appearance, precisely as in certain mosses.</p> +<p>No such thing as a petiolate leaf occurs in acrogens, all are attached +by a broad base? Of acrogenous leaves, those only are leaves whose +attachment is at right angles with the stem; the rest are divisions +of a frond. Thus far with the ramenta. The divisions of +the frond, are, I find, not gyrate, but rather cochleariform involate. +The future reproductiveness is settled at a very early period, and is +distinguishable under the microscope by a sort of <i>margination</i> +of the frondlets. In the earliest stage I have looked at, the +margin is greenish, striated by narrow cells, and passes into the body +of the leaf gradually; the greater development is perhaps central; even +now the bulk of the cells of the leaflet have green granules, and are +opaque from air. The vessels are marked out, or at least their +future course, and along them the opacity from air does not exist, so +that the veins appear depressed.</p> +<p>The next stage presented a greater development of an isolation of +the margin, but no other change. The next presented an isolation +of the margin, which remains almost white, the other part being green, +but more so because of a thickening as it were along the base of the +marginal part, and an evident deposit of grumous matter, from which, +under every circumstance new tissue seems always to be developed. +Pressure causes its discharge, its contents were unappreciated by my +poor instruments; after this the leaflets revert to the appearance of +the second stage. Here I ceased for the day, having I think ascertained +that ferns are endorhizal, and that the primary divisions of the roots +hence have sheaths, which adhere to the apex of the root itself.—What +a strange union of roots, that of monocotyledons in the main divisions, +and of pure acrogens in the minor!!</p> +<p>I cannot help thinking that the secret is hidden in these ramenta, +which, as is known, are so universal as obviously to have higher functions +than those of mere covering scales. The appearance of those I +have described as existing about the points of growth, are exactly the +same as the processes mixed with the anthers of mosses, and of which +the anthers are nothing but more developed growths; this would point +out, as indeed appears to me otherwise evident, (especially from consideration +of the theca, and its want of style,) that ferns are lower organised +as sexual beings than mosses and Hepaticæ. I know nothing +of Lycopodineæ, more than they are the highest of all acrogens; +and are not to be included in the same category with ferns.</p> +<p>The objection to the ramenta being anthers, will be the closed nature +(<i>apparently</i>) of the terminal cell, and although the anthers of +mosses do burst, and most especially those of Hepaticæ, yet the +argument is not conclusive—inasmuch as <i>boyaux</i>, to which +they are analogous <i>do</i> <i>not</i> <i>open</i>?</p> +<p>These ramenta explain fully the nature of those confervoid organs +found in some Neckeræ, and perhaps in other mosses, and it becomes +paramount to prove whether these Neckeræ have also the usual anthers, +or if they are confined to these, in which case a presumptive proof +will thus be afforded of their functions: if they have both forms, they +will nevertheless constitute an analogous passage between the two orders: +if they have only <i>these</i>, such Neckeræ will form, as indeed +they do, a very distinct genus.</p> +<p>The nature of the barren fronds requires distinct analysis. +Are they barren from mere deficiency in supplies, such as may result +from many circumstances; or are the antheriform ramenta deficient? +They are barren from defective growth. I am aware how readily +objection may be taken to these views, some will say these young ramenta +are nothing but young scales as the older ones evidently are scales; +but this amounts to nothing, because we may expect simplicity in the +sexual organs of this division, and it will be only a proof of the uniformity +of nature in making so great a difference in a function depend on, or +be associated with so small a one in form. My view I think explains +their uniformly brown colour—analogous to Brown’s sphacelation +in mutatis mutandis.</p> +<p>Others will say how absurd the idea is, when you cannot show the +place to which the impregnating influence is to be applied. But +the consideration of mosses does away with this objection partly, and +that of Anthoceros, entirely; because in mosses, the <i>ovule</i>, or +pre-existing cell, ready to receive the male influence becomes an empty +cell, terminating the seta; and the sporula become developed at its +opposite end, the first growth appearing to be quite unconnected with +that of the future reproductive organs: and in Anthoceros there is no +fixed punctum ready for the application of the male organs, but these +have to form a communication with the lower, or inferior cellular tissue +of the frond, before even the growth of seta can commence.</p> +<p>Besides a case in point exists in Viscum, or Loranthus, in which +no point is ready prepared for the reception of the male influence; +showing how universal the law is, that in no one point or place is there +an absolute want of gradation.</p> +<p>As in mosses the influence of the male <i>disregarding</i> <i>the</i> +<i>ovule</i>, is thrown into the development of the seta, and then of +the theca at the apex of this; there can be no conclusive reason why +in ferns the same influence should be thrown into the development of +the frond, and then into that of the theca.</p> +<p>While Anthoceros proves that in these orders the male influence may +exert its effects upon any point.</p> +<p>As there is no styliform production in Anthoceros, so there is none +in ferns. If the ramenta be anthers, they will not be dubious +ones, because as they remain fixed, people cannot say, that possibly +they are also reproductive bodies, which by the bye is no objection +at all, after instances of anthers bearing <i>ovules</i> instead of +pollen!</p> +<p>Why the peculiar distribution of the male influence (on which we +determine our genera,) takes place, is another question, and one that +cannot be fairly asked?</p> +<p>Why it is confined to the under surface perhaps can, it being a law +that in all cases it is the under surface of the leaf, or its modification, +from which new growths originate, and as nature has closed indusia, +how could the under surface be interior if this rule were not regularly +adhered to?</p> +<p>That the indusium is a <i>special</i> organ, i.e. not an eruption +of the cuticle, I am sure; hence it is essential to examine extensively +both indusiate and other forms, the precise extension of their veins, +etc. at an early period to ascertain if their most diversified situations +cannot be reduced to some one type.</p> +<p><i>Query</i>. Is the gyrate vernation of any ferns comparable +to the form of certain shells, to which (at least Mollusca) ferns are +supposed to be analogous.</p> +<p><i>Memo</i>. To ascertain the most peculiar, and most universal +points of Mollusca and Pseudo cotyledonea, it is in this way that we +may hope to extend our views. Some there are indeed who, while +the whole course of their studies has been to neglect structure, deny +the applicability of presumptive evidence in favour of doctrines, the +subjects of which are barely susceptible of direct proof. Thus +Greville and Arnott, angrily ask, what do persons mean by saying that +mosses have pistilla, etc.? they protest against such community of application +in the use of terms. Many more deny sexuality because it has not +been proved. Considering the invisible nature of the fluid of +the anthers of mosses, etc. how do they expect that we are to demonstrate +its application to the pistil, and the subsequent steps? As well +might they doubt the necessity of the application of the boyau to an +ovule, (or the existence of the boyau itself,) because the derivation +of the embryo cannot be proved.</p> +<p>One word more; in all cases the appearance of the reproductive body +after impregnation, is of late date; that date becomes later as we descend +the scale. The embryonary sac of Phænogams does not always +exist at the time of application of the boyau, and the appearance of +the embryo is always posterior to this.</p> +<p>Again, ferns are superior to mosses in this, that in many cases the +male influence is exerted directly on the parts that become the thecæ, +which is not the case in mosses.</p> +<p><i>18th</i>.—Continued examining ferns, and to-day completes +my knowledge of the ramenta of three different genera.</p> +<p>In the first which is Cryptogamma, the resemblance of the young ramenta +to the anthers of Jungermannia is evident enough, they are capital, +and the head is at one period filled with granular matter: so are the +cells throughout, to a greater or less extent. They are to be +seen in all stages of development on the pinnæ of a very young +frond, those near its base having perhaps effected their purpose, while +those at the apex of the pinna, or the prolonging part of pinnula, may +be formed of only one cell. It is curious that the terminal cell +does not become spherical for some time: in its earlier stages it is +cylindrical like the rest.</p> +<p>The appearances of the old ones are, if possible, more markedly in +favour of my hypothesis; there is the same aggregation of grumous <i>congealed</i> +matter about the ends of each cell, the same curious communication between +these masses which hide the septa from view, evincing a greater or less +tendency to assume the peculiar fuscesent or fusco-brown appearance. +I observed in two instances what appeared to me decided irregular openings +in the terminal cell, from one of which grumous filaments projected; +these appeared to communicate with the mass in the terminal cell, which +like that in all the others, is congealed; but it assumes a different +and very undefined form.</p> +<p>People may object and say, why were not more met with <i>opened</i>? +This is no objection, because it is obvious that a spherical body may +be opened in part of its surface, and yet unless this portion happens +to be on the <i>edge</i> as it were of the sphere, it may escape detection +with a microscope of poor penetration.</p> +<p>In this the ramenta are confined, or nearly so, to the under surface +of the fronds. Most occupy that which is called the costa. +In this the first change as in Adiantum is in the definition of the +margin. But this point I have not paid much attention to, as with +my present means here, it would be absurd to attempt <i>proving</i> +how the fecundation takes place; all that I can attempt is, to ascertain +from structure and analogy, the male nature of these curious bodies.</p> +<p><i>See</i> Plate <i>B</i> for the various sketches. <a name="citation450"></a><a href="#footnote450">{450}</a></p> +<p>The next genus examined, is perhaps the instance in which these ramenta +have the strongest resemblance to ordinary simple hairs, both in their +young, when they represent succulent, tinged, grumous molecular-containing +hairs, and in the old, when they represent long, flattened, coriaceous +hairs, still there is abundant evidence to prove that, however different +these bodies are in appearance from those of Cryptogamma, that they +undergo the same changes, excepting perhaps as to dehiscence. +We have a tendency to fuscous colouring, a tendency to the aggregation +of congealed matter about the septæ, precisely the places where +it is to be expected. The same appearance of a canal of communication, +the same irregular <i>constriction</i> of certain cells; in this too +the first change in the pinnæ, or its component lobes, is the +definition of the margin. In this genus the under surface of the +frond is covered with these <i>hairy</i>-<i>form</i> bodies (which have +been figured over and over again in Hooker and Greville’s ferns): +on the upper face, a few exist, but incomparably less developed.</p> +<p>From the examination of this genus alone, I do not think the idea +I have been so diffuse upon, would have struck me.</p> +<p>To-morrow I examine Ceterach, assured that the scales of its under +face are reducible to the same type. In a matter of such interest +and importance as this, many will, and with reason, dislike so important +an assumption on such inconclusive evidence. But with our present +means, it appears to me probable that no evidence to demonstration can +be looked for, and for this reason, that the contents of these peculiar +cells are so subtile as to escape definition even while in their cells, +(or under the most favourable circumstance for a concentration of attention.) +How much more so will this be the case, when we attempt to examine the +steps of the application of the fecundatory matter, applied over a surface +without any prominent points, and probably opaque.</p> +<p>When direct evidence is not to be had, we are justified in using +presumptive evidence. As in human law, so in the laws of nature, +presumptive evidence to a practised eye carries with it conviction. +We have no direct evidence how the embryo is formed, yet no one doubts +but that it is brought about by the agency of the boyau, which is a +cell containing grumous molecular matter. However different a +boyau may seem to many, yet when viewed in conjunction with Cycadeæ, +the graduation to the present case becomes natural, and even the resemblance +may be perfect, because in Cycas the grains of pollen get into the nucleus +bodily, although they would still seem to throw out short tails.</p> +<p>Wonderful is the simplicity of nature! The male organ in its +essence, consists of a single cell containing molecular matter.</p> +<p>The female in its essence consists of a single cell, likewise containing +similar matter. The influence of the male is exerted, and so another +cell is formed in the female cell, and this either becomes the embryo, +or gives origin to another cell, and so on, until the terminal one becomes +the embryo.</p> +<p>I believe from examination of the most developed scaly ramenta, that +these have at an earlier period been fecundating organs, the same peculiarities +are to be detected towards their ends, where in fact they retain their +original structure, the dilated base being a subsequent development.</p> +<p>In reference to this, the examination of young ferns on their arrival +at the age of puberty is indispensable. A curious question arises, +what is the frond of a fern? Is it a mass of foliaceous growth +containing certain lines of reproductive matter, or is it a distinct +development from the axis, in which the reproductive organs are situated? +Is it, or is it not, subservient to reproduction? Here again extensive +examination is necessary.</p> +<p>If it is altogether subordinate to reproduction, we may expect the +occurrence of far more simply constituted ferns than we are yet acquainted +with. In fact we may expect a form reduced to an axis, a few ramenta, +a frondose dilatation, and one punctum of reproductive organs.</p> +<p>With respect to duration, each frond is analogous to a single seta +of a moss, it has definite limits, and is unlike the fronds of certain +Hepaticæ, which are capable of compound growth; or if this is +the case in ferns, as it is in viviparous ferns, the new formation becomes +separated from the frond, as a Phænogamous gemma does. This +is a question of importance, as perhaps it may prove that all the foliaceous +forms, except Lycopodium, Equisetum, and Chara, are frondose; the dorsal +situation is in favour of this assumption, since in all the genuine +frondose forms, the reproductive organs of both kinds originate immediately +from the under surface, although they may protrude through the upper.</p> +<p>I here ask, is there not <i>primâ</i> <i>facie</i> evidence +that these organs have peculiar functions; a peculiar form, attended +with peculiar changes, must have peculiar functions; and will any one +show me in any single instance, like circumstances to the like extent, +in any of those organs called hairs? By the bye, ferns themselves +may prove that however like these are to certain forms of hair, yet +that their functions are different, because the glandular hairs of ferns +do not undergo the same alterations, and are evidently nothing but hairs, +probably secretory.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—In Ceterach the same thing occurs precisely, with +this difference, that the <i>capita</i> of the ramenta are highly developed; +and still more, that the terminations of each pinnula of the young frond, +are mere scales without a terminal <i>head</i>.</p> +<p>So that almost all the scales of the under surface of the lobes of +the mature frond, are mere scales. The peculiar ramenta are to +be looked for along the insertion of each pinna, and along the rachis, +in which all have the peculiar structure.</p> +<p>At the time that these scales are commencing their development, the +peculiar ones are at the age of mature perfection, so far as function +goes. No one can look at a young pinnula at this epoch and observe +the evident capitation of each ramentum, the inflexion of its apex, +so that the head is brought into contact with the frond, without suspecting +that they have the same relation of <i>cause</i> to the appearance subsequently +of the thecæ or capsules. It is curious that the colour +of the scales is the same as that of the ramenta, in which the colour +is developed from above <i>downwards</i>, a peculiarity as it appears +to me.</p> +<p>The frond of Ceterach is very frondose-looking, it has stomata on +its under surface, and the cells of the cuticle very sinuate. +There can be no doubt of the propriety of including the nature of these +ramenta and scales in its generic character.</p> +<p>I can see nothing peculiar in the situation of the scales or ramenta +to suggest the reason of the situation of the capsules.</p> +<p>In several cases, each pinna appears to have scales only which become +barren lobes? the scales and ramenta have the same imbricate situation. +In this country it will be useless to expect more proofs. But +the four genera alluded to afford evidence enough, and sufficient to +show that these ramenta are formed with reference to some important +function, that their universality is incompatible with any functions +of such minor degree as are attributed to them by those who represent +them to be scales or hairs.</p> +<p>To those who require proof of the existence of the complex male organ +of Phænogams, or of a male of that form with which only they are +familiar, I do not address myself; but to the philosophic botanist, +who expects to meet with in the lower orders of plants, a lower organization, +one with a tendency of reduction to the essential elements, and who +bears in mind the comparative anatomy and structure of similar bodies +in adjoining, or not very distant groups, I beg leave to suggest the +intimate study of the ramenta of Ferns.</p> +<p>Various as the situation of the fructification is, in three out of +the above four genera, yet the initial arrangements are precisely the +same. The various forms therefore may not depend proximately on +fructification itself, but on the peculiar growth given to the species, +in the same way in fact as we have the numerous modifications of the +theca in mosses, etc. and the infinite modifications of the carpels +in Phænogams.</p> +<p>(Attention is particularly pointed to those ferns which have general +capsules or involucres.</p> +<p>Above all to the Cyatheoid forms.</p> +<p>To Ophioglossum.</p> +<p>To naked Thecæ.</p> +<p>To indusiate as Asplenia, etc.)</p> +<p>But however erroneous these views may be, they will still have been +of service if general attention is directed by them to plants, in consequence +of the suggestions they make. The time now thrown away on isolated +species, the station of which, still does not become fixed, when devoted +to the philosophical examination of ferns, will rescue botany from one +of its numerous reproaches. It is strange that such should exist +to the greatest degree in all those families stamped by nature as most +distinct. Those chaoses Polypodium, Aspidium, Davallia, would +then undergo distinct creation, and the primary divisions of the family +would become fixed; and we should then be spared the reproach of drawing +characters from organs, of the nature and functions of which we are +quite ignorant of, and of the importance of which in a science of demonstration +like that of botany, it is impossible to judge, without a true knowledge +of structure.</p> +<p>Vide Lindley’s Introd. ed. 2, 407, for the protest of Greville +and Arnott.</p> +<p>What is the most comprehensive definition of a pistil. A case +in which the future organs of reproduction are developed; and here is +a most curious circumstance, namely, that though the calyptra, which +is a genuine pistillum containing an <i>ovulum</i>, becomes torn up +from its base, yet it remains in contact with that part of the seta +in which the sporules are developed until these make their appearance, +or even later!! so that one might as well deny a pistillum to a Reseda, +or Leontice, as deny it to these plants on the strength of its being +torn from its attachments. Sprengel’s objections are worthy +only of being noticed from their having been quoted by Lindley. +The vagueness of his statement destroys all weight.</p> +<p>His objections in all cases amount to the fact, that the <i>stellulæ</i> +or <i>buds</i> containing the anthers are capable of growth. So +is the prolongation of an axis of Ananassa.</p> +<p>A Gemma has a general character in its formation as well as an anther, +or as pollen; one is a congeries of cellular tissue, with or without +vessels, the other a sac consisting of a single cell containing active +molecular matter. As an anther producing a single grain of pollen +is not inconsistent with our notions of structure, so neither is an +anther consisting of a single grain of pollen.</p> +<p>Will any one show me an instance of a proved gemma taking upon itself +the form of one of these anthers? Will any show an instance of +a sac containing fluid matter capable of growth <i>after</i> <i>dehiscence</i>. +The real gemmæ of the Hepaticæ puts the question of gemmæ +out of doubt. Is there any plant existing with two sorts of gemmæ, +so differently constituted? Many phænogams have gemma in +addition to sexes, so have Hepaticæ. Which is the most probable? +That they should have no sexes, reproductive organs, and two sorts of +gemmæ, or sexes, reproductive organs, or gemmæ of one evident +kind?</p> +<p>I cannot adopt the belief of any one having seen the germination +of the powder in the axillary bodies, that is, if applicable to the +organs I take for anthers.</p> +<p>(<i>Memorandum</i>.—To draw up a parallel between the two sets +of organs, and the steps followed in the development of each.)</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XX.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Pushut</i> <i>to</i> <i>Kettore</i> <i>and</i> <i>Barowl</i> +<i>in</i> <i>Kaffiristan</i>, <i>and</i> <i>return</i> <i>to</i> <i>Pushut</i> +<i>and</i> <i>Cabul</i>.