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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51878 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51878)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The City of the Sultan; and Domestic Manners
-of the Turks, in 1836, Vol. 1 (of 2), by Miss (Julia) Pardoe
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The City of the Sultan; and Domestic Manners of the Turks, in 1836, Vol. 1 (of 2)
-
-
-Author: Miss (Julia) Pardoe
-
-
-
-Release Date: April 28, 2016 [eBook #51878]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF THE SULTAN; AND
-DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE TURKS, IN 1836, VOL. 1 (OF 2)***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Julia Miller, Turgut Dincer, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive/American Libraries
-(https://archive.org/details/americana)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 51878-h.htm or 51878-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51878/51878-h/51878-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51878/51878-h.zip)
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/cityofsultanandd01pardiala
-
- Project Gutenberg has the other volume of this work.
- Volume II: see http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51879
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- A carat character is used to denote superscription. A
- single character following the carat is superscripted
- (example: G^t). Multiple superscripted characters are
- enclosed by curly brackets (example: Lith^{rs}).
-
- The part of List of Illustrations in Vol. I. related
- to Vol. II. is moved to Vol. II. for completenes and
- consistency.
-
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY OF THE SULTAN; AND DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE TURKS, IN 1836.
-
-
-[Illustration: Miss Pardoe del.
-
-Day & Haghe Lith^{rs}. to the King.
-
-THE CHAPEL OF THE TURNING DERVISHES.]
-
-_H. Colburn, 13 G^t. Marlborough S^t._]
-
-
-THE CITY OF THE SULTAN; AND DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE TURKS, IN 1836.
-
-by
-
-MISS PARDOE,
-
-Author of “Traits and Traditions of Portugal.”
-
-
-[Illustration: THE MAIDEN’S TOWER.]
-
-
-In Two Volumes.
-
-VOL. I.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London:
-Henry Colburn, Publisher,
-Great Marlborough Street.
-1837.
-
-London:
-F. Shoberl, Jun., Leicester Street, Leicester Square.
-
-
- TO HER
-
- TO WHOM PROFESSION AND PANEGYRIC
-
- WERE ALIKE SUPERFLUOUS;
-
- AND FROM WHOM,
-
- DURING MY SOJOURN IN THE EAST,
-
- I WAS FOR THE FIRST TIME SEPARATED—
-
- TO MY LOVED AND LOVING MOTHER,
-
- I DEDICATE THIS WORK.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-In publishing the present work I feel that I should be deficient in
-self-justice, did I not state a few facts relatively to the numerous
-difficulties with which I have had to contend during its compilation.
-
-The language of Turkey, in itself a serious impediment from its total
-dissimilarity to every European tongue, naturally raises a barrier
-between the native and the stranger, which is to the last only partially
-removed by the intervention of a third person; who, acting as an
-Interpreter, too frequently fritters away the soul of the conversation,
-even where he does not wilfully pervert its sense. But this drawback to
-a full and free intercourse with the natives, irritating and annoying as
-it is, sinks into insignificance, when compared with the myriad snares
-laid for the stranger, (and, above all, for the literary stranger) by
-party-spirit and political prejudice. The liberal-minded and
-high-hearted politician of Europe, even while he is straining every
-nerve, and exerting every energy, to support and strengthen the
-interests of his country, disdains to carry with him into private life
-the hatreds, the jealousies, and the suspicions, which, like rust on
-metal, mar the brightness of the spirit that harbours them. He does not
-reject a friend because his political tenets may be at variance with his
-own; nor overlook the amiable traits of his character, to dwell only
-upon his opposing prejudices and interests.
-
-The height to which party-spirit is carried in Constantinople; or I
-should rather say, in the Frank quarter of Constantinople, would be
-laughable were it not mischievous. Even females are not free from the
-_malaria_ which hovers like an atmosphere about the streets and
-“palaces” of Pera; and a traveller has not been domesticated a week
-among its inhabitants, ere he almost begins to believe that the
-destinies of the whole Eastern Empire hang upon the breath of a dozen
-individuals. With one party, Russia is the common sewer into which are
-poured all the reproach and the vituperation of indignant
-patriotism—with the other, England is the landmark towards which is
-pointed the finger of suspicion and defiance. All this may be very
-necessary, and very praiseworthy, as a matter of diplomacy; I suppose
-that it is both the one and the other. I have no opinion to offer on the
-subject. I merely venture to question the propriety of suffering such
-anti-social feelings to intrude into the bosom of private life; and to
-question the soundness of the judgment which would universally create a
-bad man out of a rival politician; and make the opening of one door the
-signal for the closing of another. It is said that the three plagues of
-Constantinople are Fire, Pestilence, and Dragomen; judging from what I
-saw and heard while there, I should be inclined to add a fourth, and to
-designate it, Politics. Certain it is that the faubourg of Pera always
-reminded me of an ant-hill; with its jostling, bustling, and racing for
-straws and trifles; and its ceaseless, restless struggling and striving
-to secure most inconsequent results.
-
-That the great question of Eastern policy is a weighty and an important
-one, every thinking person must concede at once; but whether its final
-settlement will be advantageously accelerated by individual jealousies
-and individual hatreds is assuredly more problematical. “He who is not
-for me is against me,” is the motto of every European resident in
-Turkey; for each, however incompetent he may be to judge of so intricate
-and comprehensive a subject, is nevertheless a loud and uncompromising
-politician. And, if the temporary sojourner in the East be resolved to
-belong to no _clique_, to pledge himself to no party, and to pursue a
-straight and independent path, as he would do in Europe, without lending
-himself to the views of either, he is certain to be suspected by both.
-
-These are the briars which beset the wayside of the stranger in Turkey.
-He has not only to contend with the unaccustomed language and manners of
-the natives—to fling from him his European prejudices—and to learn to
-look candidly and dispassionately on a state of society, differing so
-widely from that which he has left—but when the wearied spirit would
-fain fall back, and repose itself for a while among more familiar and
-congenial habits, it has previously to undergo an ordeal as unexpected
-as it is irritating; and from which it requires no inconsiderable
-portion of moral courage to escape unshackled.
-
-Such are the adventitious and unnecessary difficulties that have been
-gratuitously prepared for the Eastern traveller, and superadded to the
-natural impediments of the locality; and of these he has infinitely more
-reason to complain, than of the unavoidable obstacles which meet him at
-every step in his commerce with the natives. That the Turks as a people,
-and particularly the Turkish females, are shy of making the acquaintance
-of strangers, is most true; their habits and feelings do not lend
-themselves readily to a familiar intercourse with Europeans; nor are
-they induced to make any extraordinary effort to overcome the prejudice
-with which they ever look upon a Frank, when they remember how absurdly
-and even cruelly they have been misrepresented by many a passing
-traveller, possessed neither of the time nor the opportunity to form a
-more efficient judgment.
-
-When my father and myself left Europe, it was with the intention of
-visiting, not only Turkey, but also Greece, and Egypt; and we
-accordingly carried with us letters to influential individuals, resident
-in each of those interesting countries, whose assistance and friendship
-would have been most valuable to us. And, for the two or three first
-months of our sojourn in Constantinople, while yet unwilling to draw
-deductions, and to trust myself with inferences, which might, and
-probably would, ultimately prove erroneous, I suffered myself to be
-misled by the assertions and opinions of prejudiced and party-spirited
-persons, and still maintained the same purpose. But, when awakened to a
-suspicion of the spirit-thrall in which I had been kept, I resolved to
-hazard no assertion or opinion which did not emanate from personal
-conviction, and I found that I could not prove an honest chronicler if I
-merely contented myself with a hurried and superficial survey of a
-country constituted like Turkey.
-
-To this conviction must consequently be attributed the fact that the
-whole period of my sojourn in the East was passed in Constantinople, and
-a part of Asia Minor. But my personal disappointment will be over-paid,
-should it be conceded that I have not failed in the attempt of affording
-to my readers a more just and complete insight into Turkish domestic
-life, than they have hitherto been enabled to obtain.
-
- Bradenham Lodge, Bucks,
- May 1837.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- The Golden Horn—Stamboul in Snow—The Seraï
- Bournou—Scutari—Galata—First View of Constantinople—St.
- Sophia and Solimaniè—Pera—Domestication of Aquatic
- Birds—Sounds at Sea—Caïques—Oriental Grouping—Armenian
- Costume—Reforms of Sultan Mahmoud—Dervishes—Eastern
- Jews—Evening—Illuminated Minarets—Romance versus
- Reason—Pain at Parting—Custom House of Galata—The East
- versus the West—Reminiscences of the Marseillois
- Functionaries—The British Consul at Marseilles—The
- Light-house at Syra—The Frank Quarter—Diplomatic
- Atmosphere—Straw Huts—Care of the Turks for Animals—Scene
- from Shakspeare Page 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Difficulty of Ingress to Turkish Houses—Steep Streets—The
- Harem—The Tandour—The Mangal—The Family—Female
- Costume—Luxurious Habits—The Ramazan—The Dining-room—The
- Widow—The Dinner—The Turks not Gastronomers—Oriental
- Hospitality—Ceremony of Ablution—The Massaldjhe—Alarm in the
- Harem—The Prayer—Evening Offering—Puerile
- Questions—Opium—Primitive Painting—Splendid Beds—Avocations
- of a Turkish Lady—Oriental Coquetry—Shopping—Commercial
- Flirtations—The Sultana Heybétoullah—A Turkish Carriage—The
- Charshees—Armenian Merchants—Greek Speculators—Perfumes and
- Embroidery 16
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Turning Dervishes—Appearance of the Tekiè—The
- Mausoleum—Duties of the Dervishes—Chapel of the Convent—The
- Chief Priest—Dress of the Brotherhood—Melancholy
- Music—Solemnity of the Service—Mistakes of a Modern
- Traveller—Explanation of the Ceremony—The Prayer—The Kiss of
- Peace—Appearance of the Chapel—Religious Tolerance of the
- Turks—The French Renegade—Sketch of Halet Effendi, The
- Founder of the Tekiè 40
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Merchants of Galata—Palaces of Pera—Picturesque Style of
- Building—The Perotes—Social Subjects—Greeks, European and
- Schismatic—Ambassadorial Residences—Entrée of the
- Embassies—The Carnival—Soirées Dansantes—The Austrian
- Minister—Madame la Baronne—The Russian Minister—Madame de
- Boutenieff—The Masked Ball—Russian Supremacy—The Prussian
- Plenipotentiary—The Sardinian Chargé d’Affaires—Diplomacy
- Unhoused—Society of Pera 56
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- The Greek Carnival—Kassim Pasha—The Marine Barrack—The
- Admiralty—Palace of the Capitan Pasha—Turkish Ships and
- Turkish Sailors—More Mistakes—Aqueduct of Justinian—The
- Seraï—The Arsenal—The “Sweet Waters”—The Fanar—Interior of
- a Greek House—Courteous Reception—Patriarchal Customs—Greek
- Ladies at Home—Confectionary and Coffee—A Greek
- Dinner—Ancient and Modern Greeks—A Few Words on
- Education—National Politeness—The Great Logotheti
- Aristarchi—His Politics—Sketch of his Father—His Domestic
- History—A Greek Breakfast—The Morning after a Ball—Greek
- Progress towards Civilization—Parallel between the Turk and
- the Greek 65
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Difficulty of Obtaining an Insight into Turkish
- Character—Inconvenience of Interpreters—Errors of
- Travellers—Ignorance of Resident Europeans—Fables and
- Fable-mongers—Turkey, Local and Moral—Absence of Capital
- Crime—Police of Constantinople—Quiet Streets—Sedate
- Mirth—Practical Philosophy of the Turks—National
- Emulation—Impossibility of Revolution—Mahmoud and his
- People—Unpopularity of the Sultan—Russian
- Interference—Vanity of the Turks—Russian Gold—Tenderness of
- the Turks to Animals—Penalty for Destroying a Dog—The English
- Sportsman—Fondness of the Turks for Children—Anecdote of the
- Reiss Effendi—Adopted Children—Love of the Musselmauns for
- their Mothers—Turkish indifference to Death—Their
- Burial-places—Fasts—The Turks in the Mosque—Contempt of the
- Natives for Europeans—Freedom of the Turkish
- Women—Inviolability of the Harem—Domestic Economy of the
- Harem—Turkish Slaves—Anecdote of a Slave of Achmet
- Pasha—Cleanliness of Turkish Houses—The Real Romance of the
- East 86
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- The Harem of Mustafa Effendi—The Ladies of the
- Harem—Etiquettical Observances of the Harem—Ceremonies of
- the Salemliek—Jealousy of Precedence among the Turkish
- Women—Apartment of the Effendi—Eastern Passion for
- Diamonds—Personal Appearance of Mustafa Effendi—The little
- Slave-girl—Slavery in Turkey—Gallant Present—The
- Dinner—Turkish Cookery—Illuminated Mosques—The
- _Bokshaliks_—The Toilet after the Bath—History of an
- _Odalisque_—Stupid Husbands—Reciprocal Commiseration—Errors
- of a Modern French Traveller—Privacy of the Women’s
- Apartments—Anecdote of the Wife of the Kïara Bey—The Baïram
- _Bokshalik_—My Sleeping-room—Forethought of Turkish
- Hospitality—Farewell to Fatma Hanoum—Dense Crowd—Turkish
- Mob—Turkish Officers—Military Difficulty—The “Lower
- Orders”—Tolerance of the Orientals towards
- Foreigners—Satisfactory Expedient 109
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Bath-room of Scodra Pasha—Fondness of the Eastern Women for
- the Bath—The Outer Hall—The Proprietress—Female Groups—The
- Cooling-room—The Great Hall—The Fountains—The Bathing
- Women—The Dinner—Apology for the Turkish Ladies 129
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Cheerful Cemeteries—Burial-ground of Pera—Superiority of the
- Turkish Cemeteries—Cypresses—Singular Superstition—The
- Grand Champs—Greek Grave-yard—Sultan Selim’s
- Barrack—Village of St. Demetrius—European
- Burial-ground—Grave-stones—The Kiosk—Noble View—Legend of
- the Maiden’s Tower—Plague Hospital of the Turks—The
- Plague-Caïque—Armenian Cemetery—Curious
- Inscriptions—Turkish Burial-place—Distinctive
- Head-stones—Graves of the Janissaries—Wild
- Superstition—Cemetery of Scutari—Splendid Cypresses—Ancient
- Prophecy—Extent of Burial-ground—The Headless
- Dead—Exclusive Enclosures—Aspect of the Cemetery from the
- Summer Palace of Heybètoullah Sultane—Local Superstition—The
- Damnèd Souls 138
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- Character of the Constantinopolitan Greeks—The Greek Colony
- at the Fanar—Vogoride, Logotheti, and Angiolopolo—Political
- Sentiment—Chateaubriand at the Duke de Rovigo’s—Biting
- Criticism—Greek Chambers—“What’s in a Name?”—Custom of
- Burning Perfumes—The Pastille of the Seraglio—Turkish
- Cosmetics—Eastern Beauty 157
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- The Kourban-Baïram—Politeness of Mustafa Effendi—Depressing
- Recollections—Unquiet Night—Midnight March—Turkish
- Coffee—A Latticed Araba—The Mosque of Sultan
- Achmet—Beautiful coup-d’œil—Dress of the Turkish
- Children—Restlessness of the Franks—The Festival of
- Sacrifice—Old Jewish Rite—The Turkish
- Wife—Sun-rise—Appearance of the Troops—Turkish
- Ladies—Group of Field Officers—The Sultan’s
- Stud—Magnificent Trappings—The Seraskier Pasha—The Great
- Officers of State—The Procession—The Sultan—Imperial
- Curiosity—The Chèïk-Islam—Costume of the Sultan—Japanese
- Superstition—Vanity of Sultan Mahmoud—The Hairdresser of
- Halil Pasha—Rapid Promotion—Oriental Salutations—Halil
- Pasha—Saïd Pasha—Unruly Horses—The Valley of the “Sweet
- Waters”—Pera 171
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- The Military College—Achmet Pasha and Azmi Bey—Study of Azmi
- Bey—His grateful Memories of England and the English—The
- Establishment—The Lithographic Presses—Extemporaneous
- Poetry—Halls of Study—Number of Students—Mathematical
- Hall—The Sultan’s Gallery—The Mosque—The Mufti—The Turkish
- Creed—The Imperial Closet—The Gallery of the Imperial
- Suite—The Retiring-Room—The Printing-Office—The
- Hospital—The Refectory—The Professor of Fortification—Negro
- Officers—Moral Condition of the College—Courtesy of the
- Officers—Deficiencies of the Professors—The Turks a Reading
- People—Object of the Institution—Reasons of its
- Failure—Smiling Enemies—Forlorn Hope—Russian
- Influence—Saduk Agha—Achmet Pasha—Azmi Bey—Apology for my
- Prolixity 194
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- Invitation from Mustapha Pasha of Scodra—The Caïque, and the
- Caïquejhes—How to Travel in a Caïque—Hasty
- Glances—Self-Gratulation—Scutari—Imperial Superstition—The
- Seraglio Point—Dolma Batchè—Beshiktash—The Turning
- Dervishes—Beglièrbey—The Kiosks—A Dilemma—A Ruined
- Palace—An Introduction—A Turkish Beauty—A Discovery—A New
- Acquaintance—The Buyuk Hanoum—Fatiguing Walk—Palace of
- Mustapha Pasha—The Harem—Turkish Dyes—Ceremonies of
- Reception—Turkish Establishment—The Buyuk Hanoum—Turkish
- Chaplets—The Imperial Firman—Pearls, Rubies, and
- Emeralds—The Favourite Odalique—Heyminè Hanoum—A
- Conversation on Politics—Scodra Pasha—Singular
- Coincidence—Convenience of the Turkish Kitchen—Luxury of the
- Table—Coquetry of the Chibouk—Turkish Mode of Lighting the
- Apartments—Gentleness towards the Slaves—Interesting
- Reminiscences—Domestic Details—Dilaram Hanoum—A Paragraph
- on Pearls—A Turkish Mirror—A Summons—Scodra Pasha—Motives
- for Revolt—The Imperial Envoy—Submission—Ready Wit of the
- Pasha’s Son—The Reception Room—Personal Appearance of the
- Scodra Pasha—Inconvenient Courtesy—Conversation on
- England—Philosophy—Pleasant Dreams—The Plague-Smitten 216
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- Procession of Betrothal—Preliminary Ceremonies—The Mantle of
- Mahomet—The Palace of the Seraskier Pasha—The Palace
- Square—Picturesque Groups—An Interior—Turkish
- Children—Oriental Curiosity—Costume of the Turkish
- Children—Military Music—The Procession—Hurried Departure of
- the Crowd—The Seraskier’s Tower—The Fire Guard—Candidates
- for the Imperial Bride—Imperial Expedient—Saïd Pasha—Policy
- of the Seraskier—An Audience—The Biter Bitten—Ingenious
- Ruse—Sublime Economy—Brilliant Traffic—The Danger of
- Delay—The Marriage Gifts—An Interesting Interview 255
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- Fine Scenery—The Coast of Asia—Turkish Cemeteries—The
- Imperial Seraï—The Golden Horn—Mount Olympus—The
- Arabajhe—The Araba—The Persian Kiosk—The Barrack of
- Scutari—The Mosque of Selim III.—The Slipper of the Sultana
- Validè—The Imperial Guard—Military Material—The Macaroni
- Manufactory—Sublime Targets—A Major of the Imperial
- Guard—Triumph of Utilitarianism—The Rise of the Vines—The
- Holy Tomb—Encampments of the Plague-smitten—The Setting
- Sun—Return to Europe—The Square of Topphannè 276
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- Turkish Superstitions—Auguries—The Court Astrologer—The
- Evil Eye—Danger of Blue Eyes—Imperial Firman—The
- Babaluk—The Ceremony—Sable Pythonesses—Witchcraft 289
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- Imperial Invitation—Disagreeable Adventure—Executed
- Criminal—Efficacy of Wayside Executions—Tardy
- Conversions—Mistaken Humanity—Summary Mode of
- Execution—The Palace of Asmè Sultane—Entrance of the
- Harem—Costume of the Slaves—Nazip Hanoum—Ceremonious
- Reception—The Adopted Daughter—Costume of the Ladies of the
- Seraï—Beauty of the Slaves—Extraordinary
- Arrangement—Rejected Addresses—The Imperial
- Lover—Sacredness of Adoption in Turkey—Romantic
- Correspondence—Ladies of the Household—The Mother of the
- Slaves—Peroussè Hanoum—Crowded Audience—The Imperial
- Odalique—Music of the Harem—The New Pet—The
- Kislar-Agha—The “Light of the Harem”—The Poetical
- Sultan—Indisposition of the Sultana—The Palace Gardens—The
- Imperial Apartments—The Dancing Girl—Reluctant
- Departure—Ballad by Peroussè Hanoum 298
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- Kahaitchana—The Barbyses—The Valley of the Sweet
- Waters—Imperial Procession—National Interdict—Picturesque
- Scene—The Princess Salihè and her Infant—Forbearance of the
- Sultan—The Toxopholites—Imperial Monopoly—Passion of the
- Sultan for Archery—Record-Columns—The Odalique’s Grave—The
- Lost One—Azmè Sultane—Imperial Courtesy—A Drive through the
- Valley 321
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- Easter with the Greeks—Greek Church at Pera—Women’s
- Gallery—Interior of a Greek Church—The Sanctuary—The
- Screen—Throne of the Patriarch—The Holy Sepulchre—Singular
- Appearance of the Congregation—Sociability of the
- Ladies—_L’Echelle des Morts_—Shipping—Boats and
- Boatmen—Church of the Fanar—Ancient Screen—Treasure
- Chests—The Sanctuary—Private Chapels—A Pious
- Illumination—Priests’ House—Prison—Remedy against
- Mahomedanism—Midnight Mass—Unexpected Greetings—The
- Patriarch—Logotheti—Russian Secretaries—Russian Supremacy
- in Turkey—Affinity of Religion between the Greeks and
- Russians—The Homage—Pious Confusion—Patriarch’s
- Palace—Lovely Night-Scene—Midnight Procession—Serious
- Impressions—Suffocating Heat—Dawn 332
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- Feasting after Fasting—Visit to the Patriarch—Gorgeous
- Procession—Inconvenient Enthusiasm—Indisposition of the
- Patriarch—The Ceremony of Unrobing—The Impromptu Fair—The
- Patriarch at Home—The Golden Eggs 353
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
- High Street of Pera—Dangers and Donkeys—Travelling in an
- Araba—Fondness of the Orientals for their
- Cemeteries—Singular Spectacle—Moral Supineness of the
- Armenians—M. Nubar—The Fair—Armenian
- Dance—Anti-Exclusives—Water Venders—Being à la
- Franka—Wrestling Rings—The Battle of the Sects 360
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
- The Mosques at Midnight—Baron Rothschild—Firmans and
- Orders—A Proposition—Masquerading—St. Sophia by
- Lamplight—The Congregation—The Mosque of Sultan
- Achmet—Colossal Pillars—Return to the Harem—The
- Chèïk-Islam—Count Bathiany—The Party—St. Sophia by
- Daylight—Erroneous Impression—Turkish Paradise—Piety of the
- Turkish Women—The Vexed Traveller—Disappointment—Confusion
- of Architecture—The Sweating Stone—Women’s Gallery—View
- from the Gallery—Gog and Magog at Constantinople—The
- Impenetrable Door—Ancient Tradition—Leads of the
- Mosque—Gallery of the Dome—The Doves—The Atmeidan—The Tree
- of Groans—The Mosque of Sultan Achmet—Antique
- Vases—Historical Pulpit—The Inner Court—The Six
- Minarets—The Mosque of Solimaniè—Painted
- Windows—Ground-plan of the Principal Mosques—The Treasury of
- Solimaniè—Mausoleum of Solyman the Magnificent—Model of the
- Mosque at Mecca—Mausoleums in General—Indispensable
- Accessories—The Medresch—Mosque of Sultan Mahmoud at
- Topphannè 373
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- Antiquities of Constantinople—Ismäel Effendi—The
- Atmeidan—The Obelisk—The Delphic Tripod—The Column of
- Constantine—The Tchernberlè Tasch—The Cistern of the
- Thousand and One Columns—The Boudroum—The Roman
- Dungeons—Yèrè-Batan-Seraï—The Lost Traveller—Extent of the
- Cistern—Aqueduct of Justinian—Palace of Constantine—Tomb of
- Heraclius—The Seven Towers—An Ambassador in Search of
- Truth—Tortures of the Prison—A Legend of the Seven Towers 405
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
- Balouclè—The New Church—Delightful Road—Eyoub—The
- Cemetery—The Rebel’s Grave—The Mosque of Blood—The Hill of
- Graves—The Seven Towers—The Palace of Belisarius—The City
- Walls—Easter Festivities—The Turkish Araba—The Armenian
- Carriage—Travellers—Turkish
- Women—Seridjhes—Persians—Irregular Troops—The Plain of
- Balouclè—Laughable Mistake—Extraordinary Discretion—The
- Church of Balouclè—The Holy Well—Absurd Tradition—The
- Chapel Vault—Enthusiasm of the Greeks—A Pleasant
- Draught—Greek Substitute for a Bell—Violent Storm 434
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
- Figurative Gratitude of the Seraskier Pasha—Eastern
- Hyperbole—Reminiscences of Past Years—A Vision
- Realized—Strong Contrasts—The Marriage Fêtes—Popular
- Excitement—Crowded Streets—The Auspicious Day—Extravagant
- Expectations—The Great Cemetery—Dolma Batchè—The Grand
- Armoury—Turkish Women—Tents of the Pashas—The
- Bosphorus—Preparations—Invocation—The Illuminated
- Bosphorus—A Stretch of Fancy—A Painful Recollection—Natural
- Beauties of the Bosphorus—The Grave-Yard—Evening
- Amusements—Well Conducted Population 446
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
- Repetition—The Esplanade—The Kiosk and the Pavilion—A Short
- Cut—Dense Crowd—A Friend at Court—Curious _Coup
- d’Œil_—The Arena—The Orchestra—First Act of the
- Comedy—Disgusting Exhibition—The Birth of the
- Ballet—Dancing Boys—Second Act of the Drama—Insult to the
- Turkish Women—The Provost Marshal—Yusuf Pasha, the
- Traitor—Clemency of the Sultan—Forbearance of an Oriental
- Mob—Renewal of the Ballet—Last Act of the Drama—Theatrical
- Decorations—Watch-dogs and Chinese—Procession of the
- Trades—Frank Merchants—Thieves and Judges—Bedouin
- Tumblers—Fondness of the Pashas for Dancing—The Wise Men of
- the East 460
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
- Succession of Banquets—The Chèïk Islam and the
- Clergy—Sectarian Prejudices—The Military Staff—The Naval
- Chiefs—The Imperial Household—The Pashas—The Grand
- Vizier—Magnificent Procession—Night Scene on the
- Bosphorus—The Palace of the Seraskier Pasha—Palace of Azmè
- Sultane—Midnight Serenade—Pretty Truants—The Shore of
- Asia—Ambassadorial Banquet—War Dance—Beautiful Effects of
- Light 478
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
- Monotonous Entertainments—Bridal Preparations—Common
- Interest—Appearance of the Surrounding Country—Ride to
- Arnautkeui—Sight-loving Ladies—Glances and
- Greetings—Pictorial Grouping—The Procession—The
- Trousseau—A Steeple-Chase 488
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
-
- The Bridal Day—Ceremony of Acceptance—The Crowd—The Kislar
- Agha and the Court Astrologer—Order of the Procession—The
- Russian Coach—The Pasha and the Attachés—The
- Seraskier—Wives of the Pashas—The Sultan and the Georgian
- Slave 500
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX.
-
- A New Rejoicing—Scholastic Processions—Change in the
- Valley—The Odalique’s Grave—The Palace of Eyoub—The State
- Apartments—Return to Pera 509
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
- PAGE
-
- Chapel of the Turning Dervishes _Frontispiece._
-
- The Maiden’s Tower _Vignette Title-page._
-
- Military College 196
-
- Palace of the Sweet Waters 324
-
- A Street in Pera 361
-
- Column of Constantine and Egyptian Tripod 407
-
- The Seven Towers 421
-
-
-THE CITY OF THE SULTAN.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
- The Golden Horn—Stamboul in Snow—The Seraï
- Bournou—Scutari—Galata—First View of Constantinople—St.
- Sophia and Solimaniè—Pera—Domestication of Aquatic
- Birds—Sounds at Sea—Caïques—Oriental Grouping—Armenian
- Costume—Reforms of Sultan Mahmoud—Dervishes—Eastern
- Jews—Evening—Illuminated Minarets—Romance _versus_
- Reason—Pain at Parting—Custom House of Galata—The East
- _versus_ the West—Reminiscences of Marseillois
- Functionaries—The British Consul at Marseilles—The
- Light-house at Syra—The Frank Quarter—Diplomatic
- Atmosphere—Straw Huts—Care of the Turks for Animals—A Scene
- from Shakspeare.
-
-It was on the 30th of December, 1835, that we anchored in the Golden
-Horn; my long-indulged hopes were at length realized, and the Queen of
-Cities was before me, throned on her peopled hills, with the silver
-Bosphorus, garlanded with palaces, flowing at her feet!
-
-It was with difficulty that I could drag myself upon deck after the
-night of intense suffering which I had passed in the sea of Marmora,
-and, when I did succeed in doing so, the vessel was already under the
-walls of the Seraglio garden, and advancing rapidly towards her
-anchorage. The atmosphere was laden with snow, and I beheld Stamboul for
-the first time clad in the ermine mantle of the sternest of seasons.
-Yet, even thus, the most powerful feeling that unravelled itself from
-the chaos of sensations which thronged upon me was one of unalloyed
-delight. How could it be otherwise? I seemed to look on fairy-land—to
-behold the embodiment of my wildest visions—to be the denizen of a new
-world.
-
-Queenly Stamboul! the myriad sounds of her streets came to us mellowed
-by the distance; and, as we swept along, the whole glory of her princely
-port burst upon our view! The gilded palace of Mahmoud, with its
-glittering gate and overtopping cypresses, among which may be
-distinguished the buildings of the Seraï, were soon passed; behind us,
-in the distance, was Scutari, looking down in beauty on the channel,
-whose waves reflected the graceful outline of its tapering minarets, and
-shrouded themselves for an instant in the dark shadows of its funereal
-grove. Galata was beside us, with its mouldering walls and warlike
-memories; and the vessel trembled as the chain fell heavily into the
-water, and we anchored in the midst of the crowd of shipping that
-already thronged the harbour. On the opposite shore clustered the
-painted dwellings of Constantinople, the party-coloured garment of the
-“seven hills”—the tall cypresses that overshadowed her houses, and the
-stately plane trees, which more than rivalled them in beauty, bent their
-haughty heads beneath the weight of accumulated snows. Here and there, a
-cluster of graceful minarets cut sharply against the sky; while the
-ample dome of the mosque to which they belonged, and the roofs of the
-dwellings that nestled at their base, lay steeped in the same chill
-livery. Eagerly did I seek to distinguish those of St. Sophia, and the
-smaller but far more elegant Solimaniè, the shrine of the Prophet’s
-Beard, with its four minarets, and its cloistered courts; and it was not
-without reluctance that I turned away, to mark where the thronging
-houses of Pera climb with magnificent profusion the amphitheatre of
-hills which dominate the treasure-laden port.
-
-As my gaze wandered along the shore, and, passing by the extensive grove
-of cypresses that wave above the burying-ground, once more followed the
-course of the Bosphorus, I watched the waves as they washed the very
-foundation of the dwellings that skirt it, until I saw them chafing and
-struggling at the base of the barrack of Topphannè, and at intervals
-flinging themselves high into the air above its very roof.
-
-To an European eye, the scene, independently of its surpassing beauty
-and utter novelty, possessed two features peculiarly striking; the
-extreme vicinity of the houses to the sea, which in many instances they
-positively overhang; and the vast number of aquatic fowl that throng the
-harbour. Seagulls were flying past us in clouds, and sporting like
-domestic birds about the vessel, while many of the adjoining roofs were
-clustered with them; the wild-duck and the water-hen were diving under
-our very stern in search of food; and shoals of porpoises were every
-moment rolling by, turning up their white bellies to the light, and
-revelling in safety amid the sounds and sights of a mighty city, as
-though unconscious of the vicinity of danger. How long, I involuntarily
-asked myself, would this extraordinary confidence in man be repaid by
-impunity in an English port? and the answer was by no means pleasing to
-my national pride.
-
-As I looked round upon the shipping, the language of many lands came on
-the wind. Here the deep “Brig a-hoy!” of the British seaman boomed along
-the ripple; there, the shrill cry of the Greek mariner rang through the
-air: at intervals, the full rich strain of the dark-eyed Italian
-relieved the wild monotonous chant of the Turk; while the cry of the
-sea-boy from the rigging was answered by the stern brief tones of the
-weather-beaten sailor on the deck.
-
-Every instant a graceful caïque, with its long sharp prow and gilded
-ornaments, shot past the ship: now freighted with a bearded and
-turbaned Turk, squatted upon his carpet at the bottom of the boat, pipe
-in hand, and muffled closely in his furred pelisse, the very
-personification of luxurious idleness; and attended by his red-capped
-and blue-coated domestic, who was sometimes a thick-lipped negro, but
-more frequently a keen-eyed and mustachioed musselmaun—now tenanted by
-a group of women, huddled closely together, and wearing the _yashmac_,
-or veil of white muslin, which covers all the face except the eyes and
-nose, and gives to the wearer the appearance of an animated corpse; some
-of them, as they passed, languidly breathing out their harmonious
-Turkish, which in a female mouth is almost music.
-
-Then came a third, gliding along like a nautilus, with its small white
-sail; and bearing a bevy of Greeks, whose large flashing eyes gleamed
-out beneath the unbecoming _fèz_, or cap of red cloth, with its purple
-silk tassel, and ornament of cut paper, bound round the head among the
-lower classes, by a thick black shawl, tightly twisted. This was
-followed by a fourth, impelled by two lusty rowers, wherein the round
-hats and angular costume of a party of Franks forced your thoughts back
-upon the country that you had left, only to be recalled the next instant
-by a freight of Armenian merchants returning from the Charshees of
-Constantinople to their dwellings at Galata and Pera. As I looked on
-the fine countenances, the noble figures, and the animated expression of
-the party, how did I deprecate their shaven heads, and the use of the
-frightful _calpac_, which I cannot more appropriately describe than by
-comparing it to the iron pots used in English kitchens, inverted! The
-graceful pelisse, however, almost makes amends for the monstrous
-head-gear, as its costly garniture of sable or marten-skin falls back,
-and reveals the robe of rich silk, and the cachemire shawl folded about
-the waist. Altogether, I was more struck with the Armenian than the
-Turkish costume; and there is a refinement and _tenue_ about the wearers
-singularly attractive. Their well-trimmed mustachioes, their stained and
-carefully-shaped eyebrows, their exceeding cleanliness, in short, their
-whole appearance, interests the eye at once; nor must I pass over
-without remark their jewelled rings, and their pipes of almost countless
-cost, grasped by fingers so white and slender that they would grace a
-woman.
-
-While I am on the subject of costume, I cannot forbear to record my
-regret as I beheld in every direction the hideous and unmeaning _fèz_,
-which has almost superseded the gorgeous turban of muslin and cachemire:
-indeed, I was nearly tempted in my woman wrath to consider all the
-admirable reforms, wrought by Sultan Mahmoud in his capital,
-overbalanced by the frightful changes that he has made in the national
-costume, by introducing a mere caricature of that worst of all
-originals—the stiff, starch, angular European dress. The costly turban,
-that bound the brow like a diadem, and relieved by the richness of its
-tints the dark hue of the other garments, has now almost entirely
-disappeared from the streets; and a group of Turks look in the distance
-like a bed of poppies; the flowing robe of silk or of woollen has been
-flung aside for the ill-made and awkward surtout of blue cloth; and the
-waist, which was once girdled with a shawl of cachemire, is now
-compressed by two brass buttons!
-
-The Dervish, or domestic priest, for such he may truly be called, whose
-holy profession, instead of rendering him a distinct individual, suffers
-him to mingle like his fellow-men in all the avocations, and to
-participate in all the socialities of life; which permits him to read
-his offices behind the counter of his shop, and to bring up his family
-to the cares and customs of every-day life; and who is bound only by his
-own voluntary act to a steady continuance in the self-imposed duties
-that he is at liberty to cast aside when they become irksome to him; the
-holy Dervish frequently passed us in his turn, seated at the bottom of
-the caïque, with an open volume on his knees, and distinguished from the
-lay-Turk by his _geulaf_, or high hat of grey felt. Then came a group
-of Jews, chattering and gesticulating; with their ample cloaks, and
-small dingy-coloured caps, surrounded by a projecting band of brown and
-white cotton, whose singular pattern has misled a modern traveller so
-far as to induce him to state that it is “a white handkerchief,
-inscribed with some Hebrew sentences from their law.”
-
-Thus far, I could compare the port of Constantinople to nothing less
-delightful than poetry put into action. The novel character of the
-scenery—the ever-shifting, picturesque, and graceful groups—the
-constant flitting past of the fairy-like caïques—the strange
-tongues—the dark, wild eyes—all conspired to rivet me to the deck,
-despite the bitterness of the weather.
-
-Evening came—and the spell deepened. We had arrived during the Turkish
-Ramazan, or Lent, and, as the twilight gathered about us, the minarets
-of all the mosques were brilliantly illuminated. Nothing could exceed
-the magical effect of the scene; the darkness of the hour concealed the
-outline of the graceful shafts of these etherial columns, while the
-circles of light which girdled them almost at their extreme height
-formed a triple crown of living diamonds. Below these depended (filling
-the intermediate space) shifting figures of fire, succeeding each other
-with wonderful rapidity and precision: now it was a house, now a group
-of cypresses, then a vessel, or an anchor, or a spray of flowers; and
-these changes were effected, as I afterwards discovered, in the most
-simple and inartificial manner. Cords are slung from minaret to minaret,
-from whence depend others, to which the lamps are attached; and the
-raising or lowering of these cords, according to a previous design,
-produces the apparently magic transitions which render the illuminations
-of Stamboul unlike those of any European capital.
-
-But I can scarcely forgive myself for thus accounting in so
-matter-of-fact a manner for the beautiful illusions that wrought so
-powerfully on my own fancy. I detest the spirit which reduces every
-thing to plain reason, and pleases itself by tracing effects to causes,
-where the only result of the research must be the utter annihilation of
-all romance, and the extinction of all wonder. The flowers that blossom
-by the wayside of life are less beautiful when we have torn them leaf by
-leaf asunder, to analyze their properties, and to determine their
-classes, than when we first inhale their perfume, and delight in their
-lovely tints, heedless of all save the enjoyment which they impart. The
-man of science may decry, and the philosopher may condemn, such a mode
-of reasoning; but really, in these days of utilitarianism, when all
-things are reduced to rule, and laid bare by wisdom, it is desirable to
-reserve a niche or two unprofaned by “the schoolmaster,” where fancy
-may plume herself unchidden, despite the never-ending analysis of a
-theorising world!
-
-My continued indisposition compelled my father and myself to remain
-another day on board; but I scarcely felt the necessity irksome. All was
-so novel and so full of interest around me, and my protracted voyage had
-so thoroughly inured me to privation and inconvenience, that I was
-enabled to enjoy the scene without one regret for land. The same
-shifting panorama, the same endless varieties of sight and sound,
-occupied the day; and the same magic illusions lent a brilliancy and a
-poetry to the night.
-
-Smile, ye whose exclusiveness has girdled you with a fictitious and
-imaginary circle, beyond which ye have neither sympathies nor
-sensibilities—smile if ye will, as I declare that when the moment came
-in which I was to quit the good brig, that had borne us so bravely
-through storm and peril—the last tangible link between ourselves and
-the far land that we had loved and left—I almost regretted that I trod
-her snow-heaped and luggage-cumbered deck for the last time; and that,
-as the crew clustered round us, to secure a parting look and a parting
-word, a tear sprang to my eye. How impossible does it appear to me to
-forget, at such a time as this, those who have shared with you the
-perils and the protection of a long and arduous voyage! From the sturdy
-seaman who had stood at the helm, and contended with the drear and
-drenching midnight sea, to the venturous boy who had climbed the bending
-mast to secure the remnants of the shivered sail, every face had long
-been familiar to me. I could call each by name; nor was there one among
-them to whom I had not, on some occasion, been indebted for those rude
-but ready courtesies which, however insignificant in themselves, are
-valuable to the uninitiated and helpless at sea.
-
-On the 1st of January, 1836, we landed at the Custom House stairs at
-Galata, amid a perfect storm of snow and wind; nor must I omit the fact
-that we did so without “let or hindrance” from the officers of the
-establishment. The only inquiry made was, whether we had brought out any
-merchandize, and, our reply being in the negative, coupled with the
-assurance that we were merely travellers, and that our packages
-consisted simply of personal necessaries, we were civilly desired to
-pass on.
-
-I could not avoid contrasting this mode of action in the “barbarous”
-East, with that of “civilized” Europe, where even your very person is
-not sacred from the investigation of low-bred and low-minded
-individuals, from whose officious and frequently impertinent contact you
-can secure yourself only by a bribe. Perhaps the contrast struck me the
-more forcibly that we had embarked from Marseilles, where all which
-concerns either the Douane or the Bureau de Santé is _à la
-rigueur_—where you are obliged to pay a duty on what you take out of
-the city as well as what you bring into it—pay for a certificate of
-health to persons who do not know that you have half a dozen hours to
-live—and—hear this, ye travel-stricken English, who leave your country
-to breathe freely for a while in lands wherein ye may dwell without the
-extortion of taxes—pay _your own_ Consul for permission to embark!
-
-This last demand rankles more than all with a British subject, who may
-quit his birth-place unquestioned, and who hugs himself with the belief
-that nothing pitiful or paltry can be connected with the idea of an
-Englishman by the foreigners among whom he is about to sojourn. He has
-to learn his error, and the opportunity is afforded to him at
-Marseilles, where the natives of every other country under Heaven are
-free to leave the port as they list, when they have satisfied the
-demands of the local functionaries; while the English alone have a
-special claimant in their own Consul, the individual appointed by the
-British government to “assist” and “protect” his fellow-subjects—by
-whom they are only let loose upon the world at the rate of six francs
-and a half a head! And for this “consideration” they become the happy
-possessors of a “Permission to Embark” from a man whom they have
-probably never seen, and who has not furthered for them a single view,
-nor removed a single difficulty. To this it may be answered that, had
-they required his assistance, they might have demanded it, which must be
-conceded at once, but, nevertheless, the success of their demand is more
-than problematical—and the arrangement is perfectly on a par with that
-of the Greeks in the island of Syra, who, when we cast anchor in their
-port, claimed, among other dues, a dollar and a half for the
-signal-light; and, on being reminded that there had been no light at the
-station for several previous nights, with the additional information
-that we had narrowly escaped wreck in consequence, coolly replied, that
-all we said was very true, but that there would shortly be a fire
-kindled there regularly—that they wanted money—and that, in short, the
-dollar and a half must be paid; but herefrom we at least took our
-departure without asking leave of our own Consul.
-
-From the Custom House of Galata, we proceeded up a steep ascent to Pera,
-the quarter of the Franks—the focus of diplomacy—where every lip
-murmurs “His Excellency,” and secretaries, interpreters, and _attachés_
-are
-
- “Thick as the leaves on Valombrosa.”
-
-But, alas! on the 1st day of January, Pera, Galata, and their environs,
-were one huge snowball. As it was Friday, the Turkish Sabbath, and,
-moreover, a Friday of the Ramazan, every shop was shut; and the few foot
-passengers who passed us by hurried on as though impatient of exposure
-to so inclement an atmosphere. As most of the streets are impassable for
-carriages, and as the sedan-chairs which supply, however imperfectly,
-the place of these convenient (and almost, as I had hitherto considered,
-indispensable) articles, are all private property, we were e’en obliged
-to “thread our weary way” as patiently as we could—now buried up to our
-knees in snow, and anon immersed above our ancles in water, when we
-chanced to plunge into one of those huge holes which give so interesting
-an inequality to the surface of Turkish paving.
-
-Nevertheless, despite the difficulties that obstructed our progress, I
-could not avoid remarking the little straw huts built at intervals along
-the streets, for the accommodation and comfort of the otherwise homeless
-dogs that throng every avenue of the town. There they lay, crouched down
-snugly, too much chilled to welcome us with the chorus of barking that
-they usually bestow on travellers: a species of loud and inconvenient
-greeting with which we were by no means sorry to dispense. In addition
-to this shelter, food is every day dispensed by the inhabitants to the
-vagrant animals who, having no specific owners, are, to use the
-approved phraseology of genteel alms-asking, “wholly dependent on the
-charitable for support.” And it is a singular fact that these
-self-constituted scavengers exercise a kind of internal economy which
-almost appears to exceed the boundaries of mere instinct; they have
-their defined “walks,” or haunts, and woe betide the strange cur who
-intrudes on the privileges of his neighbours; he is hunted, upbraided
-with growls and barks, beset on all sides, even bitten in cases of
-obstinate contumacy, and universally obliged to retreat within his own
-limits. Their numbers have, as I was informed, greatly decreased of late
-years, but they are still very considerable.
-
-As we passed along, a door opened, and forth stepped the most
-magnificent-looking individual whom I ever saw: he had a costly
-cachemire twined about his waist, his flowing robes were richly furred,
-and he turned the key in the lock with an air of such blended anxiety
-and dignity, that I involuntarily thought of the Jew of Shakspeare; and
-I expected at the moment to hear him exclaim, “Shut the door, Jessica,
-shut the door, I say!” But, alas! he moved away, and no sweet Jessica
-flung back the casement to reply.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
- Difficulty of Ingress to Turkish Houses—Steep Streets—The
- Harem—The Tandour—The Mangal—The Family—Female
- Costume—Luxurious Habits—The Ramazan—The Dining-room—The
- Widow—The Dinner—The Turks not Gastronomers—Oriental
- Hospitality—Ceremony of Ablution—The Massaldjhe—Alarm in the
- Harem—The Prayer—Evening Offering—Puerile
- Questions—Opium—Primitive Painting—Splendid Beds—Avocations
- of a Turkish Lady—Oriental Coquetry—Shopping—Commercial
- Flirtations—The Sultana Heybétoullah—A Turkish Carriage—The
- Charshees—Armenian Merchants—Greek Speculators—Perfumes and
- Embroidery.
-
-I have already mentioned that we arrived at Constantinople during the
-Ramazan or Lent; and my first anxiety was to pass a day of Fast in the
-interior of a Turkish family.
-
-This difficult, and in most cases impossible, achievement for an
-European was rendered easy to me by the fact that, shortly after our
-landing, I procured an introduction to a respectable Turkish merchant;
-and I had no sooner written to propose a visit to his harem than I
-received the most frank and cordial assurances of welcome.
-
-A Greek lady of my acquaintance having offered to accompany me, and to
-act as my interpreter, we crossed over to Stamboul, and, after
-threading several steep and narrow streets, perfectly impassable for
-carriages, entered the spacious court of the house at which we were
-expected, and ascended a wide flight of stairs leading to the harem, or
-women’s apartments. The stairs terminated in a large landing-place, of
-about thirty feet square, into which several rooms opened on each side,
-screened with curtains of dark cloth embroidered with coloured worsted.
-An immense mirror filled up a space between two of the doors, and a long
-passage led from this point to the principal apartment of the harem, to
-which we were conducted by a black slave.
-
-When I say “we,” I of course allude to Mrs. —— and myself, as no men,
-save those of the family and the physician, are ever admitted within the
-walls of a Turkish harem.
-
-The apartment into which we were ushered was large and warm, richly
-carpeted, and surrounded on three sides by a sofa, raised about a foot
-from the ground, and covered with crimson shag; while the cushions, that
-rested against the wall or were scattered at intervals along the couch,
-were gaily embroidered with gold thread and coloured silks. In one angle
-of the sofa stood the _tandour_: a piece of furniture so unlike any
-thing in Europe, that I cannot forbear giving a description of it.
-
-The tandour is a wooden frame, covered with a couple of wadded
-coverlets, for such they literally are, that are in their turn overlaid
-by a third and considerably smaller one of rich silk: within the frame,
-which is of the height and dimensions of a moderately sized breakfast
-table, stands a copper vessel, filled with the embers of charcoal; and,
-on the two sides that do not touch against the sofa, piles of cushions
-are heaped upon the floor to nearly the same height, for the convenience
-of those whose rank in the family does not authorize them to take places
-on the couch.
-
-The double windows, which were all at the upper end of the apartment,
-were closely latticed; and, at the lower extremity of the room, in an
-arched recess, stood a classically-shaped clay jar full of water, and a
-covered goblet in a glass saucer. Along a silken cord, on either side of
-this niche, were hung a number of napkins, richly worked and fringed
-with gold; and a large copy of the Koran was deposited beneath a
-handkerchief of gold gauze, on a carved rosewood bracket.
-
-In the middle of the floor was placed the _mangal_, a large copper
-vessel of about a foot in height, resting upon a stand of the same
-material raised on castors, and filled, like that within the tandour,
-with charcoal.
-
-The family consisted of the father and mother, the son and the son’s
-wife, the daughter and her husband, and a younger and adopted son. The
-ladies were lying upon cushions, buried up to their necks under the
-coverings of the tandour; and, as they flung them off to receive us, I
-was struck with the beauty of the daughter, whose deep blue eyes, and
-hair of a golden brown, were totally different from what I had expected
-to find in a Turkish harem. Two glances sufficed to satisfy me that the
-mother was a shrew, and I had no reason subsequently to revoke my
-judgment. The son’s wife had fine, large, brilliant, black eyes, but her
-other features were by no means pleasing, although she possessed, in
-common with all her countrywomen, that soft, white, velvety skin, for
-which they are indebted to the constant use of the bath. To this luxury,
-in which many of them daily indulge, must be, however, attributed the
-fact that their hair, in becoming bright and glossy, loses its strength,
-and compels them to the adoption of artificial tresses; and these they
-wear in profusion, wound amid the folds of the embroidered handkerchiefs
-that they twine about their heads in a most unbecoming manner, and
-secure by bodkins of diamonds or emeralds, of which ornaments they are
-inordinately fond.
-
-They all wore chemisettes or under garments of silk gauze, trimmed with
-fringes of narrow ribbon, and wide trowsers of printed cotton falling
-to the ancle: their feet were bare, save that occasionally they thrust
-them into little yellow slippers, that scarcely covered their toes, and
-in which they moved over the floor with the greatest ease, dragging
-after them their anterys, or sweeping robes; but more frequently they
-dispensed with even these, and walked barefoot about the harem. Their
-upper dresses were of printed cotton of the brightest colours—that of
-the daughter had a blue ground, with a yellow pattern, and was trimmed
-with a fringe of pink and green. These robes, which are made in one
-piece, are divided at the hip on either side to their extreme length,
-and are girt about the waist with a cachemire shawl. The costume is
-completed in winter by a tight vest lined with fur, which is generally
-of light green or pink.
-
-Their habits are, generally speaking, most luxurious and indolent, if I
-except their custom of early rising, which, did they occupy themselves
-in any useful manner, would be undoubtedly very commendable; but, as
-they only add, by these means, two or three hours of _ennui_ to each
-day, I am at a loss how to classify it. Their time is spent in dressing
-themselves, and varying the position of their ornaments—in the
-bath—and in sleep, which they appear to have as entirely at their back
-as a draught of water; in winter, they have but to nestle under the
-coverings of the tandour, or in summer to bury themselves among their
-cushions, and in five minutes they are in the land of dreams. Indeed, so
-extraordinarily are they gifted in this respect, that they not
-unfrequently engage their guests to take a nap, with the same
-_sang-froid_ with which a European lady would invite her friends to take
-a walk. Habits of industry have, however, made their way, in many
-instances, even into the harem; the changes without have influenced the
-pursuits and feelings of the women; and utter idleness has already
-ceased to be a necessary attribute to the high-bred Turkish female.
-
-As it was the time of the Ramazan, neither coffee nor sweetmeats were
-handed to us, though the offer of refreshments was made, which we,
-however, declined, being resolved to keep Lent with them according to
-their own fashion. We fasted, therefore, until about half past six
-o’clock, when the cry of the muezzin from the minarets proclaimed that
-one of the outwatchers, of whom many are employed for the purpose, had
-caught a glimpse of the moon. Instantly all were in motion; their
-preliminary arrangements had been so zealously and carefully made that
-not another second was lost; and, as a slave announced dinner, we all
-followed her to a smaller apartment, where the table, if such I may call
-it, was already laid.
-
-The room was a perfect square, totally unfurnished, save that in the
-centre of the floor was spread a carpet, on which stood a wooden frame,
-about two feet in height, supporting an immense round plated tray, with
-the edge slightly raised. In the centre of the tray was placed a
-capacious white basin, filled with a kind of cold bread soup; and around
-it were ranged a circle of small porcelain saucers, filled with sliced
-cheese, anchovies, caviare, and sweetmeats of every description: among
-these were scattered spoons of box-wood, and goblets of pink and white
-sherbet, whose rose-scented contents perfumed the apartment. The outer
-range of the tray was covered with fragments of unleavened bread, torn
-asunder; and portions of the Ramazan cake, a dry, close, sickly kind of
-paste, glazed with the whites of eggs, and strewed over with aniseeds.
-
-Our party was a numerous one—the aged nurse, who had reared the
-children of the family—the orphan boy of a dead son, who, with his
-wife, had perished by plague during the previous twelve months—several
-neighbours who had chosen the hour of dinner to make their visits—a
-very pretty friend from Scutari—and a very plain acquaintance from the
-house of death—the widow of a day—whose husband had expired the
-previous morning, been buried the same evening, and, as it appeared,
-forgotten on the morrow; for the “disconsolate widow” had come forth in
-a pink vest, and sky blue trowsers, with rings on her fingers, and
-jewels in her turban, to seek the advice and assistance of the master of
-the house, in securing some valuable shawls, and sundry diamonds and
-baubles which she had possessed before her marriage, from the grasp of
-the deceased’s relatives.
-
-As soon as the serious business of the repast really commenced, that is,
-when we had each possessed ourselves of a cushion, and squatted down
-with our feet under us round the dinner tray, having on our laps linen
-napkins of about two yards in length richly fringed; the room was
-literally filled with slaves, “black, white, and gray,” from nine years
-old to fifty.
-
-Fish, embedded in rice, followed the side or rather circle saucers that
-I have already described; and of most of which I sparingly partook, as
-the only answer that I was capable of giving to the unceasing “Eat, eat,
-you are welcome,” of the lady of the house. With the fish, the spoons
-came into play, and all were immersed in the same dish; but I must not
-omit to add that this custom is rendered less revolting than it would
-otherwise be, by the fact that each individual is careful, should the
-_plat_ be partaken of a second time, (a rare occurrence, however, from
-the rapidity with which they are changed), always to confine herself to
-one spot. The meat and poultry were eaten with the fingers; each
-individual fishing up, or breaking away, what pleased her eye; and
-several of them tearing a portion asunder, and handing one of the pieces
-to me as a courtesy, with which, be it remarked, _par parenthèse_, I
-should joyfully have dispensed. Nineteen dishes, of fish, flesh, fowl,
-pastry, and creams, succeeding each other in the most heterogeneous
-manner—the salt following the sweet, and the stew preceding the
-custard—were terminated by a pyramid of pillauf. I had the perseverance
-to sit out this elaborate culinary exhibition; an exertion which is,
-however, by no means required of any one, by the observance of Turkish
-courtesy.
-
-Gastronomy is no science in the East, and _gourmands_ are unknown; the
-Osmanlis only eat to live, they do not live to eat; and the variety of
-their dishes originates in a tacit care to provide against individual
-disgusts, while the extreme rapidity with which they are changed
-sufficiently demonstrates their want of inclination to indulge
-individual excess. The women drink only coffee, sherbet, or water; but
-some few among the men are adopting the vices of civilized nations, and
-becoming addicted to beverages of a more potent description. No person
-is expected to remain an instant longer at a Turkish table than suffices
-him to make his meal; the instant that an individual has satisfied his
-appetite, he rises without comment or apology, washes his hands, and
-resumes his pipe or his occupation. Nor must I pass over without comment
-the simple and beautiful hospitality of the Turks, who welcome to their
-board, be he rich or poor, every countryman who thinks proper to take a
-seat at it; the emphatic “You are welcome,” is never coldly nor
-grudgingly uttered; and the Mussulmauns extend this unostentatious
-greeting to each new comer, without reservation or limit, upon the same
-principle that they never permit them to find fault with any article of
-food which may be served up. They consider themselves only as the
-stewards of GOD, and consequently use the goods of life as a loan rather
-than a possession; while they consider themselves bound to give from
-their superfluity to those who have been less favoured.
-
-As we rose from table, a slave presented herself, holding a basin and
-strainer of wrought metal, while a second poured tepid water over our
-hands, from an elegantly-formed vase of the same materials; and a third
-handed to us embroidered napkins of great beauty, of which I really
-availed myself with reluctance.
-
-Having performed this agreeable ceremony, we returned to the principal
-apartment, where our party received an addition in the person of a very
-pretty old _massaljhe_, or tale-teller, who had been invited to relieve
-the tedium of the evening with some of her narrations. This custom is
-very general during the Ramazan, and is a great resource to the Turkish
-ladies, who can thus recline in luxurious inaction, and have their minds
-amused without any personal exertion. Coffee was prepared at the mangal,
-and handed round: after which the elder lady seated herself on a pile of
-cushions placed upon the floor, and smoked a couple of pipes in perfect
-silence, and with extreme _gusto_, flinging out volumes of smoke, that
-created a thick mist in the apartment.
-
-I had just begun to indulge in a violent fit of coughing, induced by the
-density of this artificial atmosphere, when in walked a slave to
-announce the intended presence of the gentlemen of the family, and in an
-instant the whole scene was changed. The two Turkish ladies whom I have
-already mentioned as being on a visit in the house rushed from the room
-barefooted, in as little time as it would have required for me to
-disengage myself from the tandour; the less agile _massaljhe_ covered
-her face with a thick veil, and concealed herself behind the door—the
-Juno-like daughter (one of the most majestic women I ever remember to
-have seen, although very far from one of the tallest) flung a
-handkerchief over her head, and fastened it beneath her chin: while the
-son’s wife caught up a _feridjhe_, or cloak, and withdrew, muffled amid
-its folds, to her own apartment. The elder lady was the only one of the
-party undisturbed by the intelligence: she never raised her eyes from
-the carpet, but continued inhaling the aroma of the “scented weed,”
-gravely grasping her long pipe, her lips pressed against its amber
-mouthpiece, and her brilliant rings and diamond-studded bracelet
-flashing in the light.
-
-In a few minutes, the aged father of the family was squatted down
-immediately opposite to my seat, smothered in furs, and crowned with the
-most stately looking turban I had yet seen: on one side of him stood a
-slave with his chibouk, which his wife had just filled and lighted, and
-on the other his elder son, holding the little brass dish in which the
-pipe-bowl is deposited to protect the carpet. Near him, on another
-cushion, lay the tobacco-bag of gold-embroidered cachemire, from which
-the said son was about to regale himself, after having supplied the
-wants of his father: and a few paces nearer to the door reclined the
-handsome Soliman Effendi, the adopted son to whom I have already
-alluded.
-
-While the party were refreshing themselves with coffee, which was
-shortly afterwards served to them, a cry from the minarets of a
-neighbouring mosque announced the hour of prayer; when the old man
-gravely laid aside his pipe, and, spreading a crimson rug above the
-carpet near the spot where he had been sitting, turned his face to the
-East, and began his devotions by stroking down his beard and falling
-upon his knees, or rather squatting himself in a doubled-up position
-which it were impossible to describe. For a while his lips moved
-rapidly, though not a sound escaped them, and then suddenly he
-prostrated himself three times, and pressed his forehead to the carpet,
-rose, and folding his arms upon his breast, continued his
-prayer—resumed after a brief space his original position, rocking his
-body slowly to and fro—again bent down—and, repeated the whole of
-these ceremonies three times, concluding his orison by extending his
-open palms towards Heaven; after which, he once more slowly and
-reverentially passed his hand down his beard, and, without uttering a
-syllable, returned to his seat and his pipe, while a slave folded the
-rug and laid it aside. I remarked that at intervals, during the prayer,
-he threw out a long respiration, as though he had been collecting his
-breath for several seconds ere he suffered it to escape, but throughout
-the whole time not a single word was audible. The rest of the party
-continued to laugh, chat, and smoke quite unconcernedly, however, during
-the devotions of the master of the house, who appeared so thoroughly
-absorbed as to be utterly unconscious of all that was going on around
-him.
-
-I ought not to have omitted to mention that, on entering the harem, each
-of the gentlemen of the family had deposited on a table at the
-extremity of the apartment his evening offering; for no Turk, however
-high his rank, returns home for the night, when the avocations of the
-day are over, empty-handed: it signifies not how trifling may be the
-value of his burthen—a cluster of grapes—a paper of sweetmeats—or,
-among the lower orders, a few small fish, or a head of salad—every
-individual is bound to make an offering to the _Dei Penates_; and to
-fail in this duty is to imply that he is about to repudiate his wife.
-
-The father of the eldest son, Usuf Effendi, had brought home Ramazan
-cakes, but Soliman Effendi deposited on the tandour a _boksha_, or
-handkerchief of clear muslin wrought with gold threads, and containing
-sweetmeats; among them were a quantity of Barcelona nuts, which, in
-Turkey, are shelled, slightly dried in the oven, and eaten with raisins,
-as almonds are in Europe. In the course of the evening, the elder lady
-resumed her place at the tandour; and, in the intervals of the
-conversation, she amused herself by burning one of the nuts at a candle,
-and, having reduced it to a black and oily substance with great care and
-patience, she took up a small round hand-mirror, set into a frame-work of
-purple velvet, embroidered in silver that was buried among her cushions,
-and began to stain her eyebrows, making them meet over the nose, and
-shaping them with an art which nothing but long practice could have
-enabled her to acquire.
-
-Their questions were of the most puerile description—my age—why I did
-not marry—whether I liked Constantinople—if I could read and write,
-&c., &c.; but no impertinent comment on fashions and habits so different
-from their own escaped them: on the contrary, they were continually
-remarking how much I must find every thing in Turkey inferior to what I
-had been accustomed to in Europe: and they lost themselves in wonder at
-the resolution that had decided me to visit a part of the world where I
-must suffer so many privations. Of course, I replied as politely as I
-could to these complimentary comments; and my companion and myself being
-much fatigued with the exertions that we had made during the day, we
-determined to retire to our apartment, without waiting to partake of the
-second repast, which is served up between two and three o’clock in the
-morning.
-
-From this period the Turks remain smoking, and sipping their coffee,
-detailing news, and telling stories, an amusement to which they are
-extremely partial, until there is sufficient light to enable them to
-distinguish between a black thread and a white one, when the fast is
-scrupulously resumed. But it may be curious to remark, that, as not even
-a draught of water can be taken until the evening meal, and, (still
-greater privation to the Osmanli,) not a pipe can be smoked, they have
-adopted a singular expedient for appeasing the cravings of re-awakening
-appetite. They cause opium pills to be prepared, enveloped in one, two,
-and three coatings of gold leaf; and these they swallow at the last
-moment when food is permitted to be taken; under the impression that
-each will produce its intended effect at a given time, which is
-determined by the number of envelopes that have to disengage themselves
-from the drug before it can act.
-
-The apartment wherein we passed the night was spacious and lofty; and
-the ceiling was lined with canvass, on which a large tree in full leaf
-was painted in oils; and, as this was the great ornament of the room,
-and, moreover, considered as a model of ingenious invention, one of the
-slaves did not fail to point out to us that the canvass, instead of
-being tightly stretched, was mounted loosely on a slight frame, which,
-when the air entered from the open windows, permitted an undulation
-intended to give to the tree the effect of reality. I do not think that
-I was ever more amused—for the branches resembled huge boa constrictors
-much more than any thing connected with the vegetable kingdom: and every
-leaf was as large and as black as the crown of a man’s hat.
-
-Our beds were composed of mattresses laid one above the other upon the
-floor, and these were of the most costly description; mine being yellow
-satin brocaded with gold, and that of my companion violet-coloured
-velvet, richly fringed. A Turkish bed is arranged in an instant—the
-mattresses are covered with a sheet of silk gauze, or striped muslin,
-(my own on this occasion was of the former material)—half a dozen
-pillows of various forms and sizes are heaped up at the head, all in
-richly embroidered muslin cases, through which the satin containing the
-down is distinctly seen—and a couple of wadded coverlets are laid at
-the feet, carefully folded: no second sheet is considered necessary, as
-the coverlets are lined with fine white linen. Those which were provided
-for us were of pale blue silk, worked with rose-coloured flowers.
-
-At the lower end of every Turkish room are large closets for the
-reception of the bedding; and the slaves no sooner ascertain that you
-have risen, than half a dozen of them enter the apartment, and in five
-minutes every vestige of your couch has disappeared—you hurry from the
-bed to the bath, whence you cannot possibly escape in less than two
-hours—and the business of the day is then generally terminated for a
-Turkish lady. All that remains to be done is to sit under the covering
-of the tandour, passing the beads of a perfumed chaplet rapidly through
-the fingers—arranging and re-arranging the head-dress and
-ornaments—or to put on the _yashmac_ and _feridjhe_, and sally forth,
-accompanied by two or three slaves, to pay visits to favourite friends;
-either on foot, in yellow boots reaching up to the swell of the leg,
-over which a slipper of the same colour is worn; or in an araba, or
-carriage of the country, all paint, gilding, and crimson cloth, nestled
-among cushions, and making more use of her eyes than any being on earth
-save a Turkish woman would, with the best inclination in the world, be
-able to accomplish; such finished coquetry I never before witnessed as
-that of the Turkish ladies in the street. As the araba moves slowly
-along, the _feridjhe_ is flung back to display its white silk lining and
-bullion tassels; and, should a group of handsome men be clustered on the
-pathway, that instant is accidentally chosen for arranging the
-_yashmac_. The dark-eyed dames of Spain, accomplished as they are in the
-art, never made more use of the graceful veil than do the orientals of
-the jealous _yashmac_.
-
-The taste for “shopping”—what an excellent essay might the “_piquante_
-and _spirituelle_” Lady Morgan write on this universal feminine
-mania!—is as great among the eastern ladies as with their fair European
-sisters; but it is indulged in a totally different manner.
-Constantinople boasts no commercial palace like those of Howell and
-James, or Storr and Mortimer; and still less a Maradan Carson: no
-carriage draws up at the door of an Ebers or a Sams for “the last new
-novel;” nor does a well-warmed and well-floored bazar tempt the
-satin-slippered dame to wander among avenues of glittering gewgaws and
-elaborated trifles: the carriage of the veiled Osmanli stops at the door
-of some merchant who has a handsome shopman; and the name of the latter,
-having been previously ascertained, Sadak or Mustapha, as the case may
-be, is ordered by the _arabajhe_, or coachman, to exhibit to his
-mistress some article of merchandize, which he brings accordingly, and,
-while the lady affects to examine its quality and to decide on its
-value, she enters into conversation with the youth, playing upon him
-meanwhile the whole artillery of her fine eyes. The questioning
-generally runs nearly thus:—“What is your name?”—“How old are
-you?”—“Are you married?”—“Were you ever in love?”—and similar
-misplaced and childish questions. Should the replies of the interrogated
-person amuse her, and his beauty appear as great on a nearer view as
-when seen from a distance, the merchandize is objected to, and the visit
-repeated frequently, ere the fastidious taste of the purchaser can be
-satisfied.
-
-Nor are women of high rank exempt from this indelicate fancy, which can
-only be accounted for by the belief that, like caged birds occasionally
-set free, they do not know how to use their liberty: the Sultana
-Haybétoullah, sister to his Sublime Highness, the Light of the Ottoman
-Empire, is particularly attached to this extraordinary _passe-temps_.
-
-The following morning we started on an exploring expedition, accompanied
-by the closely-veiled and heavily-draped “Juno,” and attended by her
-nurse and child, and her quaintly-habited footman; and, as the carriage
-could not approach the house by a considerable distance, owing to the
-narrowness and steepness of the streets in that quarter of the city,
-(which, built upon the crest and down the slope of one of the “seven
-hills,” overlooks the glittering and craft-clustered port), we were
-obliged to walk to it through the frozen snow, upon the same principle
-that, as the mountain would not go to Mahomet, Mahomet was compelled to
-go to the mountain.
-
-Directly I cast my eyes on the carriage, I had an excellent idea of that
-which the fairy godmother of Cinderella created for her favourite out of
-a pumpkin. Its form was that of a small covered waggon; its exterior was
-all crimson cloth, blue silk fringe, and tassels; and its inside
-precisely resembled a cake of gilt gingerbread. Four round
-looking-glasses, just sufficiently large to reflect the features, were
-impannelled on either side of the doors; and in the place of windows we
-had gilt lattices, so closely made that our position was the very
-reverse of cheerful; and, as I found it, moreover, quite impossible to
-breathe freely, these lattices were flung back despite the cold, and
-this arrangement being made, I established myself very comfortably on
-the satin cushions, with my feet doubled under me _à la Turque_, amid
-the piled-up luxuries of _duvet_ and embroidery.
-
-Our first visit was to the charshees, or, as Europeans for some
-inexplicable reason have the habit of calling them, the “bazars”—the
-word bazar literally signifying market—and, as the carriage rattled
-under the heavy portal, my first feeling was that of extreme
-disappointment. The great attraction of these establishments is
-undeniably their vast extent, for in _tenue_ and richness they are as
-inferior to our own miniature bazars in London as possible. Rudely
-paved—disagreeably dirty—plentifully furnished with _égouts_, of which
-both the sight and the scent are unpleasing—badly lighted—clumsily
-built—and so constructed as to afford no idea of the space they cover,
-until you have wandered through the whole of their mazes, your
-involuntary impression is one of wonder at the hyperboles which have
-been lavished on them by travellers, and the uncalled-for extacies of
-tour-writers.
-
-The charshees are like a little commercial town, roofed in; each street
-being appropriated to one particular trade or calling; and presenting
-relative degrees of attraction and luxury, from the diamond-merchant’s
-counter to the cushions of the shawl and fur-menders.
-
-The Beizensteen is wonderfully rich in jewels, but in order to witness
-the display of these you must be, or be likely to become, a purchaser,
-as only a few, and those of comparatively small value, are exposed in
-the glass cases which ornament the counters. Nearly the whole of the
-jewellers are Armenians; as well as the money-changers, who transact
-business in their immediate vicinity. Indeed, all the steady commerce on
-a great scale in the capital may be said to be, with very slight
-exceptions, in the hands of the Armenians, who have the true, patient,
-plodding, calculating spirit of trade; while the wilder speculations of
-hazardous and ambitious enterprise are grasped with avidity by the more
-daring and adventurous Greeks; and hence arises the fact, for which it
-is at first sight difficult to account, that the most wealthy and the
-most needy of the merchants of Stamboul are alike of that nation: while
-you rarely see an Armenian either limited in his means, or obtrusive in
-his style.
-
-In the street of the embroiderers, whose stalls make a very gay
-appearance, being hung all over with tobacco-bags, purses, and
-_coiffures_, wrought in gold and silver, we purchased a couple of
-richly-worked handkerchiefs, used by the ladies of the country for
-binding up the hair after the bath, and which are embroidered with a
-taste and skill truly admirable.
-
-Thence we drove to the shoe bazar, where slippers worked with
-seed-pearls, and silver and gold thread, upon velvets of every shade and
-colour, make a very handsome and tempting appearance; and among these
-are ranged circular looking-glasses, of which the frames, backs, and
-handles are similarly ornamented. The scent-dealers next claimed our
-attention, and their quarter is indeed a miniature embodiment of “Araby
-the Blest,” for the atmosphere is one cloud of perfume. Here we were
-fully enabled to understand _l’embarras des richesses_, for all the
-sweets of the East and West tempted us at once, from the long and
-slender _flacon_ of Eau de Cologne, to the small, gilded,
-closely-enveloped bottle of attar-gul. Nor less luxurious was the
-atmosphere of the spice bazar, with its pyramids of cloves, its piles of
-cinnamon, and its bags of mace—and, while the porcelain dealers allured
-us into their neighbourhood by a dazzling display, comprising every
-variety of ancient and modern china; silks, velvets, Broussa satins, and
-gold gauze in their turn invited us in another direction—and, in short,
-I left the charshees with aching eyes, and a very confused impression of
-this great mart of luxury and expence.
-
-It was a most fatiguing day; and I was scarcely sorry when, having bade
-farewell to the hospitable family, who had so kindly and courteously
-received us as guests, we hastened to embark on board our caïque, and in
-ten minutes found ourselves at Topphannè, whence we slowly mounted the
-steep ascent which terminates in the high-street of Pera, within a
-hundred yards of our temporary residence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
- Turning Dervishes—Appearance of the Tekiè—The
- Mausoleum—Duties of the Dervishes—Chapel of the Convent—The
- Chief Priest—Dress of the Brotherhood—Melancholy
- Music—Solemnity of the Service—Mistakes of a Modern
- Traveller—Explanation of the Ceremony—The Prayer—The Kiss of
- Peace—Appearance of the Chapel—Religious Tolerance of the
- Turks—The French Renegade—Sketch of Halet Effendi, the
- Founder of the Tekiè.
-
-I paid two visits to the convent (if such, indeed, it may be termed) of
-Turning, or, as they are commonly called in Europe, Dancing Dervishes,
-which is situated opposite the Petit Champs des Morts, descending
-towards Galata. The court of the Tekiè is entered by a handsomely
-ornamented gate, and, having passed it, you have the cemetery of the
-brethren on your left hand, and the gable of the main building on your
-right. As you arrive in front of the convent, the court widens, and in
-the midst stands a magnificent plane tree of great antiquity, carefully
-railed in; while you have on one side the elegant mausoleum in which
-repose the superiors of the order; and on the other the fountain of
-white marble, roofed in like an oratory, and enclosed on all its six
-sides from the weather, where the Dervishes perform their ablutions ere
-they enter the chapel. The mausoleum is of the octagon form, the floor
-being raised two steps in the centre, leaving a space all round, just
-sufficiently wide for one person to pass along. The sarcophagi are
-covered with plain clay-coloured cloth, and at the head of each tomb is
-placed the _geulaf_, or Dervishes’ hat, encircled by a clear muslin
-handkerchief, embroidered with tinted silks and gold thread. A large
-gilt frame, enclosing the representation of a hat wrought in needlework,
-and standing on a slab, on which is inscribed a sentence from the Koran,
-rests against one of the sarcophagi, and huge wax-candles in plain
-clay-coloured candlesticks are scattered among the tombs.
-
-The Tekiè is a handsome building with projecting wings, in which the
-community live very comfortably with their wives and children; and
-whence, having performed their religious duties, they sally forth to
-their several avocations in the city, and mingle with their fellow-men
-upon equal terms. Unlike the monks of the church of Rome, the Dervishes
-are forbidden to accumulate wealth in order to enrich either themselves
-or their convent. The most simple fare, the least costly garments, serve
-alike for their own use, and for that of their families: industry,
-temperance, and devotion are their duties; and, as they are at liberty
-to secede from their self-imposed obligations whenever they see fit to
-do so, there is no lukewarmness among the community, who find time
-throughout the whole year to devote many hours to God, even of their
-most busy days; and, unlike their fellow-citizens, the other
-Mussulmauns, they throw open the doors of their chapel to strangers,
-only stipulating that gentlemen shall put off their shoes ere they
-enter.
-
-This chapel, which has been erroneously designated a “mosque,” is an
-octagon building of moderate size, neatly painted in fresco. The centre
-of the floor is railed off, and the enclosure is sacred to the
-brotherhood; while the outer circle, covered with Indian matting, is
-appropriated to visiters. A deep gallery runs round six sides of the
-building, and beneath it, on your left hand as you enter, you remark the
-lattices through which the Turkish women witness the service. A narrow
-mat surrounds the circle within the railing, and upon this the brethren
-kneel during the prayers; while the centre of the floor is so highly
-polished by the perpetual friction that it resembles a mirror, and the
-boards are united by nails with heads as large as a shilling, to prevent
-accidents to the feet of the Dervishes during their evolutions. A bar of
-iron descends octagonally from the centre of the domed roof, to which
-transverse bars are attached, bearing a vast number of glass lamps of
-different colours and sizes; and, against many of the pillars, of which
-I counted four-and-twenty, supporting the dome, are hung frames, within
-which are inscribed passages from the Prophets.
-
-Above the seat of the superior, the name of the founder of the Tekiè is
-written in gold on a black ground, in immense characters. This seat
-consists of a small carpet, above which is spread a crimson rug, and on
-this the worthy principal was squatted when we entered, in an ample
-cloak of Spanish brown, with large hanging sleeves, and his geulaf, or
-high hat of grey felt, encircled with a green shawl. I pitied him that
-his back was turned towards the glorious Bosphorus, that was distinctly
-seen through the four large windows at the extremity of the chapel,
-flashing in the light, with the slender minarets and lordly mosques of
-Stamboul gleaming out in the distance.
-
-One by one, the Dervishes entered the chapel, bowing profoundly at the
-little gate of the enclosure, took their places on the mat, and, bending
-down, reverently kissed the ground; and then, folding their arms meekly
-on their breasts, remained buried in prayer, with their eyes closed, and
-their bodies swinging slowly to and fro. They were all enveloped in wide
-cloaks of dark coloured cloth with pendent sleeves; and wore their
-geulafs, which they retained during the whole of the service.
-
-I confess that the impression produced on my mind by the idea of Dancing
-Dervishes was the very reverse of solemn; and I was, in consequence,
-quite unprepared for the effect that the exhibition of their religious
-rites cannot fail to exert on all those who are not predetermined to
-find food for mirth in every sectarian peculiarity. The deep stillness,
-broken only by the breath of prayer, or the melancholy wailing of the
-muffled instruments, which seemed to send forth their voice of sadness
-from behind a cloud in subdued sorrowing, like the melodious plaint of
-angels over fallen mortality—the concentrated and pious
-self-forgetfulness of the community, who never once cast their eyes over
-the crowds that thronged their chapel—the deep, rich chant of the
-choral brethren—even the very contrast afforded by the light and
-fairy-like temple in which they thus meekly ministered to their Maker,
-with their own calm and inspired appearance, heightened the effect of
-the scene; and tacitly rebuked the presumption and worldliness of spirit
-that would have sought a jest in the very sanctuary of religion.
-
-The service commenced with an extemporaneous prayer from the chief
-priest, to which the attendant Dervishes listened with arms folded upon
-their breasts, and their eyes fixed on the ground. At its conclusion,
-all bowed their foreheads to the earth; and the orchestra struck into
-one of those peculiarly wild and melancholy Turkish airs which are
-unlike any other music that I ever heard. Instantly, the full voices of
-the brethren joined in chorus, and the effect was thrilling: now the
-sounds died away like the exhausted breath of a departing spirit, and
-suddenly they swelled once more into a deep and powerful diapason that
-seemed scarce earthly. A second stillness of about a minute succeeded,
-when the low, solemn music was resumed, and the Dervishes, slowly rising
-from the earth, followed their superior three times round the enclosure;
-bowing down twice under the shadow of the name of their Founder,
-suspended above the seat of the high priest. This reverence was
-performed without removing their folded arms from their breasts—the
-first time on the side by which they approached, and afterwards on that
-opposite, which they gained by slowly revolving on the right foot, in
-such a manner as to prevent their turning their backs towards the
-inscription. The procession was closed by a second prostration, after
-which, each Dervish having gained his place, cast off his cloak, and
-such as had walked in woollen slippers withdrew them, and, passing
-solemnly before the Chief Priest, they commenced their evolutions.
-
-I am by no means prepared, nor even inclined, to attempt a Quixotic
-defence of the very extraordinary and _bizarre_ ceremonial to which I
-was next a witness; but I cannot, nevertheless, agree with a modern
-traveller in describing it as “an absurdity.” That it does not accord
-with our European ideas of consistent and worthy worship is not only
-possible, but certain; yet I should imagine that no one could feel other
-than respect for men of irreproachable character, serving God according
-to their means of judgment.
-
-The extraordinary ceremony which gives its name to the Dancing, or, as
-they are really and much more appropriately called, the Turning
-Dervishes—for nothing can be more utterly unlike dancing than their
-evolutions—is not without its meaning. The community first pray for
-pardon of their past sins, and the amendment of their future lives; and
-then, after a silent supplication for strength to work out the change,
-they figure, by their peculiar and fatiguing movements, their anxiety to
-“shake the dust from their feet,” and to cast from them all worldly
-ties.
-
-As I could not reconcile myself to believe that the custom could have
-grown out of mere whim, I took some pains to ascertain its meaning, as
-well as visiting the chapel a second time during its observance, in
-order to ascertain whether the ceremonies differed on different days,
-but I remarked no change.
-
-Immediately after passing with a solemn reverence, twice performed, the
-place of the High Priest, who remained standing, the Dervishes spread
-their arms, and commenced their revolving motion; the palm of the right
-hand being held upwards, and that of the left turned down. Their
-under-dresses (for, as I before remarked, they had laid aside their
-cloaks) consisted of a jacket and petticoat of dark coloured cloth, that
-descended to their feet; the higher order of brethren being clad in
-green, and the others in brown, or a sort of yellowish gray; about their
-waists they wore wide girdles, edged with red, to which the right side
-of the jacket was closely fastened, while the left hung loose: their
-petticoats were of immense width, and laid in large plaits beneath the
-girdle, and, as the wearers swung round, formed a bell-like appearance;
-these latter garments, however, are only worn during the ceremony, and
-are exchanged in summer for white ones of lighter material.
-
-The number of those who were “on duty,” for I know not how else to
-express it, was nine; seven of them being men, and the remaining two,
-mere boys, the youngest certainly not more than ten years of age. Nine,
-eleven, and thirteen are the mystic numbers, which, however great the
-strength of community, are never exceeded; and the remaining members of
-the brotherhood, during the evolutions of their companions, continue
-engaged in prayer within the enclosure. These on this occasion amounted
-to about a score, and remained each leaning against a pillar: while the
-beat of the drum in the gallery marked the time to which the revolving
-Dervishes moved, and the effect was singular to a degree that baffles
-description. So true and unerring were their motions, that, although the
-space which they occupied was somewhat circumscribed, they never once
-gained upon each other: and for five minutes they continued twirling
-round and round, as though impelled by machinery, their pale,
-passionless countenances perfectly immobile, their heads slightly
-declined towards the right shoulder, and their inflated garments
-creating a cold, sharp air in the chapel, from the rapidity of their
-action. At the termination of that period, the name of the Prophet
-occurred in the chant, which had been unintermitted in the gallery; and,
-as they simultaneously paused, and, folding their hands upon their
-breasts, bent down in reverence at the sound, their ample garments wound
-about them at the sudden check, and gave them, for a moment, the
-appearance of mummies.
-
-An interval of prayer followed; and the same ceremony was performed
-three times; at the termination of which they all fell prostrate on the
-earth, when those who had hitherto remained spectators flung their
-cloaks over them, and the one who knelt on the left of the Chief Priest
-rose, and delivered a long prayer divided into sections, with a rapid
-and solemn voice, prolonging the last word of each sentence by the
-utterance of “ha—ha—ha”—with a rich depth of octave that would not
-have disgraced Phillips.
-
-This prayer was for “the great ones of the earth”—the magnates of the
-land—all who were “in authority over them;” and at each proud name they
-bowed their heads upon their breasts, until that of the Sultan was
-mentioned, when they once more fell flat upon the ground, to the sound
-of the most awful howl I ever heard.
-
-This outburst from the gallery terminated the labours of the orchestra;
-and the superior, rising to his knees while the others continued
-prostrate, in his turn prayed for a few instants; and then, taking his
-stand upon the crimson rug, they approached him one by one, and,
-clasping his hand, pressed it to their lips and forehead. When the first
-had passed, he stationed himself on the right of the superior, and
-awaited the arrival of the second, who, on reaching him, bestowed on him
-also the kiss of peace, which he had just proffered to the Chief Priest;
-and each in succession performed the same ceremony to all those who had
-preceded him, which was acknowledged by gently stroking down the beard.
-
-This was the final act of the exhibition; and, the superior having
-slowly and silently traversed the enclosure, in five seconds the chapel
-was empty, and the congregation busied at the portal in reclaiming
-their boots, shoes, and slippers.
-
-I had never hitherto seen such picturesque groups as those which
-thronged the Dervishes’ chapel on my second visit; nor did I ever
-witness more perfect order in any public assembly. A deep stillness
-reigned throughout the whole ceremony, only broken by the sobs of a
-middle-aged Turk who stood near me, and who was so much overcome by the
-saddening wail of the orchestra that he could not restrain his tears; a
-circumstance by no means uncommon in this country, where all ranks are
-peculiarly susceptible to the influence of music.
-
-The interior of the edifice was a perfect picture, of which the
-soberly-clad Dervishes occupied the centre; while the exterior circle
-was peopled with groups of soldiers in their coarse wrapping coats and
-red caps—venerable Turks in claret-coloured pelisses, richly
-furred—descendants of Mahomet, with their green turbans and portly
-beards—and peasants in their rude suits of dusky brown; all equally
-intent, and all equally orderly.
-
-The Turks are extremely tolerant with regard to religious opinions;
-their creed being split into as many sects as that of the Church of
-England; and each individual being left equally free to follow, as he
-sees fit, the dictates of his conscience. The Dervishes are of several
-different orders. The _Mivlavies_ are materialists in their faith; the
-_Zerrins_ worship the Virgin Mary; and the _Bektachis_ believe in the
-Saviour and the twelve apostles; every order has its peculiar
-constitution, differing from the dogmas of simple Islamism; but they are
-universally venerated by Musselmauns, despite their sectarian
-prejudices. They are generally versed in astrology and music; exorcise
-sufferers from witchcraft and the evil eye; and are always of quiet and
-submissive manners, never mingling either in the intrigues of the court,
-or the cabals of the Ulémas.
-
-It is not surprising that the Turks should venerate their own Dervishes,
-when they not only tolerate but even respect the Christian monks, and
-regard their monasteries as holy places, bearing the names of saints,
-and inhabited by men wholly devoted to God. To such a height, indeed, do
-they carry this reverence, that they permit the communities of several
-convents built on the charming little group of islands, called “Princes’
-Islands,” situated in the Propontis, not more than two leagues from
-Constantinople, to be summoned to their chapel to prayer by the ringing
-of bells; a privilege which is not accorded to any Christian church
-devoted to a general congregation; but perhaps the greatest proof that
-can be adduced of their veneration for religious societies exists in the
-fact that in the mausoleum of the principal Tekiè at Iconium lies one
-of the most celebrated of Musselmaun saints, Mollah Hunkiar, and beside
-him a Christian monk, to whom he had been so tenderly attached during
-his life, that he desired in his will that they should not be separated
-after death. The two tombs still exist, and what renders the anecdote
-still more worthy of record, is the circumstance that it is the Chèïk or
-Abbot of this very monastery, who has the privilege of girding on the
-sword of the Sultan in the Mosque of Eyoub, on his accession to the
-Ottoman throne.
-
-The Turks do not consider their women worthy to become Dervishes, but
-they, nevertheless, respect the Christian nuns; and a somewhat curious
-proof of this fact was given in 1818, on the receipt by the Sultan and
-his favourite minister, Halet Effendi, of two petitions drawn up by a
-sisterhood at Genoa, in which were set forth the injuries done to their
-convent by the French Republicans, terminating with a prayer to “his
-very pious Highness,” to send to them, as a present, three Turkey
-carpets to cover the floor of their chapel, one of which was to be
-crimson, a second purple, and the third green; and in return they
-promised to pray for the health, prosperity, and glory of the august
-head of the Ottoman Empire. The Sultan gallantly acceded to their
-request, and the compatriotes of Roxalana received with the least
-possible delay the magnificent donation by which a Musselmaun Emperor
-contributed to the adornment of a temple dedicated to Christian worship.
-
-In the cemetery of the Tekiè at Pera lies the body of the Marquis de
-Bonneval, a French renegade who died a pasha; and the stone slab yet
-remains there that once covered the head of Halet Effendi, the founder
-of the convent, which, I have omitted to mention, is built entirely of
-marble. The head of the Effendi has, however, been removed to a less
-sacred place of burial, and has found a traitor’s grave.
-
-Halet Effendi, once the favourite of the Sultan, was the cause of the
-Greek insurrection, which he brought about to conceal his own disloyal
-views. Having, by his intrigues, caused the appointment of Michel Suzzo
-to the principality of Moldavia, and having been reproached with the
-disaffection of Suzzo towards his Imperial master, the minister, who was
-responsible for the conduct and loyalty of his Greek _protégé_, boldly
-replied that the disaffection towards the Sultan was not that of Suzzo
-individually, but of his whole nation; an assertion which he immediately
-proceeded to bear out by exciting the Greeks covertly to rebellion; and
-he was so well seconded by his creature that, when Ypsalanti reared his
-standard in the provinces, Suzzo joined his banner, and the insurrection
-in the Morea, and the revolt of the Greeks in Constantinople, with the
-murder of the Patriarch, were the fearful consequences of the rebellious
-coalition; a treason which Mahmoud visited on his favourite with a
-sentence of exile to Iconia, giving him, at the same time, an autograph
-letter, in which he pledged himself to respect both his life and
-property; but, after the lapse of a few years, repenting an act of
-clemency so misplaced, the Sultan dispatched a Capedjee-basha, furnished
-with a Firman of recall, to his banished courtier, who found Halet
-Effendi at Iconia, and presented his credentials. The exile, overjoyed
-at so sudden and unlooked-for a change in his fortunes, lost no time in
-preparing for his return to Constantinople; but he had not long confided
-himself to the keeping of the Capedjee-basha when the bowstring
-terminated his existence, and the executioner hastened back to Stamboul,
-carrying along with him the head of his victim.
-
-This ghastly memorial of their benefactor was consigned, at their urgent
-request, to the Dervishes of Pera, who buried it in their grave-yard,
-beneath the small slab of stone, which, in a Turkish cemetery, indicates
-to the initiated that the deceased above whom it is placed has perished
-by violence; but it had not lain there more than a few days, when the
-Sultan chanced to inquire how it had been disposed of; and, hearing
-that it had received burial at this Tekiè, of whose order, entitled
-Mevlavies, he is himself a member, (and whose chapel in which he
-formerly performed his evolutions he still frequents, although in
-private, occupying, on his visits, one of the latticed closets,) he
-ordered that it should be immediately disinterred and carried to Balata,
-where the common sewers of the city empty themselves into the Bosphorus.
-This was accordingly done; and the turban-crested pillar that surmounts
-the slab now only serves to indicate the spot where rested for a few
-brief days the dishonoured head of Halet Effendi.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
- Merchants of Galata—Palaces of Pera—Picturesque style of
- Building—The Perotes—Social Subjects—Greeks, European and
- Schismatic—Ambassadorial Residences—Entrée of the
- Embassies—The Carnival—Soirées Dansantes—The Austrian
- Minister—Madame la Baronne—The Russian Minister—Madame de
- Boutenieff—The Masked Ball—Russian Supremacy—The Prussian
- Plenipotentiary—The Sardinian Chargé d’Affaires—Diplomacy
- Unhoused—Society of Pera.
-
-Neither Frank nor Christian is allowed to inhabit the “City of the
-Faithful;” and the faubourg of Pera, situated on the opposite side of
-the port, is consequently the head-quarters of the _élite_ of European
-society. Galata, which skirts the shore of the Bosphorus at the base of
-the hill on which Pera is built, numbers among its inhabitants many very
-respectable merchants, whose avocations demand their continual presence;
-but Pera is the dwelling-place of the beau-monde—the seat of
-fashion—the St. James’s of the capital. Here every thing social is _en
-magnifique_: the residences attached to the different Legations glory in
-the imposing designations of “palaces”—the gloomy _magazins_ of the
-Parisian _modistes_ are as dear and as dirty as can be desired—all the
-_employés_ of diplomacy throng the narrow, steep, and ill-paved
-streets, while the fair Greeks look down upon them from their
-bay-windows, projecting far beyond the façade of the building; and the
-bright-eyed Armenians peer from their lattices “all-seeing, but unseen.”
-The quaintly-coloured houses, looking like tenements of painted
-pasteboard, appear as though a touch would make them meet, and are
-picturesque beyond description, as they advance and recede, setting all
-external order, regularity, and proportion, at defiance.
-
-In my rapid definition of European society, I must not omit to mention
-that the Perotes, or natives of Pera, consider themselves as much Franks
-as though they had been born and nurtured on the banks of the Thames or
-the Seine; and your expression of amusement at this very original notion
-would inevitably give great offence. Conceding this point, therefore, as
-one which will not admit of argument, I shall simply divide society into
-two parts—the diplomatic and the scandalous—premising, however, that
-it requires a delicate touch to separate them, they are so intimately
-interwoven. Those who have the _entrée_ of the several embassies
-criticise each other; while those who have not, exercise a still more
-powerful prerogative; and certain it is that, between the two, the
-population of Pera is a great circulating medium which would render an
-official “hue and cry” a work of supererogation. “Not a feather falls
-to the ground,” but in half an hour every individual in the place knows
-by whom it was plucked, and the tale is told with a raciness and a zest
-that would make the fortune of a Sunday paper.
-
-A nice distinction exists among the Greeks, on which they vehemently
-insist; the Greek Catholics consider themselves as Europeans, while the
-schismatic Greeks do not assume this privilege, of which the former are
-extremely jealous.
-
-After the residence of a few weeks, you can readily determine the origin
-of every female whom you encounter in the streets of Pera. The fair
-Perotes, indeed, wear the bonnet, the cloak, and the shawl, which form
-the walking garb of the genuine European gentlewoman; but, nevertheless,
-it is impossible not to distinguish them at a glance; an insurmountable
-taste for bright colours, an indescribable peculiarity in the adjustment
-of their toilette, at once mark the Perote; while the dark-eyed Greek is
-known by her wide-spreading turban of gauze or velvet, over which is
-flung a lace veil, which, falling low upon the back and shoulders,
-leaves the face almost entirely uncovered.
-
-Since the great fire of Pera, the Ambassadors of England and France have
-resided at Therapia, a pretty village on the banks of the Bosphorus,
-near the mouth of the Black Sea; but the Internuncio of Russia, the
-Ministers of Austria and Prussia, and the Chargés d’Affaires of Sardinia
-and Holland, still inhabit the town daring the winter months. The
-Austrian palace, however, is the only one that now remains, the other
-diplomatic establishments being compressed into dwelling-houses; thus
-the Russian minister inhabits a mansion in the High Street, and the
-Dutch Chargé d’Affaires resides next door to us.
-
-The _entrée_ of the embassies is peculiarly easy to the resident
-Europeans, as their number is so limited that _les grands convenances_
-are almost necessarily laid aside, and their Excellencies
-super-eminently tolerant with regard to the rank of their guests. Thus
-it is somewhat startling to a traveller, accustomed to the exclusive
-circles of Paris and London, to find, not only merchants and their wives
-at the diplomatic _soirées_, but even the head clerks and their fair
-partners. It is true that the mode of reception has gradations of
-graciousness,
-
- “Small by degrees, and beautifully less;”
-
-but this is mere matter of individual feeling and power of
-endurance—the fact remains unaltered.
-
-The Carnival had this year resumed its gaiety; men’s minds had begun to
-cast off the panic occasioned by the terrific conflagration which almost
-made the town a waste, and nearly ruined many of the inhabitants whose
-property consisted chiefly in houses.
-
-At the Austrian palace there were balls every Sunday throughout the
-Carnival, where mustachioes and diplomatic buttons were rife. The
-never-ending cotillon, the rapid mazurka, the quadrille, and waltz, were
-equally popular; and I have danced the first with a Greek, the second
-with a Russian, the third with a Frenchman, and the fourth with a
-German, during the course of the evening.
-
-The Baron de Stürmer, the Austrian minister, is about fifty years of
-age, partially bald, and remarkably grave-looking when not excited; but
-his address is peculiarly agreeable, and his smile like lightning.
-
-Madame la Baronne is a good specimen of the present school of Parisian
-breeding—her pride is blent with playfulness, and her courtesy is as
-gracious as it is graceful. Although _tant soit peu precieuse_—she is
-perfectly free from pedantry, and is a delightful conversationist. She
-has memories of Napoleon at St. Helena, where she resided for several
-years; anecdotes, _piquantes_ and political—those well-worded and
-softly-articulated compliments which seat you upon velvet; and, above
-all, that air of genuine _laissez aller insouciance_ which no woman save
-a Parisian ever thoroughly acquires. I am indebted to the elegant
-hospitality of this lady for many of the most pleasant hours that I
-spent in the Frank circle at Pera.
-
-M. de Boutenieff, the Russian minister, has a face which, for the first
-five minutes, baffles you by its contradictory expression—there is a
-character of benevolence and gentleness about the forehead and eyes that
-attracts, while the subtle curve of the lip repulses by its cast of
-craft and caution—his conversation is easy, courtly, and pleasing; and
-his unremitted good humour and affability render him universally popular
-in society. Madame de Boutenieff, who is his second wife, is young,
-graceful, and lively—an indefatigable dancer, and a fascinating
-hostess; and, moreover, the niece of Nesselrode.
-
-The _soirées dansantes_ at the Russian palace terminated with a masked
-ball, which worthily wound up the Carnival, and was sustained with great
-spirit. The fair hostess herself, with two ladies attached to the
-legation, and the wife of the French chancellor, personated angels, who
-were led into the ball-room by a _parti carré_ of devils, embodied by
-four of the Russian secretaries. Some of our politicians will assuredly
-smile at the conceit, nor can I forebear to admit the propriety of the
-fancy; for truly, when I consider the number of _attachés_ to the
-Russian Legation, as compared with that of the other powers at this
-court, I am inclined to allow that “their name is legion.”
-
-Even in a ball-room the Russian supremacy is palpably evident—their
-number, their political power, their never-ceasing efforts at
-popularity—cannot be forgotten for a moment. There is diplomacy in
-every action—in every look—in every tone—and withal a
-self-gratulatory, quiet species of at-home-ness every where and with
-everybody, which shews you at once that they are quite at ease, at
-least, for the present.
-
-Exquisite, in the most wide acceptation of the term, in their
-costume—affectedly refined and aristocratic in their manners—_acharnés
-pour la danse_—“_passant la moitié de leur temps à rien faire, et
-l’autre moitié à faire des riens_,” the _attachés_ of M. de Boutenieff,
-upwards of thirty in number, are as busily employed in turning heads and
-winning hearts, as though the great stake which they came here to play
-were but the secondary object of their mission.
-
-Count Königsmark, the Prussian minister, is a high-bred and accomplished
-gentleman: distinguished by that calm and graceful _tenue_ that sits so
-well on men of rank, and which is the most becoming attribute alike of
-mental and of social aristocracy.
-
-The Sardinian Chargé d’Affaires, General Montiglio, is of very retiring
-habits, and mixes little in general society; but he is a person of
-considerable acquirements, and an indefatigable sportsman. His domestic
-history is a little romance, and may serve to account in a great
-measure for his love of retirement, and the hermit-like seclusion of his
-wife. Having made a _mariage d’inclination_ which was considered by the
-Sardinian court to be incompatible with his rank and position in
-society, he was sent into honourable exile to Smyrna, as Chargé
-d’Affaires, whence he was a short time since removed to Constantinople;
-where, as I before remarked, he is rarely met with amid the Perote crowd
-that fills the ambassadorial ball-rooms.
-
-The other foreign ministers play a comparatively insignificant _rôle_ in
-society; as, since the destruction of the several diplomatic residences
-in the great fire, they have been compelled to inhabit houses which are
-not calculated for reception; and it would appear as though they are
-likely to be long situated thus: the only palace in process of
-restoration being that of Russia. Here again is asserted the autocracy
-of the North—the English palace is in ruins, and parasites are
-wreathing, like emerald-coloured snakes, about its tottering
-walls—Holland, France, all save Austria, are
-
- “Driven from their parch’d and blacken’d halls.”
-
-The evil is general—but the remedy has been applied, as yet, only in
-one instance.
-
-Close the doors of the diplomatic residences, and little more can be
-said for the European society of Pera; it is about on a par with that
-of a third-rate provincial town in England. _Ennui_ succeeds to
-curiosity, and indifference to _ennui_; and you gladly step into your
-caïque, or your araba; or, better still, spring into your saddle, to
-recreate yourself among scenes of beauty and magnificence, and to escape
-from “the everlasting larum” of “rounded sentences which tend to
-nothing.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
- The Greek Carnival—Kassim Pasha—The Marine Barrack—The
- Admiralty—Palace of the Capitan Pasha—Turkish Ships and
- Turkish Sailors—More Mistakes—Aqueduct of Justinian—The
- Seraï—The Arsenal—The “Sweet Waters”—The Fanar—Interior of
- a Greek House—Courteous Reception—Patriarchal Customs—Greek
- Ladies at Home—Confectionary and Coffee—A Greek
- Dinner—Ancient and Modern Greeks—A Few Words on
- Education—National Politeness—The Great Logotheti
- Aristarchi—His Politics—Sketch of his Father—His Domestic
- History—A Greek Breakfast—The Morning after a Ball—Greek
- Progress towards Civilization—Parallel between the Turk and
- the Greek.
-
-The Greek Carnival extends three days beyond that of the Europeans; and,
-such being the case, we gladly accepted an invitation to a ball to be
-given by a wealthy Cesarean merchant, resident at the Fanar, or Greek
-quarter of Constantinople; and I embarked in a caïque, with my father,
-under one of those bright spring suns which make the Bosphorus glitter
-like a plate of polished steel.
-
-We took boat at Kassim Pasha, in the yard of the marine barrack, an
-extensive block of building, equally remarkable for its tawdry
-fresco-painted walls, and demolished windows; and close beside the
-Admiralty, a gay-looking edifice in the Russian taste, elaborately
-ornamented throughout its exterior, and adorned with peristyles on
-three of its sides. The _rez-de-chaussée_ contains apartments
-appropriated to the principal persons of the establishment, and public
-offices for the transaction of business. The next range are sacred to
-the Sultan, who occasionally passes a morning at Kassim Pasha,
-inspecting the progress of the vessels of war now building: and from the
-windows of his saloons looking down upon the line-of-battle ships in the
-harbour.
-
-On a height a little in rear of the Admiralty stand the picturesque
-remains of the palace that was formerly inhabited by the Capitan Pasha;
-of which two long lines of grated arches still exist nearly perfect,
-having much the effect of an aqueduct; while a little cluster of towers,
-crowning the grass-grown acclivity, add a most interesting feature to
-the ruin.
-
-On all sides of the caïque towered a lordly vessel with its bristling
-cannon, and painted or gilt stern gallery, lying peacefully at anchor in
-the land-locked harbour; while the largest frigate in the world was
-busily preparing for sea as we passed under her bows, and her deck was
-all alive with men, in their red caps and close blue jackets; but I fear
-that the blue jackets of England would scarce seek to claim brotherhood
-with the tars of Turkey, for they have, in sooth, but a “lubberly” look
-with them; and it is commonly remarked that the Sultan has some of the
-finest vessels in the world, and some of the worst sailors.
-
-As this was the first day of unclouded sunshine on which I had crossed
-the port, I looked around me in order to discover the “gilded domes” of
-which a modern traveller has spoken; but, alas!—the truth must be
-told—not a mosque in Stamboul has a gilded dome; and the only approach
-to such a gorgeous object that I could discover were the gilded spires
-of the minarets of Sultan Mahmoud’s mosque at Topphannè; but, _en
-revanche_, the eye lingered long on the ruin of Justinian’s aqueduct,
-which rises hoar and dark above the clustering houses of the city,
-spanning the two hills against which it rests, as with the grasp of
-centuries—upon the glittering pinnacles of the Seraï, flashing out amid
-the tall cypresses that hem them in; and on the elegant, but nearly
-untenanted, Seraglio itself, which stands upon the very edge of the
-lake-like sea, mirrored in the clear waters.
-
-But these were soon left behind; and, as our sturdy rowers rapidly
-impelled us forward, we traced on our right hand the extensive
-outbuildings of the Arsenal, which bound the shore to the very extremity
-of the port, and only terminate at the point of the “Sweet Waters,”
-where a lovely river empties itself into the harbour, and gives its name
-to the locality.
-
-In ten minutes, we were at the Fanar, and landed on a wooden terrace
-washed by the waters of the port; and in five more we had passed into
-the garden to which it belonged, and thence into the house of the
-hospitable family who had offered us a home for the night.
-
-Having traversed an extensive hall paved with stone, whence three
-flights of marble stairs gave admittance into different parts of the
-mansion, we passed through a long gallery, and entered the apartment in
-which the ladies of the family were awaiting our arrival. No chilling
-salutation of measured courtesy—no high-bred manifestation of
-“exclusive” indifference, greeted the foreign strangers; but each in
-turn approached us with extended hand, and offered the kiss of welcome;
-and in less than a quarter of an hour we were all laughing and chatting
-as gaily in French, as though we had been the acquaintance of years.
-
-No where do you feel yourself more thoroughly at home at once than among
-the inhabitants of the East; they _may_ be what we are accustomed to
-call them—semi-barbarians—but, if such be the case, never was the
-aphorism of a celebrated female writer more thoroughly exemplified that
-“extreme politeness comes next to extreme simplicity of manners.” Any
-privation that you may suffer in a Turkish or Greek house, beyond those
-consequent on the habits of the country, must be gratuitous, as the
-natives place a firm reliance on your asking for all that you require
-or wish; and they are so far from being obliged to you for a contrary
-mode of action, that you cannot more seriously offend than by giving
-them cause to suspect, after your departure, that you have been
-inconvenienced during your residence in their families.
-
-The room in which we were received was of considerable extent, and
-surrounded on three sides by a sofa, like those in the Turkish houses,
-which were in fact copied from the Greeks; this was covered with a gay
-patterned chintz, and furnished with cushions of cut velvet of a rich
-deep blue; nor was the comfortable tandour wanting; and, when I had laid
-aside my cloak, shawl, and bonnet, and exchanged my walking shoes for
-slippers, I crept under the wadded coverings as gladly as any Greek
-among them; and, having surrounded ourselves with cushions, we all sat
-in luxurious idleness, speculating on the forthcoming ball, and relating
-anecdotes of those which were past.
-
-Nothing can be more patriarchal than the domestic economy of a Greek
-family: that in which we were guests comprised three generations; and
-the respect and obedience shown by the younger branches to their
-venerable relatives were at once beautiful and affecting. The aged
-grandmother, a noble remain of former beauty, with a profile which a
-sculptor must still have loved to look upon, so perfectly was its
-outline preserved—wore her grey hair braided back from her forehead,
-and a dark shawl wound about her head—a long pelisse of brown cloth
-lined with rich fur, with wide sleeves, and an under-jacket of crimson
-merinos, doubled with marten-skin—her daughter, the mistress of the
-house, and the mother of twelve children, reminded me strongly of a
-Jewess, with her large, dark, flashing eyes, and high aquiline nose: her
-wide brow was cinctured with a costly Persian scarf; and during the day
-she three times changed the magnificent cachemere in which she was
-enveloped. The younger ladies wore turbans of gauze wreathed with
-flowers, very similar to those which are in use among our matrons for
-evening dress; their dark, luxuriant, glossy hair being almost entirely
-hidden; and furred pelisses that reached from the throat mid-way to the
-knee, whence the full petticoat of merinos, or chaly, fell in large
-folds to their feet.
-
-As soon as we were comfortably established round the tandour, a servant
-brought in a tray on which were arranged a large cut glass vase, filled
-with a delicate preserve slightly impregnated with _attar de rose_, a
-range of crystal goblets of water, and a silver boat, whose oars were
-gilt tea-spoons. One of these the lady of the house immersed in the
-preserve, and offered to me; after which she replaced the spoon in the
-boat, and I then accepted a draught of water presented by the same
-hospitable hand; the whole ceremony was next gone through with my
-father; and, the tray being dismissed, a second servant entered with
-coffee, served in little porcelain cups of divers patterns, without
-saucers, but deposited in stands of fillagreed silver, shaped nearly
-like the egg-cups of Europe.
-
-After this, we were left to our charcoal and cushions until six o’clock;
-save that my father smoked a costly pipe with a mouthpiece of the
-colour and almost of the bulk of a lemon, in company of our host, a
-tall, majestic-looking man, upwards of six feet in height, whose black
-calpac differed from those of the Armenians in its superiority of size
-and globular form, and whose furred garments, heaped one above another,
-seemed to me, shivering as I had lately been under a sharp spring breeze
-on the water, the very embodiment of comfort.
-
-A Greek dinner is a most elaborate business; rendered still more lengthy
-by the fact that the knives, forks, and other appliances which European
-example has introduced, are as yet rather hindrances than auxiliaries to
-most of those who have adopted them.
-
-When we had taken our places at table, I looked around me with
-considerable interest—we were truly a large party—all the junior
-members of the family, who had been throughout the morning “on
-household cares intent,” were gathered around the board; and such a
-circle of bright black eyes I never beheld before in my life!
-
-The very aspect of the repast was _appetissant_—the portly tureen of
-rice soup was surrounded by every tentative to appetite that can be
-enumerated; pickled anchovies, shred cheese, dried sausage divided into
-minute portions, pickles of every description, salt tunny-fish, looking
-like condensed rose leaves, and Adrianople tongues sliced to the
-thinness of wafers. The sparkling Greek wines were laughing in light
-among dishes upheaped with luscious confectionary—Sciote pastry—red
-mullet, blushing through the garlanded parsley among which they were
-imbedded, and pyramids of pillauf slightly tinged with the juice of the
-tomato. More substantial dishes were rapidly handed round by servants,
-and a delicious dessert crowned the hospitable meal, at whose
-termination we hurried to our several apartments, and were soon immersed
-in all the mysteries of the toilet.
-
-The house of the merchant by whom the ball was to be given, and whose
-name was Kachishesh Oglou, signifying “Son of the Hermit,” was next door
-to that in which we were already guests; and the cheerful music of the
-Wallachian band gave earnest of its commencement long ere we were ready
-to augment the festive crowd: and a crowd it truly was, a perfect
-social kaleidoscope; for the variety of costumes and colours in constant
-motion formed a gay and characteristic piece of human mosaic. There were
-the venerable men whose hair and beards had grown gray with age, and who
-had scorned to put off the garb of their fathers; the dark globular
-calpac and the graceful pelisse—the _tiers étât_ of fashion, in their
-semi-European dress, the ill-cut frock-coat, and the scarlet _fèz_,
-drawn down to their very eyebrows—and the young, travelled beaux, in
-their pride of superior knowledge and _tenue_, gloved and chausséd with
-a neatness and precision worthy of the school in which they had studied.
-
-Among the ladies, the same graduated scale of fashion was perceptible:
-the elder matrons wore the dark head-dress and unbecoming vest of
-by-gone years, half concealed by the warm wrapping pelisse—the next in
-age had mingled the Greek and European costumes into one heterogeneous
-mass, each heightening and widening the absurdity of the other; and had
-overlaid the inconsistent medley with a profusion of diamonds absolutely
-dazzling; while the younger ladies presented precisely the same
-appearance as the belles of a third rate country town in England: their
-petticoats too short, their heads too high, their sleeves too elaborate,
-and their whole persons over-dressed.
-
-I have already remarked on the fondness of the Greek ladies for gay
-colours; a taste peculiarly, and almost painfully, apparent in a
-ball-room: such bright blues, deep pinks, and glowing scarlets I never
-before saw collected together; and this glaring taste extends even to
-their jewels, which they mix in the most extraordinary manner; their
-only care being to heap upon their persons every ornament that they can
-contrive to wear.
-
-I cannot, however, record even this inconsequent criticism without a
-feeling of self-reproach, when I remember the kindliness of heart, and
-frankness of welcome, with which I was received among them. No curious
-impertinence taught me that I was felt to be a stranger; on the
-contrary, I was greeted with smiles on every side; each had something
-kind and complimentary to address to me; and in ten minutes I had been
-presented to every individual in the room whose acquaintance I could
-desire to make. Nor must I pass over without remark the progress of
-education among these amiable women; two-thirds of the younger ones
-speak French, many of them even fluently—several were conversant with
-English, and still more with Italian; while a knowledge of the ancient
-Greek is the basis of their education, and is consequently almost
-general. A taste for music is also rapidly obtaining; and time and
-greater facilities are alone wanting to lend the polish of
-high-breeding and high education to the Greek ladies: the material is
-there—they already possess intellect, quickness of perception, and a
-strong desire for instruction; and, even eminently superior as they
-already are to the Turkish and Armenian females, they are so conscious
-of their deficiencies both of education and opportunity, that, were
-these once secured to them, they would probably be inferior to no women
-in the world as regards mental acquirements.
-
-I pass by the heavy-looking, but, nevertheless, handsome, son of the
-Prince of Samos, the minister of Moldavia—a group of Mickialis,
-Manolakis, Lorenzis, Arcolopolos, &c., &c., &c., all dark-eyed and
-mustachioed—to particularize an individual who must ever be an object
-of great interest to all who are conversant with Eastern politics—I
-allude to Nicholas Aristarchi—Great Logotheti, or head of the clergy,
-and representative of the Greek nation in the Synod—the Aristarchi, who
-is accused by his enemies of having brought about the treaty of Unkiar
-Skelessi—of having caused Achmet Pasha to counsel the Sultan to cede
-some of his finest provinces to the Russians, in virtue of the
-convention of St. Petersburg; and, to crown all, of being in the receipt
-of a considerable pension, granted to him, in consideration of his
-services, by the Emperor Nicholas.
-
-Be all this as it may—and be it remembered that each of these
-assertions is totally discredited by a numerous party, who have taken a
-very different view of the political career of Logotheti, and who find a
-complete refutation of these charges against him, in the perilous
-situation of the Sultan when Mahomet Ali marched upon Qutayah—Mahmoud
-was without fleet or army—threatened by his people—abandoned by his
-friends—deserted by his allies—and reduced to the bare question of
-self-preservation. In this strait, uncounselled, unadvised, even
-unsuspected of such an intention, he personally invited the Russian
-fleet to protect him against his own subjects, nor did he abandon his
-purpose at the remonstrance of his own ministers, and those of the
-foreign powers.
-
-During the succeeding four years, the Ottoman Government have persisted
-in the same views, as if in conviction of their efficacy; and it is
-scarcely probable that a solitary individual, and that individual,
-moreover, a Greek raïah, could possess sufficient power to regulate the
-movements of a despotic government; while it is certain that Aristarchi
-is still in the confidence of the Turkish ministry, and is more or less
-interwoven in the intricate web of her political existence.
-
-Many of those who have been the most violent against him have forgotten,
-or perhaps have never known, that he is the son of that Aristarchi who
-was sacrificed because he was too true to the cause which he had
-espoused. Aristarchi was the last Greek Dragoman to the Porte, and the
-confidant of Halet Effendi; and, on the insurrection of his countrymen,
-he continued faithful to the interests of the Sultan, and steadily
-pursued the straight and manly line of policy which had induced him to
-support the views of England against those of Russia; but he was
-abandoned in his need by the power that he had, in his days of
-influence, exerted his best energies to serve. England changed her
-policy, and Aristarchi, abandoned to the tender mercies of the
-arch-traitor, Halet Effendi, was exiled to Boloo, under a promise of
-recall; but he ultimately lost his life, which no powerful hand was
-outstretched to save, simply because Aristarchi was the only individual
-whose personal and acquired rank rendered him eligible to fill the
-exalted station of Prince of Wallachia; and that he was unhappily the
-confidant of the treacherous intrigues of his patron, which that patron
-well knew that he possessed the power to disclose. Thus, forgotten on
-one hand, and betrayed on the other, he fell a sacrifice to the
-misgivings of Halet Effendi, who supplied his place with one less versed
-in the intricacies of his own subtle policy.
-
-Logotheti saw his father cut to pieces before his eyes—murdered by the
-emissaries of those whom he had served with honour and fidelity—he
-beheld his mother put forth, with her seven helpless daughters, from the
-home that had so long been her’s—he stood between his two young
-brothers, orphaned and beggared by the same stroke—he saw the
-possessions which should have been his own pass into the hands of
-strangers—and he knew and felt that on his individual exertions
-depended the comforts, the fortunes, the very existence, of those
-helpless and homeless beings.
-
-I shall pursue the subject no farther for obvious reasons, suffice it
-that Nicholas Aristarchi, Great Logotheti and Chargé d’Affaires for
-Wallachia, was to me an object of surpassing interest: I had heard so
-much of him—I had imagined so much—and I had been so deeply affected
-by his domestic history—that I was anxious to see a man who had
-suffered so fearfully, who had struggled so manfully, and who had
-grappled with fortune until he saw it at his feet; and whose individual
-influence had sufficed to depose two Patriarchs, and to seat two others
-on the throne of the Greek church.
-
-Nor did I, when I first met him, know the tendency of his politics; I
-was desirous only to make the acquaintance of a man who had become an
-object of great interest to me from the description and narration of an
-individual whom he had essentially served, and who had succeeded in
-awakening in my mind a wish to see and converse with him. My business
-was with the man; with the politician I had nothing to do. I thought
-only of the Aristarchi, who had saved and supported a ruined mother and
-a beggared family; I cared not for the Dragoman, who had assisted at
-treaties, and passed his youth among the intrigues of cabinets. His
-domestic history was a little romance; my feelings of sympathy had been
-excited by the manner in which it was related to me; and I rejoiced in
-the opportunity of becoming known to him.
-
-Logotheti was one of the first persons presented to me; and I instantly
-felt that, had I encountered him in a crowd, I could not have passed him
-by without remark. He is about five and thirty, of the middle size, and
-there is mind in every line of his expressive countenance—his brow is
-high and ample, with the rich brown hair receding from it, as if fully
-to reveal its intellectual character; his bright and restless eyes
-appear almost to flash fire during his moments of excitement, but in
-those of repose their characteristic is extreme softness; his nose is a
-perfect aquiline, and his moustache partially conceals a set of the
-whitest teeth I ever saw. As he stood conversing with me, I remarked
-that he constantly amused himself by toying with his beard, which he
-wears pointed, and of which he is evidently vain. His voice is
-extremely agreeable, his delivery emphatic, and he speaks French
-fluently.
-
-After a few moments of conversation, he introduced me to his wife, his
-mother, and his sisters, all of whom greeted me with the greatest
-kindness; and in a few more, my hand was in his, and we were threading
-the mazes of a cotillon. I was much amused by the officiousness of his
-attendants; his pipe-bearer, whose tube (not staff) of office was of the
-most costly description, approached him every five minutes with the
-tempting luxury, of which he was, however, much too well-bred to avail
-himself while conversing with me; although the Greek ladies are
-accustomed to this social accessory, and many of the elder ones even
-indulge in it themselves—another handed to him from time to time a
-clean cambric handkerchief—while a third haunted him like his shadow,
-and the moment that we paused, either in the dance, or in our walk
-across the room, placed a couple of chairs for us to seat ourselves. Of
-this latter arrangement, he availed himself without scruple, and
-compelled me to do the same; while, as the evolutions of the figure
-constantly caused me to rise, he invariably stood leaning over the back
-of my empty chair, until I was again seated, ere he would resume his
-own.
-
-As he persisted in dancing with me nearly the whole of the evening, and
-talking to me during the remainder, I soon became much interested in
-his conversation, and it was with sincere pleasure that I heard him
-promise that he would get up an extempore ball for us the following
-night. The news soon spread through the room, and great were the
-exertions made to secure invitations, the more particularly as the
-morrow was the last day of the Carnival; and, at half past four in the
-morning, after having received an invitation to breakfast with Madame
-Logotheti, we made our parting bow to our very handsome hostess and her
-hospitable husband, and hastened to secure a little rest, to enable us
-to contend with the fatigues of the forthcoming evening.
-
-A Greek breakfast differs little from a Greek dinner: there are the same
-sparkling wines, the same goodly tureen of soup, the same meats, and
-confectionary, and _friandises_; but, in addition to these, there is the
-snowy kaimack, or clotted cream, and the bubbling urn.
-
-I know not whether others have made the same remark, but I have
-frequently observed that the breakfast after a ball, where the party is
-an agreeable one, is a most delightful repast. The excitement of the
-previous night has not entirely subsided—the “sayings and doings” of
-“ladies bright and cavaliers” afford a gay and unfailing topic—and all
-goes “merry as a marriage bell.” Certain it is, that in this instance
-my theory is borne out by the result; for, on the termination of the
-meal, the family insisted on our remaining with them during our stay at
-the Fanar. Servants were accordingly despatched for our bandboxes and
-dressing-cases, and we established ourselves comfortably round the
-tandour until dinner-time.
-
-As the house which Logotheti occupied during the winter months was
-merely hired,[1] and, although extremely handsome and spacious, was
-greatly inferior in magnificence to his residence on the Bosphorus, he
-did not consider it expedient to give the ball himself, lest he should
-offend many whom he had neither time nor space to invite; but requested
-one of his friends, Hage Aneste, or Aneste the Pilgrim, a Primate of the
-Greek church and a near neighbour, to open his house in the evening, and
-the arrangement was completed at once.
-
-If I had been pleased with Logotheti in the heat and hurry of a ball
-room, I was infinitely more delighted with him in the bosom of his
-family. His gentle and courtly manners, and his unaffected and fluent
-conversation, rendered him a charming companion; and the hours flew so
-swiftly in his society, and that of his amiable family, that dinner was
-announced before the morning had appeared to be half spent.
-
-At half past nine, we were in the ball-room, which I entered on the arm
-of Logotheti, and I was considerably startled during our progress up
-stairs by the manner of his reception. Our host and hostess met us on
-the first landing-place, where they bent down and kissed the hem of his
-garment, despite his efforts to prevent this truly Oriental salutation.
-Their example was followed by all those who made way for us; and, as he
-led me through the noble saloon in which we were to dance, and seated me
-in the centre of the sofa, at the upper end of a drawing-room that
-opened into it, every one rose, and continued standing until he had
-taken possession of a chair.
-
-Coffee having been handed round, Logotheti conducted me back into the
-saloon, where we opened the ball with a Polonaise; after which,
-quadrilles, waltzes, cotillons, and mazurkas, followed each other in
-rapid succession; and, after having been introduced to more persons than
-I could possibly recognise should I ever meet them again, and dancing
-until near six o’clock in the morning, I walked another Polonaise with
-our agreeable host, and quitted the ball-room with more regret than I
-ever experienced on a similar occasion.
-
-We remained the morrow at the Fanar, and I carried away with me no
-memories save those of kindness and courtesy. Seldom, very seldom
-indeed, have I passed three days of such unalloyed gratification as
-those for which I am indebted to Logotheti and his friends.
-
-No circumstance impressed me more strongly during this very agreeable
-visit, than the rapid strides which the Constantinopolitan Greeks are
-making towards civilization. The Turks have a thousand old and cherished
-superstitions that tend to clog the chariot wheels of social
-progression, and which it will require time to rend away; the Armenians,
-who consider their Moslem masters as the _ne plus ultra_ of human
-perfection, are yet further removed from improvement than the Turks;
-while the Greeks, lively and quick-minded, seize, as it were by
-intuition, minute shades of character as well as striking points of
-manners. Locomotive, physically as well as mentally, they indulge their
-erratic tastes and propensities by travel; they compare, estimate, and
-adopt; they pride themselves in their progress; they stand forth,
-scorning all half measures, as declared converts to European customs;
-and they fashion their minds as well as their persons, after their
-admitted models.
-
-The Turk is the more stately, the more haughty, and the more
-self-centered, of the inhabitants of the East; but in all that relates
-to social tactics he is very far inferior to the keen, shrewd,
-calculating, intriguing, Greek.
-
-The Moslem will fix his eye upon a distant and important object, and
-work steadily onwards until he has attained it; but, meanwhile, the
-active Greek will have clutched a score of minor advantages, which
-probably, in the aggregate, are of more than equal weight. It is the
-collision of mind and matter—the elephant and the fox. Intellectual
-craft has been the safety-buoy of the Greeks; had they been differently
-constituted, they would long ere this have been swept from the face of
-the earth, or have become mere “hewers of wood and drawers of water.” As
-it is, there is so strong a principle of moral life in this portion of
-the Greek nation, that, were they only more united among themselves, and
-less a prey to intestine jealousies and heart-burnings, it is probable
-that in these times, when Turkey lies stretched like a worsted giant at
-the mercy of the European powers, the heel of the Greeks might be shod
-with an iron, heavy enough to press her down beyond all means of
-resuscitation; in possession, as they are, of the confidence of those in
-power.
-
-Animal force has subjugated the Greeks—subjugated, but not subdued
-them; their physical power has departed, but their moral energy remains
-unimpaired; and it is doubtful whether human means will ever crush it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
- Difficulty of Obtaining an Insight into Turkish
- Character—Inconvenience of Interpreters—Errors of
- Travellers—Ignorance of Resident Europeans—Fables and
- Fable-mongers—Turkey, Local and Moral—Absence of Capital
- Crime—Police of Constantinople—Quiet Streets—Sedate
- Mirth—Practical Philosophy of the Turks—National
- Emulation—Impossibility of Revolution—Mahmoud and his
- People—Unpopularity of the Sultan—Russian
- Interference—Vanity of the Turks—Russian Gold—Tenderness of
- the Turks to Animals—Penalty for Destroying a Dog—The English
- Sportsman—Fondness of the Turks for Children—Anecdote of the
- Reiss Effendi—Adopted Children—Love of the Musselmauns for
- their Mothers—Turkish Indifference to Death—Their
- Burial-places—Fasts—The Turks in the Mosque—Contempt of the
- Natives for Europeans—Freedom of the Turkish
- Women—Inviolability of the Harem—Domestic Economy of the
- Harem—Turkish Slaves—Anecdote of a Slave of Achmet
- Pasha—Cleanliness of Turkish Houses—The Real Romance of the
- East.
-
-There is, perhaps, no country under heaven where it is more difficult
-for an European to obtain a full and perfect insight into the national
-character, than in Turkey. The extreme application, and the length of
-time necessary to the acquirement of the two leading languages, which
-bear scarcely any affinity to those of Europe, render the task one of
-utter hopelessness to the traveller, who consequently labours under the
-disadvantage of explaining his impressions, and seeking for information
-through the medium of a third person, inferentially, and it may almost
-be said totally, uninterested in both. The most simple question may be
-put in a manner calculated to influence the reply; as the rivulet takes
-the tinge of the soil over which it passes—a misplaced emphasis may
-change the nature of an assertion; and no one requires to be reminded of
-the difficulty, if not impossibility, of meeting with an individual so
-straightforward and matter-of-fact as to translate as though he were
-perpetually _in foro conscientiæ_. Thus the means of communication
-between the native and the stranger have an additional and almost
-insurmountable impediment in this respect, superadded to the natural and
-palpable obstacles presented by opposing and diffluent prejudices,
-customs, and opinions.
-
-Flung back, consequently, upon his own resources; soured, perhaps
-somewhat, by the consciousness that he is so, and judging according to
-his own impressions, the traveller hazards undigested and erroneous
-judgments on the most important facts—traces effects to wrong
-causes—and, deciding by personal feeling, condemns much that, did he
-perfectly and thoroughly comprehend its nature and tendency, he would
-probably applaud. Hence arise most of those errors relative to the
-feelings and affairs of the East, that have so long misled the public
-mind in Europe; and, woman as I am, I cannot but deplore a fact which I
-may be deficient in the power to remedy. The repercussion of public
-opinion must be wrought by a skilful and a powerful hand, They are no
-lady-fingers which can grasp a pen potent enough to overthrow the
-impressions and prejudices that have covered reams of paper, and spread
-scores of misconceptions. But, nevertheless, like the mouse in the
-fable, I may myself succeed in breaking away a few of the meshes that
-imprison the lion; and, as I was peculiarly situated during my residence
-in the East, and enjoyed advantages and opportunities denied to the
-generality of travellers, who, as far as the natives are concerned, pass
-their time in Turkey “unknowing and unknown,” I trust that my attempt to
-refute the errors of some of my predecessors, and to advance opinions,
-as well as to adduce facts, according to my own experience, may not
-entail on me the imputation of presumption. I know not whether it may
-have been from want of inclination, but it is certain that Europeans are
-at this moment resident in Turkey, as ignorant of all that relates to
-her political economy, her system of government, and her moral ethics,
-as though they had never left their own country: and who have,
-nevertheless, been resident there for fifteen or twenty years. If you
-succeed in prevailing on them to speak on the subject, they never
-progress beyond exanimate and crude details of mere external effects.
-They have not exerted themselves to look deeper; and it may be
-supererogatory to add, that at the Embassies the great question of
-Oriental policy is never discussed, save _en petit comité_. It is also a
-well-attested fact that the entrée of native houses, and intimacy with
-native families, are not only extremely difficult, but in most cases
-impossible to Europeans; and hence the cause of the tissue of fables
-which, like those of Scheherazade, have created genii and enchanters _ab
-ovo usque ad mala_, in every account of the East. The European mind has
-become so imbued with ideas of Oriental mysteriousness, mysticism, and
-magnificence, and it has been so long accustomed to pillow its faith on
-the marvels and metaphors of tourists, that it is to be doubted whether
-it will willingly cast off its old associations, and suffer itself to be
-undeceived.
-
-To the eye, Turkey is, indeed, all that has been described, gorgeous,
-glowing, and magnificent; the very position of its capital seems to
-claim for it the proud title of the “Queen of Cities.” Throned on its
-seven hills, mirrored in the blue beauty of the Bosphorus—that glorious
-strait which links the land-locked harbour of Stamboul to the mouth of
-the Euxine—uniting two divisions of the earth in its golden
-grasp—lording it over the classic and dusky mountains of Asia, and the
-laughing shores of Europe—the imagination cannot picture a site or
-scene of more perfect beauty. But the _morale_ of the Turkish empire is
-less perfect than its terrestrial position; it possesses the best
-conducted people with the worst conducted government—ministers
-accessible to bribes—public functionaries practised in chicane—a court
-without consistency, and a population without energy.
-
-All these things are, however, on the surface, and cannot, consequently,
-escape the notice of any observant traveller. It is the reverse of the
-picture that has been so frequently overlooked and neglected. And yet
-who that regards, with unprejudiced eyes, the moral state of Turkey, can
-fail to be struck by the absence of capital crime, the contented and
-even proud feelings of the lower ranks, and the absence of all
-assumption and haughtiness among the higher?
-
-Constantinople, with a population of six hundred thousand souls, has a
-police of one hundred and fifty men. No street-riots rouse the quiet
-citizens from their evening cogitations—no gaming-house vomits forth
-its throng of despairing or of exulting votaries—no murders frighten
-slumber from the pillows of the timid, “making night hideous”—no ruined
-speculator terminates his losses and his life at the same instant, and
-thus bequeathes a double misery to his survivors—no inebriated mechanic
-reels homeward to wreak his drunken temper on his trembling wife—the
-Kavashlir, or police of the capital, are rather for show than use.