</p> +<p><i>February</i> <i>20th</i>.—Fumaria found.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Cloudy, threatening rain. Swallows coming +in, also Fringillaria, with blackish cheek-streaks, also Pyrgita alia, +starlings uncommon up to this day about the site of the camp, where +there is much straw, and camels are lying. Flocks of <i>rooks</i>, +genuine rooks, flocks of daws, <i>minas</i>, pigeons, and many carrion +crows have been daily resorting to camp, all very wild from being constantly +fired at, as in this country every man almost has a matchlock. +No Gypaëtos seen for several days.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Fine weather after two days uncertain, in which +the large-headed lark has just come in abundance, this and the <i>English</i> +one frequent fields; the crystal one is found almost exclusively on +certain stony cultivated places: swallows have likewise arrived with +many wild fowl. Four raptorial birds are now seen about this, +or rather three, for Gypaëtos has gone, viz. the common kite, or +one which looks much like it, a beautiful white slaty-blue and black +<i>harrier</i>, at least it comes about constantly, and looks much like +an Indian species, and much like one I shot high up in Bootan, together +with a large blackish and white one, with a <i>distinct</i> <i>collar</i>. +The fishing hawk, I saw it yesterday catch a large fish, making a strong +rapid plunge boldly into the water, and emerging again from it without +much difficulty; its habits except while fishing, are very sedentary, +and it seems to prefer <i>one</i> <i>spot</i>, viz. the top of some +particular tree, near perhaps its favourite feeding place.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—Another new bird has come in. A <i>Fringillina</i>, +with curious Flycatcher habits, I have only seen two individuals, they +perch towards the top of trees, and thence sally out after winged insects. +I examined the contents of its stomach, and found only seeds, gravel, +and soft insects.</p> +<p>The sun is increasing wonderfully in power, but the trees are not +as yet budded. Shrubby Polygoneæ, with flagellate branches +and leaves, in which the petiole is as much developed as the lamina, +form a curious feature of Affghan Flora; Euphorbia linifolia common, +the herbaceous one in profusion.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—Spring coming on rapidly, snow not within 2,000 +feet of where it was twenty days back, and the sun oppressively hot; +winged ants in abundance: whenever this happens it proves the perfection +of the crows, which are on all such occasions to be seen acting the +part of flycatchers in addition to their various other callings, soaring +and sweeping round after these insects, but not returning as Merops +or real flycatchers to a fixed station. I have hitherto seen only +the jackdaws at this spot in Calcutta, but here the real crow mingles +in it.</p> +<p>In Calcutta, the common kite often acts a similar part, but catches +only <i>with</i> <i>its</i> <i>feet</i>.</p> +<p>A small kingfisher is to be found here <i>rarely</i>, it is much +like the Indian blue and reddish one, the white and black kingfisher +is not seen here, although found at Jallalabad.</p> +<p>The species of <i>sub</i>-wader, with a stout upturned beak, is a +true Grallator, yet is not always about water, but often in the driest +places; the genus has a flight strongly resembling that of certain Anatidæ.</p> +<p>A <i>Monaul</i> pheasant, or some similar splendid bird is found +in the snows of Kaffiristan, all I have seen of it are a few feathers.</p> +<p>Merula more common, <i>Anthus</i>, <i>Timalia</i>, observed.</p> +<p>To-day one good specimen of a splendid pinus, allied to P. longifolia, +was brought from the mountains, where it is found <i>among</i> <i>snow</i>: +this makes the third species; one cultivated at Candahar near a mosque; +the short-leaved <i>Julghozeh</i>, from Tazeen; and this one which has +as fine a cone as can be wished.</p> +<p>Where did the profusion of Justicia Adhatoda which I find here come +from, is it not a distinct species?</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Proceeded to Chugur Serai, started +from the other side of the ferry at 11.30 A.M., and reached at 4 P.M. +No halt of any consequence on the road. Passed Nachung at 12.50: +the first rocky ground occurred at the narrow part of the north side +of the valley 2.25.</p> +<p>15th.—And thence to Chugur 4 P.M., distance certainly thirteen +miles.</p> +<p>Road decent, good about half-way, where it extends over cultivation +on firm ground, then over rocky, stony, raviny ground. From the +12.50 station, the valley becomes much narrower, and the river confined +to one bed: cultivation scanty, between this and Chugur, where, about +400 yards of excessively difficult ground occurred, commanded by the +precipice under which the path, which is execrable, runs. It is +quite impassable for guns.</p> +<p>After this the country traversed seemed to be well cultivated: and +even picturesque.</p> +<p>The fort is nothing particular; it is placed on the right bank of +the river, which is deep, narrow and raviny: descent to the river abrupt. +The bridge very richly ornamented, and of curious and simple Bootan +timber construction.</p> +<p>Town small, and the people very civil: I lodged in Meer Alum’s +own house.</p> +<p>Iris crocifolia abundant, towards Chugur, a Mazus or Stemodia.</p> +<p>Mimosa that of the Khyber, common, Polygoni in abundance on the rocks, +Dodonæa.</p> +<p>The hills about Pushut are here only recognisable in two instances, +the central one presenting three peaks, next to it the barren cliff, +and the three mountains south-west of Dhurrah.</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—Proceeded to Bala Chugur Serai, which is not more +than six miles up the river, occasionally passing along the stony bank +under hills, otherwise over cultivation, which is conducted in terraces.</p> +<p>The scenery pretty, reminding me of low parts of Bootan, although +much more barren; watercourses well made: two <i>kafir</i> ruins passed; +valley very narrow, but rather straight. Both chakor and small +partridges common. Vegetation is here the same as elsewhere. +Zaitoon trees, Mimosa, Euonymus, Dodonæa, Amygdalus in abundance, +Polygonum of yesterday.</p> +<p>The stony slopes of hills, covered with Andropogoneous grasses. +Rice, beans, wheat, oranges, <i>toot</i>, <i>chanra</i>. Narcissus +in swarms, brought in from the <i>kafirs</i>.</p> +<p>Another bridge was here crossed, the same as at lower Chugur Serai. +No tributaries passed, the river fordable at rapids, but the road is +not passable for guns.</p> +<p>Aquila, Enicurus, Alcedo bengalensis common, as well as jack snipe.</p> +<p>Red-billed crow, chakor, yellow wagtail, Fringilla, Muscicapa in +flocks, feeding in the fields, and from trees on insects.</p> +<p>The blackbird of the Himalayas, wild pigeons. Narcissus in +abundance in sandy fields, Cryptandrioid, Clematis, Rubus, Euonymus, +Pteris!</p> +<p>We had an interview with the <i>kafirs</i> or infidels about a mile +below Katoor, they seemed at first much alarmed, our retinue not being +small or unarmed, and their reliance on Mussulman faith not very strong. +They took up their post at the foot of a hill where a deputation of +the Khan of Chugur Serai, (who has married a Chief’s daughter) +met them; they received the deputation with a <i>feu</i> <i>de</i> <i>joie</i> +from one or two firelocks, and then accompanied him to us, preceded +by two drums, one of ordinary, the other of an hour-glass shape, and +two pipes of gramineous culm, with three or four holes, and apparently +oblique mouth-pieces, but of ordinary sound. The Chiefs, the head +of whom is Hussin Ali’s father-in-law, having been introduced, +advanced, and commenced turning and stamping round a circle.</p> +<p>The usual formalities then took place; the followers, although a +fine bodied people, and very active, were excessively dirty, and not +very fair; most were dressed in skins, having the hair inside, armed +with bows, either straight or like cow’s horns, and daggers.</p> +<p>The Chiefs were much fairer than their followers, and in the expression +of face and eyes European; but in all cases the forehead was very slanting, +and head generally badly developed.</p> +<p>Their dress consisted of cotton frocks, with slashed sleeves, embroidered +thickly with worsted network: they wear short <i>pyjamas</i>, and skin +shoes, with thick skin soles; one had short boots with hair inside: +most were ornamented with the blue and yellow <i>longhys</i> of Pushut, +etc. The hair is cut short except that of the Chiefs, who had +fillets left round their heads, adorned with cowries, in radiated shapes, +with a red, worsted, pendant tassel. The headman had a pendant +wire chain with ornaments, and from the centre of the tassel, the <i>Monaul</i> +pheasant feathers, and his back hair was plaited into many little tails.</p> +<p>Almost all had necklaces of beads, the better sort silver earrings +(plain rings), and some pendant silver ornaments; many had bracelets, +ornamented with brass; <i>kumurbunds</i> of plain white cloths: the +poor ones have their heads naked, or with bits of cloth wrapped round.</p> +<p>They had no swords, but Hindoostany ones, and of these very few.</p> +<p>Even their archery, Macgregor says is bad; one or two had spears, +the Chief’s spear was provided with a very long head, and ornamented +with cowrie shells at the top of the <i>haft</i>; two women came afterwards, +their necks loaded with cowries and bits of bones, but otherwise well +clothed with the usual gowns, the outer one without sleeves and very +wide arm holes. They were decorated with very coarse, large, circular +earrings. They approached the rest singing in chorus, not unmelodiously, +but with very little variation in notes. Then a whistle, general +and loud from the whole party, representing their rejoicing over a slaughtered +Mussulman.</p> +<p>On the whole these people present nothing peculiar as compared with +other hill people: like them they are vindictive, savage, poor, dirty, +remarkable for great cupidity, fond of red cloth, beads, etc. +They are a mixed race, some are like Indians, some like Europeans, but +in all the forehead is low, Tartar eyes, often light brown or grey, +hair often light. Put them among the Nagas, etc. of the Assam +frontier, and none would notice them.</p> +<p>The Chief’s son wore a black, narrow band round his head, ornamented +behind with a few cowries and bone ornaments.</p> +<p>They are independent, appear to delight in talking of their victories +over the Mussulmans, but the oddest peculiarity as compared with Asiatics, +is their shaking hands, which was certainly done with us in the European +custom.</p> +<p>The limits of the firs, are as strict as those of Baloot, etc., of +the latter it may be stated as between 3,500 to 5,600 feet, of the firs +between 5,500 and 8,000; what makes me say this is, that at Katoor the +mountains are covered with heavy snow, and are naked above, but with +heavy pine forest below, and then with forests of Baloot.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—Ascended the hills to about 200 feet above the +limits of inferior snow, which may be estimated at about 4,500 feet.</p> +<p>These hills from 3,500 feet and upwards, are well wooded, presenting +no peculiarity in the distribution of the woods, which are thin, or +thickish only in sheltered parts, down ravines, etc. but presenting +a great peculiarity in the small variety of forms, for there are not +more than three kinds of trees, and not more than a dozen shrubs: the +trees are Baloot, which commence at the base, and ascend to the pines, +say a height of 4,000 feet: Zaitoon, which commences at the base, and +scarcely extends beyond 5,000 feet, Xanthoxylon, which has a wider range +than Zaitoon, is comparatively rare.</p> +<p>The inclination of these hills is steep, but the ascent is not more +extraordinarily difficult, they are covered with masses and blocks of +rock, which are plentifully clothed with lichens and mosses, but of +small variety of species. The more open parts are covered with +Andropogoneous grasses; the lemon-grass occurs below.</p> +<p>The shrubs and trees are as follows with their Pushtoo names—</p> +<pre>Zanthoxylon, <i>Schneæ</i> <i>khinfuch</i>, +Quercus Baloot, <i>Ichairraye</i>. +Olea, <i>Khoo</i>-<i>unn</i> <i>Zaitoon</i>. +Amygdalus, <i>Budam</i>, <i>Junglee</i> <i>Tulk</i>. +Nanus, <i>Naguhn</i>. +Celtis, <i>Tanghuh</i>. +Cyrtisoid of Bolan, <i>Wooraijoa</i>. +Periploca, <i>Burrara</i>, <i>Banduk</i>. +Cotoneaster of Tazeen, <i>Khurrowa</i>. +Euonymus, <i>Churroghzye</i>. +Dodonæa , <i>Wroolarskye</i>. +Artemisia, <i>Tuhakar</i>. +Rubus, <i>Khusuhurra</i>.</pre> +<p>The higher ridges are crowned with beautiful pines; the most common +on this side is called <i>Nukhtur</i>, and has not eatable seeds, its +timber is in general use—and it is in much vogue for torches.</p> +<p>The <i>Julghozeh</i> also is met with, but rarely. Abundance +of firewood.</p> +<p>Ixioides very common, and now in flower, Amygdalus, <i>Budam</i>, +also, this is common, and a curious Irideous plant, allied to Crocus; +one Arum likewise occurs. Pigeons very wary, mostly of the green +sort with whitish wing-coverts; a pretty small-sized Jay occurs, with +a jerking bobtailed flight, a strong-billed Parus, of the climbing sub-genus, +Chakors common.</p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>6th</i>.—Rain almost all day.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Unsettled weather continues. To-day the <i>kafirs</i> +came in with plants of a decided Himalayan nature, a beautiful Iris, +the flowers of which are of a deep indigo-blue, a Viburnum, Euonymus, +Valeriana, Juniperus, Spiræacea, Adiantum, Asplenium, Pteris, +etc.</p> +<p>How strangely intelligent all hill people are, and how they are urged +by an insatiable love of money. I never expected any thing to +be brought in, judging of the <i>kafirs</i> as I have learnt to do of +Affghans and Indians, and here they have in one day, without even a +lesson, brought in excellent specimens, including mosses, etc. +I went out to-day to the end of Meer Alum’s territory, this boundary +being about one and a quarter miles beyond Shingan. The valley +up to this is beautifully cultivated, and begins to look green. +Saw and shot another Myophonus, a Saxicola and an Alcedo, the common +one of India; this species has strengthening splints, as it were on +both mandibles: and the feet, etc. have no scales, being very different +from those of the generality of birds.</p> +<p>Myophonus I take to be the large beautiful metallic-blue blackbird, +with obscure and elegant white markings. I have observed common +to all hills I have seen, and is always found in damp wet places, this +bird is very wary, and in carriage much like the English blackbird, +on alighting from its short flight, flirting its tail about, etc. +This bird leads me to remark how widely the river chats are distributed. +The beautiful white-crowned black and red species, and the grey, with +a red tail, are found about all hill streams in the north-eastern parts +of India; the latter is a curious bird, radiating its tail out constantly. +Enicurus is also widely distributed.</p> +<p>I also got to-day a beautiful male Lophophorus, the plumage of which +surpasses description; it is a heavy bird, with brown irides, and a +brownish-chesnut tail; it came from Daiwag.</p> +<p>I met with five <i>kafirs</i>, when out to-day, only one would come +to me; he was a very tall man, with a savage face, light keen eyes, +returning from a forage on the Safis: he was an <i>Arunsha</i> man, +and a <i>Tor</i> <i>kafir</i>, who are represented as very different +from the <i>Espheen</i> or white ones, who are found in the mountains +adjacent to Balk, etc. Arunsha is three days journey from this, +and has a lame, or one-<i>legged</i> chief, <i>Dheemoo</i>; my friend’s +name was <i>Bazaar</i>, he was armed with a matchlock taller than himself, +and the usual dagger. How they compete with the Mussulmans I cannot +imagine, as they can only fight in close quarters, and for which they +have daggers about six inches long in the blade.</p> +<p>The <i>Kafir</i> names of the plants brought in are as follows:—</p> +<pre>* <i>Praitsoo</i>, Hedera. + <i>Akrumah</i>, Iris. +* <i>Kreemapotak</i>, Melanthium. + <i>Daisoo</i>, Urtica urens? +* <i>Joh</i>, Laricoides. + <i>Wheeree</i>, Ephedroides. +* <i>Amarr</i>, Rhamnea. + <i>Whishtur</i>, Juniperus. +* <i>Traih</i>, Quercus. +* <i>Unzoomal</i>, Spireæa. + <i>Gutsuttur</i>, Viola.</pre> +<p>Of these, those marked with an asterisk have no affinity at all with +the Khorassan Flora: nothing can show the change in the Flora of Katoor +better than this, that two <i>kafirs</i> bring in one day, without having +their attention directed to ferns, as many species as I have obtained +in all that part of Khorassan I have visited, amounting to 1,000 miles +in different latitudes and at very various elevations. The following +are the kafir names for the corresponding words:—</p> +<pre><i>Darr</i>, Mountain. <i>Wussut</i>, Goat. +<i>Trimm</i>, Snow. <i>Wemmi</i>, Doomba sheep. +<i>Trosse</i>, Ice. <i>Sovurr</i>, Hog. +<i>Wishin</i>, Rain. <i>Kookoor</i>, a Fowl. +<i>Earr</i>, Clouds. <i>Melli</i>, Bread. +<i>Populass</i>, Lightning. <i>Ow</i>, Water. +<i>Doodoowunn</i>, Thunder. <i>Undah</i>, Meat. +<i>Tsaih</i>, Sun. <i>Ornachoa</i>, Skin. +<i>Mass</i>, Moon. <i>Haddi</i>, Bone. +<i>Tarah</i>, Star. <i>Jeet</i>, Body. +<i>Geutte</i>, Jungul. <i>Shai</i>, Head. +<i>Julla</i>, Tree. <i>Ash</i>, Face. +<i>Poutte</i>, Leaf. <i>Uchain</i>, Eyes. +<i>Pushe</i>, Flower. <i>Jibb</i>, Tongue. +<i>Bhee</i>, Seed. <i>Mass</i>, Nose. +<i>Tat</i>, Father. <i>Dhermurr</i>, Neck. +<i>Zfee</i>, Mother. <i>Kaitss</i>, Hair. +<i>Porottr</i>, Boy, Son. <i>Deh</i>, Beard. +<i>Jhoo</i>, Girl, Daughter. <i>Troh</i>, Chest. +<i>Moochook</i>, a little Girl. <i>Booh</i>, Arm. +<i>Ooruttur</i>, a large ditto. <i>Ungree</i>, Hand. +<i>Birra</i>, Brother. <i>Sichupput</i>, Fingers. +<i>Soose</i>, Sister. <i>Noach</i>, Nail. +<i>Tsoon</i>, Dog. <i>Dust</i> <i>oungree</i>, Thumb. +<i>Pishash</i>, Cat. <i>Koorr</i>, Leg. +<i>Goh</i>, Cow. <i>Papoa</i>, Foot. +<i>Ghora</i>, Horse.</pre> +<p>The mixture of Hindoostanee names is very curious indeed, particularly +those names of things which, from being indigenous, one would suppose +would have indigenous names.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Went up to Bharowl and returned to-day, March 9th, +first went to Loongurze, the Barometer at which stood 24.758. +Therm. in sun 85°. Bharowl is a small plain, but still three +or four times larger than Loongurze, and perhaps 100 feet below it: +this place is up the ravine leading to the fourth peak of the west side, +which same peak must be between 9,000 to 10,000 feet high. Loongurze +is visible from this, and is more to the south.</p> +<p>The villages consist of several houses forming a sort of wall; outside, +the houses are of one story, with terraced roof, supported by timbers, +they are built of stones, slabs of micaceous slate, which is the prevailing +rock, and timbers interposed as ties; the rooms are very dark, and very +dirty, with no outlet for the smoke. The only part of the furniture +worth noticing consists of an inverted conical basket, made out of the +stems of some large grass, coated with mud, and truncated at the top, +used to keep grain in. The under, or ground floor appears to be +used for the domestic animals which are cows, goats, fowls, etc. +The inhabitants of Bharowl, <i>Bhawiolis</i>, are a <i>kafir</i> race +with a Mussulman cast of countenance, but fair, of an unhealthy look, +with in many cases light hair, and generally light eyes, they are a +rather large tribe, and appear to have but few wants, are very poor, +and very dirty; the better part of the men are clothed in Cashgar, <i>chargas</i>, +and ordinary cotton under-garments; the women dress in blue. Both +villages are on the limit of inferior snow at this season; there is +enough of cultivation about to supply their wants, chiefly wheat and +barley, and a sort of pea. Loongurze is infested with a villainous +midge, of the same genus as that of the Naga Hills, but few are to be +found at Bharowl.</p> +<p>At Loongurze I met a Khungurlye slave, of the caste Krungurlye, the +head-quarters of which are at a mountain village, about eight <i>cos</i> +off, in a north-west direction. The chief of Koorungul is Ahmed +Khan, he is independent: his village having 400 men, well armed.</p> +<p>The man wore a goat skin jacket without sleeves, a skull cap of camel +hair netted, and leggings to the ancle of the same, to keep off the +midges; these leggings are likewise used at Bharowl for the same purpose. +The following is a specimen of the Krungurlye dialect.</p> +<pre><i>Baba</i>, Father. <i>Wurrik</i>, Water. +<i>Aiee</i>, Mother. <i>Soourr</i>, Hog. +<i>Lohideck</i>, Brother. <i>Kookoor</i>, Fowl. +<i>Trizzai</i>, Sister. <i>Ow</i>, Bread. +<i>Khleck</i>, Woman. <i>Trull</i>, Jungul. +<i>Gillor</i>, Horse. <i>Psan</i>-<i>sa</i>, Cat.</pre> +<p>The Krungurlies are said to have been <i>kafirs</i>, converted long +ago. They are now quite Mussulman in appearance. They were +doubtless originally a mixture of European and Tartar races driven by +persecution to the hills, to which they are still perhaps restricted +by the cause which led to their original isolation.</p> +<p>I tried to ascend the ridge, but the snow was impracticable even +within 700 feet of the village. The <i>Nakhtur</i>, or Pinus, +which is the prevailing feature above Bharowl, is the same as the Tazeen +one, and is a Cedrus or <i>Abils</i>, leaves very short, cones erect +and elegant, but only broken ones could be found. The ridge and +its face is quite covered with them, they grow singly. Huge masses +of micaceous rocks are scattered here and there, some are of gigantic +size.</p> +<p>The Baloot is the next most common tree, but I fancy it does not +extend beyond 7,500 feet; this is in general use for firewood, many +of the trees, especially below, are much damaged, and on these the leaves +are generally very thorny. Next is the Zaitoon, but it is not +common in this direction, although common a mile to the south on the +ridge first ascended. The soil is now saturated with snow water, +and appears good and plentiful. The want of soil is another reason +why the lower ranges are so barren, but this is just the contrary of +what would be expected.</p> +<p>In spite of the beauty and fineness of these forests, there is still +the Khorassan paucity of forms. Many herbaceous plants are doubtless +hid under the snow, but few shrubs were to be seen: the Mespilus of +Tazeen being the most common at 6,000 to 7,000 feet, a Thymus, Labiata, +Olea fragrans, Ocymoidea, two or three Crucifera; Sedum pictum observed, +and Melanthaceæ which has fragrant flowers, is very common. +The rocks are covered with mosses, Grimmia pulvinaloides, every where +in profusion. New forms consist of a fine Tortula and an Anictangioid, +with leaves white, and membranous from the middle upwards.