-
-From dusk the streets are silent, save when their echoes are awakened by
-the footfalls of some individual who passes, accompanied by his servant
-bearing a lantern, on an errand of business or pleasure. Without these
-lanterns, no person can stir, as the streets of the city are not
-lighted, and so ill-paved that it would be not only difficult, but
-almost dangerous, to traverse them in the dark. If occasionally some
-loud voice of dispute, or some ringing peal of laughter, should scare
-the silence of night, it is sure to be the voice or the laughter of an
-European, for the Turk is never loud, even in his mirth; a quiet,
-internal chuckle, rather seen upon the lips than sensible to the ear, is
-his greatest demonstration of enjoyment; and while the excitable Greek
-occasionally almost shrieks out his hilarity, the Musselmaun will look
-on quietly, with the smile about his mouth, and the sparkle in his eye,
-which are the only tokens of his anticipation in the jest.
-
-The Turks are the most practical philosophers on earth; they are always
-contented with the present, and yet ever looking upon it as a mere
-fleeting good, to which it were as idle to attach any overweening value,
-as it would be to mourn it when it escapes them. Honours and wealth are
-such precarious possessions in the East, that men cannot afford to waste
-existence in weak repinings at their loss; nor are they inclined to do
-so, when they remember that the next mutation of the Imperial will may
-reinstate them, unquestioned and untrammelled, in their original
-position.
-
-It is true that the sharpest sting of worldly misfortune is spared to
-the Turk, by the perfect similarity of habit and feeling between the
-rich and the poor; and he also suffers less morally than the European,
-from the fact that there exists no aristocracy in the country, either of
-birth or wealth, to ride rough-shod over their less fortunate
-fellow-men. The boatman on the Bosphorus, and the porter in the
-streets—the slave in the Salemliek, and the groom in the stables, are
-alike eligible to fill the rank of Pasha—there is no exclusive _clique_
-or _caste_ to absorb “the loaves and fishes” of office in Turkey—the
-butcher of to-day may be the Generalissimo of to-morrow; and the barber
-who takes an Effendi by the nose on Monday may, on Tuesday, be equally
-authorized to take him by the hand.
-
-To this circumstance must be attributed, in a great degree, the
-impossibility of a revolution in Turkey; but another may also be adduced
-of at least equal weight. In Europe, the subversion of order is the work
-of a party who have everything to gain, and who, from possessing no
-individual interest in the country, have consequently nothing to lose.
-To persons of this class, every social change offers at least the
-prospect of advantage; but, throughout the Ottoman empire, nearly every
-man is the owner of a plot of land, and is enabled to trim his own vine,
-and to sit under the shadow of his own fig-tree—he has an interest in
-the soil—and thus, although popular commotions are of frequent
-occurrence, they merely agitate, without exasperating the feelings of
-the people.
-
-The Osmanli is, moreover, mentally, as well as physically, indolent—he
-is an enemy to all unnecessary exertion; and the subjects of Sultan
-Mahmoud have never threatened him with rebellion because he refused to
-grant any change in their existing privileges and customs, but, on the
-contrary, because he sought to introduce innovations for which they had
-never asked, and for which they had no desire. “Why,” they exclaim in
-their philosophy, “why seek to alter what is well? If we are content,
-what more can we desire?” And, acting upon this principle, they resist
-every attempt at change, as they would a design against their individual
-liberty.
-
-This feeling has induced the great unpopularity of the Sultan; who, in
-his zeal to civilize the Empire, has necessarily shocked many privileges
-and overturned many theories. That he _is_ unpopular, unfortunately
-admits of no doubt, even in the minds of those most attached to his
-interests—the very presence of Russian arms within his Imperial
-territory sufficiently attest the fact: and it is to be feared that he
-will discover, when too late, that these apparent means of safety were
-the actual engines of his destruction. Be this as it may, it is certain
-that the Russian alliance has given great and rational umbrage to the
-bulk of his people; and, combined with his own mania for improvement and
-innovation, has caused a want of affection for his person, and a want of
-deference for his opinions, which operate most disadvantageously for his
-interests.
-
-That the Russian influence has negatived the good effects of many of his
-endeavours is palpable, and forces itself daily on the notice of those
-who look closely and carefully on the existing state of things at
-Constantinople. It is the policy of Russia to check every advance
-towards enlightenment among a people whom she has already trammelled,
-and whom she would fain subjugate. The Turk is vain and self-centered,
-and consequently most susceptible to flattery. Tell him that he is
-“wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best,” and his own self-appreciation
-leads him immediately to put firm faith in the sincerity of your
-assertion; the effect of this blind trust is evident at once—it
-paralyzes all desire of further improvement: he holds it as
-supererogatory to “gild refined gold, and paint the lily,” and he thus
-stops short at the threshold, when he should press forward to the arena.
-
-These sober statements are sad innovators on our European ideas of
-Eastern magnificence, but they are, nevertheless, too characteristic to
-be passed over in silence.
-
-To all the brute creation the Turks are not only merciful but
-ministering friends; and to so great an extent do they carry this
-tenderness towards the inferior animals, that they will not kill an
-unweaned lamb, in order to spare unnecessary suffering to the mother;
-and an English sportsman, who had been unsuccessful in the chase,
-having, on one occasion, in firing off his piece previously to
-disembarking from his caïque, brought down a gull that was sailing above
-his head, was reproached by his rowers with as much horror and emphasis
-as though he had been guilty of homicide.
-
-I have elsewhere remarked on the singular impunity enjoyed by the
-aquatic birds which throng the harbour of Constantinople, and sport
-among the shipping; on the divers, that may be knocked down by the oar
-of every passing caïque, so fearless are they of human vicinity; and the
-gulls, which cluster like pigeons on the roofs of the houses—on the
-porpoises that crowd the port, and the dogs that haunt the streets. It
-may not be unamusing to state the forfeit inflicted on an individual
-for destroying one of these animals, as it is both curious and
-characteristic. The dead dog is hung up by the tail in such a manner as
-to suffer his nose to touch the ground; and his murderer is compelled to
-cover him entirely with corn or millet seed, which is secured by the
-proper authorities, and distributed to the poor. This ceremony generally
-costs the delinquent about a thousand piastres.
-
-Another distinguishing trait in the Turkish character is their strong
-parental affection; indeed I may say love of children generally. Nothing
-can be more beautiful than the tenderness of a Turkish father; he hails
-every demonstration of dawning intellect, every proof of infant
-affection, with a delight that must be witnessed to be thoroughly
-understood; he anticipates every want, he gratifies every wish, he
-sacrifices his own personal comfort to ensure that of his child; and I
-cannot better illustrate this fact than by mentioning a circumstance
-which fell under my own observation.
-
-The Reiss Effendi, or Minister for Foreign Affairs, had a grandchild
-whose indisposition caused him the most lively uneasiness; it was in
-vain that his English physician assured him of the total absence of
-danger; his every thought, his every anxiety, were with this darling
-boy; in the midst of the most pressing public business, he would start
-up and hasten to the chamber of the little patient, to assure himself
-that everything was going on favourably; he would leave his friends, in
-an hour of relaxation, to sit beside the sick bed of the child; and at
-length, when a strict and rigid system of diet was prescribed, which was
-to be of a fortnight’s duration, he actually submitted himself, and
-compelled all his establishment to submit, to the same monotonous and
-scanty fare, lest the boy should accidentally see, or otherwise become
-conscious of the presence of, any more enticing food, for which he might
-pine, and thus increase his malady.
-
-It may be thought that I have cited an extreme instance, but such is, in
-reality, far from being the case; indeed, to such a pitch do the
-Osmanlis carry their love for children, that they are constantly
-adopting those of others, whom they emphatically denominate “children of
-the soul.” They generally take them into their families when mere
-infants; they rear them with the most extreme care and tenderness: and
-finally portion them on their marriage, as though the claim were a
-natural, rather than a gratuitous, one. The adopted child of Turkey is
-not like the _protégé_ of Europe, the plaything of a season, and
-ultimately too often the victim of a whim: the act of adoption is with
-the Turks a solemn obligation; and poverty and privation would alike
-fail to weary them of well-doing where their affections as well as their
-word were pledged.
-
-An equally beautiful feature in the character of the Turks is their
-reverence and respect for the author of their being. Their wives advise
-and reprimand unheeded—their words are _bosh_—nothing—but the mother
-is an oracle; she is consulted, confided in, listened to with respect
-and deference, honoured to her latest hour, and remembered with
-affection and regret beyond the grave. “My wives die, and I can replace
-them,” says the Osmanli; “my children perish, and others may be born to
-me; but who shall restore to me the mother who has passed away, and who
-is seen no more?”
-
-These are strong traits, beautiful developments, of human nature; and,
-if such be indeed the social attributes of “barbarism,” then may
-civilized Europe, amid her pride of science and her superiority of
-knowledge, confess that herein at least she is mated by the less
-highly-gifted Musselmauns.
-
-The philosophy and kindly feeling of the Turk is carried even beyond the
-grave. He looks upon death calmly and without repugnance; he does not
-connect it with ideas of gloom and horror, as we are too prone to do in
-Europe—he spreads his burial places in the sunniest spots—on the
-crests of the laughing hills, where they are bathed in the light of the
-blue sky; beside the crowded thoroughfares of the city, where the dead
-are, as it were, once more mingled with the living—in the green nooks
-that stretch down to the Bosphorus, wherein more selfish spirits would
-have erected a villa, or have planted a vineyard. He identifies himself
-with the generation which has passed away—he is ready to yield his
-place to that which is to succeed his own.
-
-Nor must I omit to remark on the devout and unaffected religious feeling
-that exists in Turkey, not only among the Musselmauns, who, however
-imperative may be their avocations, never neglect to pray five times
-during the day; but equally among the Greeks and Armenians, whose fasts
-are so severe that those of the Roman Catholics are comparatively
-feasts. If you meet a Turk and inquire after his health, he
-replies—“_Shukiur Allah!_—Praise be to God, I am well.” Every thing is
-referred to the Great First Cause. There is none of that haughty
-self-dependence, that overweening _morgue_, so strongly marked in
-Europeans. Among men, the Osmanli considers himself the first, but only
-among men; when he puts off his slippers at the door of the mosque, he
-carries no pomp with him into the presence of his God. The luxurious
-inhabitant of the East, who, in his own salemliek is wont to recline on
-cushions, and to be served by officious slaves, does not pass into the
-house of God to tenant a crimson-lined and well-wadded pew, and to
-listen to the words of inspiration beside a comfortable stove, in dreamy
-indifference: he takes his place among the crowd—the Effendi stands
-beside the water-carrier—the Bey near the charcoal-vender—he is but
-one item among many—he arrogates to himself no honour in the temple
-where all men are as one common family; and he insults not the Divine
-Majesty by a bended knee and a stubborn brow.
-
-That the generality of the Turks hold every Frank in supreme contempt,
-admits of no doubt; and could they, to use their own phrase, “make our
-fathers and mothers eat dirt,” I am afraid that our respectable
-ancestors would never again enjoy a comfortable meal; but this feeling
-on their part is rather amusing than offensive, and only enhances the
-merit of their politeness when they show courtesy to the stranger and
-the Giaour.
-
-If, as we are all prone to believe, freedom be happiness, then are the
-Turkish women the happiest, for they are certainly the freest
-individuals in the Empire. It is the fashion in Europe to pity the women
-of the East; but it is ignorance of their real position alone which can
-engender so misplaced an exhibition of sentiment. I have already stated
-that they are permitted to expostulate, to urge, even to insist on any
-point wherein they may feel an interest; nor does an Osmanli husband
-ever resent the expressions of his wife; it is, on the contrary, part
-and parcel of his philosophy to bear the storm of words unmoved; and the
-most emphatic and passionate oration of the inmates of his harem seldom
-produces more than the trite “_Bakalum_—we shall see.”
-
-It is also a fact that though a Turk has an undoubted right to enter the
-apartments of his wives at all hours, it is a privilege of which he very
-rarely, I may almost say, never avails himself. One room in the harem is
-appropriated to the master of the house, and therein he awaits the
-appearance of the individual with whom he wishes to converse, and who is
-summoned to his presence by a slave. Should he, on passing to his
-apartment, see slippers at the foot of the stairs, he cannot, under any
-pretence, intrude himself in the harem: it is a liberty that every woman
-in the Empire would resent. When guests are on a visit of some days, he
-sends a slave forward to announce his approach, and thus gives them time
-and opportunity to withdraw.
-
-A Turkish woman consults no pleasure save her own when she wishes to
-walk or drive, or even to pass a short time with a friend: she adjusts
-her _yashmac_ and _feridjhe_, summons her slave, who prepares her
-_boksha_, or bundle, neatly arranged in a muslin handkerchief; and, on
-the entrance of the husband, his inquiries are answered by the
-intelligence that the Hanoum[2] Effendi is gone to spend a week at the
-harem of so and so. Should he be suspicious of the fact, he takes steps
-to ascertain that she is really there; but the idea of controlling her
-in the fancy, or of making it subject of reproach on her return, is
-perfectly out of the question.
-
-The instances are rare in which a Turk, save among the higher ranks,
-becomes the husband of two wives. He usually marries a woman of his own
-rank; after which, should he, either from whim, or for family reasons,
-resolve on increasing his establishment, he purchases slaves from
-Circassia and Georgia, who are termed _Odaliques_; and who, however they
-may succeed in superseding the Buyuk Hanoum, or head of the harem, in
-his affections, are, nevertheless, subordinate persons in the household;
-bound to obey her bidding, to pay her the greatest respect, and to look
-up to her as a superior. Thus a Turkish lady constantly prefers the
-introduction of half a dozen _Odaliques_ into her harem to that of a
-second wife; as it precludes the possibility of any inconvenient
-assumption of power on the part of her companions, who must, under all
-circumstances, continue subservient to her authority.
-
-The almost total absence of education among Turkish women, and the
-consequently limited range of their ideas, is another cause of that
-quiet, careless, indolent happiness that they enjoy; their sensibilities
-have never been awakened, and their feelings and habits are
-comparatively unexacting: they have no factitious wants, growing out of
-excessive mental refinement; and they do not, therefore, torment
-themselves with the myriad anxieties, and doubts, and chimeras, which
-would darken and depress the spirit of more highly-gifted females. Give
-her shawls, and diamonds, a spacious mansion in Stamboul, and a sunny
-palace on the Bosphorus, and a Turkish wife is the very type of
-happiness; amused with trifles, careless of all save the passing hour; a
-woman in person, but a child at heart.
-
-Were I a man, and condemned to an existence of servitude, I would
-unhesitatingly chuse that of slavery in a Turkish family: for if ever
-the “bitter draught” can indeed be rendered palatable, it is there. The
-slave of the Osmanli is the child of his adoption; he purchases with his
-gold a being to cherish, to protect, and to support; and in almost every
-case he secures to himself what all his gold could not command—a
-devoted and loving heart, ready to sacrifice its every hope and impulse
-in his service. Once forget that the smiling menial who hands you your
-coffee, or pours the rose-water on your hands from an urn of silver,
-has been purchased at a price, and you must look with admiration on the
-relative positions of the servant and his lord—the one so eager and so
-earnest in his services—the other so gentle and so unexacting in his
-commands.
-
-No assertion of mine can, however, so satisfactorily prove the fact
-which I have here advanced, as the circumstance that almost all the
-youth of both sexes in Circassia insist upon being conveyed by their
-parents to Constantinople, where the road to honour and advancement is
-open to every one. The slaves receive no wages; the price of their
-services has already been paid to their relatives; but twice in the
-year, at stated periods, the master and mistress of the family, and,
-indeed, every one of their superiors under the same roof, are bound to
-make them a present, termed the _Backshish_, the value of which varies
-according to the will of the donor; and they are as well fed, and nearly
-as well clothed, as their owners.
-
-As they stand in the apartment with their hands folded upon their
-breasts, they occasionally mix in the conversation unrebuked; while,
-from their number, (every individual maintaining as many as his income
-will admit), they are never subjected to hard labour; indeed, I have
-been sometimes tempted to think that all the work of a Turkish house
-must be done by the fairies; for, although I have been the inmate of
-several harems at all hours, I never saw a symptom of any thing like
-domestic toil.
-
-There is a remarkable feature in the position of the Turkish slaves that
-I must not omit to mention. Should it occur that one of them, from
-whatever cause it may arise, feels himself uncomfortable in the house of
-his owner, the dissatisfied party requests his master to dispose of him;
-and, having repeated this appeal three several times, the law enforces
-compliance with its spirit; nor is this all—the slave can not only
-insist on changing owners, but even on selecting his purchaser, although
-he may by such means entail considerable loss on his master. But, as
-asseveration is not proof, I will adduce an example.
-
-The wife of Achmet Pasha had a female slave, who, being partial to a
-young man of the neighbourhood, was desirous to become his property.
-Such being the case, she informed her mistress that she wished to be
-taken to the market and disposed of, which was accordingly carried into
-effect; but, as she was young and pretty, and her lover in confined
-circumstances, he was soon outbidden by a wealthier man; and, on her
-return to the harem of Achmet Pasha, her mistress told her that an
-Asiatic merchant had offered twenty thousand piastres for her, and that
-she would be removed to his house in a few days. “I will not belong to
-him,” was the reply; “there was a young man in the market who bid twelve
-thousand for me, and I have decided to follow him. My price to you was
-but ten thousand piastres, and thus you will gain two thousand by
-selling me to him.” Her declaration was decisive: she became the
-property of her lover, and her resolution cost her mistress eighty
-pounds sterling.
-
-The most perfect cleanliness is the leading characteristic of Eastern
-houses—not a grain of dust, not a foot-mark, defaces the surface of the
-Indian matting that covers the large halls, whence the several
-apartments branch off in every direction; the glass from which you drink
-is carefully guarded to avoid the possibility of contamination; and, the
-instant that you have eaten, a slave stands before you with water and a
-napkin to cleanse your hands. To the constant use of the bath I have
-already alluded; and no soil is ever seen on the dress of a Turkish
-gentlewoman.
-
-I am quite conscious that more than one lady-reader will lay down my
-volume without regret, when she discovers how matter-of-fact are many of
-its contents. The very term “Oriental” implies to European ears the
-concentration of romance; and I was long in the East ere I could divest
-myself of the same feeling. It would have been easy for me to have
-continued the illusion, for Oriental habits lend themselves greatly to
-the deceit, when the looker-on is satisfied with glancing over the
-surface of things; but with a conscientious chronicler this does not
-suffice; and, consequently, I rather sought to be instructed than to be
-amused, and preferred the veracious to the entertaining.
-
-This bowing down of the imagination before the reason is, however, the
-less either a merit on the one hand, or a sacrifice on the other, that
-enough of the wild and the wonderful, as well as of the bright and the
-beautiful, still remains, to make the East a scene of enchantment. A
-sky, whose blue brilliancy floods with light alike the shores of Asia
-and of Europe—whose sunshine falls warm and golden on domes, and
-minarets, and palaces—a sea, whose waves glitter in silver, forming the
-bright bond by which two quarters of the world are linked together—an
-Empire, peopled by the gathering of many nations—the stately Turk—the
-serious Armenian—the wily Jew—the keen-eyed Greek—the graceful
-Circassian—the desert-loving Tartar—the roving Arab—the mountain-born
-son of Caucasus—the voluptuous Persian—the Indian Dervish, and the
-thoughtful Frank—each clad in the garb, and speaking the language of
-his people; suffice to weave a web of tints too various and too
-brilliant to be wrought into the dull and commonplace pattern of
-every-day existence.
-
-I would not remove one fold of the graceful drapery which veils the
-time-hallowed statue of Eastern power and beauty; but I cannot refrain
-from plucking away the trash and tinsel that ignorance and bad taste
-have hung about it; and which belong as little to the masterpiece they
-desecrate, as the votive offerings of bigotry and superstition form a
-part of one of Raphaël’s divine Madonnas, because they are appended to
-her shrine.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
- The Harem of Mustafa Effendi—The Ladies of the
- Harem—Etiquettical Observances of the Harem—Ceremonies of the
- Salemliek—Jealousy of Precedence among the Turkish
- Women—Apartment of the Effendi—Eastern Passion for
- Diamonds—Personal Appearance of Mustafa Effendi—The little
- Slave-girl—Slavery in Turkey—Gallant Present—The
- Dinner—Turkish Cookery—Illuminated Mosques—The
- _Bokshaliks_—The Toilet after the Bath—History of an
- _Odalique_—Stupid Husbands—Reciprocal Commiseration—Errors
- of a Modern French Traveller—Privacy of the Women’s
- Apartments—Anecdote of the Wife of the Kïara Bey—The Baïram
- _Bokshalik_—My Sleeping-room—Forethought of Turkish
- Hospitality—Farewell to Fatma Hanoum—Dense Crowd—Turkish
- Mob—Turkish Officers—Military Difficulty—The “Lower
- Orders”—Tolerance of the Orientals towards
- Foreigners—Satisfactory Expedient.
-
-On the eve of the Baïram which terminates the Ramazan, we passed over to
-Constantinople with some friends to visit Mustafa Effendi, the Egyptian
-Chargé d’Affaires, whose magnificent mansion is situated near the gate
-of the Seraglio. Having passed the portal, we found ourselves in a
-spacious and covered court, having on our right hand a marble fountain,
-into whose capacious basin the water fell murmuringly from a group of
-lion’s heads; and, beyond it, the entrance to the women’s apartments,
-with the conventuallooking wheel, by means of which food is introduced
-into the harem; and on our left a stately staircase leading to the main
-body of the building. Here our party were compelled to separate; the
-gentlemen put off their boots, and followed the two black slaves who
-awaited them, to the suite of rooms occupied by the master of the house,
-while my companion and myself were consigned to the guidance of a third
-attendant, who beat upon the door of the harem, and we entered a large
-hall paved with marble, and were immediately surrounded by half a dozen
-female slaves, who took our shoes, shawls, and bonnets, and led us over
-the fine Indian matting of the centre saloon, to the richly-furnished
-apartment of the lady of the house.
-
-A soft twilight reigned in the room, of which all the curtains were
-closely drawn to exclude the sun; and the wife of the minister and her
-daughter-in-law were seated at the tandour, engaged in conversation with
-several of their attendants, who stood before them in a half circle,
-with their arms folded upon their breasts. The elder lady was the most
-high-bred person whom I had yet seen in the country; the younger one was
-pale and delicate, with eyes like jet, and a very sweet and gentle
-expression; she spoke but seldom, and always in monosyllables, being
-evidently overawed by the presence of her companion.
-
-There are probably few nations in the world that observe with such
-severity as the Turks that domestic precedence and etiquette, which,
-while it may certainly prevent any disrespectful familiarity, has a
-tendency to annihilate all ease. Thus, the other ladies of the family
-are each inferior to the first wife, who takes the upper seat on the
-sofa, and regulates all the internal economy of the women’s apartments:
-and, although they may be greatly preferred by the husband, they are,
-nevertheless, bound to obey her commands, and to treat her with the
-respect due to a superior. In the Salemliek, when she is desired by her
-lord to be seated, (without which gracious intimation she must continue
-standing before him), she is privileged to place herself on the same
-sofa, but on its extreme edge, and at a considerable distance; while the
-other ladies are only permitted to fold their feet under them on a
-cushion spread upon the carpet, and thence look up to the great and
-gracious ruler of their destinies! The ceremonies of the Salemliek are
-neither forgotten nor neglected in the harem, and it is customary for
-all the slaves to bend down and kiss the hem of their mistress’s garment
-on her first appearance in the morning.
-
-These heart-shutting observances cannot fail to heighten the jealousy
-which their relative position must naturally excite in the bosoms of
-the other inmates of the harem, although such a circumstance as
-rebellion against the supreme power is never heard of, nor imagined.
-
-During the day we were summoned to the apartment of the minister;
-whither, as the invitation was not extended to his wife, we went,
-accompanied only by three or four black slaves. After traversing several
-long galleries and halls, covered so closely with matting that not a
-footfall could be heard, we passed under the tapestry-hanging that
-veiled the door of the Effendi’s apartment, and found ourselves in an
-atmosphere so heavy with perfume that for a moment it was almost
-suffocating.
-
-The venerable Chargé d’Affaires, who had been long an invalid, was
-sitting upon his sofa, surrounded by cushions of every possible size and
-shape, wrapped in furs, and inhaling the odour of a bunch of musk
-lemons, the most sickly and sating of all savours—a magnificent mangal,
-upheaped with fire, occupied the centre of the apartment; the divan was
-almost covered with inlaid boxes, articles of bijouterie, books, and
-papers; a large silver tray resting upon a tripod was piled
-pyramidically with fine winter fruits; and within a recess on one side
-of the room were ranged a splendid coffee service of French porcelain,
-and a pair of tall and exquisitely-wrought essence-vases of fillagreed
-silver—in short, the whole aspect of the apartment would have
-satisfied the most boudoir-loving _petite-maitresse_ of Paris or London.
-Near the mangal stood the four attendants of the master of the house,
-two fine boys of twelve or fourteen years of age, and two pretty little
-girls, one or two years younger, gorgeously dressed, and wearing
-magnificent brilliant ornaments on their heads and bosoms.
-
-The rage for diamonds is excessive among both the Turks and the Greeks;
-but, while the Greek ladies delight in heaping upon their persons every
-ornament for which they can find space, many of the fair Osmanlis, with
-a pretty exclusive scorn of adventitious attraction, content themselves
-with a clasp or two, a bracelet, or some similar bagatelle; and decorate
-their favourite slaves with their more costly and ponderous jewels.
-
-A most venerable-looking person was Mustafa Effendi, with his lofty
-turban, and his snow-white beard; and he received us so kindly, and
-discoursed with us so good-humouredly, that I was delighted with him. A
-chair was brought for the Greek lady who had accompanied me, but he
-motioned to me to place myself on a pile of cushions at his side, where
-I remained very comfortably during the whole of our visit. He took a
-great quantity of snuff from a box whose lid was richly set with
-precious stones; and, on my admiring it, showed me another containing
-his opium pills, which was exquisitely inlaid with fine large
-brilliants.
-
-My attention being attracted to the rosy, happy-looking little
-slave-girl who stood near me, with her chubby arms crossed before her,
-her large pink trowsers completely concealing her naked feet, and her
-long blue antery richly trimmed with yellow floss-silk fringe, lying
-upon the carpet; he beckoned her to him, called her a good child, who
-had wit enough to anticipate his wants, and affection enough to supply
-them without bidding, and bade me remark the henna with which the tips
-of her toes and fingers were deeply tinged. She was, he said, a
-Georgian, whom he had purchased of her mother for six thousand piastres;
-she had already been in his house two years; and he hoped some day to
-give her a marriage portion, and to see her comfortably established, as
-she was a good girl, and he was much attached to her. The other, he
-added, was also obedient and willing, but she did not possess the
-vivacity and quickness of his little favourite—she had cost him seven
-thousand piastres, as she was a year older, and considerably stronger
-than her companion; and was a Circassian, brought to Constantinople, and
-sold, at her own request, by her parents.
-
-When I remembered that these children were slaves, I felt inclined to
-pity them—when the very price which had been paid for them was stated
-to me, a sickness crept over my heart—but, as I looked upon the pleased
-and happy countenances of the two little girls, and remembered that
-slavery, in Turkey at least, is a mere name, and in nine cases out of
-ten even voluntary, I felt that here my commiseration would be
-misplaced.
-
-Soon after we had taken leave of the gentle and gracious old Effendi, a
-basket of delicious fruit was sent into the harem for our use, with an
-injunction that we should dine alone, lest we should be inconvenienced
-by the national habits. An embroidered carpet was consequently spread,
-beside which were placed a couple of cushions; and the dinner tray, such
-as I have before described it, was lifted into the apartment of the
-younger lady, at her earnest request: nine slaves, forming a line from
-the table to the door, waited upon us: and we partook of an endless
-variety of boiled, stewed, roasted, and baked—delicious cinnamon
-soup—chickens, farcied with fine herbs and olives—anchovy
-cakes—lemon-tinted pillauf—chopped meat and spiced rice, rolled in
-preserved vine-leaves-the most delicate of pastry, and the most costly
-of conserves. Many-coloured sherbets, and lemonade, completed the
-repast; and when I laid aside my gold-embroidered napkin, and wiped the
-rose-water from my hands, I could but marvel at the hyper-fastidiousness
-of those travellers who have affected to quarrel with the Turkish
-kitchen; or infer that they had only “assisted” at the tables of hotels
-and eating-houses.
-
-From the windows of the apartment, we had an excellent view, when the
-evening had closed in, of the illuminated mosques of the city, and the
-lines of light that hung like threads of fire from minaret to minaret.
-The casements quivered beneath the shock of the rattling cannon; and all
-the sounds which came to us from without spoke of festivity and
-rejoicing; and, meanwhile, we were a happy party within. Fatma Hanoum
-smoked her pipe, and overlooked the distribution of the _bokshaliks_
-that her daughter was preparing for the morrow—every member of the
-household, on the occasion of the Baïram, being entitled to a present,
-more or less valuable according to their deserts, the length and
-difficulty of their services, or the degree of favour in which they are
-held.
-
-We, meanwhile, amused ourselves with watching the slaves, who, having
-left the bath, had seated themselves in groups at the lower end of the
-apartment, combing, tressing, and banding their dark, glossy hair; the
-younger ones forming it into one long, thick plait, hanging down the
-centre of the back, and twisting above it the painted handkerchief, so
-popular in the harem that it is worn equally by the Sultana and the
-slave; the others binding their tresses tightly about their heads, and
-replacing the locks which they hid from view with a profusion of false
-hair, braided in twenty or thirty little plaits, and reaching round the
-whole width of the shoulders.
-
-All were busily engaged in preparing for the festival of the morrow,
-though many of them were aware that they should not leave the harem; it
-was sufficient that it _was_ a festival, an excitement, a topic of
-conversation, something, in short, to engross their thoughts; and no
-belle ever prepared for a birthday with more alacrity than did the
-females of the harem of Mustafa Effendi, black and white, for the
-Baïram.
-
-In the course of the evening, the Bayuk Hanoum was summoned to her
-husband, and then the timid wife of her son joined us at the tandour,
-and related to us the little history of her life, which, although by no
-means remarkable in Turkey, is so characteristic, and will, moreover,
-appear so extraordinary to European readers, that I shall give it, as
-nearly as my memory will serve me, in her own words.
-
-“I am but nineteen,” she said, “a Circassian by birth, and was brought
-by my parents to Constantinople, and sold, at the age of nine years, to
-a friend of Fatma Hanoum’s. I was very happy, for she was kind to me,
-and I thought to pass my life in her harem; but about a year ago I
-accompanied her hither on a visit to the wife of Mustafa Effendi, at a
-moment when her son was beside her. I was one of four; and I do not yet
-understand why nor how I attracted his attention as I stood beside my
-companions; but a few days afterwards my mistress called me to her, and
-asked me if I had remarked the young Ismaël Bey when we had visited his
-mother. I told her that I had seen him; and she then informed me that
-the Hanoum desired to purchase me, in obedience to his wish; and
-demanded of me if I was willing to accede to the arrangement. Of course,
-I consented, and the Bey, having considered me as agreeable when I had
-withdrawn my _yashmac_ as he had anticipated, he purchased me for ten
-thousand piastres, and I became an inmate of the harem of Mustafa
-Effendi—I am still happy,” she added plaintively, “very happy, for I am
-sure he loves me; but I nevertheless hope to be more so; for ere long I
-shall be a mother, and should my child prove to be a boy, from his
-_Odalique_ I may perhaps become his wife.”
-
-I pitied the poor young creature as I listened to her narrative, through
-the medium of my companion, who spoke the Turkish language fluently; and
-I breathed a silent prayer that her visions of happiness might be
-realized. She was not pretty; but she was so childlike, so graceful, and
-so gentle, that she inspired an interest which, when I had heard her
-story, was even painful; nor was the feeling lessened by an
-introduction to her husband, who, during the evening, sent to desire
-that all the women, save his mother and wife, should retire, as he
-intended to visit the harem; doubtlessly as much to satisfy his
-curiosity, as to exhibit his courtesy, by paying his respects to the
-European guests of his mother. Sallow and sickly-looking, inanimate,
-even for a Turk, and apparently _bête comme une bûche_, he seated
-himself, and listened to the conversation that was going forward, with
-one unvaried and inexpressive smile—
-
- Pleased, he knew not why, and cared not wherefore;
-
-dividing his admiration between the Frank ladies, and the brilliancy of
-a large diamond that he wore on his finger.
-
-How comparative is happiness! I never lay my head upon my pillow, but I
-am grateful to Providence that I was not born in Turkey; while the fair
-Osmanlis in their turn pity the Frank women with a depth of sentiment
-almost ludicrous. They can imagine no slavery comparable with our’s—we
-take so much trouble to attain such slight ends—we run about from
-country to country, to see sights which we must regret when we leave
-them—we are so blent with all the anxieties and cares of our male
-relations—we expose ourselves to danger, and brave difficulties suited
-only to men—we have to contend with such trials and temptations, from
-our constant contact with the opposite sex—in short, they regard us
-as slaves, buying our comparative liberty at a price so mighty, that
-they are unable to estimate its extent—and then, the hardship of
-wearing our faces uncovered, and exposing them to the sun and wind, when
-we might veil them comfortably with a _yashmac_! Not a day passes in
-which they have commerce with a Frank, but they return thanks to Allah
-that they are not European women!
-
-A modern French traveller, whose amusing work has, in one moderate
-volume, contrived to treat of about a dozen countries and localities;
-and to detail, respecting each, such a mass of fallacies as assuredly
-were never before collected together: informs his readers that the
-jealousies of the harem are carried to such a pitch as to entail poison,
-or, at the least, humiliating and severe labour on the victim of the
-disappointed rival! This assertion, like many others in which he has
-indulged, would be comic were it not wicked—for the very arrangements
-of the harem render it impossible: each lady has her private apartment,
-which, should she desire to remain secluded, no one has the privilege to
-invade; and, from the moment that she becomes a member of the family,
-her life, should she so will it, is one of the most monotonous idleness.
-The very slaves, as I believe I have elsewhere remarked, are so numerous
-in every handsome establishment, that three-fourths of their time is
-unemployed; and as, in the less distinguished ranks, no Turk indulges
-in the expensive luxury of a second wife, there is little opportunity
-afforded for female tyranny.
-
-The Kiära Bey, or Minister of the Interior, despite his exalted station
-and his immense wealth, has declined to avail himself of his polygamical
-privilege; and, although his wife is both plain and elderly, she has
-such a supreme hold, if not upon his heart, at least upon his actions,
-that, a short time since, having discovered that her lord had suddenly
-become more than necessarily attentive to a fair Circassian, her own
-peculiar favourite, whom she had reared from a child, and whose beauty
-was of no ordinary character, she very quietly placed her in an araba,
-sent her to the slave-market, and disposed of her to the highest bidder.
-The ingratitude of the _protégée_ had loosened her hold on the
-affections of her patroness; nor did the husband venture to utter a
-reproach to his outraged helpmate, when he discovered the absence of the
-too-fascinating Circassian.
-
-Had the unhappy girl been the _Odalique_ of the lord, instead of the
-slave of the lady, the evil would have been irremediable, however; as in
-that case, the Bayuk Hanoum would have possessed no power to displace
-her.
-
-Early in the morning, the stately Fatma Hanoum presented to my companion
-and myself a _bokshalik_ from the venerable Effendi, which consisted of
-the material for a dress, neatly folded in a handkerchief of clear
-muslin, fringed with gold-coloured silk; and, as I made my hasty
-toilette, in the hope of witnessing the procession of the Baïram, and
-seeing Mahmoud “the Powerful” in all the splendour of his greatness, I
-glanced with considerable interest round the apartment in which I had
-passed the night. In the domed recess, which I soon discovered to be
-common to every handsome Turkish apartment, stood a French clock, that
-“discoursed,” if not “eloquent,” at least fairy-like, music—a piece of
-furniture, by the way, universally popular among the natives of the
-East, who usually have one or more in every room occupied by the
-family—two noble porcelain vases—a china plate containing an enamelled
-snuff-box, and a carved ebony chaplet—and a tray on which were placed
-cut crystal goblets of water, covered glass bowls filled with delicate
-conserves, a silver caïque, whose oars were small spoons, and a
-beautifully worked wicker basket, shaped like a dish, and upheaped with
-crystallized fruits, sparkling beneath a veil of pale pink gauze,
-knotted together with bunches of artificial flowers.
-
-Turkish hospitality and _prévoyance_ provide even for the refreshment of
-a sleepless night!
-
-The divan was of flesh-coloured satin, and the carpet as delicately
-wrought and patterned as a cachemire shawl. The cushions which had been
-piled about my bed were of velvet, satin, and embroidered muslin, and
-the coverlets, of rich Broussa silk, powdered with silver leaves.
-
-I made my libations with perfumed water—swallowed my coffee from a
-china cup so minute that a fairy might have drained it—tied on my
-bonnet—an object of unvarying amusement to the Turkish ladies, who
-consider this stiff head-dress as one of the most frightful and
-ridiculous of European inventions—and bade adieu to Fatma Hanoum and
-her dark-eyed daughter, with a regret which their unbounded courtesy and
-kindness were well calculated to inspire.
-
-A wealthy Armenian diamond-merchant, who held a high situation in the
-Mint, had offered us a window, whence we might witness the whole
-ceremony of the Imperial procession, and towards this point we bent our
-steps. But, alas for our curiosity! our leave-taking had been so
-thoughtlessly prolonged, that the subjects of his Sublime Highness had
-blocked up every avenue bearing upon the point by which he was to pass;
-and, despite all the efforts of our European cavaliers and native
-attendants, to proceed was impossible. We accordingly took up our
-station a little apart from the crowd, in order to contemplate at our
-ease the novel and picturesque spectacle of a Turkish mob.
-
-In the distance rose the gigantic dome and arrowy minarets of Saint
-Sophia; and beneath them, far as the eye could reach, stretched a sea of
-capped and turbaned heads, heaving and sinking like billows after a
-storm. Every house-roof, every mouldering wall, every heap of rubbish,
-was covered with eager spectators; while the windows of the surrounding
-dwellings were crowded with veiled women and laughing children.
-
-What groups were wedged together in the narrow space immediately before
-us! The pale, bent, submissive-looking Jew was folding his greasy mantle
-closer about him, as he elbowed aside the green-turbaned Emir, and the
-grave and solemn Hadje who had knelt beside the grave of the Prophet:
-the bustling Frank was striding along, jostling alike the serious
-Armenian, whose furred and flowing habit formed a strange contrast to
-the short blue jacket and tight pantaloons of the tall, strong-limbed,
-Circassian—and the bustling and noisy Greek, whose shrill voice and
-vociferous utterance would have suited a woman—parties of Turkish
-officers were forcing a passage as best they could, with their caps
-pulled down upon their eyebrows, their sword-belts hanging at least a
-quarter of a yard below their waists, and their diamond stars, (the
-symbols of their military rank) glittering in the clear
-sunshine—patroles of Turkish soldiers were endeavouring in vain to
-clear a passage along the centre of the street for the convenience of
-the Sultanas, and the wives of the different Pashas, whose arabas were
-momently expected; the mob closing rapidly in their rear as they slowly
-moved on—and clouds of doves at intervals filled the air, the tenants
-of the giant mosque before us, scared from the usual quiet of their
-resting-places by the unwonted stir and excitement beneath them.
-
-As the birds which domesticate themselves about the mosques are held
-sacred, and regarded with almost superstitious reverence, their numbers
-necessarily increase to a wonderful extent; and on this occasion they
-hovered round the stupendous edifice of Saint Sophia, to the amount of
-several thousands.
-
-A strange military difficulty had been started a short time previously
-to the occasion of the Baïram, which had been overcome in so
-extraordinary and even humorous a manner, that it deserves especial
-mention; and it was to convince myself of the actual existence of the
-laughable custom engendered by Turkish jealousy, that I remained longer
-than I should have otherwise been induced to do, in the immediate
-vicinity of a Constantinopolitan mob. Be it, however, avowed, _en
-passant_, that the—what shall I call them? for our European term of
-“lower orders” is by no means applicable to a people who acknowledge no
-difference of rank—no aristocracy save that of office—the great mass
-of the population of the capital—assimilate on no one point with our
-own turbulent, vociferous, uncompromising, and unaccommodating mobs in
-Europe. Among above five thousand boatmen, artisans, and soldiers, not a
-blow was struck, not a voice was raised in menace—among the conflicting
-interests, feelings, and prejudices, of Christians, Musselmauns, and
-Jews, not a word was uttered calculated to excite angry or unpleasant
-feeling; while I am bound to confess that a female, however fastidious,
-would have found less to offend her amid the crush and confusion of that
-mighty mass of commonly called semi-civilized human beings, than in a
-walk of ten minutes through the streets of London or Paris.
-
-The natives of the East have yet to learn that there can be either wit
-or amusement in annoying others for the mere sake of creating annoyance;
-that there can be humour in raising a blush on the cheek of the timid,
-or calling a pang to the heart of the innocent. They are utilitarians;
-to torment for the mere love of mischief they do not comprehend; and
-they, consequently, never attempt extraneous evil unless to secure, or
-at least to strive for, some immediate personal benefit. Thus no rude
-or impertinent comment is made upon the Frank stranger, and above all,
-upon the Frank woman, whose habits, manners, and costume, differ so
-widely, and, doubtlessly to them so absurdly, from those of their own
-country; while towards each other they are as staid, as solemn, and as
-courteous, as though each were jealous to preserve the good order of the
-community, and considered it as his individual concern.
-
-To revert to the military ceremony, from which, in order to render
-justice to the Turkish population, I have unavoidably digressed; I shall
-mention, without further preface, that it arose from the reluctance of
-the Sultan and his ministers, that the troops, in presenting arms to the
-female members of the Imperial family, should have the opportunity
-afforded them of a momentary gaze at their veiled and sacred
-countenances. The difficulty was, how to retain the “pomp and
-circumstance” of the ceremonial, and at the same time to render this
-passing privilege impossible. A most original and satisfactory expedient
-was at length fortunately discovered; and we were lucky enough to
-witness the effect of the new arrangement.
-
-The slow and noisy rattle of the arabas was heard—the word was passed
-along the line that the Sultanas were approaching—and suddenly the
-troops faced about, with their backs to the open space along which the
-princesses were expected, and, extending their arms to their full
-length, the manœuvre was performed behind them, producing the most
-extraordinary and ludicrous scene that was perhaps ever enacted by a
-body of soldiers! In this uncomfortable, and I should also imagine
-difficult, position, they remained until the four carriages had passed,
-when they resumed their original order, and stood leaning negligently on
-their muskets until the return of the Imperial _cortège_.
-
-George Cruikshank would have immortalized himself had he been by to note
-it!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
- Bath-room of Scodra Pasha—Fondness of the Eastern Women for
- the Bath—The Outer Hall—The Proprietress—Female Groupes—The
- Cooling-room—The Great Hall—The Fountains—The Bathing
- Women—The Dinner—Apology for the Turkish Ladies.
-
-The first bath-room which I saw in the country was that of Scodra Pasha;
-and, had I been inclined so to do, I might doubtlessly have woven a
-pretty fiction on the subject, without actually visiting one of these
-extraordinary establishments. But too much has already been written on
-inference by Eastern tourists, and I have no wish to add to the number
-of fables which have been advanced as facts, by suffering imagination to
-usurp the office of vision. Such being the case, I resolved to visit a
-public bath in company with a female acquaintance, and not only become a
-spectator but an actor in the scene, if I found the arrangement
-feasible.
-
-The bath-room of the Pasha, or rather of his family, was a domed
-cabinet, lined with marble, moderately heated, and entered from the
-loveliest little boudoir imaginable, where a sofa of brocaded silk,
-piled with cushions of gold tissue, offered the means of repose after
-the exhaustion of bathing. But I had seen it tenanted only by a Greek
-lady and myself, and half a score of slaves, who were all occupied in
-attendance upon us; and I felt at once that, under such circumstances, I
-could form no adequate idea of what is understood by a Turkish bath; the
-terrestrial paradise of Eastern women, where politics, social and
-national, scandal, marriage, and every other subject under heaven,
-within the capacity of uneducated but quick-witted females, is
-discussed: and where ample revenge is taken for the quiet and seclusion
-of the harem, in the noise, and hurry, and excitement, of a crowd.
-
-Having passed through a small entrance-court, we entered an extensive
-hall, paved with white marble, and surrounded by a double tier of
-projecting galleries, supported by pillars: the lower range being raised
-about three feet from the floor. These galleries were covered with rich
-carpets, or mattresses, overlaid with chintz or crimson shag, and
-crowded with cushions; the spaces between the pillars were slightly
-partitioned off to the height of a few inches; and, when we entered, the
-whole of the boxes, if I may so call them, were occupied, save the one
-which had been reserved for us.
-
-In the centre of the hall, a large and handsome fountain of white
-marble, pouring its waters into four ample scallop shells, whence they
-fell again into a large basin with the prettiest and most soothing sound
-imaginable, was surrounded by four sofas of the same material, on one of
-which, a young and lovely woman, lay pillowed on several costly shawls,
-nursing her infant.
-
-When I had established myself comfortably among my cushions, I found
-plenty of amusement for the first half hour in looking about me; and a
-more singular scene I never beheld. On the left hand of the door of
-entrance, sat the proprietress of the baths, a beautiful woman of about
-forty, in a dark turban, and a straight dress of flowered cotton, girt
-round the waist with a cachemire shawl; her chemisette of silk gauze was
-richly trimmed—her gold snuff-box lay on the sofa beside her—her
-amber-headed pipe rested against a cushion—and she was amusing herself
-by winding silk from a small ebony distaff, and taking a prominent part
-in the conversation; while immediately behind her squatted a negro
-slave-girl of twelve or thirteen years of age, grinning from ear to ear,
-and rolling the whites of her large eyes in extacy at all that was going
-forward.
-
-The boxes presented the oddest appearance in the world—some of the
-ladies had returned from the bathing-hall, and were reclining
-luxuriously upon their sofas, rolled from head to foot in fine white
-linen, in many instances embroidered and fringed with gold, with their
-fine hair falling about their shoulders, which their slaves, not quite
-so closely covered as their mistresses, were drying, combing, perfuming,
-and plaiting, with the greatest care. Others were preparing for the
-bath, and laying aside their dresses, or rather suffering them to be
-laid aside, for few of them extended a hand to assist themselves—while
-the latest comers were removing their _yashmacs_ and cloaks, and
-exchanging greetings with their acquaintance.
-
-As I had previously resolved to visit every part of the establishment, I
-followed the example of my companion, who had already undergone the
-fatigue of an Oriental bath, and exchanged my morning dress for a linen
-wrapper, and loosened my hair: and then, conducted by the Greek
-waiting-maid who had accompanied me, I walked barefooted across the cold
-marble floor to a door at the opposite extremity of the hall, and, on
-crossing the threshold, found myself in the cooling-room, where groups
-of ladies were sitting, or lying listlessly on their sofas, enveloped in
-their white linen wrappers, or preparing for their return to the colder
-region whence I had just made my escape.
-
-This second room was filled with hot air, to me, indeed, most
-oppressively so; but I soon discovered that it was, nevertheless, a
-_cooling-room_; when, after having traversed it, and dipped my feet some
-half dozen times in the little channels of warm water that intersected
-the floor, I entered the great bathing-place of the establishment—the
-extensive octagon hall in which all those who do not chuse, or who
-cannot afford, to pay for a separate apartment, avail themselves, as
-they find opportunities, of the eight fountains which it contains.
-
-For the first few moments, I was bewildered; the heavy, dense,
-sulphureous vapour that filled the place, and almost suffocated me—the
-wild, shrill cries of the slaves pealing through the reverberating domes
-of the bathing-halls, enough to awaken the very marble with which they
-were lined—the subdued laughter, and whispered conversation of their
-mistresses murmuring along in an under-current of sound—the sight of
-nearly three hundred women only partially dressed, and that in fine
-linen so perfectly saturated with vapour, that it revealed the whole
-outline of the figure—the busy slaves, passing and repassing, naked
-from the waist upwards, and with their arms folded upon their bosoms,
-balancing on their heads piles of fringed or embroidered napkins—groups
-of lovely girls, laughing, chatting, and refreshing themselves with
-sweetmeats, sherbet, and lemonade—parties of playful children,
-apparently quite indifferent to the dense atmosphere which made me
-struggle for breath—and, to crown all, the sudden bursting forth of a
-chorus of voices into one of the wildest and shrillest of Turkish
-melodies, that was caught up and flung back by the echoes of the vast
-hall, making a din worthy of a saturnalia of demons—all combined to
-form a picture, like the illusory semblance of a phantasmagoria, almost
-leaving me in doubt whether that on which I looked were indeed reality,
-or the mere creation of a distempered brain.
-
-Beside every fountain knelt, or sat, several ladies, attended by their
-slaves, in all the various stages of the operation; each intent upon her
-own arrangements, and regardless of the passers-by; nor did half a dozen
-of them turn their heads even to look at the English stranger, as we
-passed on to the small inner cabinet that had been retained for us.
-
-The process of Turkish bathing is tedious, exhausting, and troublesome;
-I believe that the pretty Greek who attended me spent an hour and a half
-over my hair alone. The supply of water is immense, and can be heated at
-the pleasure of the bather, as it falls into the marble basin from two
-pipes, the one pouring forth a hot, and the other a cold, stream. The
-marble on which you stand and sit is heated to a degree that you could
-not support, were the atmosphere less dense and oppressive; and, as the
-water is poured over you from an embossed silver basin, the feeling of
-exhaustion becomes almost agreeable. Every lady carries with her all the
-appliances of the bath, as well as providing her own servant; the
-inferior ranks alone availing themselves of the services of the bathing
-women, who, in such cases, supply their employers with every thing
-requisite.
-
-These bathing-women, of whom I saw several as I traversed the great
-hall, are the most unsightly objects that can be imagined; from
-constantly living in a sulphureous atmosphere, their skins have become
-of the colour of tobacco, and of the consistency of parchment; many
-among them were elderly women, but not one of them was wrinkled; they
-had, apparently, become aged like frosted apples; the skin had tightened
-over the muscles, and produced what to me at least was a hideous feature
-of old age.
-
-Having remained in the bath about two hours and a half, I began to
-sicken for pure air and rest; and, accordingly, winding a napkin with
-fringed ends about my head, and folding myself in my wrapper, I hastily
-and imprudently traversed the cooling-room, now crowded with company,
-looking like a congregation of resuscitated corpses clad in their
-grave-clothes, and fevered into life; and gained the outer hall, where
-the napkin was removed from my head, my hair carefully plaited without
-drying, and enveloped in a painted muslin handkerchief; and myself
-buried among the soft cushions of the divan.
-
-A new feature had been added to the scene since my departure; most of
-the ladies were at dinner. The crimson glow of the bath, which throws
-all the blood into the head, had passed from most of their faces, and
-was replaced by the pure, pale, peach-like softness of complexion that
-its constant use never fails to produce. Numbers of negresses were
-entering with covered dishes, or departing with the reliques of those
-which had been served up; and, as the Turkish mode of eating lends
-itself to these _pic-nic_ species of repasts, the fair ladies appeared
-to be as much at home squatted round their plated or china bowls, spoon
-in hand, in the hall of the bath, as though they were partaking of its
-contents in the seclusion of their own harems.
-
-Sherbet, lemonade, _mohalibè_, a species of inferior blanc-manger, and
-fruit, were constantly handed about for sale; and the scene was
-altogether so amusing, that it was almost with regret that I folded
-myself closely in my cloak and veil, and bowed my farewell to the
-several groups which I passed on my way to the door.
-
-I should be unjust did I not declare that I witnessed none of that
-unnecessary and wanton exposure described by Lady M. W. Montague. Either
-the fair Ambassadress was present at a peculiar ceremony, or the Turkish
-ladies have become more delicate and fastidious in their ideas of
-propriety.
-
-The excessive exhaustion which it induces, and the great quantity of
-time which it consumes, are the only objections that can reasonably be
-advanced against the use of the Turkish bath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
- Cheerful Cemeteries—Burial-ground of Pera—Superiority of the
- Turkish Cemeteries—Cypresses—Singular Superstition—The
- _Grand Champs_—Greek Grave-yard—Sultan Selim’s
- Barrack—Village of St. Demetrius—European
- Burial-ground—Grave-stones—The Kiosk—Noble View—Legend of
- the Maiden’s Tower—Plague Hospital of the Turks—The
- Plague-Caïque—Armenian Cemetery—Curious Inscriptions—Turkish
- Burial-place—Distinctive Head-stones—Graves of the
- Janissaries—Wild Superstition—Cemetery of Scutari—Splendid
- Cypresses—Ancient Prophecy—Extent of Burial-ground—The
- Headless Dead—Exclusive Enclosures—Aspect of the Cemetery
- from the Summer Palace of Heybetoullah Sultane—Local
- Superstition—The Damnèd Souls.
-
-I have alluded elsewhere to the apparent care with which the Turks
-select the most lovely spots for burying their dead, and how they have,
-by such means, divested death of its most gloomy attributes. Like the
-ancient Romans, they form grave-yards by the road-side; and, like them,
-they inscribe upon their tombs the most beautiful lessons of resignation
-and philosophy.
-
-The Cemetery of Pera offers a singular spectacle; and the rather that
-the “Champ des Morts” is the promenade of the whole population, Turk,
-Frank, Greek, and Armenian; the lesser burial-place, or _Petit Champs_,
-is sacred to the Mussulmauns, and fringes with its dark cypresses the
-crest of the hill that dominates the port; it is hemmed in with
-houses—overlooked by a hundred casements—grazed by cattle—loud with
-greetings and gossipry—and commands an extensive view of the shipping
-in the harbour and the opposite shore. There are footpaths among the
-funereal trees; sunny glades gleaming out amid the dark shadows;
-head-stones clustered against the grassy slopes, and guard-houses, with
-their portals thronged with lounging soldiers, mocking the
-defencelessness of the dead. Nor must I forget to mention the small
-octagonal building, which, seated in the very depth of the valley, and
-generally remarkable from the dense volume of smoke exuding from its
-tall chimney, marks the spot where the last profane duties are paid to
-the dead; where the body is washed, the beard is shorn, the nails are
-cut, and the limbs are decently composed, ere what was so lately a True
-Believer is laid to rest in the narrow grave, to be aroused only by the
-sound of the last trumpet.
-
-The superiority of the Turkish cemeteries over those of Europe may be
-accounted for in several ways. Their head-stones are more picturesque
-and various—their situation better chosen—and, above all things, the
-Mussulmaun never disturbs the ashes of the dead. There is no burying and
-re-burying on the same spot, as with us. The remains of the departed
-are sacred.
-
-When a body is committed to the earth, the priest plants a cypress at
-the head, and another at the foot, of the grave; and hence those
-far-spreading forests, those bough o’er-canopied cities of the dead,
-which form so remarkable a feature in Turkish scenery. Should only one
-tree in six survive, enough still remain to form a dense and solemn
-grove; but the Turks have a singular superstition with regard to those
-that, instead of lancing their tall heads towards the sky, take a
-downward bend, as though they would fain return to the earth from whence
-they sprang; they hold that these imply the damnation of the soul whose
-mortal remains they overshadow; and as, from the closeness with which
-they are planted, and their consequent number, such accidents are by no
-means rare, it must be at best a most uncomfortable creed.
-
-But it is to the “Grand Champs” that the stranger should direct his
-steps, if he would contemplate a scene to which the world probably can
-produce no parallel. Emerging from the all but interminable High Street,
-whose projecting upper stories form a canopy above your head for nearly
-its whole length, you have on your left hand the plague-hospital for the
-Franks, and on your right a stretch of higher land, which is the
-burial-ground of the Greeks. Here there is nothing to arrest your steps;
-it is ill-kept, and, were it not for the houses that surround it, would
-be dreary and desolate from its very disorder. The Greek is the creature
-of to-day—yesterday is blotted from his tablets.
-
-Having passed the grave-yard, the road widens into an esplanade, in
-front of an extensive block of building, erected by Sultan Selim as a
-cavalry barrack. It is painted rose-colour, has a noble entrance, and
-possesses a look of order and regularity almost European. It is not
-until you descend the gentle declivity that slopes onward to the Grand
-Champs des Morts, that you discover the whole extent of the edifice,
-which is a quadrangle, having three fronts; its fourth side being
-devoted to a range of stabling.
-
-The road to Therapia and the “Sweet Waters” skirts the burial-ground;
-and the little Greek village or colony of St. Demetrius covers an
-opposite height.
-
-The first plot of ground, after passing the barrack, is the grave-yard
-of the Franks; and here you are greeted on all sides with inscriptions
-in Latin: injunctions to pray for the souls of the departed; flourishes
-of French sentiment; calembourgs graven into the everlasting stone,
-treating of roses and reine Marguerites; concise English records of
-births, deaths, ages, and diseases; Italian elaborations of regret and
-despair; and all the commonplaces of an ordinary burial-ground.
-
-Along the edge of this piece of land, a wide road conducts you to a
-steep descent leading to the Sultan’s Palace of Dolma Batché; the crest
-of the hill commanding a noble view of the channel; while, on the verge
-of the descent, and almost touching the graves, stands a kiosk of wood,
-rudely put together, and serving as a coffee room; and immediately in
-front of it, a group of cypresses form a pleasant shade, beneath which
-parties of Turks, Greeks, and Armenians, seated on low stools, smoke
-their eternal chibouks, sip their sugarless coffee, and contemplate one
-of the loveliest views over which the eye of a painter ever lingered.
-
-From this height, the hill slopes rapidly downward, clothed with fruit
-trees, and bright with vegetation. At its foot flows the blue Bosphorus,
-clear and sparkling as the sky, whose tint it rivals. Immediately across
-the channel stretches Scutari, the gem of the Asian shore, with its
-forest of cypresses, its belt of palaces, its hill-seated kiosks, and
-its sky-kissing minarets. Further in the distance are two pigmy islands,
-heaving up their dark sides from the bright wave, like aquatic monsters
-revelling in the sunshine; beyond is a stretch of sea—the Sea of
-Marmora—laughing in the light, as though no storms had ever rent its
-bosom—while, above all, on the extreme verge of the horizon, almost
-blending with the dark purple clouds that rest upon it, towers Mount
-Olympus, the dwelling of the gods, crowned with snows, and flinging its
-long shadows over the pleasant town and mulberry groves of Broussa. And
-here, a little to the right, (where Scutari, after advancing with a
-graceful curve, as though to do homage to her European sister, again
-recedes), upon a rock so small that its foundations cover the whole
-surface, stands the “Maiden’s Tower;” an object in itself so picturesque
-that it would arrest the eye though it possessed no legend to attract
-the sympathy—but such is far from being the case.
-
-This Tower, so runs the tale, was erected by a former Sultan, as a
-residence for his only daughter, of whom it was foretold by the
-astrologers that she would, before the completion of her eighteenth
-year, be destroyed by a serpent. Every precaution was taken to overcome
-destiny; but it was not to be—an adder, accidentally concealed in a box
-of figs, fastened upon the hand of the princess, and she was found dead
-on her sofa.
-
-The Maiden’s Tower is now the plague-hospital of the Turks: and his
-heart must be atrophised indeed who can look around on the bright and
-beautiful scene amid which it stands, and not feel how much the bitter
-pang of the plague-smitten must be enhanced by the contrast of all
-around them with their own probable fate—for, alas! the long gaze of
-the sickening victim is too frequently his last! The dying wretch should
-pass to his infected home by a road of gloom and shadow, where no image
-of gladness can mock him by its intrusive and harrowing presence—but to
-be swiftly borne along that blue sea, with those magnificent shores
-stretching away into the distance, far beyond his failing vision—to be
-carried to his narrow chamber, probably to die—cut off from his
-fellow-men—from all the glory and the majesty around him—surely no
-after-pang can be so keen as that which grapples at his heart during his
-brief voyage to the Maiden’s Tower!
-
-Rapidly darts forward the slender caïque; it shoots from the shore like
-a wild bird—no sound of revelry, no shout of greeting, no pealing
-laughter, heralds its departure—the sturdy rowers bend to their oars;
-the resisting waters yield before the vigorous stroke—there is no
-pause—no interval—the errand is contagion—the freight is death! The
-eyes are dim that roll languidly in their sockets: the lips are livid
-that quiver with agony in lieu of words: the brow is pale and clammy
-that is turned upwards to the cloudless sky—the hands are nerveless
-that are flung listlessly across the panting breast—and as men watch
-from afar the rapid progress of the laden boat, their own breath comes
-thickly, and their pulses throb; and, when they at length turn aside to
-pursue their way, they move onward with a slower and a less steady
-step—their brows are clouded—they have looked upon the plague!
-
-But the goal is gained, and the caïque has discharged its gloomy
-freight. All around is life, and light, and loveliness. The surface of
-the channel is crowded with boats, filled with busy human beings,
-hurrying onward in pursuit of pleasure or of gain; a thousand sounds are
-on the wind. The swift caïques dart like water-fowl past the Maiden’s
-Tower, and few within them waste a thought upon the anguish which it
-conceals!
-
-A few paces from the spot whence you look down upon this various
-scene—a few paces, and from the refuge of the dying you gaze upon the
-resting-place of the dead. Where the acacia-trees blossom in their
-beauty, and shed their withered flowers upon a plain of graves on the
-right hand, immediately in a line with the European cemetery, is the
-burial-ground of the Armenians. It is a thickly-peopled spot; and as you
-wander beneath the leafy boughs of the scented acacias, and thread your
-way among the tombs, you are struck by the peculiarity of their
-inscriptions. The noble Armenian character is graven deeply into the
-stone; name and date are duly set forth; but that which renders an
-Armenian slab (for there is not a head-stone throughout the cemetery)
-peculiar and distinctive, is the singular custom that has obtained among
-this people of chisselling upon the tomb the emblem of the trade or
-profession of the deceased.
-
-Thus the priest is distinguished even beyond the grave by the mitre that
-surmounts his name—the diamond merchant by a group of ornaments—the
-money-changer by a pair of scales—the florist by a knot of
-flowers—besides many more ignoble hieroglyphics, such as the razor of
-the barber, the shears of the tailor, and others of this class; and,
-where the calling is one that may have been followed by either sex, a
-book, placed immediately above the appropriate emblem, distinguishes the
-grave of the man.
-
-Nor is this all: the victims of a violent death have also their
-distinctive mark—and more than one tomb in this extraordinary
-burial-place presents you with the headless trunk of an individual, from
-whose severed throat the gushing blood is spirting upwards like a
-fountain, while the head itself is pillowed on the clasped hands! Many
-of the more ancient among the tombs are very richly and elaborately
-wrought, but nearly all the modern ones are perfectly simple; and you
-seldom pass the spot without seeing groups of people seated upon the
-graves beneath the shadow of the trees, talking, and even smoking. Death
-has no gloom for the natives of the East.
-
-The Turkish cemetery stretches along the slope of the hill behind the
-barrack, and descends far into the valley. Its thickly-planted cypresses
-form a dense shade, beneath which the tall head-stones gleam out white
-and ghastly. The grove is intersected by footpaths, and here and there a
-green glade lets in the sunshine, to glitter upon many a gilded tomb.
-Plunge into the thick darkness of the more covered spots, and for a
-moment you will almost think that you stand amid the ruins of some
-devastated city. You are surrounded by what appear for an instant to be
-the myriad fragments of some mighty whole—but the gloom has deceived
-you—you are in the midst of a Nekropolis—a City of the Dead. Those
-chisselled blocks of stone that lie prostrate at your feet, or lean
-heavily on one side as if about to fall, and which at the first glance
-have seemed to you to be the shivered portions of some mighty
-column—those turban-crowned shafts which rise on all sides—those gilt
-and lettered slabs erected beside them—are memorials of the
-departed—the first are of ancient date; the earth has become loosened
-at their base, and they have lost their hold—the others tell their own
-tale; the bearded Moslem sleeps beside his wife—the turban surmounting
-his head-stone, and the rose-branch carved on her’s, define their sex,
-while the record of their years and virtues is engraven beneath. Would
-you know more? Note the form and folds of the turban, and you will learn
-the rank and profession of the deceased—here lies the man of law—and
-there rests the Pasha—the soldier slumbers yonder, and close beside you
-repose the ashes of the priest—here and there, scattered over the
-burial-ground, you may distinguish several head-stones from which the
-turbans have been recently struck off—so recently that the severed
-stone is not yet weather-stained; they mark the graves of the
-Janissaries, desecrated by order of the Sultan after the distinction of
-their body; who himself stood by while a portion of the work was going
-forward; and the mutilated turbans that are half buried in the long
-grass beside these graves are imperishable witnesses to their
-disgrace—a disgrace which was extended even beyond the grave, and whose
-depth of ignominy can only be understood in a country where the dead are
-objects of peculiar veneration.
-
-Those raised terraces enclosed within a railing are family
-burial-places; and the miniature column crowned with a _fèz_, painted
-in bright scarlet, records the rest of some infant Effendi. At the base
-of many of the shafts are stones hollowed out to contain water, which
-are carefully filled, during the warm season, by pious individuals, for
-the supply of the birds, or any wandering animals.
-
-The Turks have a strange superstition attached to this cemetery. They
-believe that on particular anniversaries sparks of fire exude from many
-of the graves, and lose themselves among the boughs of the cypresses.
-The idea is at least highly poetical.
-
-But Constantinople boasts no burial-place of equal beauty with that of
-Scutari, and probably the world cannot produce such another, either as
-regards extent or pictorial effect. A forest of the finest cypresses
-extending over an immense space, clothing hill and valley, and
-overshadowing, like a huge pall, thousands of dead, is seen far off at
-sea, and presents an object at once striking and magnificent. Most of
-the trees are of gigantic height, and their slender and spiral outline
-cutting sharply against the clear sky is graceful beyond expression. The
-Turks themselves prefer the great cemetery of Scutari to all others;
-for, according to an ancient prophecy in which they have the most
-implicit faith, the followers of Mahomet are, ere the termination of the
-world, to be expelled from Europe; and, as they are jealous of
-committing even their ashes to the keeping of the Giaour, they covet,
-above all things, a grave in this Asiatic wilderness of tombs. Thus,
-year after year, the cypress forest extends its boundaries, and spreads
-further and wider its dense shadows; generation after generation sleeps
-in the same thickly-peopled solitude; and the laughing vineyard and the
-grassy glade disappear beneath the encroachments of the ever-yawning
-sepulchre—the living yield up their space to the dead—the blossoming
-fruit trees are swept away, and the funereal and feathering boughs of
-the dark grave-tree tower in their stead.
-
-It is not without a sensation of the most solemn awe that you turn aside
-from the open plain, and abandon the cheerful sunshine, to plunge into
-the deep gloom of the silent forest; scores of narrow pathways intersect
-it in all directions; and, should you fail to follow them in your
-wanderings, your every step must be upon a grave. Here a group of lofty
-and turban-crowned columns, each with a small square slab of stone at
-its base, arrests you with a thrill of sickening interest, for that
-silent and pigmy slab tells you a tale of terror—each covers the
-severed head of a victim to state policy, or state intrigue—Vizirs and
-Pashas, Beys and Effendis—the eye that blighted, and the brow that
-burned, are mouldering, or have mouldered there—the fever of ambition,
-the thirst of power, the wiliness of treason, and the pride of
-place—all that frets and fevers the mind of man, is there laid to rest
-for ever—and the stately turban towers, as if in mockery, above the
-trunkless head which festers in its dishonoured grave!
-
-Those gilded tombs enclosed within their circling barrier are inscribed
-with the names and titles of some powerful or wealthy race that has
-carried its pride beyond the grave, and not suffered even its dust to
-mingle with that of more common men—the prostrate and perished columns
-on one hand have yielded reluctantly to time, and now cumber the earth
-in recordless ruin; while the stately head-stones on the other, yet
-bright with gilding, and elaborate with ornament, point out to you the
-resting-places of the newly dead—the pomp of yesterday speaks far less
-sadly to the heart than the hoar and letterless remains of by-past
-centuries.
-
-Suddenly a bright light flashes through the gloom; the warm sunshine
-falls in a flood of radiance, the more startling from the darkness that
-surrounds it, upon a limited and treeless space, on which time or the
-tempest have done their work; and where withered boughs and shivered
-trunks, branchless and gray with moss, are prostrate among sunken tombs
-and ruined monuments.
-
-Your spirit is oppressed, your eye is blinded, by that mocking light!
-
-Here and there, upon the borders of the forest, a latticed pavilion of
-the brightest green, contrasting strangely with the cold, white,
-spectral-looking head-stones which it overtops, causes you to turn aside
-almost in wonder; but death is even there—it is the tomb of some
-beloved child, and the slab within is strown with flowers—flowers that
-have been gathered in anguish, and moistened with tears. Alas! for the
-breaking heart and the trembling hand that strewed them there!
-
-I remember nothing more beautiful than the aspect of the burying-ground
-of Scutari, from the road which winds in front of the summer palace of
-the Princess Haybètoullah. The crest of the hill is one dense mass of
-dark foliage, while the slope is only partially clothed with trees, that
-advance and recede in the most graceful curves; and the contrast between
-the deep dusky green of the cypresses, and the soft bright tint of the
-young fresh grass in the open spaces between them, produces an effect
-almost magical, and which strikes you as being more the result of art
-than accident, until you convince yourself, by looking around you, that
-it is to its extent alone that this noble cemetery owes its gloom, for
-its site is eminently picturesque and beautiful. On one side, an open
-plain separates it from the channel; on the other, it is bounded by a
-height clothed with vines and almond trees—the houses of Scutari touch
-upon its border, and even mingle with its graves in the rear, while
-before it spreads a wide extent of cultivated land dotted with
-habitations.
-
-Need I add that the Nekropolis of Scutari, such as I have described it,
-has also its local superstition? Surely not; and the idea is so wild,
-and withal so imaginative, that I cannot pass it by without record.
-
-Along the channel may be constantly seen clouds of aquatic birds of
-dusky plumage, speeding their rapid flight from the Euxine to the
-Propontis, or bending their restless course from thence back again to
-the Black Sea, never pausing for a moment to rest their weary wing on
-the fair green spots of earth that woo them on every side; and it is
-only when a storm takes place in the Sea of Marmora, or sweeps over the
-bosom of the Bosphorus, that they fly shrieking to the cypress forest of
-Scutari for shelter; and these the Turks believe to be the souls of the
-damned, who have found sepulchre beneath its boughs, and which are
-permitted, during a period of elementary commotion, to revisit the spot
-where their mortal bodies moulder; and there mourn together over the
-crimes and judgment of their misspent existence upon earth—while,
-during the gentler seasons, they are compelled to pass incessantly
-within sight of the localities they loved in life, without the privilege
-of pausing even for one instant in the charmed flight to which they are
-condemned for all eternity!
-
-My mind was full of this legend when I visited the cemetery—and I can
-offer no better apology for the wild verses that I strung together as I
-sat upon a fallen column in one of the gloomiest nooks of the forest,
-and amid the noon-day twilight of the thick branches, while my
-companions wandered away among the graves.
-
-
- THE DAMNÈD SOULS.
-
- Hark! ’tis a night when the storm-god rides
- In triumph o’er the deep;
- And the howling voice of the tempest chides
- The spirits that fain would sleep:
- When the clouds, like a sable-bannered host,
- Crowd the dense and lurid sky;
- And the ship and her crew are in darkness lost
- As the blast roars rushing by.
-
- Voices are heard which summon men
- To a dark and nameless doom;
- And spirits, beyond a mortal’s ken,
- Are wandering through the gloom;
- While the thunders leap from steep to steep,
- And the yellow lightnings flash,
- And the rocks reply to the riot on high,
- As the wild waves o’er them dash.
-
- And we are here, in this night of fear,
- Urged by a potent spell,
- Haunting the glade where our bones are laid,
- Our tale of crime to tell—
- We have hither come, through the midnight gloom,
- As the tempest about us rolls,
- To spread mid the graves, where the rank grass waves,
- The feast of the Damnèd Souls.
-
- Some have flown from the deep sea-caves
- Which the storm-won treasures hold;
- And these are they who through life were slaves
- To the sordid love of gold;
- No other light e’er meets their sight,
- Save the gleam of the yellow ore;
- And loathe they there, in their dark despair,
- What they idolized before.
-
- They have swept o’er the rude and rushing tide,
- Bestrewn with wreck and spoil,
- Where the shrieking seaman writhed and died
- ’Mid his unavailing toil;
- And they rode the wave, without power to save
- The wretch as he floated by;
- And sighed to think, as they saw him sink,
- What a boon it was to die!
-
- Some were cast from the burning womb,
- Whence the lava-floods have birth;
- From fires which wither, but ne’er consume
- The rejected one of earth—
- And these are they who were once the prey
- Of the thirst that madmen know,
- When the world for them is the diadem
- That burns into the brow.
-
- They who crouch in the deepest gloom
- Where no lightning-flash can dart,
- Who, chained in couples, have hither come,
- And can never be rent apart;
- These are they whose life was a scene of strife,
- And who learnt, alas! too late,
- That the years flew fast which they each had cast
- On the altar of their hate.
-
- But, hark! through the forest there sweeps a wail
- More wild than the tempest-blast,
- As each commences the darkling tale
- Of the stern and shadowy past—
- And the spell that has power, in this dread hour,
- No pang of our’s controls—
- Nor may mortal dare in the watch to share
- That is kept by the Damnèd Souls!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
- Character of the Constantinopolitan Greeks—The Greek Colony at
- the Fanar—Vogoride, Logotheti, and Angiolopolo—Political
- Sentiment—Chateaubriand at the Duke de Rovigo’s—Biting
- Criticism—Greek Chambers—“What’s in a Name?”—Custom of
- Burning Perfumes—The Pastille of the Seraglio—Turkish
- Cosmetics—Eastern Beauty.
-
-The more I saw of the Greeks, the more curious did I find the study of
-that page of the great volume of human nature which was there flung
-back; and, far from sharing in the astonishment of those who almost deem
-it a miracle that the whole nation has not been swept away, I rather
-marvel at the state of moral and political thraldom in which they exist.
-The tolerated citizens of an Empire whose interests, both civil and
-religious, differ so widely from their own, the Fanariote Greeks nourish
-in their heart’s core a hatred of their masters as intense as it is
-enduring, and serve them rather from fear than zeal.
-
-Every Greek is an intuitive diplomatist; nature has endowed him with a
-keen and subtle spirit—a power to see deeply, and to act promptly—and
-as their motto is palpable to all who have studied their
-character—_tempora mutantur, et nos mutamur in illis_—they are any
-thing but safe counsellors or firm friends. Each is to be had at a
-price: and, as several of the most talented among them are in the
-confidence of the leading members of the Turkish government, it were
-idle to expatiate on the pernicious consequences of their influence.
-There are so many spies in the camp—so many breaches in the
-fortress—and, with the helm of affairs, although not actually in their
-grasp, at least sufficiently within their reach to enable them
-occasionally to make the vessel of state policy swerve towards the
-course whither they would fain direct it, they are no contemptible
-allies to any foreign power that may need their services. The Turk
-probably possesses the soundest judgment, but the Greek is more subtle
-and quick-witted, and dazzles even where he may fail to convince.
-
-Under these circumstances, partially trusted by the Turks, and enriched
-and employed by other nations—gifted with subtlety, energy of
-character, and that keenness of perception and quickness of intellect
-for which they are remarkable—the Greeks would be dangerous, if not
-fatal enemies to their Moslem masters, had they not, like Achilles, one
-vulnerable point—they are not true, even to each other. Dissimulation
-is the atmosphere in which they livejealousy is the food on which they
-prey—and, while they are urging on the chariot of their own fortunes,
-they are sure to have some luckless rival impaled upon one of the spokes
-of its uncertain wheel.
-
-Hence, all those overwhelming revolutions which render the tenure of
-wealth and honours among them almost as precarious as among the Turks
-themselves. The tolerance of the Sultan’s government has conceded to
-them a magistracy and an ecclesiastical power as distinct as though they
-were a free people and the denizens of a free country; and their shrewd
-and subtle spirits, trammelled without, become tenfold more bitter in
-their concentrated struggle for supremacy among themselves. Their circle
-is limited: their hemisphere will afford space for one luminary only; to
-aggrandize one, another must be sacrificed; and thus it is a perpetual
-grappling for ascendency; and public probity and private friendship give
-way before it.
-
-The Greek colony at the Fanar is the focus of intrigue; each is a spy
-upon his neighbour—here “Greek meets Greek,” and the “tug of war” is
-deadly. Patriarchs and archbishops are deposed and exiled—magistrates
-are displaced and banished, as one or the other party obtain
-power—until the concentration of hatred atrophises every heart, and the
-smile upon every lip waits but the opportunity to wither into a sneer.
-
-With the double impulsion of honour and power among their own community,
-and wealth and influence without, it will be readily understood that a
-people constituted like the Fanariote Greeks pursue their purpose with a
-tenacity that blinds them to all less absorbing considerations. Each
-suffices to himself—he is his own world—and he centres all his
-energies and exertions upon one point. In this fact exists the weakness
-of the Greeks—they are too egotistical to be dangerous—they indulge
-individual selfishness when they should exert themselves for the common
-benefit of the community—the fruit is perished at the core, and it
-consequently decays upon the surface—and, while they thus make war upon
-each other, and fling the brand of jealousy upon the hearths of their
-own race, they require no exterior force to crush them.
-
-The three most conspicuous individuals now left among the Fanariote
-Greeks are Vogorede, Logotheti, and Angiolopolo, each of whom is more or
-less in the confidence of the Porte. The war between these talented and
-ambitious men is literally a war of wits. The craft is with Vogorede,
-the energy with Logotheti, and the tenacity of purpose with Angiolopolo.
-The nature of each individual is written on his countenance—that of
-Vogorede changes like the hue of the camelion; he is a man whose smile
-is not mirth, nor approbation, nor enjoyment—his brow is narrow and
-deeply interlined, less by time than by the workings of his spirit; his
-eye is cold and quick, but it is the quickness which gives no token of
-intelligence—the restlessness of suspicion.
-
-The personal attributes of Logotheti are of a different character; his
-glance is searching and fiery, his features mobile and expressive, and
-his forehead high and strongly marked; and to these no more striking
-contrast can be afforded than by the truly magnificent head of
-Angiolopolo. There is not a vestige of passion, not a trace of anxiety,
-nor care, nor emotion perceptible; his countenance is calm, benevolent,
-and beautiful: his brow is singularly smooth for his age, and its
-character of placidity has continued unchanged throughout a long life of
-political exertion and excitement; while the white beard, which he wears
-to the utmost length that is now permitted, (Sultan Mahmoud having
-lately regulated this important point, and having even curtailed the
-exuberance of that of one of his ministers with his own Imperial hands!)
-gives him an air of patriarchal dignity in excellent keeping with his
-strictly Oriental costume.
-
-Having been for twelve years Chargé d’Affaires at Paris during the reign
-of Napoleon, he has a memory stored with anecdote; and a vivacity of
-expression, and an accuracy of detail, which make his portraits
-life-like, and never fail to point the moral of the tale. He discourses
-fluently in French, and enters into the most trifling subjects with a
-relish and gaiety quite wonderful when his age (near seventy) and his
-pursuits are taken into consideration; and you have not been half an
-hour in his society before you feel the greatest surprise that the
-_maladie de pays_ should ever have been sufficiently strong to induce
-him to solicit his recall from a court whose now time-worn recollections
-yet retain so bright a hold upon his nature. Angiolopolo has neither the
-appearance nor the bearing of a veteran politician; and, were you
-ignorant of his history, you would look upon him as one who had fallen
-into “the sear and yellow leaf,” without one storm to hasten the decay.
-
-After an existence of political toil, Angiolopolo has ostensibly retired
-into the calm and quiet of domestic life. I speak, therefore, of him
-rather as he was a few months back than as he now actually is; though
-the fire which has been long burning requires time ere it can be
-thoroughly extinguished, and it is only fair to infer that, after so
-many years of state service, Angiolopolo will carry with him the same
-tastes and pursuits to the grave.
-
-Prepossessed by his appearance, I accepted with pleasure an invitation
-to spend the day with his family, and the more particularly as I was
-anxious to make the acquaintance of all those individuals who had become
-matter of local interest.
-
-When I entered, he was seated in the Oriental fashion on a corner of the
-sofa, with a small writing-stand on a low stool beside him, and leaning
-his arm upon a chest of polished wood containing papers. He received us
-with much politeness, and presented me to his wife and daughter, who
-were nestled under the covering of the tandour, on the other side of the
-apartment, and who welcomed me in the most cordial manner.
-
-For a time, nothing but the veriest commonplace was uttered by any of
-the party; but some political allusion having been accidentally made, he
-expressed himself both disappointed and annoyed at the supineness of the
-British Government, though he admitted that it had caused him no
-surprize, as it was not the first occasion on which England, after
-amusing and deluding the Porte with promises of protection and support,
-had failed to fulfil her pledges in the hour of need. “As individuals,”
-he added emphatically, “no one can respect the English more than I do,
-but as a nation every thinking man throughout the Ottoman Empire has
-lost faith in them—the trust and confidence which the Turks once placed
-in the political integrity of Great Britain are at an end for ever.”
-
-As he was an invalid, we dined _en famille_; and I was struck with the
-extreme attention and deference that he showed towards his wife; all the
-other Greeks with whom I had become acquainted being the most
-indifferent, or, as we style it in Europe, the most fashionable of
-husbands; nor was I less surprised at the apparent zest with which he
-entered into the inconsequent conversation that ensued, and the
-playfulness with which he bandied jest for jest, and piled anecdote on
-anecdote. One incident that he mentioned I may repeat without
-indiscretion, as it cannot, after such a lapse of time, affect the
-individual who is its subject, and whose literary reputation is now too
-well established to be injured by the old-world histories of the past.
-
-Angiolopolo was one day dining at the table of the Duke de Rovigo, when
-the work of Chateaubriand on the East became the subject of
-conversation; the author himself, then a very young man, and but little
-known in the world of letters, being one of the guests; and, while it
-was under discussion, the Duke requested of Angiolopolo to give him his
-opinion on its merits. The Ottoman Chargé d’Affaires, aware that
-Chateaubriand was present, and not wishing to pronounce a judgment that
-must be displeasing to him, carelessly replied that he remembered having
-met with the work some time previously: and thus sought to turn aside
-the subject, the more particularly as, not being supposed to be aware of
-the vicinity of the author, he had no apology afforded him on the score
-of delicacy, should he pronounce an opinion tending to gloss over his
-real sentiments.
-
-But this indefinite reply did not satisfy the Duke, who expressed his
-astonishment that a native of the country of which the work treated
-should feel so little interest in the subject as to retain no memory of
-its contents. Thus urged, Angiolopolo found himself compelled to declare
-that he had not only read the book carefully, but still retained the
-most perfect recollection of many of its passages; and that he had
-evaded the inquiry simply from a disinclination to speak with severity
-of a writer, who had permitted himself to describe the domestic manners
-of a people, of whom he had only been enabled to judge from such
-specimens as coffee-houses and the like places of vulgar resort had
-offered to his observation.
-
-That he should form erroneous opinions of the mass from these low-bred
-and low-minded portions of the population might be pardoned, as the
-error of a surface-scanning and light-headed traveller; but that he
-should put them forth in sober earnestness to mislead wiser men, who did
-not possess the opportunity of forming a more correct judgment for
-themselves, was a graver and a more reprehensible fault, and one which
-no native of the East could easily forgive. Had he been honest, he would
-frankly have acknowledged that the doors of the higher classes were
-reluctantly and rarely opened to the Franks, who required the best
-introductions to secure an entrance into any distinguished house; both
-the habits and the position of the Orientals being unfavourable to the
-curiosity of strangers—and not have libelled a people of whom he really
-knew as little on his return to Europe as the day on which he landed at
-Stamboul.
-
-“Chateaubriand has since become a distinguished writer;” he added in
-conclusion, “but I doubt not that often, amid his success, he has
-remembered the dinner at the Duke de Rovigo’s, and his inexorable
-critic.”
-
-In anecdotes of this description, in which his powers of memory and his
-natural vivacity were equally apparent, the hours passed rapidly away;
-nor did we retire till near midnight, and even then more as a matter of
-expediency than of weariness, (for he was far too hospitable to suffer
-us to leave him until the following day,) and we had consequently full
-time to enjoy his reminiscences.
-
-I should have previously remarked that the chambers in the Greek houses
-are generally arranged in the same manner as those of the Turks—that
-is to say, a pile of mattresses are heaped upon the floor, without a
-bedstead; but with the Greeks the coverlets are less splendid, and the
-pillows are less costly. In each, a tray is conspicuously set out with
-conserves, generally strongly impregnated with perfume, such as rose,
-bergamotte, and citron: and covered goblets of richly-cut crystal,
-filled with water. The custom appears singular to an European, but it is
-by no means unpleasant; and I had not been long in the country ere I
-found the visit of the servant, who knelt down at my bedside, and handed
-the tray to me on my awaking, a very agreeable one.
-
-“What’s in a name?” asks Juliet. I confess that to me there is a spell
-in many; and among the Greeks I did not enjoy my sweetmeats the less
-that they were handed to me by Euphrosine or Anastasia; or my coffee
-that the tray was held by Demetrius or Theodosius. This may be folly,
-but it is not the less fact.
-
-The custom of burning perfumes in the mangal is, if not a healthy, at
-least a very luxurious one; and the atmosphere of the saloon of
-Angiolopolo was heavy with ambergris and musk. I have not yet met with a
-native of the East, of either sex, who was not strongly attached to
-their use; their own perfumes are delicate and agreeable, being rather
-concentrated preparations, than individual scents; and soothing, rather
-than exciting, the nerves; but they are also very partial to those of
-Europe, and among the latest presents of the Empress of Russia to the
-Princess Asmé, the Sultan’s eldest sister, were several cases of Eau de
-Cologne.
-
-The pastille of the seraglio, of which a large quantity has been
-presented to me by different Turkish and Armenian gentlemen, is a
-delightful invention; and looks, moreover, in its casing of gold leaf,
-extremely elegant; as it is somewhat costly, it is not in common use,
-but it is greatly prized in the harems.
-
-Perhaps no country exceeds Turkey in the variety and value of its
-cosmetics; and, although there are no daily prints to advertise their
-virtues, no ingenious puffs to expatiate on their properties, the ladies
-are by no means ignorant of their existence, but employ them in all
-their varieties; from the dye with which they darken their eyebrows, to
-the henna that disfigures the extremities of their fingers.
-
-Among the fair Greeks, the use of rouge is by no means uncommon; and
-they also carry to a greater extreme than the Turkish women the
-frightful custom of joining the eyebrows artificially across the nose,
-by which mistaken habit I have seen many a really pretty face terribly
-disfigured. I am, however, bound to confess that the dearth of beauty
-among the Greek ladies is very striking; their expression is good, but
-their features are irregular, and ill-assorted; and, were it not that
-they have almost universally fine, sparkling, dark eyes, they would be,
-taking them collectively, a decidedly plain race.
-
-I looked in vain for the noble, calm, and peculiar outline which we are
-prone to believe must characterize the whole people; for the
-finely-poised head, the expansive brow, the drooping eyelid, and, above
-all, the straight nose and short upper lip of genuine Grecian beauty; I
-met with it only in one instance, but that one was a breathing model of
-the beautiful and classical in nature.
-
-The Greek ladies are bad figures, are by no means gifted either as to
-hands or feet, walk ungracefully, and are remarkable only, as I have
-already stated, for their bright eyes, and their dark, lustrous hair.
-
-The men are a much finer race, or rather there are more individuals
-among them who have the distinguished outline of head which one looks to
-meet with in their nation; but the females have neither the sweet,
-sleepy, fascinating expression of the Turkish beauties, nor the pure,
-fresh, sparkling complexion of the Armenian maidens, whose foreheads are
-frequently as snowy as the veil that binds them, and whose lips and
-cheeks look like crushed roses.
-
-Not the least lovely among them is the fair girl who, in a spirit of
-frolic, consented to be presented to an English traveller, (Mr. Auldjo)
-as a Turkish lady, but whose style of beauty is perfectly dissimilar
-from that of the nation which she personated; the dark eyes, the
-henna-tipped fingers, and the costume, which is essentially the same as
-that of the harem, were, however, quite sufficient to deceive an
-unpractised eye; and the lively Armenian, to whom I was introduced at my
-express desire, tells the tale of her successful deceit with a
-self-complacency and enjoyment perfectly amusing.
-
-Had she more mind, and less _enbompoint_, an Armenian beauty would be
-perfect!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-
- The Kourban-Baïram—Politeness of Mustafa Effendi—Depressing
- Recollections—Unquiet Night—Midnight March—Turkish Coffee—A
- Latticed Araba—The Mosque of Sultan Achmet—Beautiful _coup
- d’œil_—Dress of the Turkish Children—Restlessness of the
- Franks—The Festival of Sacrifice—Old Jewish Rite—The Turkish
- Wife—Sun-rise—Appearance of the Troops—Turkish Ladies—Group
- of Field Officers—The Sultan’s Stud—Magnificent
- Trappings—The Seraskier Pasha—The Great Officers of
- State—The Procession—The Sultan—Imperial Curiosity—The
- Chèïk-Islam—Costume of the Sultan—Japanese
- Superstition—Vanity of Sultan Mahmoud—The Hairdresser of
- Halil Pasha—Rapid Promotion—Oriental Salutations—Halil
- Pasha—Saïd Pasha—Unruly Horses—The Valley of the “Sweet
- Waters”—Pera.
-
-The Kourban-Baïram being fixed for the 28th of March, we crossed over to
-Constantinople on the evening of the 27th, in order to be on the spot,
-and thus diminish the fatigue of the morrow. Mustafa Effendi, who had
-removed with his harem to his country-house, very obligingly offered us
-the use of his mansion for the night, as well as the services of his
-house-steward and a couple of servants; and we accordingly found
-ourselves once more at home beneath his hospitable roof.
-
-I rejoiced that we required the accommodation only for some hours; as
-perhaps there are few things more depressing than a stroll through the
-empty and echoing chambers that you have associated with ideas and
-memories of mirth, and inhabitation, and amusement. The spacious
-apartments gave back a hollow reverberation, as we wandered over their
-uncarpeted floors, and flung open the casements of their uncurtained
-windows. The very chambers which had been purposely and carefully
-prepared for us were new and strange, being in a different part of the
-house from that occupied by the harem; and I more than once regretted
-the absence of the courteous old man who had received me so kindly on my
-first visit.
-
-As I had failed to obtain a view of the procession at the Festival of
-the Baïram, that terminated the Ramazan, when an apartment had been
-prepared for us at the Mint, of which we were unable to take possession,
-owing to the density of the crowd, that filled every street in its
-neighbourhood, and which we were not sufficiently early to precede; I
-was the more anxious not to subject myself to a similar disappointment
-on the present occasion; a feeling that was, indeed, shared by the whole
-party; and, accordingly, on parting for the night, which we did at an
-early hour, we were very sincere in our reciprocal promises to be
-hyper-diligent on the morrow.
-
-And what a night we passed! The cannon was booming along the water, and
-rattling in long-sustained echoes among the hills—the myriad dogs that
-infest the city, scared from their usually quiet rest, were howling,
-whining, and barking, without a moment’s intermission; and the Imperial
-band was perambulating the streets, attended by flambeau-bearers; and
-executing, with admirable precision, some noble pieces of music. The
-wind-instruments were relieved at intervals by the drums and fifes, than
-which there are, perhaps, none better in the world: and these were
-succeeded by the tramp, beneath our window, of the whole garrison of the
-city, afoot and under arms two hours before daybreak.
-
-I watched the troops as they passed, the flaring torches throwing them
-into broad light between the two lofty white walls that hemmed in the
-narrow street, and from whose surface the sickly moonlight was fast
-waning, scrambling up the steep hill upon whose rise the house is built,
-rather in masses than in columns; officers and men mingled pell-mell,
-laughing, talking, and struggling over the rough pavement, in a manner
-much more picturesque than imposing.
-
-I had scarcely thrown myself once more upon my sofa, in order to court
-the sleep of which I had as yet only dreamt, when the rattling of our
-heavy carriage into the courtyard, and the loud knock at the door by
-which the Greek waiting-maid announced her wish for admittance,
-dispelled my hopes once more; and when she entered, candle in hand, I
-resigned myself to my fate, and, having ascertained that it was nearly
-four o’clock, made a hasty toilette, and joined my companions.
-
-The warmest and strongest of coffee was soon swallowed—by the way, what
-a sad pity it is that we know nothing about making coffee in Europe—and
-having settled ourselves comfortably in our well-cushioned araba, Madame
-——, myself, and our attendant were soon jolting over the rough _pavé_
-towards the scene of action, followed by my father and the two Turkish
-servants. The lattices of the carriage were closely shut, to avoid any
-possible difficulty, owing to our being Europeans; and one servant
-walked close beside each door, as though guarding the harem of some
-bearded Moslem.
-
-Arrived within the precincts of the court of Sultan Achmet’s magnificent
-mosque, and fairly _entamés_ among the carriages, which resembled a bed
-of scarlet and yellow poppies, we removed the lattices altogether, and
-remained lying very comfortably among our silken cushions, with the
-araba open on all sides, and immediately in front of us the space along
-which the procession was to pass: the line of carriages forming one
-boundary, and the other being guarded by a treble rank of military.
-
-The coup-d’œil was beautiful! The sun was just fringing the fleecy
-clouds with a glad golden edge; and, as the vapours rolled away, the
-bright blue of the laughing sky spread far and wide its stainless
-canopy. The noble trees that overshadow a portion of the enclosure were
-just putting forth their young spring leaves, all fresh, and dewy, and
-tender—tokens of that infant vegetation which may be blighted by too
-rude a blast, and which awakens in the heart such gentle and such fond
-associations—the spacious steps of white marble that stretch far in
-front of the principal entrance of the mosque were crowded with human
-beings—the exterior gallery that runs along the side of the edifice on
-which the Sultan was to pass was filled with women, whose white veils
-and dark _feridjhes_ made them look like a community of nuns—while, in
-the rear of the military, groups were every where forming, shifting, and
-producing the most interesting pictorial effects.
-
-Here, it was a party of Jews—there, a knot of Armenians—further on, a
-circle of Greeks—and close beside us a cluster of women huddled
-together, and holding by the hand their rosy children, whose appearance
-I cannot more appropriately describe than by comparing them to the
-sweeps on May-day—such costumes! such pinks, greens, reds, and
-yellows, each out-glaring the other on the girls; the most grotesque
-prints fashioned into the most _outré_ forms—pendent sleeves, trailing
-_anterys_, and little curly heads enveloped in painted handkerchiefs:
-while the boys from three years of age figured in surtout coats as
-brightly buttoned, and as ill-cut as those of their fathers—miniature
-pantaloons, corded with scarlet—and minute _fez’s_, with their purple
-tassels attached by stars of pearl of great beauty, or decorated with
-magnificent brilliant ornaments, fastened to the cap with pearl loops,
-to which were generally added golden coins, blue beads, and other
-preservatives against the Evil Eye!
-
-A few Franks were distinguishable among the crowd; but they appeared and
-disappeared like wandering spirits, never resting long on the same spot,
-and earning many a quiet smile from their Moslem neighbours, who are
-never weary of marvelling at the perpetual locomotion of the Giaours, so
-opposed to their own love of rest and quiet. Give a Turk a moderately
-good position on such an occasion as this, and he will never abandon it
-on the bare possibility of procuring a better; but the Greek and the
-European fidget and fuss to the last moment, and very probably do not
-always profit by their pains.
-
-The Kourban-Baïram, or festival of sacrifice, differs from that which
-takes place at the conclusion of the Ramazan, by its greater pomp and
-the circumstance that, on the occasion of the present festival, animals
-are sacrificed to propitiate the favour of the Divinity: and, as we
-drove along the streets, they were crowded with sheep and lambs about to
-be offered up.
-
-Every head of a family sacrifices an animal with his own hands; and
-every male member of his household is at liberty to indulge his piety in
-a similar manner; but the chief of the house is bound to observe the
-ceremonial.
-
-On his return from the Mosque, the Sultan puts on a sacrificial dress,
-and, while two attendants hold the lamb which is to be honoured by
-suffering the stab of the Imperial knife, he slaughters it with his
-Sublime hands. The first victim that he destroys is a propitiation for
-himself, but he afterwards offers up one for each member of his family,
-and consequently his office is by no means a sinecure.
-
-Nor is this the only occasion on which this ancient Jewish rite is
-observed by the Turks. On recovery from a severe illness, on the birth
-of a child, on return from a pilgrimage—in short, in every leading
-circumstance of his life, the Musselmaun immolates a victim: but the
-Kourban-Baïram is the great sacrificial anniversary, and is observed
-with much splendour and rejoicing by all the population of the capital.
-The vessels in the harbour are gaily decked out with flags; all business
-is suspended; men grasp each other by the hand in the streets, and utter
-a fraternal greeting—and the poor are seen hastening from house to
-house to secure the flesh of the sacrifices, which is divided among
-themselves and the dogs of the city, scarcely less sacred than their own
-kind in the eyes of the Osmanlis.
-
-A friend of mine was told the other day by a Turk with whom he is
-intimate, and who had just returned to Stamboul after an absence of six
-months, that he had ascertained that while he was away from home his
-wife had not once quitted the house; a piece of intelligence which so
-rejoiced him, that he had sacrificed six sheep, one for each month, in
-gratitude to Allah and the Prophet, who had bestowed on him so virtuous
-a helpmate.
-
-What a glorious burst of light flooded the enclosure when the sun at
-length clomb the horizon! It was not only a time of human festival, but
-nature’s own peculiar holyday; and there was an elasticity and balminess
-in the air that swept through the carriage, which made the heart leap
-for gladness.
-
-The troops presented a better appearance in line than I had expected,
-but Sultan Mahmoud has yet much to do if he ever intends to make them
-look like _soldiers_. They are dirty, slouching, and awkward; tread
-inwards from their habit of sitting upon their feet, and march as though
-they were dragging their slippers after them. The frightful _fèz_ is
-pulled down to their very eyebrows, and the ill-cut clothing is composed
-of the coarsest and dingiest materials.
-
-But what shall I say of the officers? How shall I describe the
-appearance of the gallant individuals who were constantly passing and
-repassing, and making frequent pauses in our immediate vicinity; incited
-thereto, as I have no doubt, by the presence of two lovely young Turkish
-ladies, who had quitted their carriage, and established themselves on
-the footboard behind, in order to secure a better sight of the “Brother
-of the Sun,” whom we were all anxiously awaiting; and whose _yashmacs_
-were so gracefully, or shall I say coquettishly, arranged, that I doubt
-whether they would have been so attractive without them. They were of
-the whitest and clearest muslin, through which I not only saw the
-flowers that rested on their foreheads, and the diamonds that sparkled
-in the embroidered and richly-fringed handkerchiefs bound about their
-heads, but even the very colour of their lips. And then the magic of
-their long, sleepy, jet-black eyes, and the constant flinging back and
-refolding of the jealous _feridjhe_, by fingers white, and slender, and
-henna-tipped! I really pitied the sword-girt Moslems.
-
-I was still gazing at these lovely women, when a party of about thirty
-field-officers passed the carriage, on their way to their places near
-the door of the Mosque, at which the Sultan was to enter. They were all
-similarly attired in surtout coats of Spanish brown, gathered in large
-folds at the back of the waist, and buttoned beneath a cloth strap; a
-very common and ugly fashion among the Turks; and wore sword-belts
-richly embroidered with gold. Many among them were some of the stoutest
-men I ever saw.
-
-In about five minutes after them, arrived the led horses of the Sultan;
-and these formed by far the most splendid feature of the procession;
-they were ten in number, and wore on their heads a _panache_ of white
-and pink ostrich feathers mixed with roses, and fastened down upon the
-forelock with a clasp of precious stones. Each was attended by a groom,
-controlling, with some trouble, the curvettings and capers of the
-pampered animals, who were caparisoned in a style of splendour which, if
-it have ever been equalled, can certainly never have been surpassed.
-Their housings, which were either of silk or velvet, all differing the
-one from the other, were embroidered with gold and silver, large
-pearls, and jewels. One of them bore, on a ground of myrtle-coloured
-velvet, the cypher of the Sultan wrought in brilliants, and surrounded
-by a garland of flowers formed of rubies, emeralds, and topaz. Another
-housing, of rich lilac silk, was worked at the corners with a cluster of
-musical instruments in diamonds and large pearls, and, as the sunshine
-flashed upon it, it was like a blaze of light. The remainder were
-equally magnificent; and the well-padded saddles of crimson or green
-velvet were decorated with stirrups of chased gold, while the bridles,
-whose embroidered reins hung low upon the necks of the animals, were one
-mass of gold and jewels.
-
-The Sultan’s stud was succeeded by the Seraskier Pasha in state, mounted
-on a tall gray horse, (whose elaborate accoutrements were only inferior
-to those that I have attempted to describe,) and surrounded and followed
-by a dozen attendants on foot: his diamond-hilted sword—the rings upon
-his hands—the star in front of his _fèz_, and the orders on his breast,
-were perfectly dazzling.
-
-At intervals of about a minute, all the great officers of state passed
-in the same order, and according to their respective ranks; and at
-length we heard the welcome sounds of the Imperial band, which struck up
-the Sultan’s Grand March, as Mahmoud the Powerful, the Brother of the
-Sun, and Emperor of the East, passed the gates of the court.
-
-First came twelve running footmen, in richly laced uniforms, and high
-military caps; and these were succeeded by the twenty body pages, who
-were splendidly dressed, and wore in their chakos, plumes, or rather
-_crêtes_ of stiff feathers, intermixed with artificial flowers of
-immense size, and originally invented to conceal the face of the Sultan
-as he passed along, and thus screen him from the Evil Eye! But his
-present Sublime Highness is not to be so easily scared into concealment,
-and the pages who were wont to surround his predecessors merely precede
-him, while a crowd of military officers supply their place, one walking
-at each of his stirrups, and the rest a little in the rear.
-
-As this was the first occasion on which I had seen the Sultan, I leant
-eagerly forward upon my cushions to obtain a good view of him; and I saw
-before me, at the distance of fifteen or twenty yards at the utmost, a
-man of noble physiognomy and graceful bearing, who sat his horse with
-gentlemanlike ease, and whose countenance was decidedly prepossessing.
-He wore in his _fèz_ an aigrette of diamonds, sustaining a cluster of
-peacock’s feathers; an ample blue cloak was flung across his shoulders,
-whose collar was one mass of jewels, and on the third finger of his
-bridle hand glittered the largest brilliant that I ever remember to have
-seen.
-
-As he moved forward at a foot’s pace, loud shouts of “Long live Sultan
-Mahmoud!” ran along the lines, and were re-echoed by the crowd, but he
-did not acknowledge the greeting, though his eyes wandered on all sides,
-until they fell upon our party, when a bright smile lit up his features,
-and for the first time he turned his head, and looked long and fixedly
-at us. In the next instant, he bent down, and said something in a
-subdued voice to the officer who walked at his stirrup, who, with a low
-obeisance, quitted his side, and hastily made his way through the crowd,
-until he reached our carriage, to the astonishment and terror of a group
-of Turkish women who had ensconced themselves almost under it; and,
-bowing to my father, who still stood bare-headed beside us, he inquired
-of one of the servants who I was and what had brought me to
-Constantinople; the Sultan, meanwhile, looking back continually, and
-smiling in the same goodhumoured and condescending manner.
-
-The reply was simple—I was an Englishwoman, and had accompanied my
-father to Turkey, for the purpose of seeing the country; and, having
-received this answer, the messenger again saluted us, and withdrew.
-
-A very short interval ensued ere he returned, and hurriedly and
-anxiously resumed his inquiries, to which our attendant became too
-nervous to reply; when he exclaimed, “Is there no one here who can act
-as Dragoman, and give me the intelligence which is required by his
-Sublime Highness?”
-
-“I will inform you of all that you require to learn, Effendim;” said my
-companion in her soft, harmonious, Turkish: “the lady is English.”
-
-“His Highness sees that she is English;” replied the officer: “but he
-wishes to know _who_ she is.”
-
-This important information was added, and once more he departed.
-
-Crowds of decorated individuals closed the procession; and in five
-minutes more Sultan Mahmoud dismounted and entered the Mosque.
-
-The Chèïk-Islam, or High Priest, had preceded his Imperial Master; but
-we saw him only at a distance as he ascended the marble steps that I
-have already mentioned, and passed in through the great entrance. He
-wore a turban of the sacred green, about which was wound a massive
-chain, or rather belt, of gold; and was mounted on a fine Arabian, whose
-bridle was held by two grooms.
-
-Sultan Mahmoud is not a handsome man, and yet it is difficult to define
-wherefore; for his features are good and strongly marked, and his eye
-bright and piercing. His jet black hair, seen in heavy curls beneath
-the _fèz_, which, like most of his subjects, he wears drawn down low
-upon his forehead; and his bushy and well-trimmed beard, add
-considerably to the dignity of his appearance, as well as giving to him
-a look of much greater youth than he can actually boast; but this is a
-merely artificial advantage, being the effect of one of those skilful
-dyes so common in the East.
-
-As in Japan, the popular belief is firm that the King never dies, so in
-Turkey the Sovereign is never permitted to imagine that he can grow old;
-and thus every officer of the household stains his hair and beard, and
-uses all the means with which art or invention can supply him, in order
-that no intrusive symptom of age or decay may shock the nerves, and
-awaken the regrets of his lord and contemporary—the faded beauties of
-the Seraglio are removed from his sight, the past is seldom adverted to,
-and the future is considered as his sure and undoubted heritage.
-
-Never did monarch lend himself to the delicious cheat more lovingly than
-Sultan Mahmoud; who, with all his energy of character, is the victim
-(for in his case I can apply no other term) of the most consummate
-personal vanity. We are accustomed in England to think of George the
-Fourth as the _ne plus ultra_ of exquisitism—the Prince of
-_Petit-maîtres_—but what will honest John Bull say to a Turkish
-Emperor, an Imperial Mussulmaun, who paints white and red, and who
-considers himself sufficiently repaid for all the care and anxiety of a
-costly toilette, by the admiration and flattery of the ladies of the
-Seraglio? And yet such is the case—the Immolator of the Janissaries,
-the reformer of a mighty empire, the sovereign of the gravest people
-upon earth, is a very “thing of shreds and patches”—a consumer of
-cosmetics—an idolater of gauds and toys—the Sacrificing High Priest at
-the altar of self-adornment!
-
-On a recent occasion, having caused his hair (of which he is extremely
-vain) to be cut by the court _coiffeur_, he withdrew his _fèz_ and
-inquired of his son-in-law, Halil Pasha, if he approved of the style in
-which it had been done. The Favorite, with a sincerity which did him
-honour, replied that the Imperial Head had been most basely shorn; and
-was forthwith desired to display the honours of his own cranium to his
-Sublime Highness, who immediately acquiesced in the superior skill of
-the artist who had operated upon the Pasha; and desired that, without a
-moment’s delay, the happy mortal who had exhibited such distinguished
-taste in curling and cutting should be summoned to his presence.
-
-In five minutes, half a dozen of the palace officers were _en route_ in
-search of the _coiffeur_, who was accidentally from home: and it was
-not until after a considerable delay that he was discovered, basin in
-hand, and razor in grasp, busily engaged in shaving the head of a
-grave-looking Armenian, who had already undergone half the operation.
-Despite the lathered skull of the customer, and the terrified
-deprecations of the _artiste_, the officers, who were utterly ignorant
-of the Sultan’s motive for summoning their prisoner, pounced upon him
-without mercy, and rather dragged than conducted him to the caïque that
-was waiting to convey him to the palace; whither he was followed by the
-silent and pitying wonder of the men, and the low wailing of the women.
-
-On his arrival, he was immediately led into the Imperial presence, where
-his trembling knees instinctively bent under him, as he wildly gasped
-out his innocence of any and every crime against His Sublime Highness;
-he wrung his hands, he implored a mercy for which he scarcely dared to
-hope, he writhed in his agony of spirit, expecting nothing less than the
-bowstring for some imputed delinquency, and he talked of his wife, and
-his young and helpless children so soon to be cast upon the world unless
-his life were spared; while the Sultan laid aside his _fèz_, and
-prepared his own head for a more simple operation.
-
-“Peace, fool!” said His Highness at length, “did you not cut the hair
-of Halil Pasha?”
-
-“I did, your Sublime Highness; and to the best of my poor skill,”
-faltered out the pale and terrified _artiste_; “have mercy upon my want
-of knowledge!”
-
-“Compose your nerves, and produce your scissors,” returned the Sultan;
-“you shall have the distinguished honour of cutting mine, also—to your
-task at once.”
-
-No sooner said than done: men of this craft have been gifted with ready
-wit and self-possession, from the days in which the red-robed ghost of
-the German barber shaved the adventurous student in the haunted castle;
-and ere long His Imperial Highness was cropped and curled to his sublime
-satisfaction; and the hairdresser found himself appointed keeper of the
-head of the Turkish Empire—a “man of mark”—and returned to his home in
-triumph, not only _quitte pour la peur_, but with his wildest visions
-realized!
-
-During the short period that the Sultan remained in the mosque, the
-scene around us was far from unamusing: the horses were paraded to and
-fro; the troops rested on their arms, and conversed freely with each
-other; the officers, breaking through the spell that had lately bound
-them, resumed their stroll and their scrutiny; and many a glance was
-directed towards our little party, for which we were indebted to the
-curiosity of their Imperial Master. Then came a rush from the great
-entrance of the mosque; and, when a host of red-capped and turbaned
-Turks had issued forth, the Chèïk-Islam slowly descended the steps, and
-departed in the same state as he had come. The horses were led back into
-their ranks; the military shouldered their muskets; and once more the
-Seraskier Pasha with his train of attendants paced slowly along the
-line.
-
-Those officers who were of sufficiently high grade to attract his
-attention made their graceful obeisance, first laying their right hand
-upon their lips, and then upon their foreheads, and bowing down nearly
-to the earth; while the Pashas, who were not of a rank elevated enough
-to appear mounted before the Sultan, moved amid the throng, with their
-diamond orders and embroidered sword-belts glittering in the light.
-Among these was Namik Pasha, whom I had known in England, and who
-approached the carriage to greet me, while the Seraskier reined up his
-horse beneath the window of a house that overlooked the scene, and paid
-his compliments to Madame de Boutenieff, who sat surrounded by
-secretaries and _attachés_.
-
-One by one, all the Pashas re-appeared, and, having saluted each other
-with a ceremonious etiquette that distinctly marked their respective
-ranks, they marshalled themselves round the gateway according to their
-precedence of power; and then it was that I particularly remarked the
-unpleasant effect of their ungloved hands, so utterly inconsistent,
-according to European ideas, with the magnificence of all the other
-details of their costume.
-
-By a happy, though not altogether singular, coincidence, the husband of
-one of the princesses, and the intended husband of the other, are both
-the adopted sons of the old Seraskier; and as they took their places on
-either side of him, they naturally excited considerable attention.
-
-Halil Pasha is a good-looking man, but clumsily and ungracefully made,
-with a grave expression of countenance; which, if report speak truly,
-the temper of his Imperial helpmate is not calculated to gladden.
-
-Having mentioned the Princess Salihè, I may as well introduce in this
-place a little anecdote, for whose veracity my informant pledged
-himself. Her Imperial Highness, on one occasion, only a few months back,
-chanced to pass in her araba by a coffee-kiosk, in which a party of
-Ulemas, about thirty in number, were gravely smoking their chibouks. It
-chanced that no individual among them remarked the approach of the
-Imperial carriage; and they consequently all remained seated, as though
-the owner of the equipage had not been the Cousin of the Sun and Moon,
-and herself one of the principal constellations. The rage of the
-Princess was unbounded; and she instantly despatched one of her
-_kavashlir_ for an armed guard, to whom she gave orders to convey the
-whole party to the palace of the Seraskier, to receive the bastinado for
-the want of respect which they had displayed towards her sacred person.
-To hear was to obey; and forthwith the thirty Ulemas, members of the
-most powerful body of men now existing in the Empire, were marched off
-to the Seraskier; to whom, on their appearance in the court of the
-palace, it was immediately announced that a formidable group of Ulemas,
-attended by a number of soldiers, were approaching, as if to demand an
-audience of His Excellency.
-
-The Seraskier, anxious as to the purport of their visit, ordered that
-they should instantly be admitted; and, suspicious of some popular
-discontent, resolved upon giving them a most courteous reception; when
-he was struck dumb by the intelligence that they were prisoners sent to
-receive the punishment of their crime! For a moment even the Seraskier
-was at fault; but, suddenly looking towards them with a smiling
-countenance, and affecting not to remark the lowering brows of the
-outraged professors—“Her Imperial Highness has condescended to make
-merry with me,” he said gaily. “She threatened that I should pay dear
-for some unpalatable advice that I ventured to give her, and you are to
-be the medium of her vengeance. I comprehend the jest, and must abide by
-her good pleasure.” Then, turning to his purse-bearer, he desired him to
-count out one hundred piastres to each individual, which was accordingly
-done, and the discomfited Ulemas left the palace.
-
-But the affair might have proved to be the very reverse of a jest in its
-consequences, and this the Pasha well knew when he ventured to set at
-nought the orders of the princess; and he accordingly lost no time in
-obtaining an audience of the Sultan, to whom he explained the whole
-circumstance. His Highness, after commenting gaily on the expedient of
-the Seraskier, and causing steps to be taken to ascertain that the
-aggrieved parties harboured no thoughts or designs of revenge, sent a
-stern message to his Imperial daughter, in which he warned her not to
-attempt on any future occasion to bastinado his learned and faithful
-subjects, thirty at a time.
-
-Saïd Pasha, the affianced bridegroom of the Princess Mihirmàh, is
-decidedly the handsomest man at court, as well as one of the youngest;
-he has fine eyes, a prominent and well-shaped nose, and a smile of
-peculiar sweetness.
-
-A burst of martial music again warned us of the approach of the Sultan;
-and, as he moved along upon his proud steed, which tossed its
-party-coloured plumes and flashing jewels in the clear sunshine, he
-turned towards us another look and another smile—and, in a few minutes,
-nothing of the pageant remained with us save its memory; if, indeed, I
-except the band, whose thrilling music, as they marched past, startled
-our horses, which began to rear and kick in so inconvenient a manner
-that we were glad to drive off; and, taking our way through “The Valley
-of the Sweet Waters,” along the banks of the sparkling Barbyses, and
-past the Imperial Kiosks, that rise like fairy palaces from the soft
-turf of that lovely spot, we returned, amid the freshness and beauty of
-a quiet day in Spring, to our residence at Pera.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-
- The Military College—Achmet Pasha and Azmi Bey—Study of Azmi
- Bey—His grateful Memories of England and the English—The
- Establishment—The Lithographic Presses—Extemporaneous
- Poetry—Halls of Study—Number of Students—Mathematical
- Hall—The Sultan’s Gallery—The Mosque—The Mufti—The Turkish
- Creed—The Imperial Closet—The Gallery of the Imperial
- Suite—The Retiring-Room—The Printing-Office—The
- Hospital—The Refectory—The Professor of Fortification—Negro
- Officers—Moral Condition of the College—Courtesy of the
- Officers—Deficiencies of the Professors—The Turks a Reading
- People—Object of the Institution—Reasons of its
- Failure—Smiling Enemies—Forlorn Hope—Russian
- Influence—Saduk Agha—Achmet Pasha—Azmi Bey—Apology for my
- Prolixity.
-
-The Military College, which, from its extent, and the lavish liberality
-of its arrangements, may well be termed a princely establishment,
-occupies the crest of a hill immediately above the Imperial palace of
-Dolma Batché, signifying the “Valley of Gourds”—and the tall minaret of
-its mosque shoots upwards into the blue heaven with the grace and
-lightness of a sky-winged arrow; while the gilded crescent in the centre
-of the dome reflects back the sparkling sunbeams as they flash upon its
-glittering surface.
-
-As I had brought an introductory letter to Achmet Pasha, the governor,
-and had been personally acquainted in London with Azmi Bey, the
-Military Commandant, and, in fact, Principal of the Institution, I
-experienced no difficulty whatever in obtaining permission to pay it a
-visit; and I accordingly proceeded thither, accompanied by my father and
-a couple of friends, who were, like myself, anxious to form a correct
-opinion of the establishment.
-
-We were met at the great entrance by the young Bey himself, who welcomed
-us with the most sincere cordiality; and, offering me his arm with a
-ready politeness quite European, he conducted us to his private
-apartment, or, perhaps, I should rather call it, study. This very
-cheerful and comfortable room, situated at an angle of the building, and
-commanding two magnificent points of view, was thickly hung with English
-and French engravings, principally interiors of our metropolitan
-buildings, college-halls, theatres, and other places of public resort,
-highly coloured—a large stove gave forth an agreeable warmth—the
-window seats were strown with books and papers—a few maps were lying
-upon a side table—a curious collection of volumes was gathered together
-in a small bookcase—and the apartment had altogether a more furnished
-and snug look than any which I had yet seen inhabited by a Turk—there
-were flowers also in a glass vase; and a paper-presser on which a
-sleeping Cupid lay stretched listlessly among his fabled roses—the
-souvenir of an European friend.
-
-We remained some time talking over past days, and I was sincerely
-pleased by the fond and grateful manner in which he spoke of England,
-and his English acquaintance. He reminded me of several little by-gone
-incidents, inquired for particular individuals, and exhibited a warmth
-of feeling and interest in the past for which I was scarcely prepared.
-During the conversation, tea was handed to us in the Russian fashion by
-his dragoman, attended by two negro slaves, and after partaking of it we
-commenced our survey of the establishment.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Pardoe del.
-
-Day & Haghe Lith^{rs}. to the King.
-
-THE MILITARY COLLEGE.
-
-_Pub^d. by Henry Colburn, 13 G^t. Marlborough S^t._]
-
-The main building forms three sides of a square, and the centre of the
-fourth is occupied by an elegant kiosk-like edifice, containing the
-lithographic presses. Here we found an individual designing a very
-neatly-ornamented sheet-almanac, of which he had sketched the border
-with great delicacy. All the machinery is English, and appears to be in
-constant use. I have omitted to mention that, before we quitted the
-apartment of Azmi Bey, he presented to us several of the Professors, who
-entered to pay their respects. Among these, the most remarkable was
-Saduk Agha, a Prussian renegade, who speaks French, Italian, and Turkish
-fluently, and has a considerable knowledge of English. After conversing
-with him for some time on the merits of lithography, and examining a
-number of drawings, principally military figures, that had been executed
-by the pupils of the establishment, and were many of them of
-considerable merit; he joined his entreaties to those of Azmi Bey that I
-would write a few lines as evidence of my visit, which they might put
-under the press. Finding that they were both determined to succeed, and
-not considering the point worthy of contention, I complied with the
-request, not a little amused at my first appearance in print in Turkey:
-and I much doubt whether any thing that I have hitherto written, am now
-writing, or may hereafter write, will ever be read and re-read with so
-much apparent _gusto_ as the half dozen lines of doggrel verse which I
-improvised on a scrap of torn paper, _sur la plante des pieds_,
-surrounded by about a score of Turkish spectators.
-
-From this point, we proceeded to the inner or garden court, of which one
-side is laid out in a parterre inclosure, the centre being occupied by
-the mosque, and the extreme end terminated by the two great halls of
-study. We entered the first of these by a noble flight of stone steps,
-and found ourselves in an apartment of vast extent, admirably lighted,
-and arranged with the most perfect order and conveniency. Thickly set
-rows of high-backed benches of stained wood extended the whole depth of
-the hall, leaving a passage on either side just sufficiently wide for
-the ingress and egress of visitors; and the first ranges of seats were
-occupied by about one hundred and fifty of the junior pupils, who were
-busily employed in tracing upon their slates the elegant characters of
-their language, as sentence after sentence was slowly declaimed by the
-head boy of the class. This department of the institution is on the
-Lancastrian system.
-
-There are at present only three hundred students on the establishment; a
-report having been promulgated by its enemies that an attempt would be
-made to interfere with their religious tenets; in consequence of which
-many parents declined sending their sons: the only answer of the
-Governors to this calumny has been to compel the attendance of the boys
-three times a day at the mosque; a tolerably convincing proof that they
-entertain no anti-Mohammedan partialities.
-
-As the School is expressly intended as a nursery for the army, all the
-ambition of the students is made to bear upon that point: extraordinary
-application, or regularity of conduct, is recompensed by a step of
-military rank; and thus, should the intention of the authorities ever be
-borne out, a youth of talent and good conduct may hereafter quit the
-college as an officer, and thus commence his actual career of life,
-where many of his predecessors have terminated their’s.
-
-Having traversed the Lancastrian class, we reached the mathematical
-hall, where a considerable number of young men were busily engaged in
-colouring ground-plans of the surrounding country. The lower end of this
-stately apartment forms a deep bay, round which rows of seats are
-arranged amphitheatrically, having in the midst of them a table whereon
-are placed globes, charts, and all the requisites for study. The other
-extremity of the hall is terminated by a raised gallery, intended for
-the use of the Sultan, above which hangs his portrait in oils, executed
-by an Armenian artist, harsh, and crude, and wiry, as though it had been
-the production of a Chinese easel, and surmounted by a most elaborate
-drapery. Beneath the portrait is stretched a noble map of the
-Archipelago, the Sea of Marmora, and the Bosphorus. An electrifying
-machine, and a large map of America, an immense table, and the desks and
-seats of the students, made up the remainder of the furniture; and the
-apartment itself was by far the finest that I had yet seen in the
-country.
-
-The next point of curiosity was the mosque; and I was no less surprised
-than gratified at the readiness with which Azmi Bey acceded to our
-desire of visiting it. The outer apartment, or vestibule, was covered
-with fine Indian matting, and before we traversed it the Bey requested
-my father to put off his boots, though he made no objection to my
-retaining my slippers. As we reached the door which opened into the body
-of the mosque, I perceived that we had arrived during the prayers. The
-High Priest sat with his arms folded above his ample robe; his dark brow
-surmounted by a turban of the sacred green, and his feet doubled under
-him, in a recess facing the entrance, chanting in a nasal and monotonous
-drawl; while a very slender congregation was scattered over the floor,
-squatted upon the rich carpets that covered it. But we no sooner made
-our appearance than the Mufti rose and quitted the mosque, followed by
-his little flock; and we were left in quiet possession of the elegant
-temple whence they had so hastily withdrawn.
-
-The faith of the Musselmauns is that of love, not fear: to believe in
-One GOD, and to be charitable—and who shall deny that it is a
-comprehensive creed? The mosque in which we stood was the very
-embodiment of such a worship—the sunshine streamed through its many
-windows upon the most delicate fresco-painting, the brightest and
-richest of carpets, and the glittering lattices of the Imperial closet.
-The only dark object that met the eye was a curtain of olive-coloured
-cloth, surrounded by a bordering of flowers, delicately worked in tinted
-silks, which veiled the entrance of the marble steps leading to the
-pulpit—all beside was dazzlingly bright, and it was almost with regret
-that I returned into the vestibule, in order to ascend to the Sultan’s
-gallery.
-
-A small hall and a handsome flight of stairs, closely covered with
-English carpeting, conducted us to an elegant anti-room, from which four
-doors, veiled by draperies of dove-coloured cloth heavily fringed,
-opened into as many apartments, appropriated to the Sultan and his
-suite.
-
-The Imperial closet is richly hung with gold-coloured draperies, that
-fling a sunset glow on the surrounding objects: a magnificent sofa
-occupies one side of the room, and the floor is covered with a Brussels
-carpet. Portions of the gilded lattice open and shut at pleasure; and
-the whole has so perfectly Oriental an effect, that you involuntarily
-think of Scheherazade and her fable-loving Sultan; and forget the
-sanctity of the place, while contemplating the luxury of its
-arrangement.
-
-The gallery appropriated to the Imperial suite adjoins the closet, and
-beyond this is the retiring-room of the Sultan, wherein he performs his
-ablutions, previously to the commencement of the service. It is less
-gorgeous in its general effect than the closet, but commands a noble
-view of the Bosphorus, and the Sea of Marmora.
-
-On leaving the mosque, we descended by a flight of stone steps into the
-vaults beneath it, to visit the printing-office, where all was activity:
-compositors were setting the types—“devils” were guiding the
-rollers—lads were folding the printed sheets—and binders were
-stitching them into volumes. Every thing was clean, and orderly, and
-well conducted.
-
-We next made a tour of the hospital; and, had not two of the beds been
-tenanted, I should have quitted the establishment, if not with a firm
-conviction, at least with a very strong suspicion, that it was intended
-merely for show, it was so delicately clean and so beautifully arranged.
-
-At the head of the stairs was the receiving-room of the surgeon; and
-beyond this, on either side of the gallery, were the laboratory and the
-surgery, their doors veiled with white muslin, and every article in its
-place; the dormitories, which are only two in number, each capable of
-containing about a score of patients, were carpeted along the centre;
-the beds were tastefully draperied with muslin: and a small table stood
-near each pillow; while along the cornice of the ceiling were suspended,
-at regular distances, small tablets, whereon were inscribed the names of
-the different diseases to be treated in the ward.
-
-The refectory was perfectly European in its aspect, surrounded by long
-narrow tables and benches, and well supplied with plates, spoons,
-forks, and soup-ladles. As we entered, Azmi Bey looked towards us
-confidently for applause. He had truly worked a goodly reform in Turkish
-habits, when he taught each boy to put his fork into his own plate,
-instead of plunging his fingers into the dish of the community! Nor did
-we fail to compliment him on the change.
-
-By the time that we had completed our survey of the Establishment, our
-“tail” would have been no contemptible rival to that of Mr.
-O’Connell—every Professor and Officer connected with the Institution
-having made his bow, and joined the party. And not the least conspicuous
-of the number was the Professor of Fortification, who, besides being a
-Creole, had one of the most frightful and resolute squints I ever had
-the misfortune to meet with; and the Captain of the Guard, a very
-corpulent and consequential negro. Black officers and soldiers are,
-however, common in Turkey, where a man’s colour is never construed into
-an objection to profit by his services, nor an excuse for leaving them
-unrewarded.
-
-Having described in detail the external arrangements of the Military
-College of Turkey, it now remains for me to advert to its moral
-condition, and this is truly a melancholy task; for, rich as I have
-shown it to be in all the outward attributes necessary to such an
-Establishment, it is utterly destitute of the more essential requisites
-for insuring the important end of its foundation.
-
-Care and cost have been lavished upon it unsparingly: it is a favourite
-toy of the Sultan—a subject of ceaseless thought and interest to Achmet
-Pasha, to whose immediate control it has been entrusted—the one
-engrossing object of Azmi Bey’s solicitude—the Great National
-Scholastic Establishment—the nursery for the Imperial Army. But, alas!
-despite all these advantages, it is like the Statue of Pygmalion ere it
-was warmed to life—a body without a soul—matter without mind—a
-splendid machine, without a competent and practised hand to call forth
-its powers, and to work out its effects!
-
-To the courtesy of the several individuals immediately connected with
-the Institution, I have already borne testimony; nor does a doubt exist
-in my own mind of their sincere zeal for its welfare and prosperity.
-But, unhappily, the best intentions, and the most earnest enthusiasm,
-must fail to compensate the painful deficiency of that talent and
-experience necessary to its success. Could sentiment be deepened into
-science, and inclination be wrought into ability, the Military College
-would take high ground; for the students are eager in the pursuit of
-knowledge, but, where the means are limited, the effects must be
-comparatively inconsequent: and it is a melancholy truth that the
-untiring application, the admirable docility, and the promising talents
-of the pupils, can only conduct them to a certain point, beyond which
-their best efforts will not enable them to progress unassisted. This is
-more particularly the fact as regards the youth of Turkey, from the
-circumstance of their being by nature imitative rather than inventive;
-and, moreover, not possessing those opportunities of observation and
-individual research which lead the students of Europe to rely in no
-trifling degree upon their own mental resources.
-
-In our western world the wings of Genius are never clipped—the sunny
-path of Talent is never overshadowed—the calm brow of Science is never
-clouded—by a deficiency in the means of further improvement,
-encouragement, and support. But Education, as we comprehend the term, is
-yet in its first infancy in Turkey; and should the same evil influence
-which is now blighting with its Upas breath the Ottoman atmosphere be
-long suffered to exhale its poisonous properties, it is certain to
-annihilate all power of improvement.
-
-Perhaps, with the single exception of Great Britain, there exists not in
-the world a more reading nation than Turkey. I have no doubt that this
-assertion will startle many individuals in Europe, who have been
-accustomed, and, indeed, led to believe, that the natives of the East
-are, as a people, plunged in the profoundest ignorance. It is,
-nevertheless, a fact that nearly every man throughout the Empire can
-read and write, and that there are at this moment upwards of eight
-thousand children scattered through the different schools of the
-capital. But the studies of the Osmanlis of both sexes have, with some
-few exceptions, hitherto been confined to the Koran, and to works of an
-inconsequent and useless description; the mere plaything of an idle
-hour, incapable of inspiring one novel idea, or of leaving upon the mind
-impressions calculated to exalt or to enlighten it.
-
-The object of such an Institution as a Public School was undoubtedly to
-widen the mental views, and to enlarge the tastes of the youth of
-Turkey. But, in order to effect this very desirable end, it was
-requisite that the soundest judgment should be exercised in the
-selection of the individuals to whom were committed its different
-departments of literature and science, and this was unfortunately far
-from being the case; the internal economy of the Establishment having
-been entrusted to persons so decidedly incompetent that, with every
-desire to do their duty, they have erred, from their utter ignorance of
-the extent of the task which they have undertaken, or which has been
-forced upon them.
-
-As far as the different Professors are capable of so doing, they have
-directed the studies and formed the tastes of the students; but the
-young and ardent mind, thirsting after knowledge, and earnest in its
-acquirement, demands assistance as progressive as its own advancement.
-The fresh and buoyant spirit requires external aid, at once able and
-judicious, to support its vigour, and to strengthen its yet unpractised
-wing. And where these fail, where the shadow is alone furnished, while
-the substance is wanting, what can be expected from the comparatively
-unassisted efforts of young and unformed intellects, that have not
-simply to struggle onward towards a goal to be attained only by their
-best energies; but also to contend against, and to cast from them, a
-crowd of early prejudices and associations—while they are destitute of
-the assistance of more experienced and mature talents, upon which to
-fall back, when they have themselves just acquired sufficient knowledge
-to feel their own deficiencies?
-
-Let it not be believed for an instant that the Turks, had they been left
-to the free exercise of their own good sense and reflection, are so
-obtuse as not to have made the discovery that the progress of the pupils
-was necessarily retarded by the inexperience and incompetency of the
-preceptors. He who judges thus hastily will wrong them. Already had the
-suspicion sprung up in their minds—already did those on whom the
-authority for so doing more particularly devolved suggest the
-expediency of procuring, from Europe, men of talent, science, and
-judgment, capable of sustaining the credit of the Establishment. But the
-project was crushed in the bud; negatived on its first suggestion; set
-aside by a single sentence; _that_ sentence which has become
-all-powerful in Constantinople—and thus the ruin of the Institution is
-already sealed by the incapacity of its professors, the prejudices of
-its enemies, and the lavish and deceitful encomiums of its false
-friends.
-
-Achmet Pasha has been told that never did establishment prosper like the
-Military College of Constantinople. A foreign minister has declared it
-perfect; and obsequious secretaries and _attachés_ have raised their
-hands and eyes in almost religious wonder. Compliments have been
-lavished on the meagre talents of the masters, and smiles have veiled
-their deficiencies. And thus, flattered into a belief of their own
-sufficiency on the one hand, and misled by misstatements on the other,
-the influential individuals connected with the unhappy College have
-abandoned it to the ruin which must ultimately, and at no distant
-period, overtake it; from the hopeless incapacity of a set of men, who,
-familiar with the name of every science under Heaven, are most of them
-profoundly ignorant of all save the first rudiments of each; and who
-are, consequently, ill calculated to work that great moral change so
-ardently desired by all the true friends of Turkey.
-
-I put forth this assertion boldly, because I have convinced myself of
-its justice; and if—after having stated the eagerness with which the
-students seek to acquire information, the care and cost that have been
-lavished on the College itself, and the zeal and untiring watchfulness
-of those to whose charge it has been intrusted—I am asked the simple
-question of wherefore this great National Institution is crippled in so
-senseless and ruinous a manner by the appointment of inefficient
-individuals to its most important and responsible posts, the answer is
-ready—It is the will of Russia!
-
-The growth of knowledge is the destruction of tyranny and oppression: it
-is the moral axe struck to the core of the wide-spreading Banian of
-usurpation and encroachment—it is the light of mind, dispelling the
-darkness of prejudice and falsehood.
-
-Were Turkey once roused to a perfect estimate of her own moral power,
-she must inevitably cast off the web that has been slowly and craftily
-woven about her; and which, should no friendly hand disentangle its
-intricate threads ere it be yet too late, must ultimately fetter her
-strength beyond all power of resuscitation. To do this she must take an
-enlarged and correct view of her position—she must be able to
-appreciate her just value among the nations—she must be capable of
-combating sophistry with caution, and craft with calculative wisdom.
-This power she can only acquire by placing herself upon a mental
-equality with more civilized Europe; by training up her youth to habits
-of reflection and scientific research; by awakening within their breasts
-the generous emulation of excellence; and by opening before them paths
-of honour and advancement, no longer to be trodden by the weak foot of
-chance, but sacred to superior merit and superior genius.
-
-All this must Turkey accomplish ere she can once again be great and
-free. And it is to prevent this that the subtle policy of her archenemy,
-Russia, strains every nerve, and exerts every energy—the blandishments
-of a flattery, to which she is constitutionally too susceptible for her
-real welfare—the threats of a strength beneath which she is
-unfortunately already bowed almost to the dust—for should some generous
-spark of honour be aroused to resistance, there is the unanswerable
-declaration—_L’Empereur le veut!_ beyond which there is no appeal.
-
-Thus Russia looked upon the College with a jealous eye—it might, if
-suffered to progress towards perfection unchecked, ultimately become a
-great moral engine in the hands of the Turkish government: and this was,
-of course, not to be permitted. The Russian Legation consequently took
-an overwhelming and most generous interest in all the details of the
-establishment; laughed to scorn the necessity of European science and
-European assistance, where native talent was so rife—employed her
-creatures in writing complimentary and fulsome panegyrics on the
-Institution, which were lithographed at the school, and translated for
-the Sultan; and, in short, administered such copious draughts of
-flattery to all connected with the establishment, that their soporific
-effects are painfully apparent in the quiet, self-gratulatory, smiling
-satisfaction of those, who, while they believe that they are nursing the
-new-born Institution into vigour, are actually closing their encircling
-arms so tightly about its throat that they are strangling it in its
-first weakness.
-
-The School has but one hope—and that is unhappily faint and afar off.
-There are now between thirty and forty promising young men studying in
-Europe, who may perchance one day be enabled to effect its
-resuscitation. But years must elapse ere the most gifted pupils are
-eligible to become preceptors: and before those years are past, what may
-be the fate of Turkey? England must resolve the question.
-
-At present it is certain that the Military College is indirectly under
-Russian control and patronage; all the professors having been selected
-openly or covertly by themselves. And thus, one individual, for the
-limited remuneration of about £200 a year, not having the fear of
-ridicule before his eyes, gravely undertakes to impart to his pupils the
-knowledge of some half dozen sciences, among which geography and
-astronomy are far from being the most profound or conspicuous.
-
-Saduk Agha, of whom I have already spoken, is a man of distinguished
-abilities, who, had he been suffered to do so, might have materially
-assisted the studies of the pupils; but this point would have been too
-mighty for Russian policy to concede; and, as it was not judged prudent
-to exclude him altogether, and thus draw down remarks which might have
-proved inconvenient, his services were secured at a salary of £150 a
-year, to teach the Prussian game entitled _Le Jeu de Guerre_, which is a
-species of dissected military map, put together precisely like the
-puzzles used by children in England.
-
-Achmet Pasha, (to whom, as I have already remarked, the superintendence
-of the Institution has been immediately confided), however much he may
-desire its prosperity, has scarcely time, talent, or opportunity, (as I
-think it will be conceded when I have enumerated his multitudinous
-avocations) to give to it the care and attention which it requires from
-its Principal; or to bestow upon it that watchful _surveillance_ so
-necessary to the prosperity of an Establishment for youth. He is Grand
-Chamberlain—Generalissimo of the Imperial Guard—Governor of the
-Military College—Director of the Roads—Grand Master of the
-Artillery—Head of the Police—Inspector of Naval Architecture—_pro
-tempore_ Lord of the Admiralty, and Governor of Natolia—in short, he
-either is, or requires to be, an universal genius.
-
-Azmi Bey, the Military Commandant, with a zeal which retains him a
-willing prisoner almost constantly within the walls of the college, and
-an enthusiasm that neither difficulties nor disappointments have yet
-quenched, is, nevertheless, too young and too inexperienced to be equal
-to meet efficiently the weighty responsibility that has been thrust upon
-him; and for which he is indebted to a quickness of observation, an
-ardent desire of improvement, and a facility of imitation, called forth
-and developed by his brief residence in Europe. All that he was
-competent to effect, he has already accomplished; for he has reduced to
-order the chaos of conflicting prejudices and associations, and habits,
-which met him, Hydra-headed, on the very threshold of his task. From his
-limited experience of European feelings and manners, he has also
-profited sufficiently to enable him to adopt much that was worthy of
-imitation; while, on the other hand, he has judiciously rejected much of
-which the utility and desirableness were at best problematical. The
-easy, I may almost say, affectionate manner of all around him convince
-you at once that he is gentle in his rule; while the earnestness with
-which he interests himself in the most minute details connected with the
-Establishment is an equal proof of his unfeigned desire for its success.
-But the brevity of his European sojourn, and the confusion of ideas, and
-hurry of mind, consequent on a residence in London during the height of
-the season—the rapidity with which he was whirled from military and
-naval colleges to railroads and manufactories, from museums and
-libraries to public gardens and theatres—could scarcely, even with the
-most ceaseless efforts on his own part, have afforded opportunities for
-study, or time for reflection and research, calculated to render him the
-efficient mainspring of so complicated and delicate a piece of machinery
-as a great National Academy.
-
-I fear that I have been prolix on the subject of this interesting
-Establishment, which might have become a moral sceptre in the hand of a
-future Sultan, and which is now “a vain shadow” and “a whitewashed
-sepulchre;” but it is impossible not to feel deeply the cruel wrong
-committed by the false sophisms of a smiling enemy, towards a confiding
-and unsuspicious people; yet was my sympathy unmingled with surprise.
-Did not Russia refuse to allow the Porte to ratify the engagements
-entered into by Reschid Bey with the European officers whom he had
-selected for the service of the Sultan? And was it probable that she
-would permit a nearer and a more certain danger without an effort to
-annihilate it?
-
-One more question, and I have done. Will the traveller in Turkey, fifty
-years hence, have any thing to tell of the Military College of
-Constantinople? Alas! I doubt it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
- Invitation from Mustapha Pasha of Scodra—The Caïque, and the
- Caïquejhes—How to Travel in a Caïque—Hasty
- Glances—Self-Gratulation—Scutari—Imperial Superstition—The
- Seraglio Point—Dolma Batchè—Beshiktash—The Turning
- Dervishes—Beglièrbey—The Kiosks—A Dilemma—A Ruined
- Palace—An Introduction—A Turkish Beauty—A Discovery—A New
- Acquaintance—The Buyuk Hanoum—Fatiguing Walk—Palace of
- Mustapha Pasha—The Harem—Turkish Dyes—Ceremonies of
- Reception—Turkish Establishment—The Buyuk Hanoum—Turkish
- Chaplets—The Imperial Firman—Pearls, Rubies, and
- Emeralds—The Favourite Odalique—Heyminè Hanoum—A
- Conversation on Politics—Scodra Pasha—Singular
- Coincidence—Convenience of the Turkish Kitchen—Luxury of the
- Table—Coquetry of the Chibouk—Turkish Mode of Lighting the
- Apartments—Gentleness towards the Slaves—Interesting
- Reminiscences—Domestic Details—Dilaram Hanoum—A Paragraph on
- Pearls—A Turkish Mirror—A Summons—Scodra Pasha—Motives for
- Revolt—The Imperial Envoy—Submission—Ready Wit of the
- Pasha’s Son—The Reception Room—Personal Appearance of the
- Scodra Pasha—Inconvenient Courtesy—Conversation on
- England—Philosophy—Pleasant Dreams—The Plague-Smitten.
-
-Accompanied by a Greek lady of my acquaintance, I embarked one fine
-morning on board our caïque, to pay a visit to the wife and daughter of
-Mustapha Pasha of Scodra. As his palace was situated in a distant
-quarter of the city, and we were anxious to avoid the necessity of
-rattling over the rude and broken pavement of the streets in an araba,
-we resolved to stretch out beyond the Seraglio Point; and, following
-the walls that are now crumbling into ruin along the coast, disembark at
-Yani-capu, or the New Gate pier.
-
-Our sturdy rowers accordingly bent to their oars, and the arrowy caïque
-shot across the port, and out into the wider sea beyond, like a wild
-bird. The boatmen were clad in their summer garb, for the sunshine lay
-bright upon the water, and scarcely a breath of air murmured among the
-dark branches of the cypress groves. They wore shirts of silk gauze, of
-about the thickness of mull-muslin, with large hanging sleeves, and
-bordered round the breast with a narrow scallopping of needlework; their
-ample trowsers were of white cotton, and their shaven heads were only
-partially covered by small skull-caps of red cloth, with pendent tassels
-of purple silk; their feet were bare.
-
-My companion and myself occupied cushions spread along the bottom of the
-boat: the most comfortable, as well as the safest way to travel in a
-caïque, which, from its peculiar formation, is liable to be overset by
-the slightest imprudence; while our Greek servant, with his legs folded
-under him, was seated on the raised stern of the boat, immediately
-behind us.
-
-What pretty peeps we had of the Seraglio gardens, as we shot along;
-through the many latticed openings contrived for the gratification of
-the fair prisoners. What magnificent glimpses of domes and minarets, of
-bursting foliage, of marble fountains, and of gilded kiosks! But, alas!
-how vain must have been all the luxurious inventions of the most
-luxurious of Sultans, to insure happiness to the tenants of this painted
-prison! I looked around me on the sea-birds that were sporting upon the
-wave—above me, to the fleecy clouds that were sailing over the blue
-ether—far into the distance where a shoal of dolphins were gamboling
-almost above the water; and, as I felt the motion of the swift caïque,
-while it was gently heaved up and down by the current of the sea of
-Marmora, and saw how rapidly we sped along, I breathed a silent
-thanksgiving that _I_ too was free! Free to come and to go—to love or
-to reject—to gaze in turn upon every bright and beautiful scene of
-nature, untrammelled, and unquestioned—that no Sultan could frown me
-into submission—no Kislar Agha frighten me into hypocrisy—in short,
-that I was not born a subject of his Sublime Highness, Mahmoud the
-Powerful.
-
-On our left, rose the lordly mountain of Bulgurlhu Dagi, above Scutari,
-whose shores were fringed with country-houses, and hanging gardens;
-gradually deepening into a sterner character as they receded from the
-Bosphorus, and lifting to the sky the palace-like barrack, and the
-elegant Persian kiosk of the Sultan. The present Sovereign has a
-superstition derived from an astrologer whom he consulted in his youth,
-that, while he is constructing Imperial residences, he is sure to be
-fortunate in his other undertakings; and hence he is continually adding
-to the almost countless numbers of palaces and kiosks, that occupy the
-loveliest spots throughout the vicinity of the capital.
-
-The most extensive and ancient of these is that which is situated at the
-entrance of the harbour, and gives its name to the “Seraglio Point,” the
-walls of the Imperial Seraï running, as I have already mentioned, far
-along the coast. On the opposite shore is the small but elegant palace
-of Scutari, with its bowery terraces, which are overlooked by the
-Sultan’s principal residence of Dolma Batchè; and you may shoot an arrow
-from the many-coloured and irregularly constructed palace of Dolma
-Batchè to the vast edifice now building on the same border of the
-Bosphorus, with infinitely less taste and more architectural
-pretension—although, with true Eastern inconsistency, the whole of the
-stupendous palace above Beshiktash, save the foundation, is of wood,
-surrounded by a colonnade, supported on stately columns of white marble.
-
-This palace, of which the expence is estimated at a million sterling,
-has been already a considerable time in progress; and is erected on a
-locality that was partly occupied by a beautiful kiosk of Sultan Selim,
-and partly by a Tekiè and Chapel of Turning Dervishes.
-
-These latter, with a tenacity altogether incompatible with our European
-ideas of a despotic government, resolutely refused to quit their
-convent, when the plan of the new palace which rendered their ejection
-indispensable was explained to them. They had come to a resolution not
-to move—their mausoleum contained the holy ashes of a saint, and, in
-short, they were determined to measure their strength with the Sultan.
-Accordingly, raising the cry of sacrilege, they continued snugly within
-their convent walls, which were soon overtopped by the Imperial pile
-that rose gradually on either side of them.
-
-But Sultan Mahmoud was born a century too late to be thus baffled—the
-work went on; and he bore the opposition to his will with most exemplary
-patience so long as it did not retard the operations of his architects.
-But, when the moment at length arrived which rendered expedient the
-removal of the fraternity, he claimed from the Chèïk Islam, or High
-Priest, his permission to expel them; and, having failed in procuring
-it, quietly mounted his horse, and rode up to the convent gate. The
-Chief Dervish met him on the threshold, and the dialogue was brief:—
-
-“Your Tekiè occupies the ground necessary to the completion of my
-palace:—you must vacate it.”
-
-“We guard the sepulchre of a saint, may it please your Sublime
-Highness.”
-
-“My pleasure is your immediate removal—I have provided a place of
-reception for your community.”
-
-“We are not strong enough to contend against your Imperial will. We
-obey.” And the fraternity were put in possession of an extensive
-edifice, lately occupied by the Court Jester!
-
-By a strange chance, this house was situated immediately under the holy
-tomb which had afforded to the Dervishes their principal pretext for
-disobedience to the Imperial mandate; and the Sultan adroitly availed
-himself of the fact to impress upon them the eligibility of the
-situation, pointing out, with a solemnity worthy of the occasion, that
-it was more decent for them to be domesticated on the very spot
-consecrated by the remains of the illustrious deceased, than at the
-distance of a furlong, as had hitherto been the case. The observation
-was a happy one, and the remark unanswerable; and the fraternity were
-fain to affect accordance with the sentiment, however inconvenient its
-effects.
-
-Immediately opposite, seated upon the Asian shore, like a regal beauty
-contemplating her gorgeousness in the clear mirror of the Bosphorus,
-rises the summer palace of Beglièrbey—with its walls of pale gold and
-dead white; the prettiest and most fanciful of all the Imperial
-residences, and rendered doubly agreeable by its spacious gardens and
-overhanging groves.
-
-But the kiosks! Who shall number the kiosks! those gilt-latticed,
-many-formed, and graceful toys, which seem as though they had been
-rained from the sky during an hour of sunshine—see them on the heights
-of the Asian shore—seek them in the depths of the “Valley of Sweet
-Waters”—count them as they rise at short distances along the walls of
-the Seraï—pause a moment to admire their fairy-like beauty as you
-gallop through some lovely glen, so wild and solitary that you almost
-fancied yourself to have been the first who has ever explored its
-recesses—any where, every where, you come upon them; and they are so
-neatly kept, so brightly gilt, and so gaily painted, that they look like
-gigantic flowers scattered over the landscape.
-
-But back, my truant fancy, to the sea of Marmora, and the shores of
-Scutari; where the light caïque is bounding over the heaving waters, and
-Mount Olympus, with its crown of snow, is summoning you to memories of
-the days when, if Gods indeed were not, men lent them life! Back to the
-hoary walls of Byzantium—to the lingering relics of the Ancient
-Romans—to the City of the True Believers!
-
-We passed the little bay of Cum-capu, or Sandport, and our caïque
-shortly afterwards shot into the creek of Yani-capu; but we had not left
-the boat five minutes when we became suspicious that the servant was not
-altogether so familiar with the road leading to the palace of the Pasha
-as he had professed to be. Nor were our suspicions erroneous; for, after
-leading us up one street and down another; along the foot of the
-Aqueduct of Justinian; and amid the blackened remains of the last great
-fire, he fairly confessed that he had lost his way.
-
-In this dilemma, we took a guide, who assured us that he was as familiar
-with the palace of the Scodra Pasha as with his own house, and so he
-proved to be; though the trifling inconvenience that ensued convinced us
-that we were as far from our object as ever. After threading a vast
-number of narrow streets, each more filthy than the last, we at length
-reached one which, built on a steep acclivity, boasted a somewhat more
-comfortable and cleanly appearance; the houses were larger and better
-kept, and the shops less frequent and more respectable. Our guide
-stopped before a pair of great gates about half way up the hill, and,
-seizing the knocker, gave very audible evidence of our wish for
-admittance; after which he pocketed his piastres, and withdrew.
-
-On the opening of the gate, we found ourselves in a small covered court,
-choked with rubbish. A house, literally “tottering to its fall,” and
-propped on the garden side with heavy pieces of timber, presented itself
-as the palace of the Pasha; and the door of the harem, which one rude
-blow would have shivered to atoms, was immediately before us.
-
-We looked at each other in wonder; but, as the servant who had given us
-admittance assured us that we had made no mistake, which we were not
-only inclined, but really anxious to believe that we had done, we
-desired to be conducted to the Buyuk Hanoum. A loud blow on the door of
-the harem, most portentously echoed by the void beyond, was instantly
-answered by the appearance of a tall, bony, grinning negress; who,
-having bade us welcome, invited us to follow her to her mistress.
-
-The stairs by which we ascended to the harem creaked and quivered
-beneath our weight; the window that lighted them was uncurtained, and
-its missing panes were replaced by rags and paper—there was no matting
-upon the floor of the empty, chilly, comfortless hall into which the
-apartments opened—and the whole appearance of the place was so desolate
-and wretched, that I shivered as I remembered that I had engaged myself
-to pass the night there.
-
-Having traversed the hall, the slave lifted the heavy curtain veiling
-the door of one of the inner apartments; and, having obeyed her
-bidding, we found ourselves in a small, snug, well-heated room, closely
-carpeted and curtained; and at the instant of our entrance a beautiful
-girl rose from the sofa where she had been seated, and welcomed us with
-a smile and a blush that made us forget at once “the ruin of her house.”
-There was one circumstance connected with the greeting, however, that
-struck us as very singular; she made no allusion to our having been
-expected: but there was, on the contrary, a sort of wonder and curiosity
-in her manner, which, with intuitive good-breeding, she did not express.
-
-We were both still haunted by the idea that there must be some mistake;
-and this impression was heightened by the timid and constrained bearing
-of the young beauty, who, after having clapped her hands, and desired
-the two or three slaves who hastily obeyed the summons to prepare
-sweetmeats and coffee, suddenly sank into silence, as though waiting to
-learn the purport of our visit. My companion, acting upon the
-presumption that some mistake _must_ exist, although she was unable to
-comprehend its nature, once more inquired if she were correct in
-supposing that we were in the palace of the Scodra Pasha.
-
-Again she was answered affirmatively.
-
-“And you are then the beautiful daughter of the Pasha, of whom I have
-heard so much?”
-
-“I am the wife of his son,”—was the reply, which, concise as it was,
-brought a brighter blush to the cheek of the speaker.
-
-And she _was_ beautiful, according to the strict rule of Turkish
-loveliness; with rich red lips, large dark sleepy eyes, and a throat as
-white and dazzling as the inner leaf of the water-lily.
-
-“You are young to be a wife; have you been long married?”
-
-“Exactly twelve months—I am thirteen; my husband is a year older.”
-
-“Did you expect us earlier?”
-
-“Expect you!” echoed the fair Turk, opening her deep eyes in wonder:
-“Mashallah! how could I expect that two Frank ladies would come to visit
-me?”
-
-This was inexplicable!
-
-“I trust that the Pasha has quite recovered his late indisposition,”
-pursued my companion after a moment’s silence.
-
-“I did not know that he was unwell; we have not heard from him lately.”
-
-“Heard from him?” echoed Madame——in her turn; “my husband had a long
-conversation with him yesterday.”
-
-Again the beauty dilated her large eyes in wonder. “Impossible! He is in
-Albania.” Here was the solution of the enigma. We were bound on a visit
-to Mustapha Pasha, the rebel—and we were under the roof of Omer Pasha,
-his present successor!
-
-After a hearty laugh on all sides, we were quite at our ease; the young
-beauty handed scented conserves and coffee to us with her own pretty,
-plump, henna-tipped fingers; and informed us that her mother-in-law, the
-Buyuk Hanoum, and herself, were occupying a house lent to them by a
-friend, for the few weeks which they found it expedient to pass in
-Constantinople, while making their arrangements for Albania, where they
-were shortly to join the Pasha.
-
-After passing half an hour in chatting on various subjects, we rose to
-take our leave, and to profit by the polite offer of our new
-acquaintance to send a servant to point out to us the palace of Mustapha
-Pasha. As we were making our parting compliments, a slave came in to
-request that we would pay a visit to the Buyuk Hanoum in her apartment,
-whither she had just returned from the bath.
-
-We immediately assented, and were conducted to a spacious room at the
-other extremity of the hall, where we found the lady seated under the
-tandour, and almost in darkness; the windows of the room being on the
-old Turkish principle—that is, perforated in a double tier—the lower
-ones so closely latticed that they admitted scarcely any light, and
-barely permitted those within to see into the street; and the upper
-ones, small and half circular, dull with dust, situated close to the
-ceiling, and, in several instances, where time or accident had displaced
-the glass, repaired roughly with thin planks nailed across. The
-atmosphere of the apartment was close and oppressive, perfume having
-been flung into the mangal as we entered, which was rising in a dense
-vapour; and every creek and crevice in the room (and they were not few)
-being stopped with pink paper.
-
-The Buyuk Hanoum received us with much courtesy, and apologized for not
-having welcomed us herself on our first arrival in her own apartment,
-owing to her having been at the moment in the bath; and she appeared
-much amused at the mistake, (of which her slaves had already informed
-her) that had brought us under her roof. She had formerly been a fine
-woman, but was no longer young, and had consequently lost all the
-charming _fraicheur_ (I use the French word, for it is perfectly
-untranslateable) which is the great beauty of Oriental females. In the
-course of conversation, we discovered that she was sister to one of the
-wives of Achmet Pasha; and had herself been to pay a visit to the harem
-of Mustapha Pasha the previous day.
-
-As our engagement still remained to be fulfilled, we did not long linger
-in the apartment of the Buyuk Hanoum; but, taking leave of herself and
-her pretty little daughter-in-law, who had, during our visit, remained
-standing at the end of the room, with her hands folded meekly before
-her, while we shared the sofa of the hostess: we placed ourselves under
-the guidance of a bearded and turbaned Moslem, who was awaiting us in
-the courtyard, and once more sallied forth.
-
-What a walk we had! Up and down, and in and out, until I began to think
-that the tales of Eastern enchantment that I had read in my girlhood
-were now realized for my individual inconvenience, and that the palace
-was receding as rapidly as we advanced. I was not, however, suffered to
-persist in this idle fancy, for we really _did_ arrive at last, although
-some hours later than we should have done, before the great gates of an
-extensive edifice, which I am bound to admit had, externally, more the
-appearance of a barrack than a palace. Half a dozen servants, several of
-them negroes, were lounging in listless idleness at the entrance, which
-our arrival instantly changed into ready and officious bustle.
-
-We were ushered across an extensive courtyard to one of the wings of the
-palace, a vast, irregular, pile of building; and a single stroke upon
-the door of the harem was immediately answered from within: a group of
-smiling female slaves received us in an inner court, wherein stood the
-araba of the Buyuk Hanoum, and a very handsome marble fountain, at
-which a pretty girl of about eighteen was performing her ablutions. A
-couple of the negroes accompanied us up stairs, and, leading us across a
-very handsome saloon, whose recesses were filled with cushions, and
-whose open gallery commanded the court beneath, showed us into a smaller
-apartment, and seated us on a sofa, whereon lay a mandolin and a
-tambourine, probably flung there by some fair musicians whom our
-approach had startled from their pastime.
-
-Here we were shortly joined by a very old woman, who came to pay her
-compliments to us; and who, from her manner, was evidently a
-confidential person in the harem. She had been extremely beautiful, and
-was still a fine ruin; the outline of her features being delicate and
-regular; while her hair, of a bright chesnut colour, unmixed with a
-taint of gray, gave her a softness of expression perfectly singular.
-This latter circumstance only served to convince me of the great
-superiority of the dyes in use among the Turkish women, to those common
-in Europe; a fact which I had already occasion to notice: whatever may
-be the age of a Turkish female, she is seldom disfigured by gray hair,
-but, on the contrary, her tresses are as pure in colour, and as smooth
-and glossy, as those of the youngest girl in her family.
-
-A female slave shortly afterwards appeared to conduct us to the
-apartment of the Buyuk Hanoum, which, when we entered, was half filled
-with attendants, some standing in a semicircle round the mangal, and
-others squatted on the carpet at the extremity of the room.
-
-As this was the first harem that I had visited, where the establishment
-was on the true Turkish footing—or, to speak more plainly, where there
-were more candidates than one for the affections of the master of the
-house, although there was, in point of fact, actually but one wife—I
-paid particular attention to those delicate shades of etiquette and
-gradations of ceremony that I had been prepared to notice in these
-“princely families.”
-
-The Buyuk Hanoum occupied the upper end of the sofa, against which the
-tandour was placed; she was a plain woman, with a cold and somewhat
-stern expression of countenance: and there was more haughtiness in the
-bend and the smile wherewith she welcomed us, than I had yet seen
-exhibited by a Turkish female; when we entered, she was amusing herself,
-as is common with both sexes in this country, (as well Turks as
-Armenians) in passing rapidly through her fingers the beads of a
-chaplet, that rested on the gold-embroidered covering of the tandour.
-
-I must be permitted a momentary digression on the subject of these
-chaplets, which are as popular, or very nearly so, as the chibouk. They
-resemble, somewhat, the rosary of the Roman Catholics, save that instead
-of being terminated by a crucifix and a knot of relics, they are merely
-beads strung upon a silk cord, divided at intervals by some of a larger
-size, and secured, at the junction of the cord, by a carved acorn, or an
-ornament of a like description. They are commonly made of a wood, which,
-becoming heated by the action of the hand emits a delicious perfume; but
-their material depends upon the taste and means of the owner; the poorer
-classes carrying chaplets of berries, common beads, and other cheap
-substitutes, for this somewhat costly indulgence.
-
-The more independent the circumstances of a Turk, and consequently the
-less use he is called upon to make of his hands, the more constantly are
-they employed in toying with his chaplet—his fingers are busy with it
-as he walks along the street—you hear the light click, click, click, of
-the fast-falling beads, as he is squatted on his sofa—nay, so fond is
-he of this dull enjoyment, that, only a short period after my arrival at
-Constantinople, a Firman was issued by the Sultan, forbidding the use of
-the chaplet in the mosques, the noise of so many collected together, and
-all at work at the same time, disturbing the Mufti.
-
-It is composed of ninety-nine beads, without including that which
-connects the ends of the cord. With each of the former, an attribute of
-God is recited thus; Great—Glorious—Excellent—Omnipotent—&c. &c. The
-final bead terminates the ejaculatory prayer, and bears the name of the
-Deity himself.
-
-The chaplet of the Buyuk Hanoum was of fine pearls, beautifully matched,
-and each the size of a pea, the divisions being formed by emeralds
-similarly shaped and sized, and the whole string secured by one
-pear-shaped emerald the size of a hazel-nut.
-
-At the angle of the sofa sat the favourite Odalique of the Pasha, a
-short, slight, unattractive woman of about thirty years of age; with
-common, and rather coarse features, but with a shrewd and keen
-expression that almost made them interesting. Close beside her was
-seated a third lady, who, although certainly not pretty, was
-nevertheless tall, graceful, and delicate, with full, fine eyes, and an
-exquisite complexion; when we entered, she was employed in fondling a
-sweet little child of between one and two years old. A pile of cushions,
-carefully and comfortably arranged, were prepared immediately opposite
-to the seat of the Buyuk Hanoum, for her fair daughter, but the lovely
-Heyminè had not yet left the bath.
-
-At the invitation of the Buyuk Hanoum, we placed ourselves beside her,
-and partook of sweetmeats and coffee, amid the polite greetings of the
-whole party; and the refreshments had scarcely disappeared, when the
-fair bather entered the apartment.
-
-How shall I describe the beautiful Heyminè Hanoum? How paint the soft,
-sweet, sleepy loveliness of the Pasha’s daughter? She was just sixteen,
-at the age when Oriental beauty is at its height, and Oriental
-gracefulness unsurpassed by any gracefulness on earth. Her slight,
-willow-like, figure—her dark deep eyes, long and lustrous, with lashes
-edging like silken fringes their snowy and vein-traced lids—her
-luxuriant hair, black as the wing of the raven—her white and dazzling
-teeth—and the sweet but firm expression of her beautifully formed
-mouth——
-
-I had seen many lovely women in Turkey, but never one so purely, so
-perfectly lovely, as Heyminè Hanoum; and I am not quite sure that I did
-not admire her the more for the deep shade of melancholy that cast a
-sort of twilight over her beauty, and softened, without diminishing, its
-effect.
-
-She had been born in Albania; it was the land of her love; the Buyuk
-Hanoum, her mother, was descended from one of the most powerful and
-princely families of the country; and she had been used to see her
-looked upon with the reverence due to her birth and rank; she
-remembered that the Pasha, her father, had dared, in his pride of
-place, to measure strength with the Sultan, his master, and to defy his
-power—he had failed, but the haughty effort had been made; and the fair
-Heyminè looked back with sadness and regret to the days of past
-splendour and warrior strife amid which she had grown to womanhood. She
-clung to her mother with the loving gentleness that spoke in her deep
-eyes: but she worshipped her father, as something more than mortal; and
-her fair cheek flushed crimson, and her proud lip dilated into smiles,
-as she spoke of him. And how she had garnered up within her heart those
-sweet, sad, memories which mock the brightness of the present! How she
-dwelt upon the country she had loved and lost, and amid whose mountains
-she had breathed the breath of freedom! I never saw the enthusiasm of
-the spirit more legibly written upon the brow of any human being than on
-her’s. It redeemed the apathy of a score of Eastern women!
-
-The Buyuk Hanoum was as far from being reconciled to the change of
-country and position as her daughter; but her sadness was more subdued
-by resignation—she had reached the age when reverses are less keenly
-felt—a calm sorrow sat upon her brow, and breathed in her low,
-tremulous, tone; but the blood which leaped to the brow of the daughter
-in warmer gushes as she spoke of the past only curdled more chillingly
-about the heart of the mother when the same visions arose in vain
-mockery before her, to remind her of what had once been, and could never
-be again!
-
-Scodra Pasha had earned for himself a place on the page of history, but
-he had paid a high and a painful price for the privilege. He had tasted
-for a brief space the intoxicating draught of power, but the bowl had
-been dashed from his lips. He had defied the yoke beneath which he had
-been ultimately bowed, and the iron that has been resisted is ever that
-which eats deepest into the soul.
-
-It must be a severe trial to sink from a leader to a vassal; even when
-it is from a rebel chief to the dependent Pasha of a Sultan. Mustapha
-Pasha had been almost a sovereign in Albania, a brave soldier, and a
-powerful prince; and, when he accepted the conditions of his Imperial
-Master, and bought his life at the price of his country and his fortune,
-the struggle of the spirit must have been a bitter one.
-
-It was a singular circumstance that, at the period of my first visit to
-his harem, he was occupying a palace adjoining that in which resided
-another attainted noble—the Ex-Pasha of Bagdad! Both men of
-information—both blighted in their ambition, and bowed beneath the
-power they had defied—they amused the _ennui_ of their monotonous
-existence with writing poetry; and moralizing on the instability of
-human greatness. I have remarked elsewhere that the Turks are seldom
-found wanting in philosophy.
-
-As we did not arrive at the Pasha’s palace for several hours after we
-were expected, it was supposed that some accidental circumstance had
-prevented our visit, and the family had consequently dined before we got
-there: but such an occurrence as this never causes the slightest
-inconvenience in a Turkish house, where the culinary arrangements are so
-regulated that you can command an excellent repast at whatever moment
-you may chance to require it.
-
-On the present occasion, I rather regretted that the profuse and even
-sumptuous dinner that was served up to us was, from an excess of
-courtesy on the part of our entertainers, perfectly European in its
-arrangement, being accompanied by silver forks, knives, and chairs; but
-the luxury of the East had, nevertheless, its part in the banquet, for
-the cloth that covered the table was enriched with a deep border of
-exquisite needlework, and the napkins of muslin, almost as impalpable as
-a cobweb, were richly embroidered in gold. Wine was handed to us on a
-beautifully chased golden salver, and the glasses from which we drank it
-were of finely cut crystal; while the table stood upon a tapestry
-carpet.
-
-But the most beautiful objects employed during the repast were the
-silver basin, strainer, and vase, that were held by two black slaves for
-us to wash our hands, while a third stood a pace behind them, bearing
-upon his arm the napkin, wrought with a border of flowers in coloured
-silks, whereon they were to be dried. The vase, shaped like that from
-which Ganymede might have poured wine for Imperial Jove, was chased in
-the most delicate manner with grapes and vine leaves; and the same
-design enriched the border of the capacious basin.
-
-As soon as we had dined, we adjourned to the private apartment of
-Heyminè Hanoum, at her especial invitation; when the young beauty, freed
-from the restraint of her mother’s presence, clapped her hands, and
-ordered her pipe, which she smoked with as much grace and gusto as any
-Moslem of the Empire. They who cavil at this application of the word
-_grace_, have certainly never seen a young Turkish woman manage her
-chibouk—Nothing can be more coquettish!
-
-The chapter on fans, so celebrated in the “Spectator,” might be
-out-written a hundredfold by one competent to describe the manœuvres
-of an Eastern beauty, with her amber-lipped and gold-twisted pipe. Such
-soft and studied attitudes—such long and slowly-drawn respirations,
-having all the sentiment of a sigh without its sadness—such clasping
-and unclasping of the delicate fingers about the slender tube—-no
-novice should venture to smoke beside a Turkish woman, who is not
-satisfied to look as awkward as a poor mortal can desire!
-
-We were all comfortably nestled among our cushions; and, on a small
-round table at the extremity of the apartment, stood a tray, bearing
-four wax lights. This custom of clustering the candles together is
-common in both Turkish, Armenian, and Greek houses; and is peculiarly
-congenial to the indolence of Eastern habits, as it leaves such deep
-shadows in the distance, that those who have no immediate occupation to
-confine them to the vicinity of the glare may doze in undisturbed
-twilight on their sofas.
-
-At intervals, a slave entered to trim the candles, or to replenish the
-pipe of Heyminè Hanoum; and each lingered awhile, unchidden, to listen
-to a fragment of the conversation, or to indulge in another gaze at the
-Frank strangers; among the rest, one pale, languid-looking woman, who
-complained of sudden and severe suffering, and to whom the Pasha’s
-daughter spoke even more kindly and gently than to any of the others,
-squatted down near the door, and remained a considerable time, with her
-head drooping on her bosom, apparently amused in spite of her
-indisposition.
-
-The slaves, both black and white, were innumerable—I should think that
-we had at least a score in attendance on us during dinner.
-
-Despite the occasional interruptions that I have described, our
-conversation became gradually extremely interesting. The young beauty
-talked of Albania—of the proud and happy life that she had led there
-during her father’s prosperity; and then of the misery which she had
-endured in exchanging its delights for the chilling observances and
-restraints of the Turkish capital. Had the heart of Heyminè Hanoum beat
-in the breast of her father, let the result have been what it might, he
-never would have recanted his rebellion.
-
-From the political position of her family, she digressed to its social
-condition; and I was not a little amused by the perfect _sang froid_
-with which she entered into a detail of the domestic arrangements of the
-household.
-
-“You have seen my brother;” she said, “and I need not tell you that he
-is delicate and sickly. He was my mother’s last child, and the Pasha
-feared that he should be left without a son. In this dilemma, he
-expressed to the Buyuk Hanoum his desire to contract a second marriage;
-but this she would by no means permit. She could not, however, avoid
-seeing that his anxiety was but too well founded: and she accordingly
-proposed a compromise, to which he at once agreed. Without loss of
-time, he wrote to a friend in Constantinople to purchase for him four
-young Circassians, and to embark them, under the charge of an elderly
-woman, for Albania.
-
-“Young as I was, I shall not attempt to describe to you my mortification
-on their arrival. I saw the tears of my mother, which, when alone with
-me, she did not attempt to suppress; we had hitherto had but one heart
-and one interest in the harem of my father, and we became suddenly
-domesticated with strangers—women of another land and another language;
-to whom we were knit by no ties, bound by no sympathies.
-
-“But all this is idle. You saw the Odalique who sat nearest to my
-mother? Allah has been gracious to her—she has borne two sons to the
-Pasha.—She with the large dark eyes, who when you entered was nursing
-her infant, has no other child than that one little girl. A third you
-will shortly see, when she pays me her visit previously to retiring for
-the night: I love her much, but she, poor thing! is childless. The
-fourth died in consequence of her sufferings during the passage to
-Albania, which was tempestuous and protracted. The aged woman who
-received you on your arrival was the person who accompanied the four
-Circassians from Constantinople, and—but here is Dilaram Hanoum.”
-
-As she spoke, the curtain that shaded the door was pushed aside, and the
-Odalique entered. She was by far the prettiest woman of the three, but
-there was a subdued and hopeless expression about her, which showed at
-once that she had not been a favourite child of fortune. She was slight
-and beautifully formed, with a low, soft voice which was almost music.
-She appeared much attached to the lovely Heyminè, and hastened, after
-the first salutations were over, to replenish the pipe that rested
-beside the young beauty, and to hand it to her; a mark of attention and
-respect which was acknowledged by its object with the graceful
-salutation common in the East—the pressure of the fingers of the right
-hand to the lips and brow.
-
-The conversation was, of course, changed on her entrance; and the
-subject of jewels having been mentioned, Heyminè Hanoum despatched a
-slave for a handkerchief with which she was in the habit of binding up
-her hair, in order to show us one of the Albanian fashions. It was of
-black muslin, painted with groups of coloured flowers, and bordered all
-round with a deep fringe of fine pearls. I never in my life saw any
-mixture which produced a more striking effect; and when she wound it
-about her head—the dark glossy tresses of her hair relieved by the
-bright tints of the flowers, and the whiteness of her clear brow
-rivalling the pearls that rested on it—her crimson jacket, lined with
-sable, falling back, and revealing the transparent chemisette of gauze,
-and the fair throat which it shaded—the pale blue silk trowsers trimmed
-with silver, and the small white naked foot that peeped for an instant
-from beneath them as she altered her position—I thought that earth
-could hold nothing more lovely than Heyminè Hanoum!
-
-I was very busily engaged in examining an elegant hand-mirror set in a
-frame of chased silver, when a couple of negroes entered to invite us to
-the presence of the Pasha, who was awaiting us in his apartment. I have
-already mentioned that one room in the harem is appropriated to the
-master of the house, wherein he receives such of its inmates as he
-desires to converse with.
-
-The message was scarcely delivered when the Buyuk Hanoum, whom the Pasha
-had desired to introduce us, entered the apartment, evidently somewhat
-surprised at the honour which was about to be bestowed upon two female
-Infidels. I had heard a great deal of the Scodra Pasha, and I naturally
-desired to see him; nor perhaps may it be amiss to impart to my readers
-a portion of his history.
-
-Mustapha Pasha was residing on his Pashalik in Albania when Sultan
-Mahmoud reformed the national costume of the country, and replaced the
-lofty turbans and flowing garments of past centuries, with the scarlet
-_fèz_ and frock coat of the present day. When the order for this change
-reached the Pasha, he at once communicated it to the troops, who
-resisted it with such violence as to threaten not only the liberty, but
-the life of their Chief if he persisted in its enforcement. In vain did
-he argue, explain, and persuade; the soldiery, wedded to their ancient
-usages, refused to listen to his reasonings; their opposition being
-furthermore aggravated by a conscription, enforced with sufficient
-severity to lend them arguments against all concession to a power by
-which they were thus oppressed; and he finally found himself compelled
-to adopt a decided line of conduct in order to insure his own personal
-safety.
-
-Already nearly in a state of siege in one of his palaces—surrounded by
-troops on whom he could by no means depend, seconded as they were by the
-people, in the indignation excited by the threatened infringement on
-their cherished habits—drawing the whole of his revenue from the
-soil—married to a lady of the country—possessed of considerable
-property within the Pashalik—and threatened with death by an infuriated
-populace—it cannot be wondered at that Mustapha Pasha, thus hard
-pressed, resolved to assist his people in the struggle; and
-strengthening his army, and trusting to his mountain fastnesses,
-determined on a resistance to the Imperial will which at once placed
-Albania in a state of revolt.
-
-It were tedious to detail at length the various fortunes of the rebel
-Pasha: a brave man, beloved by his troops, and sincere in the same
-cause—greatly assisted, moreover, by the mountainous and difficult
-character of the country naturally possesses the means of making head
-against a superior power to his own; and thus it was with the Scodra
-Pasha. Many abortive attempts were made to dislodge and capture him, by
-an army under the command of Reschid Mehemet Pasha, but in vain. He
-still held on his way, until at length the Sultan, irritated at the
-ill-success of his endeavours, despatched Achmet Pasha with full power
-to act as a pacificator, and to use all possible means to recall the
-rebel chief to his allegiance, and an order not to return without having
-terminated the rebellion.
-
-Thus instructed, the Imperial Envoy left the capital for Albania; and
-his attempts were not destined to be as fruitless as those of his
-predecessors. The rebel Pasha’s army had fought for their lives as well
-as their privileges; they had gone too far to recede; and Achmet Pasha
-felt at once the utter futility of persisting in a system of violence
-which could produce no definite result. The character of his adversary
-was well known to him; it was high, honourable, and unsullied, save by
-his revolt against his Imperial Master; and it was to this knowledge
-that he resolved to trust, in order to bring about a submission which
-the Sultan’s arms were unable to effect. He accordingly despatched a
-messenger to Mustapha Pasha, by whom he requested an interview; and, to
-prove that no treachery was intended on the one hand, or feared on the
-other, he offered to place himself in the power of the rebel leader, by
-meeting him alone and unattended wherever he might appoint.
-
-The Scodra Pasha, a man of amiable disposition and quick feelings, was
-touched by this mark of confidence, and unhesitatingly acceded to the
-request; when Achmet Pasha, without further delay, fulfilled the
-conditions which he had imposed upon himself, mounted his horse, and
-rode boldly off to the palace of the rebel. He was received with the
-utmost courtesy; coffee and pipes were introduced, and the two Pashas
-sat down side by side upon their cushions to discuss the important
-subject of their meeting.
-
-To a man of Mustapha Pasha’s good sense and sound judgment, it was by no
-means difficult for his visitor to demonstrate in the clearest manner
-the hopelessness of his situation. It was true that hitherto he had
-baffled all the attempts of the Imperial troops, by the wisdom of his
-measures, the judiciousness of his arrangements, the bravery of his own
-bearing, and the zeal of his soldiery. But this state of things could
-not last for ever—he was feeding upon his own strength, and his
-resources must ultimately fail—he had yet time to make a creditable and
-a free submission—he had still an opportunity to save his head—but,
-when he yielded from weakness, (and, should he persist in his rebellion,
-the bitter hour of helplessness must come;) how could he look for a
-mercy which he had rejected when it was freely extended to him?
-
-Thus pressed, both by exterior argument and internal conviction; wearied
-also, it may be, of opposition to a sovereign whom he reverenced; the
-rebel leader asked time for deliberate consideration ere he returned a
-definite answer to the proposition—he stipulated also that an assurance
-should be solemnly given that his own life and those of his family
-should be spared; which Achmet Pasha did not hesitate to promise upon
-the spot. It was accordingly determined that the latter should remain
-two days in the palace of the rebel chief, when he should either depart
-alone, and unmolested, bearing with him the continued defiance of the
-revolted province; or that he should return to Constantinople
-accompanied by his host, and the females of his family, under the
-safeguard of his plighted word.
-
-The latter alternative was adopted; and Achmet Pasha ultimately returned
-to Constantinople in company with the Scodra Pasha and his Harem. The
-fortune of the rebel chief was confiscated, and a hundred and twenty
-thousand piastres a-year settled upon him to supply the means of
-existence. But some time elapsed ere he was admitted to the presence,
-and allowed the high honour of kissing the foot, of his Sublime
-Highness.
-
-On the same occasion he presented his two eldest sons, with whom the
-Sultan was so much pleased that he created them Pashas on the instant;
-and, having entered into conversation with them, he inquired how they
-liked the _fèz_, upon which the younger of the two, a fine boy of eight
-years of age, answered with a promptitude worthy of an accomplished
-courtier, that he had always liked it, but since he had seen it on the
-head of the Sultan, he should like it a thousand times better; a reply
-which so delighted Mahmoud that he immediately presented him with a
-watch magnificently enriched with diamonds. Nor was the child less
-fortunate throughout the audience, for the smiling sovereign tried him
-with another question, to which he answered with even more point—“And
-which do you like the best, my young Pasha?” asked the Sultan:
-“Constantinople or Albania?”
-
-“Constantinople,” replied the boy; “because you are here—the leaves
-cannot come upon the trees without the sun; and we cannot grow up to be
-brave men if we are not near you.”
-
-No wonder that Mustapha Pasha looks upon the mother of the boy as “the
-Light of the Harem.”
-
-The Buyuk Hanoum led us across the outer saloon to a spacious staircase,
-then across an upper hall, through a short gallery, and finally to the
-door of the Pasha’s apartment. As I crossed the threshold, I was
-actually dazzled with light: the room was large; and was raised one step
-at the upper end, round which ran the sofa. Two tables, bearing trays of
-candles, were placed near the entrance; and a silver branch holding
-others was in the arched recess between them. The curtains and the
-covering of the sofa were of crimson satin, the latter fringed with gold
-a foot in depth, and furnished with cushions of gold tissue embroidered
-with coloured silk. At the extremity of the dais a pile of cushions were
-heaped upon the floor; and at the upper end of the sofa squatted the
-Pasha, with a negro slave on each side of him, busied in arranging his
-pipe which had been just replenished. A capacious mangal, heavy with
-perfume, occupied the centre of the floor.
-
-Mustapha Pasha is still in the prime of life; of the middle size, with
-an agreeable and sensible expression of face, and a slight cast in one
-of his eyes. He received us very courteously, and ordered chairs for my
-friend and myself near his own seat, while he motioned the Buyuk Hanoum
-to be seated also; an intimation which she obeyed by placing herself on
-the extreme edge of the sofa. The next ceremony was to cause pipes to be
-presented to my companion and myself; the greatest honour that can be
-conferred on a female in Turkey being an invitation to smoke in the
-presence of the other sex.
-
-This was indeed a dilemma, for smoking had formed no part of my
-education; and I knew that, did I even raise the pipe to my lips, I
-should infallibly be ill; but the Pasha fortunately remarked the slight
-shudder and the gesture of repugnance with which I took it from the hand
-of the slave; and he immediately requested me to refuse it, if I found
-it disagreeable, as he merely sought to pay me a compliment by offering
-it.
-
-I need not say how gladly I availed myself of the permission, much to
-the amusement of the Pasha; who, after he had inhaled a few whiffs of
-his own chibouk, sent a second message to the harem, which was answered
-by the speedy appearance of Heyminè Hanoum and the favourite Odalique. A
-motion of his hand invited both to take their places upon the cushions
-already alluded to; and then I remarked the ascendency of the latter
-over the spirit of the Pasha—an ascendency due probably as much to her
-being the mother of his two sons, as to her natural shrewdness of
-intellect. Be that as it may, however, it was easy to perceive that she
-was a woman of great natural talent, and wonderful quickness of
-perception; and very likely to retain the supremacy that she had gained.
-
-The Pasha understood a little French, but did not attempt to speak it;
-though it is probable that he will soon do so, as he is studying the
-language with unwearying perseverance. He has already formed a very
-respectable library, where he has collected together the works of
-Voltaire, Racine, Boileau, Molière, and many other standard authors; and
-he has done so thus prematurely, he says, in order that the sight of the
-volumes may stimulate him to industry; as he never looks towards them
-without reflecting on the riches that are hidden from him by his
-ignorance of the language, and which may one day be within his grasp.
-
-I was astonished at many of the questions that he asked me; they were so
-unlike the generality of those to which I had already become accustomed
-in the country. He was very inquisitive on the subject of the Thames
-Tunnel—inquired as to its probable expense—the period at which it was
-likely to be completed—the width of the river at that precise
-spot—the amount of the toll to be paid by passengers—the mode in
-which the money had been obtained for its construction—in what manner
-it would be lighted—in short, he entered into every particular
-connected with the undertaking so earnestly, that I had reason to
-congratulate myself on being able to satisfy his curiosity.
-
-He next asked a number of questions relatively to the Fire Insurance
-Companies of London, of which he had heard vaguely; and, when I had
-explained to him the whole of the system, he expressed his regret that
-no institution of the kind had been established in Constantinople; a
-want to which he was the more sensible as he had lately lost a house
-filled with valuable furniture and effects, of which he had been unable
-to save the smallest portion. He inquired if I thought that one of our
-Companies would consent to accept an insurance for his palace; as in the
-event of their being willing to do so, he would immediately take steps
-to make the arrangement. I explained to him the difficulty of inducing
-them to run so great a risk, aware as they must be of the frequency of
-fires in Stamboul, and the exorbitant interest they would require in the
-event of their consenting to his wish: when he at once allowed the
-objection to be perfectly reasonable, although he much regretted the
-necessity of abandoning the idea.
-
-In the course of conversation, some allusion having been made to the
-philosophy with which he supported his reverses, his reply was so
-characteristic that it deserves record. “The chariot of my fortunes,” he
-said, “had, for so long a time, run smoothly over the highways of life,
-that I ought rather to feel surprise at its even pace during so many
-years, than wonder that its wheels should fail at last.”
-
-To comment on such an answer would be idle.
-
-It was not without regret that I took leave of the Pasha, whose
-courteous manners and intelligent conversation rendered him a most
-agreeable companion; and, had I been able to converse with him in his
-own language, I have no doubt that I should have been still more
-impressed in his favour. Before we quitted him, he invited us to spend a
-few days with the Buyuk Hanoum, and his daughter, during the marriage
-festivities of the Princess Mihirmàh, at a house which he had taken at
-the “Sweet Waters;” and, as we re-entered the harem, I could not refrain
-from expressing to the fair Heyminè my admiration of the intelligence
-and information of her father. But all praise of the Pasha to his
-daughter was “gilding refined gold, painting the lily, and throwing a
-perfume o’er the violet;” human commendations could not exalt him higher
-in her esteem.
-
-If splendour could insure repose, we were destined to a long night of
-slumber beneath the roof of Mustapha Pasha, for our beds were one blaze
-of gold and embroidery; and it is certain that the fair form which
-hovered about me until I sank upon my pillows had a most pleasant
-influence over my dreams; I never passed a more delicious night. I had
-visions of beauty, of which the lovely Heyminè was the type and subject:
-and if some faint impressions of strife and suffering mingled in the
-illusion, a bright smile and a soft glance dispelled the gloom, and
-brought back the light and the loveliness, that had been veiled for a
-moment, with tenfold lustre.
-
-In the morning we returned to Pera, carrying with us a store of pleasant
-memories for which we were indebted to this amiable family; and it was
-not without a very painful emotion that we learnt, in the course of the
-second day after we had quitted them, that the harem of the Pasha was
-dispersed in all directions, and the palace completely empty. The sick
-slave, whom I mentioned as having passed a considerable time in the
-apartment of Heyminè Hanoum, had died the previous night of plague!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
- Procession of Betrothal—Preliminary Ceremonies—The Mantle of
- Mahomet—The Palace of the Seraskier Pasha—The Palace
- Square—Picturesque Groups—An Interior—Turkish
- Children—Oriental Curiosity—Costume of the Turkish
- Children—Military Music—The Procession—Hurried Departure of
- the Crowd—The Seraskier’s Tower—The Fire Guard—Candidates
- for the Imperial Bride—Imperial Expedient—Saïd Pasha—Policy
- of the Seraskier—An Audience—The Biter Bitten—Ingenious
- Ruse—Sublime Economy—Brilliant Traffic—The Danger of
- Delay—The Marriage Gifts—An Interesting Interview.
-
-A few days after my visit to the harem of Scodra Pasha, my father and
-myself started at nine o’clock in the morning to Constantinople, to be
-present at the procession consequent on the betrothal of the Princess
-Mihirmàh, the Sultan’s second daughter; a lovely girl of nineteen, about
-to be bestowed on Mohammed Saïd Pasha, who had been summoned from his
-Pashalik, at the Dardanelles, to receive at the hand of his Imperial
-Master this most honouring of all gifts.
-
-But, before describing the procession, it may not perhaps be amiss to
-record some of the less public ceremonies of the betrothal, for which I
-am indebted to an eye-witness.
-
-The day fixed upon for its celebration was the 7th of April; and, at
-the hour which the Court Astrologer had decided to be the most
-auspicious for the assembling together of the individuals necessary to
-its completion, who had received their notes of invitation two days
-previously from the Kislar-Aghasi (Chief of the Eunuchs), they met in
-the private apartment of the Imperial Treasurer, near the chamber that
-contains the holy Mantle of Mahomet—the same sacred locality that
-witnessed the betrothal of the elder Princess. Here the whole company
-entered at the moment which had also been previously pointed out by the
-Astrologer as fortunate, and remained for some time in religious
-silence, in presence of the inestimable relic; after which each member
-of the distinguished circle seated himself upon the carpet that had been
-prepared for him.
-
-The Grand Vizier, Mohammed Ronouf Pasha, took the upper place upon the
-sofa, having near him the Chèïk-Islam, (or High Priest) Mekki Zadè
-Moustafa Assim Effendi, who officiated on the august occasion. On the
-right sat the chief of the Eunuchs of the Imperial Seraglio, who acted
-as the proxy of the Princess; and whose witnesses were the Commissioner
-of the Imperial Treasury, and Osman Agha, one of the principal
-Eunuchs.—On the left was placed the adopted father and representative
-of Mohammed Saïd Pasha, the Seraskier—having for his witnesses, Halil
-Rifat Pasha, the Sultan’s son-in-law, Akhmet Fevzi Pasha, Military
-Counsellor of the Palace, and Mohammed Saïd Pertew Effendi, Minister of
-the Interior, and Counsellor of State, with four others. Among the
-Chèïks and the men of letters who were admitted to this august assembly,
-to mingle their prayers with those of the Chèïk-Islam, were Elhadj
-Yousouf Effendi, Chief of the Chèïks, and preacher at the great mosque
-of St. Sophia; and Elhadj Abdoullah Effendi, first chaplain of the
-mosque of Eyoub, and preacher at the mosque of Sultan Akhmet.
-
-They were no sooner seated than the officers attached to the service of
-this chamber, which bears the name of Khirkaï-Chériff, presented to each
-person perfumes and rose-water according to the Eastern custom; and,
-when they withdrew, the doors were closed, and the ceremony commenced
-with a prayer by the Chèïk-Islam, for the divine blessing on the union
-they were then assembled to celebrate; after which he put the customary
-questions to the proxies of the two contracting parties.
-
-As soon as the act of betrothal was terminated, the doors were again
-thrown open, and the two Chèïks pronounced a prayer suited to the
-occasion. At the close of the prayer, the distinguished party quitted
-the Khirkaï-Chériff, and passed into a neighbouring apartment, where
-they partook of the refreshments provided for them, and were waited upon
-by the keeper of the Privy Purse, who presented to them the rich gifts
-with which his Sublime Highness was pleased to honour them. They then
-left the palace.
-
-As soon as they had departed, the Sultana-Mother sent by the Bach-Agha
-(Eunuch and Major Domo) the nuptial offering of the bride to the
-bridegroom, who was awaiting it at the palace of the Seraskier, and
-superintending at the same time the arrangement of his own marriage
-present, which was to be conveyed with great pomp to the Seraï. The
-procession was to start from the palace of the Seraskier (the
-bridegroom’s adopted father) at half-past ten o’clock, and we
-accordingly hired a window overlooking the line of march; whence we
-could see the train issue from the palace court, cross the extensive
-space in front of it, and finally lose itself in a narrow street leading
-to the Imperial residence.
-
-The esplanade on which we looked down was crowded with horsemen,
-footmen, and carriages. Groups of women were squatted immediately in the
-rear of the soldiers, who lined the space along which the procession was
-to move; others occupied a raised platform erected by some speculative
-Moslem, whereon a place could be secured for the modest remuneration of
-a piastre, (two-pence halfpenny.) Rows of arabas, like beds of scarlet
-poppies, were ranged behind the pedestrians; while, further from the
-scene of action, parties were scattered over the whole square in the
-most picturesque confusion. Here a train of Serudjhis walked the horses
-that they had brought for hire; there a knot of Jews chattered and
-gesticulated; while their women huddled themselves up in the coarse
-cotton scarfs which concealed their head-dresses. On one side the snowy
-turbans and dark robes of half a dozen Ulemas formed a striking contrast
-to the green shawls bound about the brows of a group of Hadjïs, and
-their ample pelisses of crimson or maroon, lined and overlaid with fur.
-Here it was a party of soldiers—there a band of Bulgarians, dressed in
-jackets of sheepskin, with the wool turned inwards, round caps of black
-lambskin, and leather leggings. Then moved by a score of Armenians, with
-their tall calpacs and crimson slippers—jostled, as they passed slowly
-along, by a set of Franks, crushing and squeezing, as though they were
-resolved to carry their point, _coute qui coute_.
-
-On a little hillock near the window that we occupied, a couple of Turks
-had spread their carpet, and were quietly smoking their chibouks,
-attended by their negro pipe-bearers; while here and there a gigantic
-umbrella of white cotton overshadowed a round stand covered with
-sherbet and mohalibè, around which were clustered a throng of noisy
-Greeks, each with eyes as black as the shawl that he wore about his
-scarlet _fèz_.
-
-Nor was the scene within the room less characteristic than that without;
-the remaining windows had been hired by four grave-looking elderly
-Turks, who had brought with them half a dozen pretty little girls, of
-eight or ten years of age; who were sitting, doubled up at one corner of
-the sofa, with all the early taught awe and deference for the lordly sex
-which is the leading sentiment of the harem.
-
-Our entrance, however, aroused them into something like action; for
-while our dragoman explained who and what we were, whence we came, and
-whither we were bound:—questions which are asked by the grave and
-bearded Moslem, as unceremoniously as by any one of our Trans-Atlantic
-brethren, and without the slightest suspicion on his own part that he is
-guilty of any impertinence—I made an easy acquaintance with the pretty
-children, by permitting them to handle the flowers in my bonnet, to
-touch my shawl, and to run their little plump fingers over my
-waist-ribbon. And when the grandee of the party who occupied the upper
-end of the sofa, whereon, moreover, his attendants had spread a carpet
-of crimson shag, fringed with gold, as though the ignoble chintz were
-not worthy the honour of receiving him, had taken the chibouk from his
-own mouth, and sent it by his pipe-bearer to my father—a mark of high
-consideration rather flattering than fastidious—and my father had, in
-his turn, despatched the dragoman, to spread before the children a feast
-of mohalibè, frosted over with powdered sugar, we were all the best
-friends in the world.
-
-One of the little girls—a calm, self-centered, true Turkish child, with
-all the premature languishment and indolence so peculiar to the women of
-the country, with black, sleepy eyes, and lips like rose-buds—was clad
-in a jacket of purple velvet, lined with ermine, and laced with gold;
-her antery of pale pink muslin was tucked up within the cachemire shawl
-that she wore about her waist; and her large trowsers of green chintz
-fell in ample plaits over the little naked feet, which, when she rose
-from the sofa, were scarcely covered at the extremities by the yellow
-slippers that lay beside her.
-
-Another, perhaps a year younger, had her jacket of crimson merino
-doubled with sable, and her little Symrniote fèz worked with seed
-pearls; her antery was yellow, her trowsers blue, and her chemisette of
-pale amber-coloured gauze. Nothing can be more outré than the costume of
-a little Turkish maiden; the long hair hanging in a score of minute
-braids, each confined at the extremity with a small knot of ribbon; the
-tight sleeves, open from the elbow, falling below the hip, and edged
-with elaborately wrought silk fringe; the round, white, dimpled feet,
-peeping out beneath the full trowsers; and the heavy jacket folding back
-from the ivory shoulders and snowy throat.
-
-There is no distinction of dress between the child of two years old and
-the woman of twenty; the same jewels, the same fashion, the same
-material, compose the one and the other; they differ only in quantity;
-the diamonds, except upon great occasions, are lavished on the children;
-and in fringe, and embroidery, and ribbon, they only yield to their
-elders, because there is not sufficient space upon their little persons
-to enable their parents to equalize the consumption between them.
-
-At length, the distant sounds of military music came to us from the
-Palace court, and forth issued the Sultan’s Band, playing his Grand
-March; this was succeeded by a regiment of the line, moving in double
-files: then rode forward about a score of staff officers, including
-several generals of brigade, and colonels of the Imperial Guard,
-surrounded by servants on foot; these were succeeded by two open
-carriages and four, empty—and after these came the presents of the
-bridegroom to the Imperial Family. First walked a hundred men of the
-Seraskier’s establishment; about a score of whom bore upon their heads
-cages of wire, covered with coloured gauze, ornamented with flowing
-ribbons, and filled with sweetmeats of the most costly description,
-piled in porcelain dishes; the frosted sugar glittering in the light
-like jewels. Those were succeeded by others charged with silk stuffs of
-the most rare qualities, produced by the Indian looms—Cachemires of
-Tibet and Lahor—and other magnificent gifts, destined for the Sultan
-Mother.
-
-The offerings to the bride followed. They consisted of two toilette
-services of massive silver, containing the most delicious perfumes of
-the East; a silver dinner service, arranged on a plateau of the same
-metal; several silver salvers covered with precious stones, and
-ornaments of gold and silver, and others heaped with gold coins: the
-whole covered with cages of silver net-work. Each of these bearers was
-attended by a page.
-
-Then followed four more, having on their heads trays of shawls, folded
-in coloured muslin—and next came a dozen men, charged with all the
-articles necessary for the bath, under transparent coverings. One
-carried the pattens of ebony, inlaid with stars of mother-of-pearl, and
-clasped over the foot with a band of brilliants; another, the
-head-kerchief of silver tissue, embroidered with wreaths of silken
-flowers; the third, a pile of silk napkins, fringed with gold; the
-fourth, a wrapping-cloth of flowered satin; the fifth, a capacious basin
-of burnished gold; the sixth, a comb of ivory, enriched with diamonds;
-the seventh, a pair of slippers, wrought with emeralds and seed pearl;
-the eighth, a chemisette of pale pink gauze, edged round the bosom with
-silver fringe; the ninth, a cut crystal box clasped with gold,
-containing scented soaps; the tenth, an ebony essence case, studded with
-rubies; the eleventh, a hand-mirror in a gold frame, surrounded by a
-garland of jewels; and the twelfth, a sofa covering of crimson velvet,
-flowered and fringed with gold.
-
-Four eunuchs in brown and gold followed the presents; and were succeeded
-by an escort of sergeants of the line; after which appeared the
-Seraskier Pasha, surrounded by a brilliant staff, and preceding a second
-regiment of infantry, with the bright barrels of their fire-locks
-flashing in the sunshine, and attended by their band. These terminated
-the procession. But an interesting feature of the show still remained,
-when the led horses of the palace guests, each held by a groom, came
-prancing through the wide gateway, as if vain of their glittering
-housings and embroidered reins; the groups which had been scattered over
-the square were all in motion; the crimson-covered arabas began to move
-from their station; the sherbet-venders vaunted their merchandize, with
-voluble eagerness, to the passers-by—the Turks resigned their chibouks
-to their pipe-bearers, and rose from their carpets, which were instantly
-rolled up, and carried away by their domestics—the Bulgarians inflated
-their bag-pipes, and obstructed the path of the foot-passengers, with
-their heavy and awkward dance, which must have been modelled upon that
-of the bear—and, ere I had wearied of contemplating the scene,
-nine-tenths of the crowd that had so lately thronged the wide space
-beneath me had passed away.
-
-The sunshine was lying warm and bright on the dome of Sultan Bajazet’s
-mosque, with its portals of indented gothic; and its spiral minarets,
-with their galleries of rich tracery-work; dominated in their turn by
-the Tower of the Seraskier, which shoots up tall and white from an angle
-of the palace court, like the giant guardian of the locality; and whose
-summit (to which we afterwards ascended) commands a series of the most
-magnificent views that the world can produce.
-
-On one side, the City of Constantinople is spread out beneath you like a
-map; and you look down upon its thousand domes, and its five thousand
-minarets—upon its khans, and its charshees, its palaces and its
-prisons. Move a few paces forward, only to the next window, and the Sea
-of Marmora, with its peopled coasts, its rocky islets, and its
-glittering waves, carries your thoughts homeward to the “golden west.”
-From one point you look on Mount Olympus, with its crown of snow; from
-another, on the sunny Bosphorus, laden with life, and laughing in the
-day-beam. Turn to the left, and the Golden Horn, from whence the riches
-of the world are poured forth over the East, lies at your feet.
-On—on—ere your eyes ache with gazing, and your mind with wonder, and
-repose your vision on the dark and arid rocks which enclose “The Valley
-of the Sweet Waters,” the most fairy-like glen that ever was hemmed in
-by a belt of mountains. And when you at length descend the three hundred
-and thirty steps of the dizzy Tower of the Seraskier, inscribe upon your
-tablets the faint record of an hour, during which, if you have
-sensibility or imagination, a love of the beautiful, or an appreciation
-of the sublime, you must have lived through an age of feeling and of
-fancy; with the busy, breathing city at your feet—the sweet, still
-valley beside you—and the wide sea, the unfathomable, the mysterious
-sea, bounding your vision.
-
-What a pigmy is man amid such a scene as this!
-
-I must not omit to mention that the Seraskier’s Tower, called, by the
-Turks, Yanguen Kiosk, or Fire Tower, is the watch-house of the
-fire-guard. Six individuals are constantly on the look-out during the
-day and night, who relieve each other every hour; and, during the
-night-watch, the guard constantly makes his round in a pair of spring
-pattens, which, being made of wood, and soled with iron, keep up a
-continual noise that prevents his giving way to drowsiness, and thus
-neglecting his duty.
-
-There were seven equally eligible candidates for the hand of the
-Princess Mihirmàh; and consequently more than seven times seven
-intrigues set on foot, when it was finally announced that the Sultan,
-her father, had resolved on bestowing her in marriage on some fortunate
-noble of his Empire. The Sublime Porte was all in commotion—the seven
-Eligibles all in agitation—every palace and harem on the _qui
-vive_—bribes flew about, on yellow wings, like the bright butterflies
-that herald spring—and the Sultan himself, weary of conflicting
-counsels and opposing interests, wavering and undecided; while many
-persons agreed in believing that the Imperial choice would ultimately
-fall on the handsome and wealthy Mustapha Pasha of Adrianople; and the
-rather as it was rumoured that the Princess had seen and admired him.
-
-But Sultan Mahmoud, after a youth of terror and a manhood of blood, had
-become too good a tactician to risk offending many by ennobling one;
-and he consequently adopted an expedient which had assuredly never been
-contemplated by those about his person. He caused the names of the seven
-candidates to be inscribed on as many separate shreds of parchment; and
-on the following Friday, when he visited the mosque, he cast them all in
-a mass beneath his prayer-carpet, where they remained during the
-service; at whose close, he put up a prayer to Allah and the Prophet to
-aid him in the hour of trial, by enabling him to withdraw the name of
-the individual whose alliance would prove the most beneficial, alike to
-his Empire, and to his daughter. Whether the prayer was heard and
-answered, I know not; but the Sublime fingers closed over the parchment
-which was inscribed with the cypher of Saïd Pasha of the Dardanelles.
-
-Saïd Pasha is a handsome man of three or four and thirty, with an
-expression of benevolence and amiability strikingly in his favour. He
-commenced his career at Court as Page to the Sultan, where he lost the
-favour of his master by refusing to obey a command which would have
-rendered him for a time the companion of grooms and serving-men; an
-instance of self-respect and self-appreciation so rare in Turkey, that
-it excited quite as much astonishment as indignation. Dismissed from the
-Court in disgrace, the young adventurer became a member of the sect of
-the _Mevlavies_, or Turning Dervishes; but, after the expiration of a
-year, he was recalled by the Sultan, and received a post in the army.
-Subsequently to this period, his rise to the Pashalik was rapid, as is
-generally the case in the East; and, on the last page of existence which
-he has turned, the characters may indeed be said to have been traced in
-gold.
-
-After this hasty sketch of his history, it is scarcely necessary for me
-to add that Saïd Pasha left the Dardanelles a poor man; nor to remind my
-readers that a titled Lackland was no meet match for a Sultan’s
-daughter. The evil cried aloud for remedy, and the cure came as speedily
-as its necessity had arisen.
-
-The Seraskier had adopted Halil Pasha as his son, on the occasion of his
-marriage with the Princess Salihè, two years ago; and had been to him a
-most munificent father; in the present difficulty he again stepped
-forward, and the portionless Saïd Pasha beheld himself at once a rich
-man.
-
-Upon the Seraskier it then devolved, in his double capacity of High
-Minister and Parent, to introduce the fortunate bridegroom to his
-Imperial father-in-law; and the recollection of all that the wily old
-courtier had done for the object of his first adoption, produced very
-different feelings in the breasts of the two individuals, more
-immediately interested in the financial arrangements of the marriage.
-
-“I present to your Sublime Highness,” said the minister, “the son-in-law
-whom Allah has destined to the high honour of becoming the husband of
-your Imperial daughter—Saïd Pasha, my adopted son—and I do so with the
-greater delight that I know him to be as brave in the field, as he is
-wise in the cabinet—as mild in temper, as he is courageous in
-spirit—learned, gentle, submissive, and enthusiastic, in his attachment
-to your Sublime Highness (May your end be glorious!) He has every virtue
-under heaven, and but one defect.”
-
-“And what may that be?” inquired the Sultan, arching his dark eyebrows
-in astonishment. “It must be weighty indeed if it can counteract the
-effect of so bright a list of qualities.”
-
-“Alas! your Sublime Highness—” replied the Seraskier, “Saïd Pasha is
-poor!”
-
-The point was pathetic enough; and the politic minister, who would
-gladly have secured the honour of being the adopted father of the
-Sultan’s second son-in-law, without paying quite so high a price for it
-as he had done on the marriage of his first, flattered himself that a
-recollection of the enormous outlay which he had made on that occasion
-would exonerate him from a similar expence on the present. But the
-Sultan had doubtlessly learnt that the diamond can be cut only with its
-own dust; and he acted upon that principle, as he blandly answered, if
-not in the words, at least in the feeling, of our immortal bard:—
-
- ’Tis true, ’tis pity, and pity ’tis, ’tis true;
-
-“But, while he has the wealthy and munificent Seraskier of the Sublime
-Empire for his adopted father, he must remain unconscious of the fact.”
-
-The Minister did all that have remained for him to do—he tried to look
-flattered and gratified—he even returned thanks for the gracious words
-which taught him to understand all that was expected of him: and he left
-the Presence to withdraw, from his strong box, ducats to the amount of
-two millions of piastres, which were bought up by the Frank Merchants at
-Galata.
-
-But the best part of the jest was yet to come. On the marriage of one of
-the Imperial Family, every Pasha of the Empire is expected to present an
-offering proportioned to his means; and, as these generally consist of
-jewels, the Chamberlain acquaints each individual, on learning the
-amount of his purposed present, with the most acceptable shape in which
-he can make it; and by these means prevents the chance of a too frequent
-repetition of the same gift.
-
-When the Princess Salihè became the wife of Halil Pasha, the amount of
-her diamonds thus obtained was very considerable; and, as she is a
-person of too morose and selfish a character to take pleasure in showing
-herself to the people as the sisters of the Sultan are in the habit of
-doing; and, moreover, too haughty to seek to dazzle even in the harem,
-his Sublime Highness, who is an admirable tactician, bethought himself
-of a most brilliant plan for making a little money in a quiet way out of
-these anti-engaging qualities.
-
-He accordingly paid a visit to his daughter; and after she had enjoyed
-the high honour of kissing his foot, and he had graciously signified to
-her his Imperial permission that she should seat herself upon the
-cushions piled on the floor near him; he condescendingly explained to
-her the utter uselessness of jewels which she never wore, and suggested
-the expediency of her disposing of them, and adding the interest of the
-sum that they would produce to her present income.
-
-The Princess listened in respectful silence; and then ventured to doubt
-whether a purchaser could be found for the diamonds of a Sultan’s
-daughter. This difficulty was, however, instantly overcome, by an offer,
-on the part of his Sublime Highness, to become himself that purchaser.
-And the consent of the Princess having been obtained, and the price to
-be paid decided on, the principal remained in the Imperial Treasury,
-whence the interest was to be drawn; and the jewels, thus, in point of
-fact, obtained for a per centage on their value, were carried off in
-triumph by the court jewellers, to be reset for the younger Princess!
-
-Nor was this all—for, when the Pashas declared the amount of their
-offerings, the money was paid on the instant, and these very diamonds
-given in exchange, fashioned into such forms as best suited the taste
-and convenience of their new owner.
-
-Thus were things situated when the baffled Seraskier withdrew from the
-Imperial Presence, to drag his beloved ducats from their snug
-resting-place in his strong box, and to scatter them among the
-money-changing Franks. Many of the Pashas had not yet come forward with
-their gifts, and he had still breathing time for a shrewd stroke. It is
-the fashion at the Sublime Court for each noble to announce the amount
-of the present which he purposes to make; and the declaration generally
-exceeds the actual value of the offering by fifty or a thousand
-piastres. The Seraskier accordingly collected these declarations, and
-having so done, he addressed a courtly circular to the tardy (in this
-case too tardy!) Pashas, informing them that his Sublime Highness
-Mahmoud “The Powerful,” the Light of the World, and Brother of the Sun,
-had so overwhelmed his intended son-in-law, Mohammed Saïd Pasha, with
-the brightness of his munificence, that he had rained diamonds upon him,
-and overstrown his path with precious stones; and, such being the case,
-he, the Seraskier, acting as his adopted father and counsellor, had
-suggested to him the expediency of proposing to those Pashas who had not
-yet honoured him with their gifts, to make them in the current coin of
-the Empire, rather than in diamonds which could not, under the
-circumstances, avail him any thing.
-
-The suggestion was a command; the wily Seraskier held the list of names
-and offerings; and each Pasha was under the necessity of coming forward,
-and paying to the treasurer of the Seraskier the actual sum in money
-which he had specified!
-
-Nothing sharpens the wits of a Turk like self-interest.
-
-The procession, from which I have digressed, passed through the street
-called Divan-Yoli, terminating at the mosque of St. Sophia, near the
-Imperial Palace. When it arrived at Ortakapou, or The Middle Door, the
-whole of the officers alighted, and formed an avenue to the entrance of
-the harem, whence the marriage gifts were conveyed into the Seraï, where
-the Seraskier, acting for the bridegroom, craved and obtained an
-interview with the Kislar-Agha, who was proxy for the Princess. This
-hideous negro has the thickest lips, the flattest nose, the smallest
-eyes, and the most unwieldy person of all the eunuchs of the empire.
-Imagination cannot paint his ugliness! And before this revolting
-caricature of humanity, the haughty Minister, in whose hands are life
-and death, bent his stubborn knee in supplication. Scarcely had he
-crossed the threshold of the magnificent apartment in which the
-Kislar-Agha awaited him, ere he prostrated himself to the earth, as he
-besought the monstrous representative of youth and beauty to have mercy
-upon the slave who kissed the dust before the Light of the Creation, the
-Glory of the Moon,[3] the Empress of his thoughts—upon which the
-unwieldy negro averted his face, cast down his eyes, and assumed the
-prude; but, after a vast deal of coquetting, the lover-like vehemence of
-the gray-headed Seraskier met with its reward—a sable hand was extended
-towards him, which he embraced with transport—the presents were
-condescendingly accepted; the sweetmeats by the Kislar-Agha himself: and
-the more costly offerings by the principal eunuchs of the palace, in the
-names of their Imperial Mistresses, to whom they were immediately
-conveyed.
-
-And thus terminated the first act of the sublime comedy!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-
- Fine Scenery—The Coast of Asia—Turkish Cemeteries—The
- Imperial Seraï—The Golden Horn—Mount Olympus—The
- Arabajhe—The Araba—The Persian Kiosk—The Barrack of
- Scutari—The Mosque of Selim III.—The Slipper of the Sultana
- Validè—The Imperial Guard—Military Material—The Macaroni
- Manufactory—Sublime Targets—A Major of the Imperial
- Guard—Triumph of Utilitarianism—The Rise of the Vines—The
- Holy Tomb—Encampments of the Plague-smitten—The Setting
- Sun—Return to Europe—The Square of Topphannè.
-
-I have seldom seen a lovelier day than that on which we first passed
-over to Scutari; the sunshine was bright upon the Bosphorus, the tops of
-the tall cypresses were golden in the light, and their feathery branches
-heaved slightly beneath the breeze; the sky was blue about the spiral
-minarets: and the painted houses gleamed out like gigantic flowers as
-the day-beam touched them; the ripple sparkled like diamond-dust, and
-our arrowy caïque seemed to breathe as it undulated upon the surface.
-
-It was a glorious scene! And we were soon upon the bosom of the blue
-waters, darting along, with the wild birds above our heads, out into the
-Sea of Marmora. Europe was beside and behind us—Europe, with its
-palaces, its politics, and its power—and the shadowy shore of Asia,
-with its cypress-crowned heights, and its dusky mountains, seemed to woo
-our approach. How I regretted that the passage was so brief—a few
-strokes of the oar, a few pulsations of the heart, after we had shot
-past the “Maiden’s Tower,” and we were landed beside the ruined mosque,
-in the valley beyond the Persian Kiosk of the Sultan, which crowns the
-crest of the highest hill.
-
-The land curved gracefully downward at this point to form a fair green
-glen, where a group of plane trees and acacias threw their long branches
-over the remains of the crumbling temple. Here and there a solitary
-cypress shot up its dark head like a death-lance into the clear horizon,
-contrasting its funereal and gloomy pomp with the laughing clusters of
-the pink-blossoming almond-trees, which were scattering their petals
-over the grave-stones that rose on the side of the grassy bank amid the
-wild flowers, as if to link the present with the past.
-
-It is a beautiful custom, that of burying the dead upon the very path of
-the living! It destroys so much of the gloom which imagination is prone
-to drape about the grave—it creates so much more of a common interest.
-The Turk smokes his chibouk with his back resting against a
-turban-crested grave-stone; the Greek spreads his meal upon a tomb; the
-Armenian shelters himself from the sunshine beneath the boughs that
-overshadow the burial-places of his people; the women sit in groups, and
-talk of their homes and of their little ones among the ashes of their
-ancestors; and the children gather the wild flowers that grow amid the
-graves, as gaily as though death had never entered there.
-
-The caïque soon darted into the little bay, and we trod the shore of
-Asia. Immediately in front of us, on the European coast, stretched the
-long castellated wall of the ancient city of Constantine, with its Seven
-Towers, and its palace-girdled Point. Nothing could be more beautiful!
-The numerous buildings of the imperial Seraï were overtopped by shadowy
-plane-trees, leafy beeches, lofty cypresses, feathery acacias, and other
-magnificent forest trees; from amid whose foliage the gleaming domes and
-gilded spires of the palace peeped out like glimpses of fairy-land. On
-the extreme point of the shore stands that portion of the Seraglio which
-was formerly appropriated to the ladies of the Imperial Harem, but which
-is now untenanted, save by half a dozen old and withered women, the
-surviving wives of the unfortunate Sultan Selim. The sun had touched it,
-and was reflected back in brightness from its gilded doors and
-glittering lattices. It looked like a cluster of kiosks gracefully
-flung together in the hour of sport.
-
-Beyond that point lay the Golden Horn; and, along the summit of the hill
-which shuts it in on the opposite shore, stretched the cypress-grove and
-houses of Pera. But ere long we turned away from these accustomed
-objects to glance upwards to the crest of Mount Olympus, far, far away
-in the distance, forming a mighty background to the Sea of Marmora. We
-saw it at a happy moment, for the sunbeams had turned its snows to
-jewels, which were flashing with a brightness that almost forbade our
-gaze; when suddenly a light cloud passed over its stately brow, and,
-deadening for an instant the glitter that it had borrowed from the
-day-beam, sobered down its tints into more subdued beauty, and made it
-look as though it were girdled by a rainbow.
-
-As we reluctantly quitted this fair scene, and walked towards the
-valley, we saw the araba that we had appointed to await us there,
-standing beneath the shade of the tall trees; and as the arabajhe
-observed our approach, he rose from his seat beneath a stately elm, laid
-aside his chibouk, and prepared to assist us into the carriage. But I
-lingered yet another moment to contemplate his costume—his voluminous
-turban, which it must have required ells of muslin to produce; and his
-gaily-tasselled and embroidered jacket, falling back to disclose the
-shawl that bound his waist. I scarcely knew which to admire the
-most;—his black and bushy beard, and the thick mustachioes that adorned
-his upper lip; or the elaborately-wrought Albanian leggings and yellow
-slippers which completed his costume.
-
-No one but a native of the luxurious East could ever have invented an
-araba; with its comfortable cushions, and its gaily painted roof, and
-gilded pillars. The prettiest are those of brown and gold, with
-rose-coloured draperies, through which the breeze flutters to your cheek
-as blandly as though it loved the tint that reminded it of the roses of
-the past season amid which it had wandered.
-
-As we clomb the hill, we passed beside the Imperial kiosk, a delicate
-little edifice with walls of pale green, and snow-white jalousies; and
-then, descending a slight acclivity, we found ourselves opposite the
-magnificent barrack, which forms so fine a feature from the sea. There
-is probably no country in the world where the barracks are so elegantly
-built as in Turkey; they have all the appearance of palaces; and that of
-Scutari being appropriated to the Imperial Guard is the handsomest in
-the neighbourhood of the capital; being a quadrangle, flanked with
-square towers, built in three sections, gradually diminishing in size,
-and crowned by a slight spire. Immediately opposite to the principal
-gate of the barrack stands the magnificent mosque of Selim III.; but
-Scutari, among the numerous temples whose slender minarets are relieved
-by the dark back ground of her funereal cypresses, possesses one of
-which I must not forget to make mention. Small in size, and not
-particularly elegant in its appearance, the mosque of the Sultana Validè
-must not be passed over in silence, built as it was from the proceeds of
-one of her diamond-sprinkled slippers!
-
-I have mentioned that this barrack is occupied by the Imperial Guard:
-and I never shall forget their appearance, as groups of them passed us
-on the road. Dirty, slouching, and awkward, many among them without
-either shirts or stockings, they certainly looked as unlike Household
-Troops as can well be imagined; and might have traversed three quarters
-of Europe without being mistaken for soldiers at all, either by their
-gait or their garb. When on duty, and not examined too closely, they
-make a fair figure as a body, but on ordinary occasions they are as
-unmilitary in their appearance and bearing as the rest of the Turkish
-army; and the majority of them are such mere boys that they induce a
-feeling of pity rather than fear. On one occasion, when I paid a visit
-to the Sultan’s sister, while waiting to be admitted, I amused myself
-by looking attentively at the palace-guard, who had all collected
-outside the guard-house to see the Franks; including the two sentinels
-on duty, they amounted to ten individuals; and certainly eight of the
-number were not more than fourteen years of age; nor do I believe that
-any of them had washed their faces, or brushed their garments for a week
-previously.
-
-A Pasha, while speaking with me one day of the Turkish army, assured me
-that it was composed of “excellent materials.”—It may be so; I cannot,
-nor do I desire, to confute his opinion; but it is certain that, like
-other raw materials, it will require a great deal of working before it
-can be rendered serviceable; and that, at present, there are few things
-more laughable than to see a Turkish regiment at drill or exercise;
-there is an independence of feeling and action about each individual
-which is quite _impayable_.
-
-But the surprise created by the appearance of the Imperial Guard was not
-to be the only cause for astonishment excited by this gallant corps; for
-we were yet indulging a hearty laugh at their expense when we were
-startled by the recommendation of the arabajhe that we should visit the
-Macaroni Manufactory of Achmet Pasha. At first we thought that our
-dragoman had played us false, for we could find no possible connection
-in our own minds between the Generalissimo of the Armies of the Sublime
-Porte, and a Macaroni Manufactory. The invitation had, however, been
-correctly interpreted, and we immediately diverged from the road to see
-this highly-connected establishment.
-
-On rising a little hill, we entered the widest street that I had yet
-seen in the East, partly overshadowed by the stately trees which
-encircled an ancient mosque, and terminated by the principal entrance to
-the garrison.
-
-I may as well mention here that the main portal of every Turkish barrack
-is decorated with a target, richly framed, and perforated with one or
-more balls, shot by the Sublime hand of the Sultan, who is an excellent
-marksman; and thus seeks to excite by his example a feeling of emulation
-among his soldiery.
-
-The araba drew up before a neat-looking white building with a green
-balcony, and, ere we could alight, the door was opened to us; when one
-of the gentlemen of the party instantly recognized an acquaintance, to
-whom he hastened to present us; and I in turn made my bow to a Major of
-the Imperial Guard, with a diamond decoration on his breast, his sleeves
-tucked up to the shoulders, and his arms buried to the elbows in flour.
-
-The Turks are utilitarians indeed!
-
-The scene was a singular one; the large hall in which we stood was
-entirely over-canopied with ropes of macaroni, and surrounded by presses
-and rollers.—A major was deciding on the merits of the flour—a
-lieutenant was superintending the working of the machine—a couple of
-sergeants were suspending the paste to dry—and a fatigue party were
-turning the wheels.
-
-Hear this, ye Grenadiers and Coldstream! ye exquisites of Bond Street
-and the Ring! There was no _ennui_ here—all was grinding, and sifting,
-and rolling, and drying, and selling—yes, selling—The Imperial Guard
-of his Sublime Highness have no occasion to kill time; they rather seek
-customers. The whitest and finest of the paste supplies the kitchen of
-the Sultan: the darkest and coarsest finds its way to that of the
-soldiers; but “more remains behind;” and if you are inclined to feast on
-Imperial macaroni, you have but to draw out your purse, and pay it in
-piastres!
-
-What a well-imagined antidote to the weariness of a garrison life—What
-a triumph for utilitarianism!
-
-I shall say nothing of the forest-like cemetery; I have spoken of it
-elsewhere. The dark cypresses were flinging their long shadows across
-the road; and the hill which we slowly ascended on quitting the
-manufactory was called “The Rise of the Vines.” The name is
-appropriate; for the houses that fringe it on the left hand overlook a
-wide extent of orchard and vineyard, interspersed with kiosks, and
-groups of flowering acacias. The view was bounded by the sea, and the
-tall mountains above Broussa: and flowers were blossoming by the
-wayside, and wild-birds were singing among the boughs. No wonder that
-the nature-loving Turks are attached to Scutari.
-
-A small building to the left of the road attracted my attention, and I
-alighted to examine it. It proved to be the tomb of a Saint; and I
-distinguished, through the closely-latticed casement, a wooden
-sarcophagus surmounted by a green turban, and surrounded by the
-prayer-carpets of the priests. The wire-work of the window was knotted
-all over with rags; shreds of cotton, woollen, and silk—morsels of
-ribbon and tape—and fragments of every description. They had been
-fastened there by sick and suffering persons, who had firmly believed
-that their trouble, whether mental or physical, would remain attached to
-the rag, and that they should themselves “return each to his home
-clean.”
-
-We avoided the town, for the Plague was there; that omnipresent but
-invisible enemy which stretches its clammy hand over the East, and
-sweeps down its prey, unchecked by the groans of the bereaved, or the
-pangs of the smitten—the deadly Plague, which spares neither sex, nor
-age, nor condition, but makes one universal harvest of mankind.
-
-Nothing ever thrilled me more than when I once came suddenly, during my
-wanderings, upon an encampment of the Plague-smitten. The huts are
-generally erected on a hill-side, and the tents pitched among them; and
-you see the families of the infected basking in the sunshine within
-their prescribed limits, and gazing eagerly at the chance passenger,
-whom his ignorance of their vicinity may conduct past their temporary
-dwellings; the children rolling half-naked upon the grass; and the
-sallow and careworn parents hanging out the garments of the patients on
-the trees of the neighbourhood. Such was precisely the case with that
-into which I had unconsciously intruded; and whence I was very hastily
-dislodged by the shouts of the guard, stationed to enforce the
-quarantaine of the mountain colony; and the alarmed exclamations of my
-companions.
-
-It is difficult to look upon such a scene, and upon such a sky, and to
-believe in the existence of this frightful scourge! It is the canker at
-the core of the forest-tree—the serpent in the garden of Eden.
-
-The sun was setting ere we prepared to traverse the Golden Horn, in
-order to reach the European side before the firing of the evening gun;
-the shadows were lying long upon the water: a yellow gleam was settling
-on the domes and houses of Stamboul, and a thick vapour lowered over the
-sky. The twilight of the East is fleeting as a thought—and the outline
-of the city ere long loomed out from amid the gathering darkness, like a
-spectre of the past. One line of light still glimmered across the waves
-like a thread of gold, linking the shores of Europe and of Asia; but,
-even as I pointed it out, it faded; softening down to a faint yellow,
-like the lip of a primrose—and in another instant, it was gone; while,
-as it disappeared, the hoarse cannon pealed over the ripple, and told
-that another day was spent.
-
-Our rowers had calculated to a nicety, for, as the sound died away, the
-caïque touched the crazy wooden pier of Topphannè, and we were once more
-in Europe!
-
-There is not a locality throughout the whole of the capital more
-strictly or more richly oriental in its aspect than the small square of
-Topphannè. In the midst stands the celebrated Kilidge Ali Pasha
-Djiamini, or Fountain of the Mosque of Ali Pasha, a French renegade, who
-built the temple which bears his name. Constantinople boasts no other
-fountain of equal beauty. Its rich and elegant arabesques are beyond all
-praise; and, when the sun is shining on them, almost look like jewels.
-It has, however, suffered materially from the reforming mania of the
-Sultan, who, in his rage for improvement, has replaced its wavy and
-deeply-projecting roof with a little terrace railing, out of all
-keeping, alike with its architecture and its ornaments; and who was with
-difficulty persuaded not to destroy it altogether.
-
-On one side of the fountain is the mosque to which it belongs, and on
-the other the kiosk of Halil Pasha, with its magnificent portal and
-glittering casements. But to be seen to perfection, the square of
-Topphannè must be visited during the autumn, when the rich fruits of
-Asia are scattered over its whole extent; piles of perfumed melons,
-pyramids of yellow grapes, heaps of scarlet pomegranates—the golden
-orange, the amber-coloured lemon, the ruddy apple, the tufted quince,
-all are poured forth before you. Nor are the vendors less various or
-less glowing than their merchandize, as they sit doubled-up upon their
-mats, clad in all the colours of the rainbow, with their chibouks
-between their lips; rather waiting than looking for customers—a bright
-sky above them, and the blended languages of many lands swelling upon
-the wind.
-
-Had I landed at Topphannè on my arrival in Turkey, I should have fancied
-myself a spectator of one of the scenes described by the tale-telling
-Schererazade.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
- Turkish Superstitions—Auguries—The Court Astrologer—The Evil
- Eye—Danger of Blue Eyes—Imperial Firman—The Babaluk—The
- Ceremony—Sable Pythonesses—Witchcraft.
-
-The Turks are strangely superstitious; they cling resolutely to the
-absurd and wild fancies which have been banished from Europe for
-centuries; and that too with a blindness of faith, and a tenacity of
-purpose, quite in keeping with their firm and somewhat dogged natures.
-
-Many of their superstitions they inherit from the Romans; they extract
-auguries of good and evil from the entrails of fresh-slaughtered
-animals—they draw inferences from the flight of birds—they have
-auspicious and inauspicious hours, which are gravely determined by the
-Astrologers; and no Osmanli ever undertakes a journey, builds a house,
-marries a wife, or commences any business of importance, without
-satisfying himself on this important point. Should evil or
-disappointment overtake him, despite the precaution he has used, he
-never blames either his own mismanagement or another’s treachery;
-neither does he sink beneath the trial: he tells you that it is his
-_kismet_—his fate—and he calmly submits to what he considers to have
-been inevitable; and should misfortunes accumulate about him, instead of
-attributing them to worldly causes, he ascribes them to _felech_—his
-constellation—without searching further.
-
-When he is troubled with unpleasant dreams, haunted by melancholy
-fancies, or suffering from bodily disease, he tears away a fragment of
-his dress, and fastens the rag to the iron-work of a window belonging to
-the tomb of a saint, in order to deposit the evil along with it. When he
-is sick, he procures from the Priest an earthen bowl, inscribed
-throughout its interior with passages from the Koran; and, filling it
-with water, sets it aside until the whole of the writing becomes
-effaced, when he swallows the liquid, and thus administers to himself a
-dose of Holy Writ! The Court Astrologer publishes every year a species
-of supernatural almanack, in which he specifies the lucky and unlucky
-days of the different moons; foretells wars, deaths, and marriages; and
-imparts a vast quantity of multifarious information, which must be both
-valuable and curious, if it is to be estimated by the price paid for it,
-as the salary of the Seer is a most liberal one.
-
-Another singular superstition common throughout Turkey is the belief
-that should a dog chance to pass between two persons who are conversing,
-one or the other will fall sick unless the animal be propitiated with
-food; and the first care of a Musselmaun to whom this ill-luck has
-occurred, is to look about him for the means of averting its effect.
-
-But the predominant weakness of the East is the dread of the Evil Eye.
-Should you praise the beauty of a Turkish child to its mother, without
-prefacing your admiration with “_Mashallah!_” or, In the name of
-God—which is considered sufficient to counteract the power of all
-malignant spirits; and, should the child become ill or meet with an
-accident, it is at once decided that you have smitten it with the Evil
-Eye. The Greeks, when by accident they allude to their own good health
-or good fortune, immediately spit upon their breasts to avert the malign
-influence; and to such a pitch do they carry their faith in the efficacy
-of this inelegant exorcism, that on a recent occasion, when an
-acquaintance of my own was introduced to a beautiful Greek girl, and
-betrayed into an eulogium on her loveliness, he was earnestly entreated
-by her mother to perform the same ceremony in the very face which he had
-just been eulogizing, in order to annul the evil effects of his
-admiration; and so pressing were her instances that he was compelled to
-affect obedience to her wishes, ere she could be re-assured of the
-safety of her daughter!
-
-The Turk decorates the roof of his house, the prow of his caïque, the
-cap of his child, the neck of his horse, and the cage of his bird, with
-charms against the Evil Eye; one of the most powerful of these antidotes
-being garlic: and it must be conceded that, here at least, the workers
-of woe have shown their taste. Every hovel has its head of garlic
-suspended by a string; and bouquets of flowers formed of spices, amid
-which this noxious root is nestled, are sent as presents to the mother
-of a new-born infant, as a safeguard both to herself and her little one.
-
-A blue eye is super-eminently suspicious, for they have an idea that
-such is the legitimate colour of the evil orb; and you seldom see a
-horse, or a draught ox, or even a donkey, which has not about its neck a
-string of blue beads, to preserve it from the dark deeds of witchcraft.
-I was considerably amused on one occasion, when, being about to meet the
-carriage of a friend, the horse that drew it, either from idleness or
-caprice, suddenly stood still, and the arabajhe exclaimed with vehemence
-to his mistress, “You see, madam, you see that the horse is struck—the
-new Hanoum has blue eyes!” turning his own on me as he spoke, with a
-most unloving expression. I am perfectly convinced that, had the animal
-met with any misfortune, or been guilty of any misdemeanour during the
-remainder of the day, the whole blame would have inevitably been visited
-on my unlucky eyes, which had counteracted the effect of a row of glass
-beads, and a crescent of bone!
-
-To protect the reigning Sultan from the power of the Evil Eye during his
-state progresses through the streets of the capital, a peculiar
-head-dress was invented for the Imperial body-pages, whose ornamented
-plumes were of such large dimensions as, collectively, to form a screen
-about his sacred person. Even Sultan Mahmoud, who is superior to many of
-the popular prejudices, has just caused a Firman to be published,
-prohibiting the women from looking earnestly at him as he passes them,
-on pain of—what think you, reader?—of subjecting their husbands or
-brothers to the bastinado! The Turkish laws are too gallant to condemn
-females to suffer this punishment in their own persons, and Mahmoud is
-consequently to be protected from the possibly fatal effects of the
-ladies’ eyes by their fears for their male relations.
-
-Another singular custom is that of pouring water where any one has
-fallen, to prevent a recurrence of the accident on the same spot, which
-is religiously observed by the lower orders; as well as flinging stones
-at the body of a decapitated criminal, in order to secure the dreams of
-the spectator from an intrusion of the ghastly object.
-
-No Turk of the lower ranks of society ever passes a shred of paper which
-may chance to lie upon his path; he always gathers it up with the
-greatest care; as the popular belief leads him to place implicit faith
-in an ancient superstition that all paper thus obtained will be
-collected after death, and scattered over the burning soil through which
-he is to pass to paradise; and that consequently the more he is enabled
-to secure, the less suffering he will have to endure hereafter.
-
-A most extraordinary fact came to my knowledge a short time before I
-left the East, relatively to the female Arabs of the harem. They have a
-species of society, or institution—I scarcely know how to term it—in
-which they are initiated from their girlhood, that they call “Babaluk,”
-whose principle of mystery is kept as secret as that of freemasonry;
-while the occasional display of its influence is wild and startling
-enough to remind the spectator of the Priestesses of Delphi.
-
-Far from affecting any concealment of their participation in the
-pretended powers of the society, you cannot, when a guest in the harem,
-please an initiated Arab more surely than by inquiring if she be a
-Babaluk; and the Turkish ladies frequently amuse themselves and their
-visitors by exhibiting their black slaves while under the influence of
-their self-excited phrenzy. When a sable Pythoness is informed of the
-wish of her mistress, she collects such of her companions as are
-Babaluks, for there are sometimes several in the same harem, and a
-brazier of burning charcoal is placed in the centre of the saloon in
-which the ceremony is to take place. Round this brazier the Arabs squat
-down, and commence a low, wild chant, which they take up at intervals
-from the lips of each other; and then break into a chorus, that
-ultimately dies away in a wail, succeeded by a long silence, during
-whose continuance they rock their bodies backwards and forwards, and
-never raise their eyes from the earth. From the moment in which the
-chant commences, an attendant is constantly employed in feeding the fire
-with aloes, incense, musk, and every species of intoxicating perfume.
-
-After a time, they fall on the floor in a state of utter insensibility,
-and great exertion is frequently necessary to arouse them from their
-trance; but, when once they are awakened, they become furious—they rend
-themselves, and each other—they tear their hair and their
-clothing—they howl like wild beasts, and they cry earnestly for food,
-while they reject all that is offered except brandy and raw meat, both
-of which they destroy in great quantities. Having satisfied their
-hunger, they renew the warfare that they had discontinued to indulge it,
-and finally roll on the floor with bloodshot eyeballs, and foaming at
-the mouth.
-
-A second trance ultimately seizes them, from which they are left to
-recover alone; fresh perfumes being flung into the brazier to expedite
-their restoration, which generally takes place in ten or fifteen
-minutes; and then it is that the spell of prophecy is on them. They rise
-slowly and majestically from the floor—they wave their hands solemnly
-over the aromatic flame—they have become suddenly subdued and gentle;
-and, after having made the circuit of the brazier several times in
-silence, they gaze coldly round the circle, until, fixing upon some
-particular individual, they commence shadowing forth her fate, past,
-present, and to come; and I have heard it seriously asserted that they
-have thus divulged the most secret events of by-gone years, as well as
-prophecying those which subsequently took place.
-
-It is scarcely wonderful—even disgusting as a great portion of the
-ceremonial undoubtedly is—that many of the Turkish ladies occasionally
-relieve the tedium of the harem by the exhibition of the Babaluk; that
-vague yearning to pry into futurity so inherent in our nature, coupled
-with the uncertainty on whom the spell of the sybil may be cast, causes
-an excitement which forms an agreeable contrast from their customary
-_ennui_. No second fate is ever foretold at the same orgies. When the
-first Babaluk begins to speak, the others sink down into a sitting
-posture, occasionally enforcing her assertions by repeating the last
-words of any remarkable sentence in a long, low wail; and, when she
-ceases and takes her place among them, they are for the third time
-overtaken by a trance: the brazier is then removed, the spectators leave
-the room, the door is carefully closed, and the Babaluks are left to
-awaken at their leisure. When they finally come forth, they resume their
-customary avocations, without making the slightest allusion to the
-extraordinary scene in which they have been actors; nor do they like the
-subject to be mentioned to them until several days have elapsed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
- Imperial Invitation—Disagreeable Adventure—Executed
- Criminal—Efficacy of Wayside Executions—Tardy
- Conversions—Mistaken Humanity—Summary Mode of Execution—The
- Palace of Asmè Sultane—Entrance of the Harem—Costume of the
- Slaves—Nazip Hanoum—Ceremonious Reception—The Adopted
- Daughter—Costume of the Ladies of the Seraï—Beauty of the
- Slaves—Extraordinary Arrangement—Rejected Addresses—The
- Imperial Lover—Sacredness of Adoption in Turkey—Romantic
- Correspondence—Ladies of the Household—The Mother of the
- Slaves—Peroussè Hanoum—Crowded Audience—The Imperial
- Odalique—Music of the Harem—The New Pet—The Kislar-Agha—The
- “Light of the Harem”—The Poetical Sultan—Indisposition of the
- Sultana—The Palace Gardens—The Imperial Apartments—The
- Dancing Girl—Reluctant Departure—Ballad by Peroussè Hanoum.
-
-Having received an invitation to wait upon Asmè Sultane, the elder
-sister of the Sultan, at her summer palace, I started from Pera early
-one morning accompanied by a friend, to obey the Imperial summons.
-
-The weather was beautiful; the great Cemetery was crowded with loungers,
-and the road leading to “The Sweet Waters” thronged with horsemen. The
-spring flowers were bursting, and the young leaves trembling in the
-fresh breeze; and, as we passed on, amid sunshine and salutations, I
-forgot the purpose of my errand in the enjoyment of the glad scene
-around me.
-
-But, unhappily for the continuance of these joyous feelings, the
-authorities had just secured a band of Sclavonian housebreakers, and,
-having bestowed upon them a very summary species of civil drum-head
-court-martial, had hung a dozen of them the previous day in the
-outskirts of the city. Of this uncomfortable fact we were entirely
-ignorant; and the shock may consequently be conceived when, on
-descending a steep pitch into the narrow street of Ortakeuÿ, the
-arabadjhe suddenly exclaimed—“A man hanged! A man hanged! Hide your
-eyes, ladies.” But it was too late. As the carriage turned the corner of
-the road I had caught sight of the suspended criminal, and I continued
-to gaze upon him, fascinated by the horror of the spectacle. This was
-only the second time that I had looked upon death, and it was now before
-me in so revolting a shape that I felt as though my life-blood were
-curdling about my heart!
-
-We had come upon the victim in so instantaneous a manner that the sleeve
-of my dress almost touched his arm, as he hung from the projecting spout
-of a house immediately beside our path. He was a tall, powerful man,
-bare-headed, and clad in a white jacket and trowsers, fastened about his
-waist with a scarlet shawl. But what made the exhibition tenfold more
-horrible was the fact that the rope had slipped during his dying
-struggles, and that his head was bent forcibly backward. I shall never
-forget it; and I verily believe that I should have remained without the
-power of turning away my eyes had not my companion aroused me forcibly
-from my lethargy; when, yielding to the heart-sickness which crept over
-me, I fortunately fainted, and thus escaped all further suffering from
-the disgusting spectacle.
-
-I am not prepared to deny that these wayside executions may be very
-efficacious in preventing the spread of crime; it is a subject on which
-I am not competent to offer an opinion; but I am enabled from my own
-painful experience to decide upon their extreme inconvenience, to use no
-stronger term, to those who do not require so frightful a warning. To
-encounter death in a shape of violence upon the very path of the living,
-and in the midst of men busied in their daily avocations—to know that
-the narrow space in which the victim is suspended, surrounded by objects
-of barter, has been let out on hire for this horrible purpose—that a
-bargain has been made between the government and the shopkeeper for the
-use of the doorway leading into his dwelling—there is altogether
-something so revolting in the whole system that I cannot think of it
-without a shudder; and thus was every avenue into Pera closed for three
-days against those to whom such sights were painful; for the same
-ghastly object presented itself at each village leading from the city:
-while the body of the ringleader of the band, decapitated, and deprived
-of its right hand, was exposed in one of the public squares.
-
-One of the gang saved himself by becoming at one and the same time a
-True Believer and King’s Evidence; the only individual of the
-association who would consent to accept life on such terms. The
-remainder, kept in ignorance, according to the Turkish custom, of the
-precise moment of their execution, were allowed to frequent the taverns
-and coffee-houses accompanied by a guard, during several hours, and to
-drink and converse freely with those whom they happened to meet there;
-when suddenly their career of intemperance was checked; they were halted
-in front of the house which had been fixed upon for their reception, the
-fatal noose affixed, a basket placed beneath their feet to be
-subsequently drawn away, and in another instant they were launched into
-Eternity, while the accents of revelry were yet upon their lips! As the
-Turks do not admit the efficacy of a tardy and terror-wrung repentance,
-they consider this mode of execution to be the most humane which they
-can adopt; and, as the criminal is flattered to the last with the hope
-of pardon, he thus escapes much of the premature suffering attendant
-upon a violent death.
-
-In about an hour after we had escaped from the frightful spectacle I
-have described, we arrived at the gate of the Palace—an extensive and
-handsome edifice on the border of the Bosphorus; where a guard of
-soldiers and a throng of servants were to be traversed ere we could
-reach the staircase leading to the ante-room in which we waited, while
-our presence was announced to the princess. As Her Highness was in the
-bath when we entered, we were detained a considerable time in this
-apartment, surrounded by the officers of the household, and the
-principal negroes of the harem; a delay at which I rather rejoiced, as I
-had not altogether recovered from the effects of my morning’s adventure.
-
-At length we were requested to move forward, and, attended by half a
-dozen individuals of the Imperial suite, we traversed several apartments
-neatly matted, but quite destitute of furniture; until at the extremity
-of a long gallery, lighted on either side by twelve spacious windows,
-commanding the channel on the one hand, and the palace gardens on the
-other, we reached the lofty doors of the harem, which were flung back at
-the first signal of our attendants, and as instantly closed again when
-we had crossed the threshold.
-
-A train of female slaves, dressed in the most gaudy furniture chintzes,
-received us as we entered, and led us across a lordly hall lined with
-white marble, and supported by numerous pillars of the same material;
-through whose open doors we had a delicious view of the extensive
-gardens, with their fantastic flower-beds, stately fountains, and
-gleaming terraces. Nazip Hanoum, the adopted daughter of the Princess,
-met us in the centre of the hall, and welcomed us most gracefully; after
-which, taking a hand of each, she conducted us to her own apartment, a
-charming room overlooking the water, and entered from a gallery that
-surrounded the principal saloon. Having relieved us of our veils, and
-seated us on the cushions beside her, she clapped her hands, and about a
-score of slaves entered with coffee and sweetmeats.
-
-The _coup d’œil_ was beautiful, as the fair girls, not one of whom
-could have been more than twenty years of age, and who were all
-exceedingly lovely, prepared to hand the refreshments. The princess had
-given orders that we should be received with all possible ceremony: and
-the display was consequently most beautiful. One slave held a weighty
-vase, suspended from three silver chains, in which stood the coffee;
-another bore a large gold salver, covered with cups and holders of
-costly enamel, whence depended a dazzling drapery of gold tissue
-wrought with pearls, and richly fringed: a third carried a gilded tray
-bearing vases of cut crystal containing a variety of exquisite
-sweetmeats, confined beneath golden covers enriched with gems; a fourth
-held the salver on which stood a range of glass goblets of beautiful
-form and workmanship, filled with water—all, in fine, were laden with
-some object of cost and luxury; and their attitudes were so graceful,
-their faces so lovely, and their costume so striking, that I regretted
-their departure, when, after we had partaken of the rose-scented jelly
-and perfumed mocha, they slowly withdrew.
-
-Nazip Hanoum, the favourite of Asmè Sultane, was purchased by Her
-Imperial Highness when she was only a few months old, together with her
-mother, who died while she was yet an infant. Her influence over the
-mind of her illustrious protectress is unlimited, and, had she been
-really born “beneath the purple,” she could not have commanded greater
-liberty or consideration than she now enjoys. Her features are very
-regular, and even handsome; but her beauty is destroyed by the immense
-number of freckles that cover her face and bosom. Her eyes are a deep
-rich blue, with long dark lashes, and her hair is of a fine golden
-auburn; but the great charm of Nazip Hanoum exists in her extreme
-gracefulness; she has not a movement which is not elegant; and her
-playful vivacity and great natural shrewdness render her a delightful
-companion. Her voice is low, and sweet; and her ringing laughter the
-very echo of joyousness.
-
-Her costume was an odd admixture of the European and the Oriental. She
-wore trowsers of pale blue cotton flowered with yellow; and an antery of
-light green striped with white, and edged with a fringe of pink floss
-silk; while her jacket, which was the production of a Parisian
-dress-maker, was of dove-coloured satin, thickly wadded, and furnished
-with a deep cape, and a pair of immense sleeves, fastened at the wrists
-with diamond studs. But the most striking feature of the costume in the
-Imperial Palaces is the head-dress. Nothing can be imagined more
-hideous! A painted handkerchief is bound tightly round the brow, and
-secured by jewelled bodkins: the back hair is _crèpé_ until it becomes
-one huge dishevelled mass, when it is traversed across the top of the
-head by a corner of the handkerchief: a number of slender plaits of
-false hair hang down the back, frequently differing very materially from
-the colour of the natural tresses: the front locks are cut square across
-the forehead, and left a couple of inches longer at the sides, where
-they lie quite flat, and are stuck full of roses, or gems; or overhung
-by the deep fringe of the handkerchief, wrought to resemble a wreath of
-flowers. Some few among the ladies of the Imperial Seraïs fasten
-immense bunches of artificial ringlets under their yashmacs when they
-drive out, but they are as yet sufficiently uncommon to be remarkable.
-To this head-dress, such as I have described it, Nazip Hanoum had added,
-in common with the other females of the household, a star and crescent
-of sticking-plaister between her eyebrows, which were stained a deep
-black, and destroyed the natural softness of her expression. But her
-hands and arms were lovely! White, and round, and soft, as though they
-had been moulded in wax; and her slight elastic figure looked as if it
-had been modelled by the Graces.
-
-Asmè Sultane is celebrated throughout the capital for the beauty of her
-slaves; and his Sublime Highness has thrice demanded Nazip Hanoum, but
-has been thrice refused; an occurrence so unprecedented in the East,
-that he has finished by persuading himself that he is actually attached
-to the lively girl who has dared to play the part of a modern Roxalana,
-and to defy his power.
-
-His first rejection was treated by the Sultan as the wayward whim of a
-spoiled beauty, and he even condescended to expostulate with Nazip
-Hanoum; but his advice had no more effect upon her than his preference;
-and for the first time in his life, the “Brother of the Sun” and
-“Emperor of the Earth” found himself slighted by a mere girl.
-
-The evil was, however, without remedy, for, as the adopted daughter of
-an Imperial Princess, the liberty of the young Hanoum was sacred; and
-his Sublime Highness was fain to content himself with the anticipation
-of future success; but, when a second solicitation brought with it only
-a second repulse, despite all the costly gifts and lover-like courtesies
-of the preceding twelve months, the enraged Sultan took up the affair in
-another tone, and accused the Princess of having instigated her
-favourite to this unheard-of rebellion against his sacred will.
-
-The Sultana defended herself with all the energy of innocence, and even
-consented to further his suit by her counsels and persuasion, but no
-success followed her efforts. Nazip Hanoum preferred the partial liberty
-of the harem of her protectress, and the comparative independence of her
-present position, to the gilded captivity of the Imperial Seraglio, and
-the fleeting favour of its lord; and she consequently continued firm.
-
-The Sultan, enraged beyond endurance at this unexpected perseverance,
-left the palace in displeasure, and even refused to see his sister, whom
-he still persisted in believing to be the principal cause of his defeat.
-But monarchs are mere men where blighted feeling or wounded vanity make
-themselves felt: and Mahmoud, when he retreated to his gilded saloons at
-Beglierbey, shared the fate of his kind. He became convinced that he
-really loved Nazip Hanoum, and that her possession was necessary to his
-happiness; and, determined not to be thwarted a third time, he continued
-deaf to the earnest and humble prayers of the Princess that he would
-restore to her the light of his favour, and the glory of his presence;
-and actually refused during three long weeks to be accessible to her
-entreaties; when, feeling convinced that this display of his sublime
-wrath must have produced a powerful effect on the refractory beauty, he
-once more bent his course to the palace of the Princess.
-
-A rich gift to Nazip Hanoum announced her pardon; and when she had
-played and sung, seated on a cushion at his feet, and he had witnessed
-the graceful movements of the dancing girls, and partaken of the
-perfumed sherbet of his Imperial Sister, he led the young beauty into
-the gardens of the palace, where she was compelled to listen for the
-third time to his thriftless suit. But, alas! for the lordly lover—the
-reflections of the past year had only strengthened her resolution, and
-she continued as unmoved by his protestations as she had been by his
-displeasure; and thus, Mahmoud returned once more to his Seraglio as
-unsuccessful as ever.
-
-Such is the sacredness of adoption among the Turks.
-
-I have already mentioned that the Palace of Ortakeuÿ fronts the
-Bosphorus, from which it is only separated by a broad path or terrace of
-marble, extending along a considerable portion of the channel, and only
-broken at intervals by the projection of the different palaces and
-dwellings that are built against the edge of the stream. While we were
-conversing with Nazip Hanoum, my attention was attracted by a peculiar
-signal rising from this terrace, and evidently intended for the ear of
-some fair inhabitant of the Seraï. As no answer was returned, the shrill
-wild sound was repeated, when Nazip Hanoum rose quietly from her
-cushions, and throwing back a small door which opened in the midst of
-the lattice-work of one of the windows, demanded, in a tone of pretty
-peevishness, why she was thus persecuted, when she had announced her
-resolution not to receive another letter. The reply to this appeal,
-brief as it was, was conclusive, for, shrugging her shoulders with a
-coquettish gesture of impatience, she flung from the casement a painted
-handkerchief secured by a silken cord attached to the window-frame, and
-after the delay of a moment, drew it back, and took a letter from amid
-its folds, which, having read with a blush and a smile, she thrust into
-the shawl that was bound about her waist, with all the composure of a
-person to whom such an occurrence was no novelty.
-
-We shortly afterwards proceeded to wait upon all the principal ladies of
-the household, who occupied apartments opening from the same gallery as
-that of Nazip Hanoum. The first whom we visited was the mother of the
-slaves, a serious, stately woman, of about fifty years of age, dressed
-in an antery and trowsers of black cashmere, very silent, and even
-sad-looking, whom we quitted as soon as we had satisfied her curiosity;
-for the atmosphere of her stateliness did not appear congenial to our
-light-hearted conductress.
-
-We were next introduced to Peroussè Hanoum, the private secretary of the
-Princess, who had been a favourite Odalique of Sultan Selim; a woman
-remarkable for her talents both natural and acquired; and a celebrated
-poet. She was seated upon her sofa, surrounded by papers; lying
-confusedly in heaps, or tied up in squares of clear muslin; and engaged
-in writing on the lid of a chest inlaid with mother-of-pearl. She was
-still handsome, with delicate features, and fine eyes, but disfigured by
-the dye with which she had made her eyebrows meet across her nose. Had I
-been able to converse with her, without the interposition of a third
-person, I am sure that I should have been delighted, for she was all
-energy and enthusiasm. Her room was crowded with Turkish and Greek
-women, squatted on cushions all over the floor; and close beside her,
-with her pale cheek resting upon her knees, sat one of the ladies of the
-Imperial Seraglio, who having suffered severely from a protracted
-indisposition, had asked and obtained permission to spend a few weeks in
-the harem of the Princess, by whom she had been brought up. She was a
-lovely girl of eighteen or nineteen, very richly dressed, but evidently
-broken-hearted. Whenever she was addressed, the tears rushed into her
-large dark eyes, and every reply appeared to be an effort. The gilded
-Palace of her Imperial Master had evidently been a mere prison to her;
-and you read a tale of blighted hope and spirit-sickness upon every line
-of her pallid face.
-
-While we were in the apartment of the secretary, Nazip Hanoum, at the
-request of the fair and faded visitor, sent a slave for her zebec, and
-played and sang with considerable sweetness and execution: after which
-the gifted Peroussè Hanoum read one of her poems, which elicited such
-rapturous applause, that I asked and obtained a transcript of it, and
-having caused it to be translated into French by one of the Professors
-of the Military College, I have since rendered it into English verse for
-the gratification of my readers.
-
-We spent a considerable time in the apartment of Peroussè Hanoum; and
-after having paid a number of less interesting visits, we finally
-entered the principal room of the Harem. Here we found a sweet girl of
-about thirteen years of age, lying upon a pile of cushions, having
-sprained her ancle a day or two previously, while dancing before the
-Sultan. She was amusing herself by nursing a very fine infant, a recent
-purchase of the Princess, who had bought both it and its mother, at the
-earnest request of the latter; who, having lost three husbands in the
-space of eighteen months, and being left entirely destitute, had
-profited by the well-known partiality of her Imperial Highness for
-children, to become an inmate of the Palace. The little girl was the pet
-and plaything, not only of Asmè Sultane, but of the whole harem; and was
-handed from one to the other, and caressed by all; while the mother did
-nothing but eat, sleep, and say her prayers; which latter ceremony she
-performed with most edifying ostentation.
-
-What a bevy of fair girls occupied that apartment! What eyes, and lips,
-and teeth, were grouped together, as they sat clustered like bees upon
-their cushions, with their delicate fingers clasped together, and almost
-making their idleness look graceful! Here and there one lay fast asleep,
-with her cheek pillowed upon her hand, and a smile upon her lips, as
-though her last waking glance had been at the silver mounted mirror
-which lay beside her, and her last thought one of triumph at her young
-beauty.
-
-A few were yet settling their cashemere girdles, and arranging their
-unwieldy head-dresses for the day, after their return from the bath;
-while one laughing maiden, who appeared to possess the talent in an
-extraordinary degree, was cutting court-plaister into various fantastic
-shapes, and dispensing them to her numerous applicants, by whom they
-were immediately affixed to their carefully-tinted eyebrows. The
-Kislar-Agha, meanwhile, walked in and out of the apartment, rolling the
-whites of his large eyes, and pouting his thick lips in silence, totally
-unmoved by the mirth and laughter going on in every direction; and
-scarcely replying to the questions and comments of those who were
-courageous enough to address him.
-
-But, although there were many prettier women than herself in the party,
-Nazip Hanoum was the “Light of the Harem!” All gave way before her; her
-graceful playfulness, her joyous laughter, her innocent caprices, were
-alike received with smiles and approbation; and she appeared to be a
-general favourite, and to justify by her amiability the measureless
-affection of her Imperial patroness. We were shortly joined by Peroussè
-Hanoum, who accompanied one of the slaves on the zebec, while she sang,
-or rather recited, one of her own compositions; after which the fair
-favourite played the theorbo, and, while another of the party beat the
-tambourine, half a dozen voices pealed out the ballads of the Sultan,
-who is also a poet, and who frequently enjoys the happiness of listening
-to his own productions, from the lips of the fair household of his
-Imperial Sister.
-
-The part taken in this concert by Nazip Hanoum and the Secretary was
-intended as a high compliment to their Frank visitors; for the Turkish
-ladies hold it as a degradation to exhibit a talent which is made an
-object of speculation and profit by hired performers.
-
-Her Imperial Highness having left the bath with a violent and painful
-headache, we were requested to make a tour of the gardens, while she lay
-down to endeavour to obtain some relief: and accordingly, conducted by
-Nazip Hanoum, and followed by a dozen of her companions, we sallied
-forth by a door opening from the hall upon a stately terrace of white
-marble; and I laughed most heartily when, on emerging from the palace,
-the sprightly favourite shouted to the gardeners who were at work on all
-sides, “Do not look—we are coming out;” and, as a matter of course,
-every one of them turned towards her to utter their assurance of
-obedience, while away ran the laughing girl to gather the gayest flowers
-of the parterre, as an offering to the Frank ladies.
-
-One fountain which we passed struck me as being peculiarly elegant; the
-stream, falling from an artificial eminence, filled successively eleven
-basins of white marble, gradually increasing in size, until the last
-formed a noble sheet of water immediately under the palace windows. The
-terraces were shaded by stately trees; and a gaily gilded kiosk,
-superbly painted in fresco, throughout the whole of its interior,
-occupied the highest point of the grounds.
-
-Having completed our survey of the gardens, and the Princess being still
-invisible, we proceeded, under the same guidance, to visit the state
-apartments, which were situated immediately over the harem.
-
-The grand saloon, built above the marble hall, was the very embodiment
-of Eastern splendour. Its magnificently-painted dome was supported by
-forty porphyry pillars with gilt capitals; its walls were lined with
-plate glass; its doors veiled by silken draperies; its floor covered
-with Persian carpets; and the lattices which veiled the entrance to the
-women’s apartments richly carved and gilt. At either extremity of the
-saloon, whose form was a fine oval, a noble flight of marble steps led
-downwards to the harem; and along the glittering balustrade were
-scattered groups of slaves, awaiting the summons of their Imperial
-Mistress, and clad in the gaudiest colours.
-
-The morning-room of the Sultana was flooded with sunshine, and opened
-upon the terrace: the carpet, covering the floor, the cushions which
-were piled beneath the windows and the hangings of the walls, were all
-of the purest white, ornamented with wreaths of roses; while the roof,
-on which the Orientals universally display most elaborate taste, was of
-a deep purple colour, ribbed and studded with golden stars.
-
-The reception-room was in a different style: sombre, magnificent, and
-almost cloistral in its decorations; heavy with gilding, and gloomy with
-cornices; while the sleeping chamber, hung with crimson and blue satin,
-and scattered over with perfumes and objects of taste, had an air of
-comfort and inhabitation almost English.
-
-But the most elegant suite of rooms was that appropriated to the Sultan.
-A saloon whose thirty windows were hung with purple velvet fringed with
-gold; whose sofa cushions were formed of glittering tissue; and whose
-walls were rich with plate-glass and gilding; whose floor was crowded
-with objects of _vertù_, and whose every table was scattered over with
-gems, opened into the Imperial sleeping-room, whose European bed, hung
-with flowered muslin, and decorated with knots of coloured ribbon,
-contrasted cheerfully with the heavy magnificence of the saloon and its
-elaborate draperies; while the mangal of wrought silver, richly gilt,
-and the collection of jewelled toys which filled the two recesses at the
-end of the apartment, brought back the imagination to the gorgeous East.
-
-Incense-burners of gold, studded with precious stones; ring-trays
-wreathed with rubies; a miniature of the Sultan himself in a frame
-thickly set with diamonds, and resting upon a cushion of white satin; a
-toilette of fillagreed silver; a chocolate cup of enamel studded with
-pearls: and a gilt salver, covered with watches of all sizes and shapes,
-were part of the tempting array. But I was more delighted by a Koràn,
-and a manuscript collection of prayers, written by the Sultan, and
-splendidly illuminated. Both were bound in gold, with the Imperial
-cipher wrought upon each corner in brilliants, while a border was formed
-round the outer edges of the volumes, of passages from the holy
-writings, indifferent coloured jewels.
-
-The private withdrawing-room was not remarkable in any respect, if,
-indeed, I except the circumstance of its sofa and curtains being trimmed
-with fluted gauze ribbon, which, to an European eye, produced a most
-extraordinary effect. But, upon the whole, I saw less inconsistency and
-bad taste exhibited in the arrangements of the numerous apartments that
-I traversed, than I had prepared myself to expect.
-
-While we were making our tour of the palace, orders had been given by
-the Princess that the dancing girls should prepare themselves to exhibit
-their skill for our amusement; but, unfortunately, in the excess of her
-graciousness, she had resolved on treating us with a view of their new
-dresses and their new dances, both intended to be European; and
-assuredly such costumes were never before imagined. I will give the
-description of one—it will suffice to afford an idea of the whole. A
-dress of blue muslin, elaborately ornamented with bows of pink and
-scarlet ribbon, was drawn round the throat with a cord of green silk,
-which hung down the back and terminated in two heavy tassels; the
-petticoat was long and scanty, and was trimmed with two narrow flounces,
-edged with white satin; black leather shoes of the coarsest description,
-gloveless hands, a sash of pink and silver that swept the floor; a
-necklace of pearl; and a head-dress at least a yard across, where a mass
-of false hair was smothered in flowers enough to decorate a supper
-table, and carefully selected of all the colours of the rainbow,
-completed the costume; and I need not expatiate on its effect. But the
-admiration which it excited in the harem was immense; and the really
-beautiful girl who was the fortunate wearer of the motley garb appeared
-to consider herself raised above mortality, as she listened to the
-comments of the throng by whom she was surrounded.
-
-The male dresses were in perfect keeping with that which I have
-endeavoured to describe; and the whole had found such favour in the eyes
-of the Sultana, that she only tolerated the Turkish costume on ordinary
-occasions.
-
-As the day was waning to a close, and the distance to Pera was
-considerable, I was reluctantly obliged to decline the honour of dining
-in the palace, and awaiting until evening the appearance of the
-Princess, whose continued indisposition still confined her to her
-apartment; and accordingly, despite the remonstrances of our kind and
-courteous entertainers, I took my leave of the fair favourite and her
-talented friend; bearing with me an invitation from Her Imperial
-Highness to repeat my visit at no distant period, when she might be able
-to receive and converse with me; and I then returned to Pera with an
-aching head and dazzled eyes.
-
-I subjoin the little ballad of Peroussè Hanoum, which I have rendered
-almost literally into English verse. I could have wished that it had
-been somewhat more Oriental in its character, but its quaintness is at
-least sufficiently characteristic.
-
-
- BALLAD.
-
- My love for thee hath ta’en away my rest;
- By day and night I think of thee alone;
- I muse upon the curls which veil thy breast,
- And sigh to know that thou art not mine own.
-
- My love for thee is madness! All esteem
- My passion folly who do look on me;
- The arrows of thine eyes have drank the stream
- Of my fond heart; and I must part from thee.
-
- My love for thee is deep; and I of late
- Can look upon none other—Thou art cold,
- And ’tis the working of my hapless fate
- That I no more thy gracious smiles behold.
-
- Leyla! be mine, and learn my spirit-wrong;
- I’ll tell thee all my grief—the tale is long.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
- Kahaitchana—The Barbyses—The Valley of the Sweet
- Waters—Imperial Procession—National Interdict—Picturesque
- Scene—The Princess Salihè and her Infant—Forbearance of the
- Sultan—The Toxopholites—Imperial Monopoly—Passion of the
- Sultan for Archery—Record-Columns—The Odalique’s Grave—The
- Lost One—Azmè Sultane—Imperial Courtesy—A Drive through the
- Valley.
-
-The loveliest spot in the neighbourhood of Constantinople is undeniably
-Kahaitchana; called by the Franks the “Valley of the Sweet Waters,” a
-name as appropriate as it is poetical.
-
-The sparkling Barbyses takes its rise amid the rich vegetation of the
-valley, and traverses its greensward like a silver thread. As a river it
-is inconsiderable, but, being the only stream of any size within many
-miles of the capital, it is an object of great enjoyment and admiration.
-
-The valley itself, like that of Rasselas, is shut in on all sides by
-tall and arid hills, amid which it nestles so fresh, and green, and
-sunny, that you feel at once that it was destined by nature for holyday
-uses. Need I say that the Sultan has here both a summer palace and a
-kiosk? There exists no pretty spot near Stamboul where he has them not;
-but the Palace of Kahaitchana is a favourite retreat, where he generally
-retires to escape from the coil and cares of the capital, whenever he
-can contrive to wring a day’s leisure from the stern grasp of public
-duty. The ride from Pera is delightful: the air of the hills is so
-elastic that it seems to instil new life into your pulses; and the
-descent into the valley is so picturesque, that, despite your previous
-enjoyment, you are anxious to arrive in the lovely spot which lies,
-bathed in sunshine, at your feet.
-
-A brighter day never shone from the heavens than that on which I joined
-a party who were bound for Kahaitchana. I had been indisposed for
-several days, and was too weak to indulge myself with a gallop; and
-accordingly, comfortably nestled amid the cushions of my araba, I
-suffered the more joyous and healthful of my friends to fly past me, and
-leisurely pursued my way to the valley.
-
-As I descended the hill, I saw a procession of carriages issuing from
-the palace court, and making their way along the opposite bank of the
-stream, which forms the boundary of the Imperial pleasure grounds. A
-mounted guard stopped me for an instant at the foot of the height, but
-suffered me to pass after the delay of a moment, as he had received no
-orders to prevent the entrance of any Frank lady by that road; the
-interdict being confined to Greeks, Armenians, and Jewesses. Simply
-requesting me, therefore, to stop my carriage, as the Imperial family
-passed, he desired my arabajhe to proceed. I obeyed without hesitation;
-and, as the river is only a few feet in width, I had an excellent view
-of the distinguished party.
-
-An open carriage, drawn by four fine bay horses, each led by a groom,
-contained the two younger sons of the Sultan, the palace dwarf, and the
-principal negro of the Sultan’s household. The infant prince is a
-sweet-looking child, with bright eyes and rosy cheeks, and appears
-healthy enough to be the son of a peasant. Four bullock-carriages
-followed, and among their veiled occupants were the Princess Mihirmàh,
-her mother, and one of her sisters. Some of the younger ladies were
-exceedingly lovely, and wore their yashmacs so transparent, and so
-coquettishly arranged, that I could trace their features distinctly.
-This is, however, by no means the case generally speaking, as the
-inmates of the Imperial Seraglio are more closely covered when in a less
-retired spot, than any other of the Turkish women; and I remember on one
-occasion to have seen a favourite Odalique of the Sultan, who had a
-gauze across her eyes, as well as wearing her yashmac close to their
-very lids!
-
-Troops of negroes surrounded the carriages, and the procession was
-closed by the Kislar Agha, mounted on a superb Arabian horse, and
-accompanied by four attendants on foot.