</p> +<p>Birds, a black and white Erythaca, eyes fuscous-brown; the wood pigeon; +a jay, which is a beautiful bird, irides light brown; a small woodpecker, +with a greenish subcrest; the <i>Parus</i>; a thrush not obtained; Parus +cærulens; a pretty red-crowned small Fringilla, eyes light brown; +common crow, chakor, bearded vulture; a wren, not obtained, with irides +light brown, but with exactly the manners of Troglodytis. Chamærops, +<i>Maizurrye</i> used for netting ropes for bedsteads, Viscum of Baloot, +used for food of domestic animals.</p> +<p>Wild goats, sheep, an ass-like animal (<i>Goomasht</i>), and a fox +which is handsome, of large size, and common.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Returned.</p> +<p>The <i>Kafirs</i> have a game exactly the same as the English leap-frog, +called by them <i>Shutruck</i>. They were very much astonished +at my understanding it. They are miserable marksmen, and were +even at small distances unable to strike a large object, as for instance +a hat at twenty yards, although offered a handsome reward; nor can they +shoot at all at long distances. They are in this respect quite +below Khasyas and Booteas.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m466.jpg"> +<img alt="Ridge near Loongurze" src="images/m466.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>March</i> <i>9th</i>.—Yesterday evening a female of Lophophorus, +was brought in, and a beautiful pheasant, having claret-coloured neck. +Body otherwise fuscous and blackish-brown, having a blackish-green head, +white cheeks and fine transverse crest, as large as a middle-sized fowl. +Apparently a new subgenus of Phasianus.</p> +<p><i>11th</i>.—Swallows have now come in here. They are +apparently a different species from the Pushut kind.</p> +<p><i>12th</i>.—The large-headed lark has also come in, so that +there is a difference of twelve or fourteen days between this part of +the country and Pushut, where it was first seen, although this is only +500 feet higher, and about thirteen miles farther north.</p> +<p>The universality of the common crow is curious, especially when contrasted +with the circumscribed locality of Jackdaws. The Indian Jackdaw +is never found in hills.</p> +<p>A common plover was brought in yesterday, the wing quills had been +taken out, and its gestures on being liberated were most absurd, and +although originating from fright, were much allied to pride, its head +reclining on its neck, the latter curved, and the feet lifted high into +a stately walk, while the crest was disposed in a most supercilious +manner.</p> +<p>I have got into great request here as a physician, entirely I apprehend +owing to the people’s faith in <i>vilayuti</i> <i>daroo</i>, or +English medicine, especially calomel and cream of tartar, a combination +of which has proved an universal panacea.</p> +<p>Goitre is common here, and the place in the hot months is said to +be very unhealthy, fever and jaundice carry off numbers of people. +The Affghans, strange to say, have no popular medicines, but they are +an unintelligent race in many other points. They are aware of +bloodletting, which they practise most indiscriminately.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—Unsettled weather. Heavy thunderstorm in +the evening with clouds over the western range.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—Beautifully clear, a genuine spring beauty on +all sides.</p> +<p>The common <i>Maina</i> of these parts is a gregarious bird, which +feeds generally on the ground, but is rarely associated with cattle, +to which the Indian species are so addicted: this is an intelligent +bird, although from its nature not unnecessarily shy.</p> +<p>It is fond of singing; its notes are very varied, but not very musical, +including all sorts of intonations.</p> +<p>While so employed, the bird every now and then bobs his head suddenly +down three or four times, much for the same purpose perhaps, as our +public singers in the production of certain notes. I do not know +whether these actions of the bird are really associated with particular +notes, although they generally seem to accompany certain very flat and +very base notes, not unlike the clerk of a coachman.</p> +<p>The snow is rapidly disappearing, rain having a most powerful effect +even at the summit of the pine ridges: it is fast melting, and no new +snow has fallen, although it has been raining occasionally during the +last three days, and the sun has been altogether obscured.</p> +<p>Generally on the high Kuttoor range, fresh snow has fallen, a proof +of the great height of that range.</p> +<p>Two species of Corydalis, the first Iris and Colchicum I had found +in Kaffiristan. Corydalis is another analogy with the genuine +Himalayan Flora.</p> +<p>Jackals were heard here for the first time, although they were heard +many days ago at Pushut.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—The antilopoid animal called Suja, has horns both +on the male and female, it occurs in small herds fifteen to twenty in +the wooded mountains, its hair is of the same structure as in the Moschiferus +antilope; colour brown. Height to the shoulder two feet six inches; +its height does not increase or decrease perceptibly behind; length +of neck seven inches. Length of back from root of tail to nape +of neck two feet eight inches.</p> +<p>The Lophophorus is called <i>Moorghi</i> <i>Zureem</i>, it is a very +gorgeously coloured bird, but of heavy make; the tail is always carried +erect. Length of body two feet one inch; the girth of the body +at the shoulder including wings, seventeen to eighteen inches. +Length of neck from commencement of the crest to the base of the under +mandible, five to six inches.</p> +<p>The bird is not uncommon, being found on all the hills about here, +and apparently at no great elevations.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—The <i>Ungoor</i>, Ficus cordifolia is the first +tree that buds. The Platanus, <i>Thagur</i>; Morus coming into +flower, vegetation being very rapid.</p> +<p>A captive fox brought in, a fine and a handsome animal, with greyish +fur inclining to fuscous on the back, and with blackish points at the +back of ears, which are large, and dark-brown; eyes light yellowish-brown.</p> +<p>Measured as follows from:—</p> +<pre>Shoulder to base of tail, 1 feet 3 inches. +Shoulder to tip of nose, 1 feet 0 inches. +Height at shoulder, 1 feet 4 inches. +Height at loins, 1 feet 6½ inches. +Total length, 3 feet 8 inches. +Length of tail, 1 feet 7 inches.</pre> +<p>There is also a nocturnal beast here which has a voice something +like a jackal, but more of a bark. Shot one of the small grey, +white-rumped water robins, which was examining a wall for insects, and +fluttering about the holes in it. I saw two Carbos (cormorants), +distinct from any I had hitherto seen, very black, with some white marks. +The common black one also occurs.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—Proceeded to Chugur Pair; the time occupied by +the journey, excluding stoppages, was two hours and four minutes, at +the rate of three and a quarter miles an hour.</p> +<p>Tulipa in abundance in fields, a beautiful species, external sepals +rosy outside, odour faint but sweet.</p> +<p>On a ridge near Chugur Pair is a curious ruin, viz. a long wall.</p> +<p>The mountain is too high to enable me to say what it is like. +The tulip has a tendency to produce double flowers: one specimen seen +with a regular three-leaved perianth, eight stamina, and four carpellary +ovary, angles opposite the outer perianth leaves; the upper leaf or +bract has a tendency to become petaloid. If the anthers are pulled, +the filaments are separated from them and remain as subulate white pointed +processes.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Labiata, Ocymoidea, Salvia! erect, ramose, foliis +rugosis, verticillatis; spicatis racemosis. <i>Cal</i>. bilabiata +supra planisculis, medio carinatus, <i>Cor</i>. pallida, cærulea, +bilabiata, labio superiora subfornicata: lateralibus subrevolutis. +See Catalogue No. 52, in fields Chugur Pair, common on grassy banks.</p> +<p>A curious tendency is observed in Pomaceæ, Ceraseæ to +have the stamina of the same colour as the petals, thereby <i>showing</i> +<i>their</i> <i>origin</i>? How is it explained that in some transformations +of this, the anthers alone are petaliformed, while in others both filament +and anther are equally and primarily affected.</p> +<p>The female Lophophorus has been living on nothing for at least a +week; its voice is various, sometimes not unlike that of a large hawk, +at others a cackle, or low chuckle; occasionally it runs forward, erecting +its crest, and spreading out its tail like a fan, the <i>tail</i> <i>being</i> +<i>depressed</i>. I fancy it roosts in trees not unlike certain +pigeons, Hæmatornis one species come in, this genus I think represents +Parus: it has the same fluttering clinging habits, it often sallies +forth like Merops after insects, the genus is remarkable for the yellow +or red colour of the under tail-covers, it is a noisy bird, and not +wary until so taught by experience. I doubt its power of singing. +The so called Bulbul, <i>hazari</i> <i>dastar</i>, the famous songster, +is not a real <i>bulbul</i>, but either Alaudina or a stonechat.</p> +<p>With Hæmatornis has appeared a fine Merops, of which I have +not yet got a specimen; its habits were quite those of Merops, and it +made the same noise: it occurred with Hæmatornis.</p> +<p>Chugur is a large extent of ruins, traces of paths are visible leading +to the houses, mere huts built of slabs of slate. There is one +square part remaining much like the base of one of the topes to which +it assimilates; the building, is of slabs of wood and stone, intervening. +What could have induced the Mussulmans to build on such horridly hard +barren and hot places, with no water near? or did they occupy places +taken from the <i>Kafirs</i>. The latter I should think most likely +from the names, which are evidently <i>Kafir</i>.</p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—The bird alluded to yesterday, was again seen +to-day. I remember shooting the same species at elevations of +8,000 feet in Bootan, in oak forests. It has the habits of Merops, +with its voice or chirp, and is very gregarious, so that one part of +the flock will not separate from the rest. It perches in a very +erect manner making swoops and sallies after insects precisely as Merops. +Plumage sombre, general colour slaty, quills and crest blackish, bill +and feet orange, tail forked.</p> +<p>Is this bird of the sub-family Brachypodinæ, or is it a Fissirostral +bird; the wings, although graduated as to the two first quills (the +first being half spurious) are still long, and may be called pointed. +It obviously has much analogy? with the Drongo shrikes in habits, and +in forked tail: as well as in lengthened body? Both it and Hæmatornes +are very local, none being found here but just around a village called +Pillipote, a favourite station—Zaitoon trees, or naked Bakkeins. +Hæmatornis I have seen feeding on the ground, this species has +the same voice as that of the genus generally.</p> +<p>The yellowish <i>Bunting</i>-<i>like</i> water-wagtail, is very common +just now: it occurs in wheat fields; flight, chirp, and mode of getting +up when disturbed just as in the Buntings.</p> +<p>Weather very unsettled, heavy rain and thunder last night, and now +threatening a gale.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—Returned towards Pushut: a Lanius, but not the +one shot, was seen near the road in bushes.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—Of the four red-billed Shrikes, two are male and +female, sexes alike, stomach fleshy like that of Hæmatornis, but +food entirely vegetable: the two female stomachs contained each a seed +of the <i>Bukkein</i> (Melia): the two males contained fragments of +buds, perhaps of a willow, but not a vestige of an insect, so their +swooping and sallying is a mere analogical representation of Merops. +In Hæmatornis contents of stomach chiefly vegetable, partly of +insects.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Very rainy and unsettled weather, thunder and +lightning.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—-Clearing up: heavy rain in some parts of the +night, otherwise fine.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—A beautiful morning. Went to Kooner, distance +twelve to thirteen miles: for three miles the road was dangerous but +tolerably decent, no defiles being passed, in which murderers were likely +to lurk, very little difference in seasons between this and Pushut.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—Returned again to Pushut. The country about +Pushut is one sheet of cultivation, studded with trees; so thick are +these that few villages are discernible in consequence. Nothing +particularly notable occurred, except that a tulip is common in the +fields about Kooner, but not found in those about Pushut: it occurs +also with Amaryllideæ, which is likewise a stranger to Pushut. +What is the reason of the ruined forts so common in this country? +One would think that it were useless to pull down or destroy a good +fort, when it is the intention of building another, so that they are +scarcely to be accounted for from a succession of conquerors.</p> +<p>The country has, and always will be, a distracted one. I observe +that in all parts approaching mountains, in which the chief danger of +robbery exists, that there are generally people and especially boys +tending cattle, so that they must probably be familiar with robberies +and murders, and seeing these done so openly, so easily, and so securely, +they may well be imagined to become ready scholars. So even if +the stock already existing in the robbers’ sons, etc., were deficient, +others would be found ready to take up the profession. The Kooner +Dhurrah, or valley, is a very fine one, it is a good instance of the +peculiar kind of slope or <i>talus</i>, so common in this country. +The soil in such places being so stony as to be useless for cultivation. +Low parts entering into the valley become useful for wheat, that is, +if rain falls early, these Dhurrahs are formed or filled by debris from +the surrounding hills, carried down by torrents, which are constantly +changing their beds, the outline of the edge is circular, such as that +of a sand bank at the mouth of a river, the finer particles being of +course carried furthest down.</p> +<p>The Kooner valley may be considered as the second; the Shaiwa distinct +forming the first; it continues as far as the bend to Chugur Pair; its +beginning is close to Kooner village, near the ferry where the valley +is much contracted.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—The beautiful Smyrna kingfisher of India, with +metallic plumage, chocolate-brown underneath, occurs at Kooner.</p> +<p>The common kite is very expert in seizing objects with its claws +while flying: as is the Pondicherry falcon. They are often seen +about standing water, fishing I fancy with their claws for shells, etc. +on the surface.</p> +<p>The late rain has caused a torrent down Dhurrah Bader, and the fields +and low grounds about Choke have been inundated; about these spots, +birds have collected in numbers, the common crow taking advantage of +the circumstance had turned as it were, kingfisher, swooping about like +the kite. There were two species of Laridæ, neither of which +I had seen before, several small Tringæ, the very long red shanked +bird, Hematopus? the metallic Tantalus, common, jack-snipe, and hosts +of Budytes, which were busily employed flying and flitting about after +insects. Edolius occurs at Kooner as well as here. The number +of birds is small certainly, although the trees, etc. are now in full +leaf: no new birds seem to have come in, except the dove, and Edolius; +neither Hæmatornis nor Brachypus yet observed, one or two fresh +species of Alaudina, and stonechats have made their appearance. +It is curious that the larks do not remain above a few days, none are +to be seen now, that the crops are barely a foot high.</p> +<p>The female Monaul is going on well, though obliged to be crammed, +for though it takes water voluntarily it will not take food. It +is a very domestic bird, and fond of notice, its voice on such occasions +is pleasing, on some others very harsh and hawk or eagle-like. +Its manners are curious, depressing its tail, and arching its neck, +and pecking at imaginary objects in a curious way. From the expressive +manner in which it looks up at sunset on surrounding objects, especially +trees, it is obviously accustomed to roost.</p> +<p><i>April</i> <i>1st</i>.—Pushut Fort.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—Weather unsettled: a slight rumbling sound of an +earthquake was felt yesterday evening, the atmosphere at the time being +very close: this was succeeded by a squall. Strong winds are prevalent, +generally easterly: clear sunshine is evidently of rare continuance +at Pushut: little snow remains except towards Bharawul.</p> +<p>I was much struck this morning with the entire disappearance of a +green mantle of Confervoid scum from the surface of a foul pool close +to my quarters. Yesterday the pool was quite green, now there +is no green, nor any traces of the scum except such portion as was not +in the water but round the margins.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Proceeded to Chugur-Serai, which place was reached +after marching 3 h. 10 m. at three miles an hour. Ocharrye one +of the peaks near this is deep in snow; it is much higher than Speencas. +The season here is now nearly as forward as it is at Kooner, although +on my last visit sixteen days ago, it was fifteen days behind, but the +narrowness of the valley must increase the heat much.</p> +<p>Great delay occurred in crossing the Pushut river, which is much +swollen from the heavy rain on the 4th. Thunder and hailstone +common, clear days decidedly rare in the spring of these parts.</p> +<p>Edolius occurs here, another stonechat has come in.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—Proceeded to Otipore, which took 8 h. 9 m. to perform +the journey; very unsettled weather. Yesterday several thunderstorms, +and heavy rain.</p> +<p><i>10th</i>.—Clearing up, went to Bharawul; and returned on +the 12th. I was much disappointed at the paucity of forms, for +I did not get ten species, not met with before. The flora of the +fir woods amounts to almost nothing, Colchicum straggles up now and +then, this and a grass or Carex, a Caprifoliaceous shrub, and Cotoneaster +of Tazeen, and Fragaria are the only forms. The oak as it gets +to higher altitudes assumes a different form, probably it is a different +species, for the leaves are much less coriaceous, and are not glaucous +underneath, otherwise there is little difference between it and the +common Baloot, the chief plants found occurred in the clearings, which +surround Bharawul to some extent. Alliaria is very common; also +Tulipa. In this variety the dehiscence of the anthers continues +until, from a single simple pore, a line reaching nearly the whole length +of the anther is formed: a very pretty and sweet smelling Anemone common, +Viola, Rumex, Thalictrum a rather fine species, Hedera, Rubia cordifolia, +Valeriana, Corydalis, Fragaria, Thlaspidea, Sambucus, Ebulus adonis, +Berberis, Equisetum, Clematis, Urtica urens, were noticed, either in +cultivation or on the edge of the clearings. Poor as the flora +is, I see no chance of its promising much variety, for I observe few +other plants showing themselves: several ferns were met with in moist +places, and under rocks, two Asplenia, one undetermined; Aspidioides +very common in some places, but of last year.</p> +<p>The soil is deepish and good, when wet it is subtenacious. +The <i>Nukhtur</i> is a large tree, seventy to eighty feet high; one +of an average size measured fourteen feet in girth, four feet from the +base. The slopes of the mountain are steep, and the ravines very +rocky: on the ridges between these, the ground is covered with soil. +Colchicum observed as high as 7,500 feet. I returned another way, +keeping along the large ravine that drains the mountain to the north, +and which falls into the Otipore river, below Shinegam.</p> +<p>Buddlea was noticed at 5,800 feet, Hyacinthus throughout from this +to Bharawul; <i>Nurgiss</i> 5,800 feet, Impatiens the same as the species +below 5,000, Myrsinea ditto, Fraxinus is very common about 4,000 feet, +it is very easily mistaken for the Xanthoxylon, which appears common +over most parts of Khorassan. The range of the Cytisus, which +is a beautiful sweet smelling shrub, is extensive, it may be included +here between 3,000 and 7,000 feet: associated with it between 4,000 +to 4,500 feet is a Caragana, and about this occurs a fine Salveoideo-Dracocephalum.</p> +<p>The limit of the Baloot may be taken at 4,000 feet, but in sheltered +ravines it descends lower.</p> +<p>Euonymus <i>Moamunna</i>, Periplocea, scarcely extend above 4,000 +feet, neither do the spirescent Astragali, these are succeeded by two +or three espinous species, one the same as the Astragalus stipulis magnis +of the river towards Pironi. Amygdalus ranges between 3,500 and +7,000 feet, the pretty Cerasus does not extend above 4,000 feet. +There appears to be another Amygdalus above.</p> +<p>The chief vegetation of the mountain below 6,000 feet appears to +be a tufted coarse Andropogoneous grass, and in such situations as this +occupies, little soil is to be found; the Baloot, and Zaitoon, are confined +to sheltered places. Above they occur indiscriminately on all +faces, but Zaitoon is rare at such elevations; few birds were observed, +the most common about Bharawul are an Emberizoid and a Certhia? +Muscicapa flammea was seen at 7,000 feet in pine forests with several +Sittæ: in these forests and about Bharawul, only one Garrulus +was heard, and few woodpigeons were seen. The Picus is still common, +Myophorus now extends up to Bharawul. Parus cæruleus still +continues. Another female Nemorrhædus is brought in with +young: the breeding time probably takes place two months later. +The Merula before found below, now occurs in flocks about Bharawul.</p> +<p>According to the natives there is only about twenty days difference +in the seasons of cutting wheat and barley; this is probably not true, +yet it is borne out by the Tulip, Cytisus and Hyacinth.</p> +<p>The village has been founded five years since, and contains 180 souls. +The burial ground contains sixteen graves, which will give the annual +percentage of mortality. At Otipore the mortality is said to be +great. Whence do these people get their curious grey eyes, and +light hair?</p> +<p>Daphne extends to Bharawul.</p> +<p><i>14th</i>.—The kingcrow is now in here, also Columba, and +Lanius; this last has an unceasing jarring chirp, it has however considerable +powers of voice.