-
-As soon as the _cortège_ had passed, I pursued my way, and found that my
-friends had been compelled to make a circuit, and to enter the valley by
-another road, which did not communicate with the palace grounds. Nothing
-could be more cheerful or more picturesque than the scene that met my
-eye as I descended from the araba. The greensward was covered with merry
-groups—Wallachian and Bulgarian musicians were scattered among the
-revellers; Bohemian flower girls were vending their pretty nosegays in
-every direction, so skilfully arranged that each veiled fair one saw in
-an instant whether the tale she wished to tell had been anticipated by
-the dark-eyed Flora—mounted patroles appeared and disappeared along the
-crests of the hills as they pursued their round of observation—an
-Imperial caïque of white and gold was riding upon the ripple near one of
-the palace gates—Turkish servants were galloping in all
-directions—every avenue of the Imperial residence was doubly
-guarded—and all was bustle and excitement.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Pardoe del.
-
-Day & Haghe Lith^{rs}. to the King
-
-PALACE of the “SWEET WATERS”.
-
-_Henry Colburn, 13, G^t. Marlborough S^t. 1837._]
-
-As we were standing in front of the palace, two six-oared caïques drew
-up beside the terrace, and shortly afterwards appeared the Princess
-Salihè, the wife of Halil Pasha, attended by half a dozen negroes,
-and twice as many female slaves, and followed by the head nurse carrying
-in her arms the lovely infant, on occasion of whose birth Sultan Mahmoud
-displayed such unprecedented generosity.
-
-Heretofore, as it was stated at the time in the public prints, all the
-Emperors of Turkey had caused the male children of their own offspring
-to be destroyed, and thus provided most efficiently against future
-disputes relatively to the succession. The child on whom I now looked
-had not only been spared by its Imperial Grandsire, but public
-rejoicings had taken place on its birth—cannon had been fired, and
-ministers had been admitted to the Presence on audiences of
-congratulation. It was a noble boy, laughing and sporting in the arms of
-its nurse; and, as the caïques shot away, I busied myself with
-endeavouring to picture to my mind’s eye the joy of the fond mother on
-learning that her child was to be spared to her. The delight was,
-however, fated to be transient, for Mahmoud was ere long released from
-his incipient enemy, (if such the little prince were indeed destined one
-day to become) without dyeing his own hands in blood. Three days after
-our visit to Kahaitchana he expired in convulsions, induced by his
-sufferings in teething.
-
-As I understood that His Highness was engaged at archery with some of
-his favourite Pashas, I resolved on endeavouring to obtain a sight of
-him; and accordingly one or two of our party detached themselves from
-the rest, and, making a circuit of the pleasure-grounds, we arrived
-opposite the spot where the Toxopholites were “speeding the winged arrow
-to the mark.” A heavy cloud that was passing over the valley had already
-shed a few of those large drops which fall upon the leaves with the
-sound and the weight of hail; and the Sultan was seated beneath a red
-umbrella, held over his sacred person by one of the Officers of the
-Imperial Household. The favoured Pashas were standing in a line along
-the _façade_ of the building; and a number of servants were dispersed
-over the lawn, for the purpose of collecting the arrows.
-
-Apropos of umbrellas—Until the present reign, the red umbrella was
-sacred to the use of the Sultan; but his present Highness probably
-deeming the monopoly a very inconsequent one, graciously removed the
-interdict; and I need scarcely add that red umbrellas are now the rage
-at Constantinople.
-
-Archery is a passion with Sultan Mahmoud, who is extremely vain of his
-prowess; so much so indeed, that a long stretch of hilly country
-immediately in the rear of the Military College is dotted over with
-marble pillars fancifully carved, and carefully inscribed, erected on
-the spots where the arrows shot by himself from a terrace on the crest
-of the height are supposed to have fallen—I say supposed, for, as his
-foible is no secret, the Imperial pages who are employed to collect the
-shafts, and to measure the distances, generally pick up the arrow and
-run on twenty or thirty paces further, ere they affect to find it; by
-which means the Sultan shoots like the Prince Aimwell in the Fairy Tale;
-and the cunning varlets who restore his arrows earn many a _backshish_
-or present which more honest men would miss. I remember on one occasion,
-when on an exploring expedition, suddenly coming upon so handsome a
-marble column, inscribed with letters of gold, and surmounted by an urn,
-that I was curious to learn its purport; when, to my surprise, I
-discovered that this was a record-pillar of the same description; and as
-his Sublime Highness had on this occasion pulled a very long bow indeed,
-so he had perpetuated its memory by a handsomer erection than usual.
-
-The archery party at Kahaitchana was amusing enough. First flew the
-arrow of the Sultan, and away ran the attendants; then each Pasha shot
-in his turn, taking especial care to keep within bounds, and not to
-out-Cæsar Cæsar. Some of them looked important, and others horridly
-bored: but there was no escape from an amateur who boasts that he has
-practised every week for the last forty years.
-
-A little to the left of the spot occupied by the archers is a raised
-platform overshadowed by a weeping willow, beneath which rises a
-handsome head-stone. It is the grave of an Imperial Odalique, who died
-suddenly in the very zenith of her youth, her beauty, and her favour.
-She was buried in this lovely spot at the express command of the Sultan,
-who was so deeply affected by her loss that for two entire years he
-abandoned the valley. The platform is overlooked by the windows of the
-Salemliek, and every wind that sighs through the willow branches carries
-their voice to the ears of those who occupy its gilded chambers.
-Mahmoud, in a fit of poetical despair, is said to have written a
-pathetic ballad of which she was the subject. I endeavoured to procure
-it, but failed; and, as I was loath that she should remain unsung in
-Europe, I even tried my own hand in some wild stanzas, which I wrote
-hurriedly as I stood near her grave.
-
-
- THE LOST ONE.
-
- Spring is come back to us—the laughing Spring!
- Sunlight is on the waters—
- And many a bright, and many a beaming thing,
- O’er this fair scene its gladdening spell will fling,
- For the East’s dark-eyed daughters.
- But where is She, the loveliest of the throng,
- The painter’s model, and the theme of song;
- For whom the summer roses joyfully
- Gave forth alike the beauty of their bloom,
- Their dewy freshness, and their soft perfume:—
- The loved of the World’s Monarch—Where is She?
-
- Alas! for her the Spring returns in vain;
- Her home is with the sleepers:—
- She will not join in the glad song again
- With which she once subdued the spirit-pain
- Of the earth’s pale-browed weepers.
- For her the dance is ended—and for her
- The flowers no more will their bright petals stir;
- Nor the sad bulbul wake his melody:
- The sunshine falls on every hillock’s crest,
- The pulse of joy beats high in every breast;
- But She, the loved and lost one, where is She?
-
- She lies where lie the last year’s faded flow’rs;
- She sleeps where sleep the proudest;
- And there are eyes that will weep burning show’rs,
- And there are sighs will wear away the hours
- When the heart’s grief is loudest.
- Yet mourn her not, she had her day of pride,
- The East’s dread sovereign chose her for his bride;
- The sunlight rested on her favour’d brow:
- Like a fair blossom blighted in its bloom,
- She filled an early, but a cherished tomb,
- And where the mighty linger, rests She now!
-
-Despite the sentiment of the thing, however, the beautiful Odalique has
-been long forgotten; and the bevy of beauties who wander near her grave
-have no time to sigh over her fate. It was, nevertheless, consolatory to
-my romance to remark that the Sultan shot his arrows in another
-direction!
-
-On leaving the neighbourhood of the Toxopholites, I returned accompanied
-by a Greek lady to the araba, and drove higher up the valley; where we
-came in contact with the carriages of Azmè Sultane and her suite. On
-seeing us, she stopped, and, after inquiring if I were the Frank lady
-whom she had invited to her palace, she courteously and condescendingly
-expressed her regret that her indisposition had rendered her unable to
-receive me, but desired that I would hold myself engaged to spend
-another day in the Seraï ere long. She then, as a mark of especial
-favour, sent one of her negroes to the araba, with the infant to whom I
-have already made allusion, and whom I discovered to be the namesake of
-my lovely acquaintance, Heyminè Hanoum: the child was richly and
-fantastically dressed; and, when I had praised its beauty, admired its
-costume, and restored it to the attendant, I received a very gracious
-salutation from Her Highness, who moved on, followed by her suite.
-
-The Princess, who is the widow of a Pasha, is a noble-looking woman,
-with a very aristocratic manner, and strongly resembles her brother. She
-has evidently been handsome, but must now be more than sixty years of
-age. Her fair favourite, Nazip Hanoum, was seated beside her, but so
-closely veiled, that, until she saluted me, I was unable to recognise
-her.
-
-As we continued our drive, we passed a hundred groups of which an artist
-might have made as many studies. All was enjoyment and hilarity. Caïques
-came and went along the bright river; majestic trees stretched their
-long branches over the greensward; gay voices were on the wind; the
-cloud had passed away; and the sunlight lay bright upon the hill-tops. I
-know not a spot on earth where the long, sparkling summer day may be
-more deliciously spent than in the lovely Valley of the Sweet Waters.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-
- Easter with the Greeks—Greek Church at Pera—Women’s
- Gallery—Interior of a Greek Church—The Sanctuary—The
- Screen—Throne of the Patriarch—The Holy Sepulchre—Singular
- Appearance of the Congregation—Sociability of the
- Ladies—_L’Echelle des Morts_—Shipping—Boats and
- Boatmen—Church of the Fanar—Ancient Screen—Treasure
- Chests—The Sanctuary—Private Chapels—A Pious
- Illumination—Priests’ House—Prison—Remedy against
- Mahomedanism—Midnight Mass—Unexpected Greetings—The
- Patriarch—Logotheti—Russian Secretaries—Russian Supremacy in
- Turkey—Affinity of Religion between the Greeks and
- Russians—The Homage—Pious Confusion—Patriarch’s
- Palace—Lovely Night-Scene—Midnight Procession—Serious
- Impressions—Suffocating Heat—Dawn.
-
-Our own Easter was over. The last dinner had been eaten, the last
-quadrille had been danced; politics had succeeded to parties, and
-diplomacy to dissipation; when the Greeks were preparing to celebrate
-the festival with all the pomp and circumstance of the most gorgeous and
-glowing of religions. I took this opportunity of paying my first visit
-to the Greek Church of Pera; an elegant edifice built at the expense of
-the Russian government, and richly decorated with blue and gold; where
-the service is performed both in Greek and Russ, all the priests
-attached to it being Russians.
-
-A Greek lady, whose acquaintance I had made, politely offered me the use
-of her seat, which I accepted the more gladly, that without such
-accommodation I must have failed in my attempts to witness the ceremony;
-most of the females being obliged to content themselves with hearing the
-service, without a hope of seeing it. This difficulty arises from the
-fact that the women are not permitted to occupy the body of the church,
-but are confined to a gallery so closely latticed that it is impossible
-for those below to catch the faintest glimpse of the secluded fair-ones.
-
-The appearance of a Greek church differs from those of the Roman
-Catholics, infinitely more than do the several religions. The Sanctuary,
-in the midst of which stands the High Altar, is separated from the
-church by a close screen; and there are neither aisles nor side chapels.
-The whole edifice is lighted by chandeliers suspended from the ceiling
-in three straight lines, reaching from the Sanctuary to the principal
-entrance: and the screen is ornamented with the effigies of saints,
-hardly and drily painted; which frequently figure in such sort in their
-temples as thoroughly to exonerate them from the imputation of making to
-themselves the “likeness of anything in Heaven, or on earth, or in the
-waters under the earth.” Nor is this all; for the pious being to the
-full as prone to make votive offerings to their favourite saints as any
-Catholic in Spain or Portugal, the staring, wooden pictures are
-furthermore decorated with gold and silver hands, eyes, ears, or noses,
-as the case may be; which gives them so comical an effect that the
-gravest person cannot contemplate them without a smile.
-
-The centre of the screen is closed by a curtain above the low double
-door opening into the church—the veil shrouding from the eyes of the
-congregation “the holy of holies,” according to the old Jewish use. On
-the present occasion, the curtain was drawn back, and the High Priest
-was robing himself in front of the altar.
-
-The Patriarch’s throne was on the right hand, and immediately opposite
-to it was the pulpit; while at the bottom of the church on each side of
-the door stood two enormous chests of polished wood, containing the
-church plate and properties. In the centre of the marble floor was
-placed the boast and treasure of the chapel—a stone which once formed
-part of the Sepulchre of the Saviour, affirmed to have been brought from
-the Holy Land, and ultimately deposited here. The crush towards this
-point was enormous: the dense crowd shoving and elbowing each other most
-determinedly to secure an approach; which, when they had effected it,
-enabled them to cross themselves, according to the rite of their
-church, seven times successively with a rapidity only to be acquired by
-long practice, and to kiss each extremity of the stone, leaving a piece
-of money in the salver of the attendant priest.
-
-Huge wax candles of at least seven inches in diameter were burning in
-front of the Sanctuary, and on the canopy covering the Sepulchre; and
-the glare fell upon a dense crowd of heads, some shaven close, some
-decorated with a single long tress of hair hanging from the summit; some
-half-shaved, as though a platter had been adjusted to the cranium of the
-individual, and that the barber had operated round its edges; and others
-with long dishevelled elf-locks falling about their shoulders—the
-effect was perfectly ludicrous!
-
-Meanwhile, the ladies in the gallery were not idle: compliments were
-exchanged—inquiries made and answered—and conversations carried on, as
-coolly as though the interlocutors had been quietly seated in their own
-houses: while every five or six minutes a priest made his appearance,
-bearing a salver to receive the donations of the pious and charitable.
-But I soon wearied of the nasal, monotonous chant of the officiating
-priests, which more than counteracted the light and gladsome aspect of
-the edifice; and, satisfied with having seen a great deal of paint and
-gilding, and a rich display of tissue and embroidery, as well as a holy
-scuffle among the crowd at a particular period of the service, to
-possess themselves of the candles that had lit up the Sepulchre, I
-escaped from the scene of pious confusion; and slowly taking my way
-through the cypress-shaded burial-ground, and onward to the Echelle des
-morts, I gladly stepped into the caïque, to share, beneath the
-hospitable roof of a friend, in the magnificent ceremonials which were
-to take place in the ancient patriarchal church at the Fanar.
-
-As we traversed the port, I was struck by the various character of the
-shipping, more than usually conspicuous under a flood of bright
-sunshine. The vessels of war, (one of them the largest in the world)
-were lying like floating cities on the still surface of the mirror-like
-Bosphorus: the foreign merchant ships, anchored in dense ranks along the
-shore, with their sails furled, and their slender masts shooting
-upwards, like the tall stems of a wind-stripped forest—the Arab
-vessels, with their sharp high prows and sterns, precisely as I had
-often seen them represented on the antique medals—the steam-packets,
-dark and motionless like ocean-monsters, about to vomit forth their
-volumes of thick, suffocating smoke upon the clear air; while about, and
-around, and among all these, darted, and glided, and whirled, the
-slender caïques of polished and carved walnut wood, with their
-gracefully-clad rowers, and their minute gilded ornaments glittering in
-the light; the sharp shrill cry of “On the European side”—“On the
-Asiatic side!”—ringing upon the ear every moment, as the boatmen
-indicated each to the other which course to steer, in order to leave to
-all a free passage.
-
-We landed on a terrace overhanging the water, at the extremity of our
-friend’s garden; and after taking coffee with the ladies, immediately
-set forth to visit the church by daylight. Though more limited in its
-dimensions, and less rich in its decorations, than the church at Pera,
-it nevertheless pleased me infinitely better; there was an air of
-time-hallowed holiness about the whole of its interior, far more
-attractive than the unfaded paint and fresh gilding which I had seen in
-the morning.
-
-The Patriarch’s throne, simple, and even clumsy in its form and fashion,
-had existed for twelve hundred years, and was consequently respectable
-from its antiquity; close beside it stood the raised and high-backed
-chair of Logotheti; and about twenty feet beyond, stretched the
-magnificent screen of the Sanctuary, delicately carved in dark oak. This
-screen particularly attracted me, the workmanship was so minute and
-elaborate, and the columns which separated the panels in such high and
-bold relief. Here, as at Pera, dry, hard, savage-looking Saints
-ornamented the spaces between them, and were equally decorated with the
-incongruous and disjointed offerings of their votaries.
-
-The most popular personage of the whole calendar among the Greeks is
-decidedly St. George, who had no less than two entire effigies in beaten
-silver in this church. The pulpit was of mosaic, thickly overstrown with
-stars of mother-of-pearl; and two large chests, similar to those which I
-have already named, were composed of the same materials. The women’s
-gallery was even more closely latticed than that at Pera, and the flood
-of light without was admitted so sparingly by the high and infrequent
-casements, that a solemn twilight reigned throughout the edifice, which
-accorded admirably with its antique and somewhat gloomy character.
-
-Thanks to the guidance under which we entered, the priest who had opened
-the doors for us was obliging enough to walk to the other extremity of
-the church, and thus leave us the opportunity of penetrating into the
-Sanctuary, which the profane foot of woman is supposed never to tread.
-It consisted of a small chapel, containing an altar by no means
-remarkable, spread with the sacramental plate: a high-backed chair of
-marble for the Patriarch, a fountain for the use of the officiating
-priests, a few miserable oil-paintings, and a vast number of small
-pictures of Saints and Virgins, placed there during a certain time for
-“a consideration,” to become hallowed by the sanctity of the spot ere
-they were removed to the private chapels of the different families:
-every Greek, however limited in fortune, having an apartment in his
-house fitted up as an oratory.
-
-I was, however, much more amused (for that is the only applicable word)
-in watching the proceedings of a Greek lady who had accompanied me, than
-in contemplating the portly saints and florid martyrs by whom I was
-surrounded. A slight iron rail runs along the screen at the base of the
-paintings for the purpose of supporting the tapers which the zeal of the
-pious may be inclined to burn in their honour; and my companion was
-busily employed in lighting a score of these minute candles at a lamp
-that is constantly left burning for the purpose; humming in an
-under-tone, while she did so, the barcarolle in Masaniello which was
-exchanged, as she commenced her survey of the holy group, for such
-exclamations as the following:—
-
-“The Virgin—I shall give her four, because my own name is Mary—and
-look, I pray you, at the pretty effect of her gold hand, and her silver
-crown, with the light flashing on them. Now comes St. George—I like St.
-George, so he shall have two. Who is this? Oh! St. Nicholas; I cannot
-bear St. Nicholas, so I shall pass him by.”
-
-I ventured to intercede in his favour.
-
-“Very well, then, as you wish it, there is one for him; but he never was
-a favourite of mine: there are two saints in the calendar to whom I
-never burn a taper, St. Nicholas and St. Demetrius.”
-
-It was, however, finally settled that no partialities were to be
-indulged on the present occasion, and consequently the effect produced
-was that of a miniature illumination. My curiosity being satisfied, and
-the pious offering of my companion completed, we proceeded to make a
-tour of the vast monastic-looking building forming one side of the
-enclosure, and which is appropriated to the priests. Ascending an
-external flight of steps, we found ourselves in a wide gallery, whence
-the apartments opened on the right and left, precisely as the cells are
-arranged in a convent. One of these small, but comfortable, rooms is
-allotted to each individual; and those which we visited were very
-carefully carpeted and curtained, with divans of chintz, and every
-luxury customary in Greek apartments. In many of them we found ladies
-taking coffee with their owners, while servants were hurrying to and
-fro, full of bustle and importance.
-
-Altogether there was an atmosphere of comfort about the establishment,
-which quite made me overlook its otherwise dreary extent; and as I
-passed out by another door, having before me the Palace of the
-Patriarch, I felt no inclination to commiserate the worldly condition of
-his subordinates.
-
-From the Priest’s House we proceeded to the prison,[4] where we found
-one miserable urchin of twelve years old, “in durance vile” for an
-attempt to turn Musselmaun; he was ragged and almost barefooted, and
-some pious Turk had promised to recompense his apostacy with a new suit,
-and a pair of shoes; but, unfortunately for the cause of the Prophet,
-the boy was caught in the act of elusion, and delivered up by his
-exasperated parents to the authority of the Church, which had already
-kept him a prisoner for eight days, and was about to send him, with a
-chain about his leg, to spend a month in a public mad-house!
-
-What analogy the good Papas had found between the mosque and the
-mad-house I know not; but the punishment was certainly a most original
-and frightful one. The boy told us his own tale, and then added, with a
-broad grin, that he would take them in at last. Two other prisoners,
-accused of theft, were about to suffer their sentence in a day or two:
-exile in both cases, accompanied by branding on the breast in the most
-aggravated of the two; and, meanwhile, close confinement. They were a
-couple of shrewd-looking, desperate ruffians, and laughed in his face as
-the keeper spoke of them. We were then shown the bastinado, and the
-rings and chains for insubordinate prisoners; and, after having made a
-donation which was received with a surprise perfectly untrammelled with
-gratitude, I returned to the residence of our hospitable friends, with
-the rattling of fetters in my ears, and a thousand gloomy fancies
-floating over my brain.
-
-At half past ten o’clock we repaired once more to the Church, in order
-to assist at the midnight mass; where a Greek lady very politely gave up
-her seat to me, that I might have an uninterrupted view of the
-ceremonies. The service had already commenced when we entered, and the
-whole interior of the edifice was one blaze of light. The thirty
-chandeliers suspended from the ceiling threw a many-coloured gleam on
-the crowd beneath them, from their pendants of tinted glass; and the
-huge candles in front of the Sanctuary, and the tapers burning before
-the saints, added to the brightness of the glare; which, penetrating
-through the lattices of the gallery, enabled me to contemplate as
-extraordinary a scene as I had ever witnessed in a place of worship. The
-fair tenants of the front seats presented much the same appearance as a
-parterre of flowers; there were turbans of every tint, dresses of every
-dye, bonnets of every form: and such a constant flutter, fidget, and
-fuss; such bowing, smiling, and whispering, that I began to fancy there
-must be some mistake, and that we were, in fact, gathered together to
-witness some mere worldly exhibition.
-
-But the monotonous chanting of the priests, which had been momentarily
-suspended, was suddenly renewed; and I turned away from a score of
-polite greetings, offered by persons of whom I had not the slightest
-recollection, but to whom I had doubtlessly been presented during the
-carnival, in order to observe the proceedings beneath me.
-
-The Patriarch was seated on his throne, dressed in a vestment of white
-satin, clasped on the breast with an immense diamond ornament, over
-which was flung a scarf of gold tissue; the borders of the robe were
-wrought to about a foot in depth with portraits of the saints in
-needlework of different colours, interspersed with gold and silver
-threads. His crown of crimson velvet was entirely covered with immense
-pearls, fashioned into different figures; the intermediate spaces being
-occupied by rubies, emeralds, and brilliants, of great beauty and
-lustre. He held his staff in one hand, and in the other the Gospel,
-bound in white satin, and studded with jewels; and, at every movement
-that he made, the tapers by which he was surrounded flashed back the
-radiance of his elaborately-gemmed habit in a coruscation perfectly
-dazzling.
-
-Beside him, and on a level with the throne, sat Logotheti, in an uniform
-richly embroidered with silver; my father was beside him; and at the
-foot of his chair stood Vogorede; while immediately in front of the
-throne, in a line with the pulpit, four of the Russian Secretaries
-occupied a crimson-cushioned seat, whence they had a full view of the
-Sanctuary.
-
-Among the numerous causes, all working towards the same centre of
-Russian supremacy in Turkey, one of the most dangerous for the Moslem is
-the community of religion between the Russian and the Greek. The
-Autocrat has built a church for the Greeks in the vicinity of
-Constantinople, and the arms of Russia surmount the portal! The
-_attachés_ of the Russian Embassy, while the members of all the other
-Legations are either sleeping or feasting, are meekly kneeling before
-the throne of the Greek Patriarch, and humbly kissing the hand which
-extended to them!
-
-The act in itself is simple. It is the effect that it produces on the
-minds of the mass which is to be dreaded. The expression of delighted
-admiration on the countenances of the crowd was a perfect study, as,
-following in the wake of Logotheti and Vogoride, ere less important
-persons had an opportunity of doing homage to the Patriarch, the
-all-powerful agents of all-powerful Russia bent a willing knee to kiss
-the sacred hand. A common interest was created at once, and no tie is so
-sure as that of religious faith. The Greeks already writhe in their
-fetters—the bondmen loathe their task-masters—the tree is cankered at
-the core, and hollowed in the trunk: let Russia apply the axe, and it
-will fall.
-
-The Moslem, be he lured to ruin as smilingly as he may, and flattered
-into security as blandly as the criminal of his country, who finds the
-rope about his neck ere he knows that he is condemned; is the coveted
-prey of his semi-barbarous ally. The force of the Russian, and the guile
-of the Greek—external power and internal treachery—are at work against
-him; and what has he to oppose to these? High-sounding titles, and
-pompous phrases—a young and half-trained soldiery—a navy, unequal to
-the management of their magnificent shipping—and a Capital, protected
-by men, many of whom wear a Russian medal at their breast—a medal
-bestowed on them by the munificent Emperor of another nation, for having
-done their duty (according to Muscovite notions) towards their own!
-
-But let Turkey be supported for awhile, as her own efforts merit that
-she should be; let her find the ready help from European powers, in
-which she so fondly trusted—and she will, ere long, prove herself
-worthy to take her place among the nations. Her military and naval
-forces require only time; her soldiers have already given evidence of
-their courage, and, having so done when comparatively undisciplined,
-will naturally develop still higher attributes when acting as a
-well-organized body; in which each individual receives, as well as
-gives, support. Let the Russian medal be trampled in the dust of the
-city streets—and this will demand no effort on the part of those who
-wear it, into whose breasts it burns, and who consider it rather as a
-brand of disgrace, than as a creditable badge—and it will then require
-no spirit of prophecy to foretell the future prosperity of Turkey. To
-the East, Europe is indebted for her knowledge of military tactics and
-military subordination, and she can well afford to pay back the debt.
-Half a dozen experienced officers would, in a few months, change the
-whole appearance and nature of the Turkish army.
-
-Homage had been paid to the Patriarch, and the chanting became more
-animated, as, followed by a train of Archbishops and Bishops, he retired
-to the sanctuary, and added to his already costly habiliments several
-other jewelled and embroidered draperies. He next received the
-sacrament, at which period of the ceremony every man, woman, and child,
-within the church hastened to light the taper that they had brought for
-the purpose, (the symbol of the Resurrection) which produced a sudden
-burst of light absolutely thrilling. As I looked down upon the
-struggling and stifling crowd beneath me, so closely wedged together
-that it was with difficulty they could raise the arm holding the taper,
-which each lit by that of his neighbour, the scene was most
-extraordinary. A dense vapour was even then rapidly spreading its heavy
-folds over the whole edifice, and, in a few moments, I could distinguish
-nothing but a sea of heads, and a multitude of pigmy lights, feebly
-struggling through the thick smoke.
-
-The fiery and impetuous Greeks, enthusiastic in all their feelings—in
-religion, in love, in hate, and in ambition—did not, in the present
-instance, confine themselves so scrupulously as an European congregation
-would have done, to the space assigned to them—half a dozen wild,
-bandit-looking individuals clambered into the pulpit—a score more clung
-to the steps—those who chanced to be nearest to the vacated stalls of
-the Bishops appropriated them without ceremony—others hung by the
-pillars which supported the gallery—and thus sufficient space was with
-difficulty ensured by the panting beadles for the passage of the
-procession.
-
-At this moment, I followed my friend from the church, and, four or five
-sturdy servants having with considerable effort forced a way for us to
-the Patriarch’s Palace, we hastened to take possession of his private
-sitting-room, which, as it overlooked the enclosure in which the church
-was situated, and where the procession was to halt, he had politely
-offered, in order to secure the gratification of my curiosity.
-
-The night was one of beauty. The pale moon was riding high among masses
-of fleecy clouds, which were pillowed upon the deep blue of the sky,
-forming towers, and palaces, and islets, so changeful and fleeting, that
-they looked like the ephemeral creations of fairy-land. A lofty and
-leafy plane tree, whose foliage had newly burst beneath the soft
-influence of spring, was sighing gently in the midnight wind; and the
-long dark outline of the monastic buildings, and the slanting roof of
-the church, loomed out in the faint moonlight, with a mysterious depth
-of shadow well suited to the solemnity of the hour. The wide doors of
-the sacred edifice suddenly fell back—the low chant of the choir
-swelled upon the night air—and forth rushed the eager crowd that had so
-lately thronged the church; each with his lighted taper in his hand, and
-pressing forward to a raised platform in the centre of the enclosure,
-railed in for the convenience of the Patriarch and his train of
-dignitaries.
-
-Ere long, the whole of the wide space was like a sea, in which the dark
-waves flung themselves upwards in fiery sparks, while they rolled and
-swelled in gloom beneath the surface—or like a spot upon a sky of
-tempest, into which were gathered all the stars of heaven to form one
-galaxy of light amid the surrounding gloom. And forth into this place of
-brightness slowly moved the holy train from the chapel. First came the
-bearer of the golden crucifix, surrounded by gilded lanterns and
-gleaming candlesticks; and next the torch-bearers, whose waxen candles,
-linked together in threes with gaudily-coloured ribbons, represented the
-Trinity; then moved forward a train of priests, walking two and two,
-with their flowing robes of saffron-coloured satin, their luxuriant
-beards sweeping down to their breasts, their brimless caps, and their
-long locks falling upon their shoulders.
-
-Nothing can be more picturesque than the head-dress of a Greek priest.
-As they are not permitted to use either scissors or razor from the
-period of their birth, when they are vowed to the Church by their
-parents, they reduce the beard by plucking it, according to the old
-Jewish law; and, being almost universally very fine men, they do this
-with a care and skill which heighten the effect of their appearance;
-while their long thick locks are, on ordinary occasions, hidden beneath
-their caps.
-
-This holy body was succeeded by the Patriarch, supported on either side
-by two of the Archbishops, who, in the Greek Church, represent the
-Apostles, as the Patriarch himself personates the Saviour, and followed
-by the ten others in robes of such dazzling brilliancy that any attempt
-at description would be idle. Immediately after these came the Bishops,
-walking two and two; succeeded in their turn by Logotheti and Vogoride,
-another train of priests, and finally by that portion of the
-congregation who had not been able to effect an earlier egress from the
-church.
-
-The junior priests arranged themselves in a circle at the foot of the
-platform, which was soon filled by the heads of the Church, and the lay
-dignitaries, among whom stood my father. The Patriarch read a portion of
-the scriptures, from an ample volume that lay open on the stand before
-him: the attendant priests chanted a psalm which rose and fell on the
-night wind in solemn cadences; and, finally, the elder of the Bishops,
-having placed in the hand of the Patriarch one of the triple candles
-which I have already named, wherewith to bless the people; and
-subsequently two linked together, representing the double nature of
-Christ; the whole crowd bowed their uncovered heads, and crossed
-themselves seven times, with the collected points of the two
-fore-fingers and the thumb; after which a passage was with difficulty
-forced through the crowd for the return of the procession, whose chant
-gradually died away upon the ear, as it disappeared beneath the portal
-of the church, and in five minutes more we were alone, gazing out upon
-the empty enclosure flickered with moonlight.
-
-It was a solemn moment! The pomp and circumstance of human worship had
-passed away, and we looked only on the uncertain moon, over which the
-light scud was rapidly drifting; while the only sound that fell upon our
-ears was the sighing of the midnight wind through the leaves of the tall
-plane tree. I bowed my head in silence upon the cushion against which I
-leaned—my excited fancies were suddenly sobered, my throbbing pulses
-stilled—Nature had spoken to my heart, and my spirit was subdued
-beneath her influence. It was a sudden and strange reaction; and, could
-I at that moment have escaped to the solitude of my own chamber, I do
-not think that one idle memory of the magnificence which I had so lately
-witnessed would have intruded on my reveries.
-
-Man’s pride, and pomp, and power, had fettered my fancy, and riveted my
-gaze—But it was night; the still, soft night, with its pale moon, its
-mysterious clouds, and its sighing voice, which had touched my spirit.
-In such hours, the heart would be alone with GOD!
-
-When we re-entered the church, I feared that I should have fainted;
-thick volumes of smoke were rolling heavily along the roof; the
-suffocating incense was mounting in columns from the censers—the myriad
-tapers were adding their heat to that of the burning perfume; and the
-transition from the light pure atmosphere without was sickening. I
-persisted, nevertheless, in my determination of remaining until the
-close of the ceremony, which concluded with the Declaration of Faith,
-read by Logotheti; and a portion of the Gospel, delivered from the
-pulpit by a priest, richly dressed in blue and silver.
-
-The grey light of morning was glimmering on the Bosphorus as we returned
-to the house, where we breakfasted, and then retired to bed with aching
-heads and dazzled eyes, to prepare for the fatigues of the morrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-
- Feasting after Fasting—Visit to the Patriarch—Gorgeous
- Procession—Inconvenient Enthusiasm—Indisposition of the
- Patriarch—The Ceremony of Unrobing—The Impromptu Fair—The
- Patriarch at Home—The Golden Eggs.
-
-To what a breakfast did we sit down the following morning! The long and
-rigorous fast was over, and a hearty vengeance was to be taken for the
-previous forty days of penance and abstinence. It was amusing to remark
-with what interest every dish was examined, and how universally each was
-rejected which was not composed of some hitherto forbidden luxury. The
-centre of the table was occupied by a porcelain bowl filled with eggs
-boiled hard, and stained a fine red with logwood; but it was placed
-there merely in compliance with the national custom, as an Easter
-emblem; for on this, the first day of emancipation from the thrall of
-fast, no individual of the party had a thought to bestow on such
-primitive fare.
-
-At the conclusion of the meal, I went, accompanied by my father, and a
-fine youth who had escaped from college for the Easter recess, and who
-volunteered to act as interpreter, to pay a visit to the Patriarch, who
-had expressed a desire to make our acquaintance. We were conducted
-through several large, cold, scantily furnished apartments, presenting
-rather the appearance of belonging to a barrack than to an episcopal
-palace, with their floors thickly strown with bay leaves, which emitted
-a delicious perfume as we passed along, to the private sitting-room
-overlooking the court of the church, where we seated ourselves to await
-the arrival of the Patriarch, who had not yet left the Sanctuary.
-
-A sudden rush from the door of the church called us to the windows,
-whence we could distinguish, in the distance, the gorgeous procession
-which was conducting the Patriarch home after eight and forty hours of
-constant ceremonial. We had ample time to enjoy the spectacle, for the
-throng was so dense, that it was with the utmost difficulty that the
-beadles and _kavasses_ could force a passage through the excited and
-clamorous multitude, for the objects of their overweening and
-inconvenient enthusiasm. Nor was the difficulty likely to decrease, for
-the crowd were still pouring out from the church, clinging one to the
-other to secure their footing, and defying alike the many-thonged whips
-of the beadles, and the powerful elbows and staves of the police.
-
-The Patriarch, who had rigorously observed the fast throughout the whole
-of Lent; and who had, moreover, only partially recovered from a severe
-and lingering illness, was little able, after forty-eight consecutive
-hours of exertion, to contend with this unlooked-for and gratuitous
-demand upon his energies; and as he moved forward, supported by two of
-the Bishops, he continually implored the forbearance of the people, who,
-in their eagerness to kiss the hem of his garment, subjected him to no
-slight risk of suffocation. But he implored in vain; the crowd shouted
-and struggled—the beadles struck and shoved—and the priests threatened
-and expostulated—unheeded; while the Patriarch was ultimately lifted
-from his feet, and carried to the foot of the great stair leading to the
-palace, by half a dozen of his followers.
-
-The solemn chant of the approaching priests instantly re-echoed through
-the vast pile, and an avenue was formed from the portal of the building
-to the door of the apartment in which we stood. First entered the
-incense-bearer, who swung his censor twice or thrice at each extremity
-of the room, and then hastily withdrew; and he was almost immediately
-followed by the whole train of Bishops, sinking under the weight of
-jewels and embroidery in which they were attired, and who took their
-places in line along the edge of the divan, and there awaited in
-silence the arrival of the two Archbishops who preceded the Patriarch.
-The sight was dazzling! On all sides a mass of gold and precious stones,
-of tissue and embroidery, presented itself; and the eye actually ached
-with gazing. After the lapse of a few seconds, the Great Dignitaries
-also arrived: and as I advanced to kiss the hand of the Patriarch, I
-felt completely overawed by the magnificence of the spectacle.
-
-The ceremony of unrobing followed, during which the solemn chanting of
-the priests, who lined the gallery through which the train had passed,
-was never once interrupted; and as the Bishops cast off robe after robe
-of costly silk, gorgeous brocade, and glittering tissue, I only
-marvelled how they could have supported such a weight of dress amid the
-crowd that had so unmercifully pressed upon them below, without sinking
-under it!
-
-A furred mantle having been flung over the shoulders of the Patriarch,
-he was conducted from the apartment, followed by the Bishops; and we
-remained for a time watching the movements of the multitude in the court
-beneath, while he prepared himself to receive the numerous visits which
-he had to undergo, ere he could enjoy the repose that he so much needed.
-Triumphal arches, formed of green boughs and flowering shrubs, had been
-hastily set up in every direction, and beneath these stood the sherbet
-venders, and confectioners, without whom no festival is complete in the
-East.
-
-The church doors were already closed: and the versatile Greeks were now
-as ardent and eager in the pursuit of pleasure as they had been but an
-hour previously in that of salvation. Most of them were employed in
-re-arranging their turbans, which had been unwound in the late struggle;
-others were squatted on the ground, eating _yahourt_ (a sort of
-coagulated buttermilk) out of small earthen basins, which they emptied
-with their forefinger, with a rapidity perfectly surprising; and others
-again surrounding a _mohalibè_ merchant, whose large tray, neatly
-covered with a white cloth, china saucers, and shining brass spoons
-shaped like trowels, enhanced the relish of the dainty that he
-dispensed—a species of inferior blanc-manger, eaten with rose-water and
-powdered sugar.
-
-A servant having announced that the Patriarch awaited us in another
-department, we followed him to a spacious saloon in the opposite wing of
-the palace, where we found the magnificent Prelate seated in a cushioned
-chair raised a few steps from the floor. He had exchanged his
-party-coloured raiment for a flowing robe of violet silk with a falling
-collar of velvet, and wore about his neck a massive gold chain, from
-which was suspended a star of brilliants. On his right hand were two
-baskets of variegated wicker-work; the one containing eggs of a crimson
-colour richly gilt, and the other filled with eggs of white and gold;
-while on his left-hand, a larger basket was upheaped with others simply
-stained with logwood, like those which I had seen on the breakfast
-table.
-
-He received us with much politeness; and, through the medium of our
-young friend, who made an admirable Dragoman, he asked me several
-questions on the impressions which I had received in the East: appeared
-gratified at the admiration that I expressed of the gorgeous ceremonial
-to which I had so lately been a witness; and regretted that the
-exhaustion under which he was then suffering from the fatigues of the
-last two days rendered him unable to converse with me, as he had been
-desirous of doing.
-
-Coffee and sweetmeats were shortly afterwards served; and, as I was
-aware that the anti-room was thronged with persons who were waiting to
-pay their compliments to him, I rose to depart; when he presented to me
-a couple of the gilded eggs, which he accompanied by a flattering
-expression of the pleasure that my visit had afforded to him, and a hope
-that he should again see me when his health was re-established. I made
-as handsome a reply as I was capable of doing; pressed to my lips the
-holy fingers which were extended towards me, and took my leave.
-
-I was not aware, as I received the eggs, of the extent of the
-compliment that had been paid to me, which I only learnt accidentally,
-on inquiring the origin and meaning of so singular an offering. The
-custom, as I was informed, is of so ancient a date, that no reason, save
-its antiquity, can now be adduced for its observance; but great ceremony
-is kept up in the distribution. To the principal persons of the nation
-the Patriarch gives two of those eggs which are gilt, to the next in
-rank one gilt and one plain—then follows one gilt—then two plain—and
-finally one—but, to each person who is admitted to the presence of the
-Patriarch, he is under the necessity of making the offering, be the
-guest who he may; and a day is set apart during the week, on which the
-whole of the male Greek population of Constantinople have the right to
-receive it at his hands, until extreme fatigue obliges him to resign the
-office to the Grand-Vicar.
-
-On returning to the house of our friends, we partook of coffee, and the
-delicious Easter cake peculiar to the Greeks; and immediately afterwards
-embarked in our caïque, which was to convey us to the Echelles des
-Morts, in order to witness the festivities of the Armenians in the great
-cemetery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-
- High Street of Pera—Dangers and Donkeys—Travelling in an
- Araba—Fondness of the Orientals for their Cemeteries—Singular
- Spectacle—Moral Supineness of the Armenians—M. Nubar—The
- Fair—Armenian Dance—Anti-Exclusives—Water Venders—Being à
- la Franka—Wrestling Rings—The Battle of the Sects.
-
-The araba was already at the door when we arrived at home; and, weary
-with mounting the steep ascent to Pera, I gladly threw myself upon the
-crimson mattress, and among the yielding cushions, and prepared to
-become a spectator of this new festival in luxurious inaction.
-
-Let no one venture either on foot, on horseback, or in a carriage, along
-the all-but-interminable High Street of Pera, on a fête-day, if he be in
-a hurry! In the first place, two moderately-sized individuals who chance
-to be opposite neighbours may shake hands from their own doors without
-moving an inch forward—and in the next, there is no other road from
-Topphannè or Galata (the principal landing-places) to the Great
-Cemetery. And then the natives of the East have a very sociable, but
-extremely inconvenient habit of walking with their arms about each
-other’s necks, or holding hands like children in parties of five or
-six, although they are obliged, from the narrowness of the thoroughfare,
-to move along sideways; but, nevertheless, they will not slacken their
-hold until the necessity for so doing becomes sufficiently imperative to
-admit no alternative.
-
-[Illustration: A STREET IN PERA]
-
-Another peculiarity attending an Eastern mob is its utter disregard of
-being run over, or knocked down: an Oriental will see your horse’s nose
-resting on his shoulder, and even then he will not move out of the way
-until you compel him; and when your arabajhe warns him that he is almost
-under the wheel of the carriage, he looks at him as though he wondered
-at the wanton waste of words bestowed upon so insignificant a piece of
-information.
-
-But, if the bipeds are difficult of management, the quadrupeds are
-altogether unmanageable! Let those whose nerves are shattered by the
-rattle of the London carts come here, and have their temper tried by the
-donkeys of Constantinople. You have scarcely turned the corner of the
-street, and forced your way among the clinging, chattering, lounging
-mob, ere you come upon a gang of donkeys—your horse is restless, he
-champs the bit, paws with his foreleg, and backs among the crowd, in his
-impatience to get on; you must be contented to allow him the privilege
-of champing, pawing, and backing, for there is no contending against a
-string of a dozen donkeys, laden with tiles.
-
-While you are trying to look amused at your dilemma, and endeavouring
-with “favour and fair words” to induce their owner to arrange them in
-regular line in order to enable you to pass, you hear a portentous
-clatter a hundred yards a-head:—you look forward with foreboding, and
-your fears have not misled you: it is, indeed, “the meeting of the
-donkeys;” and another gang, heavily charged with earth, or bricks, or
-unhewn stone, are gravely approaching to entangle themselves among your
-first favourites, and to be dislodged only with blows and kicks very
-ill-calculated to pacify either you or your horse.
-
-In an araba your case is still more hopeless; for a horse _must_ get on
-at last, by dint of intruding upon the pavement, and impudently poking
-his nose into every window; applying his shoulder to the back of one
-individual, and whisking his long tail into the face of another—but a
-carriage following a carriage must be satisfied to travel at the pace
-which may chance to be agreeable to its leader—while a carriage meeting
-a carriage is pushed one way, lifted another, driven against the walls
-of the houses, and shoved into the kennel, until you begin to consider
-it very doubtful whether you possess sufficient strength of wrist and
-tenacity of finger, to enable you to remain within, while such violent
-proceedings are taking place without. And when to these difficulties are
-superadded the inconvenience of a dense, reckless, pleasure-seeking mob,
-it must be conceded on all hands that the progress along the High Street
-of Pera on a festival day is by no means “easy travelling.”
-
-On the occasion of which I am about to speak we encountered three
-detachments of donkeys, four arabas, six horses laden with timber, and a
-flock of sheep—fortunately, we were by no means pressed for time;
-though how we escaped victimizing a few of the supine subjects of his
-Sublime Highness, I cannot take upon me to explain.
-
-I have already spoken elsewhere of the indifference, if not absolute
-enjoyment, with which the inhabitants of the East frequent their
-burying-grounds; but on the occasion of this festival I was more
-impressed than ever by the extent to which it is carried. The whole of
-the Christian Cemetery had assumed the appearance of a fair—nor was
-this all, for the very tombs of the dead were taxed to enhance the
-comforts of the living; and many was the tent whose centre table,
-covered with a fringed cloth, and temptingly spread with biscuits,
-sweetmeats, and sherbet, was the stately monument of some departed
-Armenian! Grave-stones steadied the poles which supported the
-swings—divans, comfortably overlaid with cushions, were but
-chintz-covered sepulchres—the step that enabled the boy to reach his
-seat in the merry-go-round was the earth which had been heaped upon the
-breast of the man whose course was run—the same trees flung their long
-shadows over the sports of the living and the slumbers of the dead—the
-kibaub merchants had dug hollows to cook their dainties under the
-shelter of the tombs—and the smoking booths were amply supplied with
-seats and counters from the same wide waste of death.
-
-On one side, a slender train of priests were committing a body to the
-earth, and mingling their lugubrious chant with the shrill instruments
-of a party of dancers; on the other, a patrol of dismounted lancers were
-threading among the many-coloured tents, in order to maintain an order
-which the heavy-witted Armenians lacked all inclination to break.
-
-I never saw a set of people who bore so decidedly the stamp of having
-been born to slavery as the Armenians: they seem even to love the rattle
-of their chains; they have no high feeling, no emulation, no enthusiasm,
-no longing for “a place among the nations;” no aspirations after the
-bright and the beautiful; no ideas, in short, beyond a pitiful imitation
-of their Moslem masters, whom they consider as the _ne plus ultra_ of
-all perfection.
-
-The appearance of the upper class of Armenians I have already described.
-Give them a more becoming head-dress, and their costume is surpassingly
-graceful; but their advantages are all external; their dreams are all of
-piastres; they have no soul. If you talk to them of their subjection to
-the Osmanli, what do they reply? “All that you say may be very true, but
-it does not concern me—my affairs are in a most prosperous condition.”
-
-It is impossible to make them sensible of their own social position;
-they listen, twirl their mustachioes, flourish their white
-handkerchiefs, replenish their chibouks, utter from time to time
-“_pekké,_” (very well), with an inane smile, and ultimately walk away,
-as well satisfied with themselves and with their tyrants as though the
-subject were one of the most irrelevant nature.
-
-From this sweeping accusation of apathy and self-depreciation, even
-after many months passed in the East, I can except only one individual;
-but that one is indeed a rare and a bright example to the rest of his
-countrymen. To those travellers who have visited Constantinople, and who
-have had the pleasure and advantage of his acquaintance, I need scarcely
-say that I allude to M. Nubar, the eminent merchant of Galata, whose
-extensive information, sound judgment, and habitual courtesy, render his
-friendship extremely valuable to those who are fortunate enough to
-secure it.
-
-To return, however, to the festival of the Champ des Morts, from which I
-have digressed. Every hundred yards that we advanced, the scene became
-more striking. One long line of diminutive tents formed a temporary
-street of eating-houses; there were kibaubs, pillauf, fritters, pickled
-vegetables, soups, rolls stuffed with fine herbs, sausages, fried fish,
-bread of every quality, and cakes of all dimensions. Escaping from this
-too savoury locality, we found ourselves among the sherbet venders,
-whose marquees, lined with blue or crimson, were pitched with more
-precision and regard to comfort and convenience than those of the
-_restaurateurs_. Mirrors, bouquets, and a display of goblets of all
-shapes and sizes, were skilfully set forth in many of them; some even
-indulged in the luxury of pictures, which were universally-glaring and
-highly-coloured French prints of female heads, of the most common
-description; and in these tents chairs and cushions were alike provided
-for the guests; while in one corner stood the mangal, ready to supply
-the necessary fragment of live coal for igniting the chibouk.
-
-Scattered among these more assuming establishments were the stands of
-the itinerant merchants, whose little cupolaed fountains threw up a
-slender thread of water to the accompaniment of a tinkling sound,
-produced by the contact of half a dozen thin plates of metal; while a
-circle of sherbet glasses, filled with liquids of different colours, and
-interspersed with green boughs, and suspended lemons, looked so cool and
-refreshing that they were more tempting by far than the aristocratic
-establishments of the marquee owners. Here and there a flat tomb,
-fancifully covered with gold-embroidered handkerchiefs, was overspread
-with sweetmeats and preserved fruits; while, in the midst of these rival
-establishments, groups of men were seated in a circle, wherever a little
-shade could be obtained, smoking their long pipes in silence, with
-their diminutive coffee-cups resting on the ground beside them. The
-wooden kiosk overhanging the Bosphorus was crowded; and many a party was
-snugly niched among the acacias, with their backs resting against the
-tombs, and the sunshine flickering at their feet.
-
-But the leading feature of the festival was the Armenian dance, that was
-going forward in every direction, and which was so perfectly
-characteristic of the people that it merits particular mention. A large
-circle was formed, frequently consisting of between forty and fifty
-individuals, (chance comers falling in as they pleased without question
-or hindrance) holding each other by the hand, or round the neck, and
-wedged closely together so as to form a compact body; the leader of the
-dance being the only one who detached himself from the rest, and held
-the person next to him at arm’s length. In the centre of the ring stood,
-and sometimes danced, the musician, whose instrument was either a
-species of small, cracked guitar, with wire strings, which he struck
-with very slender regard to either time or tune; or a bagpipe precisely
-similar to that of Scotland, but not played in the same spirit-stirring
-style, the Armenian performer making no attempt at any thing beyond
-noise, and never by any accident forming three consecutive notes which
-harmonized; but his hearers were not fastidious, and the music was, at
-least, in good keeping with the dance. Beside the minstrel, such as I
-have described him, moved the buffoon of the company, who also, by some
-extraordinary and perfectly Armenian concatenation of ideas, acted as
-Master of the Ceremonies.
-
-The leader flourished a painted muslin handkerchief, while he lifted up
-first one foot and then the other, as fowls do sometimes in a farmyard;
-poising the body on one leg for an instant, and then changing the
-position. This movement was followed by the whole of the party with more
-or less awkwardness; and thus hopping, balancing, and shifting their
-feet, they slowly worked round and round the circle, without changing
-either the time or the movement for several consecutive hours; the
-different individuals falling in and out of the ring as their
-inclination prompted, without disturbing in the slightest degree the
-economy of the dance. There was nothing exclusive in these Terpsichorean
-circles, where the smart serving-man’s neck was clasped by the sinewy
-hand of the street-porter, and where the embroidered Albanian legging
-and European shoe were placed in juxtaposition with the bare limb and
-heelless slipper. There must have been at least a dozen of these dances
-going forward in the fair, (for such I may truly call it), with a
-perseverance and solemnity perfectly astonishing, when it is remembered
-that many of the individuals thus engaged had walked five and six
-leagues to share in the festival, and would have no resting-place but
-the earth whereon to sleep away their fatigue.
-
-Great was the commerce of the water-venders, who traversed the crowd in
-every direction, with their classically formed earthen jars upon their
-shoulders, and their crystal goblets in their hands, who, for a couple
-of _paras_, poured forth a draught of sparkling water, which almost made
-one thirsty to look at it; and were as particular and punctilious in
-cleansing the glass after every customer, as though they were under the
-_surveillance_ of his successor.
-
-A few, a very few, of the revellers had indulged in deeper potations,
-and were exhibiting proofs of their inebriety in their unsteady gait and
-uncertain utterance; but intemperance is not _yet_ the common vice of
-the East; although it bids fair in time to become such. A very talented
-and distinguished individual, with whom I was lately conversing on the
-subject of the different degrees of civilization attained by particular
-nations, said of the Russians that they had commenced with champagne and
-ballet-dancers. Glorious was it, therefore, for the half dozen Armenians
-who were staggering among the crowd, to have profited as far as they
-could by so brilliant an example. Being intoxicated is, according to
-the Eastern phraseology, being _à la Franka_.
-
-Apart from the crowd were wrestling-rings, where the combatants
-exhibited their prowess precisely after the fashion of the Ancient
-Romans; and on all sides were bands of Bohemians, as dark-eyed and as
-voluble as the gipsies of Europe.
-
-The festival lasted three days, and not a single hand nor voice was
-raised in violence during the whole period; when, as if resolved to
-vindicate themselves from the aspersion of utter insensibility, the
-Catholic and Schismatic sects terminated their sports with a regular
-fight, in front of an Armenian church in Galata. The Schismatic party
-were returning to the place of embarkation in order to pass over to
-Constantinople, and singing at the pitch of their voices, at the precise
-moment when a priest of the opposite sect was performing mass in the
-church. A messenger was despatched to the revellers to enforce silence
-until they had quitted the precincts of the chapel; but his errand was a
-vain one; the Schismatics were not to be controlled; a crowd
-collected—the merits of the case were explained—the Catholics became
-furious, and insisted on the instant departure of the intruders—the
-Schismatics waxed valiant, and refused to move—and, finally, after a
-fight in which many blows were given and received, the Turks stepped in
-as mediators, and carried off a score of the combatants to Stamboul,
-where they were detained for the night, fined a few piastres, and
-dismissed like a set of lubberly schoolboys, who had wound up a holyday
-with a boxing-match!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-
- The Mosques at Midnight—Baron Rothschild—Firmans and
- Orders—A Proposition—Masquerading—St. Sophia by
- Lamplight—The Congregation—The Mosque of Sultan
- Achmet—Colossal Pillars—Return to the Harem—The
- Chèïk-Islam—Count Bathiany—The Party—St. Sophia by
- Daylight—Erroneous Impression—Turkish Paradise—Piety of the
- Turkish Women—The Vexed Traveller—Disappointment—Confusion
- of Architecture—The Sweating Stone—Women’s Gallery—View from
- the Gallery—Gog and Magog at Constantinople—The Impenetrable
- Door—Ancient Tradition—Leads of the Mosque—Gallery of the
- Dome—The Doves—The Atmeidan—The Tree of Groans—The Mosque
- of Sultan Achmet—Antique Vases—Historical Pulpit—The Inner
- Court—The Six Minarets—The Mosque of Solimaniè—Painted
- Windows—Ground-plan of the Principal Mosques—The Treasury of
- Solimaniè—Mausoleum of Solyman the Magnificent—Model of the
- Mosque at Mecca—Mausoleums in General—Indispensable
- Accessories—The Medresch—Mosque of Sultan Mahmoud at
- Topphannè.
-
-Although I am about to describe to my readers a morning at the mosques,
-I must nevertheless first conduct them into the mosques at midnight, by
-recounting a visit to St. Sophia and Sultan Achmet, which I have
-hitherto forborne to mention, in the hope (since realized) of being
-enabled, ere my departure from Constantinople, both to form and to
-impart a better idea of these magnificent edifices than my first
-adventurous survey had rendered me capable of doing.
-
-During a visit that I made to a Turkish family, with whom I had become
-acquainted, the conversation turned on the difficulty of obtaining a
-Firman to see the mosques; when it was stated that Baron Rothschild was
-the only private individual to whom the favour had ever been accorded:
-(probably upon the same principle that the Pope instituted the order of
-St. Gregory, and bestowed the first decoration upon the Hebraic
-Crœsus) and that travellers were thus dependent on the uncertain
-chance of encountering, during their residence in Turkey, some
-distinguished person to whom the marble doors were permitted to fall
-back.
-
-In vain I questioned and cross-questioned; I failed to obtain a ray of
-hope beyond the very feeble one held out by this infrequent casualty;
-and I could not refrain from expressing the bitterness of my
-disappointment, with an emphasis which convinced my Musselmaun hearers
-that I was sincere.
-
-Hours passed away, and other subjects had succeeded to this most
-interesting one, when, as the evening closed in, I remarked that ——
-Bey, the eldest son of the house, was carrying on a very energetic
-_sotto voce_ conversation with his venerable father; and I was not a
-little astonished when he ultimately informed me, in his imperfect
-French, that there was one method of visiting the mosques, if I had
-nerve to attempt it, which would probably prove successful; and that, in
-the event of my resolving to run the risk, he was himself so convinced
-of its practicability, that he would accompany me, with the consent of
-his father, attended by the old Kïara, or House-steward; upon the
-understanding (and on this the grey-bearded Effendi had resolutely
-insisted) that in the event of detection it was to be _sauve qui peut_;
-an arrangement that would enable his son at once to elude pursuit, if he
-exercised the least ingenuity or caution.
-
-What European traveller, possessed of the least spirit of adventure,
-would refuse to encounter danger in order to stand beneath the dome of
-St. Sophia? And, above all, what wandering Giaour could resist the
-temptation of entering a mosque during High Prayer?
-
-These were the questions that I asked myself as the young Bey vowed
-himself so gallantly to the venture, (to him, in any case, not without
-its dangers) in order to avert from me the disappointment which I
-dreaded.
-
-I at once understood that the attempt must be made in a Turkish dress;
-but this fact was of trifling importance, as no costume in the world
-lends itself more readily or more conveniently to the purposes of
-disguise. After having deliberately weighed the chances for and against
-detection, I resolved to run the risk; and accordingly I stained my
-eyebrows with some of the dye common in the harem; concealed my female
-attire beneath a magnificent pelisse, lined with sables, which fastened
-from my chin to my feet; pulled a _fèz_ low upon my brow; and, preceded
-by a servant with a lantern, attended by the Bey, and followed by the
-Kïara and a pipe-bearer, at half-past ten o’clock I sallied forth on my
-adventurous errand.
-
-We had not mentioned to either the wife or the mother of the Bey whither
-we were bound, being fearful of alarming them unnecessarily; and they
-consequently remained perfectly satisfied with the assurance of the old
-gentleman, that I was anxious to see the Bosphorus by moonlight; though
-a darker night never spread its mantle over the earth.
-
-I am extremely doubtful whether, on a less exciting occasion, I could
-have kept time with the rapid pace of my companion, over the vile
-pavement of Constantinople; as it was, however, I dared not give way,
-lest any one among the individuals who followed us, and who were perhaps
-bound on the same errand, should penetrate my disguise.
-
-“If we escape from St. Sophia unsuspected,” said my chivalrous friend,
-“we will then make another bold attempt; we will visit the mosque of
-Sultan Achmet; and as this is a high festival, if you risk the
-adventure, you will have done what no Infidel has ever yet dared to do;
-but I forewarn you that, should you be discovered, and fail to make your
-escape on the instant, you will be torn to pieces.”
-
-This assertion somewhat staggered me, and for an instant my woman-spirit
-quailed; I contented myself, however, with briefly replying: “When we
-leave St. Sophia, we will talk of this,” and continued to walk beside
-him in silence. At length we entered the spacious court of the mosque,
-and as the servants stooped to withdraw my shoes, the Bey murmured in my
-ear: “Be firm, or you are lost!”—and making a strong effort to subdue
-the feeling of mingled awe and fear, which was rapidly stealing over me,
-I pulled the _fèz_ deeper upon my eyebrows, and obeyed.
-
-On passing the threshold, I found myself in a covered peristyle, whose
-gigantic columns of granite are partially sunk in the wall of which they
-form a part; the floor was covered with fine matting, and the coloured
-lamps, which were suspended in festoons from the lofty ceiling, shed a
-broad light on all the surrounding objects. In most of the recesses
-formed by the pillars, beggars were crouched down, holding in front of
-them their little metal basins, to receive the _paras_ of the
-charitable; while servants lounged to and fro, or squatted in groups
-upon the matting, awaiting the egress of their employers. As I looked
-around me, our own attendant moved forward, and raising the curtain
-which veiled a double door of bronze, situated at mid-length of the
-peristyle, I involuntarily shrank back before the blaze of light that
-burst upon me.
-
-Far as the eye could reach upwards, circles of coloured fire, appearing
-as if suspended in mid-air, designed the form of the stupendous dome;
-while beneath, devices of every shape and colour were formed by myriads
-of lamps of various hues: the Imperial closet, situated opposite to the
-pulpit, was one blaze of refulgence, and its gilded lattices flashed
-back the brilliancy, till it looked like a gigantic meteor!
-
-As I stood a few paces within the doorway, I could not distinguish the
-limits of the edifice—I looked forward, upward—to the right hand, and
-to the left—but I could only take in a given space, covered with human
-beings, kneeling in regular lines, and at a certain signal bowing their
-turbaned heads to the earth, as if one soul and one impulse animated the
-whole congregation; while the shrill chanting of the choir pealed
-through the vast pile, and died away in lengthened cadences among the
-tall dark pillars which support it.
-
-And this was St. Sophia! To me it seemed like a creation of
-enchantment—the light—the ringing voices—the mysterious extent, which
-baffled the earnestness of my gaze—the ten thousand turbaned Moslems,
-all kneeling with their faces turned towards Mecca, and at intervals
-laying their foreheads to the earth—the bright and various colours of
-the dresses—and the rich and glowing tints of the carpets that veiled
-the marble floor—all conspired to form a scene of such unearthly
-magnificence, that I felt as though there could be no reality in what I
-looked on, but that, at some sudden signal, the towering columns would
-fail to support the vault of light above them, and all would become
-void.
-
-I had forgotten every thing in the mere exercise of vision;—the danger
-of detection—the flight of time—almost my own identity—when my
-companion uttered the single word “_Gel_—Come”—and, passing forward to
-another door on the opposite side of the building, I instinctively
-followed him, and once more found myself in the court.
-
-What a long breath I drew, as the cold air swept across my forehead! I
-felt like one who has suddenly stepped beyond the circle of an
-enchanter, and dissolved the spell of some mighty magic.
-
-“Whither shall we now bend our way?” asked my companion, as we resumed
-our shoes.
-
-“To Sultan Achmet,”—I answered briefly. I could not have bestowed many
-words on my best friend at that moment; the very effort at speech was
-painful.
-
-In ten minutes more we stood before the mosque of Sultan Achmet, and,
-ascending the noble flight of steps which lead to the principal
-entrance, we again cast off our shoes, and entered the temple.
-
-Infinitely less vast than St. Sophia, this mosque impressed me with a
-feeling of awe, much greater than that which I had experienced in
-visiting its more stately neighbour—four colossal pillars of marble,
-five or six feet in circumference, support the dome, and these were
-wreathed with lamps, even to the summit; while the number of lights
-suspended from the ceiling gave the whole edifice the appearance of a
-space overhung with stars. We entered at a propitious moment, for the
-Faithful were performing their prostrations, and had consequently no
-time to speculate on our appearance; the chanting was wilder and
-shriller than that which I had just heard at St. Sophia; it sounded to
-me, in fact, more like the delirious outcry, which we may suppose to
-have been uttered by a band of Delphic Priestesses, than the voices of a
-choir of uninspired human beings.
-
-We passed onward over the yielding carpets, which returned no sound
-beneath our footsteps: and there was something strangely supernatural
-in the spectacle of several human beings moving along, without creating
-a single echo in the vast space they traversed. We paused an instant
-beside the marble-arched platform, on which the muezzin was performing
-his prostrations to the shrill cry of the choir;—we lingered another,
-to take a last look at the kneeling thousands who were absorbed in their
-devotions; and then, rapidly descending into the court, my companion
-uttered a hasty congratulation on the successful issue of our bold
-adventure, to which I responded a most heartfelt ‘Amen’—and in less
-than an hour, I cast off my _fèz_ and my pelisse in the harem
-of——Effendi, and exclaimed to its astonished inmates:—“I have seen
-the mosques!”
-
-Knowing what I now know of the Turks, I would not run the same risk a
-second time, though the Prophet’s Beard were to be my recompense. There
-are some circumstances in which ignorance of the extent of the danger is
-its best antidote.
-
-But the feeling that remained on my mind was vague even to pain; I had
-seen St. Sophia, it is true, and seen it in all the glory of its million
-lamps; I had beheld it at a moment when no christian eye had ever
-heretofore looked on it; and when detection would have involved instant
-destruction. I had lifted aside the veil from the Holy of
-Holies—witnessed the prostration which followed the thrilling cry of
-“Allah Il Allah!”—and polluted, with the breath of a Giaour, the
-atmosphere of the True Believers—I had looked upon the Chèïk-Islam, as
-he stood with his face turned Mecca-ward, his pale brow cinctured with
-gold, and his stately figure draped in white cachemere—and I had stood
-erect when every head was bowed, and every knee bent at the name of the
-Prophet; but still I had no definite idea of the mosque of St. Sophia;
-on the contrary, the wish that I had formerly felt to visit it grew to a
-positive craving from the hour in which I found myself at midnight
-beneath its fire-girdled dome, and glanced out into the deep and
-mysterious darkness beyond; and it was not until months afterwards that
-it was satisfied, when the arrival of Count Bathiany, an Hungarian
-nobleman, brother to the Princess Metternich, gave an opportunity to the
-curious of indulging their lion-hunting propensities.
-
-The party assembled at half-past ten in the morning at one of the gates
-of the city, near the Seraglio wall, known by the name of “The Gate of
-the Garden.” There were horsemen and pedestrians—ladies in arabas, and
-on foot—spruce _attachés_, grave elderly gentlemen, anxious
-antiquaries, officers of the navy, dragomen, foreign nobles, native
-servants, and a motley train of sailors and attendants, carrying the
-slippers of their several masters.
-
-But if the eye were confused by the number of objects by which it was
-attracted as our party passed, procession-like, through the narrow
-streets, amid the comments and not unfrequently the scowls of the Turks,
-who bear but impatiently this licensed profanation of their temples; the
-ear was infinitely more so by the confusion of languages which assailed
-it on all sides; here, two Russians almost set your teeth on edge as
-they exchanged a few sentences—there, a couple of Germans deluded you
-for the first moment into a belief that they were conversing in
-English—on one side, a dark-eyed stranger begged your pardon in his low
-soft Italian, for an awkwardness of which you were not conscious, and
-thus gave himself an opportunity of addressing you during the morning,
-without rudeness—and on the other, two smart midshipmen laughed out in
-the lightness of their hearts words which told of home, because they
-were breathed in the language of your own land—while a constant chorus
-of Turkish, Greek, and Arab, was kept up by the attendants in the rear.
-
-At length we reached St. Sophia; and I felt my heart beat quicker, as I
-once more traversed the flagged court, and passed the elegant fountain,
-at which the Faithful perform their ablutions; with its projecting
-octagonal roof, its marble basin, and its covering of close iron
-net-work, to protect the spring from the pollution of the birds.
-
-At the entrance of the peristyle to which I have before alluded, we put
-on the slippers we had provided, and, as soon as we had all passed, the
-doors were closed.
-
-How different was the aspect of every object around me from that which
-it wore on my last visit! Then, all was refulgent with light; and now, a
-sacred gloom hung upon the dark walls, and floated like a veil about our
-path. Few were they who did not pass on in silence; for there is a power
-and a sublimity in scenes like the one I am attempting to describe,
-which overawe for awhile even the most vulgar minds; while to the
-susceptible and contemplative the spell is deepened a thousand-fold.
-
-One burst, rather of sound than speech—the wordless tribute of
-irrepressible admiration—heralded our passage across the block of
-porphyry upon which close the interior doors of the mosque; and in less
-than a moment the richly carpeted floor of marble, porphyry, jasper, and
-verd-antique, was mosaiced with groups of gazers throughout its whole
-extent. Some stood riveted to the spot on which they had first halted,
-as if touched by the wand of an enchanter, and scarcely stirring a limb
-in the excess of their absorbing contemplation; others hurried rapidly
-along, as though breathless with eager and impatient curiosity—one
-tall, pale man, with amber-coloured mustachioes and long thin fingers,
-was already taking notes, with his little red book resting against the
-boots that he carried in his hand; and a couple of antiquaries were just
-commencing a dispute _sotto voce_ relatively to some pillars of Egyptian
-granite on the left hand side of the temple.
-
-Nor were the Imams idle; for they had instantly detected the unhandsome
-intrusion of one traveller with his boots on; an insult so great, that
-no Moslem can tolerate it; and they were busily employed in compelling
-their removal: accompanying the ceremony with certain epithets addressed
-to the Giaour, with which, if he were unfortunate enough to understand
-them, he had no opportunity of feeling flattered.
-
-Our party were not, however, the only tenants of the vast pile. A group
-of Ulemas were engaged in prayer as we entered, nor did they suffer our
-presence to interfere with their devotions; and almost in the centre of
-the floor knelt a party of women similarly engaged, while a couple of
-children, who had accompanied them, were chasing each other over the
-rich carpets.
-
-An erroneous impression has obtained in Europe that females do not
-attend, or rather, I should perhaps say, are not permitted to enter, the
-mosques; this, as I have just shewn, is by no means the case; the
-entrance is forbidden to them only during the midnight prayer. And, in
-like manner, I had been taught to believe, before I visited the country,
-that the Turks denied to their women the possession of souls: this is as
-false a position as the other. It is true that the lordly Moslem claims
-a paradise apart; where Hourii are to wreathe his brow with
-ever-blooming flowers—pour his sherbet in streams of perfume into its
-crystal vase—and fill his chibouk with fragrance.[5] But, amid these
-voluptuous dreams, he does not quite overlook the eternal interests of
-his mere earthly partner; I do not believe that her future enjoyments
-are as clearly defined as those which he arrogates to himself—there is
-a little harem-like mystery flung over the destiny that awaits her; but,
-meanwhile, he does not altogether shut her out from the promise of a
-hereafter, from which he himself anticipates so full a portion of
-felicity.
-
-The Turkish women are intuitively pious; the exercises of religion are
-admirably suited to their style of existence. In the seclusion of the
-harem the hour of prayer is an epoch of unwearying interest to the
-whole of its inhabitants; and there is something touching and beautiful
-in the humility with which, when they have spread their prayer-carpets,
-they veil themselves with a scarf of white muslin, ere they intrude into
-the immediate presence of their Maker.
-
-Being aware of all this, the appearance of females in the mosque of St.
-Sophia did not produce the same effect upon me as upon many of the
-party. Those who were lately from Europe could scarcely believe their
-eyes; and when, in reply to the remark of a person who stood near me,
-expressing his astonishment at such an apparition, I explained to him
-that the presence of females in the different mosques was of constant
-and hourly occurrence, he looked so exceedingly annoyed at the sweeping
-away of his ancient prejudices, that I verily believe he thought the
-deficiency of the whole female Empire of Turkey must be transferred to
-my own little person, and that I, at least, could have no soul.
-
-Upon the whole, the first view of St. Sophia disappointed me; I had
-carried away an idea of much greater extent; spacious as it was, I could
-now see from one extremity of the wide edifice to the other—I was no
-longer bewildered by the blaze of innumerable lights—and I know not
-wherefore, but I regretted the mysterious indistinctness of outline
-which had thralled me during my midnight visit.
-
-Ignorant as I am also of architecture as a science, I have a sufficient
-perception of the beautiful and the symmetrical, to make me lament the
-incongruous medley of different orders and materials by which I was
-surrounded. What gigantic pillars encircle the dome!—What individual
-treasures are collected together! But with what recklessness are they
-forced into juxtaposition! Columns of varying sizes and proportions;
-some of Egyptian granite, others of porphyry, others again of scagliola,
-and various precious marbles, are scattered, like the fragments of many
-distinct buildings, throughout the whole body of the edifice. The eye is
-bewildered, and the mind remains unsatisfied.
-
-Eight of the porphyry pillars are relics of the temple of Heliopolis;
-while those of _verd-antique_ are from that of Ephesus. The walls are
-lined with marble, jasper, porphyry, and verd-antique, to the height of
-a gallery which surrounds the temple; and which, like the base of the
-building, is floored with rich marbles, and supported by plain columns
-of the same material. But the dome, which was formerly adorned with
-minute mosaics, was white-washed when the Turks converted St. Sophia
-into a mosque; and the original richness of the design is now only to
-be deciphered in spots where the plaster has fallen away; added to
-which, the inferior Imams attached to the building make a trade of the
-fragments of mosaic that they are continually tearing down, and which
-are eagerly bought up by travellers, who thus encourage a Vandalism
-whose destructive effects are irreparable.
-
-Before we ascended to the gallery, we were introduced to one of the
-miracles of the place, in the shape of a column; a portion of whose
-surface is cased with iron, in one part of which a deep cavity is worn
-away beneath the metal; and into this orifice the visiter is invited to
-insert his finger, in order to convince himself of the humidity of the
-marble. This column is called by the Imams “the Sweating Stone;” but if
-the indignation of the inanimate matter at the transformation of a
-Christian temple into a Mahommedan mosque have really reduced it to a
-state of perpetual and palpable perspiration, I am under the necessity
-of confessing that the miracle was not wrought for me; for, on making
-the trial, I was conscious only of an extreme chill.
-
-Hence we ascended by a very dilapidated and crumbling spiral stair to
-the gallery, devoted originally to the use of the women, and capacious
-enough to contain several hundreds; and here the mosaic merchants
-plunged their hands into their breasts, and from amid the folds of their
-garments drew forth some thousands of the gilt and coloured stones which
-they had torn away from the elaborately-ornamented dome.
-
-These were soon disposed of, and then we were permitted to contemplate
-at our ease the marvels of the mighty pile, with its vast uncumbered
-space, its bronzed columns, (many of them clamped with iron to enable
-them to resist more powerfully the ravages of time,) and the huge,
-shapeless, mystic-looking masses of dark shadow immediately beneath the
-dome, which, after you have lost yourself in a thousand vague
-conjectures on their nature and purport, turn out to be nothing more
-than the mere daubing of some journeyman painter for the purpose of
-effacing two mighty cherubim, that, in days of yore, pointed to the
-Christian votary the way to Heaven, but which now, in the dim twilight
-of the place, look like familiar spirits, shapeless and grim, guarding
-the accumulated relics of the days of paganism, congregated beneath
-them.
-
-The view from this gallery, at the upper extremity of the mosque, is
-extremely imposing; from that point you take in, and feel, all the
-extent of the edifice, whose effect is rendered the more striking, from
-the fact that it is entirely laid bare beneath you, being totally free
-from the divisions and subdivisions which in Catholic chapels are
-necessary for the location of the different shrines. Plain and
-unornamented, save by the casing of marble already alluded to, the walls
-tower upward in severe beauty, until they reach the base of the stately
-dome, which is poized, as if by some mighty magic, on the capitals of a
-circle of gigantic and rudely fashioned pillars; immediately beneath you
-are the columns that support the gallery in which you stand, throughout
-the whole extent of the temple; while on your left hand the marble
-pulpit, with its flight of noble steps, shut in by a finely sculptured
-door of the same material, and on your right the Imperial closet, with
-its gilded lattices, complete the detail of the picture.
-
-The two huge waxen candles occupying the sides of the arched recess, or
-_mihrab_, at the eastern end of the building, are lighted every night,
-and last exactly twelve months; they are the very Gog and Magog of
-wax-chandlery, and must be at least eighteen inches in circumference.
-
-In making the tour of the gallery, we came upon a door that had been
-stopped with masonry; the frame into which it had originally fitted is
-of white marble, and remains quite perfect. There are traces of violence
-on the brick-work, which appears to have been secured by some powerful
-cement that has indurated with age, until it has acquired the solidity
-of stone, and has become capable of resisting any ordinary effort to
-remove it; and this door is the second miracle of St. Sophia.
-
-The legend runs that the united attempts of all the masons of Stamboul
-are powerless against the rude masonry that blocks the entrance of this
-passage, by reason of a wondrous and most potent talisman, which human
-means have as yet failed to weaken; but that it conducts to an apartment
-in which a Greek Bishop is seated before a reading-desk perusing an open
-volume of so holy a nature, that no Moslem eye must ever rest upon it.
-Nor does the tradition end here, for both the Turks and Greeks have a
-firm faith in the prophecies which have been made, that St. Sophia will
-one day revert to the Christians, on which occasion the walled-up Bishop
-will emerge from his concealment, and chant a solemn high mass at the
-great altar.
-
-The latter portion of the legend would imply that the superstition is of
-remote origin. I felt glad of this—these mystic imaginings require to
-be enveloped in the mist of centuries, in order to elevate the
-ridiculous into the sublime, and to attract our fancy without revolting
-our reason.
-
-From the gallery we passed out upon the leads that cover the inferior
-cupolas of the building, and screen the mausoleums of the Sultans, and
-other distinguished personages, whose ashes repose within the holy
-precincts of St. Sophia; and, after traversing a number of these, and
-crouching through several low and narrow stone passages, stopping at
-intervals to contemplate the magnificent views that were spread out
-beneath us on all sides, and which varied every moment as we advanced,
-we at length found ourselves at the foot of the ruinous and crumbling
-stair, or rather ascent, (for the traces of steps are almost worn away)
-leading to the gallery encircling the dome.
-
-Few of the party were disheartened by the difficulty; and accordingly we
-slipped and scrambled towards the summit, and resolved to see all the
-marvels of the place; but when the narrow door which opens from the
-gallery was flung back by the guide, “a change came o’er the spirit of
-our dream”—and out of the hundred individuals who were lion-hunting at
-St. Sophia, there were only seven who possessed nerve enough to make the
-tour of the dome. Many a fair lady and gallant knight leant for an
-instant over the slender fence, and looked down into the body of the
-building while clinging firmly to the rail; gazing on men reduced to the
-dimensions of pigmies, and wide carpets dwindled to the proportions of a
-pocket handkerchief; but a brief survey contented them, and they drew
-back from the dizzy spectacle, with swimming heads and aching eyes.
-
-Seven individuals only, as I have already mentioned, detached themselves
-from the throng, of which number I was one; and I understood at once the
-secret of the line of light that had struck me so forcibly on the night
-of my first visit, when I remarked the clustered lamps which were still
-attached to the lower railing of the gallery; and I wondered no longer
-at the sublime effect they had produced, as I perceived the immense
-height at which they had been placed.
-
-The path we had to follow was about a foot in width, and the slight
-railing that protected it was secured by iron bars to the wall beyond;
-but in two places the projecting ledge that formed the passage had lost
-its horizontal position, and sloped downwards at the outer edge, giving
-a most uncomfortable projection to the wooden fence; these little
-inconveniences were, however, amply compensated by the sublime effect of
-the edifice, seen thus, as it seemed, from the clouds; while the
-beautiful proportions of the dome became tenfold more evident as the eye
-took in its whole extent, unbewildered by the immense space which had
-baffled it from below.
-
-While I stood gazing on the magnificent spectacle spread out beneath
-me, a couple of doves winged their tranquil flight across the body of
-the mosque, to their resting-places on the opposite side of the
-building. As these birds are held sacred by the Musselmauns, they abound
-about all their public edifices, and multiply to an extraordinary
-extent; and their appearance, at a moment when my fancy was awakened,
-and my feelings excited, by the objects of beauty and of grandeur that
-surrounded me, produced an effect so powerful as to give birth to a very
-different train of ideas from those in which I had previously been
-indulging.[6]
-
-The tour of the gallery completed our survey of the far-famed St.
-Sophia; and flinging off the slippers which we had drawn over our shoes,
-we exchanged the marble floor, covered with yielding carpets, for the
-steep and stony streets leading to the mosque of Sultan Achmet.
-
-On passing through the Atmeidan (or Place of Horses) on one side of
-which the mosque is situated, a large plane tree was pointed out to me,
-from whose branches Sultan Mahmoud caused several of the principal
-Janissaries to be hanged, during the destruction of that formidable
-body, whence it is called by the Turks “the Tree of Groans.” The
-exterior of the building was already familiar to me, as it was from the
-courtyard of Sultan Achmet that I had seen the procession of the
-Kourban-Baïram; but of its interior I retained only the same dreamy,
-indistinct impression which I had carried away on the same occasion from
-St. Sophia.
-
-The mosque of Sultan Achmet is remarkable for the immensity of the four
-colossal columns that support the dome, to which I have already alluded;
-and from the fact that the decree against the Janissaries was unrolled
-and read by the Chief Priest from its marble pulpit. An air of solemn
-and religious grandeur is shed over it by the dim twilight that enters
-through the windows of clouded glass; and it possesses a side gallery,
-roofed with mosaic and supported by marble pillars, which produces a
-very pleasing effect; but beyond this, there is little to attract in its
-detail, if, indeed, I except the curious and valuable collection of
-antique vases, many of them richly inlaid with mother-of-pearl, and
-various coloured stones, (and all of them, as the Imam assured us,
-authentic) which are suspended from the transverse bars of iron that
-support the lamps, intermixed with ostrich eggs, bunches of corn in the
-ear, and similar symbols of abundance.
-
-The inner court of the mosque is truly beautiful, being surrounded by an
-open cloister supported by graceful columns in the Arabian taste, whose
-capitals resemble clusters of stalactites, and whose slender shafts
-shoot upwards almost with the lightness of a minaret. In the centre of
-the court, a stately fountain pours forth its sparkling waters; and on
-the left hand as you enter is situated the marble balcony from which are
-read all the Imperial Firmans that possess public interest. Near the
-gate of entrance, stands an immense block of porphyry of singular
-beauty, resting upon two masses of stone; on which the dead are exposed
-previous to their interment; no corpse being permitted to defile the
-interior of the mosque, and the Sultans themselves having the funeral
-prayers read over them in the open air.
-
-The mosque of Sultan Achmet is the only one in the city that has six
-minarets. This peculiarity arose from the desire of the Sultan to be the
-first monarch who should build a mosque in his capital, rivalling that
-of Mecca in the number of its minarets; but, as this could not be done
-without permission of the Mufti, compliance with the Imperial request
-was delayed, until steps had been taken to increase those at Mecca to
-seven, as it was not deemed expedient for any other mosque to enjoy the
-same privileges as that which is sanctified by the presence of the
-Prophet’s Tomb.
-
-These minarets are arranged with the most beautiful taste: two of them
-are attached to the main body of the building, while the four others
-pierce through the dense foliage of the stately forest trees which
-encircle the mosque, with an irregularity singularly graceful. Their
-transparent galleries of perforated masonry (three in number) girdle the
-slender shafts with the lightness and delicacy of net-work, and their
-pointed spires, touched with gold, gleam out like stars through the
-clear blue of the surrounding horizon.
-
-From the mosque of Sultan Achmet we proceeded to that of Solimaniè,
-built by Solyman the Magnificent, which is considered to be the most
-elegant edifice in Stamboul. Its interior is eminently cheerful and
-attractive; and the splendid windows of stained glass are the spoils of
-its founder, who, subsequently to a victory obtained over the Persians,
-bore them away in triumph to enrich the present building, which was then
-in a state of progression. The four pillars that support the dome are
-slight and well-proportioned; but the four porphyry columns which form
-the angles of the temple are the boast of the edifice; they originally
-served as pedestals to as many antique statues, and are of surpassing
-symmetry. St. Sophia, amid all the remains which are collected beneath
-its roof, possesses nothing so fine; and, independently of these, there
-is a greater attempt at architectural elaboration throughout the whole
-building, than in either of the mosques that we had previously visited.
-
-The pulpit is very peculiar, being shaped somewhat like the blossom of
-the aram, which it the more resembles from the fact that the marble
-whereof it is formed is of the most snowy whiteness; and the great doors
-of the main entrance are richly inlaid with devices of mother-of-pearl.
-
-Attached to the wall, near the platform of the muezzin, hangs a long
-scroll of parchment, on which are traced, in black and gold, the
-ground-plans of the five principal mosques in the world—viz. those of
-Mecca, Medina, Jerusalem, St. Sophia, and Adrianople. It is evidently of
-great antiquity, and was precisely the description of relic which an
-antiquary would have valued; while even to the unscientific it was an
-object of considerable interest.
-
-There is one peculiarity in the mosque of Solimaniè, which it were an
-injustice to the Turkish government to pass over in silence; and which
-is in itself so interesting, that I am surprised no traveller has yet
-made it matter of record.
-
-An open gallery, extending along the whole of the northern side of the
-edifice, is filled with chests of various sizes and descriptions, piled
-one on the other, and carefully marked; these chests contain treasure,
-principally in gold, silver, and jewels, to a vast amount; and are all
-the property of individuals, who, in the event of their leaving the
-country, family misunderstandings, or from other causes, require a place
-of safety in which to deposit their wealth. Each package being
-accurately described, and scrupulously secured, is received and
-registered at Solimaniè by the proper authorities, and there it remains
-intact and inviolate, despite national convulsions and ministerial
-changes. No event, however unexpected, or however extraordinary, is
-suffered to affect the sacredness of the trust; and no consideration of
-country, or of religion, militates against the admission of such
-deposits as may be tendered, by persons anxious to secure their property
-against casualties.
-
-On one side may be seen the fortune of an orphan confided to the keeping
-of the Directors of the Institution during his minority; on the other,
-the capital of a merchant who is pursuing his traffic over seas. All
-classes and all creeds alike avail themselves of the security of the
-depository; and, although an individual may fail to reclaim his property
-for twenty, fifty, or even an unlimited number of years, no seal is ever
-broken, no lock is ever forced. And despite that this great National
-Bank, for as such it may truly be considered, offers not only an easy,
-but an efficient and abundant, mean of supply, no instance has ever
-been known in which government has made an effort to avail itself of the
-treasures of Solimaniè. As the property is deposited, so is it
-withdrawn—the proper documents are produced, and the chest or desk is
-delivered up without the demand of a piastre from those who have acted
-as its guardians.
-
-The despotism of the Turkish government cannot, in this instance, be
-subject of complaint; when, amid all its reverses, and all its
-necessities, it has ever respected the property thus trustingly
-confided; while it can scarcely be denied that the admirable integrity,
-which is the great safeguard of the heaped-up wealth within the walls of
-the mosque, is at least as worthy of commendation, as the generous
-liberality which has foreborne to levy a tax upon so valuable a
-privilege.
-
-From the mosque we passed out by a charming covered walk to the
-mausoleum of the Magnificent Solyman; an elegant cupolaed building, with
-a fluted roof projecting about two feet forward, cased with marble on
-the outside, and finely painted within in delicate frescoes. An enormous
-plane tree flings its tortuous branches over the beautiful edifice,
-which has far more the aspect of a temple than a tomb; and the sunshine
-falls flickeringly on the marble steps, as it struggles through the
-fresh leaves. The floor is richly carpeted, and along the centre are
-ranged the sarcophagi of Solyman the Magnificent and his successor, of
-Sultan Akhmet, and of the two daughters of the Imperial founder of the
-mosque. Those of the Sultans are adorned with lofty turbans of white
-muslin, decorated with aigrettes, and attached to the sarcophagi by
-costly shawls; the tombs of the Princesses are covered plainly with
-cachemire of a dark green colour, and are considerably injured by time.
-
-An admirable model of the mosque of Mecca occupied a stand on the right
-of the entrance, and was an object of general curiosity; it was well
-executed, and gave an excellent idea not only of the building itself but
-of the approaches to it. The Tomb of the Prophet occupied the centre of
-the plan; and the line of road, covered with pilgrims, with its mountain
-barrier and halting-places, enabled the spectator to form an accurate
-judgment of the locality.
-
-In all mausoleums of this description, (and they abound in
-Constantinople) a priest each day lights up the huge wax candles that
-are placed at the feet of the sarcophagi, and leaves them burning while
-he reads a chapter from the Koran. Every part of the building is kept
-scrupulously clean, and a grain of dust is never suffered to pollute the
-tombs; the light is freely admitted to the interior, and no feeling of
-gloom connects itself with these resting-places of the dead, which are
-the very types of luxury and comfort.
-
-Each mausoleum has its peculiar priest, which renders a fact that at
-first startled me infinitely less surprising; I allude to the immense
-number of individuals attached to the service of each mosque—St. Sophia
-alone, as I have been credibly informed, affording occupation to more
-than three hundred persons!
-
-Three accessories are indispensable to a mosque—a clock, a fountain,
-and a minaret; the clock determines the hour of prayer—the fountain
-enables the Faithful to perform their ablutions—and the minaret
-supplies the gallery whence the muezzin warns the pious to the temple of
-Allah.
-
-But, independently of these, every Imperial mosque possesses also its
-_Medresch_ or College, where the _Sophtas_ are instructed at the expense
-of the establishment; and its _Imaret_, or receiving-house for pilgrims,
-where wayfaring strangers are lodged and fed, and the poor are relieved
-at a certain hour each day, when a distribution of food takes place to
-all who think proper to solicit it. In the event of a _Kourban_, or
-sacrifice, it is in the _Imaret_ that the animal is put to death, and
-shared among the needy who throng its entrance to benefit by the pious
-offering.
-
-The mosque of Sultan Mahmoud at Topphannè is greatly enhanced in beauty
-by the splendid fountain and clock-house which he has built on either
-side of the entrance; and whose gilded lattice-work, and paintings in
-arabesque are truly Oriental in their taste; this small but elegant
-mosque is also remarkable for the gilt spires of its minarets, and the
-stately flight of marble steps by which it is approached.
-
-The ruins of a mosque still remain in Constantinople which was
-overthrown by an earthquake, wherein the tomb of the Sultan by whom it
-was built, was covered with a slab of red marble, said to have been the
-identical stone on which our Saviour was stretched on his descent from
-the cross, embalmed, and prepared for the sepulchre!
-
-All the principal mosques are surrounded, and partially overshadowed, by
-ancient and stately trees, that, in many cases, appear to be coeval with
-the edifice, and through whose leafy screen portions of the white
-building gleam out in strong relief; and these are dominated in their
-turn by the arrowy minarets, which, springing from a dense mass of
-foliage, cut sharply against the clear sky, and heighten the beauty of
-the picture.
-
-I have seldom spent a morning of more absorbing interest than that which
-I passed among the Mosques of Constantinople.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-
- Antiquities of Constantinople—Ismäel Effendi—The
- Atmeidan—The Obelisk—The Delphic Tripod—The Column of
- Constantine—The Tchernberlè Tasch—The Cistern of the Thousand
- and One Columns—The Boudroum—The Roman
- Dungeons—Yèrè-Batan-Seraï—The Lost Traveller—Extent of the
- Cistern—Aqueduct of Justinian—Palace of Constantine—Tomb of
- Heraclius—The Seven Towers—An Ambassador in Search of
- Truth—Tortures of the Prison—A Legend of the Seven Towers.
-
-The antiquities of Constantinople are few in number; and when the
-by-past fortunes of Byzantium are taken into consideration, not
-remarkably interesting. I shall consequently say little upon the
-subject, and the rather that more competent writers than myself have
-already described them; and that these reliques of departed centuries
-are not calculated to be treated _a tutto volo di penna_. But, as it is
-impossible to pass them over altogether in silence, I shall merely
-endeavour to describe their nature and the effect which they produced
-upon myself.
-
-Perhaps the most curious remain of by-gone days now existing, and
-certainly that which is the least known, is _Yèrè-Batan-Seraï_,
-literally the “Swallowed up Palace,” anciently called _Philoxmos_. I
-had heard much of this extraordinary old Roman work, but we had
-repeatedly failed in our attempts to visit it, from the fact of its
-opening into the court of a Turkish house, whose owner was not always
-willing to submit to the intrusion of strangers.
-
-We were not, however, fated to leave Constantinople without effecting
-our purpose; which we ultimately accomplished through the medium of one
-of the Sultan’s Physicians, who provided us with such attendance as
-insured our success. Ismäel Effendi, Surgeon-in-chief of the Anatomical
-School attached to the Seraï Bournou, volunteered to become our escort,
-and we gladly availed ourselves of his kindness. He was a fine,
-vivacious, intelligent young man, endowed with an energy and mobility
-perfectly Greek, combined with that gentle and quiet courtesy so
-essentially Turkish: and we were, furthermore, accompanied by one of his
-friends, who spoke the French language with tolerable fluency; and a
-soldier of the Palace Guard, to prevent our collision with the
-passers-by; a precaution which the rapid and virulent spread of the
-Plague had rendered essentially necessary.
-
-We first directed our steps to the Atmeidan, or Place of Horses, the
-ancient race-course of the Romans; in which stands a handsome Egyptian
-obelisk of red granite, placed there by Theodosius, and resting upon a
-pedestal of white marble, whereon are coarsely represented his
-victories in very ill-executed _alto relievo_. The obelisk is sixty feet
-in height, and elaborately ornamented with hieroglyphics.
-
-Near it are the remains of the Delphic Tripod; the brazen heads of the
-serpents are wanting; and it is asserted that one of them was struck off
-by Sultan Akhmet at a single blow of his scimitar.
-
-[Illustration: COLUMN OF CONSTANTINE. TRIPOD. EGYPTIAN OBELISK.]
-
-The Turks are extremely jealous of this interesting remain, as they have
-a tradition that, when it is either destroyed or displaced,
-Constantinople will fall once more into the hands and under the power of
-the Christians; and so universal is this superstition, that a pretty
-little girl of about eight years of age, who saw us examining it,
-approached us, and said earnestly; “You may look, but you cannot buy
-this with all your gold, for it is our talisman, and you are Franks and
-Infidels.”
-
-About one hundred paces beyond the Tripod, the lofty monument of
-Constantine, denuded of the coating of metal by which its coarse masonry
-is said to have been once concealed, rears its head ninety feet from the
-earth; and appears, from its immense height and small circumference,
-superadded to the apparently careless and insecure manner in which the
-stones are put together, to stand erect only by a miracle.
-
-But far more curious than either of these is the _Tchernberlè Tasch_, or
-Burnt Pillar, situated at a short distance from the Tower of the
-Seraskier. It was originally brought by Constantine from the Temple of
-Apollo, at Rome, and was placed upon an hexagonal pedestal, within which
-were built up several portions of the Holy Cross; whence the small
-square in which it stood became a place of prayer. When first
-transported to Constantinople, it was surmounted by a statue of the God,
-from the chisel of Phidias, of which the head was surrounded by a halo.
-But the conqueror appropriated the figure, and caused to be inscribed
-beneath it, “The Justice of the Sun to the Illustrious Constantine.”
-
-The destruction of the statue is diversely explained by different
-writers. Genaro Esquilichi declares it to have been destroyed by a
-thunderbolt; Anna de Comnena asserts that it was overthrown by a strong
-southerly wind during the reign of Alexius de Comnena, and that it
-killed several persons in its fall; while other authors mention that it
-was merely mutilated by the first accident, and utterly ruined by the
-second. The pedestal bears an inscription now nearly obliterated, which
-may be thus rendered from the original Greek:
-
- “O Christ, Master and Protector of the World,
- I dedicate to Thee this City, subject to Thee;
- And the Sceptre, and the Empire of Rome.
- Guard the City, and protect it from all evil.”
-
-The pillar is ninety feet in height, and the pedestal measures thirty
-feet at its base; it has suffered severely from fire as well as from
-time, and a strong wire-work has been carefully erected about it to
-prevent its falling to pieces, as it is rent and riven in every
-direction. It is to be deplored that this interesting relic is built in
-on all sides by unsightly houses.
-
-From the _Tchernberlè Tasch_ we proceeded to visit a cistern called by
-the Turks _Bin-Vebir-Direg_, or the “Thousand and One,” in allusion to
-the number of columns that support it. It is an immense subterranean, of
-which the roof is in reality sustained by three hundred and thirty-six
-pillars of coarse marble, each formed of two or more blocks.
-
-These pillars are now buried to one-third of their height in the earth,
-the water-courses having been turned, and the cistern dried up, for the
-purpose of receiving the rubbish which was flung out when the
-foundations of St. Sophia were laid. It is now occupied by silk-winders,
-and they have become so accustomed to the sight of visiters that they
-scarcely suffer you to descend the first flight of steps before they all
-quit their wheels, and begin shouting for _backschish_. The channel worn
-in the stone by the passage of the water that once flowed into the
-cistern is distinguishable on three different sides of the subterranean,
-which is lit by narrow grated windows level with the roof; and the
-echoes, prolonged and flung back by the vaulted recesses, have a sound
-so hollow and supernatural that they appear like the distant mutterings
-of fiends.
-
-As we were about to quit _Bin-Vebir-Direg_, one of the silk-spinners
-informed us that there was another smaller _Boudroum_, or subterranean
-in the neighbourhood, to which he offered to conduct us; honestly
-admitting, at the same time, that the atmosphere that we should breathe
-there was so unwholesome that few persons ventured to indulge their
-curiosity by descending into it. Thither we accordingly went, and the
-less reluctantly as we ascertained by the way that this also had been
-converted into a spinning establishment, where fifty or sixty persons
-were constantly employed.
-
-A short walk over the rubbish of an ancient fire brought us to the
-narrow door of this second subterranean. And we had not descended a
-dozen steps, ere we were perfectly convinced of the accuracy of the
-information given to us by the guide. Each felt as though a wet garment
-had suddenly been wound about him; and the appearance of the miserable
-beings who were turning the cotton wheels, sufficiently demonstrated the
-unhealthiness of the atmosphere; they were all deadly white, and looked
-like a society of recuscitated corpses. We had heard a confusion of
-voices from the moment that we approached the neighbourhood of
-_Bin-Vebir-Direg_, but all was silence within the _Boudroum_ where we
-now found ourselves; while the blended curiosity and astonishment with
-which every eye was turned upon us, was a convincing proof that the
-unfortunates who tenanted it were little used to the sight of strangers.
-
-Immediately that we had descended into the vault, they simultaneously
-desired us to keep in continual motion during our stay, alleging that
-the exercise consequent on their occupation was their only preservative
-against destruction; and confirming the truth of their statement by the
-melancholy tale of a man who had come a few weeks previously to visit
-one of their company, and who remained quietly smoking upon his mat for
-several hours, after which he was seized with lethargy, and died.
-
-As the lower orders of Orientals universally believe every Frank to be,
-if not actually a Physician by profession, at least perfectly conversant
-with the “healing art,” a group of the pallid wretches by whom we were
-surrounded immediately began to apply to my father for advice and
-assistance; when the good-natured Ismäel Effendi volunteered to
-prescribe for them, and listened with the greatest patience to a list of
-ailments, engendered by the fetid atmosphere, and quite beyond the reach
-of medicine.
-
-This cistern, although of considerably less extent than
-_Bin-Vebir-Direg_, being supported only by one and thirty pillars, is
-nevertheless infinitely handsomer, as the columns are at least thrice
-the circumference of the “Thousand and One,” and uncovered to their
-base; two only are imperfect; and the _coup-dœil_ from mid-way of the
-stone stair is most imposing.
-
-On emerging from this dim and vapour-freighted vault, we inquired of the
-guide whom we had retained, whether he could direct us to any other
-object of interest in that quarter of the city; when, after some
-hesitation, allured by the promise held out to him of a liberal
-_backschish_, he at length admitted that there was a _Boudroum_ about
-half a mile from thence, which was but little known, and into which no
-Frank had ever been admitted. Then followed a host of assurances of the
-danger that he incurred by pointing it out to us, and of which we
-readily understood the motive; and, after receiving a second promise of
-reward, he ultimately led the way through one or two narrow streets;
-when passing under a large doorway, we found ourselves in a dilapidated
-Khan, where a dozen old men were seated on low stools, winding silk.
-Here our conductor procured lights, after which he preceded us down a
-flight of steps, terminating in a second door, whence a short stair
-descended into an extensive vault, supported by eight double arches of
-solid masonry, as perfect as though they had only been completed on the
-previous day.
-
-Traversing this vault, we entered a second, perfectly dark, of which the
-outer wall was strengthened by four large pillars. At the extreme end of
-this inner subterranean, we found a flight of ruined stone steps, which
-we ascended with some difficulty, and, on arriving at the summit of the
-stair, discovered that we were standing in a dilapidated Roman dungeon.
-
-From this point several other cells branched off in different
-directions. The entrance of one, which appeared to be a _cachot forcé_,
-was so blocked by the masses of stone that had fallen from the roof,
-that we were unable to penetrate into it; but on the other side we
-passed into a range of dungeons, of which the partition walls, at least
-a foot in thickness, had been torn down. The iron rings by which the
-prisoners had been chained, still remained, as did also the sleeping
-places hollowed in the masonry; but the most curious and frightful
-feature of the locality was a water-course, which, passing along the
-entire line of cells, emptied itself into a small dungeon, situated
-under the arched vault that I have already described, and thus offered a
-ready mean of destruction to the oppressor, and a dreadful and hopeless
-death to the captive.
-
-I was sincerely glad to leave this gloomy remain of by-past power, and
-to breathe once more the pure air of Heaven, on my way to
-_Yèrè-Batan-Seraï_, where we arrived after a long and very fatiguing
-walk. After a little hesitation, the door of the Turkish house to which
-I have elsewhere alluded was opened to us, and, passing through the
-great entrance hall, we traversed the courtyard, and descending a steep
-slope of slippery earth, found ourselves at the opening of the dim
-mysterious Palace of Waters.
-
-The roof of this immense cistern, of which the extent is unknown, is
-supported, like that of _Bin-Vebir-Direg_, by marble columns, distant
-about ten feet from each other, but each formed from a single block; the
-capitals are elaborately wrought, and in one instance the entire pillar
-is covered with sculptured ornaments.
-
-At the period of our visit, Constantinople had been long suffering from
-drought, and the water in the cistern was consequently much lower than
-usual, a circumstance that greatly tended to augment the stateliness of
-its effect. There was formerly a boat upon it, but it has been destroyed
-in consequence of the numerous accidents to which it gave rise.
-
-The Kiära of the Effendi who owned the house, had accompanied us to the
-vault; and he mentioned two adventures connected with it that had taken
-place within his own knowledge, and which he related to us as having
-both occurred to Englishmen.
-
-The first and the saddest was the tale of a young traveller, who about
-six years ago arrived at Constantinople, and in his tour of the capital,
-obtained permission to see the _Yèrè Batan Seraï_. The boat was then
-upon the water; and, not satisfied with gazing on the wonders of the
-place from land, he sprang into the little skiff, and accompanied by the
-boatman who was accustomed to row the family in the immediate vicinity
-of the opening, he pushed off, after having received a warning not to
-be guilty of the imprudence of advancing so far into the interior as to
-lose sight of the light of day. This warning he was unhappy enough to
-disregard. Those who stood watching his progress remarked that he had
-provided himself with a lamp, and they again shouted to him to beware:
-but the wretched man was bent upon his purpose; and having, as it is
-supposed, induced the boatman, by the promise of a heavy reward, to
-comply with his wish, the flame of the lamp became rapidly fainter and
-fainter, and at length disappeared altogether from the sight of those
-who were left behind; and who remained at their station anxiously
-awaiting its return. But they lingered in vain—they had looked their
-last upon the unfortunates who had so lately parted from them in the
-full rush of life and hope—the boat came no more—and it is presumed
-that those within it, having bewildered themselves among the columns,
-became unable to retrace their way, and perished miserably by famine.
-
-I should have mentioned that the spot on which we stood was not the
-proper entrance to the cistern, of whose existence and situation they
-are even now ignorant, but an opening formed by the failure of several
-of the pillars, by which accident the roof fell in, and disclosed the
-water-vault beneath.
-
-Another similar but less extensive failure of the extraordinary fabric
-in a yard near the Sublime Porte betrayed its extent in that direction;
-a third took place in the immediate neighbourhood of St. Sophia; and a
-fourth within the walls of the Record Office; thus affording an
-assurance that the cistern extended for several leagues beneath the
-city. Further than this the Constantinopolitan authorities cannot throw
-any light on its dimensions; and, as far as I was individually
-concerned, I am not quite sure that this fact did not increase the
-interest of the locality—the mysterious distance into which man is
-forbidden to penetrate—the long lines of columns deepening in tint, and
-diminishing in their proportions as they recede—the sober twilight that
-softens every object—and the dreamy stillness that lords it over this
-singular Water Palace, which the voice of man can awaken for a brief
-space into long-drawn and unearthly echoes, that sweep onward into the
-darkness, and ere they are quite lost to the ear, appear to shape
-themselves into words: all combined to invest the spot with an awful and
-thrilling character, which, to an imaginative mind, were assuredly more
-than an equivalent for the privilege of determining its limits.
-
-The second local anecdote related to us by the Kiära was that of an
-Englishman, who, only a few months previous to our visit, had requested
-permission to make use of the little boat that had replaced the one in
-which the traveller, to whom I have already alluded, had been lost. Many
-objections were started; and the fate of his unfortunate countryman was
-insisted upon as the reason of the refusal; but on his repeated promises
-of prudence, the old Effendi at length consented to his wish; and having
-lighted a couple of torches, and affixed them to the stern of the boat,
-the traveller drew out a large quantity of strong twine, which he made
-fast to one of the pillars, leaving the ball to unwind itself as he
-proceeded.
-
-As no one could be found who was willing to accompany him, he started
-alone; and hour after hour went by without sign of his return; until, as
-the fourth hour was on the eve of completion, the flame of the torches
-lit up the distance, and was reflected back by the gleaming columns. The
-wanderer sprang from the boat chilled and exhausted; and, in answer to
-the inquiries of those about him, he stated that he had progressed for
-two hours in a straight line, but that he had seen nothing more than
-what they looked upon themselves—the vaulted roof above his head, the
-water beneath his feet, and a wilderness of pillars rising on all sides,
-and losing themselves in the darkness.
-
-This second adventure so alarmed the worthy old Osmanli to whom the boat
-belonged, that he caused it to be immediately destroyed; and visitors
-are now compelled to content themselves with a partial view of
-_Yèrè-Batan-Seraï_ from the ruined opening.
-
-Marcian’s Column, called by the Turks _Kestachi_, which is situated in
-the garden of a Turkish house near the gate of Adrianople, is a splendid
-remain, of which the capital is supported by four magnificent eagles.
-The hexagonal pedestal is ornamented with wreaths of oak leaves, and the
-height of the shaft is nearly eighty feet.
-
-Of the remains of the Aqueduct of Justinian I have already spoken; and
-hundreds of beautiful and graceful columns, and thousands of sculptured
-fragments, are to be seen intermingled with the masonry of the city
-walls.
-
-The ancient Palace of Constantine, vulgarly named the Palace of
-Belisarius, stands in that quarter of the city called Balata, a
-corruption of _Balati_, “the gate of the palace.” It is impossible to
-visit this curious ruin with any pleasure, as it has been given up to
-the needy Jews, who have established within its walls a species of
-pauper barrack, redolent of filth. It is of considerable extent, and
-principally remarkable for the curious arrangement of its brick-work;
-there are, however, the remains of a handsome doorway, and outworks of
-great strength.
-
-About ten days before I left the country, some workmen, employed in
-digging the foundation of an outbuilding at the Arsenal, brought to
-light a handsome sarcophagus of red marble, containing the bodies of
-Heraclius, a Greek Emperor, who flourished during the reign of Mahomet,
-and his consort. The two figures representing the Imperial pair are
-nearly perfect. That of the Emperor holds in one hand a globe, and with
-the other grasps a sceptre; while the Empress is represented with her
-crown resting upon her open palm. At their feet are the busts of two
-worthies, supposed to be portraits of celebrated warriors, but the
-inscriptions beneath them are nearly obliterated.
-
-Immediately that the identity of the occupants of this lordly tomb was
-ascertained, orders were given that an iron railing, breast-high, should
-be erected to protect the relic from injury, the Turks having a
-tradition that Heraclius died a Mahomedan. The fact is, however, more
-than doubtful; although it is well known that Mahomet sent him an
-invitation to abjure Christianity, and to become a True Believer; but,
-at the period of this occurrence, Heraclius was bowed by years, and sunk
-in sensual enjoyments. Anxious to evade a war with Mahomet, whose
-successes were then at their height, he despatched an ambiguous reply to
-the message, and died ere he had given the Musselmauns reason to
-suspect the real motive of his supineness. Hence the Turks claimed the
-sarcophagus of Heraclius as the tomb of a True Believer; and a marble
-mausoleum is to be built over it, similar to those which contain the
-ashes of the Sultans.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Pardoe del.
-
-Day & Haghe Lith^{rs}. to the King.
-
-THE SEVEN TOWERS.
-
-_Pub^d. by H. Colburn, 13 G^t. Marlborough S^t._]
-
-The Seven Towers—that celebrated prison of which the very name is a
-spell of power—are rapidly crumbling to decay, but must continue to be
-among the most interesting of the antiquities of Constantinople, as long
-as one stone remains upon another.
-
-Although situated in a populous part of the city, this fortress is,
-nevertheless, an isolated building; and four of the towers to which it
-owes its name are destroyed, but of those that still exist, one contains
-the apartments originally appropriated to state prisoners, and is also
-the residence of the Military Commandant and the officers of the
-garrison. When it ceased to be a state prison for attainted Turks, the
-fortress of the Seven Towers was exclusively reserved for the reception
-of the Russian Ambassadors, on the occasion of any misunderstanding
-between the Ottoman and Muscovite courts; and it is almost a ludicrous
-fact that, during the reign of Mustapha III., His Excellency Count
-Obrescoff, representative of Her Imperial Majesty, the Empress of all
-the Russias, not only suffered an imprisonment of three years in this
-fortress, but actually passed several days at the bottom of a dry well,
-into which it was the Sublime pleasure of the Sultan to cause him to be
-lowered.
-
-If His Highness acted upon the impression that the Muscovite Minister
-would succeed during his subterranean sojourn in discovering the moral
-deity who is said to be concealed therein, there is every reason, from
-existing circumstances, to believe that the experiment was a failure, or
-that she declined being withdrawn from her retreat.
-
-Instruments of torture—racks, wheels, and oubliettes—are rife within
-this place of gloom and horror. One chasm, upon whose brink you stand,
-is called the “Well of Blood,” and is said to have overflowed its margin
-with the ensanguined stream which was once warm with life—a small
-court, designated the “Place of Heads,” is pointed out as having been
-cumbered with the slain, until the revolting pile was of sufficient
-height to enable the spectator to look out from its summit upon the
-waves of the glittering Propontis; and more than one stone tunnel is
-shown, into which the wretched captive was condemned to crawl upon his
-hands and knees, and there left to die of famine.
-
-But I shall pass by these tales of terror, to narrate a Legend of the
-Seven Towers, less known than the objects which are exhibited to every
-visiter, and more calculated to interest the reader.
-
-On the declaration of war with Russia made by the Turks in 1786, Baron
-Bulhakoff, the Russian Minister, despite his representation that the
-imprisonment of the Muscovite Ambassadors on such occasions had been
-abolished by treaty, was, nevertheless, sent to the Seven Towers by
-order of Codza Youssouf Pasha, the Grand Vèzir, with the assurance that
-treaties were very good things in a time of peace, but mere waste paper
-in the event of war. The discomfited Ambassador was, however, treated
-with great civility, and was even permitted to select such members of
-the Legation as he desired should bear him company during his captivity;
-strict orders being given to the Commandant of the castle to accede to
-every request of his prisoner which did not tend to compromise his
-safety; and upon his complaining of the accommodations of the Tower, he
-was moreover permitted to erect a kiosk on the walls of the fortress,
-whence he had a magnificent view of the Sea of Marmora and its
-glittering islands, and to construct a spacious and handsome apartment
-within the Tower itself.
-
-I have already stated that the Commandant was lodged beneath the same
-roof as his prisoner; but I have yet to tell that he had an only
-daughter, so young, and so lovely, that she might have taken her stand
-between the two Houri who wait at the portal of Paradise to beckon the
-Faithful across its threshold, without seeming less beautiful than they.
-Fifteen springs had with their delicate breathings opened the petals of
-the roses since the birth of Rèchèdi[7] Hanoum, and she had far
-out-bloomed the brightest blossoms of the fairest of seasons. Her voice,
-when it was poured forth in song, came through the lattices of her
-casement like the tones of a distant mandolin sweeping over the waters
-of the still sea—when you looked upon her, it was as though you looked
-upon a rose; and when you listened, you seemed to listen to the
-nightingale.
-
-Rèchèdi Hanoum had never yet poured the scented sherbet in the garden of
-flowers. Her young heart was as free as the breeze that came to her brow
-from the blue bosom of the Propontis; and when she heard that a
-Muscovite Giaour was about to become an inmate of the Tower, she only
-trembled, for she knew that he was the enemy of her country.
-
-Terror was, however, soon succeeded by curiosity. Only a few weeks after
-the compulsatory domestication of the Ambassador at the Seven Towers,
-his kiosk was completed; and from her closed casements the young Hanoum
-could see all that passed in the vast apartment of the prisoner.
-
-Her first glance at the dreaded Infidel was transient; but soon she took
-another, and a longer look; and curiosity was, in its turn, succeeded by
-sympathy. The Russian prisoner was the handsomest man on whom her eye
-had ever rested, and it was not thus that she had pictured to herself
-the dreaded Muscovite. He was unhappy too, for in his solitary moments
-he paced the floor with hurried and unequal steps, like one who is
-grappling with some painful memory; and at times sat sadly, with his
-head pillowed on his hand, and his fingers wreathed amid the wavy hair
-which encircled his brow; looking so mournful, and above all so
-fascinating, that the fair Rèchèdi at last began to weep as she clung to
-her lattice, with her gaze riveted upon him; and to find more happiness
-in those tears, than in all the simple pleasures that had hitherto
-formed the charm of her existence.
-
-Little did the young Hanoum suspect that she loved the Giaour. She never
-dreamt of passion; but, with all the generous anxiety of innocence,
-unconscious that a warmer feeling than that of mere pity urged her to
-the effort, she began to muse upon the means of diminishing the
-irksomeness of a captivity which she was incapable of terminating. The
-first, the most natural impulse led her to sweep her hands across the
-chords of her Zebec; and as she remarked the start of agreeable surprise
-with which the sound was greeted by the courtly prisoner, her young
-heart bounded with joy, and the wild song gushed forth in a burst of
-sweetness which chained the attention of the captive, and afforded to
-the delighted girl the opportunity of a long, long look, that more than
-repaid her for her minstrelsy.
-
-During the evening she watched to ascertain whether a repetition of her
-song would be expected, and she did not watch in vain; for more than
-once the Russian noble leant from his casement, and seemed to listen;
-but he came not there alone; one of his companions in captivity was
-beside him; and Rèchèdi Hanoum, although she guessed not wherefore, had
-suddenly become jealous of her minstrelsy, and would not exhibit it
-before a third person.
-
-On the morrow, an equally graceful, and equally successful effort whiled
-the prisoner for a time from his sorrows. A cluster of roses, woven
-together with a tress of bright dark hair, was flung from the casement
-of the young beauty, at a moment when the back of the stranger was
-turned towards her. It fell at his feet, and was secured and pressed to
-his lips, with a respectful courtesy that quickened the pulses of the
-donor; but not a glimpse of the fair girl accompanied the gift; and it
-seemed as though the Baron had suspected wherefore, for ere long he was
-alone in his apartment; and, when he had dismissed his attendants, he
-once more advanced to the window, and glanced anxiously towards the
-jealous lattices by which it was overlooked.
-
-There was a slight motion perceptible behind the screen; a white hand
-waved a greeting; and the imprisoned noble bent forward to obtain a
-nearer view of its fair owner. For a moment Rèchèdi Hanoum stood
-motionless, terrified at the excess of her own temerity; but there was a
-more powerful feeling at her heart than fear; and in the next, she
-forced away her prison-bars for an instant; and, with the telltale hand
-pressed upon her bosom, stood revealed to her enraptured neighbour.
-
-From that day the young beauty allowed herself to betray to the captive
-her interest in his sorrows; she did more; she admitted that she shared
-them; and ere long there was not an hour throughout the day in which the
-thoughts of Rèchèdi Hanoum were not dwelling on the handsome prisoner.
-
-Thus were things situated during two long years, when the death of the
-reigning Sultan, at the termination of that period, induced the
-Ambassadors of England and France to demand from his successor, Selim
-III., the liberty of the Russian Minister. The request was refused, for
-the war was not yet terminated; and the new Sovereign required no better
-pretext for disregarding the representations of the European
-Ambassadors, than the continuation of hostilities between the two
-countries. But Selim had other and more secret reasons for thus
-peremptorily negativing their prayer; and it will be seen in the suite
-that they did not arise from personal dislike to the captive Muscovite.
-
-Like Haroun Alraschid of Arabian memory, the new Sultan, during the
-first weeks of his reign, amused himself by nocturnal wanderings about
-the streets of the city in disguise; attended by the subsequently famous
-Hussèin, his first and favourite body-page; and immediately that he had
-refused compliance with the demand of the Ambassadors, he resolved on
-paying an _incognito_ visit to his prisoner at the Seven Towers. As soon
-as twilight had fallen like a mantle over the gilded glories of
-Stamboul, he accordingly set forth; and having discovered himself to the
-Commandant, and enjoined him to secresy, he entered the anti-chamber of
-the Baron, where he found one of his suite, to whom he expressed his
-desire to have an interview with the captive Ambassador.
-
-The individual to whom the Sultan had addressed himself recognised him
-at once; but, without betraying that he did so, contented himself with
-expressing his regret that he was unable to comply with the request of
-his visitor, the orders of the Sultan being peremptory, that the Baron
-should hold no intercourse with any one beyond the walls of the
-fortress.
-
-On receiving this answer, Selim replied gaily that the Sultan need never
-be informed of the circumstance; and that, being a near relation of the
-Commandant, and having obtained his permission to have a few minutes’
-conversation with the prisoner, he trusted that he should not encounter
-any obstacle either on the part of the Baron himself, or on that of his
-friends.
-
-The Dragoman, with affected reluctance, quitted the room, to ascertain,
-as he asserted, the determination of His Excellency, but in reality to
-inform him of the Imperial masquerade; and in five minutes more the
-disguised Sultan and his favourite were ushered into the apartment of
-the Ambassador.
-
-After some inconsequent conversation, Selim inquired how the Baron had
-contrived to divert the weary hours of his captivity; and was answered
-that he had endeavoured to lighten them by books, and by gazing out upon
-the Sea of Marmora from his kiosk. Bulhakoff sighed as he made the
-reply, and remembered how much more they had been brightened by the
-affection of the fair Rèchèdi Hanoum; and he almost felt as though he
-were an ingrate that he did not add her smiles and her solicitude to the
-list of his prison-blessings.
-
-“The same volume and the same kiosk cannot please for ever;” said the
-Sultan with a smile; “and you would not, doubtlessly, be sorry to
-exchange your books against the conversation of your fellow-men; nor
-your view of the blue Propontis for one more novel. A prison is but a
-prison at the best, even though you may be locked up with all the
-courtesy in the world. But your captivity is not likely to endure much
-longer. _Shekiur Allah!_—Praise be to God—I am intimately acquainted
-with the Sultan’s favourite; and I know that, had not the meddling
-ministers of England and France sought to drive the new sovereign into
-an act of justice, which he had resolved to perform from inclination,
-you would have been, ere this, at liberty. Do not therefore be induced
-to lend yourself or your countenance to any intrigue that they may make
-to liberate you, and which will only tend to exasperate His Highness;
-but wait patiently for another month, and at its expiration you will be
-set free, and restored to your country.”
-
-“I trust that you may prove a true prophet—” said the Baron; and his
-visitors shortly afterwards departed.
-
-The days wore on; the month was almost at an end, and yet the captive
-noble had never ventured to breathe to the fair girl who loved him the
-probability of his liberation. He shrank from the task almost with
-trembling, for he felt that even to him the parting would be a bitter
-one—even to him, although he was about to recover liberty, and country,
-and friends. What, then, would it be to her? to “his caged bird,” as he
-had often fondly called her—who knew no joy save in his presence—no
-liberty save that of loving him! As the twilight fell sadly over the
-sea, and the tall trees of the prison-garden grew dark and gloomy in the
-sinking light, he remembered how ardently they had both watched for that
-still hour, soon to be one of tenfold bitterness to the forsaken Rèchèdi
-Hanoum; and there were moments in which he almost wished that she had
-never loved him.
-
-But the hour of trial came at last. Selim had redeemed his word, and
-Bulhakoff was free. His companions in captivity would fain have quitted
-the fortress within the hour; but the liberated prisoner lingered. He
-gave no reason for his delay; he offered no explanation of his motives;
-he simply announced his resolution not to quit the Tower until the
-morrow; and then he shut himself into his chamber, and passed there
-several of the most bitter hours of his captivity.
-
-Once more twilight lay long upon the waters—the time of tryst was
-come—the last which the beautiful young Hanoum was ever to keep with
-her lover. She had long forgotten the possibility of his liberation; and
-when she stole from her chamber to the shadow of the tall cypresses that
-had so often witnessed their meeting, her heart bounded like her step.
-But no fond smile welcomed her coming—no reproach, more dear than
-praise, murmured against her tardiness—Bulhakoff was leaning his head
-against the tree beside which he stood, and the young beauty had clasped
-within her own the chill and listless hand that hung at his side, ere
-with a painful start he awakened from his reverie.
-
-The interview was short; but brief as was its duration it had taught the
-wretched girl that for her there was no future save one of misery. She
-did not weep—her burning eyeballs were too hot for tears. She _could_
-not weep, for the drops of anguish would have dimmed the image of him
-whom she had loved, and was about to lose. She made no reply to the
-withering tidings he had brought, for what had words to do with such a
-grief as her’s? She was like one who dreamt a fearful dream; and when
-she turned away to regain her chamber, she walked with a firm step, for
-her heart was broken; and she had nothing now left to do but to veil
-from her lover the extent of her own anguish, lest she should add to the
-bitterness of his.
-
-The morrow came. The Baron turned a long, soul-centered look-towards the
-lattices of his young love, and quitted her for ever; and, ere many
-weeks were spent, the same group of cypresses which had overshadowed the
-trysting-place of Rèchèdi Hanoum gloomed above her grave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-
- Balouclè—The New Church—Delightful Road—Eyoub—The
- Cemetery—The Rebel’s Grave—The Mosque of Blood—The Hill of
- Graves—The Seven Towers—The Palace of Belisarius—The City
- Walls—Easter Festivities—The Turkish Araba—The Armenian
- Carriage—Travellers—Turkish
- Women—Seridjhes—Persians—Irregular Troops—The Plain of
- Balouclè—Laughable Mistake—Extraordinary Discretion—The
- Church of Balouclè—The Holy Well—Absurd Tradition—The Chapel
- Vault—Enthusiasm of the Greeks—A Pleasant Draught—Greek
- Substitute for a Bell—Violent Storm.
-
-Our next expedition was to Balouclè, where the Greeks have recently
-built a small, but elegant church, upon the spot once occupied by a very
-spacious edifice, which had gone to ruin. The ride, though long and
-somewhat fatiguing, was most delightful; the road leading us across the
-hills, to the fair Valley of the Sweet Waters, along the banks of the
-sparkling Barbyses, past the Imperial kiosks; and onward to the
-beautiful village of Eyoub, the stronghold of the Constantinopolitan
-Turks, wherein they allow no Giaour to reside; and the marble floor of
-whose thrice-holy mosque no infidel foot has ever trodden.
-
-The situation of Eyoub is eminently picturesque. It is backed by
-gently-swelling hills, clothed with trees, where the delicate acacia and
-the majestic maple are mingled with the scented lime and the dark and
-rigid cypress, whose blended shadows fall over a thousand graves, and
-turn away the sunlight from the lettered tombs of many a lordly
-Musselmaun. Eyoub possesses also a melancholy interest from the fact,
-that in its beautiful cemetery stands the rude mausoleum of the rebel
-Ali of Tepeleni who revolted in Albania, wherein are deposited the heads
-of himself, his three sons, and his grandson. Nor is this all; for a
-small mosque, almost buried amid tall trees, may be distinguished at the
-point where the main street sweeps downward to the water’s edge, whose
-modest minaret is painted a dull red from its base to its spire, and
-which bears the thrilling designation of the “Mosque of Blood.”
-
-I have elsewhere mentioned that the Osmanlis do not permit their temples
-to be desecrated by the admission of the dead beneath their roofs; and
-this humble pile earned its awful appellation at the siege of
-Constantinople, when its doors were forced by the combatants, and its
-narrow floor cumbered with slain. Since that period, its single minaret
-has been painted as I have described; and it possesses an additional
-interest from its vicinity to the bleak, naked, treeless hill, whereon
-were interred all the True Believers who perished at that memorable
-period, and whose ashes still remain undisturbed.
-
-Nothing can be more romantic than the appearance of the Seven Towers,
-the remains of the Palace of Belisarius, and the crumbling walls of the
-city, extending along the whole line of road to Balouclè, like a
-succession of ruined castles; and overtopped by forest trees, whose
-bright foliage forms a striking contrast from the grey and mouldering
-rampart. At intervals, towers thickly overgrown with ivy, and tottering
-to their fall, raise their fantastic outline against the sky; while the
-moat is in many places entirely concealed by the wild fig trees, and the
-dense underwood, that have sprung in wild luxuriance from the rich soil.
-
-At the period of our visit, the Easter festivities were at their height,
-and the road was covered with groups of travellers, all hurrying towards
-the same point. There was the gilded araba of the Turkish lady, with its
-covering of crimson cloth, and its carved lattices; followed by a
-mounted negro. Then came the bullock-carriage of an Armenian family,
-gaily painted and cushioned, its oxen half covered with worsted tassels
-and finery, and glittering about the head with foil and gold leaf; while
-a long curved stick, extending backward from each yoke as far as the
-carriage, was painted in stripes of blue and yellow, and adorned with
-pendent tassels of coloured worsted. Both animals wore their charm
-against the Evil Eye; and the whole equipage was sufficiently
-well-appointed to have done honour to the harem of a Pasha, while the
-bright dark eyes and delicate hands of its occupants would have been an
-equal triumph for his taste. But at the first glance you saw that the
-carriage was not that of a Turk, for the painted hoops were plainly
-covered by a white awning, the symbol of the _raïah_. The haughty
-Osmanli has reserved to himself the privilege of seating his wives
-beneath draperies of crimson, blue, or purple, fringed with gold; while
-the Armenian, the Greek, and the Jew, when making use of this popular
-conveyance, are obliged to content themselves with a simple awning of
-white linen. Here galloped a reckless Greek, urging his good hack to the
-top of its speed; there moved along a stately Turk, with the hand of his
-groom resting on the flank of his well-fed horse, and his pipe-bearer
-walking five paces behind him. Now it was a party of Franks, booted,
-spurred, and looking in silent scorn upon the incongruous trappings of
-the natives, and now a group of foot-passengers, walking at a pace which
-I never saw equalled in England.
-
-As we approached Balouclè, the features of the scene became still more
-striking. The low wall that skirted the road was covered with Turkish
-women, squatted upon their rugs and carpets, with the arabas in which
-they had travelled ranged along behind them. Seridjhes were walking
-droves of horses to and fro, and waiting for customers to hire them;
-travelling merchants were retailing yahourt and mohalibè to the hungry
-and the weary; Bulgarians were playing their awkward antics to attract
-the attention of the idle, and the piastres of the profuse; and the halt
-and the blind were seated by the wayside, to invoke the paras of the
-charitable. Parties of Persians, with large white turbans, silken robes,
-and eyes as black as midnight, were walking their well-trained horses
-through the crowd; and a detachment of the Irregular Troops, with their
-jester at their head, in a cap made of sheepskin, adorned with three
-fox-tails, and a vest of undressed leather, drove back the people on
-either side, as they made their way through the throng with a sort of
-short run. They had precisely the appearance of banditti, each being
-dressed and armed according to his own means or fancy; while their huge
-mustachioes, and the elf locks that escaped from beneath their turbans,
-added to the ferocious character of their aspect.
-
-The plain on which the Church is situated is thickly wooded in its
-immediate neighbourhood, and on this occasion was covered with a dense
-crowd of merry human beings. The same amusements as I have described at
-the Armenian festival were in full career; but the heavy meaningless
-dance of the Champs des Morts was here exchanged for the graceful
-romaïka, which was going forward in every direction.
-
-For every other female whom I saw on the ground, I remarked at least a
-hundred and fifty Turkish women; and the astonishment excited by the
-appearance of the Greek lady by whom I was accompanied, and myself among
-these latter, was most amusing. As the greater number of them had never
-before seen a Frank lady on horseback, they concluded that we had each
-lost a leg; and the “Mashallahs!” with which they contemplated our
-gaiety were innumerable. But as a Turkish woman never scruples to
-address a stranger in the street; and as our being actually crippled was
-a matter of uncertainty; they were resolved to satisfy their minds on
-this very important point; and several of them accordingly addressed
-themselves to the gentlemen of our party, in order to resolve the doubt;
-exclaiming with an energy worthy of the occasion: “For the love of God,
-tell us if your wives have lost a leg, or not!”
-
-When they had been assured to the contrary, their next conclusion was
-still more amusing. It was clear that none but rope-dancers could
-balance themselves upon the back of a horse without having one leg on
-either side of the saddle—ergo, we were collectively, ladies and
-gentlemen, the identical party of rope-dancers, whom the Sultan had
-engaged for the marriage festivities of his Imperial daughter: and so
-perfectly convinced were they of their own sagacity on this second
-occasion, that I am only surprised that they had sufficient discretion
-to refrain from requesting us to give them a specimen of our abilities.
-
-The Church of Balouclè stands in the centre of an enclosed court, within
-which are also situated the houses of the priests. A handsome flight of
-stone steps leads downward to the portal; and, as you cross the
-threshold, the interior of the edifice produces on you the effect of
-something that has sprung into existence at the touch of an enchanter’s
-wand. It looks as though it were built of porcelain, all is so fresh and
-so glittering. It is entirely lined with white and gold, and the paint
-upon the walls is so highly varnished, that you can scarcely distinguish
-it from the polished marble that composes the screen of the sanctuary;
-the latticed gallery of the women is fancifully decorated and gilt; and
-the elegant pulpit is shaped like an inverted minaret.
-
-But the principal attraction of the Church of Balouclè, and that which
-lends to it its distinguishing character of sanctity, is the Holy Well,
-dedicated to the Virgin, which, on the occasion of all high festivals,
-is opened for the benefit and edification of the pious. Situated in a
-vault immediately beneath the chancel, protected by a balustrade of
-marble, and lighted by the lamp that is constantly burning before the
-shrine of the Madonna, rises the spring whose holy and healing qualities
-are matter of devout belief with the Greeks; and in which the lower
-orders of the people gravely assert that fish are to be seen swimming
-about, cooked on one side and crude on the other.
-
-This somewhat extraordinary circumstance is accounted for by a variety
-of legends; the most comprehensible of the whole being that which
-affirms that, some holy man or woman having been refused food on this
-very spot, when on a pilgrimage to a shrine of the Virgin, situated in
-the neighbourhood, the well-disposed fish, whose pious self-immolation
-has been thus immortalised, sprang from the waters of the spring, and
-flung themselves upon the heated ashes of the fire, whereon the churlish
-host, who refused help to the weary and wayworn pilgrims, had just
-prepared his own meal. How the travellers were induced to refrain from
-the savoury repast; and how the fish contrived to return to the stream
-after being well cooked on one side, the legend sayeth not; and those
-who are inclined to doubt the fact of their present existence had
-better make a descent into the vault on the occasion of an Easter
-festival; and, should they still continue sceptical, after the scene
-which they will then and there witness, nothing that I can say will
-awaken their faith.
-
-After having duly flung a few piastres upon the salver held by the
-priest who guarded the door; and protected on either side by a
-gentleman, to secure me from the pressure of the crowd, I commenced my
-slippery descent into the subterranean chapel. The stone steps were
-running with water, spilt by the eager motions of those who were bearing
-it away; nor was this all, for, as they handed it to each other over the
-heads of such as chanced to obstruct their passage, an occasional shower
-fell upon us from above, whose holiness by no means sufficed to
-counteract its chill.