</p> +<p>Sitta feeds on seeds as well as on insects, but the structure of +its stomach is insectivorous.</p> +<p>The female Monaul died yesterday. I heard some of these birds +in the pine forests of Bharawul, their voice being very loud and grating; +the female was a good tempered bird, capable of attachment, when caressed +its notes were pleasing.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—The Hoopoe seen; another fish brought in to-day, +the usual mountainous form, but with a very rough nose.</p> +<p>The Edolius is here the earliest and the latest daily bird. +I observed several to-day on a tree making a great noise with their +harsh chirp, at each chirp the tail was for the instant jerked out like +a fan.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—A single parrot seen flying overhead.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—What is the bodily strength of man to that of +insects! I have just been watching an ant dragging the body of +a hornet, many times larger than itself, up a door with the greatest +ease; so much so, that after dragging it up three feet, it came down +to alter its position, carrying it up a second time by its wing: the +ant was of a large species.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Pastor came in to-day, an elegant bird, eyes nearly +white, tinged with grey; legs and beak yellow, base of gape leaden-blue, +junction of yellow and blue parts greenish!</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Mango bird first seen today, another dove came +in about the 23rd. Quail coming in, Pastor roseus.</p> +<p>Every plant from the Kafir hills convinces me that they are Himalayan +in their features, and that about this the transition between the American +and genuine European forms takes place. Thus I have seen Asperula, +two and three European looking Ranunculi.</p> +<p>Cratœgus, etc. in addition to the other forms, before alluded +to.</p> +<p>There is a rather fine <i>sissoo</i> near Sheargar, it is curious +that it is later in coming into leaf than any other tree. Does +this indicate its being of a more tropical nature than the others? on +the contrary, the Bukkeim is now in flower, also Citrus.</p> +<p>The Affghans are fond of Amaryllideæ, <i>Gratool</i>, <i>Goolab</i>, +and Lonicera, in the season of the two former, every one met has a bunch +placed over each ear.</p> +<p>Observed to-day a curious monstrosity of the ovula of the Lonicera +of this place, from which it is evident, that the ovule represents a +bud; the funicle the <i>stalk</i>; the teguments convolute leaves, and +the nucleus the punctum of growth.</p> +<p>Every variation was observed, generally the more leafy the outer +tegument the greater was the degree of straightness of the funicle, +and the abortion of the nucleus.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—To Chugur-Serai.</p> +<p><i>June</i> <i>5th</i>.—Arrived at Cabul.</p> +<p>The whole country between Khuggur and Koord Cabul, even including +the high ground of this, or Huft-Kotul, presents the same formation, +but from Khuggur it rises gradually, and beyond Gundamuck loses all +characters of tabularity, it consists of sand, overlying which is a +bed of blocks or often of boulders; in this sand, which is here and +there easily pulverised, (in other places it is pressed as it were into +slabs of no great thickness;) layers or beds of conglomerate frequently +occur, either regularly or irregularly; in one case two conglomerated +beds approached at an angle and then united.</p> +<p>The framework or base of the country is generally limestone, sometimes +slate which presents every variety of distortion, the strata being often +vertical and wavy, no dykes were observed. The older rocks are +generally completely covered by sand and shingle, or stones; but as +we approach the boundaries of the valleys, they protrude into ridges, +often of considerable size and height. The valleys however are +not entirely bounded by these to the west, for as I have said, the plain +of Koord Cabul is reached by crossing undulations of this same formation. +From Khuggur to Gundamuck, about five stony steppes are crossed, each +rising in height above the last, and each separated by deep ravines, +with one or both banks generally precipitous, affording exit to streamlets +from the Sofaid-Koh. It is curious that the streamlets, and streams +about Gundamuck have not worn themselves half as deep channels as those +about Khuggur, although no appreciable difference is apparent in the +strata.</p> +<p>The surface is often rendered rugged in places by the occurrence +of loose slabs, which give the appearance of stratification to the rocks.</p> +<p>It appears to me that the whole of the extreme eastern Khorassan +originally was a bed of stones or boulders, overlying a formation of +pure sand, and that its irregular surface is due to the subsequent upheavement +of the foundation ridges. The good soil is in such case necessarily +confined to the immediate neighbourhood of the streams, etc. descending +from those ridges.</p> +<p>The following is a section exposed on the north boundary of the valley, +not far from Jugdulluck:—</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m476.jpg"> +<img alt="Section of valley near Jugdulluck" src="images/m476.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The whole tract is devoid of trees, until one nears Jugdulluck, when +not only the foundation rocks, but also the stony undulated hills are +dotted with stunted trees of Baloot and Xanthoxylon. Tufted Andropogoneous +grasses form the prevailing feature, Ærua also is common along +the streams: and wherever the ground retains moisture, Typha latifolia +abounds with the usual frequenters of watery spots. The road to +Gundamuck, especially the ascent of the two last steppes, is infamous; +but the regular Jallalabad road is good, having only one descent to +Neemla, and an easy ascent from that place, and thence it is over a +gentle declivity to Futtehabad.</p> +<p>The spurs from the Sofaid-Koh are very numerous, and the ravines +they form show the great quantity of water derived from this ridge, +their direction is N. 45, E. The direction of the streams after +emerging from the lower ridges continues about the same.</p> +<p>The Cabul and Soorkhab rivers debouche at a much greater angle. +Their direction being 95, E. The waters of both are turbid, but +those of the latter are reddish.</p> +<p>Throughout the valley of Jallalabad cultivation extends alone along +the streams, many of which are entirely consumed by agricultural processes; +in no place does it bear any proportion to the uncultivated portion, +which is invariably densely strewed with stones, the smaller of which +are generally water-worn; the larger, masses of angular rock.</p> +<p>White mulberries ripen in perfection at Gundamuck in the early part +of July. There is more cultivation about Khuggur occurring in +a continuous and broadish tract, than in almost any other place.</p> +<p>I observed a curious tendency to anastomosis, or self-grafting in +the roots of Morus: this in its young state often has pinnatifid artacarpoid +leaves. Query, is this a sign of the greater development of Morus? +or is it in any way analogous to that progressive development existing +during the growth of every animated being?</p> +<p>At Gundamuck observed Oriolus; it differs in plumage and voice from +the Indian Mango bird, which is a far more beautiful bird, with only +one note: Edolius also seen.</p> +<p>Pastor and the other common birds. Merops was seen soaring +over stones, and stooping at insects; in such situations it remains +long on the wing; it does not appear to perch on any thing but withered +branches.</p> +<p>Composita Senecionoides occurs about Soorkhab, Reaumuria occurs half-way +between it and Gundamuck. Capparis continues to Soorkhab. +Statices common, also Campanula; and about Jugdulluck a striking Boragineous +plant, Boraginiæ sp., and on the sandy pass above Barkhab, a Salvia +is found in profusion, one of the commonest grasses is Poa <i>cynosuroides</i>?</p> +<p>The stem of Hippuris is worth examination, inasmuch as it consists +of a central easily separable axis, and a vertical system of great thickness, +highly cellular, so that judging <i>a</i> <i>priori</i>, as these cells +(which are compound) occupy the whole space between the ligneous system +and the cutis, no longitudinal vessels can exist in that part which +represents the bark.</p> +<p><i>15th</i>.—Cabul. Glycyrrhiza thermopsoides frequently +presents on the non-flowering stems, a pod-like transformation of the +uppermost leaves.</p> +<p>In Centaurea <i>cyanea</i>, the disposition of the limb of the ray +is such that the incomplete part or the fissure is outside. This +is exactly opposite to the disposition of the same part in true Ligulatæ.</p> +<p>Judging from Centaurea, the smaller lip of the bilabiate species +of Compositæ ought to be situated outside.</p> +<p>Erythræoides, Glauca floribus albidis occurs on the <i>Chummums</i>.</p> +<p><i>16th</i>.—Regaled with a library: “Calumny and detraction,” +says Boerhaave, “are sparks, which if you do not blow them, will +go out of themselves.”—<i>Murphy’s</i> <i>Johnston</i>, +Vol. IX. p.34.</p> +<p>In Johnston’s Life of Drake, p.99 to 100, are some admirable +remarks on those minds, that disapprove of every strikingly novel scheme, +and from which a good motto might be chosen, should any national system +be proposed in Botany.</p> +<p>What were Sir Thomas Browne’s five sorts of vegetables, and +what were his remarks on the form of plants and laws of vegetation?—<i>See</i> +<i>Johnston’s</i> <i>Works</i>, Vol. IX. p.296.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XXI.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Cabul</i> <i>to</i> <i>Kohi</i>-<i>Baba</i>.</p> +<p><i>July</i> <i>17th</i>.—Proceeded from Cabul to Shah Bagh; +cloudy weather, occasionally a very slight shower during the last few +days, depending probably on the Punjab rains. To-day, observed +a small green caterpillar, climbing up a fine thread, like a spider’s +web, which hung from the fly of the tent; its motions were precisely +those of climbing, the thread over which it had passed was accumulated +between its third pairs of legs; it did not use its mouth.</p> +<p>I did not ascertain whether the thread was its own production or +not; if it was, it must have come out of its tail.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—The fish in the Cabul river here are, a Loach, +an Oreinus, and a Barbel; none of these grow to any size, as there is +but little water left in the river in consequence of the drain for extensive +cultivation on both the east and west sides of the city.</p> +<p>Small specimens of these fish, especially the Loach and Oreinus, +are found in the canals or larger watercuts, in which the current is +slow and regular. It is curious that in the canal near the Shah +Bagh, which has been lately turned off above the Cantonment, all the +specimens of the Loach left in the pools of water were dead, while the +Oreinus did not appear to have suffered.</p> +<p>This Loach is a Cobitis propria, it has the usual form of that genus, +the spots are disposed irregularly, rarely becoming banded. The +shape of the head is curious, the forehead being prominent, this gives +the mouth an appearance of unusual depression. <a name="citation479"></a><a href="#footnote479">{479}</a></p> +<p>The country both on the east and west sides of Cabul may have been +formerly a lake. Such indeed would seem to have been the origin +of all the valleys in which there is an expanse of tillable ground, +and not mere strips confined to the banks of the draining streams.</p> +<p>The eastern valley is indeed partly occupied by the large sheet of +water to the north, and the west is very marshy. The eastern one +is interspersed with low detached ranges of hills.</p> +<p>The birds are a magpie, a dove, Oriolus, Pastor roseus, Pastor alter, +sparrow, water-wagtail, Hirundo, Hoopoe, Lanius, Sylvia sp., water-hen, +wild ducks on the lake, and Merops; almost all these as at Khujgal, +but no <i>minas</i>, or Edolia.</p> +<p>At Urghundy occurs Potentilla quinquifolia, repens radicans pubescens, +stipulis oblongis.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—Halted at Koti-Ashruf. The most common plants +on the Khak-i-Sofaid pass are two or three of the small pulvinate Statices, +Senecionoides glaucescens. The yellow Asphodelus is very common, +and I also saw A. mesembryanthemifolia. At the foot of the pass, +I saw Scabiosa, which also occurred on the summit.</p> +<p>First march on the Cabul side of Ghuznee. Whole tracts blue +with the Labiata Plectranthoides; at Urghundy, along a watercut, are +planted several willows of the common large-leaved kind, the bark of +these on all the older parts is cracked longitudinally, and the trunk +has the appearance of being twisted, which I have no doubt is the natural +state, the spire is from left to right. The prevailing winds are +easterly.</p> +<p>Bean cultivation is very common in the valley of the Cabul river +to the west beyond the Khak-i-Sofaid pass; I suspect it requires a greater +altitude than most of the other cultivated plants of Affghanistan, it +abounds in the high ground about Shaikhabad.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—Proceeded in the morning from Julraize to Sir-i-Chushme. +The fish of the place are the same, the Silurus being common. +The two sorts of Oreinus vary much in the length of the intestinal canal,—the +yellowish and large one having it five times: the small and less yellowish, +three and a half lengths of the body. Both these species come +close to Barbus, showing that the spinosity of the dorsal fin is a more +valuable character than that of the form of the mouth.</p> +<p>The cartilaginous disc of Oreinus is a reflection outwards of the +osseo-cartilaginous part of the mouth, the fleshy part alone is the +lips. Oriolus, Upupa, and Percnopterus, continue with Columba. +Grapes and apricots <i>khar</i> <i>see</i>, and the common ones reach +as far as this, but are very inferior to those of Cabul; rice cultivated +here and there. The chief trees are Populus lombardensis, Salix +magnifolia, and S. pendula, Hippophæ.</p> +<p>At Koti-Ashruf Salix angustissima is found, and on it Cuscuta gigantea; +on to-day’s march Hippophæ, but this is found also at Maidan: +Merops was heard at Koti-Ashruf. In the spring of Sir-i-Chushme, +a Typhoid plant occurs in profusion, Veronicæ 2, alta et repens +rotundifolia, Nasturtium aquatica, Scrophularia of Julraize, Juncus, +Triglochin, and Plantago of the green sward, everywhere between 6,000 +and 11,000 feet.</p> +<p>Trees end at the foot of Oonnye.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Girdun Dewar. Salvia swarms up the ascent +and on the descent, but less so than before, and on the Yonutt platform +it is almost absent; Cnicus also in profusion both up and down, and +on the platform Festuca triticoides begins about half-way up; Statice +are common over the whole pass. Caragana in the grassy swardy +ravines. On the highest point Astragalus arbuscula, the fields +studded with yellow buttons of tansy, and white flowers of Stellaria; +Arabidea glauca siliculosa, also common; this is rare on the west side +of Hindoo-koosh, as is also Stellaria. Tansy continues in some +places.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—To Kurzar. Proceeded up the Siah-Sung; along +the river, green sward with patches of Caragana, Campanula, and Geraniums +occurred in profusion in some places. Salvia not uncommon; at +the first part, or perhaps for three miles from camp a large Hingoid +is common, smaller and whiter than the species so common on the lower +hills, and which is the large-leaved species of Quettah and the Kojhuk +pass. Potamogeton cylindrifolia common; Senecionoides.</p> +<p>On the stony part, or beyond Siah-Sung, when one leaves the bed of +the river, Astragali two or three species, Salvia, and Blitum. +Two sorts of fish are found in the river, and perhaps a third in the +black hammer-headed Silurus. <a name="citation481"></a><a href="#footnote481">{481}</a> +Of the two caught, one is an Oreinus, but passing close into Barbus. +Beneath the glandular line, white, above fuscous-brownish, with irregular +black spots, fins fusco-reddish.</p> +<p>The other is a loach, Cobitis propria, shape shark-like, colour yellowish-brown, +almost tawny, sides irregularly spotted with brownish-black spots, arranged +on the back in broad irregular, generally complete bands. Head +not banded, fins tawny, with oblong black spots, eyes prominent, irides +reddish-orange: this is a very abundant species.</p> +<p>Poplar trees, (P. lombardensis): these from being planted close, +grow together, the union generally taking place near the base. +I have not seen a section of the wood.</p> +<p><i>August</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Kaloo. So far as I can judge, +the flora of this side of the pass does not differ, but in a few unimportant +instances from that of the Kurzar side. The summit however has +a much colder climate, probably from being exposed on the Kurzar side +to an extremely cold and piercing wind from the Kohi-Baba range. +Cnici 2, and Festuca triticoides are the most common plants, with Arenaria +fruticosa, Composita No. 152, Asphodelus of Erak now nearly passed flower, +and some Astragali. But on this side, Cnici cease almost entirely, +although they re-appear lower down, but only partially, and the top +of the pass is covered with the Statice of Kurzar, and Astragali, among +which, that with the flat pod, winged on the dorsal suture, is the most +common. Lower down the same, or similar features continue, and +the only plants limited to this side are a curious Astragalus, Crotalarioid, +Polygonum fruticosa, microphyllum, and spinosum, a Boraginea like that +of Jugdulluck, but much smaller and decumbent, a Papaveraceæ, +petalis Papaveris Rhœadis, with a siliquose fruit, and Clematis +erecta: willow trees (the broad leaved species) occur here, a large +Agrostic grass, Ribes and Symphorema of Erak.</p> +<p>The Affghans appear to cut every plant almost of any size for winter +fodder, even thistles, docks, etc. The purple Lactucoid of Cabul +re-appears, and the curious flat fruit calyxed Boraginea of Shawl both +in abundance. The crops here are not more forward than those at +Kurzar; the fields are <i>crowded</i> with Stellaria, but there is much +less Tanacetum; Geraniums occur in profusion.</p> +<p>Silene fimbriata, is a night flower, withering by 9 A.M.</p> +<p>I found no snow up the left Hajeeguk ravine, and the effect was marked, +namely, that none of the alpine plants are so abundant about it as last +season, when they were in flower, or had passed.</p> +<p>There is on the hills about this ravine, a large burrowing animal, +probably a marmot; it is of a dark colour with tawny rump; when on the +alert it sits on its rump, or rather perhaps raised on the hind legs, +and has the voice of an ordinary Rodentia.</p> +<p>I heard several of these, but saw only one.</p> +<p>Rich botanising is to be had on the swampy ground at the mouth of +the right ravine. Pediculares 2, Silenaceæ 3 or 4, Veroniceæ +2, Orchis 1, Ranunculi 2, Junci 2, Carices several, Swertiæ 2, +one the larger Solidago, Geranium, Gramineæ several, Parnassia +of Erak, Campanula, Ruta odora, etc.</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—To Topehee. The vegetation of Kaloo is far +less varied than that of Hajeeguk, for it presents no such swampy ravines +at such elevations.</p> +<p>The plants of the hills around Kaloo villages continue half-way up, +on the road over the ravine Corvisartia is plentiful, with a Labiata, +Calyce Royleæ, in profusion; this and Cnici form the chief vegetation; +Papaveraceæ also continue.</p> +<p>Up the 1st ascent Hingoid tenuifolia, Ephedra stricta, Ribes commence, +Ephedra continuing throughout wherever the bare rocks project through +the loose soil; one-third way up, Statice long and short-peduncled commence +with an Astragalus. The bulk of the vegetation is an Artemisia; +Royleoid and Chenopodium villosum continue, and do so for half-way up.</p> +<p>At the black rock half-way up, Dianthus, Astragalus, Crotalarioid, +Rosæ sp., Statice pulvinata, are common, this last and Artemisia +are the chief features: Scutellaria, Stellaria dichotoma, Umbellifera +of Yonutt, Corvisartia, wild Gramineæ of Yonutt, Arenaria fruticosa, +Festuca triticoides continues. Borago of upper Kaloo, and the +Glauci of Kaloo occur. Astragali 2 or 3 sp., Silene sp., but the +chief vegetation is Artemisia.</p> +<p>On the summit, Corvisartia, Boragineæ, Gramineæ, several; +a straggling Plectranthus cœruleus, Arenaria fruticosa, Allium +rubrum, Cnici 2, the yellow Erigeronoid of Hajeeguk summit, occur on +the descent just below the ridge, and on this side the Statice pulvinata +is in profusion, and of large size. Large marmot, with teeth like +those of a rat.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—Proceeded to Bamean. At Topehee was found +a curious succulent Hypericum, it is odd that the leaves, etc. of these +succulent saline plants are cold; strikingly so. Connected with +this low temperature, is the fact, that if shut up in a box with other +plants, and water thrown in, that even though they be at the top, they +cause the deposit of all the water that passes up in the shape of vapour, +while the ordinary plants remain quite dry! A wonderful provision +of nature adapting them the more to extremely dry stations. About +Topehee, Cichorium is common; Salvia of Oonnye, Geranium, Artemisia +exaltata of Sir-i-Chushme, and Pulmonaria, so common everywhere, occur; +Glaucum swarms in saline marshy places. Triglochin is also found, +also Ranunculus stoloniferæ trilobata of Kaloo, Hippuris. +The flat-calyxed Boraginea, Melilotus officinalis also found; Potamogeton +cylindrifolia, Centaurea lutea.</p> +<p>There also occurs along the barren slopes of the hills a glaucous +shrub, much like that between Chunni and Dund-i-Goolai, decumbens, subspinos: +glauco alb. fruct. baccato drupaceis, oblongis, purpuris, basi calyce +parvo, 5-fido, stylo brevi apiculatis, putamina osseo-crasso oblongo +ovato, Sem. immatur.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Bamean. The fish, so far as I have caught +any, seem to be one trout, and two barbels. Of 5 species, one +of these takes the worm greedily, the length of the intestines varied +in every instance, and of three the relative lengths of body and canal +were as follows:</p> +<pre>Inches. Canal. + +Body 6 (times ) 2.125 ( Of three since captured and +Body 7 (longer ) 2½ ( about 8 inches long, all +Body 10½ (than the) 3½ ( nearly the same size, the + (body. ) ( length of the canal was + ( three times longer than the + ( body.</pre> +<p>The intestines as usual taper almost gradually from the stomach and +œsophagus, and are gorged with greenish pulp.</p> +<p>This is worth following up. It is scarcely credible, but that +the species are really different; or if not, the variety in the length +will considerably diminish the value of the length of canal as a principle +of arrangement. <a name="citation484"></a><a href="#footnote484">{484}</a></p> +<p>The glaucous long-peduncled, large-flowered Statice is limited to +the east side of Kaloo. On this side another species occupies +similar elevations, viz., 9,500 to 10,500 feet; it is a good deal like +the one met with towards Ghuzni. These species are less alpine +than the short-peduncled species with large flowers, which continues +all over Kaloo, being in great perfection on the west side, near the +summit. Another short-peduncled species appears on the descent, +close to upper Topehee. Towards this Royleoid occurs but sparingly, +and the first change takes place in the abundance of Salicornia or Kochia. +Also about this, Peganum and Salvia reoccur, both kinds not being uncommon +about Bamean.</p> +<p>Lactuca dislocata occurs throughout.</p> +<p>The vegetation of Bamean is that of Topehee, but the small flowered +Tamarisk is scarce—Potentilla anserina is common, Hyoscyamus spinosus +of Kaloo occurs.</p> +<p>The Bamean river divides the Kohi-Baba from the Hindoo-koosh, but +both are obviously of the same system, i.e. they divide the ranges to +the north. To the east their offsets are divided by the Kaloo +river. The direction of the Hindoo-koosh and that of the Kohi-Baba, +is about 115 west. The space to the west consists of a low, rather +flat plateau, (as it appears from the top of Kaloo,) this flat belongs +to the Kohi-Baba range; the offsets of the Hindoo-koosh to the east +and north are ordinarily shaped. All the hills on the north side +of the valley disintegrate on their south faces, forming cliffs of partial +extent.</p> +<p><i>13th</i>.—Proceeded to Akrobat, ascending the Bamean river, +and then diverging up a <i>kotul</i> or acclivity of considerable height, +but gradual ascent. Then descending at once steeply to Akrobat, +which is about 9,500 feet above the sea. Along the river, Rosa, +Hippophæ, and Salix occur, the two former being abundant. +Scarcely any change in vegetation occurs: an Ephedra, very common up +the <i>kotul</i> and abundantly in fruit. The hills are very barren, +and nothing remarkable is observable about Syghan. Apricot constitutes +the only fruit tree. Salix, Populus, and Sinjit occur.</p> +<p>All the valleys are narrow, and the hills very barren, the chief +vegetation being Salsolaceæ. The vegetation of the valleys +is the same as that of Bamean; on the north of Akrobat two Statice occur, +one with spathulate leaves scapigerous, the other a tall straggling +plant.</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—Erak. The vegetation of Kurzar consists +of Hypericum, Salsolaceæ, Carduacea, and Hyoscyamus spinosus, +but Salsolaceæ occur in profusion and several species.</p> +<p>Hypericum enjoys to perfection, the faculty of condensing water on +its leaves, much more so than Salsolaceæ; it presents an obvious +affinity to Rutaceæ, capsula radiata 5-valvis, loculicida: valvis +linea centrali notatis, septis solutis imo apice exceptis. Seminibus +basi locul. affixis, apice villosis; the tobacco is different from the +Nicot. tobaccum, cor. virida tubo calyce, duplo longiore lamina brevi +plicato: apricots in sheltered places.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—Kurzar. The Erak <i>kotul</i> is thickly +covered with Festuca triticoides, two Carduaceæ, Salvia, Artemisiæ, +and Statices on the south side. On the north Statices, Onosma, +and Carduaceæ are most common, and the vegetation is scantier. +Ribes is common up the Erak ravine; with it, Rosa and Symphorema are +the chief shrubs. Ephedra ceases about 10,000 feet. A snake +found of general grey colour, with black-brown marking.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—Ascended Kohi-Baba from upper Kaloo, the ascent +occupied about five hours, the ridge was surmounted but no view of Baissoat +was obtained, except that the crest surmounted, as well as the still +loftier culminating one belong to ridges running 30° north from +a main ridge, the passes of which, although apparently the same height +as the peak surmounted, are much more heavily covered with snow. +These passes do not appear very difficult.</p> +<p>At 2 P.M. set up the barometer on the ridge, the mercury stood 17.354. +Therm. in cistern, 79.5. Detached Therm. in sun 85°—on +the ground 105°.</p> +<p><i>September</i> <i>2nd</i>.—At 2½ P.M. the barometer +stood 17.356.</p> +<p>Assuming this to give about 15,000 feet, none of the peaks will be +found to be higher than 16,500. The culminating point was close +by, and did not appear more than 1,000 feet above me. The different +ridges are separated by deep spaces in which snow lies to a considerable +extent.</p> +<p>Having descended a considerable way I again set up the barometer. +Time 4-45 P.M.</p> +<p>The mercury stood at 18.889.</p> +<pre> Therm. in the Cistern. 63° + Ditto in the air. 68°</pre> +<p>The vegetation continues unaltered, the same as that of Kaloo kotul.</p> +<p>Carduaceæ, Astragali, Nardoid, Bromoid, Hordeoid pubescens, +and Statices. And up to this, which may be assumed as 13,500 feet, +the hills present the same features, rounded with a good deal of soil, +and large granitic masses.</p> +<p>But above this the disintegration of the ridge has reached a great +extent; for 1,500 to 2,000 feet the ascent is steep, passing over a +profusion of blocks and slabs of granite, generally externally of a +dark brown colour; here and there there is some coarse granular soil, +and towards the second station, say at an altitude of 14,000 feet, a +marshy spot occurred, crowded with Primula, together with Arenaria, +Fumaria of Erak, Ranunculus of Hajeeguk, Carex, etc. From within +1,000 feet of the summit the ascent was easier, over ground composed +entirely of small angular bits of granite, which rock protrudes to the +north, forming the south wall of a huge amphitheatre, heavily snowed +in places.</p> +<p>This granite varies much; being below a coarse quartzose grey rock, +above a very compact brown rock, except perhaps in its lowest outcrop, +where it has a slaty structure.</p> +<p>The second station may be assumed as the lowest limit of the inferior +snow line, but this so much depends on casual circumstances that even +many places at 15,000 feet are uncovered by snow, which as might be +expected is always heaviest in the higher valleys which are least exposed +to the sun’s rays. The surface of the snow in many places +was picturesque, being in the shape of crowded pinnacled ridges, the +interstices from 4 to 5 feet deep, holding water or ice. I saw +from the summit a flock of the large grouse, and at 14,000 feet, a large +hare.</p> +<p>The peak surmounted is the lowest, and the nearest to Upper Kaloo. +The granite on the west side formed a precipitous cliff of 200 to 300 +feet deep.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the slope with small fragments, say between 14 +to 15,000 feet was very scanty, a Cheiranthus, Polygonum scariosum, +Papaveraceæ, Phloxoides and Statice, being the only plants; and +perhaps this may be assumed as having no particular plant, all those +enumerated being found below.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the steep rugged portion, which contained many +patches of snow and better soil, was more varied; in the upper parts +of this a Carex, two or three Graminæ, Cheiranthus, Plectranthus, +Sedoides, Arenaria, Potentilla, Primula, Draboides and Brassicacea occurred. +A Tanacetoid was perhaps the most common.</p> +<p>The most alpine forms of these were Carex, Holcoides, Sedoides, Statice +densissima, and Papaveracea; but of these Papaveracea, Phloxoid, Statice +densissima, Cheiranthus, and Polygonum are alone found above. +Here again the effect of the proximity of a bed of snow in retarding +vegetation was most evident. Phloxoides elsewhere partly in flower, +being found in full flower near one of the beds of snow.</p> +<p>It is curious that no green spots are found above, all the water +passing down under the soil, the swardy ravines scarcely extend beyond +an elevation of 1,500 feet above the camp on Upper Kaloo.</p> +<p>The limit of the grey shrubby Salix may be taken as 1,000 feet above +that, the other plants are precisely the same as those of other swards; +Abelia extends higher than Salix.</p> +<p>The limit of crops is about the same, the issue of the water obviously +being in relation to the extent of cultivation by irrigation. +The associated plants present no change.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Cabul. Curious transformation in Carthamus +was observed, either affecting the involucrum alone, when those branches +that would have become flowers become clavate, covered with very dense +aristate leaves, or affecting the florets which become more or less +converted in the branches. In these the involucre is little altered, +and the receptacle is attacked by larva. In certain of these the +florets are submitted to very curious metamorphoses, each envelope remaining, +but quite green, the stamina being little changed, the pistillum changed +into a leaf-bearing branch, the stigmata, etc. into two leaves.</p> +<p>This is chiefly remarkable because of the general tardiness of change +in the stamina, since it shows that the binary formation of the pistillum +is a primary effect: it may be asked, if the number should be 5, why +has it not reverted to its original or typical state? The calyx +is not reducible to 5. The permanency of the character of aggregate +flowers is here shown, as well as in Echinops, so that it is scarcely +probable we shall ever meet a compositious flower solitary in the axil +of an ordinary leaf.</p> +<p>To be examined hereafter in detail.</p> +<p>If wood is a descending formation, produced by leaves, how are woody +tendrils to be accounted for. In the vine the ancient tendrils +are perfectly woody, although this may not be true wood, yet it is truly +fibrous, and I ask, from what is it formed?</p> +<p>The growth of young shoots is at once a proof that the whole system +may be formed from ascending growth, for in many we find woody fibre +complete, though not indurated, and all the leaves from which wood is +said to be formed are only in a rudimentary state.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>2nd</i>.—Seh-Baba. Spiræa belloides, +commonish on limestone rocks in the ravine near the road which leads +from Tazeen valley to Khubur-i-Jubbur. This limestone is in thin +strata; the strata are subdivided by quartzose veins, they occur generally +at a dip of from 15 to 20 degrees, but are occasionally quite vertical +or highly wavy, presenting evidence of concentrated force upwards. +The outcrop wears an uniform aspect, and occurs to the north of the +ravine. The south here and there presents sheets of rock, the +overlying strata having slipped off. The strike of the strata +is north and south.</p> +<p>Coal is said by Hatchet to be formed chiefly from the resinous principles +of plants,—this would account for its appearance when burnt, which +is the same as that of burnt bitumen. But resinous principles +are, even when they exist, of partial extent only in plants. In +good coal the whole of the vegetable substance seems to be transformed, +a supposition barely compatible with Hatchet’s idea.</p> +<p>To study this, extensive examination of coal in all degrees of formation +would be necessary, beginning with the wood so curiously changed by +the Brahmapootra, i.e. brown coal occurring in its sand banks, and which +has a very peculiar and disagreeable odour when burning. It would +also be necessary to examine how far the coal-plants exhibit vegetable +structure, are they mere impressions or are they the plants themselves +changed? To what extent do these agree with coal? What particular +plants and what parts of these appear to have formed coal? Its +fibrous structure would hint at formation from the woody system, and +it is not incompatible with the <i>deliquescence</i> of a thick layer +of drift.</p> +<p>The plants of coal fields having been drifted, can only give us an +idea of the vegetation along the natural drains of the then country, +such may by no means have had <i>one</i> <i>universal</i> <i>character</i>.</p> +<p>The plants of the open surface of modern tropical countries being +generally different from those along the beds of streams, in which situations +now-a-days Equiseteæ, Lycopods and Filicis are chiefly found. +Coal being drift, it follows that the plants of the coal fields can +give us no information on the distribution of vegetables in those days; +to gain information on this, the fossils should be in their original +situation. And there again an obstacle may exist in our not being +able to ascertain the height or level of that situation.</p> +<p>If the plants of coal fields are found to be converted into coal, +then the only difference between coal shale, and coal will consist in +the very small proportion of vegetable matter in the former.</p> +<p>The small number of coal plants, i.e. the small number of species, +at once points to the supposition that fossil plants are confined to +those of the most indestructible nature: here again is another sign +of this in the preponderance of Ferns, which Lindley finds to be the +most permanent.</p> +<p>Hence the preponderance of Ferns, is by no means explainable by their +greatest simplicity of form, and consequent priority of formation.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XXII.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Peshawur</i> <i>to</i> <i>Lahore</i>.</p> +<p><i>October</i> <i>14th</i>.—Peshawur.—Cucurbitaceæ. +The petals of cucurbita were observed in one instance united along two +of the corollal sinuses to the staminal column, alternating with the +smaller stamina; the processes were produced upwards into petaloid appendages.</p> +<p><i>17th</i>.—Proceeded to Nowshera. As far as Pubbe the +road extended chiefly through a cultivated country, thence as far as +could be judged at night, over a plain country covered with coarse grass, +and here and there (whenever a sufficiently gravelly surface occurred) +among the thick of <i>Bheir</i>, which is here used for fences; Mudar, +Ærua, Nerioides and Adhatoda occurred; <i>Furas</i> a common tree.</p> +<p><i>18th</i>.—Reached Khairabad. The same kind of country +as about Nowshera, stony or sandy, with extensive tracts covered with +<i>Bheir</i>, Mudar, and Ærua as before, Mimosa common towards +Geedur Gulli, and on it also Kureel, which appears for the first time +as it was not seen about Jumrood. On to-day’s march many +grasses are apparent, the pale Saccharoid grass of Jugdulluck common, +a species of Cynodon (given to me by Dr. Ritchie at Dhukk) very common, +a Pommereullioid, a curious Schœnanthus, a Poa, all are coarse +and cover a large tract towards Geedur Gulli: Barleria spinosa appears.</p> +<p>Geedur Gulli is a ravine winding in and out in a curious manner among +low hills at the north-west end of what is called the Afredi Spur. +Mimosa very common, Kureel, Dodonæa and Edgeworthia, neither very +common, but Moarcurra and Euonymus are both rather common. <i>Mudar</i> +common; some Andropogons, of which one is the same as that of the Khyber. +<i>Bheir</i> very common, also a Mimosa like the common <i>Babool</i>, +but flowers unscented. Chokeys, or police stations are situated +along the whole line of road to Peshawur. Adhatoda common at the +entrance to Geedur Gulli where the scenery is rather pretty; Adiantum +common on banks near the water; the hills of Geedur Gulli are rather +thickly sprinkled with wood.</p> +<p>The Cabul river is here a large stream, with a moderate confined +bed between high banks on which Akora and Khairabad are situated. +The view of the Indus from Geedur Gulli presents a desolate look of +sand, which extends over a large space visible through a break in the +hills to the north. The passage of the Indus through the Attock +range seen from the same point is curious; but general remarks on scenery +can be of no use, except when they are founded on an intimate acquaintance +with the country. The most natural course, i.e. one less impeded +by mountains, would seem to be to the east instead of south.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m491.jpg"> +<img alt="Diagram of Attock Range" src="images/m491.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>Mulberry, Salix angustifolia, or willow, and <i>Buckein</i>, were +seen at Attock. The scenery is not however bold, but on the contrary +very poor compared with the defiles of the Irrawadi. The hills +are low, rounded, and present no precipices of striking dimensions. +An old fort situated near the junction of the rivers is a handsome looking +building, but completely commanded. A large Serai or place for +travellers is situated near it to the north. The water of the +Indus is muddy, but presents nothing remarkable in temperature. +The analogous points between the Indus and Irrawadi consist in defiles +and the want of branches for a long way above their mouths. Jackdaws +were the first old acquaintances I met with on entering Peshawur; and +the common kite, the Affghan one not having the same thrilling cry that +the Indian one has; grey partridges are found about Nowshera; as also +Kuchaloo or Yams.</p> +<p><i>19th</i>.—Proceeded over the plain to Chuch and Khot-bha, +winding along the Attock hill round to the fort, and passing the Serai, +and another smaller one in ruins near the plains, thence over level +ground to within two miles of Bhowli, where conspicuous trees were observed, +otherwise the plain is rather barren, a few <i>Bheirs</i> and some Phœnix +only occurring about villages on hills. The vegetation is the +same. Chuch plain, where not cultivated, is covered with short +coarse grasses, Andropogoneæ. Among these a large-leaved +Salvia occurs. The forms presented by the vegetation are however +very little diversified. Mudar, a small-fruited Kochia, like that +of Jallalabad; Bœrhaavia very common.</p> +<p>Cultivation is conducted in <i>Bheir</i> fences, and consists of +Indian-corn, <i>Bajra</i>, and cotton.</p> +<p>From the Attock hills, the Indus is seen much divided by beds of +sand, and churs or islands covered with a large purple Saccharum. +Peganum continues to Attock and even extends beyond.</p> +<p>Water plants of Chuch, Trapa, Valisneria verticillata, and Nymphæa.</p> +<p>Shumshbad.—This town lies to the left of the road, one mile +in the rear of my encampment.</p> +<p>The spines of Barleria are evidently axillary, as is seen in young +branches, probably they represent the lower pair of leaves of the lateral +branches, the terminal parts of which have a tendency to develop.</p> +<p>The spines of Mimosa belong evidently to the same exertion as the +leaf; they are connate at the base, and from the centre of this hardened +part, arises the leaf; they may be either the lower pinnæ, or +they may be <i>spurious</i> stipulæ. The leaves developed +within the true ones belong to an ill-developed branch. True stipulæ +are leaves with a distinct origin. Spurious stipulæ belong +to their leaves, as is evident from their not having a distinct origin.</p> +<p><i>20th</i>.—Hussun Abdul. Until we came near the Boorhan +valley, the road passed over a high, dry, sandy plain, with no cultivation, +and no water, then the descent took place through picturesque raviny +ground with a few isolated mounds, to a fine clear stream. The +remaining part extended either along the cultivation of the Boorhan +valley, or through similar raviny ground. Two streams were passed, +the last is the Hussun Abdul river.</p> +<p>The vegetation of the high plain continues the same. <i>Bheir</i>, +Mimosa, <i>Kureel</i>, Ærua, Mudar, Andropogoneæ, Pommereullia, +Œgilops, Salvia, and Crotalaria aphylla.</p> +<p>Among the ravines and thence to Hussun Abdul, a new feature presents +itself in the frequency of a largish Mimosa, probably that of the Khyber +pass. This forms prettily wooded scenery, the white thorned Mimosa +also occurs, Moacurra none, Euonymus, <i>Bheir</i>.</p> +<p>About Boorhan a Ficus becomes very common, Achyranthes, Kochia fructibus +parvis, Salvia, Serratuloid of Ali-Baghan and Ichardeh. Paganum +common—Adhatoda and Vitex. In scenery the country is pretty, +particularly after passing the last river: a dampish spot was passed +at Bhowli: a large Acacia, Melanoxylon and Pteris were found on the +river banks. Dodonæa seen on low hills near Bhowli, as also +Adiantum. Started at 5 hours 40 minutes and reached at 11.30; +distance at least eighteen miles.</p> +<p>Hussun Abdul, is a pretty place, particularly the broken ground about +the sacred stream, and the tank, in which Mahaseers abound; the water +beautiful, many trees occur, especially Morus, Salix and Ficus.</p> +<p>Zyziphus is a fine tree here, Phœnix, Khuggur, Bukkein, Ficus, +and Cupressus occur.</p> +<p>The jackdaw, <i>mina</i>, blue and chesnut kingfisher, a noisy bird. +The small kingfisher, black and white kingfisher common: Myophonus, +Pomatorrhinus.</p> +<p><i>21st</i>.—The chief cultivation here is <i>bajra</i>, and +Zea maize. The former produces a second crop from branches; hence +it is left standing after the top spike, which is the largest, is picked; +vegetation chiefly Indian, very few Affghan forms remaining, those of +the hills are Mimosa, Adhatoda, and Euonymus.</p> +<p>The water plants are all decidedly tropical; no Epilobium seen since +leaving Peshawar: Eclipta, Cyperaceæ.</p> +<p>Trichodesma, Cannabis.</p> +<p>Fish have few engaging habits, the tame Mahaseers take no notice +of any one until food is thrown to them.</p> +<p>Tagetes, <i>Sud</i> <i>Buruk</i>, is a curious genus, on account +of its simple tubular involucrum, very entire and pappus florets, conduplicate +in æstivation, all florets fæminine are ligulate; are the +folded up ones representations of the males?</p> +<p><i>22nd</i>.—To Janika Sung, seventeen miles: the country continues +much the same. The road passes out of <i>Hussun</i> <i>Abdul</i> +over a low stony elevation, and enters another valley, the exit from +which is through the Maha Gullah: a large Serai is passed about two +and a half miles from the Boorgi; in the Gullah near this, is a portion +of a formed road. Janika Sung is a small village, about five miles +from the Boorgi.</p> +<p>The face of the country is undulated, intersected by ravines, rather +thickly covered with the large Mimosa and <i>Bheir</i>: the same may +be seen in every direction.</p> +<p>Affghan plants have nearly ended, Moacurra and Euonymus alone continuing. +At the Maha Gullah a Carissa, and a <i>Zaitoon</i>, Ehretioides. +This defile is picturesque, the wood prettily contrasted with bits of +grassy ground. Adhatoda in abundance.</p> +<p>The Maha Gullah was formerly a notorious place for robbers, but is +now quite safe, which says much for the Seikh rule.</p> +<p>There was not much cultivation passed to-day, although most of the +surface is fit for it: water is near the surface. The Maha Gullah +range is composed of limestone.</p> +<p>The white-spined Mimosa and crooked-spined one change places, the +former occupies uncultivated plains, the latter stony, undulated, or +hilly ground.</p> +<p>Carissa certainly represents Jasminum.