-
-When I gained the chapel, and paused to take breath, a most singular
-scene presented itself. The narrow space was cumbered with individuals,
-who were shouting, struggling, and even fighting their way, to the
-margin of the Well: an image of the Virgin tricked out in gold and
-embroidery, before which burned the lamp that lit up the subterranean,
-gleamed out in vain from a niche opposite to the spring: the very piety
-of her votaries had induced them to turn their backs upon her; and I
-believe that mine was the only eye which rested upon her altar.
-
-Some, who had succeeded in filling the vessels which they had brought
-with them, were standing bare-headed, throwing the cold stream over
-their shaven crowns: others, who had suffered from lameness, were
-emptying their earthen jars upon their feet; some were pouring it down
-their chests, and others again down their throats.
-
-By the strenuous endeavours of my friends, and the assistance of a
-sickly-looking priest who was collecting paras among the crowd, I
-succeeded in obtaining a draught of the water; and, whether it arose
-from the stream having been thickened by the dipping in of so many
-vessels, or that the half fried fish imparted to it a disagreeable
-flavour of the charcoal ashes; or, again, that it was really and simply
-of very indifferent quality, I cannot take upon me to decide; while I am
-quite competent to declare that I never swallowed a more unsatisfactory
-beverage, and that nothing less than a very painful thirst would have
-induced me to venture upon a second trial.
-
-On escaping from the subterranean, (and it was really an escape)! I went
-to examine the machine which in all the principal Greek churches acts as
-the substitute for a bell, whose use is not permitted by the Turks. It
-is a very inartificial instrument, being merely a bar of iron resting
-lightly between two perpendicular pieces of timber, which, on being
-struck with a short bar of cypress-wood, emits a clear ringing sound,
-that may be heard to a considerable distance. In the smaller churches
-two sticks are beaten together, but this signal avails only when the
-congregation is nestled near the walls of the temple.
-
-Having secured the water that they had taken so much trouble to obtain,
-the enthusiastic and light-hearted Greeks were pouring out of the chapel
-as we returned; and ere we could mount our horses many of them had
-already joined the dancers, and were engaged in winding through the
-graceful mazes of the romaïka, while others were busied in filling their
-chibouks in the neighbourhood of the coffee-tents.
-
-A mass of heavy vapours, rising up against the wind, and arraying
-themselves like a host about to do battle, warned us not to linger long
-at so considerable a distance from home; and, profiting by the
-intimation of a coming storm, we started off at a gallop, to the
-increased astonishment of the Turkish women, who were still clustering
-like bees upon the wall. But our speed availed us nothing: we had not
-cleared the hills above Kahaitchana when the enemy was upon us; and a
-tempest of blended hail, rain, and wind bore us company for the
-remainder of the journey; and thus we were fairly drenched ere we
-reached Pera, notwithstanding our offerings at the shrine of the Virgin,
-and our pilgrimage to the Holy Well.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-
- Figurative Gratitude of the Seraskier Pasha—Eastern
- Hyperbole—Reminiscences of Past Years—A Vision
- Realized—Strong Contrasts—The Marriage Fêtes—Popular
- Excitement—Crowded Streets—The Auspicious Day—Extravagant
- Expectations—The Great Cemetery—Dolma Batchè—The Grand
- Armoury—Turkish Women—Tents of the Pashas—The
- Bosphorus—Preparations—Invocation—The Illuminated
- Bosphorus—A Stretch of Fancy—A Painful Recollection—Natural
- Beauties of the Bosphorus—The Grave-Yard—Evening
- Amusements—Well Conducted Population.
-
-In a letter of thanks recently addressed by the Seraskier Pasha to the
-Sultan, in acknowledgment of some honour conferred upon him by his
-Imperial Master, he exclaims in an affected burst of enthusiastic
-gratitude:—“Your Sublime favour has been as a southern sun piercing
-even to the remote corner of my insignificance. Had I all the forest
-boughs of the Universe for pens, and the condensed stars of Heaven for a
-page whereon to inscribe your bounties, I should still lack both space
-and means to record them!”
-
-Even in this style should he or she who undertakes to become their
-chronicler, shape the periods in which are detailed the marriage
-festivities of the Princess Mihirmàh. The pen should be tipped with
-diamond-dust, and the paper powdered with seed-pearl. All the hyperboles
-of the Arabian story-tellers should be heaped together, as the colours
-of the rainbow are piled upon the clouds which pillow the setting sun;
-and, as the gorgeous tail of the peacock serves to withdraw the eye from
-its coarse and ungainly feet, so should the glowing sentences that
-dilate on the glories of the show, veil from the vision of the reader
-the paltry details that would tend to dissolve the enchantment.
-
-How often have I hung entranced over the sparkling pages of the “Hundred
-and One Nights.” How little did I ever expect to see them brought into
-action. When a mere girl, I remember once to have laid the volume on my
-knees; and, with my head pillowed on my hand, and my eyes closed, to
-have attempted to bring clearly before my mental vision the Caravan of
-the Merchand Abdullah, when he departed in search of the Valley of
-Diamonds.
-
-Years have since passed over me, and that gorgeous description is no
-longer a mere dream. I have looked upon its realization—I have seen the
-flashing of the jewels in the sunshine—the prancing of the steeds
-impatient of a rider—the rolling of the fifty chariots—the gathering
-of the throng of princes—the eunuchs and the horsemen—winding their
-way over hill and through valley, under a sky of turquoise, along the
-bank of a clear stream; and within sight of a sea whose shore was
-studded with palaces, and upon whose blue bosom a fleet of stately ships
-were riding at anchor within an arrow’s flight of land.
-
-But I have also seen more than this. I have seen not only the machinery
-at work, but the wheels that worked it; not only the brilliant effect,
-but the combination of paltry means used to produce it—the blending of
-the magnificent and the _mesquin_—a thousand minute details,
-unimportant in themselves, and yet operating so powerfully on the
-imagination, that they clipped the wings of Fancy, and wrung the wand
-from the grasp of the Enchanter.
-
-There is no consistency, no keeping, in Oriental splendour. The Pasha,
-with the diamond on his breast, is generally attended by a running
-footman who is slip-shod; and the Sultana, whose araba is veiled by a
-covering of crimson and gold, not infrequently figures in pantaloons of
-furniture chintz, and an antery of printed cotton. The same startling
-contrasts meet you at every step: and tourists and historians pass them
-over, because they destroy the continuity of their narrations, and the
-rounding of their periods; and yet they are as characteristic of the
-people as the chibouk or the turban, and therefore equally worthy of
-record.
-
-The Fêtes were to continue for eight days—the diamond was to be
-shivered into fragments, and thus divided into many portions without
-sacrificing its lustre. All the population of Constantinople was in a
-ferment—the charshees had yielded up their glittering store of gold and
-silver stuffs—the diamond-merchants had exhausted themselves in elegant
-conceits—the confectioners had realized the fabled garden of
-enchantment visited by Aladdin in his search for the magic lamp, and the
-candied fruits peeped from amid their sugary cases, like masses of
-precious ore, and clusters of jewels—the silk-bazar of Broussa was a
-waste—the environs of Pera resembled a scattered camp—the heights
-around the valley of Dolma Batchè were guarded by mounted
-troops—provisions of every description trebled their price: and one
-vessel, laden with a hundred and fifty thousand fowls for the market of
-Constantinople, which arrived from the Archipelago, was secured for the
-exclusive use of the Sultan’s kitchen.
-
-Pashas were daily pouring in from the provinces—tribute was flung into
-the yawning coffers of the state—audiences of congratulation kept the
-Imperial Palace in a constant whirl—and the streets of the city were
-thronged with a motley crowd, either invited thither by the
-authorities, or attracted by the hope of profit. Bulgarians, in parties
-of three or four, impeded the progress of every respectable passenger
-who would fain have threaded his way among them unmolested; and by dint
-of stunning him with their discordant instruments, and intruding
-themselves upon his path to exhibit their coarse and ungainly dances,
-wrung from him by their sturdy perseverance a donation whose impulse was
-certainly not one of charity. Bohemian gipsies, some of them so lovely
-that they seemed formed to command the prosperity which they subtly
-promised to others, were bestowing palaces and power on every side at
-the slender price of a few paras. Arabian tumblers, turned loose for the
-first time in the streets of a great capital, and appearing scarcely
-able to keep their feet upon the solid earth, jostled you at every
-corner. Persian rope-dancers stalked gravely and solemnly along, with
-large white turbans, and flowing robes. Bedouin jugglers were grouped in
-coffee-shops and smoking-booths, awaiting the moment when their services
-would be required; and bewildering the sober brains of the surrounding
-Turks with loud vauntings of the feats with which they proposed to
-delight his Sublime Highness, and to astonish his people. Altogether,
-Constantinople resembled a human kaleidoscope, whose forms and features
-varied at every turn; and even those who, like myself, had no immediate
-interest in the festival, caught a portion of the popular excitement,
-and became anxious for the period of its celebration.
-
-At length, the auspicious morning dawned which the Court Astrologer had
-declared to herald happiness to the Princess; and all Stamboul had
-crossed the Bosphorus with the rising sun to share in the Imperial
-festivities.
-
-Long before mid-day Pera also was a desert: the stream of life had
-flowed in one sole direction, and every avenue leading to Dolma Batchè
-was thronged with human beings, anxious and excited, and yet scarcely
-knowing what they anticipated. The marriage festival had been the one
-engrossing subject of discourse and speculation for so many months—such
-extravagant suggestions had been hazarded, and such wild assertions had
-been made, that the imagination of the crowd had run riot; and, had the
-fountains poured forth liquid ore, and the heavens themselves rained
-diamond-dust, I am not sure that such events would have caused any
-extraordinary manifestation of astonishment, from the mass of spectators
-who had clustered themselves like bees in the neighbourhood of the
-palace.
-
-The Great Cemetery looked as though every grave had given up its dead;
-there was scarcely space to pass among the crowd which thronged it.
-Dancing, smoking, and gambling for sugarplums, (the only stake that a
-Turk ever hazards on a game of chance) divided the attention of the
-loiterers, with swings, round-abouts, and mohalibè merchants. Pillauf
-and kibaubs were preparing in every direction for the refreshment of the
-hungry; and tinted and perfumed sherbets, carefully guarded from the
-sun, were whiling in their turn the weary and the warm to pause on their
-onward path, and indulge in their tempting freshness.
-
-The tents were flaunting their bright colours in the sunshine; the
-smoking booths were filled with guests; the little wooden kiosk on the
-edge of the height was unapproachable; the long line of wall surrounding
-the Artillery Barrack was, as usual on all festive occasions, covered
-with Turkish women; and the whole space beneath was instinct with life
-and motion.
-
-From the point of the hill above the sea the land shoots sharply down
-into the valley of Dolma Batchè, clothed with fruit trees, whose
-perfumed blossoms, then in the height of their beauty, were emptying
-their tinted chalices, on the air. The road leading to the Palace is cut
-along the side of the declivity, forming on its upper edge a lofty ridge
-which was fringed throughout its whole length with tents; in the
-distance rose the Military College, spanning the crest of the hill like
-a diadem; with the gilded and glittering crescent that crowns the dome
-of its mosque flashing in the sunshine. On the right hand the view was
-bounded by the dense forest of cypresses rising above the tombs of the
-Turkish cemetery, which swept darkly downwards to the Bosphorus that was
-laughing in its loveliness, and reflecting on its waveless bosom the
-lovely height of Scutari which hemmed in the landscape. And as the eye
-wandered onward along the channel, it took in the dusky shore of Asia,
-with its kiosk-crowned and forest-clad mountains; until the line was
-lost in the gradually failing purple, that blent itself at last with the
-horizon.
-
-Immediately beneath the hill, and close upon the shore, stands the
-Palace of Dolma Batchè, with its walls of many tints, and its fantastic
-irregularity of outline; while behind its spacious gardens, sloping
-gently upward, and clothed with turf, rises a stretch of land which was
-now crowded with Turkish women. Nothing could be more picturesque than
-their appearance: the nature of the ground having enabled them to
-arrange themselves amphitheatrically, and from thence to command an
-uninterrupted view of the esplanade in front of the Grand Armoury, which
-is enclosed on its opposite side by a raised terrace, along whose edge
-were pitched the tents of the Pashas. There must have been at least five
-hundred women clustered together on that one small stretch of land; and
-in the distance it presented precisely the appearance of a meadow
-covered with daisies, with here and there a corn-poppy flaunting in the
-midst; the white yashmacs and red umbrellas lending themselves readily
-to the illusion.
-
-The tents of the Pashas were many of them very magnificent: the Grand
-Vèzir’s was hung with crimson velvet, richly embroidered; while that of
-Achmet Pasha was lined with green satin, and fringed with gold; and the
-whole were richly carpeted, and surrounded by handsome sofas. The
-reception-marquee, in which the Sultan was to entertain a party of
-guests daily, was situated in the rear of those that I have just
-described: and the kitchen, ingeniously fitted up with stoves, dressers,
-and tables, hewn in the hill-side, was tenanted by five hundred cooks.
-
-The Bosphorus was crowded with caïques, almost as countless as its
-ripple; and immediately in front of the Palace, and nearly in the centre
-of the stream, were anchored two rafts, supporting small fortified
-castles, whence the fireworks were to be displayed.
-
-A survey of these different preparations proved to be the principal
-amusement of the day, as the rope-dancing on the Esplanade of the
-Armoury was not sufficiently attractive to detain any individual less
-indolent than a Turkish woman; and consequently, after having completed
-our tour of observation, we returned to Pera in order to repose
-ourselves, and to prepare for the magnificent spectacle that awaited us
-in the evening.
-
-And now, ye Spirits of Fire, who guard the subterranean flames which are
-only suffered to flash forth at intervals from the crater of some fierce
-volcano—Ye, whose brows are girt with rays of many-coloured radiance,
-whose loins are cinctured by the lightning, and whose garments are of
-the tint which hangs like a drapery over the cineritious remnants of a
-conflagrated city—Ye, who must have left your vapoury palaces, and
-bowed your flame-crowned heads upon your gleaming wings, in blighted
-pride to see your lordliest pageants overmatched—lend me a pen of fire,
-drawn from the pinion of your bravest sprite, and fashioned with an
-unwrought diamond; for thus only can I record the glorious scene that
-burst upon me, as, at the close of day, I stood upon a height above the
-channel, when a festive people had recorded their participation in the
-gladness of their Monarch, in characters of fire.
-
-The moon rode high in Heaven, but her beam looked pale and sickly, as it
-faded before the brighter light with which men had made night glorious;
-while the stars seemed but fading sparks, that had been emitted by the
-stupendous line of fire girdling the Bosphorus—It was a spectacle of
-enchantment!
-
-Not an outline could be traced of any of the lordly piles which fringe
-the coast. The summit of the Asian shore was dimly perceptible, as it
-cut sharply against the clear deep blue of the horizon; but there was no
-intrusive object of mortal creation for the every day necessities of
-life, to recall the wandering fancy back to earth. Nothing can be
-conceived more beautiful than the whole scene. A range of palaces of the
-most fantastic forms, wrought in fire, and seeming to be poized upon the
-waves, along which they threw their gleaming shadows, stretched far as
-the eye could reach. Portals of variegated light—terraces of burnished
-gold, or of beaten silver—groves of forest trees, whose leaves were
-emeralds—fruits, heaped in stately vases, each one a priceless
-gem—altars, upon which burnt flames of liquid metal—pavilions of
-crystal—and halls, lined with columns of sapphire, and lighted by domes
-of carbuncles, were among the objects that appeared to have sprung up
-from the depths of the ocean, and to be now riding upon its bosom.
-
-The sensation which this gorgeous scene produced upon me, for the first
-few moments, was almost painful. I deemed myself thralled—I doubted my
-own identity—I almost expected the earth to fail beneath my feet, for
-earth had no share in the spectacle on which I looked—I saw boats
-passing and repassing over a lake of molten silver—I saw palaces of
-fire based upon its surface, and heaving with its undulations—a marine
-monster, whose eyes were dazzling, and whose nostrils vomited forth
-flames that shot high into the air, wound its slow way among the gliding
-barks, and none heeded its vicinity—I beheld huge dark masses covered
-with stars of light, which were reflected in the stream beneath, looking
-like rocky craters that would shortly burst, and cast forth the
-imprisoned fires—carriages and horses, guided by spectral hands,
-followed over the same cold clear surface—and suddenly, with a hissing
-sound which startled me from my reverie, and a burst of light almost
-blinding, up sprang a cluster of fiery serpents into the pure ether,
-mocking the pale moon with their transient brilliancy, and then falling
-back in starry showers.
-
-The dream of fancy was dispelled at once:—A handful of rockets sufficed
-to arouse me from one of the wildest visions in which I ever remember to
-have indulged—for I no sooner saw them run shimmering along the sky,
-than I sickened at the memory of the frightful catastrophe which
-attended their preparation; when eighty-four miserable human beings fell
-victims to the explosion of the powder-room of the manufactory. My
-enthusiasm was at an end: but my admiration of the magnificent scene,
-amid which I stood, continued unabated; the channel of the Bosphorus,
-beautiful under all circumstances, and at all times, offered facilities,
-and enhanced effects, in an exhibition like that on which I looked, that
-cannot probably be exceeded in the world; and I felt at once that, even
-had man done less, nature would still have made the pageant peerless.
-
-We at length turned reluctantly away from the City of Fire on which we
-had been so long looking; and, threading among the tents that occupied
-the crest of the hill, we passed out through the fair of the Great
-Cemetery. Every booth was thronged. In one, a set of Fantoccini were
-performing their miniature drama; in another, an Improvvisatore was
-regaling a circle of listeners with a gesticulation and volubility which
-appeared to excite great admiration in his auditors; while in a third, a
-trio of Bohemian minstrels, squatted upon a mat, were accompanying their
-wild recitative by a few chords struck almost at random upon their
-mandolins.
-
-In the distance, a wreath of lamps defined the outline of the Military
-College; while lower in the valley gleamed out the costly chandeliers
-which lit up the tents of the Pashas. The hills were sprinkled over with
-lights; the terrace at the extremity of the palace was a wall of fire;
-and the scene was all life and gladness. Crowds thronged the narrow
-road; but not a sound of discord, not a word uttered in menace or in
-defiance, escaped from the lips of a single individual; all were
-tranquil, orderly, and well conducted; the sole aim of each was
-amusement; and this great eastern mob, amounting to between forty and
-fifty thousand persons, collected together from all the surrounding
-country, from the heart of a great city, and from the shores of two
-different quarters of the earth, appeared to act from one common
-impulse, and to have one common interest.
-
-It is questionable whether such a fact as this could be recorded of any
-other country.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-
- Repetition—The Esplanade—The Kiosk and the Pavilion—A Short
- Cut—Dense Crowd—A Friend at Court—Curious _Coup d’Œil_—The
- Arena—The Orchestra—First Act of the Comedy—Disgusting
- Exhibition—The Birth of the Ballet—Dancing Boys—Second Act
- of the Drama—Insult to the Turkish Women—The Provost
- Marshal—Yusuf Pasha, the Traitor—Clemency of the
- Sultan—Forbearance of an Oriental Mob—Renewal of the
- Ballet—Last Act of the Drama—Theatrical
- Decorations—Watch-dogs and Chinese—Procession of the
- Trades—Frank Merchants—Thieves and Judges—Bedouin
- Tumblers—Fondness of the Pashas for Dancing—The Wise Men of
- the East.
-
-It were worse than idle to follow the daily progress of the Fêtes. It
-were but to weary the reader with repetitions, or to delude him with
-fictions; for the same actors being engaged during the whole of the
-festival, only varied their exhibitions sufficiently to emancipate
-themselves from the reproach of actual repetition. So monotonous,
-indeed, did I find the second representation I was induced to witness,
-that I never ventured upon a third.
-
-I have already mentioned that the Esplanade of the Grand Armoury had
-been selected as one of the spots upon which the sports were to take
-place; but I learnt from an individual who had possessed himself of the
-important secret, that the principal performers were to exhibit on a
-piece of land situated between the palace walls, and the kiosk in which
-the Pashas did the honours to the dinner-guests of the Sultan, after the
-termination of their repast; while a garden Pavilion, whose windows
-opened upon this space, was to be tenanted by his Sublime Highness, his
-Imperial daughters, the Sultana, their mother, and half a dozen of the
-most favoured ladies of the harem, who, from the painted lattices, could
-look forth upon the scene.
-
-This arrangement sufficiently attested the superiority of the situation;
-and, accordingly, avoiding the crowd of the Champs des Morts, and the
-thronged descent into the valley, we drove across the hills beyond the
-Military College; and then, skirting the height above Dolma Batchè,
-suddenly descended almost under the walls of the Palace. But the chosen
-spot was surrounded by guards, and the crowd were clustered densely in
-their rear; so densely, indeed, that the _arabadjhe_ declared our
-further progress to be altogether impracticable.
-
-From this dilemma we were fortunately extricated by an officer of Achmet
-Pasha’s household; who, perceiving the difficulty, hastened to remove
-it, which he effected in no very gentle manner by striking the
-individuals who impeded our passage right and left with the flat of his
-sword, until he established us immediately behind the line of military.
-
-The performances had not yet commenced, and I had consequently time to
-contemplate the animated scene before me. On my right was the kiosk,
-whose wide casements were crowded with Pashas; on my left the Garden
-Pavilion, which had the honour of screening from the gaze of the vulgar
-the Brother of the Sun and his train of attendant beauties; behind me
-rose the hill whose summit was covered with the tents of the Imperial
-suite, and whose rise was occupied by a crowd of Turkish females; and
-before me stretched the Bosphorus. A small opening, leading down from
-the arena towards the shore, was occupied by a detachment of military:
-and beneath the windows of the kiosk, mats had been spread for about a
-hundred women, who were comfortably established under the long shadows
-of the building.
-
-At the other extremity of the circle, thirteen Jews, seated
-crescent-wise, were playing upon tambourines; while as many more,
-squatted in their rear, were each beating upon a sort of coarse drum,
-whose only attribute was noise; and the time to be observed by the
-musicians was regulated by an individual, with a venerable white beard
-and a staff of office. This head-splitting orchestra continued to
-accompany the whole performance, with very slight intervals of rest; and
-was quite in keeping with the remainder of the exhibition.
-
-Not the slightest effort had been made to level the piece of land thus
-converted into a temporary theatre, and which was stony and uneven to a
-degree that must have disconcerted any individuals less philosophical
-than those who were to exhibit their histrionic and terpsichorean
-talents before the Ottoman Emperor and his August Court. In fact, the
-whole of the scenic preparations were conducted in so primitive a manner
-that you saw at once no deceit was intended, and that, if you suffered
-yourself to be led away by the incidents of the drama, you would not be
-deluded thereto by any effort of the actors.
-
-The first arrival upon the scene was that of four ragged personages,
-apparently intended to represent the street porters who ply for hire
-about the quays and markets; and these interesting individuals sustained
-a long and animated conversation, setting forth the dull condition of
-the Queen of Cities, in which neither feast nor festival had been held
-since the Baïram. Their lamentations at length attracted the attention
-of a fifth loiterer of the same class, who, joining the group, gave a
-new tone to the subject by announcing the approaching marriage of the
-High and Peerless Princess Mihirmàh—the daughter of His Sublime
-Highness Mahmoud the Powerful, the Emperor of the East, and Conqueror of
-the World!
-
-The intelligence was received with enthusiasm, and the new comer was
-encouraged to proceed with his narration; in which he accordingly set
-forth not only the beauties and virtues of the Imperial Bride, and the
-high and endearing qualities of her affianced husband, but also gave a
-_catalogue raisonné_ of all the sports and ceremonies which were to be
-observed on the happy occasion of her nuptials; and it is only fair to
-believe that he did so with some address, as a murmur of admiration ran
-through the crowd who were devouring his discourse.
-
-After asserting that the whole universe had been taxed to produce
-novelties worthy of the illustrious event, he proposed to exhibit to his
-companions an ingenious machine that had been imported from Europe, and
-which was to be exhibited by a friend of his own. Hereupon, a sort of
-buffoon was introduced, attended by two men, who fixed a swing with a
-lattice seat between two slight wooden frames, which they were obliged
-to support during the remainder of the scene.
-
-One by one, the respectable worthies whom I have attempted to describe
-were seated in the swing, and rocked gently backwards and forwards by
-the proprietor of the show; and during this time an old Jew, with a long
-white beard and tattered garments, followed by a deformed and hideous
-dwarf, joined himself to the party, but at a sufficient distance to
-indicate that he was conscious of his unworthiness to intrude upon their
-notice.
-
-A mischievous whim suddenly prompted the hilarious Mussulmauns to make
-the quailing dwarf a party in their pastime, and they accordingly placed
-him in the swing, and amused themselves for a time with his abortive
-attempts to escape; but, wearying of the jest, they agreed to replace
-him by his master; and, despite the prayers and terror of the hoary Jew,
-they compelled him to occupy the crazy seat, which, failing beneath his
-weight, precipitated him to the ground, where, falling upon his head, he
-remained apparently lifeless.
-
-At this period of the performance, half a score of the members of the
-orchestra left their places, and walked demurely out of the ring, in
-order to swell the crowd which shortly afterwards advanced to raise the
-body of the murdered man, and convey him away to burial.
-
-Nothing can be conceived more disgusting than the scene that followed;
-all the actors being actually Jews, selected from the very dregs of the
-people, and compelled to exhibit the degradation of their social state
-for the amusement of their task-masters. A wretched bier, borne by four
-men, was brought forward, on which the supposed corpse was flung with a
-haste and indecency betokening strong alarm; and it was about to
-disappear with its loathsome freight, when its passage was obstructed by
-a party of police, who, occupying the centre of the path along which it
-was passing, and remaining erect on its approach, were supposed to
-awaken in the bosoms of the bearers one of the strongest superstitions
-of the Jews of Turkey; who, when they are carrying a body to the grave
-that is met by a Christian or a Mahommedan who refuses to bend down and
-pass under the bier, consider the corpse so contaminated by the contact
-as to be without the pale of salvation; and, setting down the body under
-this impression on the spot where the encounter has taken place, they
-abandon it to the tender mercies of the local authorities.
-
-This wretched and revolting superstition was enacted by the degraded
-wretches who were hired on the present occasion to expose the abjectness
-of their people, with all the painful exactness which could delude the
-spectator into the belief that he beheld a scene of actual and
-unpremeditated horror. A distracted wife tore off her turban, and
-plucked out handfuls of her dishevelled hair; the body was rolled over
-into the dust: a scuffle ensued between the Jewish rabble and the armed
-kavasses, in which a few blows were given that appeared to fall more
-heavily than was altogether necessary to the effect of the scene; and
-the Jew, recovering from his trance amid the shouting and yelling of
-the combatants, was borne off in triumph by his tribe, with a wild
-chorus that terminated the first act of the drama!
-
-At intervals, the disgust which this hateful exhibition tended to excite
-in my bosom was relieved by the arrival of some tardy Pasha, attended by
-a train of domestics; who, entering the arena by the passage to which I
-have already alluded as opening from the shoreward side of the
-enclosure, guided his richly caparisoned steed, whose housings were
-bright with gems and embroidery, through the motley throng of actors;
-while his diamond star glittered in the sunshine, and his gold-wrought
-sword-belt and jewelled weapon-hilt flashed back the light that glanced
-upon them.
-
-My pen wearies of its office, as I pursue the detail of the morning’s
-performance; but I compel myself to the task, in order to convey to my
-readers an accurate idea of the Turkish drama—for this coarse,
-revolting, and aimless exhibition, whose description I have commenced,
-is the highest effort that the histrionic art has yet made in Turkey;
-and I am bound to add that the effect which it produced upon the
-spectators was one of unequivocal gratification.
-
-The retreat of the Jewish party was succeeded by the arrival of a group
-of ballet dancers, consisting of about a score of youths from fourteen
-to twenty years of age, dressed in a rich costume of satin, fringed and
-ribbed with gold, varying in colour, according to the fancy of the
-wearer. They all wore their own long hair, curled in ringlets, and
-floating about their shoulders; and their appearance was so extremely
-disagreeable, notwithstanding the splendour of their costume, that I was
-surprised to learn that they all belonged to the Sultan, or to different
-wealthy Pashas, who take so much delight in seeing them dance as to keep
-several constantly in their pay.
-
-As I had been assured that the whole of the exhibition remained
-precisely similar to the scenic amusements of the ancient Romans, I
-contemplated it with more patience than I should otherwise have been
-able to exert: for I soon discovered that the dancing was quite upon a
-par with the dramatic portion of the entertainment. If that upon which I
-now looked were indeed the germ whence sprang the most graceful and the
-most elegant of all the movements of which the human form is
-susceptible—if this were indeed the birth of the Ballet—then is it a
-fair child that may truly blush for its parentage: for the exhibition
-was coarse, monotonous, and wearisome, nor did it possess one redeeming
-attribute. An unceasing circuit of the enclosure—a wreathing of arms
-and handkerchiefs—an affected inclination of the head first to the one
-side, and then to the other—a beating of feet upon the earth, and a
-succession of prostrations before the Pashas, appeared to be the extent
-of talent of which the dancers were capable; and the only variation that
-I was able to discover was an increase of speed, which rendered the
-heavy movements of the exhibitors only the more conspicuous. The very
-appearance, moreover, of this party of petticoated and long-haired
-youths was revolting to my English ideas: and, despite the acclamations
-with which they were liberally greeted, I felt glad when they made their
-parting obeisance, and gave place to the second series of performers.
-
-A Turk, fèzed and coated, next entered upon the scene—a sort of
-Oriental Jacques, melancholy and gentlemanlike, who told a tale of
-blighted love, and consequent sadness; at whose termination he was
-accosted by the buffoon, who in his turn delivered a panegyric on the
-loveliness of the veiled beauties of Stamboul, which however failed in
-its effect upon the slighted suitor; who, with sundry contortions, and
-wringings of the hands, professed his inability ever to love again.
-
-The buffoon, resolved, as it appeared, to make trial of his constancy;
-or outraged at the affectation of so anti-Turkish a display of
-sensibility, shortly withdrew; and returned accompanied by three of the
-Ballet dancers, disguised as females, and wearing the _yashmac_ and the
-_feridjhe_. Of course, curiosity succeeded to indifference, and passion
-to curiosity; and a scene of love-making ensued, that consisted of
-attempts to induce the ladies to unveil; experiments with the swing,
-which occasionally broke down to the great amusement of the spectators;
-and energetic asseverations on the one part and the other.
-
-During the scene, the principal dancer, who personated the attractive
-fair-one, displayed considerable talent in his part; the _feridjhe_ was
-thrown aside; and those Franks who were present, and who could not
-necessarily hope to gain even a glimpse of a Turkish female in the
-costume of the harem, had here an excellent opportunity of forming an
-idea of their appearance; and not only of their appearance, but of their
-manners also, for the resemblance was perfect; and, to render the
-ridicule still more complete, the dress was that of the last Palace
-adoption—the antery and trowsers, wedded to the wadded silk jacket and
-_gigot_ sleeves!
-
-In the course of the performance, he danced the dance of the harem, with
-a degree of skill that few of the female dancers ever attain; and which
-elicited great applause from the audience; and, had the exhibition
-ended here, it would have been rather absurd than revolting; but the
-jealous Musselmauns, who veil the casements of their harems with
-lattices, and the faces of their women with _yashmacs_, sat not only
-quietly but admiringly by, while all, and probably more than all, the
-secrets of the interior were laid bare, and caricatured for the
-amusement of the vulgar. There could not have been a high-minded Turkish
-woman present, who did not blush at least as deeply for her husband as
-for herself; and not a pure-hearted female of any nation, who did not
-feel more contempt for the instigators of the insult than for its
-objects.
-
-Not one of the least extraordinary portions of the day’s performances
-was enacted by a young Pasha, recently promoted to that distinguished
-rank, with the additional titles of General, and Provost-Marshal of the
-Ottoman armies. This very heavy and coarse-looking individual, who was
-formerly Commandant of the Military College in its days of neglect and
-utter uselessness, is the son of Yusuf Pasha, the treacherous Chief who
-sold Varna to the Russians, and escaped into the Northern States, where
-he remained secure, until the kind-hearted Nicholas had wrung his pardon
-from the betrayed Sultan; who in his plenitude of mercy not only forgave
-the crime of his false servant, but rewarded his affected penitence
-with the Pashalik of Belgrade, which he now enjoys.
-
-Mustapha Pasha, his son, figured on the occasion of the Fêtes with a
-diamond star upon his breast, and grasping a whip bound with gold wire,
-and furnished with a long lash, which he laid about the heads and
-shoulders of the mob with a most lavish hand, whenever they advanced an
-inch or two beyond their allotted boundary. I confess that I could not
-help smiling as I pictured to myself the reception which His Highness
-Mustapha Pasha, General of Brigade, and Provost Marshal of the Ottoman
-Armies, would have received from a sturdy English mob, when they felt
-his long whip among them! I suspect that his labours would have been
-brief, and his office not altogether a safe one.
-
-Could I have disengaged my carriage from the crowd, I should at once
-have retired, perfectly satisfied with the specimen I had obtained of
-the Turkish taste in theatricals; but the arabas were standing four
-deep, and pressed upon from behind by a dense mob; and I was
-consequently compelled to remain a patient spectator of the whole
-performance. Intrigues with Greek serving-men, domestic quarrels ending
-in blows, and similarly well-conceived incidents, filled up the canvass,
-until the end of the second act, when a fresh set of ballet dancers,
-amounting to nearly one hundred, and clad in the beautiful old Greek
-dress, entered, and made their bow to the Pashas.
-
-During their performance, which was similar to that of the first party,
-although less gracefully executed, a new feature was added to the
-exhibition. An attempt at side scenes was evident, though I confess that
-for the first few minutes I was at a loss to imagine the intention of
-the very primitive machinery that was introduced. A couple of frames,
-similar to those on which linen is dried in England, were placed on a
-line about twenty feet apart, while, in the centre, a low railing of
-about six feet in length divided the distance. A poor old wretch, with a
-rope about his neck, was then tied to each frame, and made to squat down
-upon his hands and knees, to represent a watch-dog; and some green
-almonds were scattered about him for his food.
-
-These miserable individuals, whose hired and voluntary degradation made
-me heart-sick, were both of them old men, whose beards were grey, and
-whose age should have exempted them from such an office as their
-necessities had induced them to fulfil. Beside these were placed two
-youths dressed as Chinese, with long braids hanging down their backs,
-and feather fans in their hands; not very unlike the figures which adorn
-the old china in the cabinet of an antiquary. Next came forward a
-procession composed of all the trades of Constantinople, from the Jew
-who vends fried fish at the corners of the streets, to the Frank
-merchant, who, when he closes his office, becomes one of the
-“Exclusives” of Pera.
-
-Of course, the Frank was very roughly handled. His hat was struck off,
-and made a football for all the ragamuffins by whom he was surrounded;
-and the comments which were uttered alike upon his costume and his
-country were by no means courteous or conciliatory. But it could
-scarcely be expected that more delicacy would be observed towards a
-Frank than had been shown to the women of the country; and, this
-specimen of bad taste apart, the procession was the best point of the
-performance; as the individuals who composed it appeared to have been
-principally “taken in the fact,” and forced upon the scene; thus
-affording faithful rather than flattering representations of their
-several callings.
-
-When the procession moved off, the serious business of the drama was
-resumed; the three females re-entered on the scene, accompanied by their
-mother, and a Greek serving-man, laden with their parasols and
-essence-bottles; and followed by two thieves, who concealed themselves
-behind the Chinese statues, for such I found that the two quaint figures
-who had so quietly walked to their places were intended to represent.
-After a vast deal of absurd grimace and buffoonery, rugs were spread in
-front of the low railing, and the four females and the Greek servant
-seated themselves, to listen to a tale told by the old woman.
-
-While they were thus engaged, the melancholy Jacques of the previous act
-stole upon their privacy, when an absurd exhibition of screaming and
-fainting took place; during which the two thieves contrived, without any
-attempt at self-concealment, to possess themselves of the cachemires and
-handkerchiefs of the ladies, and, moving a few paces apart, they began
-to divide the spoil; when the buffoon, in his turn, prowling about the
-neighbourhood, discovered the theft, and, raising a hue and cry, at
-which the dogs were let loose by the party, hastened during the
-confusion to seize upon the booty of the robbers. The outcry attracted
-the attention of the Cadi, who entered, accompanied by his attendants,
-to ascertain the cause of the tumult; when the ladies, with tears and
-shrieks, declared the amount of their losses, and demanded justice.
-
-Of course the good taste which had made a jest of the feelings of their
-allies, and the morals of their women, would not permit the Turkish
-comedians to spare their judges; and accordingly the Cadi was a huge
-caricature of humanity, with spectacles as large as saucers, and a
-beard of sheep skin. A hurried trial ensued, in which, while the Cadi
-was ogling the females, the buffoon was making himself merry at the
-expense of the Cadi; the executioner with his bastinado, and the clerk
-with his ink-horn and parchment, were both forthcoming; and the drama
-ended by the capture of the thieves, and the restoration of the stolen
-property!
-
-A confused dance, accompanied by the wild, shrill chanting of the
-dancers, which I can compare to nothing but the orgies of a troop of
-Bacchantes, succeeded the departure of the actors, and the whole arena
-appeared in motion. The drums and tambourines gave out their loudest
-discord; gold and silver glittered in the sunshine; arms were tossed in
-the air; the long tresses of the performers floated on the wind; and I
-was delighted when the appearance of a troop of Bedouin Arabs, summoned
-to Stamboul expressly for the occasion, possessed themselves of the open
-space to exhibit their feats of strength and address. They were
-magnificently attired in coloured satins, and formed a very curious
-group; but their accomplishments would scarcely have secured for them an
-engagement in a respectable English booth. It was altogether pitiable.
-
-When I at length contrived to escape from the crowd, I left a party of
-the dancing boys performing their evolutions in the Kiosk of the
-Pashas. Their Highnesses had not yet had a surfeit of the senseless
-pastime; and the youths were reaping a golden harvest.
-
-The days are gone by in which people were wont to talk of the “Wise Men
-of the East.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-
- Succession of Banquets—The Chèïk Islam and the
- Clergy—Sectarian Prejudices—The Military Staff—The Naval
- Chiefs—The Imperial Household—The Pashas—The Grand
- Vizier—Magnificent Procession—Night Scene on the
- Bosphorus—The Palace of the Seraskier Pasha—Palace of Azmè
- Sultane—Midnight Serenade—Pretty Truants—The Shore of
- Asia—Ambassadorial Banquet—War Dance—Beautiful Effects of
- Light.
-
-One of the most characteristic features of the marriage festivities was
-the succession of banquets given by the Sultan to the different high
-personages, belonging to, or connected with, his Empire.
-
-The first day was sacred to the Clergy, and the procession was a most
-interesting one. At its head walked the Chèïk Islam, with the golden
-circlet about his brow, and his graceful robes of white cachemire
-falling around him in heavy folds; a party of the principal Imams
-followed. Then came the High Chief of the Turning Dervishes, with his
-lofty hat of white felt folded about with a shawl of the sacred green,
-and shrouded in his ample mantle. Other sects of Dervishes succeeded;
-and after them came Hadjis from the Holy Shrine of Mahomet—Emirs with
-their voluminous white turbans—and Fakirs from the far East. A short
-space behind advanced the Greek Patriarch, with his jewelled crown, and
-robes of embroidered satin; supported by a group of prelates. Following
-close upon his steps, next moved forward the Armenian Archbishop,
-similarly attended, and gorgeously attired; and as he advanced, he made
-way for the Jewish Hahām-bachi, or Grand Rabbi, with his flowing
-beard and inlaid crosier; a throng of Rabbis were in his train; and
-altogether the scene was one of a most interesting character.
-
-On the arrival of these holy men at the banquetting tent, a delicate
-difficulty presented itself. The heads of the Greek and Armenian
-churches resolutely refused to sit at table with, or to eat from the
-same dish as, their Israelitish companion; while the Jew, on his side,
-declared the utter impossibility of his partaking of the same food as
-that eaten by his Christian brethren. The stately Chèïk Islam,
-meanwhile, was sitting by in uninterested silence; wondering, in the
-tolerance of his own heart and creed, why men serving the same God
-should not “dip with each other in the dish.”
-
-The difficulty was at length surmounted; for, as the Jewish law did not
-permit the Hahām-bachi to partake of flesh that had not been
-slaughtered by one of his own tribe, there was nothing left for him but
-a dinner of cheese and salad, which was accordingly spread on a
-side-table; while the scrupulous Christian prelates, who had refused the
-companionship of the representative of the ancient religion, seated
-themselves quietly on either side of the High Priest of Mahomet, and
-made an excellent dinner. The honours were done by four of the principal
-Pashas; and, at the close of the repast, the party adjourned to the
-kiosk to which I have already made reference, in order to enjoy the
-flight of the rockets, and the fairy wonders of the illuminated
-Bosphorus.
-
-To the church succeeded the army; and on the morrow Achmet Pasha, and
-the principal Officers of the Staff, were the invited guests.
-
-The magnificent shipping in the harbour next gave up its chiefs; and
-again Achmet Pasha, as temporary High Admiral, headed the board.
-
-On the fourth day, all the members of the Imperial Household were
-feasted in their turn; and, on the fifth, came the princely train of
-Pashas.
-
-The Grand Vèzer rode first on a magnificent white Arabian, whose
-housings were wrought with gold and seed-pearl. His bridle-rein was
-richly worked with coloured silks; and his golden stirrups were finely
-chased. His sword-hilt blazed with diamonds: and the brilliant order
-that he wore upon his breast burnt in the sunlight; fifteen servants on
-foot surrounded his horse.
-
-He was followed by the four newly-elected Vèzirs: the
-Oumouri-Mulkiènaziri, or Minister of the Interior; the
-Oumouri-Karidjiè-Naziri, or Minister of the Exterior; the Minister of
-Military Finance: and the Lord High Comptroller of the Mint; by the
-Seraskier Pasha, the Generallissimo of the Imperial Armies, the Grand
-Master of the Artillery, and a crowd of out-dwelling Pashas, who had
-been summoned by the Sultan to assist at the festival.
-
-I never witnessed a more magnificent or profuse display of diamonds, and
-embroidery; of proud steeds, and glittering parade. The crowd of running
-footmen—the trampling of impatient chargers—the clashing of jewelled
-weapons against the gilded stirrups—the noise, the hurry, and the
-glare, baffle all description; and when at length the princely train had
-disappeared within the tent, and the grooms were leading away the
-splendid animals, who, freed from the control of a rider, were rearing
-and prancing among the crowd, I felt like one suddenly awakened from a
-gorgeous dream, and had only a severe headache left, to convince me that
-I had really been a spectator of the splendid scene.
-
-In the evening, well furred and cloaked, we descended to the pier of
-Topphannè; and having secured one of the large caïques that ply to the
-islands, we stepped on board; and, rowing out into the middle of the
-channel, contemplated at our ease the wonders which surrounded us. From
-the centre of the stream, the whole mass of waters appeared to be
-girdled with fire; the shore was wrapt in darkness, and the edifices of
-light seemed to lift themselves almost to the clouds. I can conceive
-nothing finer of its kind; and we continued almost motionless where we
-had first paused, our caïque heaving gently upon the bosom of the blue
-waters; until a large flight of rockets gave us a momentary view of the
-surrounding shores; but, above all, of the surface of the channel.
-
-If I had been surprised at the density of the crowd on shore, I was
-tenfold more so at the floating throng which had almost choked up the
-passage of the Bosphorus. Every light and manageable craft that could be
-made available, was astir that night, from the caïque of the Pasha, to
-the little, round, tub-like boat of the Archipelagon trader; while the
-countless white yashmacs of the women gleamed out in the light of the
-rockets like a dense ridge of surf, as you approached nearer to the edge
-of the shore; a circumstance which was readily accounted for by the fact
-that no Turkish female is allowed to walk the streets after eight
-o’clock at night, and that this was consequently their only method of
-witnessing the illuminations.
-
-Having contemplated the general effect from a distance, we with some
-difficulty made our way through the caïques which were closely wedged
-together opposite the Palace of Dolma Batchè, just in time to escape one
-of the magnificent explosions produced by the Greek fires, that were
-blazing up out of the water in every direction, and which burst not five
-yards from our boat.
-
-Of all the illuminations, that of the Seraskier Pasha, taken
-individually, was by far the most brilliant. The whole _façade_ of the
-palace was one blaze of light; and, in lieu of the oil by which the
-lamps were filled in every other instance, he had fed the flame with
-some ardent spirit, which gave to it the fitful tint and the flashing
-brilliancy of diamonds. A magnificent screen in arabesques, on the
-opposite coast, at the small summer palace of Scutari, was the next most
-attractive object of the Bosphorus. But it is only as a whole that such
-a pageant should be judged; and all those who looked upon the one which
-I have attempted to describe, will doubtlessly concede that it was a
-spectacle of beauty which has probably never been exceeded.
-
-We made our way slowly, but without much difficulty, along the European
-shore, until we reached the Palace of Azmè Sultane; but for a while
-after we had gained that point all further progress was impossible.
-There must have been many hundred caïques wedged together in front of
-her terrace, and not less than fifty of them contained musicians. We had
-intended to disembark at the palace steps, and to pay a visit to Nazip
-Hanoum, but were obliged to abandon the idea, as we became instantly
-aware that the thing was impracticable. We therefore remained quietly in
-our boat, under the bright light of the magnificent screen upon whose
-surface coloured lamps were intermixed with orange boughs and exotic
-flowers. The terrace was crowded; and I saw more than one light and
-fairy figure, that even the feridjhe failed wholly to conceal, which
-looked as though its owner should rather have been peering through the
-slender lattices, than from beneath the shade of a yashmac; but the
-occasion was so rife with excitement, and the voices from the caïques
-were so enticing, that doubtlessly more than one fair Dilaram and Leyla
-played truant that evening after the prescribed hour.
-
-Having at length contrived to make our way through this crowd of
-worshippers, for such they must have been, we left the Palace far behind
-us in a few minutes, and escaped from the noise and even danger which
-were the present characteristics of its vicinity. Our sturdy boatmen,
-bending to their oars, soon brought us opposite to the dwelling of the
-bride, whose whole extent was bright with festooned fires; but my spirit
-had begun to weary with the perpetual glare, and I rejoiced when we
-struck out once more into the middle of the channel, and running under
-the shore of Asia, whose infrequent lights at this point of the stream
-rather relieved than pained the eye, left far behind us the clamorous
-merriment of the crowd. We had the moon high above us; the pale and
-placid moon, which had for many nights been mocked by a radiance more
-dazzling than her own; while the myriad stars that were twinkling their
-silver eyes as if in wonder at the scene beneath them, were reflected in
-the clear water as in a mirror. It was a heavenly night; and as we
-glided slowly along under the Asian mountains, the song of a hundred
-nightingales came to us from the groves and gardens of the coast.
-
-The transition was extraordinary; and, after the excitement, the hurry,
-and the exertion of the previous day, the quiet of the hour fell upon me
-like a happy dream; and I remember that I shed tears as I lay back upon
-my cushions, and looked upwards to the calm moon, and listened to the
-thrilling melody of the midnight woods, and felt the soft wind fanning
-the hair upon my brow; but they were tears in which there was no
-bitterness; an outpouring of the wearied spirit that relieved its
-weight; and when we once more became entangled in the floating crowd,
-and dashed forward into the blinding light of the fire-girt Palaces, the
-heart-laugh which went ringing over the ripple might sometimes have been
-traced to me.
-
-The mere worldling will sneer at this admission; but those whose
-misfortune it is to feel deeply will understand the seeming
-inconsistency.
-
-The sixth day was fixed upon for the Ambassadorial Banquet, where the
-representatives of the Mighty Ones of the Earth were to feast together
-at the board of the Brother of the Sun, and Emperor of the World. A
-table, well-appointed in the European style, had been prepared; and the
-banquetting tent was neatly fitted up with draperies and mirrors.
-
-In the evening a new and distinct feature was added to the
-entertainments, by the introduction in the outer court of the Palace of
-a raised platform, on which a score of performers, clad in half armour,
-attempted a species of war-dance to the light of a dozen bonfires, which
-flashed and faded by turns; now revealing the glittering costume of the
-struggling and straggling combatants, and now enveloping them in a cloud
-of dense black smoke, as impenetrable as the waves of Erebus. The whole
-thing was a failure; and the only charm attendant on the exhibition, was
-the singular transition of light and shade that played over the surface
-of the painted palace, and which produced effects almost magical; now
-touching the lofty portal with a golden gleam, and then fading away into
-a faint green, caught from the leafy boughs which fed the fires.
-
-The Turks are decidedly not a dancing nation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-
- Monotonous Entertainments—Bridal Preparations—Common
- Interest—Appearance of the Surrounding Country—Ride to
- Arnautkeui—Sight-loving Ladies—Glances and
- Greetings—Pictorial Grouping—The Procession—The Trousseau—A
- Steeple-Chase.
-
-Thus far all had been monotonous from its constant repetition; the same
-dramas had been enacted, the same lamps had been lighted, and the same
-banquets had been prepared; but the seventh day was the eve of the
-Imperial marriage, on which the _trousseau_ of the bride was to be borne
-in state from the Palace of Dolma Batchè, to her own glittering Seraï on
-the Bosphorus. The period was arrived when her slaves, on withdrawing
-her from the bath, were to braid her long tresses with threads of gold,
-and strings of pearl, and to stain the palms of her hands and the soles
-of her feet with henna.
-
-At an early hour the streets of Pera were crowded with arabas and
-saddle-horses; and my own eager little chesnut was neighing out his
-impatience under my window before eight o’clock. It was a glorious
-morning, bright and sunny, without a cloud; and, as I sprang into my
-saddle, I felt that this was a day on which the Fates had resolved to
-weave a white thread into the web of my existence.
-
-All the three hundred thousand persons said to have been collected in
-Constantinople on the occasion of the Imperial marriage, must have been
-beside our path that morning! I never before beheld such a gathering of
-human beings. There had been divided interests during the previous days
-of festival: different points of attraction, which had wrenched asunder
-the mighty mass of mortality, and fashioned it into divers portions; but
-on the present occasion, men’s minds were all bent upon one object; and
-this community of purpose had collected them together in one vast
-multitude.
-
-The road was guarded by armed sentinels; and about an arrow’s flight
-from the Military College, on the line from Dolma Batchè to the Palace
-of the Princess, a handsome tent had been pitched for the Ambassadors,
-which was already thronged. Every rising ground was occupied as far as
-the eye could reach; and the outline of the road along which the
-procession was to pass, was marked by clusters of females, seated so
-closely together that from a short distance they appeared to form one
-compact body. Behind these were ranged lines of arabas, filled with
-Turkish, Greek, and Armenian ladies; while on the open space beyond,
-horsemen galloped to and fro; pedestrians, who had been too tardy to
-secure advantageous places, straggled from spot to spot, in the hope of
-establishing themselves among some knot of friends; and water-venders,
-with their long-necked earthen jars and crystal goblets, passed from one
-party to another, disposing, at an usurious interest, of their tempting
-merchandize.
-
-As there was no sign of the procession when we reached the Ambassadorial
-tent, we resolved to canter on to Arnautkeui, and amuse ourselves by a
-survey of the wayside groups; and a most interesting ride it was. As the
-Turkish women generally, on any occasion which takes them from their
-homes at an early hour, profit by the circumstance to remain in the open
-air all day, none of our party were surprised at the well-organized
-arrangements that were making on all sides. The whole line of road from
-Dolma Batchè to the kiosk above the Palace of Arnautkeui was edged with
-spectators; and wherever a tree afforded the means of doing so, shawls
-and rugs had been stretched against the sun, producing a very cheerful
-and pretty effect. The number of Turkish females collected together on
-this occasion may be imagined when I state that a friend of mine, on
-whose veracity I have the most perfect reliance, assured me that he
-knew it to be a fact, that several of these sight-loving ladies had
-actually sold the tiles off the roofs of their houses, in order to raise
-money enough to enable them to hire an araba for the last two days of
-the Festival!
-
-Nor was this all; for a still more startling fact came to my knowledge
-from so authentic a source that I state it without hesitation. A Turkish
-female in a respectable station of society, having in vain importuned
-her husband for the means of witnessing the festivities in a manner
-suited to her rank, and receiving for an answer the assurance that he
-was unable to comply with her request; finding that she had no hope of
-success save through her own ingenuity, set herself to work to devise
-some expedient by which she might raise the necessary sum; and having
-taken into her confidence a favourite slave who was to accompany her in
-the event of any fortunate discovery, it was at length decided between
-them that she should sell her son, a fine little boy of about five years
-of age. No sooner said than done; she adjusted her yashmac and feridjhe,
-took her child by the hand, and, followed by her attendant, proceeded to
-the house of a slave merchant, where the bargain was soon made, and the
-sum of three thousand piastres given in exchange for the little
-Musselmaun!
-
-The astonishment of the husband may be conceived, when on the morrow he
-saw his wife seated in an araba in the midst of a bevy of her fair
-friends, without being able to discover how she had contrived to secure
-a carriage at so expensive a period. He demanded an explanation in vain;
-and it was not until he inquired for his child, and detected a
-mysterious confusion in the manner of his wife, that a suspicion of the
-fact flashed upon him. He insisted on hearing the truth; and when he at
-length learnt it, he hurried like a madman to the slave-merchant, and
-demanded back his boy; but the dealer in human beings had no expensive
-sympathies; and he only answered the agonized intreaties of the father,
-by asserting his willingness to deliver up the child when the money
-which he had given for him was repaid. The wretched parent had it not to
-give; and finding that his misery produced no effect upon the
-slave-merchant, he hurried in his anguish to the Seraskier, who, having
-heard the tale, summoned to his presence the mother, the child, and the
-merchant; and after having ascertained that the fact was precisely as it
-had been stated to him, he expressed to the former his horror of the
-unnatural deed of which she had been guilty, and received for answer
-that she had acted under the firm conviction that her husband had merely
-refused to supply her with money from an impulse of avarice; and that,
-being devoted to his child, he would immediately purchase him back. The
-apology, poor as it was, was admitted; and the Seraskier, finding that
-the father really did not possess the means of recovering his boy,
-generously paid the price of his liberty, and restored him to his
-parents; only cautioning the mother not to attempt a second sale of the
-same description, as, in the event of such an occurrence, she should
-herself be her child’s ransom.
-
-Hear this, ye Englishwomen, who have been accustomed to believe that the
-Turkish females are always under lock and key—Hear this: and then
-imagine to what a pitch they carry their love of dissipation and
-expense.
-
-Not the least amusing part of the ride was the multitude of recognitions
-and salutations consequent upon our progress through the crowd. Here a
-veiled lady greeted us from her gilded araba; and there a laughing Greek
-saluted us from beneath his wayside tent. On one side, we were joined by
-a rival party of mounted Franks; and on the other we were beckoned aside
-by some pretty friend, who was seated under the shade of a cluster of
-overhanging branches.
-
-Had there been nothing further to anticipate, the mere sight of the
-great congregation of human beings collected together that morning,
-would of itself have been a highly interesting spectacle.
-
-Probably in no other country upon earth can you encounter such groups as
-you do in Turkey; they always appear as though they had been arranged by
-an artist; and I find myself on every occasion just about to describe
-them, when I remember that I have already done so more than once; and am
-compelled, however reluctantly, to forego the inclination.
-
-Having reached the crest of the hill above Arnautkeui, we turned our
-horses’ heads once more towards Dolma Batchè; and had almost reached the
-Palace when the sound of a military band came cheerfully on the wind,
-and we were obliged to gallop off, in order to secure an elevated
-station whence we could conveniently witness the passage of the
-procession.
-
-We were fortunate enough to possess ourselves of a spot of ground that
-overhung the road, along which we reined up our horses in line, and
-awaited the arrival of the pageant.
-
-The Band led the way, playing the Sultan’s Grand March upon their wind
-instruments, and the military followed in good order; it was a squadron
-of the _élite_ of the Turkish Army, the Cavalry of the Imperial Guard,
-whose several troops are distinguished by the different colour of their
-horses. I counted four negro officers as they passed us.
-
-The Troops were succeeded by fifty Field Officers, the General Staff of
-the Empire, well mounted and attended; and they, in their turn, gave
-place to twenty Great Officers of the Imperial Household. With these
-individuals commenced the interest and Orientalism of the spectacle; the
-flashing diamonds upon their breasts and hands, and the glittering
-housings of their horses, relieving the monotonous slowness with which
-they progressed. This splendid train was followed by fourteen led mules,
-laden with packages, covered with the gold and silver stuffs of Broussa,
-and secured upon the animals with cords of silk. The packages contained
-the velvet and satin mattresses intended for the harem of the Princess,
-and all the minor articles necessary to her household; which are
-supplied by the Sultan, even to the feather-brush that beats aside the
-flies from the dinner-table.
-
-Next came twelve beautiful white mules, magnificently housed, and led by
-pages dressed in a scarlet uniform: a present to the Princess from her
-Imperial Father.
-
-Nine carriages of silver net-work, roofed and draperied with coloured
-silk, each drawn by four bay horses, followed next in line; and through
-the transparent lattices glittered the costly sofa-furniture of tissue
-and embroidery; the velvet cushions, and the golden fringes which were
-to adorn the saloons of the bridal Palace.
-
-After these came three open droskys, with pages running at the
-bridle-rein of the superb leaders, who seemed impatient of the pace at
-which they travelled, and scattered the foam from their mouths as they
-champed their embossed bits; and these were overlaid with cloths of
-crimson velvet fringed with gold, on which was displayed a collection of
-richly-chased silver plate.
-
-Then followed five other carriages, drawn like the foregoing by four
-stately horses, containing trunks covered with coloured velvets and gold
-and silver stuffs, and clamped and hinged with wrought silver, laden
-with the linen of the Imperial Bride.
-
-Next came forward what, at the first glance, seen as it was through the
-cloud of dust raised by the carriages, seemed to be a moving tulip-bed,
-extending far as the eye could reach. Nor was the illusion an
-overstrained one; for this portion of the procession proved to be a
-train of one hundred and fifty men, each attended by a page, and bearing
-upon his head a basket of wicker-work, covered with gold tissue, and
-surmounted by a raised dome of coloured gauze, decorated with bunches of
-artificial flowers. Beneath these transparent screens might be seen the
-toilette of the young Princess; her golden ewers, and jewel-studded
-basins—her diamond-covered essence-boxes, and gemmed water-vases—her
-glittering porcelain, her emerald-mounted hair-brushes—and all the
-costly gauds which litter so magnificently the chambers of the great.
-Golden cages, filled with stuffed birds—inlaid caskets, heavy with
-perfumes—musical instruments, rich with laboured gold and
-jewels—salvers, upheaped with gold coins—and ten thousand brilliant
-toys, if not without a name, yet almost without a use, followed in their
-turn; and then came pyramids of sweetmeats, glittering like fruits which
-had suddenly been hardened into gems; and trays of shawls, each one a
-fortune in itself, enveloped separately in wrappers of coloured gauze,
-tied with long loops of ribbon.
-
-But the most gorgeous display was yet to come; embroidered handkerchiefs
-whose gold and silver threads were mingled with silks of many hues, and
-whose texture was almost as impalpable as the gossamer—jackets of
-velvet worked on the sleeves and breasts with precious stones—trowsers
-sprinkled with stars of gold and silver—anteries of white silk, wrought
-with coloured jewels—robes of satin powdered with seed-pearl—slippers
-as diminutive as that of Cinderella, fringed with floss silk, and
-powdered with rubies; and finally, sixteen bearers, balancing upon their
-heads cages of silver wire, resting on cushions of crimson velvet,
-whereon were displayed the bridal diamonds. The sunshine was flashing on
-them as they passed us, and at times it was impossible to look upon
-them.
-
-It seemed as though the trees of the Seraï must have dropped diamonds,
-to supply the profusion of the Imperial Father. It is impossible to
-describe them—the diadems and bracelets, the necklaces and wreaths, the
-rings and clasps: suffice it that every female article of dress or
-ornament, for which this costly stone could be made available, was here
-in its magnificence; and assuredly the gifts of the Queen of Sheba to
-King Solomon must have sunk into insignificance before the bridal
-_trousseau_ of the Princess Mihirmàh—“The Glory of the Moon!”
-
-Forty mounted negroes appointed to her household followed, like demons
-of darkness, on the footsteps of the flashing treasure which I have just
-described; and I can safely declare that I never beheld so hideous an
-assemblage of human beings. The diamonds were quite secure, I should
-imagine, from all depredators, under the charge of these frightful
-guardians—these gnomes, gloating over the produce of the “dark gold
-mines,” where no light could intrude in which they might mirror their
-own ugliness; and His Sublime Highness, or rather his Master of the
-Ceremonies, appeared to have been of the same opinion; for although a
-guard preceded the procession, none followed it; and the termination of
-the pageant came so abruptly upon me after its greatest splendour, that
-I felt as though some accident had detained the remaining actors in the
-show, and that something more must follow; but as, after the lapse of a
-moment, I discovered that all was really over, there was nothing for it
-but a steeple chase “over bank, bush, and briar,” in order to get once
-more in advance of the procession, and thus secure a second view.
-
-On this we accordingly determined; and after a gallop over ploughed
-fields, and a few leaps over sundry intervening fences and ditches, we
-found ourselves on the height above Arnautkeui, just as the gorgeous
-train was beginning to descend the hill.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-
- The Bridal Day—Ceremony of Acceptance—The Crowd—The Kislar
- Agha and the Court Astrologer—Order of the Procession—The
- Russian Coach—The Pasha and the Attachés—The Seraskier—Wives
- of the Pashas—The Sultan and the Georgian Slave.
-
-The morrow was the bridal day, when the fortunate Saïd Pasha was to
-receive his Imperial Bride beneath his own roof, and to look upon her
-for the first time. As yet he had not had even a glimpse of her through
-her yashmac, their only interview having taken place on his arrival from
-the Dardanelles, when he had been summoned to the palace to throw
-himself at her feet, and to return thanks for the honour she was about
-to confer upon him. This interview, if such indeed a meeting may be
-termed in which one of the parties only has a sight of the other, is one
-of the ceremonies _à la rigeur_ in the Imperial marriages of the East.
-
-The bridegroom elect is led into a room, at whose upper extremity a door
-stands ajar; and behind this sits the lady splendidly habited, and
-surrounded by a train of slaves. A small portion of her embroidered
-antery is suffered to pass the opening of the door; and a side lattice,
-veiled with thin gauze, enables her to take a view of her suitor as he
-approaches; which he does slowly, and upon his knees, the whole length
-of the apartment. On arriving near the “Door of Light” that conceals the
-Princess, he thrice bows his forehead to the earth, ere he ventures to
-implore a ratification of his hopes. The officious Kislar Agha replies
-for the bride; and after a second prostration, the Pasha returns thanks
-“in a neat speech;” and with the permission of the same personage, he
-then raises to his lips the hem of the Imperial garment, and retires in
-the same humble posture in which he entered.
-
-The _on dit_ at the Palace whispered the disappointment of the bride on
-the present occasion, that the choice of her Imperial father had not
-fallen on Mustapha Pasha of Adrianople, whom she had once seen by
-accident, and by whose personal beauty she had been much attracted. It
-is, nevertheless, possible that this glimpse of her destined bridegroom
-reconciled her to her destiny; for, as it is the appearance only to
-which Turkish females generally attach any importance in their husbands,
-the young Pasha of the Dardanelles could safely compete with all his
-rivals, being really a very handsome and intelligent-looking person.
-
-Had I not known that such a thing was altogether impossible, I should
-have said, when I pulled up my panting horse on the height above the
-palace, that the same groups occupied the same spots where I had seen
-them on the previous day. The scene did not appear to have altered in a
-single feature. I saw the same smiling faces, and received the same
-kindly greetings; laughed at the same dirty, stupid-looking sentinels,
-and bought a cool draught from the same water-vender for a twenty para
-piece; and, altogether, I had some difficulty in persuading myself that
-I had really talked politics with a hot-headed Englishman, theology with
-a Greek Papas, and nonsense with a Sardinian Secretary, and moreover had
-slept through a long night, since I last stood upon that sunny hill, and
-looked far and wide upon the same wilderness of human beings.
-
-The procession of the preceding day had been announced to start from
-Dolma Batchè at eight o’clock, but the mid-day muezzin had been called
-from the minarets, ere the first trumpeter issued from the portal.
-Profiting, therefore, by our experience, we partook of a quiet breakfast
-on the present occasion, ere we sped to the scene of action; and we had
-judged rightly in so doing, for we were yet considerably in advance of
-the bridal train. Nevertheless, it is certain that the baggage-mules and
-the treasure-carriages required more time to prepare them for the
-journey than the Imperial Bride, and her attendant train of ladies; for
-the Kislar Agha was yet girding on his sword with all the quiet
-precision of a man who has no cause for haste, when a negro of the Seraï
-rushed into the apartment, and startled him with the intelligence that
-her Highness was not only ready to start, but actually in the Great
-Saloon of the Harem, waiting for him to precede her to her carriage. At
-this announcement the portly personage suffered his weapon to fall from
-his hands; and tossing his arms above his head, he filled the apartment
-with his outcries.
-
-“Who has done this? Who has insidiously counselled this haste? Where is
-the traitor who would destroy the Imperial Daughter of our noble Sultan?
-(May his beard be white!) It yet wants ten minutes of the time appointed
-by the astrologer—the lucky moment is not come—and until it arrives,
-she shall not set her foot without the palace, were it ten times her
-bridal day.”
-
-At length, however, the auspicious moment really did arrive, when the
-Kislar Agha was himself the first to hasten the departure of the
-Princess. The procession was the very triumph of mystery. All the
-high-born beauties of Stamboul were to pass us by, and we were only to
-imagine the loveliness on which we were to have no opportunity of
-looking. The Sultan’s Band opened the march, and executed with great
-precision a piece of martial music, composed for the occasion by their
-talented leader Donizetti; a regiment of cavalry followed, and was
-succeeded in its turn by a gorgeous train of Pashas, among whom rode the
-bridegroom; and then came the European carriage of the Sultan, drawn by
-four bay horses, each led by a page in a scarlet and gold uniform. This
-was succeeded by the Imperial State Coach, of silver gilt, the raised
-cornice above the roof inlaid with cornelians, agates, and jaspers, the
-magnificent gift of the Emperor of Russia to his Turkish ally—the
-gilded lattices, through which gleamed the jealous curtains of
-rose-coloured silk, were closely shut; and the Imperial Bride was the
-sole tenant of the costly vehicle. This carriage, which was drawn by six
-stately horses from the personal stud of the Autocrat, was followed by
-that in which the Princess had been accustomed to drive on state
-occasions; the windows were thrown back, and the curtains undrawn—it
-was empty. Next came the Sultana-Mother, the Princess Salihè, and the
-younger sister of the bride, a sweet-looking girl of eleven or twelve
-years of age, who sat beside her veiled relatives in a heavy head-dress
-of black velvet, overcharged with diamonds; but whose fair young face
-laughed out in loveliness beneath the hideous disfigurement. These were
-succeeded by a second Russian carriage, drawn by four horses similar to
-those in the State Coach, an offering of Russian policy to Achmet Pasha,
-whose Buyuk Hanoum was within, attended by three female slaves.
-
-The train amounted in all to forty-seven carriages and four; many of
-them tenanted by five and even six individuals, whose coquettishly
-arranged yashmacs afforded at times something more than a glimpse of
-their fair faces; a fact of which the negro guard appeared so well
-aware, that on some suggestion from one of them to a Pasha, who rode
-immediately in front of the Imperial carriage, on the second apparition
-of our party by the wayside, (which, _soit dit en passant_, must have
-been sufficiently attractive to the veiled beauties, being principally
-composed of _attachés_ to the different embassies), His Excellency
-addressed himself to me in very tolerable French, and told me that,
-although I was individually at liberty to accompany the procession to
-the Palace-gates if I wished to do so, he must request that the
-gentlemen would not attempt to advance further. But the prohibition was
-more readily uttered than obeyed; and we only just waited for a first
-glimpse of the fifty negroes who formed the rear-guard, ere we were off
-again, as fast as our generous horses would carry us.
-
-And well should we have been repaid when we pulled up mid-way of the
-steep descent leading to the Palace, had it only been by the spectacle
-of the wily old Seraskier, who rode beside the window of the State
-Coach, in a state of admirably got-up agitation; first shouting to the
-troop of attendants who hung on to the wheels, like a man in the last
-agony; and then modulating his voice to the extremest gentleness of
-which it was susceptible, to implore of the Imperial Bride not to
-imagine that there existed the slightest danger; half the fuss that he
-was making meanwhile, being more than sufficient to satisfy her that she
-was on the eve of being hurled over the precipice.
-
-On her arrival in the Court of the Palace, Saïd Pasha, on his knees
-beside the carriage, received her in his arms, and carried her into the
-Great Saloon of the Harem; the ladies of the Court, who had the
-_entrée_, followed in succession; the golden gates were closed: and the
-excluded had nothing more to do than to shake the dust from their
-garments—and truly it was about an inch thick—to swallow a glass of
-iced lemonade in the saddle, and to gallop back, under a burning sun, to
-their respective homes.
-
-Each Pasha, on the occasion of an Imperial marriage, sends on a stated
-day his Buyuk Hanoum, or principal wife, to the Palace, attended by two
-slaves, to congratulate the Princess on her approaching nuptials; and
-these are the ladies who subsequently form the reception circle at her
-new home. At the visit of felicitation, when the Sultan receives them on
-the part of his august daughter, they are presented by the munificent
-sovereign with an antery, jacket, and trowsers of rich stuff, a pair of
-embroidered slippers, and a diamond ring; the same articles, but fitted
-in value to their station, being bestowed also on their attendants. In
-this magnificent costume they are expected to appear on the bridal day;
-and on their departure from the Presence, they place their own gifts in
-the hands of the Kislar Agha, which are always of the extremest richness
-that the means of the Pasha will permit.
-
-An amusing anecdote is connected with this ceremony, which, being
-authentic, I may as well relate. The Imperial Presentation negatives the
-necessity of yashmacs, and thus Sultan Mahmoud enjoys the exclusive
-privilege of forming a judgment on the taste of his Pashas. On the
-marriage of the Princess Salihè, the Reiss Effendi forwarded to the
-Imperial Presence the mother of his sons, a lady to whom nature had not
-originally been lavish of her gifts, and who had subsequently lost an
-eye during an attack of plague. His Sublime Highness was observed to
-fidget upon his sofa as the presentation took place, but the Buyuk
-Hanoum was received with all the honours due to the exalted rank of her
-husband, and departed laden with the rich gifts of Imperial generosity.
-
-On the morrow, however, a caïque impelled by three rowers, and freighted
-with a closely veiled female under the guard of a party of the negroes
-of the Seraï, pushed off from the Palace of Dolma Batchè, and ran
-alongside the terrace of that of the minister; when the lady was landed,
-and, on being conducted into the presence of the Reiss Effendi, her veil
-was withdrawn, and she proved to be a lovely Georgian slave of about
-sixteen years of age, in all the first burst of her young beauty—a
-present to the noble from his Imperial Master, accompanied by a command,
-that should another occasion occur in which the wives of the Pashas were
-required to appear before the Sultan, the Reiss Effendi would cause the
-dark-eyed Georgian to act as the representative of a lady, whose age and
-infirmities must render all court ceremonials extremely irksome to her
-feelings.
-
-Of course, the lovely slave was one of the bridal train of the Princess
-Mihirmàh!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-
- A New Rejoicing—Processions—Change in the Valley—The
- Odalique’s Grave—The Palace of Eyoub—The State
- Apartments—Return to Pera.
-
-A couple of days of rest succeeded to the marriage festivities, and
-during that time all the tents which had fringed the height above Dolma
-Batchè were transferred to the Valley of the Sweet Waters, whither they
-were followed by the tumblers, rope-dancers, and jugglers, who had
-delighted the crowd in the purlieus of the Imperial Palace. A new
-rejoicing to succeed the bridal fètes; the two younger sons of the
-Sultan, and eight thousand children, belonging to every class of the
-Turkish population, from the Pashas to the charcoal-venders of the
-metropolis and its vicinity, were to be circumcised with much pomp at
-Kahaitchana. A temporary building, shaped like a crescent, and capable
-of containing the whole number, had been erected above the upper kiosk,
-and near the border of the stream, across which a new bridge had been
-thrown; the pavilion was lined throughout with rich hangings, and well
-cushioned, and presented a very gay and pretty appearance.
-
-The Sultan entertained the Imperial Family at his Palace on the
-Barbyses; the Pashas gave daily dinners in their tents; and there was
-not an araba in Constantinople or Pera that was not in requisition.
-
-After passing to Eyoub in our caïque, we hired a close araba, in which
-we drove to the valley. The scene was a very animated one; lines of
-coffee-tents clung to the sides of the heights; groups of women, seated
-on their mats, were scattered over the greensward; itinerant
-fruit-merchants wandered to and fro, with their strawberries neatly
-arranged in small baskets wreathed with oak leaves, and their cherries
-heaped in pyramids; mohalibè and yahourt were to be seen on all sides:
-the little fountains of the sherbet-venders were tinkling like distant
-sheep-bells; and, high above the heads of the crowd, a rope-dancer was
-balancing himself in mid-air, with his crimson satin vestment flaring in
-the hot sunshine.
-
-One pretty feature in the scene was the constant succession of
-scholastic processions; each mosque sending its little troop, headed by
-an Imam, to parade the valley, and to chant a prayer for the
-preservation of the Sultan’s sons; after which all the children of the
-Turkish, Greek, Armenian, Catholic, and Jewish schools, accompanied by
-their masters, passed before the Sultan, and shared in the festivities,
-to which they had been especially invited. Nor was the appearance of the
-Turkish children who assisted at the ceremony less interesting; as they
-all, save those belonging to the more distinguished families, who wore a
-vast quantity of gold embroidery about their coats and fèzes, were
-dressed in a kind of uniform, provided for them by the Sultan; and had
-their long hair plaited in innumerable braids, and woven together with
-gold threads, sometimes to a quarter of a yard in breadth.
-
-For the first hour I was exceedingly amused. The Barbyses was alive with
-caïques—the air was loud with music and laughter—the greensward was
-crowded with arabas and idlers; and every shady tree had a colony
-beneath its boughs. But I soon wearied of the coil and confusion by
-which I was surrounded; the green, fresh, quiet valley had lost all its
-charm; I could scarcely recognize my favourite spots; nor was it until
-the close of twilight, when the illuminated glories of the port flashed
-out like a circle of fire in the distance, that I became reconciled. The
-moon silvered over the rippling river; the nightingales were loud in the
-Palace gardens; a million of twinkling stars were relieving the deep
-blue of the summer sky; while here and there erections of many-coloured
-light rose flashing out amid the leafy boughs of the crowd-invaded glen.
-Pashas came and went in their noiseless caïques; dulcimers and
-tambourines deadened at times the music of the night bird; and the low
-wind, which heaved the elastic branches of the water willow, and came
-sighing along the ripple of the sweet river, rendered the valley by
-night a scene of enchantment.
-
-I wandered to the grave of the Odalique: the moonlight was resting upon
-the record-stone; and a nightingale, seated amid the branches of the
-overhanging tree, was breathing out its song of mournful melody: it was
-far away from the idle throng of revellers, and I was weak enough to be
-glad that it was so.
-
-The night was so lovely that we dismissed our araba, and determined on
-returning in a caïque as far as the Palace of Eyoub, where I had been
-invited by the Princess Azmè to pass the night; but, on arriving there,
-we found that the Sultana and the principal ladies of her household had
-been detained by the Sultan, and would not return until the following
-day.
-
-As, however, I was fearful that the opportunity of seeing this palace
-might not recur, from the fact that the Princess never inhabits it save
-on occasions of festival at Kahaitchana, when she profits by its
-vicinity to the valley, I availed myself of the offer of the
-house-steward to show me over the state apartments, which are entirely
-unfurnished, but in themselves extremely magnificent. The screen of
-light that extended along the whole front of the building cast its glare
-through the unshuttered windows, and was reflected back by the gilded
-walls and glittering cornices. The decorations throughout are heavy, but
-of the greatest richness, and by far the most Oriental in their
-character, of any that I had yet seen. The palace was built by Sultan
-Selim, and its situation is beautiful. What was formerly the
-reception-room of that unfortunate Sovereign, is entirely lined with
-gilding, the walls being niched, and overhung with stalactited cornices
-similar to those which decorate many of our old cathedral tombs; and the
-weight of this elaborate ornament is relieved by a ceiling of faint
-blue, sprinkled with silver stars. But the absence of furniture, and the
-vast extent of the building, gave an air of desolation and discomfort to
-its whole appearance, which even the well-matted and curtained rooms
-that had been temporarily fitted-up for the use of the Sultana’s harem
-failed to overcome: and, consequently, when I had satisfied my
-curiosity, I pleaded the absence of Her Highness, and those individuals
-of her suite with whom I was acquainted, as my apology for not availing
-myself of her flattering invitation; and, reentering-our caïque, we
-dashed out into the centre of the port; and after contemplating for a
-time its temporary glories, were landed at the Echelle des Morts, and,
-passing along beneath the moon-touched and sighing cypresses of the
-grave-yard, soon found ourselves at Pera.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
- [1] As an example of the morals of the Greek clergy, it may not
- be impertinent to mention that this house was bequeathed by the
- Archbishop of Dercon, who died a few months ago at Therapia, to
- Hesterine, _la dame de ses pensées_.
-
- [2] Signifying mistress, or lady.
-
- [3] Mihirmàh, the glory of the moon.
-
- [4] The fact of the Patriarch being not only the head of the
- church, but also the chief magistrate of his nation, will
- account for the proximity of the prison to the Episcopal
- Palace.
-
- [5] I am aware that I may here be taxed with an anachronism,
- and reminded that in the days of Mahomet the use of tobacco was
- altogether unknown in Turkey; but I, nevertheless, maintain my
- position, being perfectly convinced that the Hourii would now
- beckon in vain to a paradise of which the chibouk did not form
- a feature.
-
- [6] The height of the mosque to the summit of the dome is 185
- French feet; the dome itself, from the gallery to the leads,
- 47, and its diameter, 54.
-
- [7] Mignionette.
-
-
- END OF VOL I.
-
- LONDON:
- F. SHOBERL, JUN., LEICESTER STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF THE SULTAN; AND DOMESTIC
-MANNERS OF THE TURKS, IN 1836, VOL. 1 (OF 2)***
-
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-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The City of the Sultan; and Domestic Manners
-of the Turks, in 1836, Vol. 1 (of 2), by Miss (Julia) Pardoe</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The City of the Sultan; and Domestic Manners of the Turks, in 1836, Vol. 1 (of 2)</p>
-<p>Author: Miss (Julia) Pardoe</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 28, 2016 [eBook #51878]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF THE SULTAN; AND DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE TURKS, IN 1836, VOL. 1 (OF 2)***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="center">E-text prepared by Julia Miller, Turgut Dincer,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive/American Libraries<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org/details/americana">https://archive.org/details/americana</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/cityofsultanandd01pardiala">
- https://archive.org/details/cityofsultanandd01pardiala</a><br />
- <br />
- Project Gutenberg has the other volume of this work.<br />
- <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51879/51879-h/51879-h.htm">Volume II</a>: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51879/51879-h/51879-h.htm
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class="center">
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="transnote">The part of List of Illustrations in Vol. I. related to Vol. II.
- is moved to Vol. II. for completenes and consistency.</div>
-</div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"><a name="f1" id="f1"></a><img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="500" height="316"
-alt="THE CHAPEL OF THE TURNING_DERVISHES" title="" />
-<table summary="chapel" width="100%" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="left f06">Miss Pardoe del.</td>
-<td class="right f06">Day &amp; Haghe Lith.<sup>rs</sup> to the King.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f08" colspan="2">THE CHAPEL OF THE TURNING DERVISHES</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f06" colspan="2"><i>Henry Colburn 13 G.<sup>t</sup> Marlborough St 1837.</i></td>
-</tr></table></div>
-
-<hr />
-<h1><small><small><small>THE</small></small></small><br />
-CITY OF THE SULTAN;</h1>
-<p class="center f06">AND</p>
-<p class="center">DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE TURKS,<br />
-IN 1836.</p>
-
-<p class="center">BY MISS PARDOE,</p>
-
-<p class="center f06">AUTHOR OF “TRAITS AND TRADITIONS OF PORTUGAL.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"><a name="t" id="t"></a><img src="images/title.jpg" width="300" height="329"
-alt="THE MAIDEN’S TOWER." title="" />
-
-<p class="center f06">THE MAIDEN’S TOWER.</p></div>
-
-<p class="center f08">IN TWO VOLUMES.</p>
-
-<p class="center">VOL. I.</p>
-
-<p class="center">LONDON:<br />
-HENRY COLBURN, PUBLISHER,<br />
-<small>GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET.</small><br />
-1837.
-</p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center f06">
-LONDON:<br />
-P. SHOBERL, JUN., LEICESTER STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="center f08">
-TO HER<br />
-<br />
-TO WHOM PROFESSION AND PANEGYRIC<br />
-<br />
-WERE ALIKE SUPERFLUOUS;<br />
-<br />
-AND FROM WHOM,<br />
-<br />
-DURING MY SOJOURN IN THE EAST,<br />
-<br />
-I WAS FOR THE FIRST TIME SEPARATED&mdash;<br />
-<br />
-TO MY LOVED AND LOVING MOTHER,<br />
-<br />
-I DEDICATE THIS WORK.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">v</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> publishing the present work I feel that I
-should be deficient in self-justice, did I not state
-a few facts relatively to the numerous difficulties
-with which I have had to contend during
-its compilation.</p>
-
-<p>The language of Turkey, in itself a serious
-impediment from its total dissimilarity to every
-European tongue, naturally raises a barrier between
-the native and the stranger, which is to
-the last only partially removed by the intervention
-of a third person; who, acting as an Interpreter,
-too frequently fritters away the soul of
-the conversation, even where he does not wilfully
-pervert its sense. But this drawback to a
-full and free intercourse with the natives, irritating
-and annoying as it is, sinks into insignificance,
-when compared with the myriad snares
-laid for the stranger, (and, above all, for the
-literary stranger) by party-spirit and political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">vi</a></span>
-prejudice. The liberal-minded and high-hearted
-politician of Europe, even while he is straining
-every nerve, and exerting every energy, to support
-and strengthen the interests of his country,
-disdains to carry with him into private life the
-hatreds, the jealousies, and the suspicions, which,
-like rust on metal, mar the brightness of the
-spirit that harbours them. He does not reject
-a friend because his political tenets may be at
-variance with his own; nor overlook the amiable
-traits of his character, to dwell only upon his
-opposing prejudices and interests.</p>
-
-<p>The height to which party-spirit is carried
-in Constantinople; or I should rather say, in
-the Frank quarter of Constantinople, would be
-laughable were it not mischievous. Even females
-are not free from the <em>malaria</em> which hovers like
-an atmosphere about the streets and “palaces”
-of Pera; and a traveller has not been domesticated
-a week among its inhabitants, ere he
-almost begins to believe that the destinies of the
-whole Eastern Empire hang upon the breath of
-a dozen individuals. With one party, Russia
-is the common sewer into which are poured all
-the reproach and the vituperation of indignant
-patriotism&mdash;with the other, England is the landmark
-towards which is pointed the finger of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">vii</a></span>
-suspicion and defiance. All this may be very
-necessary, and very praiseworthy, as a matter of
-diplomacy; I suppose that it is both the one
-and the other. I have no opinion to offer on the
-subject. I merely venture to question the propriety
-of suffering such anti-social feelings to
-intrude into the bosom of private life; and to
-question the soundness of the judgment which
-would universally create a bad man out of a
-rival politician; and make the opening of one
-door the signal for the closing of another. It is
-said that the three plagues of Constantinople
-are Fire, Pestilence, and Dragomen; judging
-from what I saw and heard while there, I should
-be inclined to add a fourth, and to designate it,
-Politics. Certain it is that the faubourg of
-Pera always reminded me of an ant-hill; with
-its jostling, bustling, and racing for straws and
-trifles; and its ceaseless, restless struggling and
-striving to secure most inconsequent results.</p>
-
-<p>That the great question of Eastern policy is a
-weighty and an important one, every thinking
-person must concede at once; but whether its
-final settlement will be advantageously accelerated
-by individual jealousies and individual
-hatreds is assuredly more problematical. “He
-who is not for me is against me,” is the motto of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">viii</a></span>
-every European resident in Turkey; for each,
-however incompetent he may be to judge of so
-intricate and comprehensive a subject, is nevertheless
-a loud and uncompromising politician.
-And, if the temporary sojourner in the East be
-resolved to belong to no <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">clique</em>, to pledge himself
-to no party, and to pursue a straight and
-independent path, as he would do in Europe,
-without lending himself to the views of either,
-he is certain to be suspected by both.</p>
-
-<p>These are the briars which beset the wayside
-of the stranger in Turkey. He has not only to
-contend with the unaccustomed language and
-manners of the natives&mdash;to fling from him his
-European prejudices&mdash;and to learn to look candidly
-and dispassionately on a state of society,
-differing so widely from that which he has left&mdash;but
-when the wearied spirit would fain fall
-back, and repose itself for a while among more
-familiar and congenial habits, it has previously
-to undergo an ordeal as unexpected as it is
-irritating; and from which it requires no inconsiderable
-portion of moral courage to escape
-unshackled.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the adventitious and unnecessary
-difficulties that have been gratuitously prepared
-for the Eastern traveller, and superadded to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">ix</a></span>
-the natural impediments of the locality; and of
-these he has infinitely more reason to complain,
-than of the unavoidable obstacles which meet
-him at every step in his commerce with the
-natives. That the Turks as a people, and particularly
-the Turkish females, are shy of making
-the acquaintance of strangers, is most true; their
-habits and feelings do not lend themselves readily
-to a familiar intercourse with Europeans;
-nor are they induced to make any extraordinary
-effort to overcome the prejudice with which they
-ever look upon a Frank, when they remember
-how absurdly and even cruelly they have been
-misrepresented by many a passing traveller, possessed
-neither of the time nor the opportunity
-to form a more efficient judgment.</p>
-
-<p>When my father and myself left Europe, it
-was with the intention of visiting, not only
-Turkey, but also Greece, and Egypt; and we
-accordingly carried with us letters to influential
-individuals, resident in each of those interesting
-countries, whose assistance and friendship would
-have been most valuable to us. And, for the two
-or three first months of our sojourn in Constantinople,
-while yet unwilling to draw deductions,
-and to trust myself with inferences, which might,
-and probably would, ultimately prove erroneous,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">x</a></span>
-I suffered myself to be misled by the assertions
-and opinions of prejudiced and party-spirited
-persons, and still maintained the same purpose.
-But, when awakened to a suspicion of the spirit-thrall
-in which I had been kept, I resolved to
-hazard no assertion or opinion which did not
-emanate from personal conviction, and I found
-that I could not prove an honest chronicler if I
-merely contented myself with a hurried and
-superficial survey of a country constituted like
-Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>To this conviction must consequently be attributed
-the fact that the whole period of my sojourn
-in the East was passed in Constantinople,
-and a part of Asia Minor. But my personal disappointment
-will be over-paid, should it be conceded
-that I have not failed in the attempt of affording
-to my readers a more just and complete insight
-into Turkish domestic life, than they have hitherto
-been enabled to obtain.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bradenham Lodge, Bucks,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;May 1837.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">xi</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS<br /><br />
-<small><small>OF</small></small><br /><br />
-<small>THE FIRST VOLUME.</small></h2>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<table width="100%" summary="contents" border="0">
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER I.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">The Golden Horn&mdash;Stamboul in Snow&mdash;The Sera&iuml; Bournou&mdash;Scutari&mdash;Galata&mdash;First
-View of Constantinople&mdash;St. Sophia and Solimani&egrave;&mdash;Pera&mdash;Domestication
-of Aquatic Birds&mdash;Sounds at Sea&mdash;Ca&iuml;ques&mdash;Oriental
-Grouping&mdash;Armenian Costume&mdash;Reforms of Sultan Mahmoud&mdash;Dervishes&mdash;Eastern
-Jews&mdash;Evening&mdash;Illuminated Minarets&mdash;Romance
-versus Reason&mdash;Pain at Parting&mdash;Custom House of
-Galata&mdash;The East versus the West&mdash;Reminiscences of the Marseillois
-Functionaries&mdash;The British Consul at Marseilles&mdash;The Light-house
-at Syra&mdash;The Frank Quarter&mdash;Diplomatic Atmosphere&mdash;Straw Huts&mdash;Care
-of the Turks for Animals&mdash;Scene from Shakspeare</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_1">Page&nbsp;1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER II.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Difficulty of Ingress to Turkish Houses&mdash;Steep Streets&mdash;The Harem&mdash;The
-Tandour&mdash;The Mangal&mdash;The Family&mdash;Female Costume&mdash;Luxurious
-Habits&mdash;The Ramazan&mdash;The Dining-room&mdash;The Widow&mdash;The
-Dinner&mdash;The Turks not Gastronomers&mdash;Oriental Hospitality&mdash;Ceremony
-of Ablution&mdash;The Massaldjhe&mdash;Alarm in the Harem&mdash;The
-Prayer&mdash;Evening Offering&mdash;Puerile Questions&mdash;Opium&mdash;Primitive
-Painting&mdash;Splendid Beds&mdash;Avocations of a Turkish
-Lady&mdash;Oriental Coquetry&mdash;Shopping&mdash;Commercial Flirtations&mdash;The
-Sultana Heyb&eacute;toullah&mdash;A Turkish Carriage&mdash;The Charshees&mdash;Armenian
-Merchants&mdash;Greek Speculators&mdash;Perfumes and Embroidery</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER III.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Turning Dervishes&mdash;Appearance of the Teki&egrave;&mdash;The Mausoleum&mdash;Duties
-of the Dervishes&mdash;Chapel of the
-Convent&mdash;The Chief Priest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">xii</a></span>&mdash;Dress of the Brotherhood&mdash;Melancholy Music&mdash;Solemnity of the
-Service&mdash;Mistakes of a Modern Traveller&mdash;Explanation of the Ceremony&mdash;The
-Prayer&mdash;The Kiss of Peace&mdash;Appearance of the Chapel&mdash;Religious
-Tolerance of the Turks&mdash;The French Renegade&mdash;Sketch
-of Halet Effendi, The Founder of the Teki&egrave;</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Merchants of Galata&mdash;Palaces of Pera&mdash;Picturesque Style of Building&mdash;The
-Perotes&mdash;Social Subjects&mdash;Greeks, European and Schismatic&mdash;Ambassadorial
-Residences&mdash;Entr&eacute;e of the Embassies&mdash;The Carnival&mdash;Soir&eacute;es
-Dansantes&mdash;The Austrian Minister&mdash;Madame la Baronne&mdash;The
-Russian Minister&mdash;Madame de Boutenieff&mdash;The Masked Ball&mdash;Russian
-Supremacy&mdash;The Prussian Plenipotentiary&mdash;The
-Sardinian Charg&eacute; d’Affaires&mdash;Diplomacy Unhoused&mdash;Society of
-Pera</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER V.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">The Greek Carnival&mdash;Kassim Pasha&mdash;The Marine Barrack&mdash;The
-Admiralty&mdash;Palace of the Capitan Pasha&mdash;Turkish Ships and Turkish
-Sailors&mdash;More Mistakes&mdash;Aqueduct of Justinian&mdash;The Sera&iuml;&mdash;The
-Arsenal&mdash;The “Sweet Waters”&mdash;The Fanar&mdash;Interior of a Greek
-House&mdash;Courteous Reception&mdash;Patriarchal Customs&mdash;Greek Ladies
-at Home&mdash;Confectionary and Coffee&mdash;A Greek Dinner&mdash;Ancient and
-Modern Greeks&mdash;A Few Words on Education&mdash;National Politeness&mdash;The
-Great Logotheti Aristarchi&mdash;His Politics&mdash;Sketch of his
-Father&mdash;His Domestic History&mdash;A Greek Breakfast&mdash;The Morning
-after a Ball&mdash;Greek Progress towards Civilization&mdash;Parallel between
-the Turk and the Greek</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Difficulty of Obtaining an Insight into Turkish Character&mdash;Inconvenience
-of Interpreters&mdash;Errors of Travellers&mdash;Ignorance of Resident
-Europeans&mdash;Fables and Fable-mongers&mdash;Turkey, Local and Moral&mdash;Absence
-of Capital Crime&mdash;Police of Constantinople&mdash;Quiet
-Streets&mdash;Sedate Mirth&mdash;Practical Philosophy of the Turks&mdash;National
-Emulation&mdash;Impossibility of Revolution&mdash;Mahmoud and his People&mdash;Unpopularity
-of the Sultan&mdash;Russian Interference&mdash;Vanity of the
-Turks&mdash;Russian Gold&mdash;Tenderness of the Turks to Animals&mdash;Penalty
-for Destroying a Dog&mdash;The English Sportsman&mdash;Fondness
-of the Turks for Children&mdash;Anecdote of the Reiss Effendi&mdash;Adopted
-Children&mdash;Love of the Musselmauns for their Mothers&mdash;Turkish
-indifference to Death&mdash;Their Burial-places&mdash;Fasts&mdash;The Turks in the
-Mosque&mdash;Contempt of the Natives for Europeans&mdash;Freedom of the
-Turkish Women&mdash;Inviolability of the Harem&mdash;Domestic Economy of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">xiii</a></span>
-the Harem&mdash;Turkish Slaves&mdash;Anecdote of a Slave of Achmet
-Pasha&mdash;Cleanliness of Turkish Houses&mdash;The Real Romance of the
-East</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">The Harem of Mustafa Effendi&mdash;The Ladies of the Harem&mdash;Etiquettical
-Observances of the Harem&mdash;Ceremonies of the Salemliek&mdash;Jealousy
-of Precedence among the Turkish Women&mdash;Apartment of
-the Effendi&mdash;Eastern Passion for Diamonds&mdash;Personal Appearance of
-Mustafa Effendi&mdash;The little Slave-girl&mdash;Slavery in Turkey&mdash;Gallant
-Present&mdash;The Dinner&mdash;Turkish Cookery&mdash;Illuminated Mosques&mdash;The
-<em>Bokshaliks</em>&mdash;The Toilet after the Bath&mdash;History of an <em>Odalisque</em>&mdash;Stupid
-Husbands&mdash;Reciprocal Commiseration&mdash;Errors of a Modern
-French Traveller&mdash;Privacy of the Women’s Apartments&mdash;Anecdote
-of the Wife of the K&iuml;ara Bey&mdash;The Ba&iuml;ram <em>Bokshalik</em>&mdash;My Sleeping-room&mdash;Forethought
-of Turkish Hospitality&mdash;Farewell to Fatma
-Hanoum&mdash;Dense Crowd&mdash;Turkish Mob&mdash;Turkish Officers&mdash;Military
-Difficulty&mdash;The “Lower Orders”&mdash;Tolerance of the Orientals towards
-Foreigners&mdash;Satisfactory Expedient</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER VIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Bath-room of Scodra Pasha&mdash;Fondness of the Eastern Women for the
-Bath&mdash;The Outer Hall&mdash;The Proprietress&mdash;Female Groups&mdash;The
-Cooling-room&mdash;The Great Hall&mdash;The Fountains&mdash;The Bathing Women&mdash;The
-Dinner&mdash;Apology for the Turkish Ladies</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Cheerful Cemeteries&mdash;Burial-ground of Pera&mdash;Superiority of the
-Turkish Cemeteries&mdash;Cypresses&mdash;Singular Superstition&mdash;The Grand
-Champs&mdash;Greek Grave-yard&mdash;Sultan Selim’s Barrack&mdash;Village of
-St. Demetrius&mdash;European Burial-ground&mdash;Grave-stones&mdash;The
-Kiosk&mdash;Noble View&mdash;Legend of the Maiden’s Tower&mdash;Plague
-Hospital of the Turks&mdash;The Plague-Ca&iuml;que&mdash;Armenian Cemetery&mdash;Curious
-Inscriptions&mdash;Turkish Burial-place&mdash;Distinctive Head-stones&mdash;Graves
-of the Janissaries&mdash;Wild Superstition&mdash;Cemetery of Scutari&mdash;Splendid
-Cypresses&mdash;Ancient Prophecy&mdash;Extent of Burial-ground&mdash;The
-Headless Dead&mdash;Exclusive Enclosures&mdash;Aspect of the
-Cemetery from the Summer Palace of Heyb&egrave;toullah Sultane&mdash;Local
-Superstition&mdash;The Damn&egrave;d Souls</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER X.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Character of the Constantinopolitan Greeks&mdash;The Greek Colony at the
-Fanar&mdash;Vogoride, Logotheti, and Angiolopolo&mdash;Political Sentiment&mdash;Chateaubriand
-at the Duke de Rovigo’s&mdash;Biting Criticism&mdash;Greek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">xiv</a></span>
-Chambers&mdash;“What’s in a Name?”&mdash;Custom of Burning Perfumes&mdash;The
-Pastille of the Seraglio&mdash;Turkish Cosmetics&mdash;Eastern
-Beauty</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">The Kourban-Ba&iuml;ram&mdash;Politeness of Mustafa Effendi&mdash;Depressing
-Recollections&mdash;Unquiet Night&mdash;Midnight March&mdash;Turkish Coffee&mdash;A
-Latticed Araba&mdash;The Mosque of Sultan Achmet&mdash;Beautiful coup-d’&oelig;il&mdash;Dress
-of the Turkish Children&mdash;Restlessness of the Franks&mdash;The
-Festival of Sacrifice&mdash;Old Jewish Rite&mdash;The Turkish Wife&mdash;Sun-rise&mdash;Appearance
-of the Troops&mdash;Turkish Ladies&mdash;Group of
-Field Officers&mdash;The Sultan’s Stud&mdash;Magnificent Trappings&mdash;The
-Seraskier Pasha&mdash;The Great Officers of State&mdash;The Procession&mdash;The
-Sultan&mdash;Imperial Curiosity&mdash;The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam&mdash;Costume of the
-Sultan&mdash;Japanese Superstition&mdash;Vanity of Sultan Mahmoud&mdash;The
-Hairdresser of Halil Pasha&mdash;Rapid Promotion&mdash;Oriental Salutations&mdash;Halil
-Pasha&mdash;Sa&iuml;d Pasha&mdash;Unruly Horses&mdash;The Valley of the
-“Sweet Waters”&mdash;Pera</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">The Military College&mdash;Achmet Pasha and Azmi Bey&mdash;Study of Azmi
-Bey&mdash;His grateful Memories of England and the English&mdash;The Establishment&mdash;The
-Lithographic Presses&mdash;Extemporaneous Poetry&mdash;Halls
-of Study&mdash;Number of Students&mdash;Mathematical Hall&mdash;The
-Sultan’s Gallery&mdash;The Mosque&mdash;The Mufti&mdash;The Turkish Creed&mdash;The
-Imperial Closet&mdash;The Gallery of the Imperial Suite&mdash;The
-Retiring-Room&mdash;The Printing-Office&mdash;The Hospital&mdash;The Refectory&mdash;The
-Professor of Fortification&mdash;Negro Officers&mdash;Moral Condition
-of the College&mdash;Courtesy of the Officers&mdash;Deficiencies of the Professors&mdash;The
-Turks a Reading People&mdash;Object of the Institution&mdash;Reasons
-of its Failure&mdash;Smiling Enemies&mdash;Forlorn Hope&mdash;Russian
-Influence&mdash;Saduk Agha&mdash;Achmet Pasha&mdash;Azmi Bey&mdash;Apology for
-my Prolixity</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Invitation from Mustapha Pasha of Scodra&mdash;The Ca&iuml;que, and the
-Ca&iuml;quejhes&mdash;How to Travel in a Ca&iuml;que&mdash;Hasty Glances&mdash;Self-Gratulation&mdash;Scutari&mdash;Imperial
-Superstition&mdash;The Seraglio Point&mdash;Dolma
-Batch&egrave;&mdash;Beshiktash&mdash;The Turning Dervishes&mdash;Begli&egrave;rbey&mdash;The
-Kiosks&mdash;A Dilemma&mdash;A Ruined Palace&mdash;An Introduction&mdash;A
-Turkish Beauty&mdash;A Discovery&mdash;A New Acquaintance&mdash;The
-Buyuk Hanoum&mdash;Fatiguing Walk&mdash;Palace of Mustapha
-Pasha&mdash;The Harem&mdash;Turkish Dyes&mdash;Ceremonies of Reception&mdash;Turkish
-Establishment&mdash;The Buyuk Hanoum&mdash;Turkish Chaplets&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">xv</a></span>The Imperial Firman&mdash;Pearls, Rubies, and Emeralds&mdash;The Favourite
-Odalique&mdash;Heymin&egrave; Hanoum&mdash;A Conversation on Politics&mdash;Scodra Pasha&mdash;Singular Coincidence&mdash;Convenience of the Turkish Kitchen&mdash;Luxury
-of the Table&mdash;Coquetry of the Chibouk&mdash;Turkish Mode of
-Lighting the Apartments&mdash;Gentleness towards the Slaves&mdash;Interesting
-Reminiscences&mdash;Domestic Details&mdash;Dilaram Hanoum&mdash;A
-Paragraph on Pearls&mdash;A Turkish Mirror&mdash;A Summons&mdash;Scodra
-Pasha&mdash;Motives for Revolt&mdash;The Imperial Envoy&mdash;Submission&mdash;Ready
-Wit of the Pasha’s Son&mdash;The Reception Room&mdash;Personal
-Appearance of the Scodra Pasha&mdash;Inconvenient Courtesy&mdash;Conversation
-on England&mdash;Philosophy&mdash;Pleasant Dreams&mdash;The Plague-Smitten</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Procession of Betrothal&mdash;Preliminary Ceremonies&mdash;The Mantle of Mahomet&mdash;The
-Palace of the Seraskier Pasha&mdash;The Palace Square&mdash;Picturesque
-Groups&mdash;An Interior&mdash;Turkish Children&mdash;Oriental Curiosity&mdash;Costume
-of the Turkish Children&mdash;Military Music&mdash;The
-Procession&mdash;Hurried Departure of the Crowd&mdash;The Seraskier’s
-Tower&mdash;The Fire Guard&mdash;Candidates for the Imperial Bride&mdash;Imperial
-Expedient&mdash;Sa&iuml;d Pasha&mdash;Policy of the Seraskier&mdash;An Audience&mdash;The
-Biter Bitten&mdash;Ingenious Ruse&mdash;Sublime Economy&mdash;Brilliant
-Traffic&mdash;The Danger of Delay&mdash;The Marriage Gifts&mdash;An
-Interesting Interview</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Fine Scenery&mdash;The Coast of Asia&mdash;Turkish Cemeteries&mdash;The Imperial
-Sera&iuml;&mdash;The Golden Horn&mdash;Mount Olympus&mdash;The Arabajhe&mdash;The
-Araba&mdash;The Persian Kiosk&mdash;The Barrack of Scutari&mdash;The Mosque of
-Selim III.&mdash;The Slipper of the Sultana Valid&egrave;&mdash;The Imperial Guard&mdash;Military
-Material&mdash;The Macaroni Manufactory&mdash;Sublime Targets&mdash;A
-Major of the Imperial Guard&mdash;Triumph of Utilitarianism&mdash;The
-Rise of the Vines&mdash;The Holy Tomb&mdash;Encampments of the Plague-smitten&mdash;The
-Setting Sun&mdash;Return to Europe&mdash;The Square of Topphann&egrave;</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Turkish Superstitions&mdash;Auguries&mdash;The Court Astrologer&mdash;The Evil
-Eye&mdash;Danger of Blue Eyes&mdash;Imperial Firman&mdash;The Babaluk&mdash;The
-Ceremony&mdash;Sable Pythonesses&mdash;Witchcraft</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">
-Imperial Invitation&mdash;Disagreeable Adventure&mdash;Executed Criminal&mdash;Efficacy
-of Wayside Executions&mdash;Tardy Conversions&mdash;Mistaken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">xvi</a></span>
-Humanity&mdash;Summary Mode of Execution&mdash;The Palace of Asm&egrave;
-Sultane&mdash;Entrance of the Harem&mdash;Costume of the Slaves&mdash;Nazip
-Hanoum&mdash;Ceremonious Reception&mdash;The Adopted Daughter&mdash;Costume
-of the Ladies of the Sera&iuml;&mdash;Beauty of the Slaves&mdash;Extraordinary
-Arrangement&mdash;Rejected Addresses&mdash;The Imperial Lover&mdash;Sacredness
-of Adoption in Turkey&mdash;Romantic Correspondence&mdash;Ladies
-of the Household&mdash;The Mother of the Slaves&mdash;Perouss&egrave;
-Hanoum&mdash;Crowded Audience&mdash;The Imperial Odalique&mdash;Music of
-the Harem&mdash;The New Pet&mdash;The Kislar-Agha&mdash;The “Light of the
-Harem”&mdash;The Poetical Sultan&mdash;Indisposition of the Sultana&mdash;The
-Palace Gardens&mdash;The Imperial Apartments&mdash;The Dancing Girl&mdash;Reluctant
-Departure&mdash;Ballad by Perouss&egrave; Hanoum</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_298">298</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Kahaitchana&mdash;The Barbyses&mdash;The Valley of the Sweet Waters&mdash;Imperial
-Procession&mdash;National Interdict&mdash;Picturesque Scene&mdash;The
-Princess Salih&egrave; and her Infant&mdash;Forbearance of the Sultan&mdash;The
-Toxopholites&mdash;Imperial Monopoly&mdash;Passion of the Sultan for Archery&mdash;Record-Columns&mdash;The
-Odalique’s Grave&mdash;The Lost One&mdash;Azm&egrave;
-Sultane&mdash;Imperial Courtesy&mdash;A Drive through the Valley</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Easter with the Greeks&mdash;Greek Church at Pera&mdash;Women’s Gallery&mdash;Interior
-of a Greek Church&mdash;The Sanctuary&mdash;The Screen&mdash;Throne
-of the Patriarch&mdash;The Holy Sepulchre&mdash;Singular Appearance of the
-Congregation&mdash;Sociability of the Ladies&mdash;<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Echelle des Morts</em>&mdash;Shipping&mdash;Boats
-and Boatmen&mdash;Church of the Fanar&mdash;Ancient
-Screen&mdash;Treasure Chests&mdash;The Sanctuary&mdash;Private Chapels&mdash;A
-Pious Illumination&mdash;Priests’ House&mdash;Prison&mdash;Remedy against Mahomedanism&mdash;Midnight
-Mass&mdash;Unexpected Greetings&mdash;The Patriarch&mdash;Logotheti&mdash;Russian
-Secretaries&mdash;Russian Supremacy in
-Turkey&mdash;Affinity of Religion between the Greeks and Russians&mdash;The
-Homage&mdash;Pious Confusion&mdash;Patriarch’s Palace&mdash;Lovely Night-Scene&mdash;Midnight
-Procession&mdash;Serious Impressions&mdash;Suffocating Heat&mdash;Dawn</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_332">332</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Feasting after Fasting&mdash;Visit to the Patriarch&mdash;Gorgeous Procession&mdash;Inconvenient
-Enthusiasm&mdash;Indisposition of the Patriarch&mdash;The Ceremony
-of Unrobing&mdash;The Impromptu Fair&mdash;The Patriarch at Home&mdash;The
-Golden Eggs</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_353">353</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">High Street of Pera&mdash;Dangers and Donkeys&mdash;Travelling in an
-Araba<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">xvii</a></span>&mdash;Fondness of the Orientals for their Cemeteries&mdash;Singular Spectacle&mdash;Moral
-Supineness of the Armenians&mdash;M. Nubar&mdash;The Fair&mdash;Armenian
-Dance&mdash;Anti-Exclusives&mdash;Water Venders&mdash;Being &agrave; la
-Franka&mdash;Wrestling Rings&mdash;The Battle of the Sects</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_360">360</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">The Mosques at Midnight&mdash;Baron Rothschild&mdash;Firmans and Orders&mdash;A
-Proposition&mdash;Masquerading&mdash;St. Sophia by Lamplight&mdash;The Congregation&mdash;The
-Mosque of Sultan Achmet&mdash;Colossal Pillars&mdash;Return
-to the Harem&mdash;The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam&mdash;Count Bathiany&mdash;The Party&mdash;St.
-Sophia by Daylight&mdash;Erroneous Impression&mdash;Turkish Paradise&mdash;Piety
-of the Turkish Women&mdash;The Vexed Traveller&mdash;Disappointment&mdash;Confusion
-of Architecture&mdash;The Sweating Stone&mdash;Women’s
-Gallery&mdash;View from the Gallery&mdash;Gog and Magog at Constantinople&mdash;The
-Impenetrable Door&mdash;Ancient Tradition&mdash;Leads of the
-Mosque&mdash;Gallery of the Dome&mdash;The Doves&mdash;The Atmeidan&mdash;The
-Tree of Groans&mdash;The Mosque of Sultan Achmet&mdash;Antique Vases&mdash;Historical
-Pulpit&mdash;The Inner Court&mdash;The Six Minarets&mdash;The Mosque
-of Solimani&egrave;&mdash;Painted Windows&mdash;Ground-plan of the Principal
-Mosques&mdash;The Treasury of Solimani&egrave;&mdash;Mausoleum of Solyman the
-Magnificent&mdash;Model of the Mosque at Mecca&mdash;Mausoleums in General&mdash;Indispensable
-Accessories&mdash;The Medresch&mdash;Mosque of Sultan
-Mahmoud at Topphann&egrave;</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_373">373</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Antiquities of Constantinople&mdash;Ism&auml;el Effendi&mdash;The Atmeidan&mdash;The
-Obelisk&mdash;The Delphic Tripod&mdash;The Column of Constantine&mdash;The
-Tchernberl&egrave; Tasch&mdash;The Cistern of the Thousand and One Columns&mdash;The
-Boudroum&mdash;The Roman Dungeons&mdash;Y&egrave;r&egrave;-Batan-Sera&iuml;&mdash;The
-Lost Traveller&mdash;Extent of the Cistern&mdash;Aqueduct of Justinian&mdash;Palace
-of Constantine&mdash;Tomb of Heraclius&mdash;The Seven Towers&mdash;An
-Ambassador in Search of Truth&mdash;Tortures of the Prison&mdash;A
-Legend of the Seven Towers</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_405">405</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Baloucl&egrave;&mdash;The New Church&mdash;Delightful Road&mdash;Eyoub&mdash;The Cemetery&mdash;The
-Rebel’s Grave&mdash;The Mosque of Blood&mdash;The Hill of Graves&mdash;The
-Seven Towers&mdash;The Palace of Belisarius&mdash;The City Walls&mdash;Easter
-Festivities&mdash;The Turkish Araba&mdash;The Armenian Carriage&mdash;Travellers&mdash;Turkish
-Women&mdash;Seridjhes&mdash;Persians&mdash;Irregular
-Troops&mdash;The Plain of Baloucl&egrave;&mdash;Laughable Mistake&mdash;Extraordinary
-Discretion&mdash;The Church of Baloucl&egrave;&mdash;The Holy Well&mdash;Absurd
-Tradition&mdash;The Chapel Vault&mdash;Enthusiasm of the
-Greeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">xviii</a></span>&mdash;A Pleasant Draught&mdash;Greek Substitute for a Bell&mdash;Violent
-Storm</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_434">434</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Figurative Gratitude of the Seraskier Pasha&mdash;Eastern Hyperbole&mdash;Reminiscences
-of Past Years&mdash;A Vision Realized&mdash;Strong Contrasts&mdash;The
-Marriage F&ecirc;tes&mdash;Popular Excitement&mdash;Crowded Streets&mdash;The
-Auspicious Day&mdash;Extravagant Expectations&mdash;The Great Cemetery&mdash;Dolma
-Batch&egrave;&mdash;The Grand Armoury&mdash;Turkish Women&mdash;Tents
-of the Pashas&mdash;The Bosphorus&mdash;Preparations&mdash;Invocation&mdash;The
-Illuminated Bosphorus&mdash;A Stretch of Fancy&mdash;A Painful Recollection&mdash;Natural
-Beauties of the Bosphorus&mdash;The Grave-Yard&mdash;Evening
-Amusements&mdash;Well Conducted Population</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_446">446</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Repetition&mdash;The Esplanade&mdash;The Kiosk and the Pavilion&mdash;A Short
-Cut&mdash;Dense Crowd&mdash;A Friend at Court&mdash;Curious <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Coup d’&OElig;il</em>&mdash;The
-Arena&mdash;The Orchestra&mdash;First Act of the Comedy&mdash;Disgusting
-Exhibition&mdash;The Birth of the Ballet&mdash;Dancing Boys&mdash;Second Act
-of the Drama&mdash;Insult to the Turkish Women&mdash;The Provost Marshal&mdash;Yusuf
-Pasha, the Traitor&mdash;Clemency of the Sultan&mdash;Forbearance
-of an Oriental Mob&mdash;Renewal of the Ballet&mdash;Last Act of the Drama&mdash;Theatrical
-Decorations&mdash;Watch-dogs and Chinese&mdash;Procession of
-the Trades&mdash;Frank Merchants&mdash;Thieves and Judges&mdash;Bedouin
-Tumblers&mdash;Fondness of the Pashas for Dancing&mdash;The Wise Men of
-the East</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_460">460</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Succession of Banquets&mdash;The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k Islam and the Clergy&mdash;Sectarian
-Prejudices&mdash;The Military Staff&mdash;The Naval Chiefs&mdash;The Imperial
-Household&mdash;The Pashas&mdash;The Grand Vizier&mdash;Magnificent Procession&mdash;Night
-Scene on the Bosphorus&mdash;The Palace of the Seraskier
-Pasha&mdash;Palace of Azm&egrave; Sultane&mdash;Midnight Serenade&mdash;Pretty Truants&mdash;The
-Shore of Asia&mdash;Ambassadorial Banquet&mdash;War Dance&mdash;Beautiful
-Effects of Light</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_478">478</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">Monotonous Entertainments&mdash;Bridal Preparations&mdash;Common Interest&mdash;Appearance
-of the Surrounding Country&mdash;Ride to Arnautkeui&mdash;Sight-loving
-Ladies&mdash;Glances and Greetings&mdash;Pictorial Grouping&mdash;The
-Procession&mdash;The Trousseau&mdash;A Steeple-Chase</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_488">488</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">
-The Bridal Day&mdash;Ceremony of Acceptance&mdash;The Crowd&mdash;The Kislar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">xix</a></span>
-Agha and the Court Astrologer&mdash;Order of the Procession&mdash;The
-Russian Coach&mdash;The Pasha and the Attach&eacute;s&mdash;The Seraskier&mdash;Wives
-of the Pashas&mdash;The Sultan and the Georgian Slave</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_500">500</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="center" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><p class="indent f08">A New Rejoicing&mdash;Scholastic Processions&mdash;Change in the Valley&mdash;The
-Odalique’s Grave&mdash;The Palace of Eyoub&mdash;The State Apartments&mdash;Return
-to Pera</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#Page_509">509</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">xx</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<p class="center">VOL I,</p>
-
-<table width="100%" summary="contents" border="0">
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08">
-Chapel of the Turning Dervishes</td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#f1"><i>Frontispiece.</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08">The Maiden’s Tower</td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#t"><i>Vignette&nbsp;Title-page.</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08">Military College</td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#f2">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08">Palace of the Sweet Waters</td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#f3">324</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08">A Street in Pera</td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#f4">361</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08"><p class="indent">Column of Constantine and Egyptian Tripod</p></td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#f5">407</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left f08">The Seven Towers</td>
-<td class="right f08"><a href="#f6">421</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">THE</p>
-<p class="center f15">THE CTY OF THE SULTAN.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Golden Horn&mdash;Stamboul in Snow&mdash;The Sera&iuml; Bournou&mdash;Scutari&mdash;Galata&mdash;First
-View of Constantinople&mdash;St. Sophia and Solimani&egrave;&mdash;Pera&mdash;Domestication
-of Aquatic Birds&mdash;Sounds at Sea&mdash;Ca&iuml;ques&mdash;Oriental
-Grouping&mdash;Armenian Costume&mdash;Reforms of Sultan Mahmoud&mdash;Dervishes&mdash;Eastern
-Jews&mdash;Evening&mdash;Illuminated Minarets&mdash;Romance
-<em>versus</em> Reason&mdash;Pain at Parting&mdash;Custom House of
-Galata&mdash;The East <em>versus</em> the West&mdash;Reminiscences of Marseillois
-Functionaries&mdash;The British Consul at Marseilles&mdash;The Light-house
-at Syra&mdash;The Frank Quarter&mdash;Diplomatic Atmosphere&mdash;Straw Huts&mdash;Care
-of the Turks for Animals&mdash;A Scene from Shakspeare.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was on the 30th of December, 1835, that
-we anchored in the Golden Horn; my long-indulged
-hopes were at length realized, and the
-Queen of Cities was before me, throned on her
-peopled hills, with the silver Bosphorus, garlanded
-with palaces, flowing at her feet!</p>
-
-<p>It was with difficulty that I could drag myself
-upon deck after the night of intense suffering
-which I had passed in the sea of Marmora,
-and, when I did succeed in doing so, the vessel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-was already under the walls of the Seraglio
-garden, and advancing rapidly towards her
-anchorage. The atmosphere was laden with
-snow, and I beheld Stamboul for the first time
-clad in the ermine mantle of the sternest of seasons.
-Yet, even thus, the most powerful feeling
-that unravelled itself from the chaos of sensations
-which thronged upon me was one of unalloyed
-delight. How could it be otherwise? I
-seemed to look on fairy-land&mdash;to behold the
-embodiment of my wildest visions&mdash;to be the
-denizen of a new world.</p>
-
-<p>Queenly Stamboul! the myriad sounds of her
-streets came to us mellowed by the distance;
-and, as we swept along, the whole glory of her
-princely port burst upon our view! The gilded
-palace of Mahmoud, with its glittering gate and
-overtopping cypresses, among which may be
-distinguished the buildings of the Sera&iuml;, were
-soon passed; behind us, in the distance, was
-Scutari, looking down in beauty on the channel,
-whose waves reflected the graceful outline of its
-tapering minarets, and shrouded themselves for
-an instant in the dark shadows of its funereal
-grove. Galata was beside us, with its mouldering
-walls and warlike memories; and the vessel
-trembled as the chain fell heavily into the water,
-and we anchored in the midst of the crowd of
-shipping that already thronged the harbour.
-On the opposite shore clustered the painted dwel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>lings
-of Constantinople, the party-coloured garment
-of the “seven hills”&mdash;the tall cypresses
-that overshadowed her houses, and the stately
-plane trees, which more than rivalled them in
-beauty, bent their haughty heads beneath the
-weight of accumulated snows. Here and there,
-a cluster of graceful minarets cut sharply
-against the sky; while the ample dome of the
-mosque to which they belonged, and the roofs
-of the dwellings that nestled at their base, lay
-steeped in the same chill livery. Eagerly did I
-seek to distinguish those of St. Sophia, and the
-smaller but far more elegant Solimani&egrave;, the
-shrine of the Prophet’s Beard, with its four
-minarets, and its cloistered courts; and it was
-not without reluctance that I turned away, to
-mark where the thronging houses of Pera climb
-with magnificent profusion the amphitheatre of
-hills which dominate the treasure-laden port.</p>
-
-<p>As my gaze wandered along the shore, and,
-passing by the extensive grove of cypresses that
-wave above the burying-ground, once more followed
-the course of the Bosphorus, I watched the
-waves as they washed the very foundation of the
-dwellings that skirt it, until I saw them chafing
-and struggling at the base of the barrack of
-Topphann&egrave;, and at intervals flinging themselves
-high into the air above its very roof.</p>
-
-<p>To an European eye, the scene, independently
-of its surpassing beauty and utter novelty, pos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>sessed
-two features peculiarly striking; the extreme
-vicinity of the houses to the sea, which in
-many instances they positively overhang; and
-the vast number of aquatic fowl that throng
-the harbour. Seagulls were flying past us in
-clouds, and sporting like domestic birds about
-the vessel, while many of the adjoining roofs
-were clustered with them; the wild-duck and
-the water-hen were diving under our very stern
-in search of food; and shoals of porpoises were
-every moment rolling by, turning up their white
-bellies to the light, and revelling in safety amid
-the sounds and sights of a mighty city, as
-though unconscious of the vicinity of danger.
-How long, I involuntarily asked myself, would
-this extraordinary confidence in man be repaid
-by impunity in an English port? and the answer
-was by no means pleasing to my national pride.</p>
-
-<p>As I looked round upon the shipping, the language
-of many lands came on the wind. Here
-the deep “Brig a-hoy!” of the British seaman
-boomed along the ripple; there, the shrill cry
-of the Greek mariner rang through the air:
-at intervals, the full rich strain of the dark-eyed
-Italian relieved the wild monotonous chant of
-the Turk; while the cry of the sea-boy from the
-rigging was answered by the stern brief tones
-of the weather-beaten sailor on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Every instant a graceful ca&iuml;que, with its long
-sharp prow and gilded ornaments, shot past the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-ship: now freighted with a bearded and turbaned
-Turk, squatted upon his carpet at the
-bottom of the boat, pipe in hand, and muffled
-closely in his furred pelisse, the very personification
-of luxurious idleness; and attended by
-his red-capped and blue-coated domestic, who
-was sometimes a thick-lipped negro, but more
-frequently a keen-eyed and mustachioed musselmaun&mdash;now
-tenanted by a group of women,
-huddled closely together, and wearing the <em>yashmac</em>,
-or veil of white muslin, which covers all
-the face except the eyes and nose, and gives
-to the wearer the appearance of an animated
-corpse; some of them, as they passed, languidly
-breathing out their harmonious Turkish, which
-in a female mouth is almost music.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a third, gliding along like a nautilus,
-with its small white sail; and bearing a
-bevy of Greeks, whose large flashing eyes
-gleamed out beneath the unbecoming <em>f&egrave;z</em>, or
-cap of red cloth, with its purple silk tassel,
-and ornament of cut paper, bound round the
-head among the lower classes, by a thick black
-shawl, tightly twisted. This was followed by
-a fourth, impelled by two lusty rowers, wherein
-the round hats and angular costume of a party
-of Franks forced your thoughts back upon the
-country that you had left, only to be recalled
-the next instant by a freight of Armenian merchants
-returning from the Charshees of Constantinople<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-to their dwellings at Galata and
-Pera. As I looked on the fine countenances,
-the noble figures, and the animated expression
-of the party, how did I deprecate their shaven
-heads, and the use of the frightful <em>calpac</em>, which
-I cannot more appropriately describe than by
-comparing it to the iron pots used in English
-kitchens, inverted! The graceful pelisse, however,
-almost makes amends for the monstrous
-head-gear, as its costly garniture of sable or
-marten-skin falls back, and reveals the robe of
-rich silk, and the cachemire shawl folded about
-the waist. Altogether, I was more struck with the
-Armenian than the Turkish costume; and there
-is a refinement and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tenue</em> about the wearers singularly
-attractive. Their well-trimmed mustachioes,
-their stained and carefully-shaped eyebrows,
-their exceeding cleanliness, in short,
-their whole appearance, interests the eye at
-once; nor must I pass over without remark
-their jewelled rings, and their pipes of almost
-countless cost, grasped by fingers so white and
-slender that they would grace a woman.</p>
-
-<p>While I am on the subject of costume, I cannot
-forbear to record my regret as I beheld in every
-direction the hideous and unmeaning <em>f&egrave;z</em>, which
-has almost superseded the gorgeous turban of
-muslin and cachemire: indeed, I was nearly
-tempted in my woman wrath to consider all the
-admirable reforms, wrought by Sultan Mah<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>moud
-in his capital, overbalanced by the frightful
-changes that he has made in the national
-costume, by introducing a mere caricature of that
-worst of all originals&mdash;the stiff, starch, angular
-European dress. The costly turban, that
-bound the brow like a diadem, and relieved by
-the richness of its tints the dark hue of the
-other garments, has now almost entirely disappeared
-from the streets; and a group of Turks
-look in the distance like a bed of poppies; the
-flowing robe of silk or of woollen has been flung
-aside for the ill-made and awkward surtout of
-blue cloth; and the waist, which was once
-girdled with a shawl of cachemire, is now compressed
-by two brass buttons!</p>
-
-<p>The Dervish, or domestic priest, for such he
-may truly be called, whose holy profession, instead
-of rendering him a distinct individual,
-suffers him to mingle like his fellow-men in all the
-avocations, and to participate in all the socialities
-of life; which permits him to read his offices
-behind the counter of his shop, and to bring up
-his family to the cares and customs of every-day
-life; and who is bound only by his own voluntary
-act to a steady continuance in the self-imposed
-duties that he is at liberty to cast aside when
-they become irksome to him; the holy Dervish
-frequently passed us in his turn, seated at the
-bottom of the ca&iuml;que, with an open volume on his
-knees, and distinguished from the lay-Turk by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-his <em>geulaf</em>, or high hat of grey felt. Then came
-a group of Jews, chattering and gesticulating;
-with their ample cloaks, and small dingy-coloured
-caps, surrounded by a projecting band of brown
-and white cotton, whose singular pattern has
-misled a modern traveller so far as to induce him
-to state that it is “a white handkerchief, inscribed
-with some Hebrew sentences from their law.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus far, I could compare the port of Constantinople
-to nothing less delightful than poetry
-put into action. The novel character of the
-scenery&mdash;the ever-shifting, picturesque, and
-graceful groups&mdash;the constant flitting past of
-the fairy-like ca&iuml;ques&mdash;the strange tongues&mdash;the
-dark, wild eyes&mdash;all conspired to rivet me to
-the deck, despite the bitterness of the weather.</p>
-
-<p>Evening came&mdash;and the spell deepened. We
-had arrived during the Turkish Ramazan, or
-Lent, and, as the twilight gathered about us, the
-minarets of all the mosques were brilliantly illuminated.
-Nothing could exceed the magical
-effect of the scene; the darkness of the hour concealed
-the outline of the graceful shafts of these
-etherial columns, while the circles of light which
-girdled them almost at their extreme height
-formed a triple crown of living diamonds. Below
-these depended (filling the intermediate space)
-shifting figures of fire, succeeding each other with
-wonderful rapidity and precision: now it was a
-house, now a group of cypresses, then a vessel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span>,
-or an anchor, or a spray of flowers; and these
-changes were effected, as I afterwards discovered,
-in the most simple and inartificial manner.
-Cords are slung from minaret to minaret, from
-whence depend others, to which the lamps are
-attached; and the raising or lowering of these
-cords, according to a previous design, produces
-the apparently magic transitions which render
-the illuminations of Stamboul unlike those of
-any European capital.</p>
-
-<p>But I can scarcely forgive myself for thus
-accounting in so matter-of-fact a manner for
-the beautiful illusions that wrought so powerfully
-on my own fancy. I detest the spirit
-which reduces every thing to plain reason,
-and pleases itself by tracing effects to causes,
-where the only result of the research must be
-the utter annihilation of all romance, and the
-extinction of all wonder. The flowers that
-blossom by the wayside of life are less beautiful
-when we have torn them leaf by leaf
-asunder, to analyze their properties, and to determine
-their classes, than when we first inhale
-their perfume, and delight in their lovely tints,
-heedless of all save the enjoyment which they
-impart. The man of science may decry, and the
-philosopher may condemn, such a mode of reasoning;
-but really, in these days of utilitarianism,
-when all things are reduced to rule, and laid bare
-by wisdom, it is desirable to reserve a niche or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-two unprofaned by “the schoolmaster,” where
-fancy may plume herself unchidden, despite the
-never-ending analysis of a theorising world!</p>
-
-<p>My continued indisposition compelled my
-father and myself to remain another day on
-board; but I scarcely felt the necessity irksome.
-All was so novel and so full of interest around
-me, and my protracted voyage had so thoroughly
-inured me to privation and inconvenience, that I
-was enabled to enjoy the scene without one
-regret for land. The same shifting panorama,
-the same endless varieties of sight and sound,
-occupied the day; and the same magic illusions
-lent a brilliancy and a poetry to the night.</p>
-
-<p>Smile, ye whose exclusiveness has girdled you
-with a fictitious and imaginary circle, beyond
-which ye have neither sympathies nor sensibilities&mdash;smile
-if ye will, as I declare that when the
-moment came in which I was to quit the good
-brig, that had borne us so bravely through storm
-and peril&mdash;the last tangible link between ourselves
-and the far land that we had loved and
-left&mdash;I almost regretted that I trod her snow-heaped
-and luggage-cumbered deck for the last
-time; and that, as the crew clustered round us,
-to secure a parting look and a parting word, a
-tear sprang to my eye. How impossible does it
-appear to me to forget, at such a time as this,
-those who have shared with you the perils and
-the protection of a long and arduous voyage!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-From the sturdy seaman who had stood at the
-helm, and contended with the drear and drenching
-midnight sea, to the venturous boy who had
-climbed the bending mast to secure the remnants
-of the shivered sail, every face had long been
-familiar to me. I could call each by name; nor
-was there one among them to whom I had not,
-on some occasion, been indebted for those rude
-but ready courtesies which, however insignificant
-in themselves, are valuable to the uninitiated
-and helpless at sea.</p>
-
-<p>On the 1st of January, 1836, we landed at the
-Custom House stairs at Galata, amid a perfect
-storm of snow and wind; nor must I omit the
-fact that we did so without “let or hindrance”
-from the officers of the establishment. The only
-inquiry made was, whether we had brought out
-any merchandize, and, our reply being in the
-negative, coupled with the assurance that we
-were merely travellers, and that our packages
-consisted simply of personal necessaries, we were
-civilly desired to pass on.</p>
-
-<p>I could not avoid contrasting this mode of
-action in the “barbarous” East, with that of
-“civilized” Europe, where even your very person
-is not sacred from the investigation of low-bred
-and low-minded individuals, from whose
-officious and frequently impertinent contact you
-can secure yourself only by a bribe. Perhaps
-the contrast struck me the more forcibly that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-we had embarked from Marseilles, where all
-which concerns either the Douane or the Bureau
-de Sant&eacute; is <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">&agrave; la rigueur</em>&mdash;where you are obliged
-to pay a duty on what you take out of the city
-as well as what you bring into it&mdash;pay for a
-certificate of health to persons who do not know
-that you have half a dozen hours to live&mdash;and&mdash;hear
-this, ye travel-stricken English, who leave
-your country to breathe freely for a while in
-lands wherein ye may dwell without the extortion
-of taxes&mdash;pay <em>your own</em> Consul for permission
-to embark!</p>
-
-<p>This last demand rankles more than all with
-a British subject, who may quit his birth-place
-unquestioned, and who hugs himself with the
-belief that nothing pitiful or paltry can be connected
-with the idea of an Englishman by the
-foreigners among whom he is about to sojourn.