</p> +<p>On the Kaliki Serai plain the chief plant is Mimosa albispina, then +<i>Bheir</i>—here and there patches of Leguminosa, like the Cytisoides, +so common in Affghanistan. In the <i>Bheir</i> thickets Schœnanthus +is common; Andropogon and Pommereullioid also occur.</p> +<p>In the Hussun Abdul river there is a species of Perilampus approaching +to Leuciscus, but with faint bars. In the sacred stream there +is a small Cyprinoid, probably a Systomus, with a conspicuous spot on +either side near the tail: there is also a small loach.</p> +<p>The Mahaseer in the water is a handsome fish, the edges of the scales +being then blackish, as is also the longitudinal line.</p> +<p>It is curious that all plants hitherto found parasitical on roots, +have no green leaves; to this, marked exceptions exists in Cuscuta and +Cassytha, such true-leaved parasites being found only on the ascending +axis; this rule is so permanent, that species of certain genera, such +as Burmannia, the bulk of which are not parasitical, have no leaves. +The mode of attachment of all parasitical plants is I think the same, +otherwise I should suspect the above difference to point to a marked +one in the nature of the fluid derived from the stock: thus leafless +plants might be supposed to induce no particular change in the fluid +they imbibe, while the others might be supposed to elaborate their own +from that of the stock.</p> +<p>There is another very remarkable circumstance connected with the +most typical leafless parasites, in their very frequent limitation to +the genus Cissus, on which perhaps all Rafflesiaceæ and Cynomorieæ +are exclusively found.</p> +<p>My chief reason for supposing Sarcocodon to be Monocotyledonous, +or rather Endogenous, is the ternary division of its parts, and if my +supposition be correct, it tends to establish, if indeed other ample +evidence did not exist, the great permanence and consequent value of +this numerical character.</p> +<p>And with respect to Sarcocoidalis I shall adopt the same opinion, +if I find on enquiry that a binary number, and imperfection of the female +as compared with the male, are more characteristic of Endogenous than +of Exogenous growth. This same genus I consider in both these +characters to allude to some analogy with one or more Acrogenous divisions.</p> +<p>The establishment of the order of Rhizanths, as well as that of Gymnosperms, +I consider as a retrograde step in Botanical science. It is totally +opposed to all sound principles of classification, and is a proof that, +in the nineteenth century, arbitrary characters are still sought for, +and when found are obstinately maintained.</p> +<p>Even in the arbitrary character, which is considered as destructive +of all their other claims to ordinary vegetable rank, there is no unison +whatever, for Rafflesiaceæ have ordinary ovula, while Sarcocoidalis +very extraordinary.</p> +<p>The amount of testimony proving their analogy in germination to be +with Acrogens, must be very strong before I am convinced that plants +with perfect ovula as Rafflesia, etc. germinate from an indeterminate +point, the existence of an aperture in the coats, points in the most +marked manner to some part representing a radicle. With the exception +perhaps of Sarcocoidalis, these plants differ in no respect whatever +from other Phænogamous vegetables; we have instances of the same +parasitical growth, and instances of the same apparent want of a radicle +or homogeneousness of embryo, and in the structure of the parts of the +flower there is tolerably absolute general identity.</p> +<p>It may be worthy of remark, as tending to prove the soundness of +Mr. Brown’s views with regard to the affinity of Rafflesia with +Aristolochia, that a certain large and fleshy flowered species of the +latter genus has the same putrescent smelling flowers.</p> +<p>In Rhizantheæ, as proposed by Endlicher, we have an assemblage +of discordant characters; we have plants associated, differing in the +number of their parts; we have some of comparatively simple roots associated +with others of decidedly complex organization; we have Rafflesia in +which highly complex female parts exist, associated with Sarcocoidalis, +in which these are very simple. But besides the objection of combining +discrepancies on the strength of one agreement, the establishment of +divisions upon such pretexts is objectionable in another point of view; +viz., that of making a transition of structure on one point, instead +of in several.</p> +<p>We might as well form into one division all the ternarily formed +Dicotyledons, and into another all those Monocotyledonous plants with +evident distinction between the calyx and corolla.</p> +<p>But in addition to reasons founded on structure, I have this theoretical +one, that it is as requisite that Endogens should establish a similar +relation with Acrogens; otherwise a gradation exists between the first +and third classes, and none between the second and third, between which, +gradations ought to be the more frequent.</p> +<p>As Rafflesia approaches Aristolochia, so does Sarcocodon, Taccaceæ.</p> +<p><i>23rd</i>.—Rawil Pendi. The country continues much +the same to within five or six miles of this place, viz. high raviny +ground, well covered with Mimosa, <i>Bheir</i>, etc.</p> +<p>Thence to Pendi, the country is open, bare, and much cultivated. +From high ground near Pendi a considerable tract is visible, consisting +of low ridges running nearly due south, interrupted here and there, +and apparently quite bare.</p> +<p><i>24th</i>.—To Manikyala, distance nineteen miles, over an +elevated country, with not much cultivation; broken ground occurs here +and there, especially near the river Hoomook, now a small stream, the +road winding through Mimosa jungle. <i>Moacurra</i>, <i>Bheir</i>, +Euonymus.</p> +<p>At a place about three miles from Manikyala, are the remains of a +Serai now in ruins. From this to Metope, the road extends over +an open country capable of cultivation, but neglected. Water in +wells is thirty feet perhaps below the surface: the country about Tope +very bare of trees.</p> +<p>A curious low chain of sandstone rocks here occurs, and occasionally +protrudes in places from below the soil, seldom rising above five feet +and occasionally dilated into undulated tracts.</p> +<p>Drill husbandry, (i.e. seeds sown after the plough,) seems much in +practice here. The late noise about improving pasture grasses +has been made with little reference to the nature of an Indian climate, +or the genius of the Indian people. Pasture grasses only excel +in countries where there is no division of climate into hot, rainy, +and cold seasons; but not in those in which rain is equally, or nearly +so distributed throughout the year. So far as I know, no place +in India is calculated for pasture grass cultivation, because as none +of excellent kinds can succeed without irrigation, this element of Indian +agriculture is applied to more profitable cultures, such as artificial +grasses. In the cold season and the rains, nature supplies <i>dhoob</i> +grass bountifully, leaving the natives to apply their agricultural labour +to other objects, and in such seasons the condition of cattle is decidedly +good.</p> +<p>Manikyala Tope, seen from near Rawil Pendi, is an insignificant building, +and presents the same architecture as other topes, and as the Cabul +tower, although it is not of the same materials. The lower part +of the base is of pure sandstone, the upper of a stalactital conglomerate +of small pebbles, often perforated. The terraces at the base are +now almost hid by rubbish, so that the whole looks like an overgrown +dome or a low mound. There are three stone ledges below, with +flat pilasters between the middle and lower ledge on the sides. +The dome is much damaged. The stones of which the building was +erected, were not hewn inside, but I do not know whether they have not +been cemented together. Access is easy to the top partly by means +of broken steps, otherwise the stones gave good footing. The top +of the ruin is now open and discloses a square <i>funnel</i>, penetrating +half the height of building; thence modern handiwork has caused a broken +irregular perforation. The building is not remarkable for great +size, nor are any of the stones large, still as a piece of architecture +it is far superior to any thing in modern Affghanistan. The country +around is very bare and sufficiently open. It is curious that +there are many Indian plants found on or about the building, all indicating +a decided approach to Hindoostan. A Sida, Euonymus, Bheir, Lantana, +and a Menispermum, are common shrubs on the building, also Solanum quercifolium, +spinis albis floribus cœruleo purpureis.</p> +<p><i>25th</i>.—To Puttiana, seventeen to eighteen miles; the +country much the same, little wood but bushes of the old trees: it is +tolerably open until Pukkee Serai is approached, when it becomes very +much broken and intersected by ravines in every direction, showing most +forcibly the action of water, many of the cliffs thus formed are picturesque. +At Pukkee a small river is forded, thence to near Puttiana the country +then becomes almost as raviny as before.</p> +<p>Ærua, Bheir, Mudar, a Kochia, much like one of the Cutch ones, +and the before-mentioned plants continue.</p> +<p><i>26th</i>.—To Bukriala, twenty-two miles. From Puttiana +the road is good, extended over a high open country, except where it +crosses two ravines; the first of these containing a stream of water, +about ten miles from Puttiana. From Tammuch the road descends +steeply into the Bukriala Kakhudd ravine, which takes you to Bukriala.</p> +<p>This ravine runs through a system of sandstone hills, of a blueish +muddy aspect, and red clayey earth, often conglomerate. In colours +not unlike the Bamean district. Water is plentiful in pools throughout +the lower half of the road, which is all descent. Bukriala stands +on the right bank of the Khudd river towards its mouth, the vegetation +about this place resembles that of the open country, and is unchanged +in the Khudd river, consisting of Kochia, <i>Phulahi</i>, and Mimosa +albispina, Euonymus, <i>Bheir</i>, Adhatoda, Barleria, <i>Kureel</i>, +and Capparis of Gundamuck; also Pommereullioid, Andropogon, Schœnanthus, +Holcus, and Stipa of Kuta Sung, Carallunia, Grewia and Menispermum of +Manikyala.</p> +<p>Also two plants not before seen, and neither common, one is a Butea, +leguminous velutino pubescent arbor, it is the <i>Chuchra</i> of the +natives, and is used for paper. The other is a curious, leafless, +scandent, monocotyledon. Asparaginea, and an Apocynea.</p> +<p>Alhaji Maurorum is not found between this and Hussun Abdul, which +is a curious thing.</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—To Rotas. The country to Mittian is very +much broken and consequently difficult, consisting entirely of ups and +downs: the road is only practicable for cattle; the bad part of it commences +with an abrupt ascent. About Puttiana, four miles from Bukriala, +it becomes better, but it continues partially raviny until within four +miles of Rotas, when the country becomes open, and the road good.</p> +<p>Vegetation continues precisely the same, being still in the region +of <i>Phulahi</i>: observed the Asparaginea again, Euonymus continues, +also Astragalus, a Kochia, and an Affghan Chenopodium.</p> +<p>A beautiful <i>bhowli</i> or spring is passed on the way two miles +from Rotas, it is covered with masonry, and the descent is by means +of steps; the water passes under large arches, a work worthy of the +Mogul emperors. Sissoo, Peroplocea of Bolan, common. Rotas +is an immense irregular fortress, with the usual faults: it is much +too large, and situated on a rocky plain partially commanded. +It must have once contained a large number of inhabitants. Nelumbium, +Potamogeton: half a mile from Rotas towards Peshawur, a square Serai, +enclosing a garden, is passed.</p> +<p>The country immediately about it on the west is open: and well cultivated: +there is but little water in the river. The town or village is +of no size.</p> +<p>Butea not uncommon.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—Proceeded to Jhilun. The road is at first +steep, as it passes down along the Rotas river, about three miles from +thence it is good, extending over a plain to the Jhilun. Fine +cultivation observed on all sides, and of various sorts, chiefly <i>Bajra</i> +and <i>Kureel</i>. Dhah abundant, but not arborescent, Euonymus, +Peganum, <i>Bheir</i>, and <i>Phulahi</i>, the latter very dwarfish. +Mimosa albispina and Adhatoda very common. The commonest tree +in these countries is <i>Bheir</i>, and a very handsome tree it is; +<i>Nihi</i>-<i>joari</i> cultivated.</p> +<p><i>Sun</i> and <i>Tel</i> occur, the last is very common. Yesterday +a new cultivation presented of a Composite plant, called <i>Kalizeen</i>, +used as spice or <i>musala</i> for horses. The birds observed +were Hæmatornis, Crateropod, Sylvia, Alauda cristata, Alauda alia +in flocks.</p> +<p>The town of Jhilun stands immediately on the right bank of the river +of that name, it is a large and flourishing place. The river is +about 200 yards broad, not rapid, but here and there deep, and the bed +at this place forms one undivided channel. The right bank on which +the town stands has a stony sloping shore, the left is sandy.</p> +<p>It is a mistake to suppose that the hilly country ceases here, on +the contrary, it crosses the Jhilun. At the ferry this river runs +through a large valley, bounded to the west by hills like those to which +we have been accustomed; to the east it is bounded by a low chain, which +runs parallel with the general course of the river. The valley +is open only to the north and south.</p> +<p>Otters, tortoises, and Mahaseer were seen in the river.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—To Sera, twenty-four miles, half the distance +extended over the uncultivated base of the hills, and then over the +low range itself, from which at two points, fine views are obtained +of the vast plain of the Punjab. Throughout this vast surface +the vegetation is exactly the same—Euonymus continuing, Peganum +and <i>Phulahi</i> forming chief vegetation; numbers of white partridge +occur.</p> +<p>In the plains <i>Dhah</i> is found in profusion, especially where +the cultivation is not extensive. A new Acacia appears, the <i>Kikkur</i>, +forming groves about most of the villages. Noticed the Physaloides +of Lundykhanah. Encamped under a fine Mimosa and <i>Bheir</i> +near an old Serai which forms part of the village, with a splendid view +of the Himalayas stretching away from east to west. It appears +from this direction as if there was only one low range between the plains +and the culminating range of the Himalayas. Nothing like these +mountains has been seen in Khorassan. The chief cultivation about +here is <i>Nihi</i>-<i>joari</i>, then <i>Bajra</i>—why is the +former always bent?</p> +<p>Prickly pear common from where we crossed the Jhilun river.</p> +<p>A curious metamorphosis of Sesamum is of common occurrence: the calyx +being unchanged, while the corolla preserves somewhat its shape, but +is foliaceous, the other organs are much transformed, the ovary less +so than the stamina, but generally much enlarged; <i>ovules</i> <i>in</i> +<i>leaves</i> inside. This is worthy of examination, as it shows +very plainly the origin of the stigmata from the placentæ.</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—Halted owing to having been robbed of two horses.</p> +<p><i>31st</i>.—Wuzerabad, twenty-four miles. Ten miles +from Wuzerabad the road extended through a highly cultivated country, +and crossed the Chenab, on the left bank of which river Wuzerabad is +situated. The Chenab is a fine river, the stream 150 yards wide, +but on either side extensive beds of sand show that the river during +some seasons is of great width.</p> +<p>Wuzerabad is a nice well built town, having a fine straight bazaar, +with paved street. The chief gateways and residences built by +General Avitabile.</p> +<p>Chilodia occurs in abundance, Eleusine sp., E. coracana; <i>Bajra</i> +and <i>Joari</i> <i>Nihi</i> being the prevailing cultivation.</p> +<p>It is curious that in Phulahi major of Sera and the <i>Kikkur</i>, +the young branches only are armed with thorns, so that the spines must +be deciduous in certain species of Mimosa.</p> +<p>Cactus is an instance of a calyx composed of a congeries of adherent +leaves, which leaves produce from their axilla, tufts of white hair +and thorns; or is it not an instance of an axis hollowed out towards +the apex, to the sides of which the ovary finally adheres, in this case +the outermost series of the perianth will be calyx; one reason for adopting +this supposition, besides the axillary bodies, is that there is no gradation +between the small concave leaves of the calyx, and the outer series +of the perianth.</p> +<p><i>November</i> <i>1st</i>.—Halted for fishing: Cyorinus Mrigala, +is the <i>Mhoori</i> of these parts; it grows to a large size, is a +handsome fish, and is indeed considered the king of fishes by the Punjabees. +The intestines are in longitudinal folds of extremely small comparative +diameter, and enormous length; in a large specimen it is twenty-three +times the length of the body. The intestines of the <i>Mahaseer</i> +are on the other hand only two and a quarter times the length of the +body!</p> +<p>Of the fish obtained, two are Perilamps, here called <i>Rohi</i>,</p> +<pre> 5 or 6 Cyprinides, + 4 or 5 Siluri, + 2 Ophiocephali, + 1 Esox. +Indeed I obtained a list of twenty-four species.</pre> +<p><i>2nd</i>.—To Goograuwala, twenty-four and a half miles, over +a fine populous generally cultivated country. Goograuwala is a +large town, having the streets paved with brick like those of Wuzerabad. +Cactus very common; <i>Kikkur</i> (Mimosa) is the chief tree here about +the <i>Fukeer’s</i> abodes. The Banyan also occurs.</p> +<p>Peganum and Kochia of Jallalabad continue. There is a fort +of some size close to this town, built of mud; the ditch is unfinished, +and not deep, it has a fau-se-braie, with bastions like those at Peshawur +and Jumrood. The surface of the ground is much broken close up +to it, the earth being taken away for bricks.</p> +<p><i>3rd</i>.—Proceeded to Koori, an inconspicuous village, belonging +to M. Court; it is surrounded by extensive plains, on which a tall grass +occurs to a great extent. Distance twenty-eight and a half miles, +the time taken for to-day’s journey was six and a quarter hours.</p> +<p>The country is precisely similar to that previously noticed, the +only new feature being the grassy plains, in which at some little distance +from Koori, deer, partridge, hares, etc. are said to abound.</p> +<p>A sissoo-like tree is not uncommon.</p> +<p><i>4th</i>.—To Shah Durrah, twenty-three and a half miles at +Nunzul, eight miles from Shah Durrah, a fort with ditch out of repair +was passed, at Koori ten miles from Shah Durrah, passed a deep Nullah +called Baghbuchah, with high banks, thence entered on a tract of country +covered with Saccharum, (<i>Moong</i>), from which ropes are made; (this +is the same as the Chuch species,) we next entered on cultivation close +to Shah Durrah, which place is well wooded.</p> +<p>Mangoe trees, <i>Ams</i>, Eugenia Jambolana, <i>Jams</i>, <i>Bheirs</i>, +Phœnix, <i>Kikkur</i>, and Ficus, are the principal trees.</p> +<p>The grassy tracts of the Punjab represent probably the original vegetation, +existing now only here and there owing to the extension of cultivation.</p> +<p>From Shah Durrah Lahore is visible, particularly the buildings of +the Mogul emperor’s, consisting of a conspicuous dome in ruins, +and some minarets, a large Serai likewise going to ruin, standing in +the immediate vicinity of the Royal Gardens, Lahore is decidedly a handsome +looking city viewed from Shah Durrah.</p> +<p>So great is the tendency in palms to throw out roots towards the +base, that these roots exist in the common <i>Khujoor</i>, although +they have to get rid of the indurated bases of the petioles before they +can make their exit. They are so extremely short and indurate +that it is difficult to imagine the function they perform; at first +they are capable probably of absorbing from the air.</p> +<p><i>5th</i>.—Proceeded to General Court’s house at Lahore, +distance six miles, the road after crossing the Ravee river near a royal +summer house of no extraordinary merits, passes on to the town, and +then winds round under the Simon Boorge, a very striking part, at least +exteriorly of the city, for the buildings, works, etc. are in good repair. +Besides this the ground outside is swardy and prettily wooded.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XXIII.</h3> +<p><i>From</i> <i>Lahore</i> <i>to</i> <i>Simla</i>.</p> +<p>Lahore is surrounded by a ditch and wall, the work of former emperors’ +of Delhi; the environs of the city, particularly towards M. Court’s +residence, are studded with mosques, etc. mostly half ruined, and the +ground is literally strewn with old bricks, so that the city must at +one time have been an enormous one.</p> +<p>Seikh troops in large numbers are cantoned round to the east and +south-east skirts of the town, in low pucka barracks.</p> +<p>Several low mounds apparently unconnected with ruins, occur in this +direction.</p> +<p>I arrived to hear of the death of Kurruck Sing, who was burned the +same day with five women; after the ceremony a scaffolding fell down, +wounding Nehal Sing dangerously in the head, and killing the son of +Goolab Sing. Late in the evening the Maharajah was senseless.</p> +<p>It is a curious thing, that the prince who this day ascended the +<i>guddee</i>, and Goolab Sing, had been active intriguers against Kurruck +Sing, who is said to have had his death hastened through chagrin at +witnessing Nehal Sing’s usurpation of power.</p> +<p><i>6th</i>.—Not much cultivation was observed on the road to-day, +which extended over a naked marshy saline plain, or through a <i>Kureel</i>, +and small <i>Jundy</i> and <i>Phulahi</i> district.</p> +<p>To Kanah, seventeen miles—<i>Jundy</i>, <i>Kureel</i> and <i>Bheir</i> +occur extensively. <i>Jundy</i> is a low prickly shrub, Mimosa. +There is something curious both in the surface of the cavity enclosing +the seed, and in that of the seed itself of Acacia serissa. The +former presents the distinct appearance of a straight line, originating +in the same spot as the funicle, and terminating in a very well marked, +circular depression; it is formed by the funicle as far as the cells +of the legume. If a section be made through the seed longitudinally +and its cell parallel with the plane of the legume, this mark will be +found on both sides of the cell, but more distinct on one than the other.</p> +<p>The mark on the seed by no means relates to this, at least it does +not correspond with it, for it consists of a somewhat reniform elevated +ridge, the ends of which do not meet, but one of which originates from +an elevation to which the depression would seem to respond. The +straight line does not correspond with the funicle, which is not straight, +but is pushed up in a curved form against the upper edge of the cell.