-He has to learn his error, and the opportunity
-is afforded to him at Marseilles, where the
-natives of every other country under Heaven
-are free to leave the port as they list, when
-they have satisfied the demands of the local
-functionaries; while the English alone have a
-special claimant in their own Consul, the
-individual appointed by the British government
-to “assist” and “protect” his fellow-subjects&mdash;by
-whom they are only let loose upon
-the world at the rate of six francs and a half a
-head! And for this “consideration” they be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>come
-the happy possessors of a “Permission to
-Embark” from a man whom they have probably
-never seen, and who has not furthered for them
-a single view, nor removed a single difficulty. To
-this it may be answered that, had they required
-his assistance, they might have demanded it,
-which must be conceded at once, but, nevertheless,
-the success of their demand is more than problematical&mdash;and
-the arrangement is perfectly on
-a par with that of the Greeks in the island of
-Syra, who, when we cast anchor in their port,
-claimed, among other dues, a dollar and a
-half for the signal-light; and, on being reminded
-that there had been no light at the
-station for several previous nights, with the additional
-information that we had narrowly escaped
-wreck in consequence, coolly replied, that
-all we said was very true, but that there would
-shortly be a fire kindled there regularly&mdash;that
-they wanted money&mdash;and that, in short, the
-dollar and a half must be paid; but herefrom we
-at least took our departure without asking leave
-of our own Consul.</p>
-
-<p>From the Custom House of Galata, we proceeded
-up a steep ascent to Pera, the quarter
-of the Franks&mdash;the focus of diplomacy&mdash;where
-every lip murmurs “His Excellency,” and secretaries,
-interpreters, and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em> are</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">“Thick as the leaves on Valombrosa.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>But, alas! on the 1st day of January, Pera,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-Galata, and their environs, were one huge snowball.
-As it was Friday, the Turkish Sabbath,
-and, moreover, a Friday of the Ramazan, every
-shop was shut; and the few foot passengers who
-passed us by hurried on as though impatient of
-exposure to so inclement an atmosphere. As
-most of the streets are impassable for carriages,
-and as the sedan-chairs which supply, however
-imperfectly, the place of these convenient (and
-almost, as I had hitherto considered, indispensable)
-articles, are all private property, we were
-e’en obliged to “thread our weary way” as patiently
-as we could&mdash;now buried up to our knees
-in snow, and anon immersed above our ancles in
-water, when we chanced to plunge into one of
-those huge holes which give so interesting an inequality
-to the surface of Turkish paving.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, despite the difficulties that
-obstructed our progress, I could not avoid remarking
-the little straw huts built at intervals
-along the streets, for the accommodation and
-comfort of the otherwise homeless dogs that
-throng every avenue of the town. There they
-lay, crouched down snugly, too much chilled to
-welcome us with the chorus of barking that
-they usually bestow on travellers: a species of
-loud and inconvenient greeting with which we
-were by no means sorry to dispense. In addition
-to this shelter, food is every day dispensed
-by the inhabitants to the vagrant animals who,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-having no specific owners, are, to use the approved
-phraseology of genteel alms-asking,
-‪“wholly dependent on the charitable for support.”
-And it is a singular fact that these self-constituted
-scavengers exercise a kind of internal
-economy which almost appears to exceed the
-boundaries of mere instinct; they have their
-defined “walks,” or haunts, and woe betide the
-strange cur who intrudes on the privileges of his
-neighbours; he is hunted, upbraided with growls
-and barks, beset on all sides, even bitten in
-cases of obstinate contumacy, and universally
-obliged to retreat within his own limits. Their
-numbers have, as I was informed, greatly decreased
-of late years, but they are still very
-considerable.</p>
-
-<p>As we passed along, a door opened, and forth
-stepped the most magnificent-looking individual
-whom I ever saw: he had a costly cachemire
-twined about his waist, his flowing robes were
-richly furred, and he turned the key in the lock
-with an air of such blended anxiety and dignity,
-that I involuntarily thought of the Jew of
-Shakspeare; and I expected at the moment to
-hear him exclaim, “Shut the door, Jessica, shut
-the door, I say!” But, alas! he moved away,
-and no sweet Jessica flung back the casement
-to reply.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Difficulty of Ingress to Turkish Houses&mdash;Steep Streets&mdash;The Harem&mdash;The
-Tandour&mdash;The Mangal&mdash;The Family&mdash;Female Costume&mdash;Luxurious
-Habits&mdash;The Ramazan&mdash;The Dining-room&mdash;The Widow&mdash;The
-Dinner&mdash;The Turks not Gastronomers&mdash;Oriental Hospitality&mdash;Ceremony
-of Ablution&mdash;The Massaldjhe&mdash;Alarm in the Harem&mdash;The
-Prayer&mdash;Evening Offering&mdash;Puerile Questions&mdash;Opium&mdash;Primitive
-Painting&mdash;Splendid Beds&mdash;Avocations of a Turkish
-Lady&mdash;Oriental Coquetry&mdash;Shopping&mdash;Commercial Flirtations&mdash;The
-Sultana Heyb&eacute;toullah&mdash;A Turkish Carriage&mdash;The Charshees&mdash;Armenian
-Merchants&mdash;Greek Speculators&mdash;Perfumes and Embroidery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> already mentioned that we arrived at
-Constantinople during the Ramazan or Lent;
-and my first anxiety was to pass a day of Fast
-in the interior of a Turkish family.</p>
-
-<p>This difficult, and in most cases impossible,
-achievement for an European was rendered easy
-to me by the fact that, shortly after our landing,
-I procured an introduction to a respectable
-Turkish merchant; and I had no sooner written
-to propose a visit to his harem than I received
-the most frank and cordial assurances of welcome.</p>
-
-<p>A Greek lady of my acquaintance having
-offered to accompany me, and to act as my in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>terpreter,
-we crossed over to Stamboul, and,
-after threading several steep and narrow streets,
-perfectly impassable for carriages, entered the
-spacious court of the house at which we were
-expected, and ascended a wide flight of stairs
-leading to the harem, or women’s apartments.
-The stairs terminated in a large landing-place,
-of about thirty feet square, into which several
-rooms opened on each side, screened with curtains
-of dark cloth embroidered with coloured
-worsted. An immense mirror filled up a space
-between two of the doors, and a long passage
-led from this point to the principal apartment
-of the harem, to which we were conducted by a
-black slave.</p>
-
-<p>When I say “we,” I of course allude to Mrs.
----- and myself, as no men, save those of the
-family and the physician, are ever admitted
-within the walls of a Turkish harem.</p>
-
-<p>The apartment into which we were ushered
-was large and warm, richly carpeted, and surrounded
-on three sides by a sofa, raised about
-a foot from the ground, and covered with
-crimson shag; while the cushions, that rested
-against the wall or were scattered at intervals
-along the couch, were gaily embroidered with
-gold thread and coloured silks. In one angle
-of the sofa stood the <em>tandour</em>: a piece of furniture
-so unlike any thing in Europe, that I cannot
-forbear giving a description of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>The tandour is a wooden frame, covered with
-a couple of wadded coverlets, for such they
-literally are, that are in their turn overlaid by
-a third and considerably smaller one of rich
-silk: within the frame, which is of the height
-and dimensions of a moderately sized breakfast
-table, stands a copper vessel, filled with the
-embers of charcoal; and, on the two sides that
-do not touch against the sofa, piles of cushions
-are heaped upon the floor to nearly the same
-height, for the convenience of those whose rank
-in the family does not authorize them to take
-places on the couch.</p>
-
-<p>The double windows, which were all at the
-upper end of the apartment, were closely latticed;
-and, at the lower extremity of the room,
-in an arched recess, stood a classically-shaped
-clay jar full of water, and a covered goblet in a
-glass saucer. Along a silken cord, on either
-side of this niche, were hung a number of napkins,
-richly worked and fringed with gold; and
-a large copy of the Koran was deposited beneath
-a handkerchief of gold gauze, on a carved rosewood
-bracket.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of the floor was placed the <em>mangal</em>,
-a large copper vessel of about a foot in height,
-resting upon a stand of the same material raised
-on castors, and filled, like that within the tandour,
-with charcoal.</p>
-
-<p>The family consisted of the father and mother,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-the son and the son’s wife, the daughter and
-her husband, and a younger and adopted son.
-The ladies were lying upon cushions, buried
-up to their necks under the coverings of the
-tandour; and, as they flung them off to receive
-us, I was struck with the beauty of the daughter,
-whose deep blue eyes, and hair of a golden
-brown, were totally different from what I had
-expected to find in a Turkish harem. Two
-glances sufficed to satisfy me that the mother
-was a shrew, and I had no reason subsequently
-to revoke my judgment. The son’s wife had
-fine, large, brilliant, black eyes, but her other
-features were by no means pleasing, although
-she possessed, in common with all her countrywomen,
-that soft, white, velvety skin, for which
-they are indebted to the constant use of the
-bath. To this luxury, in which many of them
-daily indulge, must be, however, attributed the
-fact that their hair, in becoming bright and
-glossy, loses its strength, and compels them to
-the adoption of artificial tresses; and these they
-wear in profusion, wound amid the folds of the
-embroidered handkerchiefs that they twine
-about their heads in a most unbecoming manner,
-and secure by bodkins of diamonds or emeralds,
-of which ornaments they are inordinately fond.</p>
-
-<p>They all wore chemisettes or under garments
-of silk gauze, trimmed with fringes of narrow
-ribbon, and wide trowsers of printed cotton fall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>ing
-to the ancle: their feet were bare, save that
-occasionally they thrust them into little yellow
-slippers, that scarcely covered their toes, and
-in which they moved over the floor with the
-greatest ease, dragging after them their anterys,
-or sweeping robes; but more frequently they
-dispensed with even these, and walked barefoot
-about the harem. Their upper dresses were of
-printed cotton of the brightest colours&mdash;that of
-the daughter had a blue ground, with a yellow
-pattern, and was trimmed with a fringe of pink
-and green. These robes, which are made in one
-piece, are divided at the hip on either side to
-their extreme length, and are girt about the
-waist with a cachemire shawl. The costume is
-completed in winter by a tight vest lined with
-fur, which is generally of light green or pink.</p>
-
-<p>Their habits are, generally speaking, most
-luxurious and indolent, if I except their custom
-of early rising, which, did they occupy themselves
-in any useful manner, would be undoubtedly
-very commendable; but, as they only add,
-by these means, two or three hours of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</em> to
-each day, I am at a loss how to classify it. Their
-time is spent in dressing themselves, and varying
-the position of their ornaments&mdash;in the bath&mdash;and
-in sleep, which they appear to have as
-entirely at their back as a draught of water;
-in winter, they have but to nestle under the
-coverings of the tandour, or in summer to bury<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-themselves among their cushions, and in five
-minutes they are in the land of dreams. Indeed,
-so extraordinarily are they gifted in this respect,
-that they not unfrequently engage their guests
-to take a nap, with the same <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sang-froid</em> with
-which a European lady would invite her friends
-to take a walk. Habits of industry have, however,
-made their way, in many instances, even
-into the harem; the changes without have influenced
-the pursuits and feelings of the women;
-and utter idleness has already ceased to be a
-necessary attribute to the high-bred Turkish
-female.</p>
-
-<p>As it was the time of the Ramazan, neither coffee
-nor sweetmeats were handed to us, though the
-offer of refreshments was made, which we, however,
-declined, being resolved to keep Lent with
-them according to their own fashion. We fasted,
-therefore, until about half past six o’clock, when
-the cry of the muezzin from the minarets proclaimed
-that one of the outwatchers, of whom
-many are employed for the purpose, had caught
-a glimpse of the moon. Instantly all were in
-motion; their preliminary arrangements had
-been so zealously and carefully made that not
-another second was lost; and, as a slave announced
-dinner, we all followed her to a smaller
-apartment, where the table, if such I may call it,
-was already laid.</p>
-
-<p>The room was a perfect square, totally un<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>furnished,
-save that in the centre of the floor
-was spread a carpet, on which stood a wooden
-frame, about two feet in height, supporting an
-immense round plated tray, with the edge slightly
-raised. In the centre of the tray was placed a
-capacious white basin, filled with a kind of cold
-bread soup; and around it were ranged a circle
-of small porcelain saucers, filled with sliced
-cheese, anchovies, caviare, and sweetmeats of
-every description: among these were scattered
-spoons of box-wood, and goblets of pink and
-white sherbet, whose rose-scented contents perfumed
-the apartment. The outer range of the
-tray was covered with fragments of unleavened
-bread, torn asunder; and portions of the Ramazan
-cake, a dry, close, sickly kind of paste, glazed
-with the whites of eggs, and strewed over with
-aniseeds.</p>
-
-<p>Our party was a numerous one&mdash;the aged
-nurse, who had reared the children of the
-family&mdash;the orphan boy of a dead son, who, with
-his wife, had perished by plague during the previous
-twelve months&mdash;several neighbours who
-had chosen the hour of dinner to make their
-visits&mdash;a very pretty friend from Scutari&mdash;and a
-very plain acquaintance from the house of death&mdash;the
-widow of a day&mdash;whose husband had expired
-the previous morning, been buried the same
-evening, and, as it appeared, forgotten on the
-morrow; for the “disconsolate widow” had come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-forth in a pink vest, and sky blue trowsers, with
-rings on her fingers, and jewels in her turban,
-to seek the advice and assistance of the master
-of the house, in securing some valuable shawls,
-and sundry diamonds and baubles which she
-had possessed before her marriage, from the
-grasp of the deceased’s relatives.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the serious business of the repast
-really commenced, that is, when we had each possessed
-ourselves of a cushion, and squatted down
-with our feet under us round the dinner tray,
-having on our laps linen napkins of about two
-yards in length richly fringed; the room was
-literally filled with slaves, “black, white, and
-gray,” from nine years old to fifty.</p>
-
-<p>Fish, embedded in rice, followed the side or
-rather circle saucers that I have already described;
-and of most of which I sparingly partook,
-as the only answer that I was capable of
-giving to the unceasing “Eat, eat, you are welcome,”
-of the lady of the house. With the fish,
-the spoons came into play, and all were immersed
-in the same dish; but I must not omit to add
-that this custom is rendered less revolting than
-it would otherwise be, by the fact that each individual
-is careful, should the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">plat</em> be partaken
-of a second time, (a rare occurrence, however,
-from the rapidity with which they are changed),
-always to confine herself to one spot. The meat
-and poultry were eaten with the fingers; each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-individual fishing up, or breaking away, what
-pleased her eye; and several of them tearing
-a portion asunder, and handing one of
-the pieces to me as a courtesy, with which, be it
-remarked, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">par parenth&egrave;se</em>, I should joyfully have
-dispensed. Nineteen dishes, of fish, flesh, fowl,
-pastry, and creams, succeeding each other in the
-most heterogeneous manner&mdash;the salt following
-the sweet, and the stew preceding the custard&mdash;were
-terminated by a pyramid of pillauf. I
-had the perseverance to sit out this elaborate
-culinary exhibition; an exertion which is, however,
-by no means required of any one, by the
-observance of Turkish courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>Gastronomy is no science in the East, and
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gourmands</em> are unknown; the Osmanlis only
-eat to live, they do not live to eat; and the
-variety of their dishes originates in a tacit
-care to provide against individual disgusts,
-while the extreme rapidity with which they
-are changed sufficiently demonstrates their
-want of inclination to indulge individual excess.
-The women drink only coffee, sherbet,
-or water; but some few among the men are
-adopting the vices of civilized nations, and becoming
-addicted to beverages of a more potent
-description. No person is expected to remain
-an instant longer at a Turkish table than suffices
-him to make his meal; the instant that an individual
-has satisfied his appetite, he rises with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>out
-comment or apology, washes his hands, and
-resumes his pipe or his occupation. Nor must
-I pass over without comment the simple and
-beautiful hospitality of the Turks, who welcome
-to their board, be he rich or poor, every countryman
-who thinks proper to take a seat at it;
-the emphatic “You are welcome,” is never coldly
-nor grudgingly uttered; and the Mussulmauns
-extend this unostentatious greeting to each
-new comer, without reservation or limit, upon
-the same principle that they never permit them
-to find fault with any article of food which may
-be served up. They consider themselves only as
-the stewards of GOD, and consequently use the
-goods of life as a loan rather than a possession;
-while they consider themselves bound to give
-from their superfluity to those who have been less
-favoured.</p>
-
-<p>As we rose from table, a slave presented herself,
-holding a basin and strainer of wrought
-metal, while a second poured tepid water over
-our hands, from an elegantly-formed vase of the
-same materials; and a third handed to us embroidered
-napkins of great beauty, of which I
-really availed myself with reluctance.</p>
-
-<p>Having performed this agreeable ceremony,
-we returned to the principal apartment, where
-our party received an addition in the person of
-a very pretty old <em>massaljhe</em>, or tale-teller, who
-had been invited to relieve the tedium of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-evening with some of her narrations. This
-custom is very general during the Ramazan,
-and is a great resource to the Turkish ladies,
-who can thus recline in luxurious inaction, and
-have their minds amused without any personal
-exertion. Coffee was prepared at the mangal,
-and handed round: after which the elder lady
-seated herself on a pile of cushions placed upon
-the floor, and smoked a couple of pipes in perfect
-silence, and with extreme <em>gusto</em>, flinging out
-volumes of smoke, that created a thick mist in
-the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>I had just begun to indulge in a violent fit of
-coughing, induced by the density of this artificial
-atmosphere, when in walked a slave to announce
-the intended presence of the gentlemen of the
-family, and in an instant the whole scene was
-changed. The two Turkish ladies whom I have
-already mentioned as being on a visit in the house
-rushed from the room barefooted, in as little
-time as it would have required for me to disengage
-myself from the tandour; the less agile
-<em>massaljhe</em> covered her face with a thick veil,
-and concealed herself behind the door&mdash;the
-Juno-like daughter (one of the most majestic
-women I ever remember to have seen, although
-very far from one of the tallest) flung a handkerchief
-over her head, and fastened it beneath
-her chin: while the son’s wife caught up a
-<em>feridjhe</em>, or cloak, and withdrew, muffled amid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-its folds, to her own apartment. The elder lady
-was the only one of the party undisturbed by
-the intelligence: she never raised her eyes from
-the carpet, but continued inhaling the aroma
-of the “scented weed,” gravely grasping her
-long pipe, her lips pressed against its amber
-mouthpiece, and her brilliant rings and diamond-studded
-bracelet flashing in the light.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes, the aged father of the family
-was squatted down immediately opposite to my
-seat, smothered in furs, and crowned with the
-most stately looking turban I had yet seen: on
-one side of him stood a slave with his chibouk,
-which his wife had just filled and lighted, and
-on the other his elder son, holding the little
-brass dish in which the pipe-bowl is deposited
-to protect the carpet. Near him, on another
-cushion, lay the tobacco-bag of gold-embroidered
-cachemire, from which the said son was about
-to regale himself, after having supplied the wants
-of his father: and a few paces nearer to the
-door reclined the handsome Soliman Effendi, the
-adopted son to whom I have already alluded.</p>
-
-<p>While the party were refreshing themselves
-with coffee, which was shortly afterwards served
-to them, a cry from the minarets of a neighbouring
-mosque announced the hour of prayer;
-when the old man gravely laid aside his pipe,
-and, spreading a crimson rug above the carpet
-near the spot where he had been sitting, turned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-his face to the East, and began his devotions by
-stroking down his beard and falling upon his
-knees, or rather squatting himself in a doubled-up
-position which it were impossible to describe.
-For a while his lips moved rapidly, though not
-a sound escaped them, and then suddenly he
-prostrated himself three times, and pressed his
-forehead to the carpet, rose, and folding his arms
-upon his breast, continued his prayer&mdash;resumed
-after a brief space his original position, rocking
-his body slowly to and fro&mdash;again bent down&mdash;and,
-repeated the whole of these ceremonies three
-times, concluding his orison by extending his
-open palms towards Heaven; after which, he once
-more slowly and reverentially passed his hand
-down his beard, and, without uttering a syllable,
-returned to his seat and his pipe, while a slave
-folded the rug and laid it aside. I remarked
-that at intervals, during the prayer, he threw
-out a long respiration, as though he had been
-collecting his breath for several seconds ere he
-suffered it to escape, but throughout the whole
-time not a single word was audible. The rest
-of the party continued to laugh, chat, and smoke
-quite unconcernedly, however, during the devotions
-of the master of the house, who appeared
-so thoroughly absorbed as to be utterly unconscious
-of all that was going on around him.</p>
-
-<p>I ought not to have omitted to mention that, on
-entering the harem, each of the gentlemen of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-family had deposited on a table at the extremity
-of the apartment his evening offering; for no
-Turk, however high his rank, returns home for
-the night, when the avocations of the day are
-over, empty-handed: it signifies not how trifling
-may be the value of his burthen&mdash;a cluster
-of grapes&mdash;a paper of sweetmeats&mdash;or, among
-the lower orders, a few small fish, or a head of
-salad&mdash;every individual is bound to make an
-offering to the <em>Dei Penates</em>; and to fail in this
-duty is to imply that he is about to repudiate
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p>The father of the eldest son, Usuf Effendi,
-had brought home Ramazan cakes, but Soliman
-Effendi deposited on the tandour a <em>boksha</em>, or
-handkerchief of clear muslin wrought with gold
-threads, and containing sweetmeats; among
-them were a quantity of Barcelona nuts, which,
-in Turkey, are shelled, slightly dried in the oven,
-and eaten with raisins, as almonds are in Europe.
-In the course of the evening, the elder lady resumed
-her place at the tandour; and, in the intervals
-of the conversation, she amused herself
-by burning one of the nuts at a candle, and,
-having reduced it to a black and oily substance
-with great care and patience, she took up a
-small round hand-mirror, set into a frame-work
-of purple velvet, embroidered in silver that
-was buried among her cushions, and began
-to stain her eyebrows, making them meet over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-the nose, and shaping them with an art which
-nothing but long practice could have enabled
-her to acquire.</p>
-
-<p>Their questions were of the most puerile description&mdash;my
-age&mdash;why I did not marry&mdash;whether
-I liked Constantinople&mdash;if I could read
-and write, &amp;c., &amp;c.; but no impertinent comment
-on fashions and habits so different from their
-own escaped them: on the contrary, they were
-continually remarking how much I must find
-every thing in Turkey inferior to what I had
-been accustomed to in Europe: and they lost
-themselves in wonder at the resolution that
-had decided me to visit a part of the world
-where I must suffer so many privations. Of
-course, I replied as politely as I could to these
-complimentary comments; and my companion
-and myself being much fatigued with the exertions
-that we had made during the day, we determined
-to retire to our apartment, without waiting to
-partake of the second repast, which is served up
-between two and three o’clock in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>From this period the Turks remain smoking,
-and sipping their coffee, detailing news, and
-telling stories, an amusement to which they
-are extremely partial, until there is sufficient
-light to enable them to distinguish between
-a black thread and a white one, when the
-fast is scrupulously resumed. But it may be
-curious to remark, that, as not even a draught<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-of water can be taken until the evening meal,
-and, (still greater privation to the Osmanli,)
-not a pipe can be smoked, they have adopted a
-singular expedient for appeasing the cravings
-of re-awakening appetite. They cause opium
-pills to be prepared, enveloped in one, two,
-and three coatings of gold leaf; and these they
-swallow at the last moment when food is
-permitted to be taken; under the impression
-that each will produce its intended effect at a
-given time, which is determined by the number
-of envelopes that have to disengage themselves
-from the drug before it can act.</p>
-
-<p>The apartment wherein we passed the night
-was spacious and lofty; and the ceiling was lined
-with canvass, on which a large tree in full leaf
-was painted in oils; and, as this was the great
-ornament of the room, and, moreover, considered
-as a model of ingenious invention, one of
-the slaves did not fail to point out to us that
-the canvass, instead of being tightly stretched,
-was mounted loosely on a slight frame, which,
-when the air entered from the open windows,
-permitted an undulation intended to give to the
-tree the effect of reality. I do not think that
-I was ever more amused&mdash;for the branches
-resembled huge boa constrictors much more
-than any thing connected with the vegetable
-kingdom: and every leaf was as large and as
-black as the crown of a man’s hat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>Our beds were composed of mattresses laid
-one above the other upon the floor, and these
-were of the most costly description; mine being
-yellow satin brocaded with gold, and that of
-my companion violet-coloured velvet, richly
-fringed. A Turkish bed is arranged in an instant&mdash;the
-mattresses are covered with a sheet
-of silk gauze, or striped muslin, (my own on this
-occasion was of the former material)&mdash;half a
-dozen pillows of various forms and sizes are
-heaped up at the head, all in richly embroidered
-muslin cases, through which the satin containing
-the down is distinctly seen&mdash;and a couple of
-wadded coverlets are laid at the feet, carefully
-folded: no second sheet is considered necessary,
-as the coverlets are lined with fine white linen.
-Those which were provided for us were of pale
-blue silk, worked with rose-coloured flowers.</p>
-
-<p>At the lower end of every Turkish room are
-large closets for the reception of the bedding;
-and the slaves no sooner ascertain that you have
-risen, than half a dozen of them enter the apartment,
-and in five minutes every vestige of your
-couch has disappeared&mdash;you hurry from the bed
-to the bath, whence you cannot possibly escape
-in less than two hours&mdash;and the business of the
-day is then generally terminated for a Turkish
-lady. All that remains to be done is to sit under
-the covering of the tandour, passing the beads
-of a perfumed chaplet rapidly through the fingers
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-fingers&mdash;arranging and re-arranging the head-dress
-and ornaments&mdash;or to put on the <em>yashmac</em> and
-<em>feridjhe</em>, and sally forth, accompanied by two or
-three slaves, to pay visits to favourite friends;
-either on foot, in yellow boots reaching up to the
-swell of the leg, over which a slipper of the same
-colour is worn; or in an araba, or carriage of
-the country, all paint, gilding, and crimson cloth,
-nestled among cushions, and making more use
-of her eyes than any being on earth save a
-Turkish woman would, with the best inclination
-in the world, be able to accomplish; such finished
-coquetry I never before witnessed as that of
-the Turkish ladies in the street. As the araba
-moves slowly along, the <em>feridjhe</em> is flung back
-to display its white silk lining and bullion tassels;
-and, should a group of handsome men be
-clustered on the pathway, that instant is accidentally
-chosen for arranging the <em>yashmac</em>. The
-dark-eyed dames of Spain, accomplished as they
-are in the art, never made more use of the
-graceful veil than do the orientals of the jealous
-<em>yashmac</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The taste for “shopping”&mdash;what an excellent
-essay might the “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">piquante</em> and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">spirituelle</em>” Lady
-Morgan write on this universal feminine mania!&mdash;is
-as great among the eastern ladies as with
-their fair European sisters; but it is indulged
-in a totally different manner. Constantinople
-boasts no commercial palace like those of Howell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-and James, or Storr and Mortimer; and still
-less a Maradan Carson: no carriage draws up
-at the door of an Ebers or a Sams for “the last
-new novel;” nor does a well-warmed and well-floored
-bazar tempt the satin-slippered dame
-to wander among avenues of glittering gewgaws
-and elaborated trifles: the carriage of the
-veiled Osmanli stops at the door of some merchant
-who has a handsome shopman; and the name
-of the latter, having been previously ascertained,
-Sadak or Mustapha, as the case may be, is ordered
-by the <em>arabajhe</em>, or coachman, to exhibit
-to his mistress some article of merchandize,
-which he brings accordingly, and, while the lady
-affects to examine its quality and to decide on
-its value, she enters into conversation with the
-youth, playing upon him meanwhile the whole
-artillery of her fine eyes. The questioning generally
-runs nearly thus:&mdash;“What is your name?”&mdash;“How
-old are you?”&mdash;“Are you married?”&mdash;“Were
-you ever in love?”&mdash;and similar misplaced
-and childish questions. Should the replies
-of the interrogated person amuse her, and his
-beauty appear as great on a nearer view as when
-seen from a distance, the merchandize is objected
-to, and the visit repeated frequently, ere the
-fastidious taste of the purchaser can be satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>Nor are women of high rank exempt from
-this indelicate fancy, which can only be accounted
-for by the belief that, like caged birds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-occasionally set free, they do not know how to
-use their liberty: the Sultana Hayb&eacute;toullah,
-sister to his Sublime Highness, the Light of the
-Ottoman Empire, is particularly attached to this
-extraordinary <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">passe-temps</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning we started on an exploring
-expedition, accompanied by the closely-veiled
-and heavily-draped “Juno,” and attended
-by her nurse and child, and her quaintly-habited
-footman; and, as the carriage could not approach
-the house by a considerable distance, owing to
-the narrowness and steepness of the streets in
-that quarter of the city, (which, built upon the
-crest and down the slope of one of the “seven
-hills,” overlooks the glittering and craft-clustered
-port), we were obliged to walk to it
-through the frozen snow, upon the same principle
-that, as the mountain would not go to Mahomet,
-Mahomet was compelled to go to the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>Directly I cast my eyes on the carriage, I had
-an excellent idea of that which the fairy godmother
-of Cinderella created for her favourite
-out of a pumpkin. Its form was that of a small
-covered waggon; its exterior was all crimson
-cloth, blue silk fringe, and tassels; and its inside
-precisely resembled a cake of gilt gingerbread.
-Four round looking-glasses, just sufficiently
-large to reflect the features, were impannelled
-on either side of the doors; and in the place of
-windows we had gilt lattices, so closely made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-that our position was the very reverse of cheerful;
-and, as I found it, moreover, quite impossible
-to breathe freely, these lattices were flung
-back despite the cold, and this arrangement
-being made, I established myself very comfortably
-on the satin cushions, with my feet doubled
-under me <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">&agrave; la Turque</em>, amid the piled-up luxuries
-of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">duvet</em> and embroidery.</p>
-
-<p>Our first visit was to the charshees, or, as
-Europeans for some inexplicable reason have
-the habit of calling them, the “bazars”&mdash;the
-word bazar literally signifying market&mdash;and,
-as the carriage rattled under the heavy portal,
-my first feeling was that of extreme disappointment.
-The great attraction of these establishments
-is undeniably their vast extent, for in
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tenue</em> and richness they are as inferior to our
-own miniature bazars in London as possible.
-Rudely paved&mdash;disagreeably dirty&mdash;plentifully
-furnished with <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">&eacute;gouts</em>, of which both the sight
-and the scent are unpleasing&mdash;badly lighted&mdash;clumsily
-built&mdash;and so constructed as to afford
-no idea of the space they cover, until you have
-wandered through the whole of their mazes, your
-involuntary impression is one of wonder at the
-hyperboles which have been lavished on them by
-travellers, and the uncalled-for extacies of tour-writers.</p>
-
-<p>The charshees are like a little commercial
-town, roofed in; each street being appropriated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-to one particular trade or calling; and presenting
-relative degrees of attraction and luxury,
-from the diamond-merchant’s counter to the
-cushions of the shawl and fur-menders.</p>
-
-<p>The Beizensteen is wonderfully rich in jewels,
-but in order to witness the display of these you
-must be, or be likely to become, a purchaser, as
-only a few, and those of comparatively small value,
-are exposed in the glass cases which ornament
-the counters. Nearly the whole of the jewellers
-are Armenians; as well as the money-changers,
-who transact business in their immediate vicinity.
-Indeed, all the steady commerce on a
-great scale in the capital may be said to be, with
-very slight exceptions, in the hands of the Armenians,
-who have the true, patient, plodding,
-calculating spirit of trade; while the wilder speculations
-of hazardous and ambitious enterprise
-are grasped with avidity by the more daring and
-adventurous Greeks; and hence arises the fact,
-for which it is at first sight difficult to account,
-that the most wealthy and the most needy of
-the merchants of Stamboul are alike of that nation:
-while you rarely see an Armenian either
-limited in his means, or obtrusive in his style.</p>
-
-<p>In the street of the embroiderers, whose stalls
-make a very gay appearance, being hung all
-over with tobacco-bags, purses, and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coiffures</em>,
-wrought in gold and silver, we purchased a
-couple of richly-worked handkerchiefs, used by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-the ladies of the country for binding up the
-hair after the bath, and which are embroidered
-with a taste and skill truly admirable.</p>
-
-<p>Thence we drove to the shoe bazar, where
-slippers worked with seed-pearls, and silver and
-gold thread, upon velvets of every shade and
-colour, make a very handsome and tempting appearance;
-and among these are ranged circular
-looking-glasses, of which the frames, backs, and
-handles are similarly ornamented. The scent-dealers
-next claimed our attention, and their
-quarter is indeed a miniature embodiment of
-“Araby the Blest,” for the atmosphere is one
-cloud of perfume. Here we were fully enabled
-to understand <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">l’embarras des richesses</em>, for all
-the sweets of the East and West tempted us at
-once, from the long and slender <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">flacon</em> of Eau
-de Cologne, to the small, gilded, closely-enveloped
-bottle of attar-gul. Nor less luxurious
-was the atmosphere of the spice bazar, with its
-pyramids of cloves, its piles of cinnamon, and its
-bags of mace&mdash;and, while the porcelain dealers
-allured us into their neighbourhood by a dazzling
-display, comprising every variety of ancient and
-modern china; silks, velvets, Broussa satins, and
-gold gauze in their turn invited us in another
-direction&mdash;and, in short, I left the charshees
-with aching eyes, and a very confused impression
-of this great mart of luxury and expence.</p>
-
-<p>It was a most fatiguing day; and I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-scarcely sorry when, having bade farewell to the
-hospitable family, who had so kindly and courteously
-received us as guests, we hastened to embark
-on board our ca&iuml;que, and in ten minutes
-found ourselves at Topphann&egrave;, whence we
-slowly mounted the steep ascent which terminates
-in the high-street of Pera, within a hundred
-yards of our temporary residence.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Turning Dervishes&mdash;Appearance of the Teki&egrave;&mdash;The Mausoleum&mdash;Duties
-of the Dervishes&mdash;Chapel of the Convent&mdash;The Chief Priest&mdash;Dress
-of the Brotherhood&mdash;Melancholy Music&mdash;Solemnity of the
-Service&mdash;Mistakes of a Modern Traveller&mdash;Explanation of the Ceremony&mdash;The
-Prayer&mdash;The Kiss of Peace&mdash;Appearance of the Chapel&mdash;Religious
-Tolerance of the Turks&mdash;The French Renegade&mdash;Sketch
-of Halet Effendi, the Founder of the Teki&egrave;.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I paid</span> two visits to the convent (if such,
-indeed, it may be termed) of Turning, or, as they
-are commonly called in Europe, Dancing Dervishes,
-which is situated opposite the Petit
-Champs des Morts, descending towards Galata.
-The court of the Teki&egrave; is entered by a handsomely
-ornamented gate, and, having passed it,
-you have the cemetery of the brethren on your
-left hand, and the gable of the main building
-on your right. As you arrive in front of the
-convent, the court widens, and in the midst
-stands a magnificent plane tree of great antiquity,
-carefully railed in; while you have on
-one side the elegant mausoleum in which repose
-the superiors of the order; and on the other
-the fountain of white marble, roofed in like an
-oratory, and enclosed on all its six sides from
-the weather, where the Dervishes perform their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-ablutions ere they enter the chapel. The mausoleum
-is of the octagon form, the floor being
-raised two steps in the centre, leaving a space
-all round, just sufficiently wide for one person to
-pass along. The sarcophagi are covered with
-plain clay-coloured cloth, and at the head of each
-tomb is placed the <em>geulaf</em>, or Dervishes’ hat, encircled
-by a clear muslin handkerchief, embroidered
-with tinted silks and gold thread. A large
-gilt frame, enclosing the representation of a hat
-wrought in needlework, and standing on a slab,
-on which is inscribed a sentence from the Koran,
-rests against one of the sarcophagi, and huge
-wax-candles in plain clay-coloured candlesticks
-are scattered among the tombs.</p>
-
-<p>The Teki&egrave; is a handsome building with projecting
-wings, in which the community live
-very comfortably with their wives and children;
-and whence, having performed their religious
-duties, they sally forth to their several avocations
-in the city, and mingle with their fellow-men
-upon equal terms. Unlike the monks of the
-church of Rome, the Dervishes are forbidden to
-accumulate wealth in order to enrich either themselves
-or their convent. The most simple fare,
-the least costly garments, serve alike for their
-own use, and for that of their families: industry,
-temperance, and devotion are their duties; and,
-as they are at liberty to secede from their self-imposed
-obligations whenever they see fit to do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-so, there is no lukewarmness among the community,
-who find time throughout the whole year
-to devote many hours to God, even of their most
-busy days; and, unlike their fellow-citizens, the
-other Mussulmauns, they throw open the doors of
-their chapel to strangers, only stipulating that
-gentlemen shall put off their shoes ere they enter.</p>
-
-<p>This chapel, which has been erroneously designated
-a “mosque,” is an octagon building
-of moderate size, neatly painted in fresco. The
-centre of the floor is railed off, and the enclosure
-is sacred to the brotherhood; while
-the outer circle, covered with Indian matting, is
-appropriated to visiters. A deep gallery runs
-round six sides of the building, and beneath it,
-on your left hand as you enter, you remark the
-lattices through which the Turkish women witness
-the service. A narrow mat surrounds the
-circle within the railing, and upon this the
-brethren kneel during the prayers; while the
-centre of the floor is so highly polished by the
-perpetual friction that it resembles a mirror, and
-the boards are united by nails with heads as large
-as a shilling, to prevent accidents to the feet of
-the Dervishes during their evolutions. A bar
-of iron descends octagonally from the centre of
-the domed roof, to which transverse bars are attached,
-bearing a vast number of glass lamps of
-different colours and sizes; and, against many of
-the pillars, of which I counted four-and-twenty,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-supporting the dome, are hung frames, within
-which are inscribed passages from the Prophets.</p>
-
-<p>Above the seat of the superior, the name of the
-founder of the Teki&egrave; is written in gold on a black
-ground, in immense characters. This seat consists
-of a small carpet, above which is spread
-a crimson rug, and on this the worthy principal
-was squatted when we entered, in an ample
-cloak of Spanish brown, with large hanging
-sleeves, and his geulaf, or high hat of grey felt,
-encircled with a green shawl. I pitied him that
-his back was turned towards the glorious Bosphorus,
-that was distinctly seen through the
-four large windows at the extremity of the
-chapel, flashing in the light, with the slender
-minarets and lordly mosques of Stamboul gleaming
-out in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>One by one, the Dervishes entered the chapel,
-bowing profoundly at the little gate of the enclosure,
-took their places on the mat, and, bending
-down, reverently kissed the ground; and
-then, folding their arms meekly on their breasts,
-remained buried in prayer, with their eyes closed,
-and their bodies swinging slowly to and fro.
-They were all enveloped in wide cloaks of dark
-coloured cloth with pendent sleeves; and wore
-their geulafs, which they retained during the
-whole of the service.</p>
-
-<p>I confess that the impression produced on
-my mind by the idea of Dancing Dervishes was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-the very reverse of solemn; and I was, in consequence,
-quite unprepared for the effect that
-the exhibition of their religious rites cannot fail
-to exert on all those who are not predetermined
-to find food for mirth in every sectarian peculiarity.
-The deep stillness, broken only by the
-breath of prayer, or the melancholy wailing of
-the muffled instruments, which seemed to send
-forth their voice of sadness from behind a
-cloud in subdued sorrowing, like the melodious
-plaint of angels over fallen mortality&mdash;the concentrated
-and pious self-forgetfulness of the community,
-who never once cast their eyes over the
-crowds that thronged their chapel&mdash;the deep,
-rich chant of the choral brethren&mdash;even the
-very contrast afforded by the light and fairy-like
-temple in which they thus meekly ministered
-to their Maker, with their own calm and
-inspired appearance, heightened the effect of the
-scene; and tacitly rebuked the presumption and
-worldliness of spirit that would have sought a
-jest in the very sanctuary of religion.</p>
-
-<p>The service commenced with an extemporaneous
-prayer from the chief priest, to which the
-attendant Dervishes listened with arms folded
-upon their breasts, and their eyes fixed on the
-ground. At its conclusion, all bowed their
-foreheads to the earth; and the orchestra struck
-into one of those peculiarly wild and melancholy
-Turkish airs which are unlike any other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-music that I ever heard. Instantly, the full
-voices of the brethren joined in chorus, and the
-effect was thrilling: now the sounds died away
-like the exhausted breath of a departing spirit,
-and suddenly they swelled once more into
-a deep and powerful diapason that seemed
-scarce earthly. A second stillness of about a
-minute succeeded, when the low, solemn music
-was resumed, and the Dervishes, slowly rising
-from the earth, followed their superior three
-times round the enclosure; bowing down twice
-under the shadow of the name of their Founder,
-suspended above the seat of the high priest.
-This reverence was performed without removing
-their folded arms from their breasts&mdash;the first
-time on the side by which they approached, and
-afterwards on that opposite, which they gained
-by slowly revolving on the right foot, in such a
-manner as to prevent their turning their backs
-towards the inscription. The procession was
-closed by a second prostration, after which, each
-Dervish having gained his place, cast off his
-cloak, and such as had walked in woollen
-slippers withdrew them, and, passing solemnly
-before the Chief Priest, they commenced their
-evolutions.</p>
-
-<p>I am by no means prepared, nor even inclined,
-to attempt a Quixotic defence of the very extraordinary
-and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bizarre</em> ceremonial to which I
-was next a witness; but I cannot, nevertheless,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-agree with a modern traveller in describing it as
-“an absurdity.” That it does not accord with
-our European ideas of consistent and worthy
-worship is not only possible, but certain; yet
-I should imagine that no one could feel other
-than respect for men of irreproachable character,
-serving God according to their means of judgment.</p>
-
-<p>The extraordinary ceremony which gives its
-name to the Dancing, or, as they are really and
-much more appropriately called, the Turning
-Dervishes&mdash;for nothing can be more utterly
-unlike dancing than their evolutions&mdash;is not
-without its meaning. The community first pray
-for pardon of their past sins, and the amendment
-of their future lives; and then, after a silent
-supplication for strength to work out the
-change, they figure, by their peculiar and
-fatiguing movements, their anxiety to “shake
-the dust from their feet,” and to cast from them
-all worldly ties.</p>
-
-<p>As I could not reconcile myself to believe that
-the custom could have grown out of mere whim,
-I took some pains to ascertain its meaning,
-as well as visiting the chapel a second time
-during its observance, in order to ascertain whether
-the ceremonies differed on different days,
-but I remarked no change.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after passing with a solemn reverence,
-twice performed, the place of the High<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-Priest, who remained standing, the Dervishes
-spread their arms, and commenced their revolving
-motion; the palm of the right hand being
-held upwards, and that of the left turned down.
-Their under-dresses (for, as I before remarked,
-they had laid aside their cloaks) consisted of a
-jacket and petticoat of dark coloured cloth,
-that descended to their feet; the higher order
-of brethren being clad in green, and the others
-in brown, or a sort of yellowish gray; about
-their waists they wore wide girdles, edged with
-red, to which the right side of the jacket was
-closely fastened, while the left hung loose: their
-petticoats were of immense width, and laid in
-large plaits beneath the girdle, and, as the
-wearers swung round, formed a bell-like appearance;
-these latter garments, however, are only
-worn during the ceremony, and are exchanged
-in summer for white ones of lighter material.</p>
-
-<p>The number of those who were “on duty,”
-for I know not how else to express it, was nine;
-seven of them being men, and the remaining
-two, mere boys, the youngest certainly not more
-than ten years of age. Nine, eleven, and thirteen
-are the mystic numbers, which, however great
-the strength of community, are never exceeded;
-and the remaining members of the brotherhood,
-during the evolutions of their companions, continue
-engaged in prayer within the enclosure.
-These on this occasion amounted to about a score,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-and remained each leaning against a pillar: while
-the beat of the drum in the gallery marked the
-time to which the revolving Dervishes moved, and
-the effect was singular to a degree that baffles
-description. So true and unerring were their
-motions, that, although the space which they occupied
-was somewhat circumscribed, they never
-once gained upon each other: and for five
-minutes they continued twirling round and
-round, as though impelled by machinery, their
-pale, passionless countenances perfectly immobile,
-their heads slightly declined towards
-the right shoulder, and their inflated garments
-creating a cold, sharp air in the chapel, from the
-rapidity of their action. At the termination
-of that period, the name of the Prophet occurred
-in the chant, which had been unintermitted
-in the gallery; and, as they simultaneously
-paused, and, folding their hands upon their
-breasts, bent down in reverence at the sound,
-their ample garments wound about them at the
-sudden check, and gave them, for a moment, the
-appearance of mummies.</p>
-
-<p>An interval of prayer followed; and the same
-ceremony was performed three times; at the termination
-of which they all fell prostrate on the
-earth, when those who had hitherto remained
-spectators flung their cloaks over them, and the
-one who knelt on the left of the Chief Priest
-rose, and delivered a long prayer divided into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-sections, with a rapid and solemn voice, prolonging
-the last word of each sentence by the utterance
-of “ha&mdash;ha&mdash;ha”&mdash;with a rich depth of
-octave that would not have disgraced Phillips.</p>
-
-<p>This prayer was for “the great ones of the
-earth”&mdash;the magnates of the land&mdash;all who
-were “in authority over them;” and at each
-proud name they bowed their heads upon their
-breasts, until that of the Sultan was mentioned,
-when they once more fell flat upon the ground,
-to the sound of the most awful howl I ever
-heard.</p>
-
-<p>This outburst from the gallery terminated
-the labours of the orchestra; and the superior,
-rising to his knees while the others continued
-prostrate, in his turn prayed for a few instants;
-and then, taking his stand upon the crimson rug,
-they approached him one by one, and, clasping
-his hand, pressed it to their lips and forehead.
-When the first had passed, he stationed himself
-on the right of the superior, and awaited the arrival
-of the second, who, on reaching him, bestowed
-on him also the kiss of peace, which he had
-just proffered to the Chief Priest; and each in
-succession performed the same ceremony to all
-those who had preceded him, which was acknowledged
-by gently stroking down the beard.</p>
-
-<p>This was the final act of the exhibition; and,
-the superior having slowly and silently traversed
-the enclosure, in five seconds the chapel was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-empty, and the congregation busied at the portal
-in reclaiming their boots, shoes, and slippers.</p>
-
-<p>I had never hitherto seen such picturesque
-groups as those which thronged the Dervishes’
-chapel on my second visit; nor did I
-ever witness more perfect order in any public
-assembly. A deep stillness reigned throughout
-the whole ceremony, only broken by the sobs of
-a middle-aged Turk who stood near me, and
-who was so much overcome by the saddening
-wail of the orchestra that he could not restrain
-his tears; a circumstance by no means uncommon
-in this country, where all ranks are peculiarly
-susceptible to the influence of music.</p>
-
-<p>The interior of the edifice was a perfect picture,
-of which the soberly-clad Dervishes occupied
-the centre; while the exterior circle was
-peopled with groups of soldiers in their coarse
-wrapping coats and red caps&mdash;venerable Turks
-in claret-coloured pelisses, richly furred&mdash;descendants
-of Mahomet, with their green turbans
-and portly beards&mdash;and peasants in their rude
-suits of dusky brown; all equally intent, and
-all equally orderly.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks are extremely tolerant with regard
-to religious opinions; their creed being split
-into as many sects as that of the Church of England;
-and each individual being left equally free
-to follow, as he sees fit, the dictates of his conscience.
-The Dervishes are of several different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-orders. The <em>Mivlavies</em> are materialists in their
-faith; the <em>Zerrins</em> worship the Virgin Mary; and
-the <em>Bektachis</em> believe in the Saviour and the twelve
-apostles; every order has its peculiar constitution,
-differing from the dogmas of simple Islamism;
-but they are universally venerated by Musselmauns,
-despite their sectarian prejudices. They
-are generally versed in astrology and music; exorcise
-sufferers from witchcraft and the evil eye;
-and are always of quiet and submissive manners,
-never mingling either in the intrigues of the
-court, or the cabals of the Ul&eacute;mas.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising that the Turks should
-venerate their own Dervishes, when they not
-only tolerate but even respect the Christian
-monks, and regard their monasteries as holy
-places, bearing the names of saints, and inhabited
-by men wholly devoted to God. To such
-a height, indeed, do they carry this reverence,
-that they permit the communities of several convents
-built on the charming little group of
-islands, called “Princes’ Islands,” situated in
-the Propontis, not more than two leagues from
-Constantinople, to be summoned to their chapel
-to prayer by the ringing of bells; a privilege
-which is not accorded to any Christian church
-devoted to a general congregation; but perhaps
-the greatest proof that can be adduced of their
-veneration for religious societies exists in the
-fact that in the mausoleum of the principal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-Teki&egrave; at Iconium lies one of the most celebrated
-of Musselmaun saints, Mollah Hunkiar, and
-beside him a Christian monk, to whom he had
-been so tenderly attached during his life, that he
-desired in his will that they should not be separated
-after death. The two tombs still exist,
-and what renders the anecdote still more worthy
-of record, is the circumstance that it is the
-Ch&egrave;&iuml;k or Abbot of this very monastery, who has
-the privilege of girding on the sword of the
-Sultan in the Mosque of Eyoub, on his accession
-to the Ottoman throne.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks do not consider their women
-worthy to become Dervishes, but they, nevertheless,
-respect the Christian nuns; and a somewhat
-curious proof of this fact was given in
-1818, on the receipt by the Sultan and his favourite
-minister, Halet Effendi, of two petitions
-drawn up by a sisterhood at Genoa, in which
-were set forth the injuries done to their convent
-by the French Republicans, terminating with a
-prayer to “his very pious Highness,” to send
-to them, as a present, three Turkey carpets to
-cover the floor of their chapel, one of which was
-to be crimson, a second purple, and the third
-green; and in return they promised to pray for
-the health, prosperity, and glory of the august
-head of the Ottoman Empire. The Sultan gallantly
-acceded to their request, and the compatriotes
-of Roxalana received with the least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-possible delay the magnificent donation by which
-a Musselmaun Emperor contributed to the
-adornment of a temple dedicated to Christian
-worship.</p>
-
-<p>In the cemetery of the Teki&egrave; at Pera lies the
-body of the Marquis de Bonneval, a French
-renegade who died a pasha; and the stone slab
-yet remains there that once covered the head of
-Halet Effendi, the founder of the convent, which,
-I have omitted to mention, is built entirely of
-marble. The head of the Effendi has, however,
-been removed to a less sacred place of
-burial, and has found a traitor’s grave.</p>
-
-<p>Halet Effendi, once the favourite of the Sultan,
-was the cause of the Greek insurrection, which he
-brought about to conceal his own disloyal views.
-Having, by his intrigues, caused the appointment
-of Michel Suzzo to the principality of Moldavia,
-and having been reproached with the
-disaffection of Suzzo towards his Imperial
-master, the minister, who was responsible for
-the conduct and loyalty of his Greek <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">prot&eacute;g&eacute;</em>,
-boldly replied that the disaffection towards the
-Sultan was not that of Suzzo individually, but
-of his whole nation; an assertion which he immediately
-proceeded to bear out by exciting the
-Greeks covertly to rebellion; and he was so well
-seconded by his creature that, when Ypsalanti
-reared his standard in the provinces, Suzzo
-joined his banner, and the insurrection in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-Morea, and the revolt of the Greeks in Constantinople,
-with the murder of the Patriarch, were
-the fearful consequences of the rebellious coalition;
-a treason which Mahmoud visited on his
-favourite with a sentence of exile to Iconia,
-giving him, at the same time, an autograph
-letter, in which he pledged himself to respect
-both his life and property; but, after the lapse of
-a few years, repenting an act of clemency so
-misplaced, the Sultan dispatched a Capedjee-basha,
-furnished with a Firman of recall, to his
-banished courtier, who found Halet Effendi at
-Iconia, and presented his credentials. The
-exile, overjoyed at so sudden and unlooked-for
-a change in his fortunes, lost no time in preparing
-for his return to Constantinople; but he
-had not long confided himself to the keeping of
-the Capedjee-basha when the bowstring terminated
-his existence, and the executioner hastened
-back to Stamboul, carrying along with
-him the head of his victim.</p>
-
-<p>This ghastly memorial of their benefactor was
-consigned, at their urgent request, to the Dervishes
-of Pera, who buried it in their grave-yard,
-beneath the small slab of stone, which, in a
-Turkish cemetery, indicates to the initiated that
-the deceased above whom it is placed has perished
-by violence; but it had not lain there more
-than a few days, when the Sultan chanced to
-inquire how it had been disposed of; and, hear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>ing
-that it had received burial at this Teki&egrave;, of
-whose order, entitled Mevlavies, he is himself a
-member, (and whose chapel in which he formerly
-performed his evolutions he still frequents, although
-in private, occupying, on his visits, one of
-the latticed closets,) he ordered that it should be
-immediately disinterred and carried to Balata,
-where the common sewers of the city empty
-themselves into the Bosphorus. This was accordingly
-done; and the turban-crested pillar that
-surmounts the slab now only serves to indicate
-the spot where rested for a few brief days the
-dishonoured head of Halet Effendi.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Merchants of Galata&mdash;Palaces of Pera&mdash;Picturesque style of Building&mdash;The
-Perotes&mdash;Social Subjects&mdash;Greeks, European and Schismatic&mdash;Ambassadorial
-Residences&mdash;Entr&eacute;e of the Embassies&mdash;The Carnival&mdash;Soir&eacute;es
-Dansantes&mdash;The Austrian Minister&mdash;Madame la Baronne&mdash;The
-Russian Minister&mdash;Madame de Boutenieff&mdash;The Masked Ball&mdash;Russian
-Supremacy&mdash;The Prussian Plenipotentiary&mdash;The Sardinian
-Charg&eacute; d’Affaires&mdash;Diplomacy Unhoused&mdash;Society of Pera.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Neither</span> Frank nor Christian is allowed to
-inhabit the “City of the Faithful;” and the
-faubourg of Pera, situated on the opposite side
-of the port, is consequently the head-quarters
-of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">&eacute;lite</em> of European society. Galata, which
-skirts the shore of the Bosphorus at the base of
-the hill on which Pera is built, numbers among
-its inhabitants many very respectable merchants,
-whose avocations demand their continual
-presence; but Pera is the dwelling-place
-of the beau-monde&mdash;the seat of fashion&mdash;the
-St. James’s of the capital. Here every thing
-social is <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en magnifique</em>: the residences attached
-to the different Legations glory in the imposing
-designations of “palaces”&mdash;the gloomy <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">magazins</em>
-of the Parisian <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">modistes</em> are as dear and as
-dirty as can be desired&mdash;all the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">employ&eacute;s</em> of
-diplomacy throng the narrow, steep, and ill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>-paved
-streets, while the fair Greeks look down
-upon them from their bay-windows, projecting
-far beyond the fa&ccedil;ade of the building; and the
-bright-eyed Armenians peer from their lattices
-“all-seeing, but unseen.” The quaintly-coloured
-houses, looking like tenements of painted pasteboard,
-appear as though a touch would make
-them meet, and are picturesque beyond description,
-as they advance and recede, setting all
-external order, regularity, and proportion, at
-defiance.</p>
-
-<p>In my rapid definition of European society, I
-must not omit to mention that the Perotes, or
-natives of Pera, consider themselves as much
-Franks as though they had been born and nurtured
-on the banks of the Thames or the Seine;
-and your expression of amusement at this very
-original notion would inevitably give great
-offence. Conceding this point, therefore, as one
-which will not admit of argument, I shall simply
-divide society into two parts&mdash;the diplomatic
-and the scandalous&mdash;premising, however, that
-it requires a delicate touch to separate them,
-they are so intimately interwoven. Those who
-have the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entr&eacute;e</em> of the several embassies criticise
-each other; while those who have not, exercise
-a still more powerful prerogative; and certain
-it is that, between the two, the population of
-Pera is a great circulating medium which would
-render an official “hue and cry” a work of su<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>pererogation.
-“Not a feather falls to the
-ground,” but in half an hour every individual
-in the place knows by whom it was plucked,
-and the tale is told with a raciness and a zest
-that would make the fortune of a Sunday paper.</p>
-
-<p>A nice distinction exists among the Greeks,
-on which they vehemently insist; the Greek
-Catholics consider themselves as Europeans,
-while the schismatic Greeks do not assume this
-privilege, of which the former are extremely
-jealous.</p>
-
-<p>After the residence of a few weeks, you can
-readily determine the origin of every female
-whom you encounter in the streets of Pera.
-The fair Perotes, indeed, wear the bonnet,
-the cloak, and the shawl, which form the walking
-garb of the genuine European gentlewoman;
-but, nevertheless, it is impossible not to distinguish
-them at a glance; an insurmountable
-taste for bright colours, an indescribable peculiarity
-in the adjustment of their toilette, at
-once mark the Perote; while the dark-eyed
-Greek is known by her wide-spreading turban
-of gauze or velvet, over which is flung a lace veil,
-which, falling low upon the back and shoulders,
-leaves the face almost entirely uncovered.</p>
-
-<p>Since the great fire of Pera, the Ambassadors
-of England and France have resided at Therapia,
-a pretty village on the banks of the Bosphorus,
-near the mouth of the Black Sea; but the Inter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>nuncio
-of Russia, the Ministers of Austria and
-Prussia, and the Charg&eacute;s d’Affaires of Sardinia
-and Holland, still inhabit the town daring the
-winter months. The Austrian palace, however,
-is the only one that now remains, the other diplomatic
-establishments being compressed into
-dwelling-houses; thus the Russian minister inhabits
-a mansion in the High Street, and the
-Dutch Charg&eacute; d’Affaires resides next door to us.</p>
-
-<p>The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entr&eacute;e</em> of the embassies is peculiarly easy
-to the resident Europeans, as their number is
-so limited that <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les grands convenances</em> are almost
-necessarily laid aside, and their Excellencies
-super-eminently tolerant with regard to the
-rank of their guests. Thus it is somewhat
-startling to a traveller, accustomed to the exclusive
-circles of Paris and London, to find, not
-only merchants and their wives at the diplomatic
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soir&eacute;es</em>, but even the head clerks and their
-fair partners. It is true that the mode of reception
-has gradations of graciousness,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">“Small by degrees, and beautifully less;”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>but this is mere matter of individual feeling
-and power of endurance&mdash;the fact remains unaltered.</p>
-
-<p>The Carnival had this year resumed its gaiety;
-men’s minds had begun to cast off the panic
-occasioned by the terrific conflagration which
-almost made the town a waste, and nearly ruined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-many of the inhabitants whose property consisted
-chiefly in houses.</p>
-
-<p>At the Austrian palace there were balls every
-Sunday throughout the Carnival, where mustachioes
-and diplomatic buttons were rife. The
-never-ending cotillon, the rapid mazurka, the
-quadrille, and waltz, were equally popular;
-and I have danced the first with a Greek, the
-second with a Russian, the third with a Frenchman,
-and the fourth with a German, during the
-course of the evening.</p>
-
-<p>The Baron de St&uuml;rmer, the Austrian minister,
-is about fifty years of age, partially bald, and
-remarkably grave-looking when not excited;
-but his address is peculiarly agreeable, and his
-smile like lightning.</p>
-
-<p>Madame la Baronne is a good specimen of the
-present school of Parisian breeding&mdash;her pride
-is blent with playfulness, and her courtesy is as
-gracious as it is graceful. Although <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tant soit peu
-precieuse</em>&mdash;she is perfectly free from pedantry,
-and is a delightful conversationist. She has
-memories of Napoleon at St. Helena, where she
-resided for several years; anecdotes, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">piquantes</em>
-and political&mdash;those well-worded and softly-articulated
-compliments which seat you upon velvet;
-and, above all, that air of genuine <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez aller
-insouciance</em> which no woman save a Parisian ever
-thoroughly acquires. I am indebted to the elegant
-hospitality of this lady for many of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-most pleasant hours that I spent in the Frank
-circle at Pera.</p>
-
-<p>M. de Boutenieff, the Russian minister, has
-a face which, for the first five minutes, baffles
-you by its contradictory expression&mdash;there is
-a character of benevolence and gentleness about
-the forehead and eyes that attracts, while the
-subtle curve of the lip repulses by its cast of
-craft and caution&mdash;his conversation is easy,
-courtly, and pleasing; and his unremitted good
-humour and affability render him universally
-popular in society. Madame de Boutenieff, who
-is his second wife, is young, graceful, and lively&mdash;an
-indefatigable dancer, and a fascinating
-hostess; and, moreover, the niece of Nesselrode.</p>
-
-<p>The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soir&eacute;es dansantes</em> at the Russian palace
-terminated with a masked ball, which worthily
-wound up the Carnival, and was sustained with
-great spirit. The fair hostess herself, with
-two ladies attached to the legation, and the wife
-of the French chancellor, personated angels, who
-were led into the ball-room by a <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">parti carr&eacute;</em> of
-devils, embodied by four of the Russian secretaries.
-Some of our politicians will assuredly smile
-at the conceit, nor can I forebear to admit the
-propriety of the fancy; for truly, when I consider
-the number of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em> to the Russian Legation,
-as compared with that of the other powers at
-this court, I am inclined to allow that “their
-name is legion.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>Even in a ball-room the Russian supremacy
-is palpably evident&mdash;their number, their political
-power, their never-ceasing efforts at popularity&mdash;cannot
-be forgotten for a moment. There
-is diplomacy in every action&mdash;in every look&mdash;in
-every tone&mdash;and withal a self-gratulatory,
-quiet species of at-home-ness every where and
-with everybody, which shews you at once that
-they are quite at ease, at least, for the present.</p>
-
-<p>Exquisite, in the most wide acceptation of
-the term, in their costume&mdash;affectedly refined
-and aristocratic in their manners&mdash;<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">acharn&eacute;s
-pour la danse</em>&mdash;“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">passant la moiti&eacute; de leur temps
-&agrave; rien faire, et l’autre moiti&eacute; &agrave; faire des riens</em>,”
-the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em> of M. de Boutenieff, upwards of thirty
-in number, are as busily employed in turning heads
-and winning hearts, as though the great
-stake which they came here to play were but
-the secondary object of their mission.</p>
-
-<p>Count K&ouml;nigsmark, the Prussian minister, is
-a high-bred and accomplished gentleman: distinguished
-by that calm and graceful <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tenue</em> that
-sits so well on men of rank, and which is the
-most becoming attribute alike of mental and
-of social aristocracy.</p>
-
-<p>The Sardinian Charg&eacute; d’Affaires, General
-Montiglio, is of very retiring habits, and mixes
-little in general society; but he is a person of
-considerable acquirements, and an indefatigable
-sportsman. His domestic history is a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-romance, and may serve to account in a great
-measure for his love of retirement, and the hermit-like
-seclusion of his wife. Having made a
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mariage d’inclination</em> which was considered by
-the Sardinian court to be incompatible with his
-rank and position in society, he was sent into
-honourable exile to Smyrna, as Charg&eacute; d’Affaires,
-whence he was a short time since removed to
-Constantinople; where, as I before remarked, he
-is rarely met with amid the Perote crowd that
-fills the ambassadorial ball-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>The other foreign ministers play a comparatively
-insignificant <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">r&ocirc;le</em> in society; as, since the
-destruction of the several diplomatic residences
-in the great fire, they have been compelled to
-inhabit houses which are not calculated for reception;
-and it would appear as though they
-are likely to be long situated thus: the only
-palace in process of restoration being that of
-Russia. Here again is asserted the autocracy
-of the North&mdash;the English palace is in ruins,
-and parasites are wreathing, like emerald-coloured
-snakes, about its tottering walls&mdash;Holland,
-France, all save Austria, are</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">“Driven from their parch’d and blacken’d halls.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The evil is general&mdash;but the remedy has been
-applied, as yet, only in one instance.</p>
-
-<p>Close the doors of the diplomatic residences,
-and little more can be said for the European<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-society of Pera; it is about on a par with that
-of a third-rate provincial town in England.
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ennui</em> succeeds to curiosity, and indifference
-to <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</em>; and you gladly step into your ca&iuml;que,
-or your araba; or, better still, spring into your
-saddle, to recreate yourself among scenes of
-beauty and magnificence, and to escape from
-“the everlasting larum” of “rounded sentences
-which tend to nothing.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Greek Carnival&mdash;Kassim Pasha&mdash;The Marine Barrack&mdash;The
-Admiralty&mdash;Palace of the Capitan Pasha&mdash;Turkish Ships and Turkish
-Sailors&mdash;More Mistakes&mdash;Aqueduct of Justinian&mdash;The Sera&iuml;&mdash;The
-Arsenal&mdash;The “Sweet Waters”&mdash;The Fanar&mdash;Interior of a Greek
-House&mdash;Courteous Reception&mdash;Patriarchal Customs&mdash;Greek Ladies
-at Home&mdash;Confectionary and Coffee&mdash;A Greek Dinner&mdash;Ancient and
-Modern Greeks&mdash;A Few Words on Education&mdash;National Politeness&mdash;The
-Great Logotheti Aristarchi&mdash;His Politics&mdash;Sketch of his
-Father&mdash;His Domestic History&mdash;A Greek Breakfast&mdash;The Morning
-after a Ball&mdash;Greek Progress towards Civilization&mdash;Parallel between
-the Turk and the Greek.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Greek Carnival extends three days beyond
-that of the Europeans; and, such being
-the case, we gladly accepted an invitation to a
-ball to be given by a wealthy Cesarean merchant,
-resident at the Fanar, or Greek quarter
-of Constantinople; and I embarked in a ca&iuml;que,
-with my father, under one of those bright spring
-suns which make the Bosphorus glitter like a
-plate of polished steel.</p>
-
-<p>We took boat at Kassim Pasha, in the yard
-of the marine barrack, an extensive block of
-building, equally remarkable for its tawdry
-fresco-painted walls, and demolished windows;
-and close beside the Admiralty, a gay-looking
-edifice in the Russian taste, elaborately orna<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>mented
-throughout its exterior, and adorned
-with peristyles on three of its sides. The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rez-de
-chaussée</em> contains apartments appropriated to the
-principal persons of the establishment, and public
-offices for the transaction of business. The next
-range are sacred to the Sultan, who occasionally
-passes a morning at Kassim Pasha, inspecting
-the progress of the vessels of war now building:
-and from the windows of his saloons looking down
-upon the line-of-battle ships in the harbour.</p>
-
-<p>On a height a little in rear of the Admiralty
-stand the picturesque remains of the
-palace that was formerly inhabited by the
-Capitan Pasha; of which two long lines of
-grated arches still exist nearly perfect, having
-much the effect of an aqueduct; while a little
-cluster of towers, crowning the grass-grown acclivity,
-add a most interesting feature to the ruin.</p>
-
-<p>On all sides of the ca&iuml;que towered a lordly
-vessel with its bristling cannon, and painted
-or gilt stern gallery, lying peacefully at anchor
-in the land-locked harbour; while the
-largest frigate in the world was busily preparing
-for sea as we passed under her bows, and
-her deck was all alive with men, in their red
-caps and close blue jackets; but I fear that the
-blue jackets of England would scarce seek to
-claim brotherhood with the tars of Turkey, for
-they have, in sooth, but a “lubberly” look with
-them; and it is commonly remarked that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-Sultan has some of the finest vessels in the
-world, and some of the worst sailors.</p>
-
-<p>As this was the first day of unclouded sunshine
-on which I had crossed the port, I looked
-around me in order to discover the “gilded
-domes" of which a modern traveller has spoken;
-but, alas!&mdash;the truth must be told&mdash;not a
-mosque in Stamboul has a gilded dome; and
-the only approach to such a gorgeous object
-that I could discover were the gilded spires
-of the minarets of Sultan Mahmoud’s mosque
-at Topphann&egrave;; but, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en revanche</em>, the eye lingered
-long on the ruin of Justinian’s aqueduct,
-which rises hoar and dark above the clustering
-houses of the city, spanning the two hills against
-which it rests, as with the grasp of centuries&mdash;upon
-the glittering pinnacles of the Sera&iuml;, flashing
-out amid the tall cypresses that hem them
-in; and on the elegant, but nearly untenanted,
-Seraglio itself, which stands upon the very edge
-of the lake-like sea, mirrored in the clear waters.</p>
-
-<p>But these were soon left behind; and, as our
-sturdy rowers rapidly impelled us forward, we
-traced on our right hand the extensive outbuildings
-of the Arsenal, which bound the shore
-to the very extremity of the port, and only terminate
-at the point of the “Sweet Waters,”
-where a lovely river empties itself into the harbour,
-and gives its name to the locality.</p>
-
-<p>In ten minutes, we were at the Fanar, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-landed on a wooden terrace washed by the
-waters of the port; and in five more we had
-passed into the garden to which it belonged,
-and thence into the house of the hospitable
-family who had offered us a home for the night.</p>
-
-<p>Having traversed an extensive hall paved
-with stone, whence three flights of marble
-stairs gave admittance into different parts of
-the mansion, we passed through a long gallery,
-and entered the apartment in which the ladies
-of the family were awaiting our arrival. No
-chilling salutation of measured courtesy&mdash;no
-high-bred manifestation of “exclusive” indifference,
-greeted the foreign strangers; but each in
-turn approached us with extended hand, and
-offered the kiss of welcome; and in less than a
-quarter of an hour we were all laughing and
-chatting as gaily in French, as though we had
-been the acquaintance of years.</p>
-
-<p>No where do you feel yourself more thoroughly
-at home at once than among the inhabitants of
-the East; they <em>may</em> be what we are accustomed
-to call them&mdash;semi-barbarians&mdash;but, if such be
-the case, never was the aphorism of a celebrated
-female writer more thoroughly exemplified that
-“extreme politeness comes next to extreme simplicity
-of manners.” Any privation that you
-may suffer in a Turkish or Greek house, beyond
-those consequent on the habits of the country,
-must be gratuitous, as the natives place a firm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-reliance on your asking for all that you require
-or wish; and they are so far from being obliged
-to you for a contrary mode of action, that you
-cannot more seriously offend than by giving
-them cause to suspect, after your departure, that
-you have been inconvenienced during your residence
-in their families.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which we were received was of
-considerable extent, and surrounded on three
-sides by a sofa, like those in the Turkish houses,
-which were in fact copied from the Greeks;
-this was covered with a gay patterned chintz, and
-furnished with cushions of cut velvet of a rich
-deep blue; nor was the comfortable tandour
-wanting; and, when I had laid aside my cloak,
-shawl, and bonnet, and exchanged my walking
-shoes for slippers, I crept under the wadded
-coverings as gladly as any Greek among them;
-and, having surrounded ourselves with cushions,
-we all sat in luxurious idleness, speculating on
-the forthcoming ball, and relating anecdotes of
-those which were past.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more patriarchal than the domestic
-economy of a Greek family: that in which
-we were guests comprised three generations; and
-the respect and obedience shown by the younger
-branches to their venerable relatives were at once
-beautiful and affecting. The aged grandmother,
-a noble remain of former beauty, with a profile
-which a sculptor must still have loved to look<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-upon, so perfectly was its outline preserved&mdash;wore
-her grey hair braided back from her forehead,
-and a dark shawl wound about her head&mdash;a
-long pelisse of brown cloth lined with rich fur,
-with wide sleeves, and an under-jacket of crimson
-merinos, doubled with marten-skin&mdash;her
-daughter, the mistress of the house, and the mother
-of twelve children, reminded me strongly of a
-Jewess, with her large, dark, flashing eyes, and
-high aquiline nose: her wide brow was cinctured
-with a costly Persian scarf; and during the day
-she three times changed the magnificent cachemere
-in which she was enveloped. The younger
-ladies wore turbans of gauze wreathed with
-flowers, very similar to those which are in use
-among our matrons for evening dress; their
-dark, luxuriant, glossy hair being almost entirely
-hidden; and furred pelisses that reached
-from the throat mid-way to the knee, whence
-the full petticoat of merinos, or chaly, fell in large
-folds to their feet.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as we were comfortably established
-round the tandour, a servant brought in a tray
-on which were arranged a large cut glass
-vase, filled with a delicate preserve slightly impregnated
-with <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attar de rose</em>, a range of crystal
-goblets of water, and a silver boat, whose oars
-were gilt tea-spoons. One of these the lady of
-the house immersed in the preserve, and offered
-to me; after which she replaced the spoon in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-the boat, and I then accepted a draught of
-water presented by the same hospitable hand;
-the whole ceremony was next gone through
-with my father; and, the tray being dismissed,
-a second servant entered with coffee, served in
-little porcelain cups of divers patterns, without
-saucers, but deposited in stands of fillagreed
-silver, shaped nearly like the egg-cups of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>After this, we were left to our charcoal and
-cushions until six o’clock; save that my father
-smoked a costly pipe with a mouthpiece of the
-colour and almost of the bulk of a lemon, in
-company of our host, a tall, majestic-looking
-man, upwards of six feet in height, whose black
-calpac differed from those of the Armenians in its
-superiority of size and globular form, and whose
-furred garments, heaped one above another,
-seemed to me, shivering as I had lately been
-under a sharp spring breeze on the water, the
-very embodiment of comfort.</p>
-
-<p>A Greek dinner is a most elaborate business;
-rendered still more lengthy by the fact that the
-knives, forks, and other appliances which European
-example has introduced, are as yet rather
-hindrances than auxiliaries to most of those
-who have adopted them.</p>
-
-<p>When we had taken our places at table, I looked
-around me with considerable interest&mdash;we were
-truly a large party&mdash;all the junior members of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-the family, who had been throughout the morning
-“on household cares intent,” were gathered
-around the board; and such a circle of bright
-black eyes I never beheld before in my life!</p>
-
-<p>The very aspect of the repast was <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">appetissant</em>&mdash;the
-portly tureen of rice soup was surrounded
-by every tentative to appetite that can be enumerated;
-pickled anchovies, shred cheese, dried
-sausage divided into minute portions, pickles of
-every description, salt tunny-fish, looking like
-condensed rose leaves, and Adrianople tongues
-sliced to the thinness of wafers. The sparkling
-Greek wines were laughing in light among
-dishes upheaped with luscious confectionary&mdash;Sciote
-pastry&mdash;red mullet, blushing through the
-garlanded parsley among which they were imbedded,
-and pyramids of pillauf slightly tinged
-with the juice of the tomato. More substantial
-dishes were rapidly handed round by servants,
-and a delicious dessert crowned the hospitable
-meal, at whose termination we hurried to our
-several apartments, and were soon immersed
-in all the mysteries of the toilet.</p>
-
-<p>The house of the merchant by whom the ball
-was to be given, and whose name was Kachishesh
-Oglou, signifying “Son of the Hermit,”
-was next door to that in which we were already
-guests; and the cheerful music of the Wallachian
-band gave earnest of its commencement long
-ere we were ready to augment the festive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-crowd: and a crowd it truly was, a perfect
-social kaleidoscope; for the variety of costumes
-and colours in constant motion formed a gay
-and characteristic piece of human mosaic.
-There were the venerable men whose hair and
-beards had grown gray with age, and who had
-scorned to put off the garb of their fathers; the
-dark globular calpac and the graceful pelisse&mdash;the
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tiers &eacute;t&acirc;t</em> of fashion, in their semi-European
-dress, the ill-cut frock-coat, and the scarlet <em>f&egrave;z</em>,
-drawn down to their very eyebrows&mdash;and the
-young, travelled beaux, in their pride of superior
-knowledge and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tenue</em>, gloved and chauss&eacute;d with
-a neatness and precision worthy of the school
-in which they had studied.</p>
-
-<p>Among the ladies, the same graduated scale
-of fashion was perceptible: the elder matrons
-wore the dark head-dress and unbecoming vest
-of by-gone years, half concealed by the warm
-wrapping pelisse&mdash;the next in age had mingled
-the Greek and European costumes into one heterogeneous
-mass, each heightening and widening
-the absurdity of the other; and had overlaid
-the inconsistent medley with a profusion of
-diamonds absolutely dazzling; while the younger
-ladies presented precisely the same appearance
-as the belles of a third rate country town in
-England: their petticoats too short, their heads
-too high, their sleeves too elaborate, and their
-whole persons over-dressed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>I have already remarked on the fondness of the
-Greek ladies for gay colours; a taste peculiarly,
-and almost painfully, apparent in a ball-room:
-such bright blues, deep pinks, and glowing
-scarlets I never before saw collected together;
-and this glaring taste extends even to their
-jewels, which they mix in the most extraordinary
-manner; their only care being to heap upon
-their persons every ornament that they can
-contrive to wear.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot, however, record even this inconsequent
-criticism without a feeling of self-reproach,
-when I remember the kindliness of heart, and
-frankness of welcome, with which I was received
-among them. No curious impertinence taught
-me that I was felt to be a stranger; on the contrary,
-I was greeted with smiles on every side;
-each had something kind and complimentary
-to address to me; and in ten minutes I had been
-presented to every individual in the room whose
-acquaintance I could desire to make. Nor must
-I pass over without remark the progress of
-education among these amiable women; two-thirds
-of the younger ones speak French, many
-of them even fluently&mdash;several were conversant
-with English, and still more with Italian; while
-a knowledge of the ancient Greek is the basis
-of their education, and is consequently almost
-general. A taste for music is also rapidly obtaining;
-and time and greater facilities are alone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-wanting to lend the polish of high-breeding and
-high education to the Greek ladies: the material
-is there&mdash;they already possess intellect,
-quickness of perception, and a strong desire
-for instruction; and, even eminently superior
-as they already are to the Turkish and Armenian
-females, they are so conscious of their deficiencies
-both of education and opportunity,
-that, were these once secured to them, they
-would probably be inferior to no women in the
-world as regards mental acquirements.</p>
-
-<p>I pass by the heavy-looking, but, nevertheless,
-handsome, son of the Prince of Samos, the
-minister of Moldavia&mdash;a group of Mickialis,
-Manolakis, Lorenzis, Arcolopolos, &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c.,
-all dark-eyed and mustachioed&mdash;to particularize
-an individual who must ever be an object of
-great interest to all who are conversant with
-Eastern politics&mdash;I allude to Nicholas Aristarchi&mdash;Great
-Logotheti, or head of the clergy, and representative
-of the Greek nation in the Synod&mdash;the
-Aristarchi, who is accused by his enemies of
-having brought about the treaty of Unkiar
-Skelessi&mdash;of having caused Achmet Pasha to
-counsel the Sultan to cede some of his finest
-provinces to the Russians, in virtue of the convention
-of St. Petersburg; and, to crown all, of
-being in the receipt of a considerable pension,
-granted to him, in consideration of his services,
-by the Emperor Nicholas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>Be all this as it may&mdash;and be it remembered
-that each of these assertions is totally discredited
-by a numerous party, who have taken a
-very different view of the political career of Logotheti,
-and who find a complete refutation of
-these charges against him, in the perilous situation
-of the Sultan when Mahomet Ali marched
-upon Qutayah&mdash;Mahmoud was without fleet or
-army&mdash;threatened by his people&mdash;abandoned by
-his friends&mdash;deserted by his allies&mdash;and reduced
-to the bare question of self-preservation. In
-this strait, uncounselled, unadvised, even unsuspected
-of such an intention, he personally invited
-the Russian fleet to protect him against his own
-subjects, nor did he abandon his purpose at the
-remonstrance of his own ministers, and those
-of the foreign powers.</p>
-
-<p>During the succeeding four years, the Ottoman
-Government have persisted in the same views, as
-if in conviction of their efficacy; and it is scarcely
-probable that a solitary individual, and that individual,
-moreover, a Greek ra&iuml;ah, could possess
-sufficient power to regulate the movements of a
-despotic government; while it is certain that
-Aristarchi is still in the confidence of the Turkish
-ministry, and is more or less interwoven in the
-intricate web of her political existence.</p>
-
-<p>Many of those who have been the most violent
-against him have forgotten, or perhaps
-have never known, that he is the son of that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-Aristarchi who was sacrificed because he was
-too true to the cause which he had espoused.
-Aristarchi was the last Greek Dragoman to the
-Porte, and the confidant of Halet Effendi; and,
-on the insurrection of his countrymen, he continued
-faithful to the interests of the Sultan, and
-steadily pursued the straight and manly line of
-policy which had induced him to support the
-views of England against those of Russia; but
-he was abandoned in his need by the power
-that he had, in his days of influence, exerted
-his best energies to serve. England changed
-her policy, and Aristarchi, abandoned to the
-tender mercies of the arch-traitor, Halet Effendi,
-was exiled to Boloo, under a promise of recall;
-but he ultimately lost his life, which no powerful
-hand was outstretched to save, simply because
-Aristarchi was the only individual whose personal
-and acquired rank rendered him eligible
-to fill the exalted station of Prince of Wallachia;
-and that he was unhappily the confidant of the
-treacherous intrigues of his patron, which that
-patron well knew that he possessed the power
-to disclose. Thus, forgotten on one hand, and betrayed
-on the other, he fell a sacrifice to the misgivings
-of Halet Effendi, who supplied his place
-with one less versed in the intricacies of his own
-subtle policy.</p>
-
-<p>Logotheti saw his father cut to pieces before
-his eyes&mdash;murdered by the emissaries of those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-whom he had served with honour and fidelity&mdash;he
-beheld his mother put forth, with her seven
-helpless daughters, from the home that had so
-long been her’s&mdash;he stood between his two young
-brothers, orphaned and beggared by the same
-stroke&mdash;he saw the possessions which should
-have been his own pass into the hands of
-strangers&mdash;and he knew and felt that on his individual
-exertions depended the comforts, the
-fortunes, the very existence, of those helpless and
-homeless beings.</p>
-
-<p>I shall pursue the subject no farther for obvious
-reasons, suffice it that Nicholas Aristarchi,
-Great Logotheti and Charg&eacute; d’Affaires for
-Wallachia, was to me an object of surpassing
-interest: I had heard so much of him&mdash;I had
-imagined so much&mdash;and I had been so deeply
-affected by his domestic history&mdash;that I was
-anxious to see a man who had suffered so fearfully,
-who had struggled so manfully, and who
-had grappled with fortune until he saw it at his
-feet; and whose individual influence had sufficed
-to depose two Patriarchs, and to seat two others
-on the throne of the Greek church.</p>
-
-<p>Nor did I, when I first met him, know the tendency
-of his politics; I was desirous only to make
-the acquaintance of a man who had become an
-object of great interest to me from the description
-and narration of an individual whom he had essentially
-served, and who had succeeded in awa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>kening
-in my mind a wish to see and converse
-with him. My business was with the man; with
-the politician I had nothing to do. I thought
-only of the Aristarchi, who had saved and supported
-a ruined mother and a beggared family;
-I cared not for the Dragoman, who had assisted
-at treaties, and passed his youth among the intrigues
-of cabinets. His domestic history was
-a little romance; my feelings of sympathy had
-been excited by the manner in which it was related
-to me; and I rejoiced in the opportunity of
-becoming known to him.</p>
-
-<p>Logotheti was one of the first persons presented
-to me; and I instantly felt that, had I
-encountered him in a crowd, I could not have
-passed him by without remark. He is about five
-and thirty, of the middle size, and there is mind
-in every line of his expressive countenance&mdash;his
-brow is high and ample, with the rich brown
-hair receding from it, as if fully to reveal its intellectual
-character; his bright and restless eyes
-appear almost to flash fire during his moments
-of excitement, but in those of repose their characteristic
-is extreme softness; his nose is a perfect
-aquiline, and his moustache partially conceals
-a set of the whitest teeth I ever saw. As
-he stood conversing with me, I remarked that
-he constantly amused himself by toying with
-his beard, which he wears pointed, and of which
-he is evidently vain. His voice is extremely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-agreeable, his delivery emphatic, and he speaks
-French fluently.</p>
-
-<p>After a few moments of conversation, he introduced
-me to his wife, his mother, and his
-sisters, all of whom greeted me with the greatest
-kindness; and in a few more, my hand was in
-his, and we were threading the mazes of a cotillon.
-I was much amused by the officiousness
-of his attendants; his pipe-bearer, whose tube
-(not staff) of office was of the most costly description,
-approached him every five minutes
-with the tempting luxury, of which he was,
-however, much too well-bred to avail himself
-while conversing with me; although the Greek
-ladies are accustomed to this social accessory,
-and many of the elder ones even indulge in it
-themselves&mdash;another handed to him from time
-to time a clean cambric handkerchief&mdash;while a
-third haunted him like his shadow, and the moment
-that we paused, either in the dance, or in
-our walk across the room, placed a couple of
-chairs for us to seat ourselves. Of this latter
-arrangement, he availed himself without scruple,
-and compelled me to do the same; while, as the
-evolutions of the figure constantly caused me to
-rise, he invariably stood leaning over the back
-of my empty chair, until I was again seated,
-ere he would resume his own.</p>
-
-<p>As he persisted in dancing with me nearly the
-whole of the evening, and talking to me during<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-the remainder, I soon became much interested
-in his conversation, and it was with sincere
-pleasure that I heard him promise that he would
-get up an extempore ball for us the following
-night. The news soon spread through the room,
-and great were the exertions made to secure invitations,
-the more particularly as the morrow
-was the last day of the Carnival; and, at half
-past four in the morning, after having received
-an invitation to breakfast with Madame Logotheti,
-we made our parting bow to our very
-handsome hostess and her hospitable husband,
-and hastened to secure a little rest, to enable us
-to contend with the fatigues of the forthcoming
-evening.</p>
-
-<p>A Greek breakfast differs little from a Greek
-dinner: there are the same sparkling wines, the
-same goodly tureen of soup, the same meats,
-and confectionary, and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">friandises</em>; but, in addition
-to these, there is the snowy kaimack, or
-clotted cream, and the bubbling urn.</p>
-
-<p>I know not whether others have made the
-same remark, but I have frequently observed
-that the breakfast after a ball, where the party
-is an agreeable one, is a most delightful repast.
-The excitement of the previous night
-has not entirely subsided&mdash;the “sayings and
-doings” of “ladies bright and cavaliers” afford
-a gay and unfailing topic&mdash;and all goes “merry
-as a marriage bell.” Certain it is, that in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-instance my theory is borne out by the result;
-for, on the termination of the meal, the family
-insisted on our remaining with them during our
-stay at the Fanar. Servants were accordingly
-despatched for our bandboxes and dressing-cases,
-and we established ourselves comfortably
-round the tandour until dinner-time.</p>
-
-<p>As the house which Logotheti occupied during
-the winter months was merely hired,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> and, although
-extremely handsome and spacious, was
-greatly inferior in magnificence to his residence
-on the Bosphorus, he did not consider it expedient
-to give the ball himself, lest he should
-offend many whom he had neither time nor
-space to invite; but requested one of his friends,
-Hage Aneste, or Aneste the Pilgrim, a Primate
-of the Greek church and a near neighbour, to
-open his house in the evening, and the arrangement
-was completed at once.</p>
-
-<p>If I had been pleased with Logotheti in the
-heat and hurry of a ball room, I was infinitely
-more delighted with him in the bosom of his family.
-His gentle and courtly manners, and his
-unaffected and fluent conversation, rendered him
-a charming companion; and the hours flew so
-swiftly in his society, and that of his amiable
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>family, that dinner was announced before the
-morning had appeared to be half spent.</p>
-
-<p>At half past nine, we were in the ball-room,
-which I entered on the arm of Logotheti, and I
-was considerably startled during our progress
-up stairs by the manner of his reception. Our
-host and hostess met us on the first landing-place,
-where they bent down and kissed the hem
-of his garment, despite his efforts to prevent this
-truly Oriental salutation. Their example was
-followed by all those who made way for us; and,
-as he led me through the noble saloon in which
-we were to dance, and seated me in the centre
-of the sofa, at the upper end of a drawing-room
-that opened into it, every one rose, and continued
-standing until he had taken possession of
-a chair.</p>
-
-<p>Coffee having been handed round, Logotheti
-conducted me back into the saloon, where we
-opened the ball with a Polonaise; after which,
-quadrilles, waltzes, cotillons, and mazurkas,
-followed each other in rapid succession; and,
-after having been introduced to more persons
-than I could possibly recognise should I ever
-meet them again, and dancing until near six
-o’clock in the morning, I walked another Polonaise
-with our agreeable host, and quitted the
-ball-room with more regret than I ever experienced
-on a similar occasion.</p>
-
-<p>We remained the morrow at the Fanar, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-I carried away with me no memories save those
-of kindness and courtesy. Seldom, very seldom
-indeed, have I passed three days of such unalloyed
-gratification as those for which I am indebted
-to Logotheti and his friends.</p>
-
-<p>No circumstance impressed me more strongly
-during this very agreeable visit, than the rapid
-strides which the Constantinopolitan Greeks are
-making towards civilization. The Turks have
-a thousand old and cherished superstitions
-that tend to clog the chariot wheels of social
-progression, and which it will require time to
-rend away; the Armenians, who consider their
-Moslem masters as the <em>ne plus ultra</em> of human
-perfection, are yet further removed from improvement
-than the Turks; while the Greeks,
-lively and quick-minded, seize, as it were by intuition,
-minute shades of character as well as
-striking points of manners. Locomotive, physically
-as well as mentally, they indulge their
-erratic tastes and propensities by travel; they
-compare, estimate, and adopt; they pride themselves
-in their progress; they stand forth, scorning
-all half measures, as declared converts to
-European customs; and they fashion their minds
-as well as their persons, after their admitted
-models.</p>
-
-<p>The Turk is the more stately, the more
-haughty, and the more self-centered, of the inhabitants
-of the East; but in all that relates<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-to social tactics he is very far inferior to the
-keen, shrewd, calculating, intriguing, Greek.</p>
-
-<p>The Moslem will fix his eye upon a distant and
-important object, and work steadily onwards
-until he has attained it; but, meanwhile, the
-active Greek will have clutched a score of minor
-advantages, which probably, in the aggregate,
-are of more than equal weight. It is the collision
-of mind and matter&mdash;the elephant and
-the fox. Intellectual craft has been the safety-buoy
-of the Greeks; had they been differently
-constituted, they would long ere this have been
-swept from the face of the earth, or have become
-mere “hewers of wood and drawers of water.”
-As it is, there is so strong a principle of moral
-life in this portion of the Greek nation, that, were
-they only more united among themselves, and
-less a prey to intestine jealousies and heart-burnings,
-it is probable that in these times,
-when Turkey lies stretched like a worsted giant
-at the mercy of the European powers, the heel
-of the Greeks might be shod with an iron,
-heavy enough to press her down beyond all
-means of resuscitation; in possession, as they
-are, of the confidence of those in power.</p>
-
-<p>Animal force has subjugated the Greeks&mdash;subjugated,
-but not subdued them; their physical
-power has departed, but their moral energy
-remains unimpaired; and it is doubtful whether
-human means will ever crush it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Difficulty of Obtaining an Insight into Turkish Character&mdash;Inconvenience
-of Interpreters&mdash;Errors of Travellers&mdash;Ignorance of Resident
-Europeans&mdash;Fables and Fable-mongers&mdash;Turkey, Local and Moral&mdash;Absence
-of Capital Crime&mdash;Police of Constantinople&mdash;Quiet
-Streets&mdash;Sedate Mirth&mdash;Practical Philosophy of the Turks&mdash;National
-Emulation&mdash;Impossibility of Revolution&mdash;Mahmoud and his People&mdash;Unpopularity
-of the Sultan&mdash;Russian Interference&mdash;Vanity of the
-Turks&mdash;Russian Gold&mdash;Tenderness of the Turks to Animals&mdash;Penalty
-for Destroying a Dog&mdash;The English Sportsman&mdash;Fondness
-of the Turks for Children&mdash;Anecdote of the Reiss Effendi&mdash;Adopted
-Children&mdash;Love of the Musselmauns for their Mothers&mdash;Turkish
-Indifference to Death&mdash;Their Burial-places&mdash;Fasts&mdash;The Turks in the
-Mosque&mdash;Contempt of the Natives for Europeans&mdash;Freedom of the
-Turkish Women&mdash;Inviolability of the Harem&mdash;Domestic Economy of
-the Harem&mdash;Turkish Slaves&mdash;Anecdote of a Slave of Achmet
-Pasha&mdash;Cleanliness of Turkish Houses&mdash;The Real Romance of the
-East.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is, perhaps, no country under heaven
-where it is more difficult for an European to obtain
-a full and perfect insight into the national
-character, than in Turkey. The extreme application,
-and the length of time necessary to the
-acquirement of the two leading languages,
-which bear scarcely any affinity to those of
-Europe, render the task one of utter hopelessness
-to the traveller, who consequently labours
-under the disadvantage of explaining his impressions,
-and seeking for information through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-the medium of a third person, inferentially, and
-it may almost be said totally, uninterested in
-both. The most simple question may be put in
-a manner calculated to influence the reply; as
-the rivulet takes the tinge of the soil over which
-it passes&mdash;a misplaced emphasis may change
-the nature of an assertion; and no one requires
-to be reminded of the difficulty, if not impossibility,
-of meeting with an individual so straightforward
-and matter-of-fact as to translate as
-though he were perpetually <em>in foro conscienti&aelig;</em>.
-Thus the means of communication between the
-native and the stranger have an additional and
-almost insurmountable impediment in this respect,
-superadded to the natural and palpable
-obstacles presented by opposing and diffluent
-prejudices, customs, and opinions.</p>
-
-<p>Flung back, consequently, upon his own resources;
-soured, perhaps somewhat, by the consciousness
-that he is so, and judging according
-to his own impressions, the traveller hazards
-undigested and erroneous judgments on the
-most important facts&mdash;traces effects to wrong
-causes&mdash;and, deciding by personal feeling, condemns
-much that, did he perfectly and thoroughly
-comprehend its nature and tendency,
-he would probably applaud. Hence arise most
-of those errors relative to the feelings and affairs
-of the East, that have so long misled the
-public mind in Europe; and, woman as I am, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-cannot but deplore a fact which I may be deficient
-in the power to remedy. The repercussion
-of public opinion must be wrought by a skilful
-and a powerful hand, They are no lady-fingers
-which can grasp a pen potent enough to overthrow
-the impressions and prejudices that have
-covered reams of paper, and spread scores of
-misconceptions. But, nevertheless, like the
-mouse in the fable, I may myself succeed in
-breaking away a few of the meshes that imprison
-the lion; and, as I was peculiarly situated
-during my residence in the East, and enjoyed
-advantages and opportunities denied to the generality
-of travellers, who, as far as the natives
-are concerned, pass their time in Turkey “unknowing
-and unknown,” I trust that my attempt
-to refute the errors of some of my predecessors,
-and to advance opinions, as well as to adduce
-facts, according to my own experience, may
-not entail on me the imputation of presumption.
-I know not whether it may have been from
-want of inclination, but it is certain that Europeans
-are at this moment resident in Turkey, as
-ignorant of all that relates to her political
-economy, her system of government, and her
-moral ethics, as though they had never left their
-own country: and who have, nevertheless, been
-resident there for fifteen or twenty years. If
-you succeed in prevailing on them to speak on
-the subject, they never progress beyond exani<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>mate
-and crude details of mere external effects.
-They have not exerted themselves to look
-deeper; and it may be supererogatory to add,
-that at the Embassies the great question of
-Oriental policy is never discussed, save <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en petit
-comit&eacute;</em>. It is also a well-attested fact that the
-entr&eacute;e of native houses, and intimacy with native
-families, are not only extremely difficult, but in
-most cases impossible to Europeans; and hence
-the cause of the tissue of fables which, like
-those of Scheherazade, have created genii and
-enchanters <em>ab ovo usque ad mala</em>, in every
-account of the East. The European mind has
-become so imbued with ideas of Oriental mysteriousness,
-mysticism, and magnificence, and it
-has been so long accustomed to pillow its faith on
-the marvels and metaphors of tourists, that it is
-to be doubted whether it will willingly cast off
-its old associations, and suffer itself to be undeceived.</p>
-
-<p>To the eye, Turkey is, indeed, all that has
-been described, gorgeous, glowing, and magnificent;
-the very position of its capital seems to
-claim for it the proud title of the “Queen of
-Cities.” Throned on its seven hills, mirrored in
-the blue beauty of the Bosphorus&mdash;that glorious
-strait which links the land-locked harbour of
-Stamboul to the mouth of the Euxine&mdash;uniting
-two divisions of the earth in its golden grasp&mdash;lording
-it over the classic and dusky mountains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-of Asia, and the laughing shores of Europe&mdash;the
-imagination cannot picture a site or scene
-of more perfect beauty. But the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">morale</em> of the
-Turkish empire is less perfect than its terrestrial
-position; it possesses the best conducted people
-with the worst conducted government&mdash;ministers
-accessible to bribes&mdash;public functionaries
-practised in chicane&mdash;a court without
-consistency, and a population without energy.</p>
-
-<p>All these things are, however, on the surface,
-and cannot, consequently, escape the notice of
-any observant traveller. It is the reverse of the
-picture that has been so frequently overlooked
-and neglected. And yet who that regards, with
-unprejudiced eyes, the moral state of Turkey,
-can fail to be struck by the absence of capital
-crime, the contented and even proud feelings of
-the lower ranks, and the absence of all assumption
-and haughtiness among the higher?</p>
-
-<p>Constantinople, with a population of six hundred
-thousand souls, has a police of one hundred
-and fifty men. No street-riots rouse the quiet citizens
-from their evening cogitations&mdash;no gaming-house
-vomits forth its throng of despairing or of
-exulting votaries&mdash;no murders frighten slumber
-from the pillows of the timid, “making night
-hideous”&mdash;no ruined speculator terminates his
-losses and his life at the same instant, and thus
-bequeathes a double misery to his survivors&mdash;no
-inebriated mechanic reels homeward to wreak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-his drunken temper on his trembling wife&mdash;the
-Kavashlir, or police of the capital, are rather
-for show than use.</p>
-
-<p>From dusk the streets are silent, save when
-their echoes are awakened by the footfalls of
-some individual who passes, accompanied by his
-servant bearing a lantern, on an errand of business
-or pleasure. Without these lanterns, no
-person can stir, as the streets of the city are
-not lighted, and so ill-paved that it would be
-not only difficult, but almost dangerous, to traverse
-them in the dark. If occasionally some
-loud voice of dispute, or some ringing peal of
-laughter, should scare the silence of night, it is
-sure to be the voice or the laughter of an European,
-for the Turk is never loud, even in his
-mirth; a quiet, internal chuckle, rather seen
-upon the lips than sensible to the ear, is his
-greatest demonstration of enjoyment; and while
-the excitable Greek occasionally almost shrieks
-out his hilarity, the Musselmaun will look on
-quietly, with the smile about his mouth, and the
-sparkle in his eye, which are the only tokens
-of his anticipation in the jest.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks are the most practical philosophers
-on earth; they are always contented with
-the present, and yet ever looking upon it as a mere
-fleeting good, to which it were as idle to attach
-any overweening value, as it would be to mourn
-it when it escapes them. Honours and wealth are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-such precarious possessions in the East, that men
-cannot afford to waste existence in weak repinings
-at their loss; nor are they inclined to do so,
-when they remember that the next mutation of
-the Imperial will may reinstate them, unquestioned
-and untrammelled, in their original position.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that the sharpest sting of worldly
-misfortune is spared to the Turk, by the perfect
-similarity of habit and feeling between
-the rich and the poor; and he also suffers less
-morally than the European, from the fact that
-there exists no aristocracy in the country, either
-of birth or wealth, to ride rough-shod over their
-less fortunate fellow-men. The boatman on the
-Bosphorus, and the porter in the streets&mdash;the
-slave in the Salemliek, and the groom in the stables,
-are alike eligible to fill the rank of Pasha&mdash;there
-is no exclusive <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">clique</em> or <em>caste</em> to absorb
-“the loaves and fishes” of office in Turkey&mdash;the
-butcher of to-day may be the Generalissimo
-of to-morrow; and the barber who takes an
-Effendi by the nose on Monday may, on Tuesday,
-be equally authorized to take him by the hand.</p>
-
-<p>To this circumstance must be attributed,
-in a great degree, the impossibility of a revolution
-in Turkey; but another may also be adduced
-of at least equal weight. In Europe, the
-subversion of order is the work of a party who
-have everything to gain, and who, from possessing
-no individual interest in the country, have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-consequently nothing to lose. To persons of
-this class, every social change offers at least the
-prospect of advantage; but, throughout the Ottoman
-empire, nearly every man is the owner of
-a plot of land, and is enabled to trim his own
-vine, and to sit under the shadow of his own
-fig-tree&mdash;he has an interest in the soil&mdash;and
-thus, although popular commotions are of frequent
-occurrence, they merely agitate, without
-exasperating the feelings of the people.</p>
-
-<p>The Osmanli is, moreover, mentally, as well as
-physically, indolent&mdash;he is an enemy to all unnecessary
-exertion; and the subjects of Sultan
-Mahmoud have never threatened him with rebellion
-because he refused to grant any change
-in their existing privileges and customs, but, on
-the contrary, because he sought to introduce innovations
-for which they had never asked, and
-for which they had no desire. “Why,” they
-exclaim in their philosophy, “why seek to alter
-what is well? If we are content, what more can
-we desire?” And, acting upon this principle,
-they resist every attempt at change, as they
-would a design against their individual liberty.</p>
-
-<p>This feeling has induced the great unpopularity
-of the Sultan; who, in his zeal to
-civilize the Empire, has necessarily shocked
-many privileges and overturned many theories.
-That he <em>is</em> unpopular, unfortunately admits of
-no doubt, even in the minds of those most at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>tached
-to his interests&mdash;the very presence of
-Russian arms within his Imperial territory
-sufficiently attest the fact: and it is to be feared
-that he will discover, when too late, that these
-apparent means of safety were the actual engines
-of his destruction. Be this as it may, it is
-certain that the Russian alliance has given
-great and rational umbrage to the bulk of his
-people; and, combined with his own mania for
-improvement and innovation, has caused a want
-of affection for his person, and a want of deference
-for his opinions, which operate most disadvantageously
-for his interests.</p>
-
-<p>That the Russian influence has negatived the
-good effects of many of his endeavours is palpable,
-and forces itself daily on the notice of
-those who look closely and carefully on the existing
-state of things at Constantinople. It is the
-policy of Russia to check every advance towards
-enlightenment among a people whom she
-has already trammelled, and whom she would
-fain subjugate. The Turk is vain and self-centered,
-and consequently most susceptible to
-flattery. Tell him that he is “wisest, virtuousest,
-discreetest, best,” and his own self-appreciation
-leads him immediately to put firm faith
-in the sincerity of your assertion; the effect of
-this blind trust is evident at once&mdash;it paralyzes
-all desire of further improvement: he holds it
-as supererogatory to “gild refined gold, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-paint the lily,” and he thus stops short at the
-threshold, when he should press forward to the
-arena.</p>
-
-<p>These sober statements are sad innovators on
-our European ideas of Eastern magnificence,
-but they are, nevertheless, too characteristic to
-be passed over in silence.</p>
-
-<p>To all the brute creation the Turks are not
-only merciful but ministering friends; and to so
-great an extent do they carry this tenderness
-towards the inferior animals, that they will not
-kill an unweaned lamb, in order to spare unnecessary
-suffering to the mother; and an English
-sportsman, who had been unsuccessful in
-the chase, having, on one occasion, in firing off
-his piece previously to disembarking from his
-ca&iuml;que, brought down a gull that was sailing
-above his head, was reproached by his rowers
-with as much horror and emphasis as though he
-had been guilty of homicide.</p>
-
-<p>I have elsewhere remarked on the singular
-impunity enjoyed by the aquatic birds which
-throng the harbour of Constantinople, and sport
-among the shipping; on the divers, that may
-be knocked down by the oar of every passing
-ca&iuml;que, so fearless are they of human vicinity;
-and the gulls, which cluster like pigeons on the
-roofs of the houses&mdash;on the porpoises that
-crowd the port, and the dogs that haunt the
-streets. It may not be unamusing to state the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-forfeit inflicted on an individual for destroying
-one of these animals, as it is both curious and
-characteristic. The dead dog is hung up by the
-tail in such a manner as to suffer his nose to
-touch the ground; and his murderer is compelled
-to cover him entirely with corn or millet
-seed, which is secured by the proper authorities,
-and distributed to the poor. This ceremony generally
-costs the delinquent about a thousand
-piastres.</p>
-
-<p>Another distinguishing trait in the Turkish
-character is their strong parental affection;
-indeed I may say love of children generally.
-Nothing can be more beautiful than the tenderness
-of a Turkish father; he hails every demonstration
-of dawning intellect, every proof of infant
-affection, with a delight that must be
-witnessed to be thoroughly understood; he anticipates
-every want, he gratifies every wish, he
-sacrifices his own personal comfort to ensure
-that of his child; and I cannot better illustrate
-this fact than by mentioning a circumstance
-which fell under my own observation.</p>
-
-<p>The Reiss Effendi, or Minister for Foreign
-Affairs, had a grandchild whose indisposition
-caused him the most lively uneasiness; it was in
-vain that his English physician assured him of
-the total absence of danger; his every thought,
-his every anxiety, were with this darling boy; in
-the midst of the most pressing public business,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-he would start up and hasten to the chamber of
-the little patient, to assure himself that everything
-was going on favourably; he would leave
-his friends, in an hour of relaxation, to sit beside
-the sick bed of the child; and at length, when a
-strict and rigid system of diet was prescribed,
-which was to be of a fortnight’s duration, he
-actually submitted himself, and compelled all
-his establishment to submit, to the same monotonous
-and scanty fare, lest the boy should accidentally
-see, or otherwise become conscious of
-the presence of, any more enticing food, for
-which he might pine, and thus increase his malady.</p>
-
-<p>It may be thought that I have cited an extreme
-instance, but such is, in reality, far from
-being the case; indeed, to such a pitch do the
-Osmanlis carry their love for children, that they
-are constantly adopting those of others, whom
-they emphatically denominate “children of the
-soul.” They generally take them into their families
-when mere infants; they rear them with
-the most extreme care and tenderness: and
-finally portion them on their marriage, as though
-the claim were a natural, rather than a gratuitous,
-one. The adopted child of Turkey is not
-like the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">prot&eacute;g&eacute;</em> of Europe, the plaything of a
-season, and ultimately too often the victim of a
-whim: the act of adoption is with the Turks a
-solemn obligation; and poverty and privation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-would alike fail to weary them of well-doing
-where their affections as well as their word were
-pledged.</p>
-
-<p>An equally beautiful feature in the character
-of the Turks is their reverence and respect for
-the author of their being. Their wives advise
-and reprimand unheeded&mdash;their words are <em>bosh</em>&mdash;nothing&mdash;but
-the mother is an oracle; she is
-consulted, confided in, listened to with respect
-and deference, honoured to her latest hour, and
-remembered with affection and regret beyond
-the grave. “My wives die, and I can replace
-them,” says the Osmanli; “my children perish,
-and others may be born to me; but who shall
-restore to me the mother who has passed away,
-and who is seen no more?”</p>
-
-<p>These are strong traits, beautiful developments,
-of human nature; and, if such be indeed
-the social attributes of “barbarism,” then may
-civilized Europe, amid her pride of science and
-her superiority of knowledge, confess that herein
-at least she is mated by the less highly-gifted
-Musselmauns.</p>
-
-<p>The philosophy and kindly feeling of the
-Turk is carried even beyond the grave. He
-looks upon death calmly and without repugnance;
-he does not connect it with ideas of gloom
-and horror, as we are too prone to do in Europe&mdash;he
-spreads his burial places in the sunniest spots&mdash;on
-the crests of the laughing hills, where they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-are bathed in the light of the blue sky; beside
-the crowded thoroughfares of the city, where
-the dead are, as it were, once more mingled with
-the living&mdash;in the green nooks that stretch
-down to the Bosphorus, wherein more selfish
-spirits would have erected a villa, or have
-planted a vineyard. He identifies himself with
-the generation which has passed away&mdash;he is
-ready to yield his place to that which is to succeed
-his own.</p>
-
-<p>Nor must I omit to remark on the devout
-and unaffected religious feeling that exists in
-Turkey, not only among the Musselmauns, who,
-however imperative may be their avocations,
-never neglect to pray five times during the day;
-but equally among the Greeks and Armenians,
-whose fasts are so severe that those of the Roman
-Catholics are comparatively feasts. If you meet
-a Turk and inquire after his health, he replies&mdash;“<em>Shukiur
-Allah!</em>&mdash;Praise be to God, I am well.”
-Every thing is referred to the Great First Cause.
-There is none of that haughty self-dependence,
-that overweening <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">morgue</em>, so strongly marked in
-Europeans. Among men, the Osmanli considers
-himself the first, but only among men; when he
-puts off his slippers at the door of the mosque,
-he carries no pomp with him into the presence
-of his God. The luxurious inhabitant of the
-East, who, in his own salemliek is wont to recline
-on cushions, and to be served by officious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-slaves, does not pass into the house of God to
-tenant a crimson-lined and well-wadded pew,
-and to listen to the words of inspiration beside
-a comfortable stove, in dreamy indifference: he
-takes his place among the crowd&mdash;the Effendi
-stands beside the water-carrier&mdash;the Bey near
-the charcoal-vender&mdash;he is but one item among
-many&mdash;he arrogates to himself no honour in
-the temple where all men are as one common
-family; and he insults not the Divine Majesty
-by a bended knee and a stubborn brow.</p>
-
-<p>That the generality of the Turks hold every
-Frank in supreme contempt, admits of no doubt;
-and could they, to use their own phrase, “make
-our fathers and mothers eat dirt,” I am afraid
-that our respectable ancestors would never again
-enjoy a comfortable meal; but this feeling on
-their part is rather amusing than offensive, and
-only enhances the merit of their politeness when
-they show courtesy to the stranger and the
-Giaour.</p>
-
-<p>If, as we are all prone to believe, freedom be
-happiness, then are the Turkish women the
-happiest, for they are certainly the freest individuals
-in the Empire. It is the fashion in Europe
-to pity the women of the East; but it is
-ignorance of their real position alone which can
-engender so misplaced an exhibition of sentiment.
-I have already stated that they are permitted
-to expostulate, to urge, even to insist on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-any point wherein they may feel an interest;
-nor does an Osmanli husband ever resent the
-expressions of his wife; it is, on the contrary,
-part and parcel of his philosophy to bear the
-storm of words unmoved; and the most emphatic
-and passionate oration of the inmates of
-his harem seldom produces more than the trite
-“<em>Bakalum</em>&mdash;we shall see.”</p>
-
-<p>It is also a fact that though a Turk has an undoubted
-right to enter the apartments of his wives
-at all hours, it is a privilege of which he very
-rarely, I may almost say, never avails himself.
-One room in the harem is appropriated to the
-master of the house, and therein he awaits the appearance
-of the individual with whom he wishes
-to converse, and who is summoned to his presence
-by a slave. Should he, on passing to his apartment,
-see slippers at the foot of the stairs, he
-cannot, under any pretence, intrude himself in
-the harem: it is a liberty that every woman
-in the Empire would resent. When guests are
-on a visit of some days, he sends a slave forward
-to announce his approach, and thus gives
-them time and opportunity to withdraw.</p>
-
-<p>A Turkish woman consults no pleasure save her
-own when she wishes to walk or drive, or even
-to pass a short time with a friend: she adjusts
-her <em>yashmac</em> and <em>feridjhe</em>, summons her slave,
-who prepares her <em>boksha</em>, or bundle, neatly
-arranged in a muslin handkerchief; and, on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-entrance of the husband, his inquiries are answered
-by the intelligence that the Hanoum<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">2</a>
-Effendi is gone to spend a week at the harem
-of so and so. Should he be suspicious of the
-fact, he takes steps to ascertain that she is really
-there; but the idea of controlling her in the
-fancy, or of making it subject of reproach on her
-return, is perfectly out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>The instances are rare in which a Turk, save
-among the higher ranks, becomes the husband
-of two wives. He usually marries a woman of
-his own rank; after which, should he, either
-from whim, or for family reasons, resolve on
-increasing his establishment, he purchases slaves
-from Circassia and Georgia, who are termed
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Odaliques</em>; and who, however they may succeed
-in superseding the Buyuk Hanoum, or head of
-the harem, in his affections, are, nevertheless,
-subordinate persons in the household; bound
-to obey her bidding, to pay her the greatest
-respect, and to look up to her as a superior.
-Thus a Turkish lady constantly prefers the introduction
-of half a dozen <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Odaliques</em> into her
-harem to that of a second wife; as it precludes
-the possibility of any inconvenient assumption
-of power on the part of her companions, who
-must, under all circumstances, continue subservient
-to her authority.</p>
-
-<p>The almost total absence of education among
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>Turkish women, and the consequently limited
-range of their ideas, is another cause of that
-quiet, careless, indolent happiness that they
-enjoy; their sensibilities have never been awakened,
-and their feelings and habits are comparatively
-unexacting: they have no factitious
-wants, growing out of excessive mental refinement;
-and they do not, therefore, torment themselves
-with the myriad anxieties, and doubts,
-and chimeras, which would darken and depress
-the spirit of more highly-gifted females. Give
-her shawls, and diamonds, a spacious mansion
-in Stamboul, and a sunny palace on the Bosphorus,
-and a Turkish wife is the very type of
-happiness; amused with trifles, careless of all
-save the passing hour; a woman in person, but
-a child at heart.</p>
-
-<p>Were I a man, and condemned to an existence
-of servitude, I would unhesitatingly chuse that
-of slavery in a Turkish family: for if ever the
-“bitter draught” can indeed be rendered palatable,
-it is there. The slave of the Osmanli is
-the child of his adoption; he purchases with
-his gold a being to cherish, to protect, and to
-support; and in almost every case he secures
-to himself what all his gold could not command&mdash;a
-devoted and loving heart, ready to sacrifice
-its every hope and impulse in his service. Once
-forget that the smiling menial who hands you
-your coffee, or pours the rose-water on your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-hands from an urn of silver, has been purchased
-at a price, and you must look with admiration
-on the relative positions of the servant and his
-lord&mdash;the one so eager and so earnest in his services&mdash;the
-other so gentle and so unexacting in
-his commands.</p>
-
-<p>No assertion of mine can, however, so satisfactorily
-prove the fact which I have here
-advanced, as the circumstance that almost all
-the youth of both sexes in Circassia insist
-upon being conveyed by their parents to Constantinople,
-where the road to honour and advancement
-is open to every one. The slaves
-receive no wages; the price of their services
-has already been paid to their relatives; but
-twice in the year, at stated periods, the master
-and mistress of the family, and, indeed, every
-one of their superiors under the same roof, are
-bound to make them a present, termed the
-<em>Backshish</em>, the value of which varies according
-to the will of the donor; and they are as
-well fed, and nearly as well clothed, as their
-owners.</p>
-
-<p>As they stand in the apartment with their
-hands folded upon their breasts, they occasionally
-mix in the conversation unrebuked; while, from
-their number, (every individual maintaining as
-many as his income will admit), they are never
-subjected to hard labour; indeed, I have been
-sometimes tempted to think that all the work of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-a Turkish house must be done by the fairies; for,
-although I have been the inmate of several
-harems at all hours, I never saw a symptom of
-any thing like domestic toil.</p>
-
-<p>There is a remarkable feature in the position
-of the Turkish slaves that I must not
-omit to mention. Should it occur that one of
-them, from whatever cause it may arise, feels
-himself uncomfortable in the house of his owner,
-the dissatisfied party requests his master to dispose
-of him; and, having repeated this appeal
-three several times, the law enforces compliance
-with its spirit; nor is this all&mdash;the slave can
-not only insist on changing owners, but even
-on selecting his purchaser, although he may by
-such means entail considerable loss on his master.
-But, as asseveration is not proof, I will adduce
-an example.</p>
-
-<p>The wife of Achmet Pasha had a female
-slave, who, being partial to a young man of
-the neighbourhood, was desirous to become
-his property. Such being the case, she informed
-her mistress that she wished to be
-taken to the market and disposed of, which was
-accordingly carried into effect; but, as she was
-young and pretty, and her lover in confined
-circumstances, he was soon outbidden by a
-wealthier man; and, on her return to the harem
-of Achmet Pasha, her mistress told her that an
-Asiatic merchant had offered twenty thousand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-piastres for her, and that she would be removed
-to his house in a few days. “I will not belong
-to him,” was the reply; “there was a young
-man in the market who bid twelve thousand for
-me, and I have decided to follow him. My price
-to you was but ten thousand piastres, and thus
-you will gain two thousand by selling me to
-him.” Her declaration was decisive: she became
-the property of her lover, and her resolution
-cost her mistress eighty pounds sterling.</p>
-
-<p>The most perfect cleanliness is the leading
-characteristic of Eastern houses&mdash;not a grain
-of dust, not a foot-mark, defaces the surface of
-the Indian matting that covers the large halls,
-whence the several apartments branch off in
-every direction; the glass from which you drink
-is carefully guarded to avoid the possibility of
-contamination; and, the instant that you have
-eaten, a slave stands before you with water and a
-napkin to cleanse your hands. To the constant
-use of the bath I have already alluded; and no
-soil is ever seen on the dress of a Turkish
-gentlewoman.</p>
-
-<p>I am quite conscious that more than one lady-reader
-will lay down my volume without regret,
-when she discovers how matter-of-fact are
-many of its contents. The very term “Oriental”
-implies to European ears the concentration of
-romance; and I was long in the East ere I
-could divest myself of the same feeling. It would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-have been easy for me to have continued the
-illusion, for Oriental habits lend themselves
-greatly to the deceit, when the looker-on is
-satisfied with glancing over the surface of
-things; but with a conscientious chronicler this
-does not suffice; and, consequently, I rather
-sought to be instructed than to be amused, and
-preferred the veracious to the entertaining.</p>
-
-<p>This bowing down of the imagination before
-the reason is, however, the less either a merit
-on the one hand, or a sacrifice on the other,
-that enough of the wild and the wonderful,
-as well as of the bright and the beautiful, still
-remains, to make the East a scene of enchantment.
-A sky, whose blue brilliancy floods
-with light alike the shores of Asia and of Europe&mdash;whose
-sunshine falls warm and golden
-on domes, and minarets, and palaces&mdash;a sea,
-whose waves glitter in silver, forming the
-bright bond by which two quarters of the world
-are linked together&mdash;an Empire, peopled by the
-gathering of many nations&mdash;the stately Turk&mdash;the
-serious Armenian&mdash;the wily Jew&mdash;the keen-eyed
-Greek&mdash;the graceful Circassian&mdash;the desert-loving
-Tartar&mdash;the roving Arab&mdash;the mountain-born
-son of Caucasus&mdash;the voluptuous
-Persian&mdash;the Indian Dervish, and the thoughtful
-Frank&mdash;each clad in the garb, and speaking
-the language of his people; suffice to weave a
-web of tints too various and too brilliant to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-wrought into the dull and commonplace pattern
-of every-day existence.</p>
-
-<p>I would not remove one fold of the graceful
-drapery which veils the time-hallowed statue
-of Eastern power and beauty; but I cannot refrain
-from plucking away the trash and tinsel
-that ignorance and bad taste have hung about
-it; and which belong as little to the masterpiece
-they desecrate, as the votive offerings of
-bigotry and superstition form a part of one of
-Rapha&euml;l’s divine Madonnas, because they are
-appended to her shrine.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Harem of Mustafa Effendi&mdash;The Ladies of the Harem&mdash;Etiquettical
-Observances of the Harem&mdash;Ceremonies of the Salemliek&mdash;Jealousy
-of Precedence among the Turkish Women&mdash;Apartment of
-the Effendi&mdash;Eastern Passion for Diamonds&mdash;Personal Appearance of
-Mustafa Effendi&mdash;The little Slave-girl&mdash;Slavery in Turkey&mdash;Gallant
-Present&mdash;The Dinner&mdash;Turkish Cookery&mdash;Illuminated Mosques&mdash;The
-<em>Bokshaliks</em>&mdash;The Toilet after the Bath&mdash;History of an <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Odalique</em>&mdash;Stupid
-Husbands&mdash;Reciprocal Commiseration&mdash;Errors of a Modern
-French Traveller&mdash;Privacy of the Women’s Apartments&mdash;Anecdote
-of the Wife of the K&iuml;ara Bey&mdash;The Ba&iuml;ram <em>Bokshalik</em>&mdash;My Sleeping-room&mdash;Forethought
-of Turkish Hospitality&mdash;Farewell to Fatma
-Hanoum&mdash;Dense Crowd&mdash;Turkish Mob&mdash;Turkish Officers&mdash;Military
-Difficulty&mdash;The “Lower Orders”&mdash;Tolerance of the Orientals towards
-Foreigners&mdash;Satisfactory Expedient.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the eve of the Ba&iuml;ram which terminates
-the Ramazan, we passed over to Constantinople
-with some friends to visit Mustafa Effendi, the
-Egyptian Charg&eacute; d’Affaires, whose magnificent
-mansion is situated near the gate of the Seraglio.
-Having passed the portal, we found ourselves in
-a spacious and covered court, having on our right
-hand a marble fountain, into whose capacious
-basin the water fell murmuringly from a group
-of lion’s heads; and, beyond it, the entrance to
-the women’s apartments, with the conventual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>looking
-wheel, by means of which food is introduced
-into the harem; and on our left a stately
-staircase leading to the main body of the building.
-Here our party were compelled to separate;
-the gentlemen put off their boots, and
-followed the two black slaves who awaited them,
-to the suite of rooms occupied by the master of
-the house, while my companion and myself were
-consigned to the guidance of a third attendant,
-who beat upon the door of the harem,
-and we entered a large hall paved with marble,
-and were immediately surrounded by half a
-dozen female slaves, who took our shoes, shawls,
-and bonnets, and led us over the fine Indian
-matting of the centre saloon, to the richly-furnished
-apartment of the lady of the house.</p>
-
-<p>A soft twilight reigned in the room, of which
-all the curtains were closely drawn to exclude
-the sun; and the wife of the minister and her
-daughter-in-law were seated at the tandour,
-engaged in conversation with several of their
-attendants, who stood before them in a half
-circle, with their arms folded upon their breasts.
-The elder lady was the most high-bred person
-whom I had yet seen in the country; the
-younger one was pale and delicate, with eyes
-like jet, and a very sweet and gentle expression;
-she spoke but seldom, and always in
-monosyllables, being evidently overawed by the
-presence of her companion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There are probably few nations in the world
-that observe with such severity as the Turks that
-domestic precedence and etiquette, which, while
-it may certainly prevent any disrespectful familiarity,
-has a tendency to annihilate all ease.
-Thus, the other ladies of the family are each
-inferior to the first wife, who takes the upper
-seat on the sofa, and regulates all the internal
-economy of the women’s apartments: and, although
-they may be greatly preferred by the
-husband, they are, nevertheless, bound to obey
-her commands, and to treat her with the respect
-due to a superior. In the Salemliek, when she
-is desired by her lord to be seated, (without
-which gracious intimation she must continue
-standing before him), she is privileged to place
-herself on the same sofa, but on its extreme edge,
-and at a considerable distance; while the other
-ladies are only permitted to fold their feet under
-them on a cushion spread upon the carpet, and
-thence look up to the great and gracious ruler
-of their destinies! The ceremonies of the Salemliek
-are neither forgotten nor neglected in
-the harem, and it is customary for all the slaves
-to bend down and kiss the hem of their mistress’s
-garment on her first appearance in the
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>These heart-shutting observances cannot fail
-to heighten the jealousy which their relative
-position must naturally excite in the bosoms of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-the other inmates of the harem, although such
-a circumstance as rebellion against the supreme
-power is never heard of, nor imagined.</p>
-
-<p>During the day we were summoned to the
-apartment of the minister; whither, as the invitation
-was not extended to his wife, we went,
-accompanied only by three or four black slaves.
-After traversing several long galleries and
-halls, covered so closely with matting that not a
-footfall could be heard, we passed under the
-tapestry-hanging that veiled the door of the
-Effendi’s apartment, and found ourselves in an
-atmosphere so heavy with perfume that for a
-moment it was almost suffocating.</p>
-
-<p>The venerable Charg&eacute; d’Affaires, who had
-been long an invalid, was sitting upon his sofa,
-surrounded by cushions of every possible size
-and shape, wrapped in furs, and inhaling the
-odour of a bunch of musk lemons, the most sickly
-and sating of all savours&mdash;a magnificent mangal,
-upheaped with fire, occupied the centre of the
-apartment; the divan was almost covered with
-inlaid boxes, articles of bijouterie, books, and
-papers; a large silver tray resting upon a
-tripod was piled pyramidically with fine winter
-fruits; and within a recess on one side of the
-room were ranged a splendid coffee service of
-French porcelain, and a pair of tall and exquisitely-wrought
-essence-vases of fillagreed
-silver&mdash;in short, the whole aspect of the apart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>ment
-would have satisfied the most boudoir-loving
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petite-maitresse</em> of Paris or London. Near
-the mangal stood the four attendants of the
-master of the house, two fine boys of twelve or
-fourteen years of age, and two pretty little girls,
-one or two years younger, gorgeously dressed,
-and wearing magnificent brilliant ornaments on
-their heads and bosoms.</p>
-
-<p>The rage for diamonds is excessive among
-both the Turks and the Greeks; but, while the
-Greek ladies delight in heaping upon their persons
-every ornament for which they can find
-space, many of the fair Osmanlis, with a pretty
-exclusive scorn of adventitious attraction, content
-themselves with a clasp or two, a bracelet,
-or some similar bagatelle; and decorate their
-favourite slaves with their more costly and
-ponderous jewels.</p>
-
-<p>A most venerable-looking person was Mustafa
-Effendi, with his lofty turban, and his snow-white
-beard; and he received us so kindly, and
-discoursed with us so good-humouredly, that I
-was delighted with him. A chair was brought for
-the Greek lady who had accompanied me, but
-he motioned to me to place myself on a pile of
-cushions at his side, where I remained very comfortably
-during the whole of our visit. He took
-a great quantity of snuff from a box whose lid
-was richly set with precious stones; and, on my
-admiring it, showed me another containing his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-opium pills, which was exquisitely inlaid with
-fine large brilliants.</p>
-
-<p>My attention being attracted to the rosy,
-happy-looking little slave-girl who stood near
-me, with her chubby arms crossed before her,
-her large pink trowsers completely concealing
-her naked feet, and her long blue antery richly
-trimmed with yellow floss-silk fringe, lying upon
-the carpet; he beckoned her to him, called her
-a good child, who had wit enough to anticipate
-his wants, and affection enough to supply them
-without bidding, and bade me remark the henna
-with which the tips of her toes and fingers
-were deeply tinged. She was, he said, a Georgian,
-whom he had purchased of her mother for
-six thousand piastres; she had already been in
-his house two years; and he hoped some day
-to give her a marriage portion, and to see her
-comfortably established, as she was a good girl,
-and he was much attached to her. The other,
-he added, was also obedient and willing, but she
-did not possess the vivacity and quickness of his
-little favourite&mdash;she had cost him seven thousand
-piastres, as she was a year older, and considerably
-stronger than her companion; and
-was a Circassian, brought to Constantinople,
-and sold, at her own request, by her parents.</p>
-
-<p>When I remembered that these children were
-slaves, I felt inclined to pity them&mdash;when the
-very price which had been paid for them was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-stated to me, a sickness crept over my heart&mdash;but,
-as I looked upon the pleased and happy
-countenances of the two little girls, and remembered
-that slavery, in Turkey at least, is a mere
-name, and in nine cases out of ten even voluntary,
-I felt that here my commiseration would
-be misplaced.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after we had taken leave of the gentle
-and gracious old Effendi, a basket of delicious
-fruit was sent into the harem for our use, with
-an injunction that we should dine alone, lest
-we should be inconvenienced by the national
-habits. An embroidered carpet was consequently
-spread, beside which were placed a
-couple of cushions; and the dinner tray, such
-as I have before described it, was lifted into the
-apartment of the younger lady, at her earnest
-request: nine slaves, forming a line from the
-table to the door, waited upon us: and we partook
-of an endless variety of boiled, stewed,
-roasted, and baked&mdash;delicious cinnamon soup&mdash;chickens,
-farcied with fine herbs and olives&mdash;anchovy
-cakes&mdash;lemon-tinted pillauf&mdash;chopped
-meat and spiced rice, rolled in preserved vine-leaves-the
-most delicate of pastry, and the
-most costly of conserves. Many-coloured sherbets,
-and lemonade, completed the repast; and
-when I laid aside my gold-embroidered napkin,
-and wiped the rose-water from my hands, I could
-but marvel at the hyper-fastidiousness of those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-travellers who have affected to quarrel with the
-Turkish kitchen; or infer that they had only “assisted”
-at the tables of hotels and eating-houses.</p>
-
-<p>From the windows of the apartment, we had
-an excellent view, when the evening had closed
-in, of the illuminated mosques of the city, and
-the lines of light that hung like threads of
-fire from minaret to minaret. The casements
-quivered beneath the shock of the rattling cannon;
-and all the sounds which came to us from
-without spoke of festivity and rejoicing; and,
-meanwhile, we were a happy party within.
-Fatma Hanoum smoked her pipe, and overlooked
-the distribution of the <em>bokshaliks</em> that her
-daughter was preparing for the morrow&mdash;every
-member of the household, on the occasion of
-the Ba&iuml;ram, being entitled to a present, more or
-less valuable according to their deserts, the
-length and difficulty of their services, or the degree
-of favour in which they are held.</p>
-
-<p>We, meanwhile, amused ourselves with watching
-the slaves, who, having left the bath, had
-seated themselves in groups at the lower end of
-the apartment, combing, tressing, and banding
-their dark, glossy hair; the younger ones forming
-it into one long, thick plait, hanging down the
-centre of the back, and twisting above it the
-painted handkerchief, so popular in the harem
-that it is worn equally by the Sultana and the
-slave; the others binding their tresses tightly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-about their heads, and replacing the locks which
-they hid from view with a profusion of false hair,
-braided in twenty or thirty little plaits, and reaching
-round the whole width of the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>All were busily engaged in preparing for the
-festival of the morrow, though many of them
-were aware that they should not leave the harem;
-it was sufficient that it <em>was</em> a festival, an excitement,
-a topic of conversation, something, in
-short, to engross their thoughts; and no belle
-ever prepared for a birthday with more alacrity
-than did the females of the harem of Mustafa
-Effendi, black and white, for the Ba&iuml;ram.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the evening, the Bayuk Hanoum
-was summoned to her husband, and then
-the timid wife of her son joined us at the tandour,
-and related to us the little history of her
-life, which, although by no means remarkable in
-Turkey, is so characteristic, and will, moreover,
-appear so extraordinary to European readers,
-that I shall give it, as nearly as my memory will
-serve me, in her own words.</p>
-
-<p>“I am but nineteen,” she said, “a Circassian
-by birth, and was brought by my parents to
-Constantinople, and sold, at the age of nine
-years, to a friend of Fatma Hanoum’s. I was
-very happy, for she was kind to me, and I
-thought to pass my life in her harem; but about
-a year ago I accompanied her hither on a visit
-to the wife of Mustafa Effendi, at a moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-when her son was beside her. I was one of four;
-and I do not yet understand why nor how I attracted
-his attention as I stood beside my companions;
-but a few days afterwards my mistress
-called me to her, and asked me if I had remarked
-the young Isma&euml;l Bey when we had
-visited his mother. I told her that I had seen
-him; and she then informed me that the Hanoum
-desired to purchase me, in obedience to
-his wish; and demanded of me if I was willing
-to accede to the arrangement. Of course, I consented,
-and the Bey, having considered me as
-agreeable when I had withdrawn my <em>yashmac</em>
-as he had anticipated, he purchased me for ten
-thousand piastres, and I became an inmate of
-the harem of Mustafa Effendi&mdash;I am still
-happy,” she added plaintively, “very happy, for
-I am sure he loves me; but I nevertheless hope
-to be more so; for ere long I shall be a mother,
-and should my child prove to be a boy, from his
-<em>Odalique</em> I may perhaps become his wife.”</p>
-
-<p>I pitied the poor young creature as I listened
-to her narrative, through the medium of my
-companion, who spoke the Turkish language
-fluently; and I breathed a silent prayer that her
-visions of happiness might be realized. She was
-not pretty; but she was so childlike, so graceful,
-and so gentle, that she inspired an interest
-which, when I had heard her story, was even
-painful; nor was the feeling lessened by an in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span>troduction
-to her husband, who, during the
-evening, sent to desire that all the women, save
-his mother and wife, should retire, as he intended
-to visit the harem; doubtlessly as much to satisfy
-his curiosity, as to exhibit his courtesy, by paying
-his respects to the European guests of his
-mother. Sallow and sickly-looking, inanimate,
-even for a Turk, and apparently <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">b&ecirc;te comme une
-b&ucirc;che</em>, he seated himself, and listened to the
-conversation that was going forward, with one
-unvaried and inexpressive smile&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">Pleased, he knew not why, and cared not wherefore;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>dividing his admiration between the Frank
-ladies, and the brilliancy of a large diamond
-that he wore on his finger.</p>
-
-<p>How comparative is happiness! I never lay
-my head upon my pillow, but I am grateful to
-Providence that I was not born in Turkey;
-while the fair Osmanlis in their turn pity the
-Frank women with a depth of sentiment almost
-ludicrous. They can imagine no slavery comparable
-with our’s&mdash;we take so much trouble to
-attain such slight ends&mdash;we run about from
-country to country, to see sights which we must
-regret when we leave them&mdash;we are so blent
-with all the anxieties and cares of our male relations&mdash;we
-expose ourselves to danger, and
-brave difficulties suited only to men&mdash;we have
-to contend with such trials and temptations,
-from our constant contact with the opposite
-sex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>&mdash;in
-short, they regard us as slaves, buying our
-comparative liberty at a price so mighty, that
-they are unable to estimate its extent&mdash;and then,
-the hardship of wearing our faces uncovered,
-and exposing them to the sun and wind, when
-we might veil them comfortably with a <em>yashmac</em>!
-Not a day passes in which they have commerce
-with a Frank, but they return thanks to Allah
-that they are not European women!</p>
-
-<p>A modern French traveller, whose amusing
-work has, in one moderate volume, contrived to
-treat of about a dozen countries and localities;
-and to detail, respecting each, such a mass of
-fallacies as assuredly were never before collected
-together: informs his readers that the jealousies
-of the harem are carried to such a pitch as to
-entail poison, or, at the least, humiliating and
-severe labour on the victim of the disappointed
-rival! This assertion, like many others in which
-he has indulged, would be comic were it not
-wicked&mdash;for the very arrangements of the harem
-render it impossible: each lady has her private
-apartment, which, should she desire to remain
-secluded, no one has the privilege to invade; and,
-from the moment that she becomes a member of
-the family, her life, should she so will it, is one
-of the most monotonous idleness. The very
-slaves, as I believe I have elsewhere remarked,
-are so numerous in every handsome establishment,
-that three-fourths of their time is unem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span>ployed;
-and as, in the less distinguished ranks,
-no Turk indulges in the expensive luxury of a
-second wife, there is little opportunity afforded
-for female tyranny.</p>
-
-<p>The Ki&auml;ra Bey, or Minister of the Interior,
-despite his exalted station and his immense
-wealth, has declined to avail himself of his polygamical
-privilege; and, although his wife is
-both plain and elderly, she has such a supreme
-hold, if not upon his heart, at least upon his
-actions, that, a short time since, having discovered
-that her lord had suddenly become more
-than necessarily attentive to a fair Circassian,
-her own peculiar favourite, whom she had
-reared from a child, and whose beauty was of
-no ordinary character, she very quietly placed
-her in an araba, sent her to the slave-market,
-and disposed of her to the highest bidder. The
-ingratitude of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">prot&eacute;g&eacute;e</em> had loosened her hold
-on the affections of her patroness; nor did the
-husband venture to utter a reproach to his outraged
-helpmate, when he discovered the absence
-of the too-fascinating Circassian.</p>
-
-<p>Had the unhappy girl been the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Odalique</em> of the
-lord, instead of the slave of the lady, the evil
-would have been irremediable, however; as in
-that case, the Bayuk Hanoum would have possessed
-no power to displace her.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning, the stately Fatma Hanoum
-presented to my companion and myself a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-<em>bokshalik</em> from the venerable Effendi, which
-consisted of the material for a dress, neatly
-folded in a handkerchief of clear muslin, fringed
-with gold-coloured silk; and, as I made my
-hasty toilette, in the hope of witnessing the procession
-of the Ba&iuml;ram, and seeing Mahmoud
-“the Powerful” in all the splendour of his
-greatness, I glanced with considerable interest
-round the apartment in which I had passed the
-night. In the domed recess, which I soon discovered
-to be common to every handsome
-Turkish apartment, stood a French clock, that
-“discoursed,” if not “eloquent,” at least fairy-like,
-music&mdash;a piece of furniture, by the way,
-universally popular among the natives of the
-East, who usually have one or more in every
-room occupied by the family&mdash;two noble porcelain
-vases&mdash;a china plate containing an enamelled
-snuff-box, and a carved ebony chaplet&mdash;and
-a tray on which were placed cut crystal
-goblets of water, covered glass bowls filled with
-delicate conserves, a silver ca&iuml;que, whose oars
-were small spoons, and a beautifully worked
-wicker basket, shaped like a dish, and upheaped
-with crystallized fruits, sparkling beneath a
-veil of pale pink gauze, knotted together with
-bunches of artificial flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Turkish hospitality and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pr&eacute;voyance</em> provide
-even for the refreshment of a sleepless
-night!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span>The divan was of flesh-coloured satin, and
-the carpet as delicately wrought and patterned
-as a cachemire shawl. The cushions which had
-been piled about my bed were of velvet, satin,
-and embroidered muslin, and the coverlets,
-of rich Broussa silk, powdered with silver
-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>I made my libations with perfumed water&mdash;swallowed
-my coffee from a china cup so minute
-that a fairy might have drained it&mdash;tied on my
-bonnet&mdash;an object of unvarying amusement to
-the Turkish ladies, who consider this stiff head-dress
-as one of the most frightful and ridiculous
-of European inventions&mdash;and bade adieu to
-Fatma Hanoum and her dark-eyed daughter,
-with a regret which their unbounded courtesy
-and kindness were well calculated to inspire.</p>
-
-<p>A wealthy Armenian diamond-merchant, who
-held a high situation in the Mint, had offered us
-a window, whence we might witness the whole
-ceremony of the Imperial procession, and towards
-this point we bent our steps. But, alas
-for our curiosity! our leave-taking had been so
-thoughtlessly prolonged, that the subjects of
-his Sublime Highness had blocked up every
-avenue bearing upon the point by which he was
-to pass; and, despite all the efforts of our European
-cavaliers and native attendants, to proceed
-was impossible. We accordingly took up
-our station a little apart from the crowd, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-order to contemplate at our ease the novel and
-picturesque spectacle of a Turkish mob.</p>
-
-<p>In the distance rose the gigantic dome and
-arrowy minarets of Saint Sophia; and beneath
-them, far as the eye could reach, stretched a
-sea of capped and turbaned heads, heaving and
-sinking like billows after a storm. Every house-roof,
-every mouldering wall, every heap of rubbish,
-was covered with eager spectators; while
-the windows of the surrounding dwellings
-were crowded with veiled women and laughing
-children.</p>
-
-<p>What groups were wedged together in the
-narrow space immediately before us! The pale,
-bent, submissive-looking Jew was folding his
-greasy mantle closer about him, as he elbowed
-aside the green-turbaned Emir, and the grave
-and solemn Hadje who had knelt beside the
-grave of the Prophet: the bustling Frank was
-striding along, jostling alike the serious Armenian,
-whose furred and flowing habit formed
-a strange contrast to the short blue jacket
-and tight pantaloons of the tall, strong-limbed,
-Circassian&mdash;and the bustling and noisy Greek,
-whose shrill voice and vociferous utterance
-would have suited a woman&mdash;parties of Turkish
-officers were forcing a passage as best they
-could, with their caps pulled down upon their
-eyebrows, their sword-belts hanging at least a
-quarter of a yard below their waists, and their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-diamond stars, (the symbols of their military
-rank) glittering in the clear sunshine&mdash;patroles
-of Turkish soldiers were endeavouring in vain
-to clear a passage along the centre of the street
-for the convenience of the Sultanas, and the
-wives of the different Pashas, whose arabas
-were momently expected; the mob closing
-rapidly in their rear as they slowly moved on&mdash;and
-clouds of doves at intervals filled the air, the
-tenants of the giant mosque before us, scared
-from the usual quiet of their resting-places by
-the unwonted stir and excitement beneath them.</p>
-
-<p>As the birds which domesticate themselves
-about the mosques are held sacred, and regarded
-with almost superstitious reverence,
-their numbers necessarily increase to a wonderful
-extent; and on this occasion they hovered
-round the stupendous edifice of Saint
-Sophia, to the amount of several thousands.</p>
-
-<p>A strange military difficulty had been started
-a short time previously to the occasion of the
-Ba&iuml;ram, which had been overcome in so extraordinary
-and even humorous a manner, that it
-deserves especial mention; and it was to convince
-myself of the actual existence of the
-laughable custom engendered by Turkish jealousy,
-that I remained longer than I should have
-otherwise been induced to do, in the immediate
-vicinity of a Constantinopolitan mob. Be it,
-however, avowed, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en passant</em>, that the&mdash;what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-shall I call them? for our European term of
-“lower orders” is by no means applicable to a
-people who acknowledge no difference of rank&mdash;no
-aristocracy save that of office&mdash;the great
-mass of the population of the capital&mdash;assimilate
-on no one point with our own turbulent, vociferous,
-uncompromising, and unaccommodating
-mobs in Europe. Among above five thousand
-boatmen, artisans, and soldiers, not a blow was
-struck, not a voice was raised in menace&mdash;among
-the conflicting interests, feelings, and
-prejudices, of Christians, Musselmauns, and
-Jews, not a word was uttered calculated to excite
-angry or unpleasant feeling; while I am
-bound to confess that a female, however fastidious,
-would have found less to offend her amid
-the crush and confusion of that mighty mass of
-commonly called semi-civilized human beings,
-than in a walk of ten minutes through the streets
-of London or Paris.</p>
-
-<p>The natives of the East have yet to learn
-that there can be either wit or amusement in
-annoying others for the mere sake of creating
-annoyance; that there can be humour in raising
-a blush on the cheek of the timid, or calling a
-pang to the heart of the innocent. They are
-utilitarians; to torment for the mere love of mischief
-they do not comprehend; and they, consequently,
-never attempt extraneous evil unless to
-secure, or at least to strive for, some immediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-personal benefit. Thus no rude or impertinent
-comment is made upon the Frank stranger, and
-above all, upon the Frank woman, whose habits,
-manners, and costume, differ so widely, and,
-doubtlessly to them so absurdly, from those of
-their own country; while towards each other
-they are as staid, as solemn, and as courteous, as
-though each were jealous to preserve the good
-order of the community, and considered it as his
-individual concern.</p>
-
-<p>To revert to the military ceremony, from
-which, in order to render justice to the Turkish
-population, I have unavoidably digressed; I shall
-mention, without further preface, that it arose
-from the reluctance of the Sultan and his ministers,
-that the troops, in presenting arms to the
-female members of the Imperial family, should
-have the opportunity afforded them of a momentary
-gaze at their veiled and sacred countenances.
-The difficulty was, how to retain the “pomp and
-circumstance” of the ceremonial, and at the
-same time to render this passing privilege impossible.
-A most original and satisfactory expedient
-was at length fortunately discovered;
-and we were lucky enough to witness the effect
-of the new arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>The slow and noisy rattle of the arabas was
-heard&mdash;the word was passed along the line that
-the Sultanas were approaching&mdash;and suddenly
-the troops faced about, with their backs to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-open space along which the princesses were expected,
-and, extending their arms to their full
-length, the man&oelig;uvre was performed behind
-them, producing the most extraordinary and ludicrous
-scene that was perhaps ever enacted by
-a body of soldiers! In this uncomfortable, and
-I should also imagine difficult, position, they
-remained until the four carriages had passed,
-when they resumed their original order, and
-stood leaning negligently on their muskets until
-the return of the Imperial <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cort&egrave;ge</em>.</p>
-
-<p>George Cruikshank would have immortalized
-himself had he been by to note it!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Bath-room of Scodra Pasha&mdash;Fondness of the Eastern Women for the
-Bath&mdash;The Outer Hall&mdash;The Proprietress&mdash;Female Groupes&mdash;The
-Cooling-room&mdash;The Great Hall&mdash;The Fountains&mdash;The Bathing Women&mdash;The
-Dinner&mdash;Apology for the Turkish Ladies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> first bath-room which I saw in the
-country was that of Scodra Pasha; and, had I
-been inclined so to do, I might doubtlessly have
-woven a pretty fiction on the subject, without
-actually visiting one of these extraordinary
-establishments. But too much has already been
-written on inference by Eastern tourists, and I
-have no wish to add to the number of fables
-which have been advanced as facts, by suffering
-imagination to usurp the office of vision. Such
-being the case, I resolved to visit a public bath
-in company with a female acquaintance, and not
-only become a spectator but an actor in the
-scene, if I found the arrangement feasible.</p>
-
-<p>The bath-room of the Pasha, or rather of his
-family, was a domed cabinet, lined with marble,
-moderately heated, and entered from the loveliest
-little boudoir imaginable, where a sofa of bro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span>caded
-silk, piled with cushions of gold tissue,
-offered the means of repose after the exhaustion
-of bathing. But I had seen it tenanted only by
-a Greek lady and myself, and half a score of
-slaves, who were all occupied in attendance upon
-us; and I felt at once that, under such circumstances,
-I could form no adequate idea of what
-is understood by a Turkish bath; the terrestrial
-paradise of Eastern women, where politics, social
-and national, scandal, marriage, and every
-other subject under heaven, within the capacity
-of uneducated but quick-witted females, is discussed:
-and where ample revenge is taken for
-the quiet and seclusion of the harem, in the
-noise, and hurry, and excitement, of a crowd.</p>
-
-<p>Having passed through a small entrance-court,
-we entered an extensive hall, paved with white
-marble, and surrounded by a double tier of projecting
-galleries, supported by pillars: the lower
-range being raised about three feet from the
-floor. These galleries were covered with rich
-carpets, or mattresses, overlaid with chintz or
-crimson shag, and crowded with cushions; the
-spaces between the pillars were slightly partitioned
-off to the height of a few inches; and,
-when we entered, the whole of the boxes, if I
-may so call them, were occupied, save the one
-which had been reserved for us.</p>
-
-<p>In the centre of the hall, a large and handsome
-fountain of white marble, pouring its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-waters into four ample scallop shells, whence
-they fell again into a large basin with the
-prettiest and most soothing sound imaginable,
-was surrounded by four sofas of the same material,
-on one of which, a young and lovely
-woman, lay pillowed on several costly shawls,
-nursing her infant.</p>
-
-<p>When I had established myself comfortably
-among my cushions, I found plenty of amusement
-for the first half hour in looking about me;
-and a more singular scene I never beheld. On
-the left hand of the door of entrance, sat the
-proprietress of the baths, a beautiful woman of
-about forty, in a dark turban, and a straight
-dress of flowered cotton, girt round the waist
-with a cachemire shawl; her chemisette of silk
-gauze was richly trimmed&mdash;her gold snuff-box
-lay on the sofa beside her&mdash;her amber-headed
-pipe rested against a cushion&mdash;and she was
-amusing herself by winding silk from a small
-ebony distaff, and taking a prominent part in
-the conversation; while immediately behind her
-squatted a negro slave-girl of twelve or thirteen
-years of age, grinning from ear to ear, and rolling
-the whites of her large eyes in extacy at
-all that was going forward.</p>
-
-<p>The boxes presented the oddest appearance
-in the world&mdash;some of the ladies had returned
-from the bathing-hall, and were reclining luxuriously
-upon their sofas, rolled from head to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-foot in fine white linen, in many instances embroidered
-and fringed with gold, with their fine
-hair falling about their shoulders, which their
-slaves, not quite so closely covered as their mistresses,
-were drying, combing, perfuming, and
-plaiting, with the greatest care. Others were
-preparing for the bath, and laying aside their
-dresses, or rather suffering them to be laid
-aside, for few of them extended a hand to assist
-themselves&mdash;while the latest comers were
-removing their <em>yashmacs</em> and cloaks, and exchanging
-greetings with their acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>As I had previously resolved to visit every
-part of the establishment, I followed the example
-of my companion, who had already undergone
-the fatigue of an Oriental bath, and
-exchanged my morning dress for a linen
-wrapper, and loosened my hair: and then, conducted
-by the Greek waiting-maid who had accompanied
-me, I walked barefooted across the
-cold marble floor to a door at the opposite
-extremity of the hall, and, on crossing the
-threshold, found myself in the cooling-room,
-where groups of ladies were sitting, or lying
-listlessly on their sofas, enveloped in their
-white linen wrappers, or preparing for their
-return to the colder region whence I had just
-made my escape.</p>
-
-<p>This second room was filled with hot air, to
-me, indeed, most oppressively so; but I soon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-discovered that it was, nevertheless, a <em>cooling-room</em>;
-when, after having traversed it, and
-dipped my feet some half dozen times in the
-little channels of warm water that intersected
-the floor, I entered the great bathing-place of
-the establishment&mdash;the extensive octagon hall
-in which all those who do not chuse, or who
-cannot afford, to pay for a separate apartment,
-avail themselves, as they find opportunities, of
-the eight fountains which it contains.</p>
-
-<p>For the first few moments, I was bewildered;
-the heavy, dense, sulphureous vapour that
-filled the place, and almost suffocated me&mdash;the
-wild, shrill cries of the slaves pealing through
-the reverberating domes of the bathing-halls,
-enough to awaken the very marble with which
-they were lined&mdash;the subdued laughter, and
-whispered conversation of their mistresses murmuring
-along in an under-current of sound&mdash;the
-sight of nearly three hundred women only
-partially dressed, and that in fine linen so perfectly
-saturated with vapour, that it revealed
-the whole outline of the figure&mdash;the busy slaves,
-passing and repassing, naked from the waist
-upwards, and with their arms folded upon their
-bosoms, balancing on their heads piles of fringed
-or embroidered napkins&mdash;groups of lovely girls,
-laughing, chatting, and refreshing themselves
-with sweetmeats, sherbet, and lemonade&mdash;parties
-of playful children, apparently quite in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>different
-to the dense atmosphere which made
-me struggle for breath&mdash;and, to crown all, the
-sudden bursting forth of a chorus of voices into
-one of the wildest and shrillest of Turkish melodies,
-that was caught up and flung back by
-the echoes of the vast hall, making a din worthy
-of a saturnalia of demons&mdash;all combined to
-form a picture, like the illusory semblance of a
-phantasmagoria, almost leaving me in doubt
-whether that on which I looked were indeed
-reality, or the mere creation of a distempered
-brain.</p>
-
-<p>Beside every fountain knelt, or sat, several
-ladies, attended by their slaves, in all the
-various stages of the operation; each intent
-upon her own arrangements, and regardless of
-the passers-by; nor did half a dozen of them
-turn their heads even to look at the English
-stranger, as we passed on to the small inner cabinet
-that had been retained for us.</p>
-
-<p>The process of Turkish bathing is tedious,
-exhausting, and troublesome; I believe that the
-pretty Greek who attended me spent an hour
-and a half over my hair alone. The supply of
-water is immense, and can be heated at the
-pleasure of the bather, as it falls into the marble
-basin from two pipes, the one pouring forth a
-hot, and the other a cold, stream. The marble
-on which you stand and sit is heated to a degree
-that you could not support, were the at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>mosphere
-less dense and oppressive; and, as
-the water is poured over you from an embossed
-silver basin, the feeling of exhaustion becomes
-almost agreeable. Every lady carries with her
-all the appliances of the bath, as well as providing
-her own servant; the inferior ranks alone
-availing themselves of the services of the
-bathing women, who, in such cases, supply
-their employers with every thing requisite.</p>
-
-<p>These bathing-women, of whom I saw several
-as I traversed the great hall, are the most unsightly
-objects that can be imagined; from constantly
-living in a sulphureous atmosphere,
-their skins have become of the colour of tobacco,
-and of the consistency of parchment;
-many among them were elderly women, but
-not one of them was wrinkled; they had, apparently,
-become aged like frosted apples; the skin
-had tightened over the muscles, and produced
-what to me at least was a hideous feature of old
-age.</p>
-
-<p>Having remained in the bath about two hours
-and a half, I began to sicken for pure air and
-rest; and, accordingly, winding a napkin with
-fringed ends about my head, and folding
-myself in my wrapper, I hastily and imprudently
-traversed the cooling-room, now crowded
-with company, looking like a congregation of
-resuscitated corpses clad in their grave-clothes,
-and fevered into life; and gained the outer hall,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-where the napkin was removed from my head,
-my hair carefully plaited without drying, and
-enveloped in a painted muslin handkerchief;
-and myself buried among the soft cushions of
-the divan.</p>
-
-<p>A new feature had been added to the scene
-since my departure; most of the ladies were at
-dinner. The crimson glow of the bath, which
-throws all the blood into the head, had passed
-from most of their faces, and was replaced by
-the pure, pale, peach-like softness of complexion
-that its constant use never fails to produce.
-Numbers of negresses were entering with covered
-dishes, or departing with the reliques of
-those which had been served up; and, as the
-Turkish mode of eating lends itself to these
-<em>pic-nic</em> species of repasts, the fair ladies appeared
-to be as much at home squatted round
-their plated or china bowls, spoon in hand, in
-the hall of the bath, as though they were partaking
-of its contents in the seclusion of their
-own harems.</p>
-
-<p>Sherbet, lemonade, <em>mohalib&egrave;</em>, a species of inferior
-blanc-manger, and fruit, were constantly
-handed about for sale; and the scene was altogether
-so amusing, that it was almost with regret
-that I folded myself closely in my cloak and veil,
-and bowed my farewell to the several groups
-which I passed on my way to the door.</p>
-
-<p>I should be unjust did I not declare that I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-witnessed none of that unnecessary and wanton
-exposure described by Lady M. W. Montague.
-Either the fair Ambassadress was present at a
-peculiar ceremony, or the Turkish ladies have
-become more delicate and fastidious in their
-ideas of propriety.</p>
-
-<p>The excessive exhaustion which it induces,
-and the great quantity of time which it consumes,
-are the only objections that can reasonably
-be advanced against the use of the Turkish
-bath.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Cheerful Cemeteries&mdash;Burial-ground of Pera&mdash;Superiority of the
-Turkish Cemeteries&mdash;Cypresses&mdash;Singular Superstition&mdash;The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Grand
-Champs</em>&mdash;Greek Grave-yard&mdash;Sultan Selim’s Barrack&mdash;Village of
-St. Demetrius&mdash;European Burial-ground&mdash;Grave-stones&mdash;The
-Kiosk&mdash;Noble View&mdash;Legend of the Maiden’s Tower&mdash;Plague
-Hospital of the Turks&mdash;The Plague-Ca&iuml;que&mdash;Armenian Cemetery&mdash;Curious
-Inscriptions&mdash;Turkish Burial-place&mdash;Distinctive Head-stones&mdash;Graves
-of the Janissaries&mdash;Wild Superstition&mdash;Cemetery of Scutari&mdash;Splendid
-Cypresses&mdash;Ancient Prophecy&mdash;Extent of Burial-ground&mdash;The
-Headless Dead&mdash;Exclusive Enclosures&mdash;Aspect of the
-Cemetery from the Summer Palace of Heybetoullah Sultane&mdash;Local
-Superstition&mdash;The Damn&egrave;d Souls.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> alluded elsewhere to the apparent care
-with which the Turks select the most lovely
-spots for burying their dead, and how they
-have, by such means, divested death of its most
-gloomy attributes. Like the ancient Romans,
-they form grave-yards by the road-side; and,
-like them, they inscribe upon their tombs the
-most beautiful lessons of resignation and philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>The Cemetery of Pera offers a singular spectacle;
-and the rather that the “Champ des
-Morts” is the promenade of the whole population,
-Turk, Frank, Greek, and Armenian; the
-lesser burial-place, or <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Petit Champs</em>, is sacred to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-the Mussulmauns, and fringes with its dark
-cypresses the crest of the hill that dominates
-the port; it is hemmed in with houses&mdash;overlooked
-by a hundred casements&mdash;grazed by
-cattle&mdash;loud with greetings and gossipry&mdash;and
-commands an extensive view of the shipping in
-the harbour and the opposite shore. There are
-footpaths among the funereal trees; sunny
-glades gleaming out amid the dark shadows;
-head-stones clustered against the grassy slopes,
-and guard-houses, with their portals thronged
-with lounging soldiers, mocking the defencelessness
-of the dead. Nor must I forget to mention
-the small octagonal building, which, seated in the
-very depth of the valley, and generally remarkable
-from the dense volume of smoke exuding
-from its tall chimney, marks the spot where the
-last profane duties are paid to the dead; where
-the body is washed, the beard is shorn, the nails
-are cut, and the limbs are decently composed,
-ere what was so lately a True Believer is laid to
-rest in the narrow grave, to be aroused only by
-the sound of the last trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>The superiority of the Turkish cemeteries
-over those of Europe may be accounted for in
-several ways. Their head-stones are more picturesque
-and various&mdash;their situation better
-chosen&mdash;and, above all things, the Mussulmaun
-never disturbs the ashes of the dead. There
-is no burying and re-burying on the same spot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-as with us. The remains of the departed are
-sacred.</p>
-
-<p>When a body is committed to the earth, the
-priest plants a cypress at the head, and another
-at the foot, of the grave; and hence those far-spreading
-forests, those bough o’er-canopied
-cities of the dead, which form so remarkable a
-feature in Turkish scenery. Should only one
-tree in six survive, enough still remain to form
-a dense and solemn grove; but the Turks have
-a singular superstition with regard to those
-that, instead of lancing their tall heads towards
-the sky, take a downward bend, as
-though they would fain return to the earth from
-whence they sprang; they hold that these imply
-the damnation of the soul whose mortal remains
-they overshadow; and as, from the closeness
-with which they are planted, and their consequent
-number, such accidents are by no means
-rare, it must be at best a most uncomfortable
-creed.</p>
-
-<p>But it is to the “Grand Champs” that the
-stranger should direct his steps, if he would
-contemplate a scene to which the world probably
-can produce no parallel. Emerging from
-the all but interminable High Street, whose projecting
-upper stories form a canopy above your
-head for nearly its whole length, you have on
-your left hand the plague-hospital for the
-Franks, and on your right a stretch of higher<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-land, which is the burial-ground of the Greeks.
-Here there is nothing to arrest your steps; it is
-ill-kept, and, were it not for the houses that
-surround it, would be dreary and desolate from
-its very disorder. The Greek is the creature
-of to-day&mdash;yesterday is blotted from his tablets.</p>
-
-<p>Having passed the grave-yard, the road
-widens into an esplanade, in front of an extensive
-block of building, erected by Sultan Selim
-as a cavalry barrack. It is painted rose-colour,
-has a noble entrance, and possesses a look of
-order and regularity almost European. It is
-not until you descend the gentle declivity that
-slopes onward to the Grand Champs des Morts,
-that you discover the whole extent of the edifice,
-which is a quadrangle, having three fronts;
-its fourth side being devoted to a range of
-stabling.</p>
-
-<p>The road to Therapia and the “Sweet
-Waters” skirts the burial-ground; and the
-little Greek village or colony of St. Demetrius
-covers an opposite height.</p>
-
-<p>The first plot of ground, after passing the
-barrack, is the grave-yard of the Franks; and
-here you are greeted on all sides with inscriptions
-in Latin: injunctions to pray for the souls
-of the departed; flourishes of French sentiment;
-calembourgs graven into the everlasting
-stone, treating of roses and reine Marguerites;
-concise English records of births, deaths, ages,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-and diseases; Italian elaborations of regret and
-despair; and all the commonplaces of an ordinary
-burial-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Along the edge of this piece of land, a wide
-road conducts you to a steep descent leading to
-the Sultan’s Palace of Dolma Batch&eacute;; the crest
-of the hill commanding a noble view of the
-channel; while, on the verge of the descent, and
-almost touching the graves, stands a kiosk of
-wood, rudely put together, and serving as a
-coffee room; and immediately in front of it, a
-group of cypresses form a pleasant shade, beneath
-which parties of Turks, Greeks, and Armenians,
-seated on low stools, smoke their
-eternal chibouks, sip their sugarless coffee, and
-contemplate one of the loveliest views over
-which the eye of a painter ever lingered.</p>
-
-<p>From this height, the hill slopes rapidly downward,
-clothed with fruit trees, and bright with
-vegetation. At its foot flows the blue Bosphorus,
-clear and sparkling as the sky, whose
-tint it rivals. Immediately across the channel
-stretches Scutari, the gem of the Asian shore,
-with its forest of cypresses, its belt of palaces,
-its hill-seated kiosks, and its sky-kissing
-minarets. Further in the distance are two
-pigmy islands, heaving up their dark sides
-from the bright wave, like aquatic monsters
-revelling in the sunshine; beyond is a stretch
-of sea&mdash;the Sea of Marmora&mdash;laughing in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-the light, as though no storms had ever rent
-its bosom&mdash;while, above all, on the extreme
-verge of the horizon, almost blending with the
-dark purple clouds that rest upon it, towers
-Mount Olympus, the dwelling of the gods,
-crowned with snows, and flinging its long
-shadows over the pleasant town and mulberry
-groves of Broussa. And here, a little to the
-right, (where Scutari, after advancing with a
-graceful curve, as though to do homage to her
-European sister, again recedes), upon a rock so
-small that its foundations cover the whole
-surface, stands the “Maiden’s Tower;” an object
-in itself so picturesque that it would arrest
-the eye though it possessed no legend to attract
-the sympathy&mdash;but such is far from being the
-case.</p>
-
-<p>This Tower, so runs the tale, was erected by
-a former Sultan, as a residence for his only
-daughter, of whom it was foretold by the astrologers
-that she would, before the completion of
-her eighteenth year, be destroyed by a serpent.
-Every precaution was taken to overcome destiny;
-but it was not to be&mdash;an adder, accidentally
-concealed in a box of figs, fastened
-upon the hand of the princess, and she was
-found dead on her sofa.</p>
-
-<p>The Maiden’s Tower is now the plague-hospital
-of the Turks: and his heart must be atrophised
-indeed who can look around on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-bright and beautiful scene amid which it stands,
-and not feel how much the bitter pang of the
-plague-smitten must be enhanced by the contrast
-of all around them with their own probable
-fate&mdash;for, alas! the long gaze of the sickening
-victim is too frequently his last! The dying
-wretch should pass to his infected home by a
-road of gloom and shadow, where no image of
-gladness can mock him by its intrusive and
-harrowing presence&mdash;but to be swiftly borne
-along that blue sea, with those magnificent
-shores stretching away into the distance, far
-beyond his failing vision&mdash;to be carried to his
-narrow chamber, probably to die&mdash;cut off from
-his fellow-men&mdash;from all the glory and the majesty
-around him&mdash;surely no after-pang can be
-so keen as that which grapples at his heart
-during his brief voyage to the Maiden’s Tower!</p>
-
-<p>Rapidly darts forward the slender ca&iuml;que; it
-shoots from the shore like a wild bird&mdash;no sound
-of revelry, no shout of greeting, no pealing
-laughter, heralds its departure&mdash;the sturdy
-rowers bend to their oars; the resisting waters
-yield before the vigorous stroke&mdash;there is no
-pause&mdash;no interval&mdash;the errand is contagion&mdash;the
-freight is death! The eyes are dim that
-roll languidly in their sockets: the lips are
-livid that quiver with agony in lieu of words:
-the brow is pale and clammy that is turned
-upwards to the cloudless sky&mdash;the hands are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-nerveless that are flung listlessly across the
-panting breast&mdash;and as men watch from afar
-the rapid progress of the laden boat, their own
-breath comes thickly, and their pulses throb;
-and, when they at length turn aside to pursue
-their way, they move onward with a slower and
-a less steady step&mdash;their brows are clouded&mdash;they
-have looked upon the plague!</p>
-
-<p>But the goal is gained, and the ca&iuml;que has
-discharged its gloomy freight. All around is
-life, and light, and loveliness. The surface of
-the channel is crowded with boats, filled with
-busy human beings, hurrying onward in pursuit
-of pleasure or of gain; a thousand sounds
-are on the wind. The swift ca&iuml;ques dart like
-water-fowl past the Maiden’s Tower, and few
-within them waste a thought upon the anguish
-which it conceals!</p>
-
-<p>A few paces from the spot whence you look
-down upon this various scene&mdash;a few paces, and
-from the refuge of the dying you gaze upon the
-resting-place of the dead. Where the acacia-trees
-blossom in their beauty, and shed their
-withered flowers upon a plain of graves on the
-right hand, immediately in a line with the European
-cemetery, is the burial-ground of the Armenians.
-It is a thickly-peopled spot; and as you
-wander beneath the leafy boughs of the scented
-acacias, and thread your way among the tombs,
-you are struck by the peculiarity of their in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>scriptions.
-The noble Armenian character is
-graven deeply into the stone; name and date
-are duly set forth; but that which renders an
-Armenian slab (for there is not a head-stone
-throughout the cemetery) peculiar and distinctive,
-is the singular custom that has obtained
-among this people of chisselling upon the tomb
-the emblem of the trade or profession of the
-deceased.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the priest is distinguished even beyond
-the grave by the mitre that surmounts his
-name&mdash;the diamond merchant by a group of
-ornaments&mdash;the money-changer by a pair of
-scales&mdash;the florist by a knot of flowers&mdash;besides
-many more ignoble hieroglyphics, such as the
-razor of the barber, the shears of the tailor,
-and others of this class; and, where the calling
-is one that may have been followed by either
-sex, a book, placed immediately above the appropriate
-emblem, distinguishes the grave of
-the man.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this all: the victims of a violent
-death have also their distinctive mark&mdash;and
-more than one tomb in this extraordinary burial-place
-presents you with the headless trunk of
-an individual, from whose severed throat the
-gushing blood is spirting upwards like a fountain,
-while the head itself is pillowed on the
-clasped hands! Many of the more ancient
-among the tombs are very richly and elabo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>rately
-wrought, but nearly all the modern ones
-are perfectly simple; and you seldom pass the
-spot without seeing groups of people seated
-upon the graves beneath the shadow of the
-trees, talking, and even smoking. Death has no
-gloom for the natives of the East.</p>
-
-<p>The Turkish cemetery stretches along the
-slope of the hill behind the barrack, and descends
-far into the valley. Its thickly-planted
-cypresses form a dense shade, beneath which
-the tall head-stones gleam out white and ghastly.
-The grove is intersected by footpaths, and here
-and there a green glade lets in the sunshine,
-to glitter upon many a gilded tomb. Plunge
-into the thick darkness of the more covered
-spots, and for a moment you will almost think
-that you stand amid the ruins of some devastated
-city. You are surrounded by what appear
-for an instant to be the myriad fragments
-of some mighty whole&mdash;but the gloom has deceived
-you&mdash;you are in the midst of a Nekropolis&mdash;a
-City of the Dead. Those chisselled
-blocks of stone that lie prostrate at your feet,
-or lean heavily on one side as if about to fall,
-and which at the first glance have seemed to
-you to be the shivered portions of some mighty
-column&mdash;those turban-crowned shafts which
-rise on all sides&mdash;those gilt and lettered slabs
-erected beside them&mdash;are memorials of the departed&mdash;the
-first are of ancient date; the earth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-has become loosened at their base, and they
-have lost their hold&mdash;the others tell their own
-tale; the bearded Moslem sleeps beside his
-wife&mdash;the turban surmounting his head-stone,
-and the rose-branch carved on her’s, define
-their sex, while the record of their years and
-virtues is engraven beneath. Would you know
-more? Note the form and folds of the turban,
-and you will learn the rank and profession of
-the deceased&mdash;here lies the man of law&mdash;and
-there rests the Pasha&mdash;the soldier slumbers yonder,
-and close beside you repose the ashes of
-the priest&mdash;here and there, scattered over the
-burial-ground, you may distinguish several
-head-stones from which the turbans have been
-recently struck off&mdash;so recently that the severed
-stone is not yet weather-stained; they mark
-the graves of the Janissaries, desecrated by
-order of the Sultan after the distinction of
-their body; who himself stood by while a portion
-of the work was going forward; and the
-mutilated turbans that are half buried in the
-long grass beside these graves are imperishable
-witnesses to their disgrace&mdash;a disgrace which
-was extended even beyond the grave, and whose
-depth of ignominy can only be understood in a
-country where the dead are objects of peculiar
-veneration.</p>
-
-<p>Those raised terraces enclosed within a railing
-are family burial-places; and the miniature<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-column crowned with a <em>f&egrave;z</em>, painted in bright
-scarlet, records the rest of some infant Effendi.
-At the base of many of the shafts are stones
-hollowed out to contain water, which are carefully
-filled, during the warm season, by pious
-individuals, for the supply of the birds, or any
-wandering animals.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks have a strange superstition attached
-to this cemetery. They believe that on
-particular anniversaries sparks of fire exude
-from many of the graves, and lose themselves
-among the boughs of the cypresses. The idea
-is at least highly poetical.</p>
-
-<p>But Constantinople boasts no burial-place of
-equal beauty with that of Scutari, and probably
-the world cannot produce such another, either
-as regards extent or pictorial effect. A forest
-of the finest cypresses extending over an immense
-space, clothing hill and valley, and overshadowing,
-like a huge pall, thousands of dead,
-is seen far off at sea, and presents an object at
-once striking and magnificent. Most of the
-trees are of gigantic height, and their slender
-and spiral outline cutting sharply against the
-clear sky is graceful beyond expression. The
-Turks themselves prefer the great cemetery of
-Scutari to all others; for, according to an ancient
-prophecy in which they have the most
-implicit faith, the followers of Mahomet are, ere
-the termination of the world, to be expelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-from Europe; and, as they are jealous of committing
-even their ashes to the keeping of the
-Giaour, they covet, above all things, a grave in
-this Asiatic wilderness of tombs. Thus, year
-after year, the cypress forest extends its boundaries,
-and spreads further and wider its dense
-shadows; generation after generation sleeps in
-the same thickly-peopled solitude; and the laughing
-vineyard and the grassy glade disappear
-beneath the encroachments of the ever-yawning
-sepulchre&mdash;the living yield up their space
-to the dead&mdash;the blossoming fruit trees are
-swept away, and the funereal and feathering
-boughs of the dark grave-tree tower in their
-stead.</p>
-
-<p>It is not without a sensation of the most
-solemn awe that you turn aside from the open
-plain, and abandon the cheerful sunshine, to
-plunge into the deep gloom of the silent forest;
-scores of narrow pathways intersect it in all
-directions; and, should you fail to follow them
-in your wanderings, your every step must be
-upon a grave. Here a group of lofty and
-turban-crowned columns, each with a small
-square slab of stone at its base, arrests you with
-a thrill of sickening interest, for that silent and
-pigmy slab tells you a tale of terror&mdash;each
-covers the severed head of a victim to state
-policy, or state intrigue&mdash;Vizirs and Pashas,
-Beys and Effendis&mdash;the eye that blighted, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-the brow that burned, are mouldering, or have
-mouldered there&mdash;the fever of ambition, the
-thirst of power, the wiliness of treason, and the
-pride of place&mdash;all that frets and fevers the
-mind of man, is there laid to rest for ever&mdash;and
-the stately turban towers, as if in mockery,
-above the trunkless head which festers in its
-dishonoured grave!</p>
-
-<p>Those gilded tombs enclosed within their
-circling barrier are inscribed with the names
-and titles of some powerful or wealthy race
-that has carried its pride beyond the grave,
-and not suffered even its dust to mingle with
-that of more common men&mdash;the prostrate and
-perished columns on one hand have yielded
-reluctantly to time, and now cumber the earth
-in recordless ruin; while the stately head-stones
-on the other, yet bright with gilding,
-and elaborate with ornament, point out to you
-the resting-places of the newly dead&mdash;the pomp
-of yesterday speaks far less sadly to the heart
-than the hoar and letterless remains of by-past
-centuries.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a bright light flashes through the
-gloom; the warm sunshine falls in a flood of
-radiance, the more startling from the darkness
-that surrounds it, upon a limited and treeless
-space, on which time or the tempest have done
-their work; and where withered boughs and
-shivered trunks, branchless and gray with moss,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-are prostrate among sunken tombs and ruined
-monuments.</p>
-
-<p>Your spirit is oppressed, your eye is blinded,
-by that mocking light!</p>
-
-<p>Here and there, upon the borders of the forest,
-a latticed pavilion of the brightest green, contrasting
-strangely with the cold, white, spectral-looking
-head-stones which it overtops,
-causes you to turn aside almost in wonder;
-but death is even there&mdash;it is the tomb of some
-beloved child, and the slab within is strown
-with flowers&mdash;flowers that have been gathered
-in anguish, and moistened with tears. Alas! for
-the breaking heart and the trembling hand
-that strewed them there!</p>
-
-<p>I remember nothing more beautiful than the
-aspect of the burying-ground of Scutari, from
-the road which winds in front of the summer
-palace of the Princess Hayb&egrave;toullah. The crest
-of the hill is one dense mass of dark foliage,
-while the slope is only partially clothed with
-trees, that advance and recede in the most
-graceful curves; and the contrast between the
-deep dusky green of the cypresses, and the soft
-bright tint of the young fresh grass in the open
-spaces between them, produces an effect almost
-magical, and which strikes you as being more
-the result of art than accident, until you convince
-yourself, by looking around you, that it is
-to its extent alone that this noble cemetery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-owes its gloom, for its site is eminently picturesque
-and beautiful. On one side, an open
-plain separates it from the channel; on the
-other, it is bounded by a height clothed with
-vines and almond trees&mdash;the houses of Scutari
-touch upon its border, and even mingle with its
-graves in the rear, while before it spreads a
-wide extent of cultivated land dotted with habitations.</p>
-
-<p>Need I add that the Nekropolis of Scutari,
-such as I have described it, has also its local
-superstition? Surely not; and the idea is so
-wild, and withal so imaginative, that I cannot
-pass it by without record.</p>
-
-<p>Along the channel may be constantly seen
-clouds of aquatic birds of dusky plumage, speeding
-their rapid flight from the Euxine to the
-Propontis, or bending their restless course from
-thence back again to the Black Sea, never pausing
-for a moment to rest their weary wing on
-the fair green spots of earth that woo them
-on every side; and it is only when a storm takes
-place in the Sea of Marmora, or sweeps over
-the bosom of the Bosphorus, that they fly shrieking
-to the cypress forest of Scutari for shelter;
-and these the Turks believe to be the souls of
-the damned, who have found sepulchre beneath
-its boughs, and which are permitted, during a
-period of elementary commotion, to revisit the
-spot where their mortal bodies moulder; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-there mourn together over the crimes and judgment
-of their misspent existence upon earth&mdash;while,
-during the gentler seasons, they are compelled
-to pass incessantly within sight of the
-localities they loved in life, without the privilege
-of pausing even for one instant in the
-charmed flight to which they are condemned
-for all eternity!</p>
-
-<p>My mind was full of this legend when I
-visited the cemetery&mdash;and I can offer no better
-apology for the wild verses that I strung together
-as I sat upon a fallen column in one of
-the gloomiest nooks of the forest, and amid the
-noon-day twilight of the thick branches, while
-my companions wandered away among the
-graves.</p>
-
-<p class="center padt1">THE DAMN&Egrave;D SOULS.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">Hark! ’tis a night when the storm-god rides</div>
-<div class="line i1">In triumph o’er the deep;</div>
-<div class="line">And the howling voice of the tempest chides</div>
-<div class="line i1">The spirits that fain would sleep:</div>
-<div class="line">When the clouds, like a sable-bannered host,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Crowd the dense and lurid sky;</div>
-<div class="line">And the ship and her crew are in darkness lost</div>
-<div class="line i1">As the blast roars rushing by.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">Voices are heard which summon men</div>
-<div class="line i1">To a dark and nameless doom;</div>
-<div class="line">And spirits, beyond a mortal’s ken,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Are wandering through the gloom;</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span></div>
-<div class="line">While the thunders leap from steep to steep,</div>
-<div class="line i1">And the yellow lightnings flash,</div>
-<div class="line">And the rocks reply to the riot on high,</div>
-<div class="line i1">As the wild waves o’er them dash.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">And we are here, in this night of fear,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Urged by a potent spell,</div>
-<div class="line">Haunting the glade where our bones are laid,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Our tale of crime to tell&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line">We have hither come, through the midnight gloom,</div>
-<div class="line i1">As the tempest about us rolls,</div>
-<div class="line">To spread mid the graves, where the rank grass waves,</div>
-<div class="line i1">The feast of the Damn&egrave;d Souls.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">Some have flown from the deep sea-caves</div>
-<div class="line i1">Which the storm-won treasures hold;</div>
-<div class="line">And these are they who through life were slaves</div>
-<div class="line i1">To the sordid love of gold;</div>
-<div class="line">No other light e’er meets their sight,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Save the gleam of the yellow ore;</div>
-<div class="line">And loathe they there, in their dark despair,</div>
-<div class="line i1">What they idolized before.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">They have swept o’er the rude and rushing tide,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Bestrewn with wreck and spoil,</div>
-<div class="line">Where the shrieking seaman writhed and died</div>
-<div class="line i1">’Mid his unavailing toil;</div>
-<div class="line">And they rode the wave, without power to save</div>
-<div class="line i1">The wretch as he floated by;</div>
-<div class="line">And sighed to think, as they saw him sink,</div>
-<div class="line i1">What a boon it was to die!</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">Some were cast from the burning womb,</div>
-<div class="line i1">Whence the lava-floods have birth;</div>
-<div class="line">From fires which wither, but ne’er consume</div>
-<div class="line i1">The rejected one of earth&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span></div>
-<div class="line">And these are they who were once the prey</div>
-<div class="line i1">Of the thirst that madmen know,</div>
-<div class="line">When the world for them is the diadem</div>
-<div class="line i1">That burns into the brow.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">They who crouch in the deepest gloom</div>
-<div class="line i1">Where no lightning-flash can dart,</div>
-<div class="line">Who, chained in couples, have hither come,</div>
-<div class="line i1">And can never be rent apart;</div>
-<div class="line">These are they whose life was a scene of strife,</div>
-<div class="line i1">And who learnt, alas! too late,</div>
-<div class="line">That the years flew fast which they each had cast</div>
-<div class="line i1">On the altar of their hate.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">But, hark! through the forest there sweeps a wail</div>
-<div class="line i1">More wild than the tempest-blast,</div>
-<div class="line">As each commences the darkling tale</div>
-<div class="line i1">Of the stern and shadowy past&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line">And the spell that has power, in this dread hour,</div>
-<div class="line i1">No pang of our’s controls&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line">Nor may mortal dare in the watch to share</div>
-<div class="line i1">That is kept by the Damn&egrave;d Souls!</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Character of the Constantinopolitan Greeks&mdash;The Greek Colony at the
-Fanar&mdash;Vogoride, Logotheti, and Angiolopolo&mdash;Political Sentiment&mdash;Chateaubriand
-at the Duke de Rovigo’s&mdash;Biting Criticism&mdash;Greek
-Chambers&mdash;“What’s in a Name?”&mdash;Custom of Burning Perfumes&mdash;The
-Pastille of the Seraglio&mdash;Turkish Cosmetics&mdash;Eastern Beauty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> more I saw of the Greeks, the more curious
-did I find the study of that page of the
-great volume of human nature which was there
-flung back; and, far from sharing in the astonishment
-of those who almost deem it a miracle
-that the whole nation has not been swept away,
-I rather marvel at the state of moral and political
-thraldom in which they exist. The tolerated
-citizens of an Empire whose interests, both
-civil and religious, differ so widely from their
-own, the Fanariote Greeks nourish in their
-heart’s core a hatred of their masters as intense
-as it is enduring, and serve them rather from
-fear than zeal.</p>
-
-<p>Every Greek is an intuitive diplomatist;
-nature has endowed him with a keen and subtle
-spirit&mdash;a power to see deeply, and to act
-promptly&mdash;and as their motto is palpable to all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-who have studied their character&mdash;<em>tempora
-mutantur, et nos mutamur in illis</em>&mdash;they are
-any thing but safe counsellors or firm friends.
-Each is to be had at a price: and, as several
-of the most talented among them are in the
-confidence of the leading members of the Turkish
-government, it were idle to expatiate on
-the pernicious consequences of their influence.
-There are so many spies in the camp&mdash;so many
-breaches in the fortress&mdash;and, with the helm of
-affairs, although not actually in their grasp, at
-least sufficiently within their reach to enable
-them occasionally to make the vessel of state
-policy swerve towards the course whither they
-would fain direct it, they are no contemptible
-allies to any foreign power that may need their
-services. The Turk probably possesses the
-soundest judgment, but the Greek is more subtle
-and quick-witted, and dazzles even where
-he may fail to convince.</p>
-
-<p>Under these circumstances, partially trusted
-by the Turks, and enriched and employed by
-other nations&mdash;gifted with subtlety, energy of
-character, and that keenness of perception and
-quickness of intellect for which they are remarkable&mdash;the
-Greeks would be dangerous, if
-not fatal enemies to their Moslem masters, had
-they not, like Achilles, one vulnerable point&mdash;they
-are not true, even to each other. Dissimulation
-is the atmosphere in which they live<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span>jealousy
-is the food on which they prey&mdash;and,
-while they are urging on the chariot of their
-own fortunes, they are sure to have some luckless
-rival impaled upon one of the spokes of its
-uncertain wheel.</p>
-
-<p>Hence, all those overwhelming revolutions
-which render the tenure of wealth and honours
-among them almost as precarious as among
-the Turks themselves. The tolerance of the
-Sultan’s government has conceded to them a
-magistracy and an ecclesiastical power as distinct
-as though they were a free people and the
-denizens of a free country; and their shrewd and
-subtle spirits, trammelled without, become tenfold
-more bitter in their concentrated struggle
-for supremacy among themselves. Their circle
-is limited: their hemisphere will afford space for
-one luminary only; to aggrandize one, another
-must be sacrificed; and thus it is a perpetual
-grappling for ascendency; and public probity
-and private friendship give way before it.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek colony at the Fanar is the focus of
-intrigue; each is a spy upon his neighbour&mdash;here
-“Greek meets Greek,” and the “tug of war”
-is deadly. Patriarchs and archbishops are deposed
-and exiled&mdash;magistrates are displaced and
-banished, as one or the other party obtain power&mdash;until
-the concentration of hatred atrophises
-every heart, and the smile upon every lip waits
-but the opportunity to wither into a sneer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span>With the double impulsion of honour and
-power among their own community, and wealth
-and influence without, it will be readily understood
-that a people constituted like the
-Fanariote Greeks pursue their purpose with a
-tenacity that blinds them to all less absorbing
-considerations. Each suffices to himself&mdash;he
-is his own world&mdash;and he centres all his
-energies and exertions upon one point. In this
-fact exists the weakness of the Greeks&mdash;they
-are too egotistical to be dangerous&mdash;they indulge
-individual selfishness when they should
-exert themselves for the common benefit of
-the community&mdash;the fruit is perished at the core,
-and it consequently decays upon the surface&mdash;and,
-while they thus make war upon each other,
-and fling the brand of jealousy upon the hearths
-of their own race, they require no exterior force
-to crush them.</p>
-
-<p>The three most conspicuous individuals now
-left among the Fanariote Greeks are Vogorede,
-Logotheti, and Angiolopolo, each of whom is
-more or less in the confidence of the Porte. The
-war between these talented and ambitious men is
-literally a war of wits. The craft is with Vogorede,
-the energy with Logotheti, and the tenacity
-of purpose with Angiolopolo. The nature of
-each individual is written on his countenance&mdash;that
-of Vogorede changes like the hue of the camelion;
-he is a man whose smile is not mirth, nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-approbation, nor enjoyment&mdash;his brow is narrow
-and deeply interlined, less by time than by the
-workings of his spirit; his eye is cold and quick,
-but it is the quickness which gives no token of
-intelligence&mdash;the restlessness of suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>The personal attributes of Logotheti are of a
-different character; his glance is searching and
-fiery, his features mobile and expressive, and
-his forehead high and strongly marked; and to
-these no more striking contrast can be afforded
-than by the truly magnificent head of Angiolopolo.
-There is not a vestige of passion, not a
-trace of anxiety, nor care, nor emotion perceptible;
-his countenance is calm, benevolent,
-and beautiful: his brow is singularly smooth
-for his age, and its character of placidity has
-continued unchanged throughout a long life of
-political exertion and excitement; while the
-white beard, which he wears to the utmost
-length that is now permitted, (Sultan Mahmoud
-having lately regulated this important point,
-and having even curtailed the exuberance of
-that of one of his ministers with his own Imperial
-hands!) gives him an air of patriarchal
-dignity in excellent keeping with his strictly
-Oriental costume.</p>
-
-<p>Having been for twelve years Charg&eacute; d’Affaires
-at Paris during the reign of Napoleon, he has
-a memory stored with anecdote; and a vivacity
-of expression, and an accuracy of detail, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-make his portraits life-like, and never fail to
-point the moral of the tale. He discourses
-fluently in French, and enters into the most
-trifling subjects with a relish and gaiety quite
-wonderful when his age (near seventy) and his
-pursuits are taken into consideration; and you
-have not been half an hour in his society before
-you feel the greatest surprise that the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">maladie
-de pays</em> should ever have been sufficiently strong
-to induce him to solicit his recall from a court
-whose now time-worn recollections yet retain so
-bright a hold upon his nature. Angiolopolo has
-neither the appearance nor the bearing of a
-veteran politician; and, were you ignorant of
-his history, you would look upon him as one
-who had fallen into “the sear and yellow leaf,”
-without one storm to hasten the decay.</p>
-
-<p>After an existence of political toil, Angiolopolo
-has ostensibly retired into the calm and quiet
-of domestic life. I speak, therefore, of him rather
-as he was a few months back than as he now
-actually is; though the fire which has been long
-burning requires time ere it can be thoroughly
-extinguished, and it is only fair to infer that,
-after so many years of state service, Angiolopolo
-will carry with him the same tastes and
-pursuits to the grave.</p>
-
-<p>Prepossessed by his appearance, I accepted
-with pleasure an invitation to spend the day
-with his family, and the more particularly as I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-was anxious to make the acquaintance of all
-those individuals who had become matter of
-local interest.</p>
-
-<p>When I entered, he was seated in the Oriental
-fashion on a corner of the sofa, with a small
-writing-stand on a low stool beside him, and
-leaning his arm upon a chest of polished wood
-containing papers. He received us with much
-politeness, and presented me to his wife and
-daughter, who were nestled under the covering
-of the tandour, on the other side of the apartment,
-and who welcomed me in the most cordial
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>For a time, nothing but the veriest commonplace
-was uttered by any of the party; but some
-political allusion having been accidentally made,
-he expressed himself both disappointed and annoyed
-at the supineness of the British Government,
-though he admitted that it had caused
-him no surprize, as it was not the first occasion
-on which England, after amusing and deluding
-the Porte with promises of protection and support,
-had failed to fulfil her pledges in the hour
-of need. “As individuals,” he added emphatically,
-“no one can respect the English
-more than I do, but as a nation every thinking
-man throughout the Ottoman Empire has lost
-faith in them&mdash;the trust and confidence which
-the Turks once placed in the political integrity
-of Great Britain are at an end for ever.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span>As he was an invalid, we dined <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en famille</em>;
-and I was struck with the extreme attention
-and deference that he showed towards his wife;
-all the other Greeks with whom I had become
-acquainted being the most indifferent, or, as
-we style it in Europe, the most fashionable
-of husbands; nor was I less surprised at the
-apparent zest with which he entered into the
-inconsequent conversation that ensued, and the
-playfulness with which he bandied jest for jest,
-and piled anecdote on anecdote. One incident
-that he mentioned I may repeat without indiscretion,
-as it cannot, after such a lapse of
-time, affect the individual who is its subject,
-and whose literary reputation is now too well
-established to be injured by the old-world histories
-of the past.</p>
-
-<p>Angiolopolo was one day dining at the table
-of the Duke de Rovigo, when the work of Chateaubriand
-on the East became the subject of
-conversation; the author himself, then a very
-young man, and but little known in the world of
-letters, being one of the guests; and, while it
-was under discussion, the Duke requested of
-Angiolopolo to give him his opinion on its
-merits. The Ottoman Charg&eacute; d’Affaires, aware
-that Chateaubriand was present, and not wishing
-to pronounce a judgment that must be displeasing
-to him, carelessly replied that he
-remembered having met with the work some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-time previously: and thus sought to turn aside
-the subject, the more particularly as, not being
-supposed to be aware of the vicinity of the
-author, he had no apology afforded him on the
-score of delicacy, should he pronounce an
-opinion tending to gloss over his real sentiments.</p>
-
-<p>But this indefinite reply did not satisfy the
-Duke, who expressed his astonishment that a
-native of the country of which the work
-treated should feel so little interest in the subject
-as to retain no memory of its contents.
-Thus urged, Angiolopolo found himself compelled
-to declare that he had not only read the
-book carefully, but still retained the most perfect
-recollection of many of its passages; and that
-he had evaded the inquiry simply from a disinclination
-to speak with severity of a writer,
-who had permitted himself to describe the domestic
-manners of a people, of whom he had
-only been enabled to judge from such specimens
-as coffee-houses and the like places of vulgar
-resort had offered to his observation.</p>
-
-<p>That he should form erroneous opinions of the
-mass from these low-bred and low-minded portions
-of the population might be pardoned, as
-the error of a surface-scanning and light-headed
-traveller; but that he should put them forth in
-sober earnestness to mislead wiser men, who did
-not possess the opportunity of forming a more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-correct judgment for themselves, was a graver
-and a more reprehensible fault, and one which
-no native of the East could easily forgive. Had
-he been honest, he would frankly have acknowledged
-that the doors of the higher classes were
-reluctantly and rarely opened to the Franks,
-who required the best introductions to secure
-an entrance into any distinguished house; both
-the habits and the position of the Orientals
-being unfavourable to the curiosity of strangers&mdash;and
-not have libelled a people of whom he
-really knew as little on his return to Europe
-as the day on which he landed at Stamboul.</p>
-
-<p>“Chateaubriand has since become a distinguished
-writer;” he added in conclusion, “but I
-doubt not that often, amid his success, he has
-remembered the dinner at the Duke de Rovigo’s,
-and his inexorable critic.”</p>
-
-<p>In anecdotes of this description, in which
-his powers of memory and his natural vivacity
-were equally apparent, the hours passed rapidly
-away; nor did we retire till near midnight, and
-even then more as a matter of expediency than
-of weariness, (for he was far too hospitable to
-suffer us to leave him until the following day,)
-and we had consequently full time to enjoy his
-reminiscences.</p>
-
-<p>I should have previously remarked that the
-chambers in the Greek houses are generally arranged
-in the same manner as those of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-Turks&mdash;that is to say, a pile of mattresses are
-heaped upon the floor, without a bedstead; but
-with the Greeks the coverlets are less splendid,
-and the pillows are less costly. In each, a tray
-is conspicuously set out with conserves, generally
-strongly impregnated with perfume, such
-as rose, bergamotte, and citron: and covered
-goblets of richly-cut crystal, filled with water.
-The custom appears singular to an European,
-but it is by no means unpleasant; and I had
-not been long in the country ere I found the
-visit of the servant, who knelt down at my bedside,
-and handed the tray to me on my awaking,
-a very agreeable one.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s in a name?” asks Juliet. I confess
-that to me there is a spell in many; and among
-the Greeks I did not enjoy my sweetmeats the
-less that they were handed to me by Euphrosine
-or Anastasia; or my coffee that the tray was
-held by Demetrius or Theodosius. This may
-be folly, but it is not the less fact.</p>
-
-<p>The custom of burning perfumes in the mangal
-is, if not a healthy, at least a very luxurious
-one; and the atmosphere of the saloon of Angiolopolo
-was heavy with ambergris and musk.
-I have not yet met with a native of the East, of
-either sex, who was not strongly attached to
-their use; their own perfumes are delicate and
-agreeable, being rather concentrated preparations,
-than individual scents; and soothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span>,
-rather than exciting, the nerves; but they are
-also very partial to those of Europe, and
-among the latest presents of the Empress of
-Russia to the Princess Asm&eacute;, the Sultan’s
-eldest sister, were several cases of Eau de Cologne.</p>
-
-<p>The pastille of the seraglio, of which a large
-quantity has been presented to me by different
-Turkish and Armenian gentlemen, is a delightful
-invention; and looks, moreover, in its casing
-of gold leaf, extremely elegant; as it is somewhat
-costly, it is not in common use, but it is
-greatly prized in the harems.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps no country exceeds Turkey in the
-variety and value of its cosmetics; and, although
-there are no daily prints to advertise their
-virtues, no ingenious puffs to expatiate on their
-properties, the ladies are by no means ignorant
-of their existence, but employ them in all their
-varieties; from the dye with which they darken
-their eyebrows, to the henna that disfigures
-the extremities of their fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Among the fair Greeks, the use of rouge is
-by no means uncommon; and they also carry
-to a greater extreme than the Turkish women
-the frightful custom of joining the eyebrows artificially
-across the nose, by which mistaken
-habit I have seen many a really pretty face
-terribly disfigured. I am, however, bound to
-confess that the dearth of beauty among the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-Greek ladies is very striking; their expression
-is good, but their features are irregular, and
-ill-assorted; and, were it not that they have almost
-universally fine, sparkling, dark eyes, they
-would be, taking them collectively, a decidedly
-plain race.</p>
-
-<p>I looked in vain for the noble, calm, and peculiar
-outline which we are prone to believe
-must characterize the whole people; for the
-finely-poised head, the expansive brow, the
-drooping eyelid, and, above all, the straight nose
-and short upper lip of genuine Grecian beauty;
-I met with it only in one instance, but that one
-was a breathing model of the beautiful and
-classical in nature.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek ladies are bad figures, are by no
-means gifted either as to hands or feet, walk ungracefully,
-and are remarkable only, as I have
-already stated, for their bright eyes, and their
-dark, lustrous hair.</p>
-
-<p>The men are a much finer race, or rather
-there are more individuals among them who
-have the distinguished outline of head which
-one looks to meet with in their nation; but the
-females have neither the sweet, sleepy, fascinating
-expression of the Turkish beauties, nor
-the pure, fresh, sparkling complexion of the
-Armenian maidens, whose foreheads are frequently
-as snowy as the veil that binds them,
-and whose lips and cheeks look like crushed roses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>Not the least lovely among them is the fair
-girl who, in a spirit of frolic, consented to be
-presented to an English traveller, (Mr. Auldjo)
-as a Turkish lady, but whose style of beauty is
-perfectly dissimilar from that of the nation which
-she personated; the dark eyes, the henna-tipped
-fingers, and the costume, which is essentially
-the same as that of the harem, were, however,
-quite sufficient to deceive an unpractised eye;
-and the lively Armenian, to whom I was introduced
-at my express desire, tells the tale of her
-successful deceit with a self-complacency and
-enjoyment perfectly amusing.</p>
-
-<p>Had she more mind, and less <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">enbompoint</em>, an
-Armenian beauty would be perfect!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Kourban-Ba&iuml;ram&mdash;Politeness of Mustafa Effendi&mdash;Depressing
-Recollections&mdash;Unquiet Night&mdash;Midnight March&mdash;Turkish Coffee&mdash;A
-Latticed Araba&mdash;The Mosque of Sultan Achmet&mdash;Beautiful <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coup
-d’&oelig;il</em>&mdash;Dress of the Turkish Children&mdash;Restlessness of the Franks&mdash;The
-Festival of Sacrifice&mdash;Old Jewish Rite&mdash;The Turkish Wife&mdash;Sun-rise&mdash;Appearance
-of the Troops&mdash;Turkish Ladies&mdash;Group of
-Field Officers&mdash;The Sultan’s Stud&mdash;Magnificent Trappings&mdash;The
-Seraskier Pasha&mdash;The Great Officers of State&mdash;The Procession&mdash;The
-Sultan&mdash;Imperial Curiosity&mdash;The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam&mdash;Costume of the
-Sultan&mdash;Japanese Superstition&mdash;Vanity of Sultan Mahmoud&mdash;The
-Hairdresser of Halil Pasha&mdash;Rapid Promotion&mdash;Oriental Salutations&mdash;Halil
-Pasha&mdash;Sa&iuml;d Pasha&mdash;Unruly Horses&mdash;The Valley of the
-“Sweet Waters”&mdash;Pera.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Kourban-Ba&iuml;ram being fixed for the 28th
-of March, we crossed over to Constantinople on
-the evening of the 27th, in order to be on the
-spot, and thus diminish the fatigue of the morrow.
-Mustafa Effendi, who had removed with
-his harem to his country-house, very obligingly
-offered us the use of his mansion for the night,
-as well as the services of his house-steward and
-a couple of servants; and we accordingly found
-ourselves once more at home beneath his hospitable
-roof.</p>
-
-<p>I rejoiced that we required the accommodation
-only for some hours; as perhaps there are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-few things more depressing than a stroll through
-the empty and echoing chambers that you
-have associated with ideas and memories of
-mirth, and inhabitation, and amusement. The
-spacious apartments gave back a hollow reverberation,
-as we wandered over their uncarpeted
-floors, and flung open the casements of their uncurtained
-windows. The very chambers which
-had been purposely and carefully prepared for
-us were new and strange, being in a different
-part of the house from that occupied by the
-harem; and I more than once regretted the absence
-of the courteous old man who had received
-me so kindly on my first visit.</p>
-
-<p>As I had failed to obtain a view of the procession
-at the Festival of the Ba&iuml;ram, that
-terminated the Ramazan, when an apartment
-had been prepared for us at the Mint, of which
-we were unable to take possession, owing to the
-density of the crowd, that filled every street
-in its neighbourhood, and which we were not
-sufficiently early to precede; I was the more
-anxious not to subject myself to a similar disappointment
-on the present occasion; a feeling
-that was, indeed, shared by the whole party;
-and, accordingly, on parting for the night, which
-we did at an early hour, we were very sincere
-in our reciprocal promises to be hyper-diligent
-on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>And what a night we passed! The cannon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-was booming along the water, and rattling in
-long-sustained echoes among the hills&mdash;the myriad
-dogs that infest the city, scared from
-their usually quiet rest, were howling, whining,
-and barking, without a moment’s intermission;
-and the Imperial band was perambulating the
-streets, attended by flambeau-bearers; and executing,
-with admirable precision, some noble
-pieces of music. The wind-instruments were
-relieved at intervals by the drums and fifes, than
-which there are, perhaps, none better in the
-world: and these were succeeded by the tramp,
-beneath our window, of the whole garrison of
-the city, afoot and under arms two hours before
-daybreak.</p>
-
-<p>I watched the troops as they passed, the
-flaring torches throwing them into broad light
-between the two lofty white walls that hemmed
-in the narrow street, and from whose surface the
-sickly moonlight was fast waning, scrambling
-up the steep hill upon whose rise the house is
-built, rather in masses than in columns; officers
-and men mingled pell-mell, laughing, talking,
-and struggling over the rough pavement, in
-a manner much more picturesque than imposing.</p>
-
-<p>I had scarcely thrown myself once more upon
-my sofa, in order to court the sleep of which I
-had as yet only dreamt, when the rattling of
-our heavy carriage into the courtyard, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-loud knock at the door by which the Greek
-waiting-maid announced her wish for admittance,
-dispelled my hopes once more; and when
-she entered, candle in hand, I resigned myself
-to my fate, and, having ascertained that it was
-nearly four o’clock, made a hasty toilette, and
-joined my companions.</p>
-
-<p>The warmest and strongest of coffee was soon
-swallowed&mdash;by the way, what a sad pity it is
-that we know nothing about making coffee in
-Europe&mdash;and having settled ourselves comfortably
-in our well-cushioned araba, Madame &mdash;&mdash;, myself,
-and our attendant were soon
-jolting over the rough <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pav&eacute;</em> towards the scene
-of action, followed by my father and the two
-Turkish servants. The lattices of the carriage
-were closely shut, to avoid any possible
-difficulty, owing to our being Europeans; and
-one servant walked close beside each door, as
-though guarding the harem of some bearded
-Moslem.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived within the precincts of the court of
-Sultan Achmet’s magnificent mosque, and fairly
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entam&eacute;s</em> among the carriages, which resembled a
-bed of scarlet and yellow poppies, we removed
-the lattices altogether, and remained lying very
-comfortably among our silken cushions, with the
-araba open on all sides, and immediately in front
-of us the space along which the procession was
-to pass: the line of carriages forming one bound<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span>ary,
-and the other being guarded by a treble
-rank of military.</p>
-
-<p>The coup-d’&oelig;il was beautiful! The sun was
-just fringing the fleecy clouds with a glad golden
-edge; and, as the vapours rolled away, the
-bright blue of the laughing sky spread far and
-wide its stainless canopy. The noble trees that
-overshadow a portion of the enclosure were just
-putting forth their young spring leaves, all
-fresh, and dewy, and tender&mdash;tokens of that
-infant vegetation which may be blighted by too
-rude a blast, and which awakens in the heart
-such gentle and such fond associations&mdash;the
-spacious steps of white marble that stretch
-far in front of the principal entrance of the
-mosque were crowded with human beings&mdash;the
-exterior gallery that runs along the side of the
-edifice on which the Sultan was to pass was
-filled with women, whose white veils and dark
-<em>feridjhes</em> made them look like a community of
-nuns&mdash;while, in the rear of the military, groups
-were every where forming, shifting, and producing
-the most interesting pictorial effects.</p>
-
-<p>Here, it was a party of Jews&mdash;there, a knot of
-Armenians&mdash;further on, a circle of Greeks&mdash;and
-close beside us a cluster of women huddled
-together, and holding by the hand their rosy
-children, whose appearance I cannot more appropriately
-describe than by comparing them
-to the sweeps on May-day&mdash;such costumes!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-such pinks, greens, reds, and yellows, each out-glaring
-the other on the girls; the most grotesque
-prints fashioned into the most <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outr&eacute;</em>
-forms&mdash;pendent sleeves, trailing <em>anterys</em>, and
-little curly heads enveloped in painted handkerchiefs:
-while the boys from three years of age
-figured in surtout coats as brightly buttoned,
-and as ill-cut as those of their fathers&mdash;miniature
-pantaloons, corded with scarlet&mdash;and
-minute <em>fez’s</em>, with their purple tassels attached
-by stars of pearl of great beauty, or decorated
-with magnificent brilliant ornaments, fastened to
-the cap with pearl loops, to which were generally
-added golden coins, blue beads, and other preservatives
-against the Evil Eye!</p>
-
-<p>A few Franks were distinguishable among
-the crowd; but they appeared and disappeared
-like wandering spirits, never resting long on
-the same spot, and earning many a quiet smile
-from their Moslem neighbours, who are never
-weary of marvelling at the perpetual locomotion
-of the Giaours, so opposed to their own love of
-rest and quiet. Give a Turk a moderately good
-position on such an occasion as this, and he
-will never abandon it on the bare possibility of
-procuring a better; but the Greek and the
-European fidget and fuss to the last moment,
-and very probably do not always profit by their
-pains.</p>
-
-<p>The Kourban-Ba&iuml;ram, or festival of sacri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span>fice,
-differs from that which takes place at the
-conclusion of the Ramazan, by its greater pomp
-and the circumstance that, on the occasion of the
-present festival, animals are sacrificed to propitiate
-the favour of the Divinity: and, as we
-drove along the streets, they were crowded with
-sheep and lambs about to be offered up.</p>
-
-<p>Every head of a family sacrifices an animal
-with his own hands; and every male member of
-his household is at liberty to indulge his piety
-in a similar manner; but the chief of the house
-is bound to observe the ceremonial.</p>
-
-<p>On his return from the Mosque, the Sultan
-puts on a sacrificial dress, and, while two attendants
-hold the lamb which is to be honoured
-by suffering the stab of the Imperial knife, he
-slaughters it with his Sublime hands. The first
-victim that he destroys is a propitiation for
-himself, but he afterwards offers up one for each
-member of his family, and consequently his
-office is by no means a sinecure.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this the only occasion on which this
-ancient Jewish rite is observed by the Turks.
-On recovery from a severe illness, on the birth
-of a child, on return from a pilgrimage&mdash;in
-short, in every leading circumstance of his life,
-the Musselmaun immolates a victim: but the
-Kourban-Ba&iuml;ram is the great sacrificial anniversary,
-and is observed with much splendour and
-rejoicing by all the population of the capital.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-The vessels in the harbour are gaily decked out
-with flags; all business is suspended; men grasp
-each other by the hand in the streets, and utter
-a fraternal greeting&mdash;and the poor are seen
-hastening from house to house to secure the
-flesh of the sacrifices, which is divided among
-themselves and the dogs of the city, scarcely less
-sacred than their own kind in the eyes of the
-Osmanlis.</p>
-
-<p>A friend of mine was told the other day by a
-Turk with whom he is intimate, and who had
-just returned to Stamboul after an absence of
-six months, that he had ascertained that while
-he was away from home his wife had not once
-quitted the house; a piece of intelligence which
-so rejoiced him, that he had sacrificed six
-sheep, one for each month, in gratitude to Allah
-and the Prophet, who had bestowed on him so
-virtuous a helpmate.</p>
-
-<p>What a glorious burst of light flooded the enclosure
-when the sun at length clomb the horizon!
-It was not only a time of human festival,
-but nature’s own peculiar holyday; and there
-was an elasticity and balminess in the air that
-swept through the carriage, which made the
-heart leap for gladness.</p>
-
-<p>The troops presented a better appearance in
-line than I had expected, but Sultan Mahmoud
-has yet much to do if he ever intends to make
-them look like <em>soldiers</em>. They are dirty, slouch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span>ing,
-and awkward; tread inwards from their
-habit of sitting upon their feet, and march as
-though they were dragging their slippers after
-them. The frightful <em>f&egrave;z</em> is pulled down to
-their very eyebrows, and the ill-cut clothing is
-composed of the coarsest and dingiest materials.</p>
-
-<p>But what shall I say of the officers? How
-shall I describe the appearance of the gallant
-individuals who were constantly passing and
-repassing, and making frequent pauses in our
-immediate vicinity; incited thereto, as I have no
-doubt, by the presence of two lovely young
-Turkish ladies, who had quitted their carriage,
-and established themselves on the footboard
-behind, in order to secure a better sight of the
-“Brother of the Sun,” whom we were all
-anxiously awaiting; and whose <em>yashmacs</em> were
-so gracefully, or shall I say coquettishly, arranged,
-that I doubt whether they would have
-been so attractive without them. They were of
-the whitest and clearest muslin, through which
-I not only saw the flowers that rested on their
-foreheads, and the diamonds that sparkled in
-the embroidered and richly-fringed handkerchiefs
-bound about their heads, but even the
-very colour of their lips. And then the magic
-of their long, sleepy, jet-black eyes, and the constant
-flinging back and refolding of the jealous
-<em>feridjhe</em>, by fingers white, and slender, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-henna-tipped! I really pitied the sword-girt
-Moslems.</p>
-
-<p>I was still gazing at these lovely women,
-when a party of about thirty field-officers passed
-the carriage, on their way to their places near
-the door of the Mosque, at which the Sultan was
-to enter. They were all similarly attired in
-surtout coats of Spanish brown, gathered in
-large folds at the back of the waist, and buttoned
-beneath a cloth strap; a very common
-and ugly fashion among the Turks; and wore
-sword-belts richly embroidered with gold. Many
-among them were some of the stoutest men I
-ever saw.</p>
-
-<p>In about five minutes after them, arrived the
-led horses of the Sultan; and these formed by
-far the most splendid feature of the procession;
-they were ten in number, and wore on their
-heads a <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">panache</em> of white and pink ostrich
-feathers mixed with roses, and fastened down
-upon the forelock with a clasp of precious
-stones. Each was attended by a groom, controlling,
-with some trouble, the curvettings and
-capers of the pampered animals, who were caparisoned
-in a style of splendour which, if it
-have ever been equalled, can certainly never
-have been surpassed. Their housings, which
-were either of silk or velvet, all differing the
-one from the other, were embroidered with gold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-and silver, large pearls, and jewels. One of
-them bore, on a ground of myrtle-coloured velvet,
-the cypher of the Sultan wrought in brilliants,
-and surrounded by a garland of flowers formed
-of rubies, emeralds, and topaz. Another housing,
-of rich lilac silk, was worked at the corners
-with a cluster of musical instruments in diamonds
-and large pearls, and, as the sunshine
-flashed upon it, it was like a blaze of light. The
-remainder were equally magnificent; and the
-well-padded saddles of crimson or green
-velvet were decorated with stirrups of chased
-gold, while the bridles, whose embroidered reins
-hung low upon the necks of the animals, were
-one mass of gold and jewels.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan’s stud was succeeded by the Seraskier
-Pasha in state, mounted on a tall gray horse,
-(whose elaborate accoutrements were only
-inferior to those that I have attempted to describe,)
-and surrounded and followed by a
-dozen attendants on foot: his diamond-hilted
-sword&mdash;the rings upon his hands&mdash;the star in
-front of his <em>f&egrave;z</em>, and the orders on his breast,
-were perfectly dazzling.</p>
-
-<p>At intervals of about a minute, all the great
-officers of state passed in the same order, and
-according to their respective ranks; and at
-length we heard the welcome sounds of the Imperial
-band, which struck up the Sultan’s Grand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-March, as Mahmoud the Powerful, the Brother
-of the Sun, and Emperor of the East, passed
-the gates of the court.</p>
-
-<p>First came twelve running footmen, in richly
-laced uniforms, and high military caps; and
-these were succeeded by the twenty body pages,
-who were splendidly dressed, and wore in their
-chakos, plumes, or rather <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cr&ecirc;tes</em> of stiff feathers,
-intermixed with artificial flowers of immense
-size, and originally invented to conceal the face
-of the Sultan as he passed along, and thus
-screen him from the Evil Eye! But his present
-Sublime Highness is not to be so easily scared
-into concealment, and the pages who were wont
-to surround his predecessors merely precede
-him, while a crowd of military officers supply
-their place, one walking at each of his stirrups,
-and the rest a little in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>As this was the first occasion on which I had
-seen the Sultan, I leant eagerly forward upon
-my cushions to obtain a good view of him; and
-I saw before me, at the distance of fifteen or
-twenty yards at the utmost, a man of noble
-physiognomy and graceful bearing, who sat
-his horse with gentlemanlike ease, and whose
-countenance was decidedly prepossessing. He
-wore in his <em>f&egrave;z</em> an aigrette of diamonds, sustaining
-a cluster of peacock’s feathers; an ample
-blue cloak was flung across his shoulders, whose
-collar was one mass of jewels, and on the third<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-finger of his bridle hand glittered the largest
-brilliant that I ever remember to have seen.</p>
-
-<p>As he moved forward at a foot’s pace, loud
-shouts of “Long live Sultan Mahmoud!” ran
-along the lines, and were re-echoed by the
-crowd, but he did not acknowledge the greeting,
-though his eyes wandered on all sides, until
-they fell upon our party, when a bright smile lit
-up his features, and for the first time he turned
-his head, and looked long and fixedly at us. In
-the next instant, he bent down, and said something
-in a subdued voice to the officer who
-walked at his stirrup, who, with a low obeisance,
-quitted his side, and hastily made his way
-through the crowd, until he reached our carriage,
-to the astonishment and terror of a group of
-Turkish women who had ensconced themselves
-almost under it; and, bowing to my father, who
-still stood bare-headed beside us, he inquired of
-one of the servants who I was and what had
-brought me to Constantinople; the Sultan,
-meanwhile, looking back continually, and
-smiling in the same goodhumoured and condescending
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>The reply was simple&mdash;I was an Englishwoman,
-and had accompanied my father to
-Turkey, for the purpose of seeing the country;
-and, having received this answer, the messenger
-again saluted us, and withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>A very short interval ensued ere he returned,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-and hurriedly and anxiously resumed his inquiries,
-to which our attendant became too nervous
-to reply; when he exclaimed, “Is there no
-one here who can act as Dragoman, and give
-me the intelligence which is required by his
-Sublime Highness?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will inform you of all that you require to
-learn, Effendim;” said my companion in her soft,
-harmonious, Turkish: “the lady is English.”</p>
-
-<p>“His Highness sees that she is English;” replied
-the officer: “but he wishes to know <em>who</em>
-she is.”</p>
-
-<p>This important information was added, and
-once more he departed.</p>
-
-<p>Crowds of decorated individuals closed the
-procession; and in five minutes more Sultan
-Mahmoud dismounted and entered the Mosque.</p>
-
-<p>The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam, or High Priest, had preceded
-his Imperial Master; but we saw him
-only at a distance as he ascended the marble
-steps that I have already mentioned, and
-passed in through the great entrance. He wore
-a turban of the sacred green, about which was
-wound a massive chain, or rather belt, of gold;
-and was mounted on a fine Arabian, whose
-bridle was held by two grooms.</p>
-
-<p>Sultan Mahmoud is not a handsome man, and
-yet it is difficult to define wherefore; for his features
-are good and strongly marked, and his eye
-bright and piercing. His jet black hair, seen in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-heavy curls beneath the <em>f&egrave;z</em>, which, like most of
-his subjects, he wears drawn down low upon his
-forehead; and his bushy and well-trimmed
-beard, add considerably to the dignity of his
-appearance, as well as giving to him a look of
-much greater youth than he can actually boast;
-but this is a merely artificial advantage, being
-the effect of one of those skilful dyes so common
-in the East.</p>
-
-<p>As in Japan, the popular belief is firm that
-the King never dies, so in Turkey the Sovereign
-is never permitted to imagine that he can grow
-old; and thus every officer of the household
-stains his hair and beard, and uses all the
-means with which art or invention can supply
-him, in order that no intrusive symptom of age
-or decay may shock the nerves, and awaken the
-regrets of his lord and contemporary&mdash;the faded
-beauties of the Seraglio are removed from his
-sight, the past is seldom adverted to, and the
-future is considered as his sure and undoubted
-heritage.</p>
-
-<p>Never did monarch lend himself to the delicious
-cheat more lovingly than Sultan Mahmoud;
-who, with all his energy of character,
-is the victim (for in his case I can apply no other
-term) of the most consummate personal vanity.
-We are accustomed in England to think of
-George the Fourth as the <em>ne plus ultra</em> of exquisitism&mdash;the
-Prince of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Petit-ma&icirc;tres</em>&mdash;but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-what will honest John Bull say to a Turkish
-Emperor, an Imperial Mussulmaun, who paints
-white and red, and who considers himself sufficiently
-repaid for all the care and anxiety of a
-costly toilette, by the admiration and flattery of
-the ladies of the Seraglio? And yet such is the
-case&mdash;the Immolator of the Janissaries, the reformer
-of a mighty empire, the sovereign of the
-gravest people upon earth, is a very “thing of
-shreds and patches”&mdash;a consumer of cosmetics&mdash;an
-idolater of gauds and toys&mdash;the Sacrificing
-High Priest at the altar of self-adornment!</p>
-
-<p>On a recent occasion, having caused his hair
-(of which he is extremely vain) to be cut by the
-court <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coiffeur</em>, he withdrew his <em>f&egrave;z</em> and inquired
-of his son-in-law, Halil Pasha, if he approved of
-the style in which it had been done. The Favorite,
-with a sincerity which did him honour,
-replied that the Imperial Head had been most
-basely shorn; and was forthwith desired to display
-the honours of his own cranium to his Sublime
-Highness, who immediately acquiesced in
-the superior skill of the artist who had operated
-upon the Pasha; and desired that, without a
-moment’s delay, the happy mortal who had exhibited
-such distinguished taste in curling and
-cutting should be summoned to his presence.</p>
-
-<p>In five minutes, half a dozen of the palace
-officers were <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</em> in search of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coiffeur</em>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-who was accidentally from home: and it was not
-until after a considerable delay that he was discovered,
-basin in hand, and razor in grasp,
-busily engaged in shaving the head of a grave-looking
-Armenian, who had already undergone
-half the operation. Despite the lathered skull
-of the customer, and the terrified deprecations
-of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">artiste</em>, the officers, who were utterly ignorant
-of the Sultan’s motive for summoning
-their prisoner, pounced upon him without mercy,
-and rather dragged than conducted him to the
-ca&iuml;que that was waiting to convey him to the
-palace; whither he was followed by the silent
-and pitying wonder of the men, and the low
-wailing of the women.</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival, he was immediately led into
-the Imperial presence, where his trembling knees
-instinctively bent under him, as he wildly gasped
-out his innocence of any and every crime against
-His Sublime Highness; he wrung his hands, he
-implored a mercy for which he scarcely dared
-to hope, he writhed in his agony of spirit, expecting
-nothing less than the bowstring for
-some imputed delinquency, and he talked of his
-wife, and his young and helpless children so soon
-to be cast upon the world unless his life were
-spared; while the Sultan laid aside his <em>f&egrave;z</em>, and
-prepared his own head for a more simple operation.</p>
-
-<p>“Peace, fool!” said His Highness at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-length, “did you not cut the hair of Halil
-Pasha?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, your Sublime Highness; and to the
-best of my poor skill,” faltered out the pale
-and terrified <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">artiste</em>; “have mercy upon my
-want of knowledge!”</p>
-
-<p>“Compose your nerves, and produce your
-scissors,” returned the Sultan; “you shall have
-the distinguished honour of cutting mine, also&mdash;to
-your task at once.”</p>
-
-<p>No sooner said than done: men of this craft
-have been gifted with ready wit and self-possession,
-from the days in which the red-robed
-ghost of the German barber shaved the adventurous
-student in the haunted castle; and ere
-long His Imperial Highness was cropped and
-curled to his sublime satisfaction; and the hairdresser
-found himself appointed keeper of the
-head of the Turkish Empire&mdash;a “man of mark”&mdash;and
-returned to his home in triumph, not
-only <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">quitte pour la peur</em>, but with his wildest
-visions realized!</p>
-
-<p>During the short period that the Sultan remained
-in the mosque, the scene around us was
-far from unamusing: the horses were paraded
-to and fro; the troops rested on their arms,
-and conversed freely with each other; the officers,
-breaking through the spell that had
-lately bound them, resumed their stroll and
-their scrutiny; and many a glance was directed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-towards our little party, for which we were
-indebted to the curiosity of their Imperial Master.
-Then came a rush from the great entrance
-of the mosque; and, when a host of red-capped
-and turbaned Turks had issued forth, the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam
-slowly descended the steps, and departed
-in the same state as he had come. The horses
-were led back into their ranks; the military
-shouldered their muskets; and once more the
-Seraskier Pasha with his train of attendants
-paced slowly along the line.</p>
-
-<p>Those officers who were of sufficiently high
-grade to attract his attention made their graceful
-obeisance, first laying their right hand upon
-their lips, and then upon their foreheads, and
-bowing down nearly to the earth; while the Pashas,
-who were not of a rank elevated enough to
-appear mounted before the Sultan, moved amid
-the throng, with their diamond orders and embroidered
-sword-belts glittering in the light.
-Among these was Namik Pasha, whom I had
-known in England, and who approached the carriage
-to greet me, while the Seraskier reined up
-his horse beneath the window of a house that
-overlooked the scene, and paid his compliments
-to Madame de Boutenieff, who sat surrounded
-by secretaries and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em>.</p>
-
-<p>One by one, all the Pashas re-appeared, and,
-having saluted each other with a ceremonious
-etiquette that distinctly marked their respec<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span>tive
-ranks, they marshalled themselves round
-the gateway according to their precedence of
-power; and then it was that I particularly remarked
-the unpleasant effect of their ungloved
-hands, so utterly inconsistent, according to European
-ideas, with the magnificence of all the
-other details of their costume.</p>
-
-<p>By a happy, though not altogether singular,
-coincidence, the husband of one of the princesses,
-and the intended husband of the other, are
-both the adopted sons of the old Seraskier; and
-as they took their places on either side of him,
-they naturally excited considerable attention.</p>
-
-<p>Halil Pasha is a good-looking man, but clumsily
-and ungracefully made, with a grave expression
-of countenance; which, if report speak
-truly, the temper of his Imperial helpmate is not
-calculated to gladden.</p>
-
-<p>Having mentioned the Princess Salih&egrave;, I may
-as well introduce in this place a little anecdote,
-for whose veracity my informant pledged himself.
-Her Imperial Highness, on one occasion,
-only a few months back, chanced to pass in her
-araba by a coffee-kiosk, in which a party of
-Ulemas, about thirty in number, were gravely
-smoking their chibouks. It chanced that no
-individual among them remarked the approach
-of the Imperial carriage; and they consequently
-all remained seated, as though the owner of the
-equipage had not been the Cousin of the Sun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-and Moon, and herself one of the principal constellations.
-The rage of the Princess was unbounded;
-and she instantly despatched one of
-her <em>kavashlir</em> for an armed guard, to whom she
-gave orders to convey the whole party to the
-palace of the Seraskier, to receive the bastinado
-for the want of respect which they had displayed
-towards her sacred person. To hear was
-to obey; and forthwith the thirty Ulemas, members
-of the most powerful body of men now existing
-in the Empire, were marched off to the Seraskier;
-to whom, on their appearance in the court of
-the palace, it was immediately announced that
-a formidable group of Ulemas, attended by a
-number of soldiers, were approaching, as if to
-demand an audience of His Excellency.</p>
-
-<p>The Seraskier, anxious as to the purport of
-their visit, ordered that they should instantly
-be admitted; and, suspicious of some popular
-discontent, resolved upon giving them a most
-courteous reception; when he was struck dumb
-by the intelligence that they were prisoners sent
-to receive the punishment of their crime! For a
-moment even the Seraskier was at fault; but,
-suddenly looking towards them with a smiling
-countenance, and affecting not to remark the
-lowering brows of the outraged professors&mdash;“Her
-Imperial Highness has condescended to
-make merry with me,” he said gaily. “She
-threatened that I should pay dear for some un<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span>palatable
-advice that I ventured to give her,
-and you are to be the medium of her vengeance.
-I comprehend the jest, and must abide by her
-good pleasure.” Then, turning to his purse-bearer,
-he desired him to count out one hundred
-piastres to each individual, which was accordingly
-done, and the discomfited Ulemas left the
-palace.</p>
-
-<p>But the affair might have proved to be the
-very reverse of a jest in its consequences, and
-this the Pasha well knew when he ventured to
-set at nought the orders of the princess; and
-he accordingly lost no time in obtaining an
-audience of the Sultan, to whom he explained
-the whole circumstance. His Highness, after
-commenting gaily on the expedient of the Seraskier,
-and causing steps to be taken to ascertain
-that the aggrieved parties harboured no
-thoughts or designs of revenge, sent a stern
-message to his Imperial daughter, in which he
-warned her not to attempt on any future occasion
-to bastinado his learned and faithful
-subjects, thirty at a time.</p>
-
-<p>Sa&iuml;d Pasha, the affianced bridegroom of the
-Princess Mihirm&agrave;h, is decidedly the handsomest
-man at court, as well as one of the youngest;
-he has fine eyes, a prominent and well-shaped
-nose, and a smile of peculiar sweetness.</p>
-
-<p>A burst of martial music again warned us of
-the approach of the Sultan; and, as he moved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-along upon his proud steed, which tossed its
-party-coloured plumes and flashing jewels in
-the clear sunshine, he turned towards us another
-look and another smile&mdash;and, in a few minutes,
-nothing of the pageant remained with us save
-its memory; if, indeed, I except the band, whose
-thrilling music, as they marched past, startled
-our horses, which began to rear and kick in so
-inconvenient a manner that we were glad to
-drive off; and, taking our way through “The
-Valley of the Sweet Waters,” along the banks
-of the sparkling Barbyses, and past the Imperial
-Kiosks, that rise like fairy palaces from
-the soft turf of that lovely spot, we returned,
-amid the freshness and beauty of a quiet day
-in Spring, to our residence at Pera.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Military College&mdash;Achmet Pasha and Azmi Bey&mdash;Study of Azmi
-Bey&mdash;His grateful Memories of England and the English&mdash;The Establishment&mdash;The
-Lithographic Presses&mdash;Extemporaneous Poetry&mdash;Halls
-of Study&mdash;Number of Students&mdash;Mathematical Hall&mdash;The
-Sultan’s Gallery&mdash;The Mosque&mdash;The Mufti&mdash;The Turkish Creed&mdash;The
-Imperial Closet&mdash;The Gallery of the Imperial Suite&mdash;The
-Retiring-Room&mdash;The Printing-Office&mdash;The Hospital&mdash;The Refectory&mdash;The
-Professor of Fortification&mdash;Negro Officers&mdash;Moral Condition
-of the College&mdash;Courtesy of the Officers&mdash;Deficiencies of the Professors&mdash;The
-Turks a Reading People&mdash;Object of the Institution&mdash;Reasons
-of its Failure&mdash;Smiling Enemies&mdash;Forlorn Hope&mdash;Russian
-Influence&mdash;Saduk Agha&mdash;Achmet Pasha&mdash;Azmi Bey&mdash;Apology for
-my Prolixity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Military College, which, from its extent,
-and the lavish liberality of its arrangements,
-may well be termed a princely establishment,
-occupies the crest of a hill immediately above
-the Imperial palace of Dolma Batch&eacute;, signifying
-the “Valley of Gourds”&mdash;and the tall minaret of
-its mosque shoots upwards into the blue heaven
-with the grace and lightness of a sky-winged
-arrow; while the gilded crescent in the centre
-of the dome reflects back the sparkling sunbeams
-as they flash upon its glittering surface.</p>
-
-<p>As I had brought an introductory letter to
-Achmet Pasha, the governor, and had been per<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span>sonally
-acquainted in London with Azmi Bey,
-the Military Commandant, and, in fact, Principal
-of the Institution, I experienced no difficulty
-whatever in obtaining permission to pay it a
-visit; and I accordingly proceeded thither, accompanied
-by my father and a couple of friends,
-who were, like myself, anxious to form a correct
-opinion of the establishment.</p>
-
-<p>We were met at the great entrance by the
-young Bey himself, who welcomed us with the
-most sincere cordiality; and, offering me his
-arm with a ready politeness quite European,
-he conducted us to his private apartment, or,
-perhaps, I should rather call it, study. This
-very cheerful and comfortable room, situated
-at an angle of the building, and commanding
-two magnificent points of view, was thickly
-hung with English and French engravings, principally
-interiors of our metropolitan buildings,
-college-halls, theatres, and other places of public
-resort, highly coloured&mdash;a large stove gave
-forth an agreeable warmth&mdash;the window seats
-were strown with books and papers&mdash;a few maps
-were lying upon a side table&mdash;a curious collection
-of volumes was gathered together in a
-small bookcase&mdash;and the apartment had altogether
-a more furnished and snug look than any
-which I had yet seen inhabited by a Turk&mdash;there
-were flowers also in a glass vase; and a paper-presser
-on which a sleeping Cupid lay stretched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-listlessly among his fabled roses&mdash;the souvenir
-of an European friend.</p>
-
-<p>We remained some time talking over past
-days, and I was sincerely pleased by the fond
-and grateful manner in which he spoke of England,
-and his English acquaintance. He reminded
-me of several little by-gone incidents, inquired for
-particular individuals, and exhibited a warmth
-of feeling and interest in the past for which I
-was scarcely prepared. During the conversation,
-tea was handed to us in the Russian fashion
-by his dragoman, attended by two negro slaves,
-and after partaking of it we commenced our
-survey of the establishment.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"><a name="f2" id="f2"></a><img src="images/i_fp196.jpg" width="500" height="308"
-alt="THE MILITARY COLLEGE." title="" />
-<table summary="military" width="100%" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="left f06">Miss Pardoe del.</td>
-<td class="right f06">Day &amp; Haghe Lith.<sup>rs</sup> to the King.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f08" colspan="2">THE MILITARY COLLEGE.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f06" colspan="2"><i>Henry Colburn 13 G.<sup>t</sup> Marlborough St 1837.</i></td>
-</tr></table></div>
-
-
-<p>The main building forms three sides of a
-square, and the centre of the fourth is occupied
-by an elegant kiosk-like edifice, containing the
-lithographic presses. Here we found an individual
-designing a very neatly-ornamented sheet-almanac,
-of which he had sketched the border
-with great delicacy. All the machinery is English,
-and appears to be in constant use. I have
-omitted to mention that, before we quitted the
-apartment of Azmi Bey, he presented to us
-several of the Professors, who entered to pay
-their respects. Among these, the most remarkable
-was Saduk Agha, a Prussian renegade,
-who speaks French, Italian, and Turkish fluently,
-and has a considerable knowledge of English.
-After conversing with him for some time on the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span>merits of lithography, and examining a number
-of drawings, principally military figures, that
-had been executed by the pupils of the establishment,
-and were many of them of considerable
-merit; he joined his entreaties to those of Azmi
-Bey that I would write a few lines as evidence
-of my visit, which they might put under the
-press. Finding that they were both determined
-to succeed, and not considering the point worthy
-of contention, I complied with the request, not
-a little amused at my first appearance in print
-in Turkey: and I much doubt whether any
-thing that I have hitherto written, am now
-writing, or may hereafter write, will ever be
-read and re-read with so much apparent <em>gusto</em>
-as the half dozen lines of doggrel verse which I
-improvised on a scrap of torn paper, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sur la plante
-des pieds</em>, surrounded by about a score of
-Turkish spectators.</p>
-
-<p>From this point, we proceeded to the inner or
-garden court, of which one side is laid out in
-a parterre inclosure, the centre being occupied
-by the mosque, and the extreme end terminated
-by the two great halls of study. We entered
-the first of these by a noble flight of stone steps,
-and found ourselves in an apartment of vast
-extent, admirably lighted, and arranged with
-the most perfect order and conveniency. Thickly
-set rows of high-backed benches of stained wood
-extended the whole depth of the hall, leaving a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-passage on either side just sufficiently wide for
-the ingress and egress of visitors; and the first
-ranges of seats were occupied by about one
-hundred and fifty of the junior pupils, who
-were busily employed in tracing upon their
-slates the elegant characters of their language,
-as sentence after sentence was slowly declaimed
-by the head boy of the class. This department
-of the institution is on the Lancastrian system.</p>
-
-<p>There are at present only three hundred
-students on the establishment; a report having
-been promulgated by its enemies that an attempt
-would be made to interfere with their
-religious tenets; in consequence of which many
-parents declined sending their sons: the only
-answer of the Governors to this calumny has
-been to compel the attendance of the boys three
-times a day at the mosque; a tolerably convincing
-proof that they entertain no anti-Mohammedan
-partialities.</p>
-
-<p>As the School is expressly intended as a nursery
-for the army, all the ambition of the students
-is made to bear upon that point: extraordinary
-application, or regularity of conduct, is recompensed
-by a step of military rank; and thus,
-should the intention of the authorities ever be
-borne out, a youth of talent and good conduct
-may hereafter quit the college as an officer, and
-thus commence his actual career of life, where
-many of his predecessors have terminated their’s.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span>Having traversed the Lancastrian class, we
-reached the mathematical hall, where a considerable
-number of young men were busily engaged
-in colouring ground-plans of the surrounding
-country. The lower end of this stately
-apartment forms a deep bay, round which rows
-of seats are arranged amphitheatrically, having
-in the midst of them a table whereon are placed
-globes, charts, and all the requisites for study.
-The other extremity of the hall is terminated
-by a raised gallery, intended for the use of the
-Sultan, above which hangs his portrait in oils,
-executed by an Armenian artist, harsh, and
-crude, and wiry, as though it had been the production
-of a Chinese easel, and surmounted by
-a most elaborate drapery. Beneath the portrait
-is stretched a noble map of the Archipelago,
-the Sea of Marmora, and the Bosphorus. An
-electrifying machine, and a large map of America,
-an immense table, and the desks and seats
-of the students, made up the remainder of
-the furniture; and the apartment itself was
-by far the finest that I had yet seen in the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>The next point of curiosity was the mosque;
-and I was no less surprised than gratified at the
-readiness with which Azmi Bey acceded to our
-desire of visiting it. The outer apartment, or
-vestibule, was covered with fine Indian matting,
-and before we traversed it the Bey requested my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-father to put off his boots, though he made no
-objection to my retaining my slippers. As we
-reached the door which opened into the body of
-the mosque, I perceived that we had arrived
-during the prayers. The High Priest sat with
-his arms folded above his ample robe; his dark
-brow surmounted by a turban of the sacred
-green, and his feet doubled under him, in a recess
-facing the entrance, chanting in a nasal
-and monotonous drawl; while a very slender
-congregation was scattered over the floor, squatted
-upon the rich carpets that covered it. But
-we no sooner made our appearance than the
-Mufti rose and quitted the mosque, followed by
-his little flock; and we were left in quiet possession
-of the elegant temple whence they had
-so hastily withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>The faith of the Musselmauns is that of love,
-not fear: to believe in One <span class="smcap">God</span>, and to be
-charitable&mdash;and who shall deny that it is a
-comprehensive creed? The mosque in which
-we stood was the very embodiment of such a
-worship&mdash;the sunshine streamed through its
-many windows upon the most delicate fresco-painting,
-the brightest and richest of carpets,
-and the glittering lattices of the Imperial closet.
-The only dark object that met the eye was a
-curtain of olive-coloured cloth, surrounded by a
-bordering of flowers, delicately worked in tinted
-silks, which veiled the entrance of the marble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-steps leading to the pulpit&mdash;all beside was dazzlingly
-bright, and it was almost with regret
-that I returned into the vestibule, in order to
-ascend to the Sultan’s gallery.</p>
-
-<p>A small hall and a handsome flight of stairs,
-closely covered with English carpeting, conducted
-us to an elegant anti-room, from which
-four doors, veiled by draperies of dove-coloured
-cloth heavily fringed, opened into as many
-apartments, appropriated to the Sultan and his
-suite.</p>
-
-<p>The Imperial closet is richly hung with gold-coloured
-draperies, that fling a sunset glow
-on the surrounding objects: a magnificent sofa
-occupies one side of the room, and the floor is
-covered with a Brussels carpet. Portions of
-the gilded lattice open and shut at pleasure;
-and the whole has so perfectly Oriental an effect,
-that you involuntarily think of Scheherazade
-and her fable-loving Sultan; and forget the
-sanctity of the place, while contemplating the
-luxury of its arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>The gallery appropriated to the Imperial
-suite adjoins the closet, and beyond this is the
-retiring-room of the Sultan, wherein he performs
-his ablutions, previously to the commencement of
-the service. It is less gorgeous in its general
-effect than the closet, but commands a noble
-view of the Bosphorus, and the Sea of Marmora.</p>
-
-<p>On leaving the mosque, we descended by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-flight of stone steps into the vaults beneath it,
-to visit the printing-office, where all was activity:
-compositors were setting the types&mdash;“devils”
-were guiding the rollers&mdash;lads were folding
-the printed sheets&mdash;and binders were stitching
-them into volumes. Every thing was clean,
-and orderly, and well conducted.</p>
-
-<p>We next made a tour of the hospital; and,
-had not two of the beds been tenanted, I should
-have quitted the establishment, if not with a
-firm conviction, at least with a very strong suspicion,
-that it was intended merely for show, it
-was so delicately clean and so beautifully arranged.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of the stairs was the receiving-room
-of the surgeon; and beyond this, on either
-side of the gallery, were the laboratory and the
-surgery, their doors veiled with white muslin,
-and every article in its place; the dormitories,
-which are only two in number, each capable of
-containing about a score of patients, were carpeted
-along the centre; the beds were tastefully
-draperied with muslin: and a small table stood
-near each pillow; while along the cornice of
-the ceiling were suspended, at regular distances,
-small tablets, whereon were inscribed the names
-of the different diseases to be treated in the
-ward.</p>
-
-<p>The refectory was perfectly European in its
-aspect, surrounded by long narrow tables and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-benches, and well supplied with plates, spoons,
-forks, and soup-ladles. As we entered, Azmi
-Bey looked towards us confidently for applause.
-He had truly worked a goodly reform in Turkish
-habits, when he taught each boy to put his
-fork into his own plate, instead of plunging his
-fingers into the dish of the community! Nor did
-we fail to compliment him on the change.</p>
-
-<p>By the time that we had completed our survey
-of the Establishment, our “tail” would have
-been no contemptible rival to that of Mr. O’Connell&mdash;every
-Professor and Officer connected
-with the Institution having made his bow, and
-joined the party. And not the least conspicuous
-of the number was the Professor of Fortification,
-who, besides being a Creole, had one of the
-most frightful and resolute squints I ever had the
-misfortune to meet with; and the Captain of the
-Guard, a very corpulent and consequential negro.
-Black officers and soldiers are, however, common
-in Turkey, where a man’s colour is never construed
-into an objection to profit by his services,
-nor an excuse for leaving them unrewarded.</p>
-
-<p>Having described in detail the external arrangements
-of the Military College of Turkey,
-it now remains for me to advert to its moral condition,
-and this is truly a melancholy task; for,
-rich as I have shown it to be in all the outward
-attributes necessary to such an Establishment,
-it is utterly destitute of the more essential<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-requisites for insuring the important end of its
-foundation.</p>
-
-<p>Care and cost have been lavished upon it
-unsparingly: it is a favourite toy of the Sultan&mdash;a
-subject of ceaseless thought and interest
-to Achmet Pasha, to whose immediate control
-it has been entrusted&mdash;the one engrossing object
-of Azmi Bey’s solicitude&mdash;the Great National
-Scholastic Establishment&mdash;the nursery for the
-Imperial Army. But, alas! despite all these advantages,
-it is like the Statue of Pygmalion ere
-it was warmed to life&mdash;a body without a soul&mdash;matter
-without mind&mdash;a splendid machine, without
-a competent and practised hand to call forth
-its powers, and to work out its effects!</p>
-
-<p>To the courtesy of the several individuals immediately
-connected with the Institution, I have
-already borne testimony; nor does a doubt exist
-in my own mind of their sincere zeal for its
-welfare and prosperity. But, unhappily, the
-best intentions, and the most earnest enthusiasm,
-must fail to compensate the painful deficiency
-of that talent and experience necessary
-to its success. Could sentiment be deepened
-into science, and inclination be wrought into
-ability, the Military College would take high
-ground; for the students are eager in the pursuit
-of knowledge, but, where the means are
-limited, the effects must be comparatively inconsequent:
-and it is a melancholy truth that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-the untiring application, the admirable docility,
-and the promising talents of the pupils, can
-only conduct them to a certain point, beyond
-which their best efforts will not enable them to
-progress unassisted. This is more particularly
-the fact as regards the youth of Turkey, from the
-circumstance of their being by nature imitative
-rather than inventive; and, moreover, not possessing
-those opportunities of observation and
-individual research which lead the students of
-Europe to rely in no trifling degree upon their
-own mental resources.</p>
-
-<p>In our western world the wings of Genius are
-never clipped&mdash;the sunny path of Talent is never
-overshadowed&mdash;the calm brow of Science is never
-clouded&mdash;by a deficiency in the means of further
-improvement, encouragement, and support. But
-Education, as we comprehend the term, is yet in
-its first infancy in Turkey; and should the same
-evil influence which is now blighting with its
-Upas breath the Ottoman atmosphere be long
-suffered to exhale its poisonous properties, it is
-certain to annihilate all power of improvement.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, with the single exception of Great
-Britain, there exists not in the world a more
-reading nation than Turkey. I have no doubt
-that this assertion will startle many individuals
-in Europe, who have been accustomed, and, indeed,
-led to believe, that the natives of the East
-are, as a people, plunged in the profoundest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span>
-ignorance. It is, nevertheless, a fact that nearly
-every man throughout the Empire can read and
-write, and that there are at this moment upwards
-of eight thousand children scattered
-through the different schools of the capital.
-But the studies of the Osmanlis of both sexes
-have, with some few exceptions, hitherto been
-confined to the Koran, and to works of an inconsequent
-and useless description; the mere
-plaything of an idle hour, incapable of inspiring
-one novel idea, or of leaving upon the
-mind impressions calculated to exalt or to enlighten
-it.</p>
-
-<p>The object of such an Institution as a Public
-School was undoubtedly to widen the mental
-views, and to enlarge the tastes of the youth of
-Turkey. But, in order to effect this very desirable
-end, it was requisite that the soundest judgment
-should be exercised in the selection of the
-individuals to whom were committed its different
-departments of literature and science, and this
-was unfortunately far from being the case; the
-internal economy of the Establishment having
-been entrusted to persons so decidedly incompetent
-that, with every desire to do their duty,
-they have erred, from their utter ignorance of the
-extent of the task which they have undertaken,
-or which has been forced upon them.</p>
-
-<p>As far as the different Professors are capable
-of so doing, they have directed the studies and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-formed the tastes of the students; but the young
-and ardent mind, thirsting after knowledge, and
-earnest in its acquirement, demands assistance
-as progressive as its own advancement. The
-fresh and buoyant spirit requires external aid,
-at once able and judicious, to support its vigour,
-and to strengthen its yet unpractised wing.
-And where these fail, where the shadow is alone
-furnished, while the substance is wanting, what
-can be expected from the comparatively unassisted
-efforts of young and unformed intellects,
-that have not simply to struggle onward towards
-a goal to be attained only by their best
-energies; but also to contend against, and to cast
-from them, a crowd of early prejudices and associations&mdash;while
-they are destitute of the assistance
-of more experienced and mature talents,
-upon which to fall back, when they have themselves
-just acquired sufficient knowledge to feel
-their own deficiencies?</p>
-
-<p>Let it not be believed for an instant that the
-Turks, had they been left to the free exercise of
-their own good sense and reflection, are so obtuse
-as not to have made the discovery that the
-progress of the pupils was necessarily retarded
-by the inexperience and incompetency of the
-preceptors. He who judges thus hastily will
-wrong them. Already had the suspicion sprung
-up in their minds&mdash;already did those on whom
-the authority for so doing more particularly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-devolved suggest the expediency of procuring,
-from Europe, men of talent, science, and judgment,
-capable of sustaining the credit of the
-Establishment. But the project was crushed in
-the bud; negatived on its first suggestion; set
-aside by a single sentence; <em>that</em> sentence which
-has become all-powerful in Constantinople&mdash;and
-thus the ruin of the Institution is already
-sealed by the incapacity of its professors, the
-prejudices of its enemies, and the lavish and
-deceitful encomiums of its false friends.</p>
-
-<p>Achmet Pasha has been told that never did
-establishment prosper like the Military College
-of Constantinople. A foreign minister has declared
-it perfect; and obsequious secretaries and
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em> have raised their hands and eyes in
-almost religious wonder. Compliments have
-been lavished on the meagre talents of the masters,
-and smiles have veiled their deficiencies.
-And thus, flattered into a belief of their own
-sufficiency on the one hand, and misled by misstatements
-on the other, the influential individuals
-connected with the unhappy College have
-abandoned it to the ruin which must ultimately,
-and at no distant period, overtake it; from the
-hopeless incapacity of a set of men, who, familiar
-with the name of every science under Heaven, are
-most of them profoundly ignorant of all save the
-first rudiments of each; and who are, consequently,
-ill calculated to work that great moral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-change so ardently desired by all the true
-friends of Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>I put forth this assertion boldly, because I
-have convinced myself of its justice; and if&mdash;after
-having stated the eagerness with which
-the students seek to acquire information, the
-care and cost that have been lavished on the
-College itself, and the zeal and untiring watchfulness
-of those to whose charge it has been
-intrusted&mdash;I am asked the simple question of
-wherefore this great National Institution is crippled
-in so senseless and ruinous a manner by
-the appointment of inefficient individuals to its
-most important and responsible posts, the answer
-is ready&mdash;It is the will of Russia!</p>
-
-<p>The growth of knowledge is the destruction
-of tyranny and oppression: it is the moral axe
-struck to the core of the wide-spreading Banian
-of usurpation and encroachment&mdash;it is the light
-of mind, dispelling the darkness of prejudice and
-falsehood.</p>
-
-<p>Were Turkey once roused to a perfect estimate
-of her own moral power, she must inevitably
-cast off the web that has been slowly and
-craftily woven about her; and which, should no
-friendly hand disentangle its intricate threads
-ere it be yet too late, must ultimately fetter her
-strength beyond all power of resuscitation. To
-do this she must take an enlarged and correct
-view of her position&mdash;she must be able to appre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span>ciate
-her just value among the nations&mdash;she must
-be capable of combating sophistry with caution,
-and craft with calculative wisdom. This power
-she can only acquire by placing herself upon a
-mental equality with more civilized Europe; by
-training up her youth to habits of reflection
-and scientific research; by awakening within
-their breasts the generous emulation of excellence;
-and by opening before them paths of
-honour and advancement, no longer to be trodden
-by the weak foot of chance, but sacred to
-superior merit and superior genius.</p>
-
-<p>All this must Turkey accomplish ere she can
-once again be great and free. And it is to prevent
-this that the subtle policy of her archenemy,
-Russia, strains every nerve, and exerts
-every energy&mdash;the blandishments of a flattery,
-to which she is constitutionally too susceptible
-for her real welfare&mdash;the threats of a strength
-beneath which she is unfortunately already
-bowed almost to the dust&mdash;for should some
-generous spark of honour be aroused to resistance,
-there is the unanswerable declaration&mdash;<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Empereur
-le veut!</em> beyond which there is no
-appeal.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Russia looked upon the College with a
-jealous eye&mdash;it might, if suffered to progress
-towards perfection unchecked, ultimately become
-a great moral engine in the hands of the
-Turkish government: and this was, of course,
-not to be permitted. The Russian Legation con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span>sequently
-took an overwhelming and most generous
-interest in all the details of the establishment;
-laughed to scorn the necessity of European
-science and European assistance, where
-native talent was so rife&mdash;employed her creatures
-in writing complimentary and fulsome panegyrics
-on the Institution, which were lithographed
-at the school, and translated for the Sultan; and,
-in short, administered such copious draughts
-of flattery to all connected with the establishment,
-that their soporific effects are painfully
-apparent in the quiet, self-gratulatory, smiling
-satisfaction of those, who, while they believe
-that they are nursing the new-born Institution
-into vigour, are actually closing their encircling
-arms so tightly about its throat that they are
-strangling it in its first weakness.</p>
-
-<p>The School has but one hope&mdash;and that is
-unhappily faint and afar off. There are now
-between thirty and forty promising young men
-studying in Europe, who may perchance one
-day be enabled to effect its resuscitation. But
-years must elapse ere the most gifted pupils are
-eligible to become preceptors: and before those
-years are past, what may be the fate of Turkey?
-England must resolve the question.</p>
-
-<p>At present it is certain that the Military College
-is indirectly under Russian control and
-patronage; all the professors having been selected
-openly or covertly by themselves. And thus,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-one individual, for the limited remuneration of
-about &pound;200 a year, not having the fear of ridicule
-before his eyes, gravely undertakes to
-impart to his pupils the knowledge of some half
-dozen sciences, among which geography and
-astronomy are far from being the most profound
-or conspicuous.</p>
-
-<p>Saduk Agha, of whom I have already spoken,
-is a man of distinguished abilities, who, had he
-been suffered to do so, might have materially
-assisted the studies of the pupils; but this point
-would have been too mighty for Russian policy
-to concede; and, as it was not judged prudent
-to exclude him altogether, and thus draw down
-remarks which might have proved inconvenient,
-his services were secured at a salary of &pound;150 a
-year, to teach the Prussian game entitled <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le
-Jeu de Guerre</em>, which is a species of dissected
-military map, put together precisely like the
-puzzles used by children in England.</p>
-
-<p>Achmet Pasha, (to whom, as I have already
-remarked, the superintendence of the Institution
-has been immediately confided), however
-much he may desire its prosperity, has scarcely
-time, talent, or opportunity, (as I think it will be
-conceded when I have enumerated his multitudinous
-avocations) to give to it the care and
-attention which it requires from its Principal; or
-to bestow upon it that watchful <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">surveillance</em> so
-necessary to the prosperity of an Establishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-for youth. He is Grand Chamberlain&mdash;Generalissimo
-of the Imperial Guard&mdash;Governor of the
-Military College&mdash;Director of the Roads&mdash;Grand
-Master of the Artillery&mdash;Head of the Police&mdash;Inspector
-of Naval Architecture&mdash;<em>pro tempore</em>
-Lord of the Admiralty, and Governor of Natolia&mdash;in
-short, he either is, or requires to be, an
-universal genius.</p>
-
-<p>Azmi Bey, the Military Commandant, with a
-zeal which retains him a willing prisoner almost
-constantly within the walls of the college, and
-an enthusiasm that neither difficulties nor disappointments
-have yet quenched, is, nevertheless,
-too young and too inexperienced to be
-equal to meet efficiently the weighty responsibility
-that has been thrust upon him; and for
-which he is indebted to a quickness of observation,
-an ardent desire of improvement, and a
-facility of imitation, called forth and developed
-by his brief residence in Europe. All that he
-was competent to effect, he has already accomplished;
-for he has reduced to order the chaos
-of conflicting prejudices and associations, and
-habits, which met him, Hydra-headed, on the
-very threshold of his task. From his limited
-experience of European feelings and manners,
-he has also profited sufficiently to enable him
-to adopt much that was worthy of imitation;
-while, on the other hand, he has judiciously rejected
-much of which the utility and desirable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span>ness
-were at best problematical. The easy, I
-may almost say, affectionate manner of all around
-him convince you at once that he is gentle in
-his rule; while the earnestness with which he
-interests himself in the most minute details connected
-with the Establishment is an equal proof
-of his unfeigned desire for its success. But the
-brevity of his European sojourn, and the confusion
-of ideas, and hurry of mind, consequent
-on a residence in London during the height of
-the season&mdash;the rapidity with which he was
-whirled from military and naval colleges to railroads
-and manufactories, from museums and
-libraries to public gardens and theatres&mdash;could
-scarcely, even with the most ceaseless efforts on
-his own part, have afforded opportunities for
-study, or time for reflection and research, calculated
-to render him the efficient mainspring of
-so complicated and delicate a piece of machinery
-as a great National Academy.</p>
-
-<p>I fear that I have been prolix on the subject
-of this interesting Establishment, which might
-have become a moral sceptre in the hand of a
-future Sultan, and which is now “a vain shadow”
-and “a white-washed sepulchre;” but it is impossible
-not to feel deeply the cruel wrong committed
-by the false sophisms of a smiling enemy,
-towards a confiding and unsuspicious people;
-yet was my sympathy unmingled with surprise.
-Did not Russia refuse to allow the Porte to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span>
-ratify the engagements entered into by Reschid
-Bey with the European officers whom he
-had selected for the service of the Sultan?
-And was it probable that she would permit a
-nearer and a more certain danger without an
-effort to annihilate it?</p>
-
-<p>One more question, and I have done. Will
-the traveller in Turkey, fifty years hence, have
-any thing to tell of the Military College of Constantinople?
-Alas! I doubt it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Invitation from Mustapha Pasha of Scodra&mdash;The Ca&iuml;que, and the
-Ca&iuml;quejhes&mdash;How to Travel in a Ca&iuml;que&mdash;Hasty Glances&mdash;Self-Gratulation&mdash;Scutari&mdash;Imperial
-Superstition&mdash;The Seraglio Point&mdash;Dolma
-Batch&egrave;&mdash;Beshiktash&mdash;The Turning Dervishes&mdash;Begli&egrave;rbey&mdash;The
-Kiosks&mdash;A Dilemma&mdash;A Ruined Palace&mdash;An Introduction&mdash;A
-Turkish Beauty&mdash;A Discovery&mdash;A New Acquaintance&mdash;The
-Buyuk Hanoum&mdash;Fatiguing Walk&mdash;Palace of Mustapha
-Pasha&mdash;The Harem&mdash;Turkish Dyes&mdash;Ceremonies of Reception&mdash;Turkish
-Establishment&mdash;The Buyuk Hanoum&mdash;Turkish Chaplets&mdash;The
-Imperial Firman&mdash;Pearls, Rubies, and Emeralds&mdash;The Favourite
-Odalique&mdash;Heymin&egrave; Hanoum&mdash;A Conversation on Politics&mdash;Scodra
-Pasha&mdash;Singular Coincidence&mdash;Convenience of the Turkish Kitchen&mdash;Luxury
-of the Table&mdash;Coquetry of the Chibouk&mdash;Turkish Mode of
-Lighting the Apartments&mdash;Gentleness towards the Slaves&mdash;Interesting
-Reminiscences&mdash;Domestic Details&mdash;Dilaram Hanoum&mdash;A
-Paragraph on Pearls&mdash;A Turkish Mirror&mdash;A Summons&mdash;Scodra
-Pasha&mdash;Motives for Revolt&mdash;The Imperial Envoy&mdash;Submission&mdash;Ready
-Wit of the Pasha’s Son&mdash;The Reception Room&mdash;Personal
-Appearance of the Scodra Pasha&mdash;Inconvenient Courtesy&mdash;Conversation
-on England&mdash;Philosophy&mdash;Pleasant Dreams&mdash;The Plague-Smitten.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Accompanied</span> by a Greek lady of my acquaintance,
-I embarked one fine morning on board our
-ca&iuml;que, to pay a visit to the wife and daughter
-of Mustapha Pasha of Scodra. As his palace
-was situated in a distant quarter of the city,
-and we were anxious to avoid the necessity of
-rattling over the rude and broken pavement of
-the streets in an araba, we resolved to stretch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-out beyond the Seraglio Point; and, following
-the walls that are now crumbling into ruin
-along the coast, disembark at Yani-capu, or the
-New Gate pier.</p>
-
-<p>Our sturdy rowers accordingly bent to their
-oars, and the arrowy ca&iuml;que shot across the port,
-and out into the wider sea beyond, like a wild
-bird. The boatmen were clad in their summer
-garb, for the sunshine lay bright upon the water,
-and scarcely a breath of air murmured among
-the dark branches of the cypress groves. They
-wore shirts of silk gauze, of about the thickness
-of mull-muslin, with large hanging sleeves, and
-bordered round the breast with a narrow scallopping
-of needlework; their ample trowsers
-were of white cotton, and their shaven heads
-were only partially covered by small skull-caps
-of red cloth, with pendent tassels of purple silk;
-their feet were bare.</p>
-
-<p>My companion and myself occupied cushions
-spread along the bottom of the boat: the most
-comfortable, as well as the safest way to travel
-in a ca&iuml;que, which, from its peculiar formation, is
-liable to be overset by the slightest imprudence;
-while our Greek servant, with his legs folded
-under him, was seated on the raised stern of the
-boat, immediately behind us.</p>
-
-<p>What pretty peeps we had of the Seraglio
-gardens, as we shot along; through the many
-latticed openings contrived for the gratification<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-of the fair prisoners. What magnificent glimpses
-of domes and minarets, of bursting foliage, of
-marble fountains, and of gilded kiosks! But,
-alas! how vain must have been all the luxurious
-inventions of the most luxurious of Sultans,
-to insure happiness to the tenants of this painted
-prison! I looked around me on the sea-birds
-that were sporting upon the wave&mdash;above me,
-to the fleecy clouds that were sailing over the
-blue ether&mdash;far into the distance where a shoal
-of dolphins were gamboling almost above the water;
-and, as I felt the motion of the swift ca&iuml;que,
-while it was gently heaved up and down by the
-current of the sea of Marmora, and saw how
-rapidly we sped along, I breathed a silent thanksgiving
-that <em>I</em> too was free! Free to come and
-to go&mdash;to love or to reject&mdash;to gaze in turn upon
-every bright and beautiful scene of nature, untrammelled,
-and unquestioned&mdash;that no Sultan
-could frown me into submission&mdash;no Kislar Agha
-frighten me into hypocrisy&mdash;in short, that I
-was not born a subject of his Sublime Highness,
-Mahmoud the Powerful.</p>
-
-<p>On our left, rose the lordly mountain of Bulgurlhu
-Dagi, above Scutari, whose shores were
-fringed with country-houses, and hanging gardens;
-gradually deepening into a sterner character
-as they receded from the Bosphorus, and
-lifting to the sky the palace-like barrack, and
-the elegant Persian kiosk of the Sultan. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-present Sovereign has a superstition derived
-from an astrologer whom he consulted in his
-youth, that, while he is constructing Imperial
-residences, he is sure to be fortunate in his other
-undertakings; and hence he is continually adding
-to the almost countless numbers of palaces
-and kiosks, that occupy the loveliest spots
-throughout the vicinity of the capital.</p>
-
-<p>The most extensive and ancient of these is
-that which is situated at the entrance of the
-harbour, and gives its name to the “Seraglio
-Point,” the walls of the Imperial Sera&iuml; running,
-as I have already mentioned, far along the
-coast. On the opposite shore is the small but
-elegant palace of Scutari, with its bowery terraces,
-which are overlooked by the Sultan’s principal
-residence of Dolma Batch&egrave;; and you may
-shoot an arrow from the many-coloured and
-irregularly constructed palace of Dolma Batch&egrave;
-to the vast edifice now building on the same
-border of the Bosphorus, with infinitely less taste
-and more architectural pretension&mdash;although,
-with true Eastern inconsistency, the whole of the
-stupendous palace above Beshiktash, save the
-foundation, is of wood, surrounded by a colonnade,
-supported on stately columns of white
-marble.</p>
-
-<p>This palace, of which the expence is estimated
-at a million sterling, has been already a considerable
-time in progress; and is erected on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</a></span>
-locality that was partly occupied by a beautiful
-kiosk of Sultan Selim, and partly by a Teki&egrave;
-and Chapel of Turning Dervishes.</p>
-
-<p>These latter, with a tenacity altogether incompatible
-with our European ideas of a despotic
-government, resolutely refused to quit
-their convent, when the plan of the new palace
-which rendered their ejection indispensable was
-explained to them. They had come to a resolution
-not to move&mdash;their mausoleum contained
-the holy ashes of a saint, and, in short, they were
-determined to measure their strength with the
-Sultan. Accordingly, raising the cry of sacrilege,
-they continued snugly within their convent
-walls, which were soon overtopped by the
-Imperial pile that rose gradually on either side
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>But Sultan Mahmoud was born a century too
-late to be thus baffled&mdash;the work went on; and
-he bore the opposition to his will with most exemplary
-patience so long as it did not retard the
-operations of his architects. But, when the moment
-at length arrived which rendered expedient
-the removal of the fraternity, he claimed
-from the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k Islam, or High Priest, his permission
-to expel them; and, having failed in procuring
-it, quietly mounted his horse, and rode up
-to the convent gate. The Chief Dervish met him
-on the threshold, and the dialogue was brief:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your Teki&egrave; occupies the ground necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-to the completion of my palace:&mdash;you must
-vacate it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We guard the sepulchre of a saint, may it
-please your Sublime Highness.”</p>
-
-<p>“My pleasure is your immediate removal&mdash;I
-have provided a place of reception for your community.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are not strong enough to contend against
-your Imperial will. We obey.” And the fraternity
-were put in possession of an extensive
-edifice, lately occupied by the Court Jester!</p>
-
-<p>By a strange chance, this house was situated
-immediately under the holy tomb which had
-afforded to the Dervishes their principal pretext
-for disobedience to the Imperial mandate; and
-the Sultan adroitly availed himself of the fact to
-impress upon them the eligibility of the situation,
-pointing out, with a solemnity worthy of
-the occasion, that it was more decent for them
-to be domesticated on the very spot consecrated
-by the remains of the illustrious deceased, than
-at the distance of a furlong, as had hitherto been
-the case. The observation was a happy one, and
-the remark unanswerable; and the fraternity
-were fain to affect accordance with the sentiment,
-however inconvenient its effects.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately opposite, seated upon the Asian
-shore, like a regal beauty contemplating her
-gorgeousness in the clear mirror of the Bosphorus,
-rises the summer palace of Begli&egrave;rbey&mdash;with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-its walls of pale gold and dead white; the prettiest
-and most fanciful of all the Imperial residences,
-and rendered doubly agreeable by its
-spacious gardens and overhanging groves.</p>
-
-<p>But the kiosks! Who shall number the kiosks!
-those gilt-latticed, many-formed, and graceful
-toys, which seem as though they had been rained
-from the sky during an hour of sunshine&mdash;see
-them on the heights of the Asian shore&mdash;seek
-them in the depths of the “Valley of Sweet Waters”&mdash;count
-them as they rise at short distances
-along the walls of the Sera&iuml;&mdash;pause a moment to
-admire their fairy-like beauty as you gallop
-through some lovely glen, so wild and solitary
-that you almost fancied yourself to have been
-the first who has ever explored its recesses&mdash;any
-where, every where, you come upon them; and
-they are so neatly kept, so brightly gilt, and
-so gaily painted, that they look like gigantic
-flowers scattered over the landscape.</p>
-
-<p>But back, my truant fancy, to the sea of Marmora,
-and the shores of Scutari; where the light
-ca&iuml;que is bounding over the heaving waters,
-and Mount Olympus, with its crown of snow, is
-summoning you to memories of the days when,
-if Gods indeed were not, men lent them life!
-Back to the hoary walls of Byzantium&mdash;to the
-lingering relics of the Ancient Romans&mdash;to the
-City of the True Believers!</p>
-
-<p>We passed the little bay of Cum-capu, or Sand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</a></span>port,
-and our ca&iuml;que shortly afterwards shot into
-the creek of Yani-capu; but we had not left the
-boat five minutes when we became suspicious
-that the servant was not altogether so familiar
-with the road leading to the palace of the Pasha
-as he had professed to be. Nor were our suspicions
-erroneous; for, after leading us up one
-street and down another; along the foot of the
-Aqueduct of Justinian; and amid the blackened
-remains of the last great fire, he fairly
-confessed that he had lost his way.</p>
-
-<p>In this dilemma, we took a guide, who assured
-us that he was as familiar with the palace of
-the Scodra Pasha as with his own house, and
-so he proved to be; though the trifling inconvenience
-that ensued convinced us that we were
-as far from our object as ever. After threading
-a vast number of narrow streets, each more
-filthy than the last, we at length reached one
-which, built on a steep acclivity, boasted a somewhat
-more comfortable and cleanly appearance;
-the houses were larger and better kept, and the
-shops less frequent and more respectable. Our
-guide stopped before a pair of great gates about
-half way up the hill, and, seizing the knocker,
-gave very audible evidence of our wish for admittance;
-after which he pocketed his piastres,
-and withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>On the opening of the gate, we found ourselves
-in a small covered court, choked with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-rubbish. A house, literally “tottering to its fall,”
-and propped on the garden side with heavy
-pieces of timber, presented itself as the palace
-of the Pasha; and the door of the harem, which
-one rude blow would have shivered to atoms,
-was immediately before us.</p>
-
-<p>We looked at each other in wonder; but, as
-the servant who had given us admittance assured
-us that we had made no mistake, which
-we were not only inclined, but really anxious to
-believe that we had done, we desired to be conducted
-to the Buyuk Hanoum. A loud blow on
-the door of the harem, most portentously echoed
-by the void beyond, was instantly answered by
-the appearance of a tall, bony, grinning negress;
-who, having bade us welcome, invited us to follow
-her to her mistress.</p>
-
-<p>The stairs by which we ascended to the harem
-creaked and quivered beneath our weight; the
-window that lighted them was uncurtained,
-and its missing panes were replaced by rags and
-paper&mdash;there was no matting upon the floor of
-the empty, chilly, comfortless hall into which
-the apartments opened&mdash;and the whole appearance
-of the place was so desolate and wretched,
-that I shivered as I remembered that I had engaged
-myself to pass the night there.</p>
-
-<p>Having traversed the hall, the slave lifted the
-heavy curtain veiling the door of one of the inner
-apartments; and, having obeyed her bidding,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-we found ourselves in a small, snug, well-heated
-room, closely carpeted and curtained; and at
-the instant of our entrance a beautiful girl rose
-from the sofa where she had been seated, and
-welcomed us with a smile and a blush that
-made us forget at once “the ruin of her house.”