</p> +<p>It corresponds, however, with a straight subclavated line running +from the hilum to the elevation whence the curved line originates, although +this correspondence is not always well marked.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m504.jpg"> +<img alt="Sketch of Jundy seed" src="images/m504.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p>The above marking, corresponding as it does in the flat part of the +legume with the funicle, evidently points to a peculiarity in the distribution +of the vascular system; probably it consists of the testa, and if so, +it is worthy of remark, as the main vessels ordinarily a single one, +run along the edge, and not on the flat surface of the fruit.</p> +<p>I know of no similar instance; in this plant the vessels of the testa +are distributed primarily at right angles with the placenta, and not +in parallel lines with that organ. If the seed were depressed +instead of compressed, it would not present this peculiarity, although +even then the two primary vessels would be remarkable. From this +instance it may be assumed that the hilum may only be defined correctly +as the spot of union between the body of the seed and the funiculus. +The leaflets of the plumula are pinnate.</p> +<p>It is also curious that the distribution of green parenchyma is along +the course of the veins of the legume, and that there is a more minute +reticulation, and a greater development of the green colour on the faces +of the cells, than on any other part of the surface of the legume. +There is no difference appreciable by the naked eye between the placental +and dorsal sutures, with the exception of the sutural line of union, +which has the usual relation with the axis of the head of the flowers—Euphorbia +occurs here.</p> +<p>The affinity of Cacteæ with Grossulaceæ is questionable, +the systems of organization being very different. Query—What +instances are there of affinity between inferior ovary plants, with +distinct definite envelopes and stamina, and plants with a perhaps similar +ovary, but with indefinite envelopes and definite stamina with a want +of correspondence in the structure of the fruit?</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—To Kussoor, twenty miles. The road extended +generally through a <i>Jundy</i> country: about half-way Salvadora appears +in abundance. Kussoor is a large well-built town, consisting of +three separate parts, each surrounded by a <i>pucka</i> wall furnished +with bastions: these three parts are at some distance from each other. +<i>Furas</i> tree common.</p> +<p><i>8th</i>.—Ferozepore. About this place two species +of Kochia occur, and Artemisia is not uncommon. The Serratuloides +of Alli-Baghan and Ichardeh in profusion, affording cover for game.</p> +<p><i>16th</i> <i>to</i> <i>21st</i>.—Loodianah. In the +Nullah, Butomus begonifolius occurs.</p> +<p>The following are the fish of Loodianah taken both from the Nullah +and the Sutledge.</p> +<p><i>Roh</i>.—Cyprinus (Cirrhinus), a large, very handsome, excellent, +orange-brown fish, takes a bait but is capricious.</p> +<p><i>Rohoo</i>.—A sombre black-brown fish, intestines several +times the length of the body, said to be the young of the above. +Both these are different from the Roh or Ruee of the Ganges.</p> +<p><i>Coorsah</i>.—Labeo Cursis, a definite scaled sombre fish, +it is good food, and attains the size of two to three seers; intestines +twice the length of the body, very narrow.</p> +<p><i>Kkul</i> <i>Bhans</i>.—Cirrhinus Calbasu, a sombre looking +breamoid-shaped fish, attains the same size as the above, and is reputed +to be excellent food.</p> +<p><i>Mhirgh</i>.—Gobio Mrigala, a handsome fish, particularly +when young; form very elegant, intestines fourteen times the length +of the body; excellent food.</p> +<p><i>Bura</i> <i>Raiwah</i>.—Gobio Rewah, a very handsome, eight-cornered, +scaled fish, with orange fins and golden sides: takes no bait?</p> +<p><i>Chota</i> <i>Raiwah</i>.—Gobio occurs in shoals—either +occupied in busily turning up its silvery sides against the bottom, +or at the surface, above which it may be seen protruding its head.</p> +<p><i>Bhangun</i>.—Gobio, a handsome fish, not esteemed.</p> +<p><i>Potea</i>.—Systomus, takes bait—worms; affords good +sport and reaches to one seer, but is not esteemed; colours ordinary.</p> +<p><i>Systomus</i>, a beautiful fish, back shining green, sides yellow, +scales beautifully striate, with a spot near the tail; mostly found +in still water.</p> +<p><i>Gonorrhynchus</i>.—Snout rough, colours sombre, belly somewhat +protuberant; found with Systomus. The intestines are of the usual +form of the genus.</p> +<p>Gonorrhynchus, a sombre smaller fish, found in still water.</p> +<p><i>Bura</i> <i>Chalwa</i>.—Much esteemed as food in the districts +of the Sutledge.</p> +<p><i>Perilampus</i>.—Intestines shorter than the body, having +at the lower end a short curve; above green, from lateral line downwards +silvery.</p> +<p><i>Moh</i>.—A <i>Siluroid</i> fish, does not attain the size +of the real Moh, which is a higher or deeper formed fish.</p> +<p><i>Tengrei</i>.—Silurus platycephalus. Attains a very +large size.</p> +<p><i>Gudha</i>.—A Percoid. Colour irregular brown, mouth +very protractile.</p> +<p><i>Gughal</i>.—Ophiocephalus, a handsome fish, back rich greenish, +mottled brown, with 3 or 4 black spots on the sides, which are yellow, +passing off into white, and a peacock spot on the tail. Fins spotted +with white: it reaches a large size.</p> +<p><i>Bham</i>.—Macrognathus, body eel-shaped, with a row of movable +spines along the back.</p> +<p>About Loodianah, the Naiad of Affghanistan, Monandra, stigmatibus +reniformibus, is common in the Nullah, so also is Butomus begonifolius, +but this may be a leafless form of Sagittaria.</p> +<p>Towards Roopur, Sissoo becomes more and more common. Roopur +is a largish town, with a Seikh pucka fort on a mound. The fort +is surrounded by a dry ditch. The town is situated on a low, rather +rugged ground, forming the first elevations of the surface towards the +Himalayas; beyond it to the north-east is a low spur, also to the west +a similar spur, very barren, rugged, clayey rock forming the immediate +bank of the river. Every thing assimilates to the Bukriala and +Jhilun ranges. Saccharum, <i>Moong</i>, as before, <i>Bheir</i> +likewise occurs.</p> +<p>Phœnix, Dalbergia sissoo, Ficus, Adhatoda, Boerhaavia scandens, +Hyperanthera, Morus, Apluda, Tamarisk, Riccia, Ammannia, Euphorbia antiquorum, +Cactus, and Dodonæa, form the chief vegetation.</p> +<p>Some rapids occur near the Bungalow: the strongest is under a cliff +on the opposite side; no fish rose to red or black hackle or orange +flies, all which were tried in vain in the deep still water close under +Bungalow. The plants of this place are Guilandina, Grewia arbuscula +in fruit, Justicia, <i>Bheir</i>, <i>Neem</i>, Mango, Parkinsonia, the +latter rare.</p> +<p>Fish caught in net are Mullet, this fish is very active, and escapes +by jumping over. Silurus, Mahaseer, several of the latter taken +at a haul, the largest 10 lbs., it is a beautiful fish with golden sides, +scales black, with the anterior half bluish-black, posterior half tawny-yellow, +fins orange, lips very thick and leathery; it lives half or three-quarters +of an hour after it is taken out of its element.</p> +<p>The <i>Nepura</i> of the natives, Gobio malacostoma, or Rock Carp +of Gray, Hardwicke’s Illustrations, is the <i>puhar</i>-<i>ka</i> +<i>muchee</i> of these parts: it has the base and edges of the scales +dull greenish-blue, fins dusky, a transverse pink line across the scales; +the length of the intestines is twenty-two and a half times that of +the body, filled with mud and coloured pulp, stomach continuous with +the intestine, and more fleshy, filled with green and whitish pulp, +and disposed in longitudinal folds.</p> +<p>The <i>Bangun</i>, Roh, (Gobio) is a splendid fish, base and edges +of the scales dusky brown, otherwise refulgent gilded, belly white, +fins dusky, head greenish-brown, less gilding about the dorsal scales. +This fish I have not seen elsewhere. Length of intestines disposed +in longitudinal folds, the posterior of which are nearly as long as +abdominal cavity, the whole twenty-seven and a half times the length +of the body. Organization and contents as in <i>Nepura</i>. +The breadth or depth of this fish immediately behind the opercule three +inches, across the body, opposite the first ray of dorsal fin, five +inches, first ray of anal three inches, length twenty-two inches.</p> +<p>Query—In which part of a fish intestines like that of the Mahaseer, +is the chief digestion carried on?</p> +<p><i>27th</i>.—To Nalighur Bungalow, the distance rather less +than sixteen, but over fourteen miles through a similar country to that +round Roopur. The road passes a large village called Canowli; +at rather less than about half-way it extended across a sandy dry river +bed of some extent, on the right bank of which, at the highest part, +is a Seikh brick fort. The road subsequently passes the Sursa, +a small shallow rapid stream. The dry bed of which turns up on +the south side of the low range to the south of Nalighur valley. +No change in vegetation takes place, except the occurrence of a Croton, +much like that of the Pagoda near Canowli.</p> +<p>Trees observed—Eugenia Jambolana, Mangifera indica, Ficus, +<i>Bheir</i>, <i>Neem</i> or Melia Azadarach, Parkinsonia about the +bungalow. Toon, Cordia, Bauhinia, Bambusa, Emblica, Morus, Plumeria, +Mudar, Saccharum, <i>Moong</i>, Bheir fruticos and Kikkur are the most +common indigenous forms. Dhak in patches here and there: Cassia +also occurs.</p> +<p>Nalighur consists of a village and fort, the latter situated to the +north-east half-way up a range of hills, the country about very barren. +Indeed the aspect of the country is much like that between Hussun Abdul +and the Jhilun, except in the rarity of <i>Phulahi</i>.</p> +<p>A great affinity exists in foliation between Terebinthace and Sapindaceæ. +Also both in foliation, flowers, and habit, between Myrtaceæ and +Guttiferæ, the only material differences being in aroma, and adherent +ovary.</p> +<p>The plants observed about Nalighur Bungalow, exclusive of species +collected, were Cassia lanceolatoid, this is the common Indian <i>Tora</i>, +Acacia, <i>Rairoo</i>, Achyranthes aspera, Digera arvensis, Polanisia +viscosa, Carissa, Carandas, Bheir frutex, Coccinea communis, Cucurbita, +Sida multilocularis, Amaranthus? spicatus, Cassia fistula.</p> +<p>Eleusine <i>echinata</i>; Poa very common, as well as <i>Dhoob</i>.</p> +<p>In gardens—Tabernamontana coronaria, <i>Bhee</i>, Chrysanthemum +double and ligulate. Of Birds, <i>Pica</i> <i>vagans</i>.</p> +<p><i>28th</i>.—From Nalighur to Ramgurh, a good ten miles. +The road first ascends through and above the town, then follows a short +twisting descent, and soon after a very long but not very steep ascent, +until it comes over the ravine of the Ramgurh river, and the descent +to that torrent; thence an uninterrupted steep ascent about as much +as the descent to Ramgurh. There is no bungalow at this stage, +merely a few shops and sheds. The fort is situated to the left +of and 600 feet above the town.</p> +<p>From Ramgurh to Sahee Bungalow, the distance is eight miles, there +is a steep descent to Sursa torrent, which contains very little water, +then a rather long and gradual ascent, then descend to the Gumbur river. +The road then extends up this ascent for one and a half mile, and continues +ascending on the right bank until within half a mile of the bungalow, +to which there is a slight descent. There is no made road along +the Gumbur, and I missed or did not observe the Soorog river. +The Gumbur is a clear, good-sized stream, fordable about the rapids, +bed narrow confined.</p> +<p>The hills traversed were comparatively barren, and decidedly uninteresting. +However much in appearance they may here and there assimilate to the +Khorassan hills, no identity in vegetation exists except perhaps in +the Apocynum found at Attock.</p> +<p>The country is cultivated with great labour, and the villages though +small are numerous, and present a look of plenty, like English white-washed +cottages.</p> +<p>There is a difference between the vegetation of the hills near the +plains and those in the interior. On the former there are scarcely +any trees, and Adhatoda occurs in greater profusion than elsewhere. +The Himalayan provinces here present an extreme affinity with the same +range to the eastward, as Bootan and Mussoorie, but the forms are by +no means so frequent—i.e. species are not so numerous. Throughout +the above twenty-eight miles the vegetation is tropical: a few European +forms occur as one gets into the hills, but they are of no great value. +The chief arboreous vegetation consists of Rubiaceæ, Mimoseæ, +Cassiaceæ (<i>Bauhinia</i>), Bignoniaceæ, and Myrtaceæ. +These are much the most common between Ramgurh and the ridge over Naligurh. +Here also Nyctanthes is very common; Zanthoxylon also occurs here and +there like an Ash.</p> +<p>On the ridge above Ramgurh, Adhatoda is very common; Carandas likewise +occurs, but is not very common; Eranthemoides is rather common, but +this occurs in profusion on the descent; Cassia tora, O. lanceolata, +and Peristrophe occur.</p> +<p>On the descent from the above ridge, Porana appears. Lemon-grass, +Bambusifolia, Cryptogramæ calamelanos, Adiantum flagelliformis.</p> +<p>On the long ascent Grislea, Acacia, Bheir, Zanthoxylon, Cordia, Nyctanthes, +Myrtaceæ 1-2, Wendlandia, Bignonia, Randia, and two or three other +trees about houses, a species of Ficus; Euphorbia antiquorum common +on the drier parts.</p> +<p>On the ascent from the torrent, the vegetation is thick. Bauhinia +scandens, Carandas, Butea, Erythrina, neither common, others as before: +Loranthus.</p> +<p>At Ramgurh, Peepul, Erythrina, Rhus planted; Euphorbia antiquorum +very common, Cassia tora, C. lanceolata, Carandas common, Kalanchœ +integrifolia, Adhatoda not rare, scarcely a single wild tree.</p> +<p>Scutellaria occurs on the descent. Rubus, Berberis, Gnaphalium. +On the ascent from Sursa, Geranium, Clematis, Asparagus, Trichodesma +of the plains, Bombax (young), Bambusa, Hirœa, Dioscorea, Fragaria, +Adiantum flagelliformis, Calomelanos, Saccharum, <i>Moong</i>, Acacia, +Adhatoda, Vitex, etc. as before, but trees are not common, except Ficus +and <i>Bheir</i> in profusion.</p> +<p>Descent to the Gumbur the same. Pyrus pomum appears, Carandas, +Anatherum muricatum, Briedleioides common. Along the Gumbur river, +Pyrus, Adhatoda, Mimosa, Dalbergia sissoo, Myrtaceæ, Euphorbia, +etc. continue as before.</p> +<p>Between Nalighur and the commencement of the descent to the Gumbur, +and especially between the Sursa and that descent, the chief vegetation +is tropical grasses, such as Andropogons. Along the Gumbur, the +hills are well covered with tall bushes. Carandas common, but +little if any grass.</p> +<p>Fossil shells are found along the Gumbur. Of birds Pica vagans, +Hæmatornis, and several Sylviæ were observed.</p> +<p>About Sahi, young Pinus longifolia; all around, the hills are of +the same aspect. No fish were seen in the Gumbur, although I crossed +it several times. The view of the plains shows the commencement +of the great chain stretching out in low, very much undulated hillocks, +precisely as in Khorassan.</p> +<p><i>29th</i>.—Proceeded from Syree to Konyar: this I think the +longest of the marches to Loodianah, and is nothing but one series of +ascents and descents chiefly along the Gumbur ravine: at the foot of +ascent to the Konyar, the road crosses a considerable stream, and nearly +at the summit of the ascent, branches off to Soobathoo.</p> +<p>Konyar is a rather large village, well ornamented with trees, in +rather a fine sort of valley, every inch of which is cultivated. +The tank adjacent to the village is well stocked with Nelumbium.</p> +<p>To Syree, the distance is eight and a half to nine miles. The +road crosses the Konyar village and valley, then ascends to the south-east, +and continues ascending gradually by an excellent road for a considerable +way, then it skirts a ridge and comes on the grand Soobathoo road. +From this a short but steep ascent, followed by a descent of a mile +and a quarter, conducts you to the bungalow.</p> +<p>No change occurs in the vegetation. The hills are more grassy +and more bare of trees, especially near Syree, but this is partly owing +to cultivation. The principal woody feature is Euphorbia antiquorum.</p> +<p>The plants before noticed occur throughout, except about Syree, where +scarcely a shrub is to be seen, nothing but burnt up grasses.</p> +<p>At Sahi, Roylea appears, also an odd-looking Modeeca and a Deeringia. +Near these is also an Asplenium, Echites. At Konyar, Prinsepia +appears, and continues becoming more and more frequent up to Syree. +Towards this place V. reniformis is seen, not a single northern grass, +although Syree must be nearly 5,000 feet high.</p> +<p>At Sahi, Pinus longifolia, Phœnix, Salix, and Polygonum of +Chugur-Serai; this is common as far as Konyar. Acacia, Carandas, +Urtica nivea. Rice cultivated.</p> +<p>About three miles beyond it, there is a beautiful ravine with dense +jungle and fine trees, chiefly Laurinea, and I think a Rhus; this is +the only spot I have seen reminding me of the Himalaya to the eastward.</p> +<p>At Konyar—Toon, Morus, Musa, Deeringia, Berberis, Briedleia.</p> +<p>The hills are as usual marked with wavy parallel lines, on which +nothing appears to grow. These lines are united by smaller oblique +ones, whence their origin?</p> +<p><i>30th</i>.—To Simla. The road extends over undulated +ground along ridges until the foot of the great ascent is reached; this +is long and steep, especially steep at the first, or Buttiara pass, +where it turns to the face of the mountain, and extends through beautiful +woods. The ground frozen, with some snow; from this to Simla the +road is tolerably level, and defended on the <i>Khudd</i>, or precipice +side by a railing. It then passes through fir woods, etc. in which +the exceedingly pretty Jay of Bharowli is common.</p> +<p>The vegetation to the foot of the ascent, and nearly half-way up, +is unchanged. Andropogoneous grasses forming the prevailing feature; +but little arboreus or shrubby vegetation occurs. About halfway +between Syree and this an ascent takes place, on which Daphne, Hypericum, +and Echinops occur.</p> +<p>Near Syree—Bombax, Ruta albiflora, Daphne, Pteris aquilina, +Clutia, Aspidium, Polytrichum nanum and aloides, Hypericum, Berberis, +Rubus, Prinsepia, Rosa, Jubrung, Grislea, (rare,) Clematis, Cerasus, +<i>Datura</i>, <i>Bukhein</i>, Citrus, Spermacoce, Pœderia azurea, +and Andropogon bambusifolia were observed. Ficus two species, +Ficus repens, Pommereullioid spicis longis, Rubia Mungista, Galium, +Polygonum of Chugur, Carissa, (rare,) Amaranthaceæ, Conyza.</p> +<p>The great ascent is very instructive; half-way up observed Gaultheria, +conspicuous from its blood-coloured leaves; an oak occurs commonly but +stunted, and a few stunted Pinus longifolia.</p> +<p>Buddlæoides occurs two-thirds of the way up, with Mespilus +microphyllus, Alpina, Labiata and Pyrus.</p> +<p>The oaks and Gaultheria increase in number and size towards Bithuria, +Conaria.</p> +<p>The first to cease is Euphorbia.</p> +<p>At the summit Berberis, Polygonum of Chugur, Rubus deltoideus, Conyza +and Prinsepia may be found, but to no extent. From this to Simla +the vegetation is chiefly northern.</p> +<p>Nothing definite is observable with regard to the distribution of +forests about Simla. The principal secondary ranges, including +the Choor, which is quite void of shrubby vegetation, is about north-east +and south-west; generally the southern aspects of those ridges on which +forests occur is bare; of this, there is a notable instance—Muhassoo.</p> +<p>Mount Jacka, which looks east and west by its broad faces, has both +densely enough wooded with oak, Euonymus, Rhododendron, Gaultheria, +and Ilex, but the ridge which looks to the plains is bare.</p> +<p>Some ridges again are quite bare, as that lowish one between Mounts +Jacka and Muhassoo.</p> +<p>The thickest and most humid woods decidedly occur on the northern +faces of the ridges; and all about Simla instances of this occur. +Such spots are at Simla so much sheltered from the sun, that the snow +which fell on the 23rd November is scarcely diminished.</p> +<p>Even in these there is no comparison in luxuriance and variety of +vegetation with the Mishmee or Bootan portions of the same stupendous +chain.</p> +<p>The trees are few in number as regards species, the only ones I have +observed are a species of oak which is very common, forming the chief +vegetation of the northern faces, and of both those of Mount Jacka.</p> +<p>The scarlet Rhododendron which occurs in the highest parts of the +woods, an occasional Pyrus, Benthamia, Euonymus, Gaultheria very common, +also Pinus Deodara, longifolia, and excelsa; of these the Deodar is +most common. Ilex, a pretty tree, occurring on Mount Jacka.</p> +<p>The following forms also I have noticed—Saxifraga ciliata, +Berberis asiatica, and Gnaphalia three or four species, which are chiefly +confined to grassy naked ridges. Thymus is also confined to these.</p> +<p>Ruta albiflora is very common in woods; Dipsacea and Artemisia on +exposed grassy spots; Swertia is common in damp places; Spiræa +bella, Ledum, Stemodia, Epilobium, Viola, Saccharum rubrum, Valeriana, +Fragaria, Galium, Clematis, Rosa, Rubus, Rumex, Leguminosæ, Coronilloid, +Smilax.</p> +<p>Acanthaceæ, Androsaceæ, particularly a Gnaphalioides +common on the exposed ridge of Mount Jacka; Myrsinea frutex, Parnassia +common, Salix fruticosa; on Prospect Point, Lycopodium, Herminioid, +Epipactis, Orchideæ aliæ, 2 Scitamineæ.</p> +<p>Elæagnus, Mespilus microphyllus, Polygonum of Chugur; 2 or +3 Amaranthaceæ; Prinsepia, rare; very little variety in ferns; +Pteris chrysocarpa, Aspidium pungens, and another are the most common; +nor is there any variety in Epiphytous ferns, and very few Jungermannias. +The Mosses are Bartramia, Catharinea, Polytrichum aloides on banks with +Fissidens, otherwise Hypna are the most prevalent. A Neckera hangs +from every tree, and a Pterogonio Neckeroid covers almost every trunk, +a Brachymenium is likewise common.</p> +<p>Altogether, though numerous, there is no great variety in form.</p> +<p>On the summit of Chaka, Quercus, Gaultheria, and Rhododendron are +common; with here and there a Deodar.</p> +<p>On the east face of that mountain consisting of a long ridge, grasses +form the chief vegetation, among which Andropogons and Schœnanthus +are not uncommon, Gnaphalia and Artemisia occur; Thymus, Androsace gnaphalioides, +Potentilla, Coronilloid, Labiata frutex, Jasminum, Rosa, Mespilus microphyllus, +Clematis, Cnicus, Rubus, Labiata alia, Galium, Swertia, Salvia were +noticed.</p> +<p>Of the tropical forms, Andropogoneous grasses are most common, Saccharum +rubrum of the Khasyah Mountains, Desmodium, Acanthaceæ, and Elæagnus, +which last occurs on Prospect Point.</p> +<p>Saccharum rubrum extends up to 8,000 feet.</p> +<p>The woods generally on the surface are matted down with grasses or +Carexes, so that there is no variety of surface for the lower orders; +in such places, Ophiopogon is very common.</p> +<p>Regarding the Coniferæ, Pinus excelsa is the rarest, Deodar +is the most common; longifolia occurs principally on a southern projection +from Chaka, and on the south face of the Mall ridge.</p> +<p><i>December</i> <i>5th</i>, <i>1840</i>.—Went to Mount Fagoo. +After passing Mount Jacka, or Chaka, you come on a bare country which +continues at least on all the southern aspects until you reach the ascent +to Muhassoo, which is at first steep, then gradual and long; the vegetation +remains unchanged until the Muhassoo ascent is begun upon; then Rhododendron, +Quercus and Gaultheria soon cease, and their places are occupied by +a Quercus much like Q. semecarpifolius, Pinus excelsa also occurs rather +abundantly, and of good size, the other vegetation continues.</p> +<p>The first part of Muhassoo, along which the road runs for some hundred +yards under its crest, is occupied by grassy vegetation, chiefly Andropogon +and Schœnanthus; Gnaphalia, Buddlæa, Labiata, Polygonum +of Chugur, Thymus, etc., and the crest of the same is chiefly occupied +by the undescribed oak.</p> +<p>But where the ridge takes a north and south direction, the west face +becomes almost exclusively occupied by Deodars, among which as one proceeds +up, Pinus Smithiana occurs; after turning again close to the little +Bazar on the north face, the road continues on this side to Fagoo, extending +through a heavy and magnificent forest of Pinus Smithiana and Quercus +semecarpifolius, the Deodar almost ceasing to appear; occasional knolls +are passed, on which grasses, Gnaphalium, etc. occur, the scenery is +very beautiful, the trees being ornamented with the grey pendulous lichen, +and with Neckeræ, particularly the dark Neckera pendula. +The underwood consists here and there of shrubs, but generally herbaceous +vegetation, as grasses, Gnaphalia, etc.</p> +<p>In fact Muhassoo is genuinely Himalayan.</p> +<p>From Fagoo eastward the country is bare, except at great elevations; +near Muttiara to the north, forest-clad mountains occur, also at Huttoo, +and far away to the eastward other fir-clad ridges appear.</p> +<p>It may be said that the really fine forests are restricted above, +within 8,000 feet.</p> +<p>The Smithia pine is a really fine tree, often 100 feet high, and +three to five feet in diameter, known by its downward curved branches, +pendulous branchlets, and pendulous oblong cones: many dead trees from +the effects of barking were observed. It is worthy of remark, +that potatoes are now cultivated in these woods.</p> +<p>The Deodar is not so large as Smithia, and is known by its tabular +branches and ovoid erect cones.</p> +<p>Andropogoneous grasses occur high up; even at the summit Acanthaceæ +occur, scarcely any change in the terrestrial ferns, among which Adiantum +is found in profusion along the road, little change in Mosses, a Polytrichum +occurs at the higher elevations, also a Dicranum on dead trunks of trees.</p> +<p>The only new arboreous vegetation consists in an Acer, which is a +small tree, also a small Poplar and Quercus semecarpifolius, this varies +greatly, Pinus Smithiana, Limonia laureola, a shrubby Rhododendron.</p> +<p>Fagoo is only 5,600 feet above the adjacent heights.</p> +<p>On the edge of the forest, the following genera, etc. were noticed—Spiræa +bella and S. aruncus,* Berberis asiatica, Swertia, grasses common, Gnaphalium, +Senecio., Epilobium, Pteris chysocarpa, P. aquilina, Adiantum, Aspidium, +Rumex, the Labiata fruticosa of Jacka, Potentilla sanguinea, Artemisia, +Coronilloid, Androsacea, Gnaphalioid, Epipactis, Carex, Cnicus, Viola, +Valerianum, Jasminum,* Viburnum,* V. aliud, Populus,* Silene, Mespilus +microphyllus, Verbascum, Thapsia, Ilex, Euonymus, Loniceroid, Acer,* +Eriogonoid,* Geranium scandens.*</p> +<p>Bupleuroid, Polytrichum, Rosa, Rubus, Salex fruticosa,* Fragaria, +Cratægus,* Saxifraga crassifolia, Viscum, Rubia cordifolia.</p> +<p>* Means altitudinal.</p> +<p>Viscum has one attachment, but from this many branches spring after +the form of the primary one. Muhassoo is of great extent, because +an arm of the mountain extends to the south, and there assumes a considerable +height, equal to that of Muhassoo itself, and equally well wooded. +It is of all other situations about Simla the proper place for collecting. +The succession of the pines in these regions is as follows:—</p> +<p>P. longifolia, dry barren spots, from 5,000 to 7,500 feet, as Rhododendrum +arboreum.</p> +<p>P. excelsa, from 7,500 to 8,500 feet, no groups occur.</p> +<p>P. Deodars, from 7,500 to 9,000 feet, especially on southern faces.</p> +<p>P. Smithiana, from 9,000 to 10,000 feet, and is in the highest perfection +on north faces.</p> +<p>One thing remarkable is the wide ranges of the above forms, for excepting +those marked with an asterisk, all are found about Simla.</p> +<p>The most common herbaceous family on Muhassoo is Compositæ, +and very strange to say, most of its forms, as indeed the others, excepting +some of the trees, are found on the Khasyah Mountains at much lower +elevations, and much lower latitudes. Of birds the <i>Cone</i>-<i>eater</i> +of Bootan occurs.</p> +<p><i>7th</i>.—To Annandale, a pretty level spot, some 2,000 feet +below Simla, remarkable for its beautiful grove of Deodars.</p> +<p>Of the wild grasses they are almost all exclusively tropical forms, +Paniceous or Andropogoneous. The chief cultivation of the hills, +Atriplex sanguinea, <i>bhatoo</i> <i>vena</i>, some fine walnut trees, +mulberries, also Celtoidea? <i>Kirrack</i> <i>ven</i>, Zanthoxylon.</p> +<p>Passed a herd of red-rumped monkeys; the crooked-tailed <i>Lungoor</i> +is also found here.</p> +<p>Rich vegetation extends down the southern slope, where there is a +waterfall. It is curious that both here and in Annandale the Deodar +grows to a large size, although naturally its range does not extend +so low as this slope. Passed a beautiful temple, surrounded with +fine Deodars.</p> +<p>Ferns occur in more abundance, thence downwards Woodwardia, Dicksonia? +Cyatheoides, and Adiantum. Mosses also occur on the dripping rocks.</p> +<p>An Alnus also occurs.</p> +<p>No fish were visible in the streamlet. Peristrophe occurs throughout +from Roopur to Simla.</p> +<p>Epiphytous or at least <i>Epirupous</i> Scitaminia. Hedychium +is found on rocks on this slope, which would give an elevation of about +5,500 feet.</p> +<p>On the sunny sides of hills about Simla, Dicerma is found, this is +one of the most tropical forms.</p> +<p>No Epiphytous Orchidea are seen. And of birds Enicurus, the +redstart of torrents, and Myophonus were observed.</p> +<h3>CHAPTER XXIV.</h3> +<p><i>Heights</i> <i>and</i> <i>Latitudes</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>Stations</i> +<i>visited</i> <i>in</i> <i>Affghanistan</i>. <a name="citation517"></a><a href="#footnote517">{517}</a></p> +<p>“The subjoined Table contains the latitudes and the altitudes +of the principal stations passed through by the late Dr. Griffith during +the Cabul campaign in 1838-40, from his original observations. +The altitudes for the latitudes were taken with the sextant and the +artificial horizon, and the results throughout are so nearly coincident, +that it may be relied on the latitudes herein given are correct to within +half a minute in space.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/m517.jpg"> +<img alt="Formula for Latitude/Elevation" src="images/m517.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p><i>Latitudes</i>, <i>and</i> <i>Elevations</i> <i>above</i> <i>the</i> +<i>Sea</i>, <i>of</i> <i>the</i> <i>various</i> <i>localities</i> <i>visited</i> +<i>in</i> <i>Affghanistan</i>.</p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/tle1.jpg"> +<img alt="Lat/El. 1" src="images/tle1.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/tle2.jpg"> +<img alt="Lat/El. 2" src="images/tle2.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<p style="text-align: center"> +<a href="images/tle3.jpg"> +<img alt="Lat/El. 3" src="images/tle3.jpg" /> +</a></p> +<h2>NOTES.</h2> +<p><a name="footnote0a"></a><a href="#citation0a">{0a}</a> Major Thomson, +C. B., Engineers, from whom as well as all the officers of the same +corps, Mr. Griffith experienced much kindness in Affghanistan.</p> +<p><a name="footnote0b"></a><a href="#citation0b">{0b}</a> <i>Racoma</i> +<i>nobilis</i>, Calcutta Journ. Nat. Hist. Vol. ii, p.577. t. xv fig. +4. Subfam. SCHIZOTHORACINÆ.</p> +<p><a name="footnote0c"></a><a href="#citation0c">{0c}</a> Calcutta +Journal Natural History, Vol. II. p577, t, xv. f. 4.</p> +<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7">{7}</a> It is also on +a northern declivity.</p> +<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9">{9}</a> On a hill near +the Bungalow are the tombs of Lieuts. Burlton and Beddinfield, two distinguished +officers murdered by the natives in 1829.</p> +<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12">{12}</a> Although +in former times it must have been of some note, the vicinity is strewed +with sculptured stones and columns, of which the modern buildings are +constructed. These remains present the form and proportions of +European Architecture, and exhibit considerable taste.</p> +<p><a name="footnote24"></a><a href="#citation24">{24}</a> The rank +of the chiefs of various nations on the frontiers of Assam depends on +the number of skulls of vanquished enemies, which decorate their houses. +The Mishmee trophies, as appears from the author’s account in +the Journ. As. Soc. May 1837, consist of the skulls of cattle only.</p> +<p><a name="footnote25"></a><a href="#citation25">{25}</a> <i>Trigonocephalus</i> +<i>mucrosquamatus</i>, afterwards described in Proc. Zool. Soc. 1839, +Vid. Cal. Journ. Nat. Hist. vol. 1, p.77.</p> +<p><a name="footnote29a"></a><a href="#citation29a">{29a}</a> Subsequently +described from this specimen in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society, +March 12, 1839. Cal. Journ. Nat. Hist. vol 1, p.82.</p> +<p><a name="footnote29b"></a><a href="#citation29b">{29b}</a> <i>Gonorhynchus</i> +<i>bimacalutus</i>, <i>G</i>. <i>brachypterus</i>, <i>Perilompus</i> +<i>æquipinnatus</i>, and <i>Cobitis</i> <i>phoxocheila</i>, which +have been all since described from these specimens in the 19th vol. +As. Res. Beng.</p> +<p><a name="footnote31"></a><a href="#citation31">{31}</a> Afterwards +crossed by the author in his journey into Burma.</p> +<p><a name="footnote33"></a><a href="#citation33">{33}</a> For a narrative +of Lieut. Wilcox’s visit to the Mishmee mountains, see As. Res. +vol. xvii. p.314.</p> +<p><a name="footnote35"></a><a href="#citation35">{35}</a> Mithun is, +according to the author, a peculiar species of Ox.</p> +<p><a name="footnote40"></a><a href="#citation40">{40}</a> Subsequently +described by the author in an important communication to the Linnæan +Society.</p> +<p><a name="footnote42"></a><a href="#citation42">{42}</a> One of the +most influential of the Singpho chiefs, whose influence at this period +kept Upper Assam unsettled.</p> +<p><a name="footnote51"></a><a href="#citation51">{51}</a> A Burmese +authority.</p> +<p><a name="footnote53"></a><a href="#citation53">{53}</a> Probably +Major R. Bruce of the Rajah’s service, one of the Superintendents +of Tea Cultivation.</p> +<p><a name="footnote54"></a><a href="#citation54">{54}</a> For the whole +of this able communication, detailing the object and results of his +visit to the Mishmee mountains, See Journ. As. Soc. Beng. May 1837.</p> +<p><a name="footnote60"></a><a href="#citation60">{60}</a> See Reports +of the Coal Committee, 1841, p.3.</p> +<p><a name="footnote61a"></a><a href="#citation61a">{61a}</a> See Description +by the Author, As. Res. Bengal, Vol. xix.</p> +<p><a name="footnote61b"></a><a href="#citation61b">{61b}</a> Since +described from these specimens as <i>Calamaria</i> <i>monticola</i>, +and <i>Dipsas</i> <i>monticola</i>. Vide Proc. Zool. Soc. March +12th 1839, and Cal. Journ. Nat. Hist. Vol. i. pp.80-85.</p> +<p><a name="footnote61c"></a><a href="#citation61c">{61c}</a> As. Res. +Vol. xix. p.336.</p> +<p><a name="footnote64"></a><a href="#citation64">{64}</a> Dr. Bayfield +was deputed by the Resident at Ava to meet the party from Assam on the +Burmese Frontier.</p> +<p><a name="footnote66"></a><a href="#citation66">{66}</a> This is one +of the Mountain Barbels, <i>Oreinus</i>, probably <i>O</i>. <i>guttatus</i>, +As. Res. vol. xix. p.273.</p> +<p><a name="footnote68"></a><a href="#citation68">{68}</a> A Barbel, +and an Oreinus, or Mountain Barbel.</p> +<p><a name="footnote74a"></a><a href="#citation74a">{74a}</a> <i>Opsarius</i> +<i>gracilus</i>, As. Res. vol. xix. p.419.</p> +<p><a name="footnote74b"></a><a href="#citation74b">{74b}</a> A species +of Barbel; probably <i>B</i>. <i>deliciosus</i>, As. Res. xix. p.352.</p> +<p><a name="footnote75"></a><a href="#citation75">{75}</a> Since described +as <i>Cyprinus</i> <i>semiplotus</i>, As. Res. vol. xix. p.346.</p> +<p><a name="footnote78"></a><a href="#citation78">{78}</a> This would +seem to be Coal formation, in which amber is frequently found. +It occurs, for instance, in the spurious coal of Kurribori, E. of Rungpore.</p> +<p><a name="footnote111"></a><a href="#citation111">{111}</a> The reading +of this passage is obscure, the MS. being very faintly written in pencil.</p> +<p><a name="footnote113"></a><a href="#citation113">{113}</a> Introd. +Nat. Syst. p.44.</p> +<p><a name="footnote114"></a><a href="#citation114">{114}</a> The preceding +eight pages within brackets are written faintly in pencil.</p> +<p><a name="footnote115a"></a><a href="#citation115a">{115a}</a> The +usual route is to Kujoo Ghat, about five miles below Moodoa Mookh, thence +through Sooroo, Kujoo, etc. to the Booree Dihing.</p> +<p><a name="footnote115b"></a><a href="#citation115b">{115b}</a> By +the Karam and this other branch, on which old Beesa was situated, all +the water which formerly supplied the Noa Dihing now passes into the +Booree Dihing.</p> +<p><a name="footnote116"></a><a href="#citation116">{116}</a> Most of +the Singphos subject to our control are located between Kujoo Ghat and +the Booree Dihing, as well as on the banks of this river and in the +valley of the Tenga Panee.</p> +<p><a name="footnote117"></a><a href="#citation117">{117}</a> The existence +of Petroleum is of value as connected with the solution of Caoutchouc.</p> +<p><a name="footnote118"></a><a href="#citation118">{118}</a> The affix +Nam, signifies in the Shan language a river or stream.</p> +<p><a name="footnote119a"></a><a href="#citation119a">{119a}</a> The +word <i>Kha</i> is Singfo, and signifies a river.</p> +<p><a name="footnote119b"></a><a href="#citation119b">{119b}</a> Here +Capt. Hannay and myself were met by Mr. Bayfield.</p> +<p><a name="footnote119c"></a><a href="#citation119c">{119c}</a> Khioung, +or Kioung, signifies a small river in the Burmese language.</p> +<p><a name="footnote119d"></a><a href="#citation119d">{119d}</a> Bhoom +is the Singfo word for mountain.</p> +<p><a name="footnote124a"></a><a href="#citation124a">{124a}</a> Which +we forded a few miles below Isilone; depth of the ford from two to four +feet.</p> +<p><a name="footnote124b"></a><a href="#citation124b">{124b}</a> In +this direction the valley is nearly 65 miles in length.</p> +<p><a name="footnote125"></a><a href="#citation125">{125}</a> This river +rises in a conspicuous range, well known by the name of Shewe Down-gyee, +or great golden mountain.</p> +<p><a name="footnote126"></a><a href="#citation126">{126}</a> This is +certainly not the Ulukhor of Buch. Hamilton’s statistics of Dinajpoor.</p> +<p><a name="footnote128"></a><a href="#citation128">{128}</a> Probably +from a species of Sterculia.</p> +<p><a name="footnote129"></a><a href="#citation129">{129}</a> The Toung-bein +of the Burmese.</p> +<p><a name="footnote130"></a><a href="#citation130">{130}</a> Many of +these hills are inhabited by Kukkeens, who do a great deal of mischief, +and whose annual depredations remain unchecked and unpunished.</p> +<p><a name="footnote132"></a><a href="#citation132">{132}</a> Serpentine +is occasionally found in the bed of the Nam-marsan.</p> +<p><a name="footnote139"></a><a href="#citation139">{139}</a> Especially +on the right bank.</p> +<p><a name="footnote145"></a><a href="#citation145">{145}</a> It must +be observed that Kamein is several miles out of the route from the Mogoung +river to Mogoung itself, we visited it en route to the Serpentine mines.</p> +<p><a name="footnote147"></a><a href="#citation147">{147}</a> This is +the site of the fossil bones discovered by Mr. Crawfurd.</p> +<p><a name="footnote149"></a><a href="#citation149">{149}</a> +These brackets are shown in the text turned through 90°. - L. B.</p> +<p><a name="footnote168"></a><a href="#citation168">{168}</a> The Kullung +rock is a most striking object from its artificial dome-like appearance. +It is composed of granite resting on an elevated plateau of soft friable +gneiss. This last in mouldering away, leaves numerous rounded +boulder-like masses of granite on the surface, which from their hardness, +resist the action of the atmosphere amidst the surrounding decay of +the softer rock.</p> +<p><a name="footnote172"></a><a href="#citation172">{172}</a> For original +notice of the discovery of this raised beach, see Journal of the Asiatic +Society, September 1835, p.523; and an account of the difference of +level in Indian coal fields, vol. vii, 1838, p.65 of the same work; +also description of Cyrtoma a new genus of Fossil Echinida, Calcutta +Journal of Nat. Hist. vol. i, p.155.</p> +<p><a name="footnote183"></a><a href="#citation183">{183}</a> Simia +Hylobates agilis.</p> +<p><a name="footnote186"></a><a href="#citation186">{186}</a> Raised +on posts.</p> +<p><a name="footnote193"></a><a href="#citation193">{193}</a> See Journal +Asiatic Society of Bengal, vol,—Feb. 1838.</p> +<p><a name="footnote205a"></a><a href="#citation205a">{205a}</a> Eastern +Thibet.</p> +<p><a name="footnote205b"></a><a href="#citation205b">{205b}</a> For +this and similar figures, see <a name="citation212"></a><a href="#footnote212">{212}</a></p> +<p><a name="footnote205c"></a><a href="#citation205c">{205c}</a> <i>Barbus</i> +<i>hexagonolepis</i>, Asiatic Res. xix.—Pl. f. 3, pp.170, 313, +336.</p> +<p><a name="footnote205d"></a><a href="#citation205d">{205d}</a> Cyprinus +Semiplotus As. Res. xix.—Pl. 37. f. 2, pp.274, 346.</p> +<p><a name="footnote206a"></a><a href="#citation206a">{206a}</a> Opsarius +gracilus, As. Res. vol. xix.</p> +<p><a name="footnote206b"></a><a href="#citation206b">{206b}</a> See +<a name="citation35"></a><a href="#footnote35">{35}</a></p> +<p><a name="footnote212"></a><a href="#citation212">{212}</a> Such figures +may be thus read. Temp. of the air 60° Fah., that of boiling +water 204½°.</p> +<p><a name="footnote217a"></a><a href="#citation217a">{217a}</a> Relative +heights.</p> +<p><a name="footnote217b"></a><a href="#citation217b">{217b}</a> These +figures refer to Woollaston’s thermetrical barometer.</p> +<p><a name="footnote221"></a><a href="#citation221">{221}</a> Centropus +nigrorufus.</p> +<p><a name="footnote227"></a><a href="#citation227">{227}</a> <i>Oreinus</i> +<i>progastus</i>, As. Res. vol. xix. pl. 40, fig. 4.</p> +<p><a name="footnote349"></a><a href="#citation349">{349}</a> Referred +to by the Author as an Anthemidioid, and on one occasion as <i>Santonica</i> +<i>achilleoidea</i>.</p> +<p><a name="footnote383"></a><a href="#citation383">{383}</a> Schizothorax +Edeniana, Cal. Journ. Nat. Hist. Vol. II. p.579.</p> +<p><a name="footnote390a"></a><a href="#citation390a">{390a}</a> Schizothoracinæ.</p> +<p><a name="footnote390b"></a><a href="#citation390b">{390b}</a> Cobitis +marmorata, see Calcutta Journal of Nat. Hist. Vol. II, p.560, where +the Fishes collected by Mr. Griffith in these parts are described.</p> +<p><a name="footnote404"></a><a href="#citation404">{404}</a> Salmo +orientalis, Calcutta, Journ. Nat. Hist. Vol. III. p.283.</p> +<p>Throughout Southern Asia, including the Punjab, and both plains and +peninsula of India properly so called, no species exists of the trout +family or Salmonidæ. Their discovery in the streams descending +from the northern declivity of the Hindoo-koosh distinguishes that chain +as the southern boundary or limit of the family. It is also remarkable +that the Hindoo-koosh should likewise be the exclusive province of a +numerous group of small scaled Cyprinidæ, met with only in the +rivers of Affghanistan, consisting of the genera, Schizothorax, Racoma, +and Oreinus, of which one or two species only have been found to extend +south along the plateau of the Himalaya, as far as 27° N., while +the bulk of the family is confined to 34° N. See Calcutta +Journ. Nat. Hist. Vol. II. p.560 t. xv.</p> +<p><a name="footnote417"></a><a href="#citation417">{417}</a> This alludes +to a sketch of the valley.</p> +<p><a name="footnote418"></a><a href="#citation418">{418}</a> Melia.</p> +<p><a name="footnote435"></a><a href="#citation435">{435}</a> For the +particulars of this attack in which Mr. Griffith nearly lost his life, +the reader is referred to extracts from private correspondence.</p> +<p><a name="footnote450"></a><a href="#citation450">{450}</a> These +sketches, together with the author’s further views on the subject, +will be more appropriately incorporated in the second part of his Posthumous +Papers, entitled ‘Icones Plantarum Asiaticarum,’ and ‘Notulæ +ad plantas Asiaticas.’</p> +<p><a name="footnote479"></a><a href="#citation479">{479}</a> Nearly +allied to <i>Cobitis</i> <i>chlorosoma</i>, As. Res. Vol. xix, pl. 52, +f. 3.</p> +<p><a name="footnote481"></a><a href="#citation481">{481}</a> This is +an undescribed species if not an undescribed genus, and was by some +mischance lost from the collections; it may properly, when described, +receive the name of the author, who was the first to notice so remarkable +a form.</p> +<p><a name="footnote484"></a><a href="#citation484">{484}</a> It is +chiefly important as a generic, not as a specific character, see <i>November</i> +<i>1st</i>.</p> +<p><a name="footnote517"></a><a href="#citation517">{517}</a> +The Editor is indebted to the kindness of Mr. Curnin, not only for the +note with which this table of heights and latitudes is introduced, but +also for the construction of the table itself from the results of 437 +observations for latitudes alone, and an equal number almost for altitudes.</p> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOURNALS OF TRAVELS IN ASSAM, BURMA,</p> +<pre> +BHOOTAN, AFGHANISTAN AND THE NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES*** + + +***** This file should be named 15171-h.htm or 15171-h.zip****** + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/5/1/7/15171 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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