-There was one circumstance connected with the
-greeting, however, that struck us as very singular;
-she made no allusion to our having been
-expected: but there was, on the contrary, a sort
-of wonder and curiosity in her manner, which,
-with intuitive good-breeding, she did not express.</p>
-
-<p>We were both still haunted by the idea that
-there must be some mistake; and this impression
-was heightened by the timid and constrained
-bearing of the young beauty, who, after having
-clapped her hands, and desired the two or three
-slaves who hastily obeyed the summons to prepare
-sweetmeats and coffee, suddenly sank into
-silence, as though waiting to learn the purport
-of our visit. My companion, acting upon the
-presumption that some mistake <em>must</em> exist, although
-she was unable to comprehend its nature,
-once more inquired if she were correct in supposing
-that we were in the palace of the Scodra
-Pasha.</p>
-
-<p>Again she was answered affirmatively.</p>
-
-<p>“And you are then the beautiful daughter of
-the Pasha, of whom I have heard so much?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</a></span>“I am the wife of his son,”&mdash;was the reply,
-which, concise as it was, brought a brighter
-blush to the cheek of the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>And she <em>was</em> beautiful, according to the strict
-rule of Turkish loveliness; with rich red lips,
-large dark sleepy eyes, and a throat as white
-and dazzling as the inner leaf of the water-lily.</p>
-
-<p>“You are young to be a wife; have you been
-long married?”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly twelve months&mdash;I am thirteen; my
-husband is a year older.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you expect us earlier?”</p>
-
-<p>“Expect you!” echoed the fair Turk, opening
-her deep eyes in wonder: “Mashallah! how
-could I expect that two Frank ladies would come
-to visit me?”</p>
-
-<p>This was inexplicable!</p>
-
-<p>“I trust that the Pasha has quite recovered
-his late indisposition,” pursued my companion
-after a moment’s silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not know that he was unwell; we have
-not heard from him lately.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heard from him?” echoed Madame&mdash;&mdash;in
-her turn; “my husband had a long conversation
-with him yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the beauty dilated her large eyes in
-wonder. “Impossible! He is in Albania.”
-Here was the solution of the enigma. We were
-bound on a visit to Mustapha Pasha, the rebel&mdash;and
-we were under the roof of Omer Pasha,
-his present successor!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</a></span>After a hearty laugh on all sides, we were
-quite at our ease; the young beauty handed
-scented conserves and coffee to us with her own
-pretty, plump, henna-tipped fingers; and informed
-us that her mother-in-law, the Buyuk
-Hanoum, and herself, were occupying a house
-lent to them by a friend, for the few weeks
-which they found it expedient to pass in Constantinople,
-while making their arrangements
-for Albania, where they were shortly to join the
-Pasha.</p>
-
-<p>After passing half an hour in chatting on
-various subjects, we rose to take our leave, and
-to profit by the polite offer of our new acquaintance
-to send a servant to point out to us the
-palace of Mustapha Pasha. As we were
-making our parting compliments, a slave came
-in to request that we would pay a visit to the
-Buyuk Hanoum in her apartment, whither she
-had just returned from the bath.</p>
-
-<p>We immediately assented, and were conducted
-to a spacious room at the other extremity of
-the hall, where we found the lady seated under
-the tandour, and almost in darkness; the windows
-of the room being on the old Turkish
-principle&mdash;that is, perforated in a double tier&mdash;the
-lower ones so closely latticed that they admitted
-scarcely any light, and barely permitted
-those within to see into the street; and the upper
-ones, small and half circular, dull with dust,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-situated close to the ceiling, and, in several instances,
-where time or accident had displaced
-the glass, repaired roughly with thin planks
-nailed across. The atmosphere of the apartment
-was close and oppressive, perfume having
-been flung into the mangal as we entered, which
-was rising in a dense vapour; and every creek
-and crevice in the room (and they were not few)
-being stopped with pink paper.</p>
-
-<p>The Buyuk Hanoum received us with much
-courtesy, and apologized for not having welcomed
-us herself on our first arrival in her own
-apartment, owing to her having been at the
-moment in the bath; and she appeared much
-amused at the mistake, (of which her slaves
-had already informed her) that had brought us
-under her roof. She had formerly been a fine
-woman, but was no longer young, and had consequently
-lost all the charming <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fraicheur</em> (I
-use the French word, for it is perfectly untranslateable)
-which is the great beauty of Oriental
-females. In the course of conversation, we
-discovered that she was sister to one of the
-wives of Achmet Pasha; and had herself been
-to pay a visit to the harem of Mustapha Pasha
-the previous day.</p>
-
-<p>As our engagement still remained to be fulfilled,
-we did not long linger in the apartment
-of the Buyuk Hanoum; but, taking leave of herself
-and her pretty little daughter-in-law, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-had, during our visit, remained standing at the
-end of the room, with her hands folded meekly
-before her, while we shared the sofa of the
-hostess: we placed ourselves under the guidance
-of a bearded and turbaned Moslem, who was
-awaiting us in the courtyard, and once more
-sallied forth.</p>
-
-<p>What a walk we had! Up and down, and in
-and out, until I began to think that the tales of
-Eastern enchantment that I had read in my
-girlhood were now realized for my individual
-inconvenience, and that the palace was receding
-as rapidly as we advanced. I was not, however,
-suffered to persist in this idle fancy, for
-we really <em>did</em> arrive at last, although some
-hours later than we should have done, before
-the great gates of an extensive edifice, which I
-am bound to admit had, externally, more the
-appearance of a barrack than a palace. Half a
-dozen servants, several of them negroes, were
-lounging in listless idleness at the entrance,
-which our arrival instantly changed into ready
-and officious bustle.</p>
-
-<p>We were ushered across an extensive courtyard
-to one of the wings of the palace, a vast,
-irregular, pile of building; and a single stroke
-upon the door of the harem was immediately
-answered from within: a group of smiling
-female slaves received us in an inner court,
-wherein stood the araba of the Buyuk Hanoum,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-and a very handsome marble fountain, at which
-a pretty girl of about eighteen was performing
-her ablutions. A couple of the negroes accompanied
-us up stairs, and, leading us across a very
-handsome saloon, whose recesses were filled with
-cushions, and whose open gallery commanded
-the court beneath, showed us into a smaller
-apartment, and seated us on a sofa, whereon lay
-a mandolin and a tambourine, probably flung
-there by some fair musicians whom our approach
-had startled from their pastime.</p>
-
-<p>Here we were shortly joined by a very old
-woman, who came to pay her compliments to
-us; and who, from her manner, was evidently a
-confidential person in the harem. She had been
-extremely beautiful, and was still a fine ruin;
-the outline of her features being delicate and
-regular; while her hair, of a bright chesnut colour,
-unmixed with a taint of gray, gave her a
-softness of expression perfectly singular. This
-latter circumstance only served to convince me
-of the great superiority of the dyes in use
-among the Turkish women, to those common in
-Europe; a fact which I had already occasion to
-notice: whatever may be the age of a Turkish
-female, she is seldom disfigured by gray hair,
-but, on the contrary, her tresses are as pure in
-colour, and as smooth and glossy, as those of
-the youngest girl in her family.</p>
-
-<p>A female slave shortly afterwards appeared to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-conduct us to the apartment of the Buyuk Hanoum,
-which, when we entered, was half filled
-with attendants, some standing in a semicircle
-round the mangal, and others squatted on the
-carpet at the extremity of the room.</p>
-
-<p>As this was the first harem that I had
-visited, where the establishment was on the true
-Turkish footing&mdash;or, to speak more plainly,
-where there were more candidates than one for
-the affections of the master of the house,
-although there was, in point of fact, actually
-but one wife&mdash;I paid particular attention to
-those delicate shades of etiquette and gradations
-of ceremony that I had been prepared to
-notice in these “princely families.”</p>
-
-<p>The Buyuk Hanoum occupied the upper end
-of the sofa, against which the tandour was
-placed; she was a plain woman, with a cold and
-somewhat stern expression of countenance: and
-there was more haughtiness in the bend and the
-smile wherewith she welcomed us, than I had
-yet seen exhibited by a Turkish female; when
-we entered, she was amusing herself, as is common
-with both sexes in this country, (as well
-Turks as Armenians) in passing rapidly through
-her fingers the beads of a chaplet, that rested
-on the gold-embroidered covering of the tandour.</p>
-
-<p>I must be permitted a momentary digression
-on the subject of these chaplets, which are as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</a></span>
-popular, or very nearly so, as the chibouk. They
-resemble, somewhat, the rosary of the Roman
-Catholics, save that instead of being terminated
-by a crucifix and a knot of relics, they are
-merely beads strung upon a silk cord, divided
-at intervals by some of a larger size, and secured,
-at the junction of the cord, by a carved
-acorn, or an ornament of a like description.
-They are commonly made of a wood, which, becoming
-heated by the action of the hand emits
-a delicious perfume; but their material depends
-upon the taste and means of the owner; the
-poorer classes carrying chaplets of berries, common
-beads, and other cheap substitutes, for this
-somewhat costly indulgence.</p>
-
-<p>The more independent the circumstances of a
-Turk, and consequently the less use he is called
-upon to make of his hands, the more constantly
-are they employed in toying with his chaplet&mdash;his
-fingers are busy with it as he walks along
-the street&mdash;you hear the light click, click, click,
-of the fast-falling beads, as he is squatted on
-his sofa&mdash;nay, so fond is he of this dull enjoyment,
-that, only a short period after my arrival
-at Constantinople, a Firman was issued by the
-Sultan, forbidding the use of the chaplet in the
-mosques, the noise of so many collected together,
-and all at work at the same time, disturbing the
-Mufti.</p>
-
-<p>It is composed of ninety-nine beads, without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-including that which connects the ends of the
-cord. With each of the former, an attribute of
-God is recited thus; Great&mdash;Glorious&mdash;Excellent&mdash;Omnipotent&mdash;&amp;c.
-&amp;c. The final bead
-terminates the ejaculatory prayer, and bears the
-name of the Deity himself.</p>
-
-<p>The chaplet of the Buyuk Hanoum was of
-fine pearls, beautifully matched, and each the
-size of a pea, the divisions being formed by
-emeralds similarly shaped and sized, and the
-whole string secured by one pear-shaped emerald
-the size of a hazel-nut.</p>
-
-<p>At the angle of the sofa sat the favourite
-Odalique of the Pasha, a short, slight, unattractive
-woman of about thirty years of age;
-with common, and rather coarse features, but
-with a shrewd and keen expression that almost
-made them interesting. Close beside her
-was seated a third lady, who, although certainly
-not pretty, was nevertheless tall, graceful,
-and delicate, with full, fine eyes, and an exquisite
-complexion; when we entered, she was
-employed in fondling a sweet little child of
-between one and two years old. A pile of
-cushions, carefully and comfortably arranged,
-were prepared immediately opposite to the seat
-of the Buyuk Hanoum, for her fair daughter, but
-the lovely Heymin&egrave; had not yet left the bath.</p>
-
-<p>At the invitation of the Buyuk Hanoum, we
-placed ourselves beside her, and partook of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-sweetmeats and coffee, amid the polite greetings
-of the whole party; and the refreshments had
-scarcely disappeared, when the fair bather entered
-the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>How shall I describe the beautiful Heymin&egrave;
-Hanoum? How paint the soft, sweet, sleepy
-loveliness of the Pasha’s daughter? She was
-just sixteen, at the age when Oriental beauty is
-at its height, and Oriental gracefulness unsurpassed
-by any gracefulness on earth. Her
-slight, willow-like, figure&mdash;her dark deep eyes,
-long and lustrous, with lashes edging like
-silken fringes their snowy and vein-traced lids&mdash;her
-luxuriant hair, black as the wing of the
-raven&mdash;her white and dazzling teeth&mdash;and the
-sweet but firm expression of her beautifully
-formed mouth&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I had seen many lovely women in Turkey, but
-never one so purely, so perfectly lovely, as Heymin&egrave;
-Hanoum; and I am not quite sure that I
-did not admire her the more for the deep shade
-of melancholy that cast a sort of twilight over
-her beauty, and softened, without diminishing,
-its effect.</p>
-
-<p>She had been born in Albania; it was the
-land of her love; the Buyuk Hanoum, her mother,
-was descended from one of the most powerful
-and princely families of the country; and she
-had been used to see her looked upon with the
-reverence due to her birth and rank; she re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</a></span>membered
-that the Pasha, her father, had
-dared, in his pride of place, to measure strength
-with the Sultan, his master, and to defy his
-power&mdash;he had failed, but the haughty effort
-had been made; and the fair Heymin&egrave; looked
-back with sadness and regret to the days of past
-splendour and warrior strife amid which she
-had grown to womanhood. She clung to her
-mother with the loving gentleness that spoke
-in her deep eyes: but she worshipped her
-father, as something more than mortal; and her
-fair cheek flushed crimson, and her proud lip
-dilated into smiles, as she spoke of him. And
-how she had garnered up within her heart those
-sweet, sad, memories which mock the brightness
-of the present! How she dwelt upon the
-country she had loved and lost, and amid whose
-mountains she had breathed the breath of freedom!
-I never saw the enthusiasm of the spirit
-more legibly written upon the brow of any
-human being than on her’s. It redeemed the
-apathy of a score of Eastern women!</p>
-
-<p>The Buyuk Hanoum was as far from being
-reconciled to the change of country and position
-as her daughter; but her sadness was more
-subdued by resignation&mdash;she had reached the
-age when reverses are less keenly felt&mdash;a calm
-sorrow sat upon her brow, and breathed in her
-low, tremulous, tone; but the blood which
-leaped to the brow of the daughter in warmer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-gushes as she spoke of the past only curdled
-more chillingly about the heart of the mother
-when the same visions arose in vain mockery
-before her, to remind her of what had once been,
-and could never be again!</p>
-
-<p>Scodra Pasha had earned for himself a place
-on the page of history, but he had paid a high
-and a painful price for the privilege. He had
-tasted for a brief space the intoxicating draught
-of power, but the bowl had been dashed from his
-lips. He had defied the yoke beneath which he
-had been ultimately bowed, and the iron that
-has been resisted is ever that which eats deepest
-into the soul.</p>
-
-<p>It must be a severe trial to sink from a leader
-to a vassal; even when it is from a rebel chief
-to the dependent Pasha of a Sultan. Mustapha
-Pasha had been almost a sovereign in Albania,
-a brave soldier, and a powerful prince; and,
-when he accepted the conditions of his Imperial
-Master, and bought his life at the price of his
-country and his fortune, the struggle of the
-spirit must have been a bitter one.</p>
-
-<p>It was a singular circumstance that, at the
-period of my first visit to his harem, he was occupying
-a palace adjoining that in which resided
-another attainted noble&mdash;the Ex-Pasha of Bagdad!
-Both men of information&mdash;both blighted
-in their ambition, and bowed beneath the power
-they had defied&mdash;they amused the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</em> of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-their monotonous existence with writing poetry;
-and moralizing on the instability of human
-greatness. I have remarked elsewhere that the
-Turks are seldom found wanting in philosophy.</p>
-
-<p>As we did not arrive at the Pasha’s palace for
-several hours after we were expected, it was
-supposed that some accidental circumstance had
-prevented our visit, and the family had consequently
-dined before we got there: but such an
-occurrence as this never causes the slightest
-inconvenience in a Turkish house, where the
-culinary arrangements are so regulated that you
-can command an excellent repast at whatever
-moment you may chance to require it.</p>
-
-<p>On the present occasion, I rather regretted
-that the profuse and even sumptuous dinner
-that was served up to us was, from an excess
-of courtesy on the part of our entertainers, perfectly
-European in its arrangement, being accompanied
-by silver forks, knives, and chairs;
-but the luxury of the East had, nevertheless, its
-part in the banquet, for the cloth that covered
-the table was enriched with a deep border of exquisite
-needlework, and the napkins of muslin,
-almost as impalpable as a cobweb, were richly
-embroidered in gold. Wine was handed to us
-on a beautifully chased golden salver, and the
-glasses from which we drank it were of finely
-cut crystal; while the table stood upon a tapestry
-carpet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</a></span>But the most beautiful objects employed
-during the repast were the silver basin,
-strainer, and vase, that were held by two
-black slaves for us to wash our hands, while a
-third stood a pace behind them, bearing upon
-his arm the napkin, wrought with a border of
-flowers in coloured silks, whereon they were to
-be dried. The vase, shaped like that from
-which Ganymede might have poured wine for
-Imperial Jove, was chased in the most delicate
-manner with grapes and vine leaves; and the
-same design enriched the border of the capacious
-basin.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as we had dined, we adjourned to the
-private apartment of Heymin&egrave; Hanoum, at her
-especial invitation; when the young beauty,
-freed from the restraint of her mother’s presence,
-clapped her hands, and ordered her pipe,
-which she smoked with as much grace and gusto
-as any Moslem of the Empire. They who cavil
-at this application of the word <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">grace</em>, have certainly
-never seen a young Turkish woman
-manage her chibouk&mdash;Nothing can be more coquettish!</p>
-
-<p>The chapter on fans, so celebrated in the
-“Spectator,” might be out-written a hundredfold
-by one competent to describe the man&oelig;uvres
-of an Eastern beauty, with her amber-lipped
-and gold-twisted pipe. Such soft and
-studied attitudes&mdash;such long and slowly-drawn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-respirations, having all the sentiment of a sigh
-without its sadness&mdash;such clasping and unclasping
-of the delicate fingers about the slender
-tube&mdash;-no novice should venture to smoke
-beside a Turkish woman, who is not satisfied
-to look as awkward as a poor mortal can desire!</p>
-
-<p>We were all comfortably nestled among our
-cushions; and, on a small round table at the extremity
-of the apartment, stood a tray, bearing
-four wax lights. This custom of clustering the
-candles together is common in both Turkish,
-Armenian, and Greek houses; and is peculiarly
-congenial to the indolence of Eastern habits, as
-it leaves such deep shadows in the distance, that
-those who have no immediate occupation to
-confine them to the vicinity of the glare may
-doze in undisturbed twilight on their sofas.</p>
-
-<p>At intervals, a slave entered to trim the
-candles, or to replenish the pipe of Heymin&egrave;
-Hanoum; and each lingered awhile, unchidden,
-to listen to a fragment of the conversation, or to
-indulge in another gaze at the Frank strangers;
-among the rest, one pale, languid-looking
-woman, who complained of sudden and severe
-suffering, and to whom the Pasha’s daughter
-spoke even more kindly and gently than to any
-of the others, squatted down near the door, and
-remained a considerable time, with her head
-drooping on her bosom, apparently amused in
-spite of her indisposition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</a></span>The slaves, both black and white, were innumerable&mdash;I
-should think that we had at least a
-score in attendance on us during dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the occasional interruptions that I
-have described, our conversation became gradually
-extremely interesting. The young beauty
-talked of Albania&mdash;of the proud and happy
-life that she had led there during her father’s
-prosperity; and then of the misery which she
-had endured in exchanging its delights for the
-chilling observances and restraints of the
-Turkish capital. Had the heart of Heymin&egrave;
-Hanoum beat in the breast of her father, let the
-result have been what it might, he never would
-have recanted his rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>From the political position of her family, she
-digressed to its social condition; and I was not
-a little amused by the perfect <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sang froid</em> with
-which she entered into a detail of the domestic
-arrangements of the household.</p>
-
-<p>“You have seen my brother;” she said, “and
-I need not tell you that he is delicate and
-sickly. He was my mother’s last child, and the
-Pasha feared that he should be left without a
-son. In this dilemma, he expressed to the
-Buyuk Hanoum his desire to contract a second
-marriage; but this she would by no means permit.
-She could not, however, avoid seeing that
-his anxiety was but too well founded: and she
-accordingly proposed a compromise, to which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-he at once agreed. Without loss of time, he
-wrote to a friend in Constantinople to purchase
-for him four young Circassians, and to embark
-them, under the charge of an elderly woman,
-for Albania.</p>
-
-<p>“Young as I was, I shall not attempt to describe
-to you my mortification on their arrival.
-I saw the tears of my mother, which, when
-alone with me, she did not attempt to suppress;
-we had hitherto had but one heart and one interest
-in the harem of my father, and we became
-suddenly domesticated with strangers&mdash;women
-of another land and another language; to whom
-we were knit by no ties, bound by no sympathies.</p>
-
-<p>“But all this is idle. You saw the Odalique
-who sat nearest to my mother? Allah has been
-gracious to her&mdash;she has borne two sons to the
-Pasha.&mdash;She with the large dark eyes, who
-when you entered was nursing her infant, has
-no other child than that one little girl. A third
-you will shortly see, when she pays me her
-visit previously to retiring for the night:
-I love her much, but she, poor thing! is
-childless. The fourth died in consequence of
-her sufferings during the passage to Albania,
-which was tempestuous and protracted. The
-aged woman who received you on your arrival
-was the person who accompanied the
-four Circassians from Constantinople, and&mdash;but
-here is Dilaram Hanoum.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</a></span>As she spoke, the curtain that shaded the
-door was pushed aside, and the Odalique entered.
-She was by far the prettiest woman of
-the three, but there was a subdued and hopeless
-expression about her, which showed at once that
-she had not been a favourite child of fortune.
-She was slight and beautifully formed, with a
-low, soft voice which was almost music. She
-appeared much attached to the lovely Heymin&egrave;,
-and hastened, after the first salutations were
-over, to replenish the pipe that rested beside
-the young beauty, and to hand it to her; a
-mark of attention and respect which was acknowledged
-by its object with the graceful salutation
-common in the East&mdash;the pressure of the
-fingers of the right hand to the lips and brow.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation was, of course, changed on
-her entrance; and the subject of jewels having
-been mentioned, Heymin&egrave; Hanoum despatched
-a slave for a handkerchief with which she was
-in the habit of binding up her hair, in order to
-show us one of the Albanian fashions. It was
-of black muslin, painted with groups of coloured
-flowers, and bordered all round with a deep
-fringe of fine pearls. I never in my life saw
-any mixture which produced a more striking
-effect; and when she wound it about her head&mdash;the
-dark glossy tresses of her hair relieved by
-the bright tints of the flowers, and the whiteness
-of her clear brow rivalling the pearls that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</a></span>
-rested on it&mdash;her crimson jacket, lined with
-sable, falling back, and revealing the transparent
-chemisette of gauze, and the fair throat which it
-shaded&mdash;the pale blue silk trowsers trimmed
-with silver, and the small white naked foot
-that peeped for an instant from beneath them
-as she altered her position&mdash;I thought that earth
-could hold nothing more lovely than Heymin&egrave;
-Hanoum!</p>
-
-<p>I was very busily engaged in examining an
-elegant hand-mirror set in a frame of chased
-silver, when a couple of negroes entered to invite
-us to the presence of the Pasha, who was awaiting
-us in his apartment. I have already mentioned
-that one room in the harem is appropriated
-to the master of the house, wherein he receives
-such of its inmates as he desires to converse
-with.</p>
-
-<p>The message was scarcely delivered when the
-Buyuk Hanoum, whom the Pasha had desired
-to introduce us, entered the apartment, evidently
-somewhat surprised at the honour which was
-about to be bestowed upon two female Infidels.
-I had heard a great deal of the Scodra Pasha,
-and I naturally desired to see him; nor perhaps
-may it be amiss to impart to my readers a portion
-of his history.</p>
-
-<p>Mustapha Pasha was residing on his Pashalik
-in Albania when Sultan Mahmoud reformed the
-national costume of the country, and replaced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</a></span>
-the lofty turbans and flowing garments of past
-centuries, with the scarlet <em>f&egrave;z</em> and frock coat of
-the present day. When the order for this change
-reached the Pasha, he at once communicated it
-to the troops, who resisted it with such violence
-as to threaten not only the liberty, but the life
-of their Chief if he persisted in its enforcement.
-In vain did he argue, explain, and persuade;
-the soldiery, wedded to their ancient usages, refused
-to listen to his reasonings; their opposition
-being furthermore aggravated by a conscription,
-enforced with sufficient severity to lend
-them arguments against all concession to a
-power by which they were thus oppressed; and
-he finally found himself compelled to adopt a
-decided line of conduct in order to insure his
-own personal safety.</p>
-
-<p>Already nearly in a state of siege in one of his
-palaces&mdash;surrounded by troops on whom he could
-by no means depend, seconded as they were by
-the people, in the indignation excited by the
-threatened infringement on their cherished habits&mdash;drawing
-the whole of his revenue from the soil&mdash;married
-to a lady of the country&mdash;possessed
-of considerable property within the Pashalik&mdash;and
-threatened with death by an infuriated populace&mdash;it
-cannot be wondered at that Mustapha
-Pasha, thus hard pressed, resolved to assist his
-people in the struggle; and strengthening his
-army, and trusting to his mountain fastnesses,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</a></span>
-determined on a resistance to the Imperial will
-which at once placed Albania in a state of revolt.</p>
-
-<p>It were tedious to detail at length the various
-fortunes of the rebel Pasha: a brave man, beloved
-by his troops, and sincere in the same
-cause&mdash;greatly assisted, moreover, by the mountainous
-and difficult character of the country
-naturally possesses the means of making head
-against a superior power to his own; and thus
-it was with the Scodra Pasha. Many abortive attempts
-were made to dislodge and capture him,
-by an army under the command of Reschid Mehemet
-Pasha, but in vain. He still held on his way,
-until at length the Sultan, irritated at the ill-success
-of his endeavours, despatched Achmet
-Pasha with full power to act as a pacificator,
-and to use all possible means to recall the rebel
-chief to his allegiance, and an order not to return
-without having terminated the rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>Thus instructed, the Imperial Envoy left the
-capital for Albania; and his attempts were not
-destined to be as fruitless as those of his predecessors.
-The rebel Pasha’s army had fought
-for their lives as well as their privileges; they
-had gone too far to recede; and Achmet Pasha
-felt at once the utter futility of persisting in a
-system of violence which could produce no definite
-result. The character of his adversary was
-well known to him; it was high, honourable,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</a></span>
-and unsullied, save by his revolt against his
-Imperial Master; and it was to this knowledge
-that he resolved to trust, in order to bring about
-a submission which the Sultan’s arms were unable
-to effect. He accordingly despatched a
-messenger to Mustapha Pasha, by whom he requested
-an interview; and, to prove that no
-treachery was intended on the one hand, or
-feared on the other, he offered to place himself
-in the power of the rebel leader, by meeting him
-alone and unattended wherever he might appoint.</p>
-
-<p>The Scodra Pasha, a man of amiable disposition
-and quick feelings, was touched by this
-mark of confidence, and unhesitatingly acceded
-to the request; when Achmet Pasha, without
-further delay, fulfilled the conditions which he
-had imposed upon himself, mounted his horse,
-and rode boldly off to the palace of the rebel.
-He was received with the utmost courtesy;
-coffee and pipes were introduced, and the two
-Pashas sat down side by side upon their cushions
-to discuss the important subject of their meeting.</p>
-
-<p>To a man of Mustapha Pasha’s good sense
-and sound judgment, it was by no means difficult
-for his visitor to demonstrate in the clearest
-manner the hopelessness of his situation. It was
-true that hitherto he had baffled all the attempts
-of the Imperial troops, by the wisdom of
-his measures, the judiciousness of his arrange<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</a></span>ments,
-the bravery of his own bearing, and the
-zeal of his soldiery. But this state of things
-could not last for ever&mdash;he was feeding upon
-his own strength, and his resources must ultimately
-fail&mdash;he had yet time to make a creditable
-and a free submission&mdash;he had still an opportunity
-to save his head&mdash;but, when he yielded
-from weakness, (and, should he persist in his
-rebellion, the bitter hour of helplessness must
-come;) how could he look for a mercy which he
-had rejected when it was freely extended to
-him?</p>
-
-<p>Thus pressed, both by exterior argument and
-internal conviction; wearied also, it may be, of
-opposition to a sovereign whom he reverenced;
-the rebel leader asked time for deliberate consideration
-ere he returned a definite answer to
-the proposition&mdash;he stipulated also that an assurance
-should be solemnly given that his own
-life and those of his family should be spared;
-which Achmet Pasha did not hesitate to promise
-upon the spot. It was accordingly determined
-that the latter should remain two days in the
-palace of the rebel chief, when he should either
-depart alone, and unmolested, bearing with him
-the continued defiance of the revolted province;
-or that he should return to Constantinople accompanied
-by his host, and the females of his
-family, under the safeguard of his plighted
-word.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</a></span>The latter alternative was adopted; and Achmet
-Pasha ultimately returned to Constantinople
-in company with the Scodra Pasha and
-his Harem. The fortune of the rebel chief was
-confiscated, and a hundred and twenty thousand
-piastres a-year settled upon him to supply the
-means of existence. But some time elapsed ere
-he was admitted to the presence, and allowed
-the high honour of kissing the foot, of his Sublime
-Highness.</p>
-
-<p>On the same occasion he presented his two
-eldest sons, with whom the Sultan was so much
-pleased that he created them Pashas on the instant;
-and, having entered into conversation with
-them, he inquired how they liked the <em>f&egrave;z</em>, upon
-which the younger of the two, a fine boy of eight
-years of age, answered with a promptitude worthy
-of an accomplished courtier, that he had always
-liked it, but since he had seen it on the head of the
-Sultan, he should like it a thousand times better;
-a reply which so delighted Mahmoud that he
-immediately presented him with a watch magnificently
-enriched with diamonds. Nor was
-the child less fortunate throughout the audience,
-for the smiling sovereign tried him with
-another question, to which he answered with
-even more point&mdash;“And which do you like the
-best, my young Pasha?” asked the Sultan:
-“Constantinople or Albania?”</p>
-
-<p>“Constantinople,” replied the boy; “because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-you are here&mdash;the leaves cannot come upon the
-trees without the sun; and we cannot grow up
-to be brave men if we are not near you.”</p>
-
-<p>No wonder that Mustapha Pasha looks upon
-the mother of the boy as “the Light of the
-Harem.”</p>
-
-<p>The Buyuk Hanoum led us across the outer
-saloon to a spacious staircase, then across an
-upper hall, through a short gallery, and finally
-to the door of the Pasha’s apartment. As I
-crossed the threshold, I was actually dazzled
-with light: the room was large; and was raised
-one step at the upper end, round which ran
-the sofa. Two tables, bearing trays of candles,
-were placed near the entrance; and a
-silver branch holding others was in the arched
-recess between them. The curtains and the covering
-of the sofa were of crimson satin, the
-latter fringed with gold a foot in depth, and furnished
-with cushions of gold tissue embroidered
-with coloured silk. At the extremity of the
-dais a pile of cushions were heaped upon the
-floor; and at the upper end of the sofa squatted
-the Pasha, with a negro slave on each side of
-him, busied in arranging his pipe which had
-been just replenished. A capacious mangal,
-heavy with perfume, occupied the centre of
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Mustapha Pasha is still in the prime of life;
-of the middle size, with an agreeable and sensi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</a></span>ble
-expression of face, and a slight cast in one of
-his eyes. He received us very courteously, and
-ordered chairs for my friend and myself near his
-own seat, while he motioned the Buyuk Hanoum
-to be seated also; an intimation which she
-obeyed by placing herself on the extreme edge
-of the sofa. The next ceremony was to cause
-pipes to be presented to my companion and myself;
-the greatest honour that can be conferred
-on a female in Turkey being an invitation to
-smoke in the presence of the other sex.</p>
-
-<p>This was indeed a dilemma, for smoking had
-formed no part of my education; and I knew
-that, did I even raise the pipe to my lips, I should
-infallibly be ill; but the Pasha fortunately
-remarked the slight shudder and the gesture
-of repugnance with which I took it from
-the hand of the slave; and he immediately requested
-me to refuse it, if I found it disagreeable,
-as he merely sought to pay me a compliment by
-offering it.</p>
-
-<p>I need not say how gladly I availed myself of
-the permission, much to the amusement of the
-Pasha; who, after he had inhaled a few whiffs
-of his own chibouk, sent a second message to the
-harem, which was answered by the speedy appearance
-of Heymin&egrave; Hanoum and the favourite
-Odalique. A motion of his hand invited both to
-take their places upon the cushions already
-alluded to; and then I remarked the ascen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</a></span>dency
-of the latter over the spirit of the
-Pasha&mdash;an ascendency due probably as much to
-her being the mother of his two sons, as to her
-natural shrewdness of intellect. Be that as it
-may, however, it was easy to perceive that she
-was a woman of great natural talent, and wonderful
-quickness of perception; and very likely
-to retain the supremacy that she had gained.</p>
-
-<p>The Pasha understood a little French, but did
-not attempt to speak it; though it is probable
-that he will soon do so, as he is studying the
-language with unwearying perseverance. He
-has already formed a very respectable library,
-where he has collected together the works of
-Voltaire, Racine, Boileau, Moli&egrave;re, and many
-other standard authors; and he has done so thus
-prematurely, he says, in order that the sight of
-the volumes may stimulate him to industry; as
-he never looks towards them without reflecting
-on the riches that are hidden from him by his
-ignorance of the language, and which may one
-day be within his grasp.</p>
-
-<p>I was astonished at many of the questions
-that he asked me; they were so unlike the generality
-of those to which I had already become
-accustomed in the country. He was very inquisitive
-on the subject of the Thames Tunnel&mdash;inquired
-as to its probable expense&mdash;the period
-at which it was likely to be completed&mdash;the
-width of the river at that precise spot&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</a></span>
-amount of the toll to be paid by passengers&mdash;the
-mode in which the money had been obtained
-for its construction&mdash;in what manner it would
-be lighted&mdash;in short, he entered into every particular
-connected with the undertaking so earnestly,
-that I had reason to congratulate myself
-on being able to satisfy his curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>He next asked a number of questions relatively
-to the Fire Insurance Companies of London,
-of which he had heard vaguely; and, when
-I had explained to him the whole of the system,
-he expressed his regret that no institution of the
-kind had been established in Constantinople; a
-want to which he was the more sensible as he
-had lately lost a house filled with valuable furniture
-and effects, of which he had been unable
-to save the smallest portion. He inquired if I
-thought that one of our Companies would consent
-to accept an insurance for his palace; as in
-the event of their being willing to do so, he
-would immediately take steps to make the arrangement.
-I explained to him the difficulty of
-inducing them to run so great a risk, aware as
-they must be of the frequency of fires in Stamboul,
-and the exorbitant interest they would require
-in the event of their consenting to his wish:
-when he at once allowed the objection to be perfectly
-reasonable, although he much regretted
-the necessity of abandoning the idea.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of conversation, some allusion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</a></span>
-having been made to the philosophy with which
-he supported his reverses, his reply was so characteristic
-that it deserves record. “The chariot
-of my fortunes,” he said, “had, for so long
-a time, run smoothly over the highways of life,
-that I ought rather to feel surprise at its even
-pace during so many years, than wonder that
-its wheels should fail at last.”</p>
-
-<p>To comment on such an answer would be
-idle.</p>
-
-<p>It was not without regret that I took leave of
-the Pasha, whose courteous manners and intelligent
-conversation rendered him a most agreeable
-companion; and, had I been able to converse
-with him in his own language, I have no doubt
-that I should have been still more impressed in
-his favour. Before we quitted him, he invited us
-to spend a few days with the Buyuk Hanoum,
-and his daughter, during the marriage festivities
-of the Princess Mihirm&agrave;h, at a house which he
-had taken at the “Sweet Waters;” and, as we
-re-entered the harem, I could not refrain from
-expressing to the fair Heymin&egrave; my admiration
-of the intelligence and information of her father.
-But all praise of the Pasha to his daughter was
-“gilding refined gold, painting the lily, and
-throwing a perfume o’er the violet;” human
-commendations could not exalt him higher in
-her esteem.</p>
-
-<p>If splendour could insure repose, we were des<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">254</a></span>tined
-to a long night of slumber beneath the
-roof of Mustapha Pasha, for our beds were one
-blaze of gold and embroidery; and it is certain
-that the fair form which hovered about me until
-I sank upon my pillows had a most pleasant
-influence over my dreams; I never passed a more
-delicious night. I had visions of beauty, of which
-the lovely Heymin&egrave; was the type and subject:
-and if some faint impressions of strife and suffering
-mingled in the illusion, a bright smile
-and a soft glance dispelled the gloom, and
-brought back the light and the loveliness, that
-had been veiled for a moment, with tenfold lustre.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning we returned to Pera, carrying
-with us a store of pleasant memories for which
-we were indebted to this amiable family; and
-it was not without a very painful emotion that
-we learnt, in the course of the second day after
-we had quitted them, that the harem of the
-Pasha was dispersed in all directions, and the
-palace completely empty. The sick slave, whom
-I mentioned as having passed a considerable
-time in the apartment of Heymin&egrave; Hanoum,
-had died the previous night of plague!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">255</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Procession of Betrothal&mdash;Preliminary Ceremonies&mdash;The Mantle of Mahomet&mdash;The
-Palace of the Seraskier Pasha&mdash;The Palace Square&mdash;Picturesque
-Groups&mdash;An Interior&mdash;Turkish Children&mdash;Oriental Curiosity&mdash;Costume
-of the Turkish Children&mdash;Military Music&mdash;The
-Procession&mdash;Hurried Departure of the Crowd&mdash;The Seraskier’s
-Tower&mdash;The Fire Guard&mdash;Candidates for the Imperial Bride&mdash;Imperial
-Expedient&mdash;Sa&iuml;d Pasha&mdash;Policy of the Seraskier&mdash;An Audience&mdash;The
-Biter Bitten&mdash;Ingenious Ruse&mdash;Sublime Economy&mdash;Brilliant
-Traffic&mdash;The Danger of Delay&mdash;The Marriage Gifts&mdash;An
-Interesting Interview.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A few</span> days after my visit to the harem of
-Scodra Pasha, my father and myself started at
-nine o’clock in the morning to Constantinople,
-to be present at the procession consequent on
-the betrothal of the Princess Mihirm&agrave;h, the
-Sultan’s second daughter; a lovely girl of nineteen,
-about to be bestowed on Mohammed Sa&iuml;d
-Pasha, who had been summoned from his Pashalik,
-at the Dardanelles, to receive at the hand
-of his Imperial Master this most honouring of
-all gifts.</p>
-
-<p>But, before describing the procession, it may
-not perhaps be amiss to record some of the less
-public ceremonies of the betrothal, for which I
-am indebted to an eye-witness.</p>
-
-<p>The day fixed upon for its celebration was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">256</a></span>
-the 7th of April; and, at the hour which the
-Court Astrologer had decided to be the most
-auspicious for the assembling together of the
-individuals necessary to its completion, who
-had received their notes of invitation two days
-previously from the Kislar-Aghasi (Chief of
-the Eunuchs), they met in the private apartment
-of the Imperial Treasurer, near the chamber
-that contains the holy Mantle of Mahomet&mdash;the
-same sacred locality that witnessed the betrothal
-of the elder Princess. Here the whole company
-entered at the moment which had also been
-previously pointed out by the Astrologer as fortunate,
-and remained for some time in religious
-silence, in presence of the inestimable relic;
-after which each member of the distinguished
-circle seated himself upon the carpet that had
-been prepared for him.</p>
-
-<p>The Grand Vizier, Mohammed Ronouf Pasha,
-took the upper place upon the sofa, having near
-him the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam, (or High Priest) Mekki
-Zad&egrave; Moustafa Assim Effendi, who officiated on
-the august occasion. On the right sat the chief of
-the Eunuchs of the Imperial Seraglio, who acted
-as the proxy of the Princess; and whose witnesses
-were the Commissioner of the Imperial
-Treasury, and Osman Agha, one of the principal
-Eunuchs.&mdash;On the left was placed the adopted
-father and representative of Mohammed Sa&iuml;d
-Pasha, the Seraskier&mdash;having for his witnesses,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">257</a></span>
-Halil Rifat Pasha, the Sultan’s son-in-law,
-Akhmet Fevzi Pasha, Military Counsellor of the
-Palace, and Mohammed Sa&iuml;d Pertew Effendi,
-Minister of the Interior, and Counsellor of State,
-with four others. Among the Ch&egrave;&iuml;ks and the
-men of letters who were admitted to this august
-assembly, to mingle their prayers with those of
-the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam, were Elhadj Yousouf Effendi,
-Chief of the Ch&egrave;&iuml;ks, and preacher at the great
-mosque of St. Sophia; and Elhadj Abdoullah
-Effendi, first chaplain of the mosque of
-Eyoub, and preacher at the mosque of Sultan
-Akhmet.</p>
-
-<p>They were no sooner seated than the officers
-attached to the service of this chamber, which
-bears the name of Khirka&iuml;-Ch&eacute;riff, presented to
-each person perfumes and rose-water according
-to the Eastern custom; and, when they withdrew,
-the doors were closed, and the ceremony
-commenced with a prayer by the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam,
-for the divine blessing on the union they were
-then assembled to celebrate; after which he
-put the customary questions to the proxies of
-the two contracting parties.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the act of betrothal was terminated,
-the doors were again thrown open, and
-the two Ch&egrave;&iuml;ks pronounced a prayer suited to
-the occasion. At the close of the prayer, the
-distinguished party quitted the Khirka&iuml;-Ch&eacute;riff,
-and passed into a neighbouring apartment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-where they partook of the refreshments provided
-for them, and were waited upon by the
-keeper of the Privy Purse, who presented to
-them the rich gifts with which his Sublime
-Highness was pleased to honour them. They
-then left the palace.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they had departed, the Sultana-Mother
-sent by the Bach-Agha (Eunuch and
-Major Domo) the nuptial offering of the bride
-to the bridegroom, who was awaiting it at the
-palace of the Seraskier, and superintending at
-the same time the arrangement of his own marriage
-present, which was to be conveyed with great
-pomp to the Sera&iuml;. The procession was to start
-from the palace of the Seraskier (the bridegroom’s
-adopted father) at half-past ten o’clock,
-and we accordingly hired a window overlooking
-the line of march; whence we could see the
-train issue from the palace court, cross the extensive
-space in front of it, and finally lose itself
-in a narrow street leading to the Imperial residence.</p>
-
-<p>The esplanade on which we looked down
-was crowded with horsemen, footmen, and carriages.
-Groups of women were squatted immediately
-in the rear of the soldiers, who lined
-the space along which the procession was to
-move; others occupied a raised platform erected
-by some speculative Moslem, whereon a place
-could be secured for the modest remuneration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">259</a></span>
-of a piastre, (two-pence halfpenny.) Rows of
-arabas, like beds of scarlet poppies, were ranged
-behind the pedestrians; while, further from the
-scene of action, parties were scattered over the
-whole square in the most picturesque confusion.
-Here a train of Serudjhis walked the horses
-that they had brought for hire; there a knot
-of Jews chattered and gesticulated; while their
-women huddled themselves up in the coarse
-cotton scarfs which concealed their head-dresses.
-On one side the snowy turbans and dark robes
-of half a dozen Ulemas formed a striking contrast
-to the green shawls bound about the
-brows of a group of Hadj&iuml;s, and their ample
-pelisses of crimson or maroon, lined and overlaid
-with fur. Here it was a party of soldiers&mdash;there
-a band of Bulgarians, dressed in jackets
-of sheepskin, with the wool turned inwards,
-round caps of black lambskin, and leather leggings.
-Then moved by a score of Armenians,
-with their tall calpacs and crimson slippers&mdash;jostled,
-as they passed slowly along, by a set of
-Franks, crushing and squeezing, as though they
-were resolved to carry their point, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coute qui
-coute</em>.</p>
-
-<p>On a little hillock near the window that we
-occupied, a couple of Turks had spread their
-carpet, and were quietly smoking their chibouks,
-attended by their negro pipe-bearers; while
-here and there a gigantic umbrella of white<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">260</a></span>
-cotton overshadowed a round stand covered
-with sherbet and mohalib&egrave;, around which were
-clustered a throng of noisy Greeks, each with
-eyes as black as the shawl that he wore about
-his scarlet <em>f&egrave;z</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the scene within the room less characteristic
-than that without; the remaining
-windows had been hired by four grave-looking
-elderly Turks, who had brought with them half
-a dozen pretty little girls, of eight or ten years
-of age; who were sitting, doubled up at one
-corner of the sofa, with all the early taught awe
-and deference for the lordly sex which is the
-leading sentiment of the harem.</p>
-
-<p>Our entrance, however, aroused them into
-something like action; for while our dragoman
-explained who and what we were, whence we
-came, and whither we were bound:&mdash;questions
-which are asked by the grave and bearded
-Moslem, as unceremoniously as by any one of
-our Trans-Atlantic brethren, and without the
-slightest suspicion on his own part that he is
-guilty of any impertinence&mdash;I made an easy
-acquaintance with the pretty children, by permitting
-them to handle the flowers in my bonnet,
-to touch my shawl, and to run their
-little plump fingers over my waist-ribbon. And
-when the grandee of the party who occupied
-the upper end of the sofa, whereon, moreover,
-his attendants had spread a carpet of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-crimson shag, fringed with gold, as though
-the ignoble chintz were not worthy the honour
-of receiving him, had taken the chibouk
-from his own mouth, and sent it by his pipe-bearer
-to my father&mdash;a mark of high consideration
-rather flattering than fastidious&mdash;and my
-father had, in his turn, despatched the dragoman,
-to spread before the children a feast of
-mohalib&egrave;, frosted over with powdered sugar,
-we were all the best friends in the world.</p>
-
-<p>One of the little girls&mdash;a calm, self-centered,
-true Turkish child, with all the premature
-languishment and indolence so peculiar to the
-women of the country, with black, sleepy eyes,
-and lips like rose-buds&mdash;was clad in a jacket of
-purple velvet, lined with ermine, and laced with
-gold; her antery of pale pink muslin was
-tucked up within the cachemire shawl that she
-wore about her waist; and her large trowsers
-of green chintz fell in ample plaits over the
-little naked feet, which, when she rose from the
-sofa, were scarcely covered at the extremities
-by the yellow slippers that lay beside her.</p>
-
-<p>Another, perhaps a year younger, had her
-jacket of crimson merino doubled with sable,
-and her little Symrniote f&egrave;z worked with seed
-pearls; her antery was yellow, her trowsers
-blue, and her chemisette of pale amber-coloured
-gauze. Nothing can be more outr&eacute; than the
-costume of a little Turkish maiden; the long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">262</a></span>
-hair hanging in a score of minute braids, each
-confined at the extremity with a small knot of
-ribbon; the tight sleeves, open from the elbow,
-falling below the hip, and edged with elaborately
-wrought silk fringe; the round, white,
-dimpled feet, peeping out beneath the full
-trowsers; and the heavy jacket folding back
-from the ivory shoulders and snowy throat.</p>
-
-<p>There is no distinction of dress between the
-child of two years old and the woman of
-twenty; the same jewels, the same fashion, the
-same material, compose the one and the other;
-they differ only in quantity; the diamonds,
-except upon great occasions, are lavished on the
-children; and in fringe, and embroidery, and
-ribbon, they only yield to their elders, because
-there is not sufficient space upon their little persons
-to enable their parents to equalize the consumption
-between them.</p>
-
-<p>At length, the distant sounds of military music
-came to us from the Palace court, and forth
-issued the Sultan’s Band, playing his Grand
-March; this was succeeded by a regiment of the
-line, moving in double files: then rode forward
-about a score of staff officers, including several
-generals of brigade, and colonels of the Imperial
-Guard, surrounded by servants on foot;
-these were succeeded by two open carriages and
-four, empty&mdash;and after these came the presents
-of the bridegroom to the Imperial Family.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">263</a></span>
-First walked a hundred men of the Seraskier’s
-establishment; about a score of whom bore
-upon their heads cages of wire, covered with
-coloured gauze, ornamented with flowing ribbons,
-and filled with sweetmeats of the most
-costly description, piled in porcelain dishes; the
-frosted sugar glittering in the light like jewels.
-Those were succeeded by others charged with
-silk stuffs of the most rare qualities, produced
-by the Indian looms&mdash;Cachemires of Tibet and
-Lahor&mdash;and other magnificent gifts, destined
-for the Sultan Mother.</p>
-
-<p>The offerings to the bride followed. They consisted
-of two toilette services of massive silver,
-containing the most delicious perfumes of the
-East; a silver dinner service, arranged on a
-plateau of the same metal; several silver salvers
-covered with precious stones, and ornaments of
-gold and silver, and others heaped with gold
-coins: the whole covered with cages of silver
-net-work. Each of these bearers was attended
-by a page.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed four more, having on their
-heads trays of shawls, folded in coloured muslin&mdash;and
-next came a dozen men, charged with all
-the articles necessary for the bath, under transparent
-coverings. One carried the pattens of
-ebony, inlaid with stars of mother-of-pearl, and
-clasped over the foot with a band of brilliants;
-another, the head-kerchief of silver tissue, em<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">264</a></span>broidered
-with wreaths of silken flowers; the
-third, a pile of silk napkins, fringed with gold;
-the fourth, a wrapping-cloth of flowered satin;
-the fifth, a capacious basin of burnished gold;
-the sixth, a comb of ivory, enriched with diamonds;
-the seventh, a pair of slippers, wrought
-with emeralds and seed pearl; the eighth, a
-chemisette of pale pink gauze, edged round the
-bosom with silver fringe; the ninth, a cut crystal
-box clasped with gold, containing scented soaps;
-the tenth, an ebony essence case, studded with
-rubies; the eleventh, a hand-mirror in a gold
-frame, surrounded by a garland of jewels; and
-the twelfth, a sofa covering of crimson velvet,
-flowered and fringed with gold.</p>
-
-<p>Four eunuchs in brown and gold followed the
-presents; and were succeeded by an escort of
-sergeants of the line; after which appeared the
-Seraskier Pasha, surrounded by a brilliant staff,
-and preceding a second regiment of infantry,
-with the bright barrels of their fire-locks flashing
-in the sunshine, and attended by their
-band. These terminated the procession. But an
-interesting feature of the show still remained,
-when the led horses of the palace guests, each
-held by a groom, came prancing through the
-wide gateway, as if vain of their glittering
-housings and embroidered reins; the groups
-which had been scattered over the square were
-all in motion; the crimson-covered arabas began<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">265</a></span>
-to move from their station; the sherbet-venders
-vaunted their merchandize, with voluble eagerness,
-to the passers-by&mdash;the Turks resigned
-their chibouks to their pipe-bearers, and rose
-from their carpets, which were instantly rolled
-up, and carried away by their domestics&mdash;the
-Bulgarians inflated their bag-pipes, and obstructed
-the path of the foot-passengers, with
-their heavy and awkward dance, which must
-have been modelled upon that of the bear&mdash;and,
-ere I had wearied of contemplating the scene,
-nine-tenths of the crowd that had so lately
-thronged the wide space beneath me had passed
-away.</p>
-
-<p>The sunshine was lying warm and bright on
-the dome of Sultan Bajazet’s mosque, with its
-portals of indented gothic; and its spiral minarets,
-with their galleries of rich tracery-work;
-dominated in their turn by the Tower of
-the Seraskier, which shoots up tall and white
-from an angle of the palace court, like the
-giant guardian of the locality; and whose summit
-(to which we afterwards ascended) commands
-a series of the most magnificent views
-that the world can produce.</p>
-
-<p>On one side, the City of Constantinople is
-spread out beneath you like a map; and you
-look down upon its thousand domes, and its
-five thousand minarets&mdash;upon its khans, and its
-charshees, its palaces and its prisons. Move a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">266</a></span>
-few paces forward, only to the next window,
-and the Sea of Marmora, with its peopled coasts,
-its rocky islets, and its glittering waves, carries
-your thoughts homeward to the “golden west.”
-From one point you look on Mount Olympus,
-with its crown of snow; from another, on the
-sunny Bosphorus, laden with life, and laughing
-in the day-beam. Turn to the left, and the
-Golden Horn, from whence the riches of the
-world are poured forth over the East, lies at
-your feet. On&mdash;on&mdash;ere your eyes ache with
-gazing, and your mind with wonder, and repose
-your vision on the dark and arid rocks which
-enclose “The Valley of the Sweet Waters,” the
-most fairy-like glen that ever was hemmed in
-by a belt of mountains. And when you at length
-descend the three hundred and thirty steps of
-the dizzy Tower of the Seraskier, inscribe upon
-your tablets the faint record of an hour, during
-which, if you have sensibility or imagination, a
-love of the beautiful, or an appreciation of the
-sublime, you must have lived through an age of
-feeling and of fancy; with the busy, breathing
-city at your feet&mdash;the sweet, still valley beside
-you&mdash;and the wide sea, the unfathomable, the
-mysterious sea, bounding your vision.</p>
-
-<p>What a pigmy is man amid such a scene as
-this!</p>
-
-<p>I must not omit to mention that the Seraskier’s
-Tower, called, by the Turks, Yanguen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</a></span>
-Kiosk, or Fire Tower, is the watch-house of the
-fire-guard. Six individuals are constantly on the
-look-out during the day and night, who relieve
-each other every hour; and, during the night-watch,
-the guard constantly makes his round in
-a pair of spring pattens, which, being made of
-wood, and soled with iron, keep up a continual
-noise that prevents his giving way to drowsiness,
-and thus neglecting his duty.</p>
-
-<p>There were seven equally eligible candidates
-for the hand of the Princess Mihirm&agrave;h; and consequently
-more than seven times seven intrigues
-set on foot, when it was finally announced that
-the Sultan, her father, had resolved on bestowing
-her in marriage on some fortunate noble of
-his Empire. The Sublime Porte was all in commotion&mdash;the
-seven Eligibles all in agitation&mdash;every
-palace and harem on the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">qui vive</em>&mdash;bribes
-flew about, on yellow wings, like the bright
-butterflies that herald spring&mdash;and the Sultan
-himself, weary of conflicting counsels and opposing
-interests, wavering and undecided; while
-many persons agreed in believing that the Imperial
-choice would ultimately fall on the handsome
-and wealthy Mustapha Pasha of Adrianople;
-and the rather as it was rumoured that
-the Princess had seen and admired him.</p>
-
-<p>But Sultan Mahmoud, after a youth of terror
-and a manhood of blood, had become too good
-a tactician to risk offending many by ennobling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</a></span>
-one; and he consequently adopted an expedient
-which had assuredly never been contemplated
-by those about his person. He caused the
-names of the seven candidates to be inscribed
-on as many separate shreds of parchment; and
-on the following Friday, when he visited the
-mosque, he cast them all in a mass beneath his
-prayer-carpet, where they remained during the
-service; at whose close, he put up a prayer to
-Allah and the Prophet to aid him in the hour of
-trial, by enabling him to withdraw the name of
-the individual whose alliance would prove the
-most beneficial, alike to his Empire, and to his
-daughter. Whether the prayer was heard and
-answered, I know not; but the Sublime fingers
-closed over the parchment which was inscribed
-with the cypher of Sa&iuml;d Pasha of the Dardanelles.</p>
-
-<p>Sa&iuml;d Pasha is a handsome man of three or
-four and thirty, with an expression of benevolence
-and amiability strikingly in his favour.
-He commenced his career at Court as Page
-to the Sultan, where he lost the favour of his
-master by refusing to obey a command which
-would have rendered him for a time the companion
-of grooms and serving-men; an instance
-of self-respect and self-appreciation so
-rare in Turkey, that it excited quite as much
-astonishment as indignation. Dismissed from
-the Court in disgrace, the young adventurer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</a></span>
-became a member of the sect of the <em>Mevlavies</em>,
-or Turning Dervishes; but, after the expiration
-of a year, he was recalled by the Sultan,
-and received a post in the army. Subsequently
-to this period, his rise to the Pashalik was
-rapid, as is generally the case in the East; and,
-on the last page of existence which he has turned,
-the characters may indeed be said to have been
-traced in gold.</p>
-
-<p>After this hasty sketch of his history, it is
-scarcely necessary for me to add that Sa&iuml;d
-Pasha left the Dardanelles a poor man; nor to
-remind my readers that a titled Lackland was no
-meet match for a Sultan’s daughter. The evil
-cried aloud for remedy, and the cure came as
-speedily as its necessity had arisen.</p>
-
-<p>The Seraskier had adopted Halil Pasha as
-his son, on the occasion of his marriage with the
-Princess Salih&egrave;, two years ago; and had been
-to him a most munificent father; in the present
-difficulty he again stepped forward, and the
-portionless Sa&iuml;d Pasha beheld himself at once a
-rich man.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the Seraskier it then devolved, in his
-double capacity of High Minister and Parent,
-to introduce the fortunate bridegroom to
-his Imperial father-in-law; and the recollection
-of all that the wily old courtier had done for
-the object of his first adoption, produced very
-different feelings in the breasts of the two indivi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">270</a></span>duals,
-more immediately interested in the financial
-arrangements of the marriage.</p>
-
-<p>“I present to your Sublime Highness,” said
-the minister, “the son-in-law whom Allah has
-destined to the high honour of becoming the
-husband of your Imperial daughter&mdash;Sa&iuml;d
-Pasha, my adopted son&mdash;and I do so with the
-greater delight that I know him to be as brave
-in the field, as he is wise in the cabinet&mdash;as mild
-in temper, as he is courageous in spirit&mdash;learned,
-gentle, submissive, and enthusiastic, in his attachment
-to your Sublime Highness (May your
-end be glorious!) He has every virtue under
-heaven, and but one defect.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what may that be?” inquired the
-Sultan, arching his dark eyebrows in astonishment.
-“It must be weighty indeed if it can
-counteract the effect of so bright a list of qualities.”</p>
-
-<p>“Alas! your Sublime Highness&mdash;” replied the
-Seraskier, “Sa&iuml;d Pasha is poor!”</p>
-
-<p>The point was pathetic enough; and the politic
-minister, who would gladly have secured the honour
-of being the adopted father of the Sultan’s
-second son-in-law, without paying quite so high
-a price for it as he had done on the marriage of
-his first, flattered himself that a recollection of
-the enormous outlay which he had made on that
-occasion would exonerate him from a similar
-expence on the present. But the Sultan had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">271</a></span>
-doubtlessly learnt that the diamond can be cut
-only with its own dust; and he acted upon that
-principle, as he blandly answered, if not in the
-words, at least in the feeling, of our immortal
-bard:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">’Tis true, ’tis pity, and pity ’tis, ’tis true;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“But, while he has the wealthy and munificent
-Seraskier of the Sublime Empire for his adopted
-father, he must remain unconscious of the
-fact.”</p>
-
-<p>The Minister did all that have remained for
-him to do&mdash;he tried to look flattered and gratified&mdash;he
-even returned thanks for the gracious words
-which taught him to understand all that was
-expected of him: and he left the Presence to
-withdraw, from his strong box, ducats to the
-amount of two millions of piastres, which were
-bought up by the Frank Merchants at Galata.</p>
-
-<p>But the best part of the jest was yet to come.
-On the marriage of one of the Imperial Family,
-every Pasha of the Empire is expected to present
-an offering proportioned to his means; and, as
-these generally consist of jewels, the Chamberlain
-acquaints each individual, on learning the
-amount of his purposed present, with the most
-acceptable shape in which he can make it; and
-by these means prevents the chance of a too
-frequent repetition of the same gift.</p>
-
-<p>When the Princess Salih&egrave; became the wife of
-Halil Pasha, the amount of her diamonds thus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">272</a></span>
-obtained was very considerable; and, as she is
-a person of too morose and selfish a character
-to take pleasure in showing herself to the people
-as the sisters of the Sultan are in the habit of
-doing; and, moreover, too haughty to seek to
-dazzle even in the harem, his Sublime Highness,
-who is an admirable tactician, bethought himself
-of a most brilliant plan for making a little
-money in a quiet way out of these anti-engaging
-qualities.</p>
-
-<p>He accordingly paid a visit to his daughter;
-and after she had enjoyed the high honour of
-kissing his foot, and he had graciously signified
-to her his Imperial permission that she should
-seat herself upon the cushions piled on the
-floor near him; he condescendingly explained to
-her the utter uselessness of jewels which she
-never wore, and suggested the expediency of her
-disposing of them, and adding the interest of
-the sum that they would produce to her present
-income.</p>
-
-<p>The Princess listened in respectful silence;
-and then ventured to doubt whether a purchaser
-could be found for the diamonds of a Sultan’s
-daughter. This difficulty was, however, instantly
-overcome, by an offer, on the part of his
-Sublime Highness, to become himself that purchaser.
-And the consent of the Princess having
-been obtained, and the price to be paid decided
-on, the principal remained in the Imperial Trea<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">273</a></span>sury,
-whence the interest was to be drawn; and
-the jewels, thus, in point of fact, obtained for a
-per centage on their value, were carried off in
-triumph by the court jewellers, to be reset for the
-younger Princess!</p>
-
-<p>Nor was this all&mdash;for, when the Pashas declared
-the amount of their offerings, the money
-was paid on the instant, and these very diamonds
-given in exchange, fashioned into such
-forms as best suited the taste and convenience
-of their new owner.</p>
-
-<p>Thus were things situated when the baffled Seraskier
-withdrew from the Imperial Presence, to
-drag his beloved ducats from their snug resting-place
-in his strong box, and to scatter them among
-the money-changing Franks. Many of the Pashas
-had not yet come forward with their gifts,
-and he had still breathing time for a shrewd
-stroke. It is the fashion at the Sublime Court for
-each noble to announce the amount of the present
-which he purposes to make; and the declaration
-generally exceeds the actual value of the
-offering by fifty or a thousand piastres. The Seraskier
-accordingly collected these declarations,
-and having so done, he addressed a courtly circular
-to the tardy (in this case too tardy!) Pashas,
-informing them that his Sublime Highness Mahmoud
-“The Powerful,” the Light of the World,
-and Brother of the Sun, had so overwhelmed his
-intended son-in-law, Mohammed Sa&iuml;d Pasha,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">274</a></span>
-with the brightness of his munificence, that he had
-rained diamonds upon him, and overstrown his
-path with precious stones; and, such being the
-case, he, the Seraskier, acting as his adopted
-father and counsellor, had suggested to him the
-expediency of proposing to those Pashas who
-had not yet honoured him with their gifts, to
-make them in the current coin of the Empire,
-rather than in diamonds which could not, under
-the circumstances, avail him any thing.</p>
-
-<p>The suggestion was a command; the wily
-Seraskier held the list of names and offerings;
-and each Pasha was under the necessity of
-coming forward, and paying to the treasurer of
-the Seraskier the actual sum in money which
-he had specified!</p>
-
-<p>Nothing sharpens the wits of a Turk like self-interest.</p>
-
-<p>The procession, from which I have digressed,
-passed through the street called Divan-Yoli, terminating
-at the mosque of St. Sophia, near the
-Imperial Palace. When it arrived at Ortakapou,
-or The Middle Door, the whole of the officers
-alighted, and formed an avenue to the entrance
-of the harem, whence the marriage gifts were
-conveyed into the Sera&iuml;, where the Seraskier,
-acting for the bridegroom, craved and obtained
-an interview with the Kislar-Agha, who was
-proxy for the Princess. This hideous negro has
-the thickest lips, the flattest nose, the smallest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">275</a></span>
-eyes, and the most unwieldy person of all the
-eunuchs of the empire. Imagination cannot paint
-his ugliness! And before this revolting caricature
-of humanity, the haughty Minister, in whose
-hands are life and death, bent his stubborn knee
-in supplication. Scarcely had he crossed the
-threshold of the magnificent apartment in which
-the Kislar-Agha awaited him, ere he prostrated
-himself to the earth, as he besought the monstrous
-representative of youth and beauty to
-have mercy upon the slave who kissed the dust
-before the Light of the Creation, the Glory of the
-Moon,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> the Empress of his thoughts&mdash;upon
-which the unwieldy negro averted his face, cast
-down his eyes, and assumed the prude; but,
-after a vast deal of coquetting, the lover-like
-vehemence of the gray-headed Seraskier met
-with its reward&mdash;a sable hand was extended
-towards him, which he embraced with transport&mdash;the
-presents were condescendingly accepted;
-the sweetmeats by the Kislar-Agha himself: and
-the more costly offerings by the principal eunuchs
-of the palace, in the names of their Imperial
-Mistresses, to whom they were immediately
-conveyed.</p>
-
-<p>And thus terminated the first act of the sublime
-comedy!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">276</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Fine Scenery&mdash;The Coast of Asia&mdash;Turkish Cemeteries&mdash;The Imperial
-Sera&iuml;&mdash;The Golden Horn&mdash;Mount Olympus&mdash;The Arabajhe&mdash;The
-Araba&mdash;The Persian Kiosk&mdash;The Barrack of Scutari&mdash;The Mosque of
-Selim III.&mdash;The Slipper of the Sultana Valid&egrave;&mdash;The Imperial Guard&mdash;Military
-Material&mdash;The Macaroni Manufactory&mdash;Sublime Targets&mdash;A
-Major of the Imperial Guard&mdash;Triumph of Utilitarianism&mdash;The
-Rise of the Vines&mdash;The Holy Tomb&mdash;Encampments of the Plague-smitten&mdash;The
-Setting Sun&mdash;Return to Europe&mdash;The Square of Topphann&egrave;.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> seldom seen a lovelier day than that
-on which we first passed over to Scutari; the
-sunshine was bright upon the Bosphorus, the
-tops of the tall cypresses were golden in the
-light, and their feathery branches heaved slightly
-beneath the breeze; the sky was blue about the
-spiral minarets: and the painted houses gleamed
-out like gigantic flowers as the day-beam touched
-them; the ripple sparkled like diamond-dust,
-and our arrowy ca&iuml;que seemed to breathe as it
-undulated upon the surface.</p>
-
-<p>It was a glorious scene! And we were
-soon upon the bosom of the blue waters, darting
-along, with the wild birds above our heads,
-out into the Sea of Marmora. Europe was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">277</a></span>
-beside and behind us&mdash;Europe, with its palaces,
-its politics, and its power&mdash;and the shadowy
-shore of Asia, with its cypress-crowned heights,
-and its dusky mountains, seemed to woo our
-approach. How I regretted that the passage
-was so brief&mdash;a few strokes of the oar, a few pulsations
-of the heart, after we had shot past the
-“Maiden’s Tower,” and we were landed beside
-the ruined mosque, in the valley beyond the
-Persian Kiosk of the Sultan, which crowns the
-crest of the highest hill.</p>
-
-<p>The land curved gracefully downward at this
-point to form a fair green glen, where a group
-of plane trees and acacias threw their long
-branches over the remains of the crumbling
-temple. Here and there a solitary cypress shot
-up its dark head like a death-lance into the clear
-horizon, contrasting its funereal and gloomy
-pomp with the laughing clusters of the pink-blossoming
-almond-trees, which were scattering
-their petals over the grave-stones that rose on
-the side of the grassy bank amid the wild flowers,
-as if to link the present with the past.</p>
-
-<p>It is a beautiful custom, that of burying the
-dead upon the very path of the living! It destroys
-so much of the gloom which imagination
-is prone to drape about the grave&mdash;it creates
-so much more of a common interest. The Turk
-smokes his chibouk with his back resting against
-a turban-crested grave-stone; the Greek spreads<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">278</a></span>
-his meal upon a tomb; the Armenian shelters
-himself from the sunshine beneath the boughs
-that overshadow the burial-places of his people;
-the women sit in groups, and talk of their
-homes and of their little ones among the ashes
-of their ancestors; and the children gather the
-wild flowers that grow amid the graves, as gaily
-as though death had never entered there.</p>
-
-<p>The ca&iuml;que soon darted into the little bay,
-and we trod the shore of Asia. Immediately in
-front of us, on the European coast, stretched the
-long castellated wall of the ancient city of
-Constantine, with its Seven Towers, and its
-palace-girdled Point. Nothing could be more
-beautiful! The numerous buildings of the imperial
-Sera&iuml; were overtopped by shadowy plane-trees,
-leafy beeches, lofty cypresses, feathery
-acacias, and other magnificent forest trees;
-from amid whose foliage the gleaming domes
-and gilded spires of the palace peeped out like
-glimpses of fairy-land. On the extreme point
-of the shore stands that portion of the Seraglio
-which was formerly appropriated to the ladies
-of the Imperial Harem, but which is now untenanted,
-save by half a dozen old and withered
-women, the surviving wives of the unfortunate
-Sultan Selim. The sun had touched it, and was
-reflected back in brightness from its gilded
-doors and glittering lattices. It looked like a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">279</a></span>
-cluster of kiosks gracefully flung together in
-the hour of sport.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond that point lay the Golden Horn; and,
-along the summit of the hill which shuts it in on
-the opposite shore, stretched the cypress-grove
-and houses of Pera. But ere long we turned away
-from these accustomed objects to glance upwards
-to the crest of Mount Olympus, far, far
-away in the distance, forming a mighty background
-to the Sea of Marmora. We saw it at
-a happy moment, for the sunbeams had turned
-its snows to jewels, which were flashing with a
-brightness that almost forbade our gaze; when
-suddenly a light cloud passed over its stately
-brow, and, deadening for an instant the glitter
-that it had borrowed from the day-beam, sobered
-down its tints into more subdued beauty, and
-made it look as though it were girdled by a
-rainbow.</p>
-
-<p>As we reluctantly quitted this fair scene, and
-walked towards the valley, we saw the araba
-that we had appointed to await us there,
-standing beneath the shade of the tall trees;
-and as the arabajhe observed our approach, he
-rose from his seat beneath a stately elm, laid
-aside his chibouk, and prepared to assist us
-into the carriage. But I lingered yet another
-moment to contemplate his costume&mdash;his voluminous
-turban, which it must have required ells
-of muslin to produce; and his gaily-tasselled and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">280</a></span>
-embroidered jacket, falling back to disclose
-the shawl that bound his waist. I scarcely
-knew which to admire the most;&mdash;his black and
-bushy beard, and the thick mustachioes that
-adorned his upper lip; or the elaborately-wrought
-Albanian leggings and yellow slippers which
-completed his costume.</p>
-
-<p>No one but a native of the luxurious East
-could ever have invented an araba; with its
-comfortable cushions, and its gaily painted roof,
-and gilded pillars. The prettiest are those of
-brown and gold, with rose-coloured draperies,
-through which the breeze flutters to your cheek
-as blandly as though it loved the tint that reminded
-it of the roses of the past season amid
-which it had wandered.</p>
-
-<p>As we clomb the hill, we passed beside the
-Imperial kiosk, a delicate little edifice with
-walls of pale green, and snow-white jalousies;
-and then, descending a slight acclivity, we found
-ourselves opposite the magnificent barrack,
-which forms so fine a feature from the sea.
-There is probably no country in the world
-where the barracks are so elegantly built as in
-Turkey; they have all the appearance of palaces;
-and that of Scutari being appropriated
-to the Imperial Guard is the handsomest in
-the neighbourhood of the capital; being a quadrangle,
-flanked with square towers, built in
-three sections, gradually diminishing in size,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">281</a></span>
-and crowned by a slight spire. Immediately
-opposite to the principal gate of the barrack
-stands the magnificent mosque of Selim III.;
-but Scutari, among the numerous temples whose
-slender minarets are relieved by the dark back
-ground of her funereal cypresses, possesses one
-of which I must not forget to make mention.
-Small in size, and not particularly elegant in its
-appearance, the mosque of the Sultana Valid&egrave;
-must not be passed over in silence, built as it
-was from the proceeds of one of her diamond-sprinkled
-slippers!</p>
-
-<p>I have mentioned that this barrack is occupied
-by the Imperial Guard: and I never
-shall forget their appearance, as groups of
-them passed us on the road. Dirty, slouching,
-and awkward, many among them without either
-shirts or stockings, they certainly looked as unlike
-Household Troops as can well be imagined;
-and might have traversed three quarters of
-Europe without being mistaken for soldiers at
-all, either by their gait or their garb. When
-on duty, and not examined too closely, they make
-a fair figure as a body, but on ordinary occasions
-they are as unmilitary in their appearance
-and bearing as the rest of the Turkish army;
-and the majority of them are such mere boys that
-they induce a feeling of pity rather than fear.
-On one occasion, when I paid a visit to the
-Sultan’s sister, while waiting to be admitted, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">282</a></span>
-amused myself by looking attentively at the
-palace-guard, who had all collected outside the
-guard-house to see the Franks; including the
-two sentinels on duty, they amounted to ten
-individuals; and certainly eight of the number
-were not more than fourteen years of age; nor
-do I believe that any of them had washed their
-faces, or brushed their garments for a week previously.</p>
-
-<p>A Pasha, while speaking with me one day of
-the Turkish army, assured me that it was composed
-of “excellent materials.”&mdash;It may be
-so; I cannot, nor do I desire, to confute his
-opinion; but it is certain that, like other raw
-materials, it will require a great deal of working
-before it can be rendered serviceable; and
-that, at present, there are few things more
-laughable than to see a Turkish regiment at
-drill or exercise; there is an independence of
-feeling and action about each individual which
-is quite <em>impayable</em>.</p>
-
-<p>But the surprise created by the appearance
-of the Imperial Guard was not to be the only
-cause for astonishment excited by this gallant
-corps; for we were yet indulging a hearty
-laugh at their expense when we were startled
-by the recommendation of the arabajhe that
-we should visit the Macaroni Manufactory of
-Achmet Pasha. At first we thought that our
-dragoman had played us false, for we could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">283</a></span>
-find no possible connection in our own minds
-between the Generalissimo of the Armies of the
-Sublime Porte, and a Macaroni Manufactory.
-The invitation had, however, been correctly
-interpreted, and we immediately diverged from
-the road to see this highly-connected establishment.</p>
-
-<p>On rising a little hill, we entered the widest
-street that I had yet seen in the East, partly
-overshadowed by the stately trees which encircled
-an ancient mosque, and terminated by the
-principal entrance to the garrison.</p>
-
-<p>I may as well mention here that the main
-portal of every Turkish barrack is decorated
-with a target, richly framed, and perforated
-with one or more balls, shot by the Sublime
-hand of the Sultan, who is an excellent marksman;
-and thus seeks to excite by his example
-a feeling of emulation among his soldiery.</p>
-
-<p>The araba drew up before a neat-looking
-white building with a green balcony, and, ere we
-could alight, the door was opened to us; when
-one of the gentlemen of the party instantly recognized
-an acquaintance, to whom he hastened
-to present us; and I in turn made my bow to a
-Major of the Imperial Guard, with a diamond decoration
-on his breast, his sleeves tucked up to
-the shoulders, and his arms buried to the elbows
-in flour.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks are utilitarians indeed!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">284</a></span>The scene was a singular one; the large hall
-in which we stood was entirely over-canopied
-with ropes of macaroni, and surrounded by
-presses and rollers.&mdash;A major was deciding on
-the merits of the flour&mdash;a lieutenant was superintending
-the working of the machine&mdash;a couple
-of sergeants were suspending the paste to dry&mdash;and
-a fatigue party were turning the wheels.</p>
-
-<p>Hear this, ye Grenadiers and Coldstream!
-ye exquisites of Bond Street and the Ring!
-There was no <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</em> here&mdash;all was grinding, and
-sifting, and rolling, and drying, and selling&mdash;yes,
-selling&mdash;The Imperial Guard of his Sublime
-Highness have no occasion to kill time; they
-rather seek customers. The whitest and finest
-of the paste supplies the kitchen of the Sultan:
-the darkest and coarsest finds its way to that
-of the soldiers; but “more remains behind;”
-and if you are inclined to feast on Imperial macaroni,
-you have but to draw out your purse,
-and pay it in piastres!</p>
-
-<p>What a well-imagined antidote to the weariness
-of a garrison life&mdash;What a triumph for utilitarianism!</p>
-
-<p>I shall say nothing of the forest-like cemetery;
-I have spoken of it elsewhere. The dark
-cypresses were flinging their long shadows across
-the road; and the hill which we slowly ascended
-on quitting the manufactory was called “The
-Rise of the Vines.” The name is appropriate;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">285</a></span>
-for the houses that fringe it on the left hand overlook
-a wide extent of orchard and vineyard, interspersed
-with kiosks, and groups of flowering acacias.
-The view was bounded by the sea, and
-the tall mountains above Broussa: and flowers
-were blossoming by the wayside, and wild-birds
-were singing among the boughs. No wonder
-that the nature-loving Turks are attached to
-Scutari.</p>
-
-<p>A small building to the left of the road attracted
-my attention, and I alighted to examine
-it. It proved to be the tomb of a Saint; and I
-distinguished, through the closely-latticed casement,
-a wooden sarcophagus surmounted by a
-green turban, and surrounded by the prayer-carpets
-of the priests. The wire-work of the
-window was knotted all over with rags; shreds
-of cotton, woollen, and silk&mdash;morsels of ribbon
-and tape&mdash;and fragments of every description.
-They had been fastened there by sick and suffering
-persons, who had firmly believed that their
-trouble, whether mental or physical, would remain
-attached to the rag, and that they should
-themselves “return each to his home clean.”</p>
-
-<p>We avoided the town, for the Plague was
-there; that omnipresent but invisible enemy
-which stretches its clammy hand over the East,
-and sweeps down its prey, unchecked by the
-groans of the bereaved, or the pangs of the
-smitten&mdash;the deadly Plague, which spares<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">286</a></span>
-neither sex, nor age, nor condition, but makes
-one universal harvest of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing ever thrilled me more than when I
-once came suddenly, during my wanderings,
-upon an encampment of the Plague-smitten.
-The huts are generally erected on a hill-side,
-and the tents pitched among them; and you see
-the families of the infected basking in the sunshine
-within their prescribed limits, and gazing
-eagerly at the chance passenger, whom his ignorance
-of their vicinity may conduct past their
-temporary dwellings; the children rolling half-naked
-upon the grass; and the sallow and careworn
-parents hanging out the garments of the
-patients on the trees of the neighbourhood.
-Such was precisely the case with that into which
-I had unconsciously intruded; and whence I
-was very hastily dislodged by the shouts of the
-guard, stationed to enforce the quarantaine of
-the mountain colony; and the alarmed exclamations
-of my companions.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to look upon such a scene, and
-upon such a sky, and to believe in the existence
-of this frightful scourge! It is the canker at the
-core of the forest-tree&mdash;the serpent in the garden
-of Eden.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was setting ere we prepared to traverse
-the Golden Horn, in order to reach the
-European side before the firing of the evening
-gun; the shadows were lying long upon the water:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">287</a></span>
-a yellow gleam was settling on the domes and
-houses of Stamboul, and a thick vapour lowered
-over the sky. The twilight of the East is fleeting
-as a thought&mdash;and the outline of the city ere
-long loomed out from amid the gathering darkness,
-like a spectre of the past. One line of light
-still glimmered across the waves like a thread
-of gold, linking the shores of Europe and of
-Asia; but, even as I pointed it out, it faded;
-softening down to a faint yellow, like the lip of
-a primrose&mdash;and in another instant, it was gone;
-while, as it disappeared, the hoarse cannon pealed
-over the ripple, and told that another day was
-spent.</p>
-
-<p>Our rowers had calculated to a nicety, for, as
-the sound died away, the ca&iuml;que touched the
-crazy wooden pier of Topphann&egrave;, and we were
-once more in Europe!</p>
-
-<p>There is not a locality throughout the whole
-of the capital more strictly or more richly oriental
-in its aspect than the small square of
-Topphann&egrave;. In the midst stands the celebrated
-Kilidge Ali Pasha Djiamini, or Fountain of the
-Mosque of Ali Pasha, a French renegade, who
-built the temple which bears his name. Constantinople
-boasts no other fountain of equal
-beauty. Its rich and elegant arabesques are
-beyond all praise; and, when the sun is shining
-on them, almost look like jewels. It has, however,
-suffered materially from the reforming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">288</a></span>
-mania of the Sultan, who, in his rage for improvement,
-has replaced its wavy and deeply-projecting
-roof with a little terrace railing, out
-of all keeping, alike with its architecture and its
-ornaments; and who was with difficulty persuaded
-not to destroy it altogether.</p>
-
-<p>On one side of the fountain is the mosque to
-which it belongs, and on the other the kiosk of
-Halil Pasha, with its magnificent portal and
-glittering casements. But to be seen to perfection,
-the square of Topphann&egrave; must be visited
-during the autumn, when the rich fruits of Asia
-are scattered over its whole extent; piles of
-perfumed melons, pyramids of yellow grapes,
-heaps of scarlet pomegranates&mdash;the golden
-orange, the amber-coloured lemon, the ruddy
-apple, the tufted quince, all are poured forth
-before you. Nor are the vendors less various
-or less glowing than their merchandize, as they
-sit doubled-up upon their mats, clad in all the
-colours of the rainbow, with their chibouks between
-their lips; rather waiting than looking for
-customers&mdash;a bright sky above them, and the
-blended languages of many lands swelling upon
-the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Had I landed at Topphann&egrave; on my arrival in
-Turkey, I should have fancied myself a spectator
-of one of the scenes described by the tale-telling
-Schererazade.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">289</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Turkish Superstitions&mdash;Auguries&mdash;The Court Astrologer&mdash;The Evil
-Eye&mdash;Danger of Blue Eyes&mdash;Imperial Firman&mdash;The Babaluk&mdash;The
-Ceremony&mdash;Sable Pythonesses&mdash;Witchcraft.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Turks are strangely superstitious; they
-cling resolutely to the absurd and wild fancies
-which have been banished from Europe for centuries;
-and that too with a blindness of faith,
-and a tenacity of purpose, quite in keeping with
-their firm and somewhat dogged natures.</p>
-
-<p>Many of their superstitions they inherit from
-the Romans; they extract auguries of good and
-evil from the entrails of fresh-slaughtered animals&mdash;they
-draw inferences from the flight of
-birds&mdash;they have auspicious and inauspicious
-hours, which are gravely determined by the
-Astrologers; and no Osmanli ever undertakes
-a journey, builds a house, marries a wife, or
-commences any business of importance, without
-satisfying himself on this important point.
-Should evil or disappointment overtake him,
-despite the precaution he has used, he never
-blames either his own mismanagement or ano<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">290</a></span>ther’s
-treachery; neither does he sink beneath
-the trial: he tells you that it is his <em>kismet</em>&mdash;his
-fate&mdash;and he calmly submits to what he considers
-to have been inevitable; and should misfortunes
-accumulate about him, instead of attributing
-them to worldly causes, he ascribes them
-to <em>felech</em>&mdash;his constellation&mdash;without searching
-further.</p>
-
-<p>When he is troubled with unpleasant dreams,
-haunted by melancholy fancies, or suffering from
-bodily disease, he tears away a fragment of his
-dress, and fastens the rag to the iron-work of a
-window belonging to the tomb of a saint, in
-order to deposit the evil along with it. When
-he is sick, he procures from the Priest an earthen
-bowl, inscribed throughout its interior with passages
-from the Koran; and, filling it with water,
-sets it aside until the whole of the writing becomes
-effaced, when he swallows the liquid, and
-thus administers to himself a dose of Holy Writ!
-The Court Astrologer publishes every year a
-species of supernatural almanack, in which he
-specifies the lucky and unlucky days of the different
-moons; foretells wars, deaths, and marriages;
-and imparts a vast quantity of multifarious
-information, which must be both valuable
-and curious, if it is to be estimated by the price
-paid for it, as the salary of the Seer is a most
-liberal one.</p>
-
-<p>Another singular superstition common through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">291</a></span>out
-Turkey is the belief that should a dog chance
-to pass between two persons who are conversing,
-one or the other will fall sick unless the animal
-be propitiated with food; and the first care of a
-Musselmaun to whom this ill-luck has occurred,
-is to look about him for the means of averting
-its effect.</p>
-
-<p>But the predominant weakness of the East is
-the dread of the Evil Eye. Should you praise
-the beauty of a Turkish child to its mother,
-without prefacing your admiration with “<em>Mashallah!</em>”
-or, In the name of God&mdash;which is considered
-sufficient to counteract the power of all
-malignant spirits; and, should the child become
-ill or meet with an accident, it is at once decided
-that you have smitten it with the Evil Eye. The
-Greeks, when by accident they allude to their
-own good health or good fortune, immediately
-spit upon their breasts to avert the malign influence;
-and to such a pitch do they carry their
-faith in the efficacy of this inelegant exorcism,
-that on a recent occasion, when an acquaintance
-of my own was introduced to a beautiful Greek
-girl, and betrayed into an eulogium on her
-loveliness, he was earnestly entreated by her
-mother to perform the same ceremony in the
-very face which he had just been eulogizing, in
-order to annul the evil effects of his admiration;
-and so pressing were her instances that he was
-compelled to affect obedience to her wishes, ere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">292</a></span>
-she could be re-assured of the safety of her
-daughter!</p>
-
-<p>The Turk decorates the roof of his house, the
-prow of his ca&iuml;que, the cap of his child, the neck
-of his horse, and the cage of his bird, with charms
-against the Evil Eye; one of the most powerful
-of these antidotes being garlic: and it must be
-conceded that, here at least, the workers of woe
-have shown their taste. Every hovel has its
-head of garlic suspended by a string; and bouquets
-of flowers formed of spices, amid which
-this noxious root is nestled, are sent as presents
-to the mother of a new-born infant, as a safeguard
-both to herself and her little one.</p>
-
-<p>A blue eye is super-eminently suspicious, for
-they have an idea that such is the legitimate
-colour of the evil orb; and you seldom see a
-horse, or a draught ox, or even a donkey, which
-has not about its neck a string of blue beads,
-to preserve it from the dark deeds of witchcraft.
-I was considerably amused on one occasion,
-when, being about to meet the carriage of a
-friend, the horse that drew it, either from
-idleness or caprice, suddenly stood still, and
-the arabajhe exclaimed with vehemence to his
-mistress, “You see, madam, you see that the
-horse is struck&mdash;the new Hanoum has blue
-eyes!” turning his own on me as he spoke,
-with a most unloving expression. I am perfectly
-convinced that, had the animal met with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">293</a></span>
-any misfortune, or been guilty of any misdemeanour
-during the remainder of the day, the
-whole blame would have inevitably been visited
-on my unlucky eyes, which had counteracted
-the effect of a row of glass beads, and a crescent
-of bone!</p>
-
-<p>To protect the reigning Sultan from the power
-of the Evil Eye during his state progresses
-through the streets of the capital, a peculiar head-dress
-was invented for the Imperial body-pages,
-whose ornamented plumes were of such large dimensions
-as, collectively, to form a screen about
-his sacred person. Even Sultan Mahmoud, who
-is superior to many of the popular prejudices, has
-just caused a Firman to be published, prohibiting
-the women from looking earnestly at him
-as he passes them, on pain of&mdash;what think you,
-reader?&mdash;of subjecting their husbands or brothers
-to the bastinado! The Turkish laws are
-too gallant to condemn females to suffer this
-punishment in their own persons, and Mahmoud
-is consequently to be protected from the
-possibly fatal effects of the ladies’ eyes by their
-fears for their male relations.</p>
-
-<p>Another singular custom is that of pouring
-water where any one has fallen, to prevent a
-recurrence of the accident on the same spot,
-which is religiously observed by the lower
-orders; as well as flinging stones at the body of
-a decapitated criminal, in order to secure the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">294</a></span>
-dreams of the spectator from an intrusion of
-the ghastly object.</p>
-
-<p>No Turk of the lower ranks of society ever
-passes a shred of paper which may chance to lie
-upon his path; he always gathers it up with the
-greatest care; as the popular belief leads him to
-place implicit faith in an ancient superstition
-that all paper thus obtained will be collected
-after death, and scattered over the burning soil
-through which he is to pass to paradise; and
-that consequently the more he is enabled to
-secure, the less suffering he will have to endure
-hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>A most extraordinary fact came to my knowledge
-a short time before I left the East, relatively
-to the female Arabs of the harem. They
-have a species of society, or institution&mdash;I
-scarcely know how to term it&mdash;in which they
-are initiated from their girlhood, that they call
-“Babaluk,” whose principle of mystery is kept
-as secret as that of freemasonry; while the
-occasional display of its influence is wild and
-startling enough to remind the spectator of the
-Priestesses of Delphi.</p>
-
-<p>Far from affecting any concealment of their
-participation in the pretended powers of the
-society, you cannot, when a guest in the harem,
-please an initiated Arab more surely than
-by inquiring if she be a Babaluk; and the
-Turkish ladies frequently amuse themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">295</a></span>
-and their visitors by exhibiting their black
-slaves while under the influence of their self-excited
-phrenzy. When a sable Pythoness is
-informed of the wish of her mistress, she collects
-such of her companions as are Babaluks,
-for there are sometimes several in the same
-harem, and a brazier of burning charcoal is
-placed in the centre of the saloon in which the
-ceremony is to take place. Round this brazier
-the Arabs squat down, and commence a low,
-wild chant, which they take up at intervals
-from the lips of each other; and then break
-into a chorus, that ultimately dies away in
-a wail, succeeded by a long silence, during
-whose continuance they rock their bodies backwards
-and forwards, and never raise their eyes
-from the earth. From the moment in which
-the chant commences, an attendant is constantly
-employed in feeding the fire with aloes, incense,
-musk, and every species of intoxicating perfume.</p>
-
-<p>After a time, they fall on the floor in a state
-of utter insensibility, and great exertion is frequently
-necessary to arouse them from their
-trance; but, when once they are awakened, they
-become furious&mdash;they rend themselves, and each
-other&mdash;they tear their hair and their clothing&mdash;they
-howl like wild beasts, and they cry earnestly
-for food, while they reject all that is offered
-except brandy and raw meat, both of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">296</a></span>
-they destroy in great quantities. Having satisfied
-their hunger, they renew the warfare that
-they had discontinued to indulge it, and finally
-roll on the floor with bloodshot eyeballs, and
-foaming at the mouth.</p>
-
-<p>A second trance ultimately seizes them, from
-which they are left to recover alone; fresh perfumes
-being flung into the brazier to expedite
-their restoration, which generally takes place
-in ten or fifteen minutes; and then it is that the
-spell of prophecy is on them. They rise slowly
-and majestically from the floor&mdash;they wave their
-hands solemnly over the aromatic flame&mdash;they
-have become suddenly subdued and gentle; and,
-after having made the circuit of the brazier
-several times in silence, they gaze coldly round
-the circle, until, fixing upon some particular
-individual, they commence shadowing forth her
-fate, past, present, and to come; and I have
-heard it seriously asserted that they have thus
-divulged the most secret events of by-gone years,
-as well as prophecying those which subsequently
-took place.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely wonderful&mdash;even disgusting as
-a great portion of the ceremonial undoubtedly
-is&mdash;that many of the Turkish ladies occasionally
-relieve the tedium of the harem by the exhibition
-of the Babaluk; that vague yearning to
-pry into futurity so inherent in our nature,
-coupled with the uncertainty on whom the spell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">297</a></span>
-of the sybil may be cast, causes an excitement
-which forms an agreeable contrast from their
-customary <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</em>. No second fate is ever foretold
-at the same orgies. When the first Babaluk
-begins to speak, the others sink down into
-a sitting posture, occasionally enforcing her
-assertions by repeating the last words of any
-remarkable sentence in a long, low wail; and,
-when she ceases and takes her place among
-them, they are for the third time overtaken by a
-trance: the brazier is then removed, the spectators
-leave the room, the door is carefully
-closed, and the Babaluks are left to awaken at
-their leisure. When they finally come forth,
-they resume their customary avocations, without
-making the slightest allusion to the extraordinary
-scene in which they have been actors;
-nor do they like the subject to be mentioned
-to them until several days have elapsed.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">298</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Imperial Invitation&mdash;Disagreeable Adventure&mdash;Executed Criminal&mdash;Efficacy
-of Wayside Executions&mdash;Tardy Conversions&mdash;Mistaken
-Humanity&mdash;Summary Mode of Execution&mdash;The Palace of Asm&egrave;
-Sultane&mdash;Entrance of the Harem&mdash;Costume of the Slaves&mdash;Nazip
-Hanoum&mdash;Ceremonious Reception&mdash;The Adopted Daughter&mdash;Costume
-of the Ladies of the Sera&iuml;&mdash;Beauty of the Slaves&mdash;Extraordinary
-Arrangement&mdash;Rejected Addresses&mdash;The Imperial Lover&mdash;Sacredness
-of Adoption in Turkey&mdash;Romantic Correspondence&mdash;Ladies
-of the Household&mdash;The Mother of the Slaves&mdash;Perouss&egrave;
-Hanoum&mdash;Crowded Audience&mdash;The Imperial Odalique&mdash;Music of
-the Harem&mdash;The New Pet&mdash;The Kislar-Agha&mdash;The “Light of the
-Harem”&mdash;The Poetical Sultan&mdash;Indisposition of the Sultana&mdash;The
-Palace Gardens&mdash;The Imperial Apartments&mdash;The Dancing Girl&mdash;Reluctant
-Departure&mdash;Ballad by Perouss&egrave; Hanoum.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> received an invitation to wait upon
-Asm&egrave; Sultane, the elder sister of the Sultan, at
-her summer palace, I started from Pera early
-one morning accompanied by a friend, to obey
-the Imperial summons.</p>
-
-<p>The weather was beautiful; the great Cemetery
-was crowded with loungers, and the road
-leading to “The Sweet Waters” thronged with
-horsemen. The spring flowers were bursting,
-and the young leaves trembling in the fresh
-breeze; and, as we passed on, amid sunshine and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">299</a></span>
-salutations, I forgot the purpose of my errand
-in the enjoyment of the glad scene around me.</p>
-
-<p>But, unhappily for the continuance of these
-joyous feelings, the authorities had just secured
-a band of Sclavonian housebreakers, and, having
-bestowed upon them a very summary species of
-civil drum-head court-martial, had hung a dozen
-of them the previous day in the outskirts of the
-city. Of this uncomfortable fact we were entirely
-ignorant; and the shock may consequently
-be conceived when, on descending a steep pitch
-into the narrow street of Ortakeu&yuml;, the arabadjhe
-suddenly exclaimed&mdash;“A man hanged!
-A man hanged! Hide your eyes, ladies.” But it
-was too late. As the carriage turned the corner
-of the road I had caught sight of the suspended
-criminal, and I continued to gaze upon him,
-fascinated by the horror of the spectacle. This
-was only the second time that I had looked
-upon death, and it was now before me in so
-revolting a shape that I felt as though my life-blood
-were curdling about my heart!</p>
-
-<p>We had come upon the victim in so instantaneous
-a manner that the sleeve of my dress almost
-touched his arm, as he hung from the projecting
-spout of a house immediately beside our path.
-He was a tall, powerful man, bare-headed, and
-clad in a white jacket and trowsers, fastened
-about his waist with a scarlet shawl. But what
-made the exhibition tenfold more horrible was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">300</a></span>
-the fact that the rope had slipped during his
-dying struggles, and that his head was bent
-forcibly backward. I shall never forget it;
-and I verily believe that I should have remained
-without the power of turning away my eyes
-had not my companion aroused me forcibly from
-my lethargy; when, yielding to the heart-sickness
-which crept over me, I fortunately fainted,
-and thus escaped all further suffering from the
-disgusting spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>I am not prepared to deny that these wayside
-executions may be very efficacious in preventing
-the spread of crime; it is a subject on
-which I am not competent to offer an opinion;
-but I am enabled from my own painful experience
-to decide upon their extreme inconvenience,
-to use no stronger term, to those who do not
-require so frightful a warning. To encounter
-death in a shape of violence upon the very path
-of the living, and in the midst of men busied in
-their daily avocations&mdash;to know that the narrow
-space in which the victim is suspended,
-surrounded by objects of barter, has been let
-out on hire for this horrible purpose&mdash;that a
-bargain has been made between the government
-and the shopkeeper for the use of the
-doorway leading into his dwelling&mdash;there is
-altogether something so revolting in the whole
-system that I cannot think of it without a shudder;
-and thus was every avenue into Pera closed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">301</a></span>
-for three days against those to whom such
-sights were painful; for the same ghastly object
-presented itself at each village leading from the
-city: while the body of the ringleader of the
-band, decapitated, and deprived of its right
-hand, was exposed in one of the public squares.</p>
-
-<p>One of the gang saved himself by becoming
-at one and the same time a True Believer and
-King’s Evidence; the only individual of the association
-who would consent to accept life on
-such terms. The remainder, kept in ignorance,
-according to the Turkish custom, of the precise
-moment of their execution, were allowed to
-frequent the taverns and coffee-houses accompanied
-by a guard, during several hours, and to
-drink and converse freely with those whom they
-happened to meet there; when suddenly their
-career of intemperance was checked; they were
-halted in front of the house which had been fixed
-upon for their reception, the fatal noose affixed,
-a basket placed beneath their feet to be subsequently
-drawn away, and in another instant
-they were launched into Eternity, while the accents
-of revelry were yet upon their lips! As the
-Turks do not admit the efficacy of a tardy and
-terror-wrung repentance, they consider this mode
-of execution to be the most humane which they
-can adopt; and, as the criminal is flattered to
-the last with the hope of pardon, he thus escapes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">302</a></span>
-much of the premature suffering attendant upon
-a violent death.</p>
-
-<p>In about an hour after we had escaped from
-the frightful spectacle I have described, we arrived
-at the gate of the Palace&mdash;an extensive
-and handsome edifice on the border of the Bosphorus;
-where a guard of soldiers and a throng
-of servants were to be traversed ere we could
-reach the staircase leading to the ante-room in
-which we waited, while our presence was announced
-to the princess. As Her Highness was
-in the bath when we entered, we were detained
-a considerable time in this apartment, surrounded
-by the officers of the household, and
-the principal negroes of the harem; a delay at
-which I rather rejoiced, as I had not altogether
-recovered from the effects of my morning’s adventure.</p>
-
-<p>At length we were requested to move forward,
-and, attended by half a dozen individuals of the
-Imperial suite, we traversed several apartments
-neatly matted, but quite destitute of furniture;
-until at the extremity of a long gallery, lighted on
-either side by twelve spacious windows, commanding
-the channel on the one hand, and
-the palace gardens on the other, we reached the
-lofty doors of the harem, which were flung back
-at the first signal of our attendants, and as instantly
-closed again when we had crossed the
-threshold.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">303</a></span>A train of female slaves, dressed in the most
-gaudy furniture chintzes, received us as we entered,
-and led us across a lordly hall lined with
-white marble, and supported by numerous pillars
-of the same material; through whose open
-doors we had a delicious view of the extensive
-gardens, with their fantastic flower-beds, stately
-fountains, and gleaming terraces. Nazip Hanoum,
-the adopted daughter of the Princess, met
-us in the centre of the hall, and welcomed us
-most gracefully; after which, taking a hand of
-each, she conducted us to her own apartment,
-a charming room overlooking the water, and
-entered from a gallery that surrounded the
-principal saloon. Having relieved us of our
-veils, and seated us on the cushions beside her,
-she clapped her hands, and about a score of
-slaves entered with coffee and sweetmeats.</p>
-
-<p>The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coup d’&oelig;il</em> was beautiful, as the fair
-girls, not one of whom could have been more
-than twenty years of age, and who were all
-exceedingly lovely, prepared to hand the refreshments.
-The princess had given orders
-that we should be received with all possible
-ceremony: and the display was consequently
-most beautiful. One slave held a weighty vase,
-suspended from three silver chains, in which
-stood the coffee; another bore a large gold salver,
-covered with cups and holders of costly enamel,
-whence depended a dazzling drapery of gold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">304</a></span>
-tissue wrought with pearls, and richly fringed:
-a third carried a gilded tray bearing vases of
-cut crystal containing a variety of exquisite
-sweetmeats, confined beneath golden covers enriched
-with gems; a fourth held the salver on
-which stood a range of glass goblets of beautiful
-form and workmanship, filled with water&mdash;all,
-in fine, were laden with some object of cost
-and luxury; and their attitudes were so graceful,
-their faces so lovely, and their costume
-so striking, that I regretted their departure,
-when, after we had partaken of the rose-scented
-jelly and perfumed mocha, they slowly withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>Nazip Hanoum, the favourite of Asm&egrave; Sultane,
-was purchased by Her Imperial Highness when
-she was only a few months old, together with
-her mother, who died while she was yet an infant.
-Her influence over the mind of her illustrious
-protectress is unlimited, and, had she been
-really born “beneath the purple,” she could not
-have commanded greater liberty or consideration
-than she now enjoys. Her features are very
-regular, and even handsome; but her beauty
-is destroyed by the immense number of freckles
-that cover her face and bosom. Her eyes are
-a deep rich blue, with long dark lashes, and her
-hair is of a fine golden auburn; but the great
-charm of Nazip Hanoum exists in her extreme
-gracefulness; she has not a movement which is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">305</a></span>
-not elegant; and her playful vivacity and great
-natural shrewdness render her a delightful companion.
-Her voice is low, and sweet; and her
-ringing laughter the very echo of joyousness.</p>
-
-<p>Her costume was an odd admixture of the
-European and the Oriental. She wore trowsers
-of pale blue cotton flowered with yellow; and
-an antery of light green striped with white, and
-edged with a fringe of pink floss silk; while her
-jacket, which was the production of a Parisian
-dress-maker, was of dove-coloured satin, thickly
-wadded, and furnished with a deep cape, and a
-pair of immense sleeves, fastened at the wrists
-with diamond studs. But the most striking feature
-of the costume in the Imperial Palaces is the
-head-dress. Nothing can be imagined more
-hideous! A painted handkerchief is bound tightly
-round the brow, and secured by jewelled
-bodkins: the back hair is <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cr&egrave;p&eacute;</em> until it becomes
-one huge dishevelled mass, when it is
-traversed across the top of the head by a corner
-of the handkerchief: a number of slender plaits
-of false hair hang down the back, frequently
-differing very materially from the colour of the
-natural tresses: the front locks are cut square
-across the forehead, and left a couple of inches
-longer at the sides, where they lie quite flat, and
-are stuck full of roses, or gems; or overhung
-by the deep fringe of the handkerchief,
-wrought to resemble a wreath of flowers. Some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">306</a></span>
-few among the ladies of the Imperial Sera&iuml;s
-fasten immense bunches of artificial ringlets
-under their yashmacs when they drive out, but
-they are as yet sufficiently uncommon to be remarkable.
-To this head-dress, such as I have
-described it, Nazip Hanoum had added, in common
-with the other females of the household,
-a star and crescent of sticking-plaister between
-her eyebrows, which were stained a deep black,
-and destroyed the natural softness of her expression.
-But her hands and arms were lovely!
-White, and round, and soft, as though they had
-been moulded in wax; and her slight elastic
-figure looked as if it had been modelled by the
-Graces.</p>
-
-<p>Asm&egrave; Sultane is celebrated throughout the
-capital for the beauty of her slaves; and his
-Sublime Highness has thrice demanded Nazip
-Hanoum, but has been thrice refused; an occurrence
-so unprecedented in the East, that
-he has finished by persuading himself that he
-is actually attached to the lively girl who has
-dared to play the part of a modern Roxalana,
-and to defy his power.</p>
-
-<p>His first rejection was treated by the Sultan
-as the wayward whim of a spoiled beauty, and
-he even condescended to expostulate with Nazip
-Hanoum; but his advice had no more effect upon
-her than his preference; and for the first time in
-his life, the “Brother of the Sun” and “Emperor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">307</a></span>
-of the Earth” found himself slighted by a mere
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>The evil was, however, without remedy, for,
-as the adopted daughter of an Imperial Princess,
-the liberty of the young Hanoum was sacred;
-and his Sublime Highness was fain to content
-himself with the anticipation of future success;
-but, when a second solicitation brought with
-it only a second repulse, despite all the costly
-gifts and lover-like courtesies of the preceding
-twelve months, the enraged Sultan took up the
-affair in another tone, and accused the Princess
-of having instigated her favourite to this unheard-of
-rebellion against his sacred will.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultana defended herself with all the
-energy of innocence, and even consented to further
-his suit by her counsels and persuasion, but
-no success followed her efforts. Nazip Hanoum
-preferred the partial liberty of the harem of her
-protectress, and the comparative independence
-of her present position, to the gilded captivity
-of the Imperial Seraglio, and the fleeting favour
-of its lord; and she consequently continued
-firm.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan, enraged beyond endurance at this
-unexpected perseverance, left the palace in displeasure,
-and even refused to see his sister,
-whom he still persisted in believing to be the
-principal cause of his defeat. But monarchs
-are mere men where blighted feeling or wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">308</a></span>
-vanity make themselves felt: and Mahmoud,
-when he retreated to his gilded saloons at
-Beglierbey, shared the fate of his kind. He became
-convinced that he really loved Nazip Hanoum,
-and that her possession was necessary to
-his happiness; and, determined not to be thwarted
-a third time, he continued deaf to the earnest
-and humble prayers of the Princess that he
-would restore to her the light of his favour, and
-the glory of his presence; and actually refused
-during three long weeks to be accessible to her
-entreaties; when, feeling convinced that this
-display of his sublime wrath must have produced
-a powerful effect on the refractory beauty,
-he once more bent his course to the palace of
-the Princess.</p>
-
-<p>A rich gift to Nazip Hanoum announced her
-pardon; and when she had played and sung,
-seated on a cushion at his feet, and he had witnessed
-the graceful movements of the dancing
-girls, and partaken of the perfumed sherbet of
-his Imperial Sister, he led the young beauty into
-the gardens of the palace, where she was compelled
-to listen for the third time to his thriftless
-suit. But, alas! for the lordly lover&mdash;the reflections
-of the past year had only strengthened
-her resolution, and she continued as unmoved
-by his protestations as she had been by his
-displeasure; and thus, Mahmoud returned once
-more to his Seraglio as unsuccessful as ever.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">309</a></span>Such is the sacredness of adoption among the
-Turks.</p>
-
-<p>I have already mentioned that the Palace of
-Ortakeu&yuml; fronts the Bosphorus, from which it
-is only separated by a broad path or terrace of
-marble, extending along a considerable portion
-of the channel, and only broken at intervals
-by the projection of the different palaces
-and dwellings that are built against the edge
-of the stream. While we were conversing with
-Nazip Hanoum, my attention was attracted by a
-peculiar signal rising from this terrace, and evidently
-intended for the ear of some fair inhabitant
-of the Sera&iuml;. As no answer was returned,
-the shrill wild sound was repeated, when Nazip
-Hanoum rose quietly from her cushions, and
-throwing back a small door which opened in the
-midst of the lattice-work of one of the windows,
-demanded, in a tone of pretty peevishness, why
-she was thus persecuted, when she had announced
-her resolution not to receive another
-letter. The reply to this appeal, brief as it was,
-was conclusive, for, shrugging her shoulders with
-a coquettish gesture of impatience, she flung from
-the casement a painted handkerchief secured
-by a silken cord attached to the window-frame,
-and after the delay of a moment, drew it back,
-and took a letter from amid its folds, which,
-having read with a blush and a smile, she thrust
-into the shawl that was bound about her waist,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">310</a></span>
-with all the composure of a person to whom
-such an occurrence was no novelty.</p>
-
-<p>We shortly afterwards proceeded to wait upon
-all the principal ladies of the household, who
-occupied apartments opening from the same
-gallery as that of Nazip Hanoum. The first
-whom we visited was the mother of the slaves,
-a serious, stately woman, of about fifty years of
-age, dressed in an antery and trowsers of black
-cashmere, very silent, and even sad-looking,
-whom we quitted as soon as we had satisfied her
-curiosity; for the atmosphere of her stateliness
-did not appear congenial to our light-hearted
-conductress.</p>
-
-<p>We were next introduced to Perouss&egrave; Hanoum,
-the private secretary of the Princess, who had been
-a favourite Odalique of Sultan Selim; a woman
-remarkable for her talents both natural and acquired;
-and a celebrated poet. She was seated
-upon her sofa, surrounded by papers; lying confusedly
-in heaps, or tied up in squares of clear
-muslin; and engaged in writing on the lid of a
-chest inlaid with mother-of-pearl. She was still
-handsome, with delicate features, and fine eyes,
-but disfigured by the dye with which she had
-made her eyebrows meet across her nose. Had
-I been able to converse with her, without the
-interposition of a third person, I am sure that
-I should have been delighted, for she was all
-energy and enthusiasm. Her room was crowded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">311</a></span>
-with Turkish and Greek women, squatted on
-cushions all over the floor; and close beside her,
-with her pale cheek resting upon her knees, sat
-one of the ladies of the Imperial Seraglio, who
-having suffered severely from a protracted indisposition,
-had asked and obtained permission to
-spend a few weeks in the harem of the Princess,
-by whom she had been brought up. She was a
-lovely girl of eighteen or nineteen, very richly
-dressed, but evidently broken-hearted. Whenever
-she was addressed, the tears rushed into
-her large dark eyes, and every reply appeared
-to be an effort. The gilded Palace of her Imperial
-Master had evidently been a mere prison to
-her; and you read a tale of blighted hope and
-spirit-sickness upon every line of her pallid
-face.</p>
-
-<p>While we were in the apartment of the secretary,
-Nazip Hanoum, at the request of the fair
-and faded visitor, sent a slave for her zebec,
-and played and sang with considerable sweetness
-and execution: after which the gifted Perouss&egrave;
-Hanoum read one of her poems, which elicited
-such rapturous applause, that I asked and
-obtained a transcript of it, and having caused it
-to be translated into French by one of the Professors
-of the Military College, I have since rendered
-it into English verse for the gratification
-of my readers.</p>
-
-<p>We spent a considerable time in the apart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">312</a></span>ment
-of Perouss&egrave; Hanoum; and after having paid
-a number of less interesting visits, we finally
-entered the principal room of the Harem. Here
-we found a sweet girl of about thirteen years
-of age, lying upon a pile of cushions, having
-sprained her ancle a day or two previously, while
-dancing before the Sultan. She was amusing
-herself by nursing a very fine infant, a recent
-purchase of the Princess, who had bought
-both it and its mother, at the earnest request
-of the latter; who, having lost three husbands in
-the space of eighteen months, and being left entirely
-destitute, had profited by the well-known
-partiality of her Imperial Highness for children,
-to become an inmate of the Palace. The
-little girl was the pet and plaything, not only
-of Asm&egrave; Sultane, but of the whole harem; and
-was handed from one to the other, and caressed
-by all; while the mother did nothing but eat,
-sleep, and say her prayers; which latter ceremony
-she performed with most edifying ostentation.</p>
-
-<p>What a bevy of fair girls occupied that apartment!
-What eyes, and lips, and teeth, were
-grouped together, as they sat clustered like
-bees upon their cushions, with their delicate fingers
-clasped together, and almost making their
-idleness look graceful! Here and there one
-lay fast asleep, with her cheek pillowed upon
-her hand, and a smile upon her lips, as though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">313</a></span>
-her last waking glance had been at the silver
-mounted mirror which lay beside her, and
-her last thought one of triumph at her young
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>A few were yet settling their cashemere girdles,
-and arranging their unwieldy head-dresses
-for the day, after their return from the bath;
-while one laughing maiden, who appeared to
-possess the talent in an extraordinary degree,
-was cutting court-plaister into various fantastic
-shapes, and dispensing them to her numerous
-applicants, by whom they were immediately
-affixed to their carefully-tinted eyebrows. The
-Kislar-Agha, meanwhile, walked in and out
-of the apartment, rolling the whites of his large
-eyes, and pouting his thick lips in silence,
-totally unmoved by the mirth and laughter
-going on in every direction; and scarcely
-replying to the questions and comments of
-those who were courageous enough to address
-him.</p>
-
-<p>But, although there were many prettier
-women than herself in the party, Nazip Hanoum
-was the “Light of the Harem!” All gave way
-before her; her graceful playfulness, her joyous
-laughter, her innocent caprices, were alike received
-with smiles and approbation; and she
-appeared to be a general favourite, and to justify
-by her amiability the measureless affection of her
-Imperial patroness. We were shortly joined by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">314</a></span>
-Perouss&egrave; Hanoum, who accompanied one of the
-slaves on the zebec, while she sang, or rather
-recited, one of her own compositions; after which
-the fair favourite played the theorbo, and, while
-another of the party beat the tambourine, half a
-dozen voices pealed out the ballads of the Sultan,
-who is also a poet, and who frequently enjoys
-the happiness of listening to his own productions,
-from the lips of the fair household of his
-Imperial Sister.</p>
-
-<p>The part taken in this concert by Nazip
-Hanoum and the Secretary was intended as a
-high compliment to their Frank visitors; for
-the Turkish ladies hold it as a degradation to
-exhibit a talent which is made an object of speculation
-and profit by hired performers.</p>
-
-<p>Her Imperial Highness having left the bath
-with a violent and painful headache, we were
-requested to make a tour of the gardens, while
-she lay down to endeavour to obtain some
-relief: and accordingly, conducted by Nazip
-Hanoum, and followed by a dozen of her companions,
-we sallied forth by a door opening
-from the hall upon a stately terrace of white
-marble; and I laughed most heartily when,
-on emerging from the palace, the sprightly
-favourite shouted to the gardeners who were
-at work on all sides, “Do not look&mdash;we are
-coming out;” and, as a matter of course, every
-one of them turned towards her to utter their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">315</a></span>
-assurance of obedience, while away ran the
-laughing girl to gather the gayest flowers of the
-parterre, as an offering to the Frank ladies.</p>
-
-<p>One fountain which we passed struck me as
-being peculiarly elegant; the stream, falling
-from an artificial eminence, filled successively
-eleven basins of white marble, gradually increasing
-in size, until the last formed a noble
-sheet of water immediately under the palace
-windows. The terraces were shaded by stately
-trees; and a gaily gilded kiosk, superbly painted
-in fresco, throughout the whole of its interior,
-occupied the highest point of the grounds.</p>
-
-<p>Having completed our survey of the gardens,
-and the Princess being still invisible, we proceeded,
-under the same guidance, to visit the
-state apartments, which were situated immediately
-over the harem.</p>
-
-<p>The grand saloon, built above the marble
-hall, was the very embodiment of Eastern splendour.
-Its magnificently-painted dome was supported
-by forty porphyry pillars with gilt capitals;
-its walls were lined with plate glass; its
-doors veiled by silken draperies; its floor covered
-with Persian carpets; and the lattices
-which veiled the entrance to the women’s apartments
-richly carved and gilt. At either extremity
-of the saloon, whose form was a fine oval,
-a noble flight of marble steps led downwards to
-the harem; and along the glittering balustrade<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">316</a></span>
-were scattered groups of slaves, awaiting the
-summons of their Imperial Mistress, and clad in
-the gaudiest colours.</p>
-
-<p>The morning-room of the Sultana was flooded
-with sunshine, and opened upon the terrace: the
-carpet, covering the floor, the cushions which
-were piled beneath the windows and the hangings
-of the walls, were all of the purest white,
-ornamented with wreaths of roses; while the
-roof, on which the Orientals universally display
-most elaborate taste, was of a deep purple
-colour, ribbed and studded with golden stars.</p>
-
-<p>The reception-room was in a different style:
-sombre, magnificent, and almost cloistral in its
-decorations; heavy with gilding, and gloomy
-with cornices; while the sleeping chamber,
-hung with crimson and blue satin, and scattered
-over with perfumes and objects of taste, had
-an air of comfort and inhabitation almost English.</p>
-
-<p>But the most elegant suite of rooms was that
-appropriated to the Sultan. A saloon whose
-thirty windows were hung with purple velvet
-fringed with gold; whose sofa cushions were
-formed of glittering tissue; and whose walls
-were rich with plate-glass and gilding; whose
-floor was crowded with objects of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">vert&ugrave;</em>, and
-whose every table was scattered over with
-gems, opened into the Imperial sleeping-room,
-whose European bed, hung with flowered muslin,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">317</a></span>
-and decorated with knots of coloured ribbon,
-contrasted cheerfully with the heavy magnificence
-of the saloon and its elaborate draperies;
-while the mangal of wrought silver, richly gilt,
-and the collection of jewelled toys which filled
-the two recesses at the end of the apartment,
-brought back the imagination to the gorgeous
-East.</p>
-
-<p>Incense-burners of gold, studded with precious
-stones; ring-trays wreathed with rubies;
-a miniature of the Sultan himself in a frame
-thickly set with diamonds, and resting upon a
-cushion of white satin; a toilette of fillagreed
-silver; a chocolate cup of enamel studded with
-pearls: and a gilt salver, covered with watches
-of all sizes and shapes, were part of the tempting
-array. But I was more delighted by a
-Kor&agrave;n, and a manuscript collection of prayers,
-written by the Sultan, and splendidly illuminated.
-Both were bound in gold, with the Imperial
-cipher wrought upon each corner in
-brilliants, while a border was formed round the
-outer edges of the volumes, of passages from
-the holy writings, indifferent coloured jewels.</p>
-
-<p>The private withdrawing-room was not remarkable
-in any respect, if, indeed, I except the
-circumstance of its sofa and curtains being trimmed
-with fluted gauze ribbon, which, to an European
-eye, produced a most extraordinary effect.
-But, upon the whole, I saw less inconsistency<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">318</a></span>
-and bad taste exhibited in the arrangements of
-the numerous apartments that I traversed, than
-I had prepared myself to expect.</p>
-
-<p>While we were making our tour of the palace,
-orders had been given by the Princess that the
-dancing girls should prepare themselves to exhibit
-their skill for our amusement; but, unfortunately,
-in the excess of her graciousness, she
-had resolved on treating us with a view of their
-new dresses and their new dances, both intended
-to be European; and assuredly such costumes
-were never before imagined. I will give the
-description of one&mdash;it will suffice to afford an
-idea of the whole. A dress of blue muslin,
-elaborately ornamented with bows of pink and
-scarlet ribbon, was drawn round the throat with
-a cord of green silk, which hung down the back
-and terminated in two heavy tassels; the petticoat
-was long and scanty, and was trimmed
-with two narrow flounces, edged with white
-satin; black leather shoes of the coarsest description,
-gloveless hands, a sash of pink and
-silver that swept the floor; a necklace of
-pearl; and a head-dress at least a yard across,
-where a mass of false hair was smothered in
-flowers enough to decorate a supper table, and
-carefully selected of all the colours of the rainbow,
-completed the costume; and I need not expatiate
-on its effect. But the admiration which
-it excited in the harem was immense; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">319</a></span>
-really beautiful girl who was the fortunate
-wearer of the motley garb appeared to consider
-herself raised above mortality, as she
-listened to the comments of the throng by whom
-she was surrounded.</p>
-
-<p>The male dresses were in perfect keeping with
-that which I have endeavoured to describe;
-and the whole had found such favour in the eyes
-of the Sultana, that she only tolerated the
-Turkish costume on ordinary occasions.</p>
-
-<p>As the day was waning to a close, and the
-distance to Pera was considerable, I was reluctantly
-obliged to decline the honour of dining
-in the palace, and awaiting until evening the
-appearance of the Princess, whose continued
-indisposition still confined her to her apartment;
-and accordingly, despite the remonstrances of
-our kind and courteous entertainers, I took my
-leave of the fair favourite and her talented
-friend; bearing with me an invitation from Her
-Imperial Highness to repeat my visit at no distant
-period, when she might be able to receive
-and converse with me; and I then returned to
-Pera with an aching head and dazzled eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I subjoin the little ballad of Perouss&egrave; Hanoum,
-which I have rendered almost literally
-into English verse. I could have wished that it
-had been somewhat more Oriental in its character,
-but its quaintness is at least sufficiently
-characteristic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">320</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">BALLAD.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">My love for thee hath ta’en away my rest;</div>
-<div class="line i1">By day and night I think of thee alone;</div>
-<div class="line">I muse upon the curls which veil thy breast,</div>
-<div class="line i1">And sigh to know that thou art not mine own.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">My love for thee is madness! All esteem</div>
-<div class="line i1">My passion folly who do look on me;</div>
-<div class="line">The arrows of thine eyes have drank the stream</div>
-<div class="line i1">Of my fond heart; and I must part from thee.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">My love for thee is deep; and I of late</div>
-<div class="line i1">Can look upon none other&mdash;Thou art cold,</div>
-<div class="line">And ’tis the working of my hapless fate</div>
-<div class="line i1">That I no more thy gracious smiles behold.</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">Leyla! be mine, and learn my spirit-wrong;</div>
-<div class="line">I’ll tell thee all my grief&mdash;the tale is long.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">321</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Kahaitchana&mdash;The Barbyses&mdash;The Valley of the Sweet Waters&mdash;Imperial
-Procession&mdash;National Interdict&mdash;Picturesque Scene&mdash;The
-Princess Salih&egrave; and her Infant&mdash;Forbearance of the Sultan&mdash;The
-Toxopholites&mdash;Imperial Monopoly&mdash;Passion of the Sultan for Archery&mdash;Record-Columns&mdash;The
-Odalique’s Grave&mdash;The Lost One&mdash;Azm&egrave;
-Sultane&mdash;Imperial Courtesy&mdash;A Drive through the Valley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> loveliest spot in the neighbourhood of
-Constantinople is undeniably Kahaitchana;
-called by the Franks the “Valley of the Sweet
-Waters,” a name as appropriate as it is poetical.</p>
-
-<p>The sparkling Barbyses takes its rise amid
-the rich vegetation of the valley, and traverses
-its greensward like a silver thread. As a river
-it is inconsiderable, but, being the only stream
-of any size within many miles of the capital, it
-is an object of great enjoyment and admiration.</p>
-
-<p>The valley itself, like that of Rasselas, is shut
-in on all sides by tall and arid hills, amid which
-it nestles so fresh, and green, and sunny, that
-you feel at once that it was destined by nature
-for holyday uses. Need I say that the Sultan
-has here both a summer palace and a kiosk?
-There exists no pretty spot near Stamboul<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">322</a></span>
-where he has them not; but the Palace of Kahaitchana
-is a favourite retreat, where he generally
-retires to escape from the coil and cares of
-the capital, whenever he can contrive to wring
-a day’s leisure from the stern grasp of public
-duty. The ride from Pera is delightful: the
-air of the hills is so elastic that it seems to instil
-new life into your pulses; and the descent
-into the valley is so picturesque, that, despite
-your previous enjoyment, you are anxious to
-arrive in the lovely spot which lies, bathed in
-sunshine, at your feet.</p>
-
-<p>A brighter day never shone from the heavens
-than that on which I joined a party who were
-bound for Kahaitchana. I had been indisposed
-for several days, and was too weak to indulge
-myself with a gallop; and accordingly, comfortably
-nestled amid the cushions of my araba,
-I suffered the more joyous and healthful of my
-friends to fly past me, and leisurely pursued my
-way to the valley.</p>
-
-<p>As I descended the hill, I saw a procession of
-carriages issuing from the palace court, and
-making their way along the opposite bank of
-the stream, which forms the boundary of the
-Imperial pleasure grounds. A mounted guard
-stopped me for an instant at the foot of the
-height, but suffered me to pass after the delay
-of a moment, as he had received no orders to
-prevent the entrance of any Frank lady by that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">323</a></span>
-road; the interdict being confined to Greeks,
-Armenians, and Jewesses. Simply requesting
-me, therefore, to stop my carriage, as the Imperial
-family passed, he desired my arabajhe
-to proceed. I obeyed without hesitation; and,
-as the river is only a few feet in width, I had an
-excellent view of the distinguished party.</p>
-
-<p>An open carriage, drawn by four fine bay
-horses, each led by a groom, contained the two
-younger sons of the Sultan, the palace dwarf,
-and the principal negro of the Sultan’s household.
-The infant prince is a sweet-looking child,
-with bright eyes and rosy cheeks, and appears
-healthy enough to be the son of a peasant.
-Four bullock-carriages followed, and among
-their veiled occupants were the Princess Mihirm&agrave;h,
-her mother, and one of her sisters. Some
-of the younger ladies were exceedingly lovely,
-and wore their yashmacs so transparent, and so
-coquettishly arranged, that I could trace their
-features distinctly. This is, however, by no
-means the case generally speaking, as the inmates
-of the Imperial Seraglio are more closely
-covered when in a less retired spot, than any
-other of the Turkish women; and I remember
-on one occasion to have seen a favourite Odalique
-of the Sultan, who had a gauze across her
-eyes, as well as wearing her yashmac close to
-their very lids!</p>
-
-<p>Troops of negroes surrounded the carriages,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">324</a></span>
-and the procession was closed by the Kislar
-Agha, mounted on a superb Arabian horse, and
-accompanied by four attendants on foot.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cort&egrave;ge</em> had passed, I pursued
-my way, and found that my friends had
-been compelled to make a circuit, and to enter
-the valley by another road, which did not communicate
-with the palace grounds. Nothing
-could be more cheerful or more picturesque than
-the scene that met my eye as I descended from
-the araba. The greensward was covered with
-merry groups&mdash;Wallachian and Bulgarian
-musicians were scattered among the revellers;
-Bohemian flower girls were vending their
-pretty nosegays in every direction, so skilfully
-arranged that each veiled fair one saw in
-an instant whether the tale she wished to tell
-had been anticipated by the dark-eyed Flora&mdash;mounted
-patroles appeared and disappeared
-along the crests of the hills as they pursued
-their round of observation&mdash;an Imperial ca&iuml;que
-of white and gold was riding upon the ripple
-near one of the palace gates&mdash;Turkish servants
-were galloping in all directions&mdash;every avenue
-of the Imperial residence was doubly guarded&mdash;and
-all was bustle and excitement.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"><a name="f3" id="f3"></a><img src="images/i_fp324.jpg" width="500" height="325"
-alt="PALACE of the 'SWEET WATERS'." title="" />
-<table summary="sweet" width="100%" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="left f06">Miss Pardoe del.</td>
-<td class="right f06">Day &amp; Haghe Lith.<sup>rs</sup> to the King.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f08" colspan="2">PALACE of the “SWEET WATERS".</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f06" colspan="2"><i>Henry Colburn 13 G.<sup>t</sup> Marlborough St 1837.</i></td>
-</tr></table></div>
-
-<p>As we were standing in front of the palace,
-two six-oared ca&iuml;ques drew up beside the terrace,
-and shortly afterwards appeared the
-Princess Salih&egrave;, the wife of Halil Pasha, at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">325</a></span>tended
-by half a dozen negroes, and twice as
-many female slaves, and followed by the head
-nurse carrying in her arms the lovely infant, on
-occasion of whose birth Sultan Mahmoud displayed
-such unprecedented generosity.</p>
-
-<p>Heretofore, as it was stated at the time in the
-public prints, all the Emperors of Turkey had
-caused the male children of their own offspring
-to be destroyed, and thus provided most efficiently
-against future disputes relatively to the
-succession. The child on whom I now looked
-had not only been spared by its Imperial Grandsire,
-but public rejoicings had taken place on its
-birth&mdash;cannon had been fired, and ministers had
-been admitted to the Presence on audiences of
-congratulation. It was a noble boy, laughing
-and sporting in the arms of its nurse; and, as
-the ca&iuml;ques shot away, I busied myself with endeavouring
-to picture to my mind’s eye the joy
-of the fond mother on learning that her child
-was to be spared to her. The delight was,
-however, fated to be transient, for Mahmoud
-was ere long released from his incipient enemy,
-(if such the little prince were indeed destined
-one day to become) without dyeing his own hands
-in blood. Three days after our visit to Kahaitchana
-he expired in convulsions, induced by
-his sufferings in teething.</p>
-
-<p>As I understood that His Highness was engaged
-at archery with some of his favourite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">326</a></span>
-Pashas, I resolved on endeavouring to obtain a
-sight of him; and accordingly one or two of our
-party detached themselves from the rest, and,
-making a circuit of the pleasure-grounds, we
-arrived opposite the spot where the Toxopholites
-were “speeding the winged arrow to the
-mark.” A heavy cloud that was passing over
-the valley had already shed a few of those
-large drops which fall upon the leaves with the
-sound and the weight of hail; and the Sultan
-was seated beneath a red umbrella, held over
-his sacred person by one of the Officers of the
-Imperial Household. The favoured Pashas were
-standing in a line along the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fa&ccedil;ade</em> of the building;
-and a number of servants were dispersed
-over the lawn, for the purpose of collecting the
-arrows.</p>
-
-<p>Apropos of umbrellas&mdash;Until the present reign,
-the red umbrella was sacred to the use of the
-Sultan; but his present Highness probably deeming
-the monopoly a very inconsequent one,
-graciously removed the interdict; and I need
-scarcely add that red umbrellas are now the
-rage at Constantinople.</p>
-
-<p>Archery is a passion with Sultan Mahmoud,
-who is extremely vain of his prowess; so much
-so indeed, that a long stretch of hilly country
-immediately in the rear of the Military College
-is dotted over with marble pillars fancifully
-carved, and carefully inscribed, erected on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">327</a></span>
-spots where the arrows shot by himself from a
-terrace on the crest of the height are supposed to
-have fallen&mdash;I say supposed, for, as his foible is
-no secret, the Imperial pages who are employed
-to collect the shafts, and to measure the distances,
-generally pick up the arrow and run on
-twenty or thirty paces further, ere they affect
-to find it; by which means the Sultan shoots
-like the Prince Aimwell in the Fairy Tale; and
-the cunning varlets who restore his arrows earn
-many a <em>backshish</em> or present which more honest
-men would miss. I remember on one occasion,
-when on an exploring expedition, suddenly coming
-upon so handsome a marble column, inscribed
-with letters of gold, and surmounted by
-an urn, that I was curious to learn its purport;
-when, to my surprise, I discovered that this was
-a record-pillar of the same description; and as
-his Sublime Highness had on this occasion pulled
-a very long bow indeed, so he had perpetuated
-its memory by a handsomer erection than usual.</p>
-
-<p>The archery party at Kahaitchana was amusing
-enough. First flew the arrow of the Sultan,
-and away ran the attendants; then each Pasha
-shot in his turn, taking especial care to keep
-within bounds, and not to out-C&aelig;sar C&aelig;sar.
-Some of them looked important, and others horridly
-bored: but there was no escape from an
-amateur who boasts that he has practised every
-week for the last forty years.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">328</a></span>A little to the left of the spot occupied by the
-archers is a raised platform overshadowed by a
-weeping willow, beneath which rises a handsome
-head-stone. It is the grave of an Imperial
-Odalique, who died suddenly in the very
-zenith of her youth, her beauty, and her favour.
-She was buried in this lovely spot at the express
-command of the Sultan, who was so deeply affected
-by her loss that for two entire years he
-abandoned the valley. The platform is overlooked
-by the windows of the Salemliek, and
-every wind that sighs through the willow
-branches carries their voice to the ears of those
-who occupy its gilded chambers. Mahmoud, in
-a fit of poetical despair, is said to have written
-a pathetic ballad of which she was the subject.
-I endeavoured to procure it, but failed; and, as
-I was loath that she should remain unsung in
-Europe, I even tried my own hand in some wild
-stanzas, which I wrote hurriedly as I stood near
-her grave.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE LOST ONE.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">Spring is come back to us&mdash;the laughing Spring!</div>
-<div class="line i1">Sunlight is on the waters&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line">And many a bright, and many a beaming thing,</div>
-<div class="line">O’er this fair scene its gladdening spell will fling,</div>
-<div class="line i1">For the East’s dark-eyed daughters.</div>
-<div class="line">But where is She, the loveliest of the throng,</div>
-<div class="line">The painter’s model, and the theme of song;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">329</a></span></div>
-<div class="line i1">For whom the summer roses joyfully</div>
-<div class="line">Gave forth alike the beauty of their bloom,</div>
-<div class="line">Their dewy freshness, and their soft perfume:&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line i1">The loved of the World’s Monarch&mdash;Where is She?</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">Alas! for her the Spring returns in vain;</div>
-<div class="line i1">Her home is with the sleepers:&mdash;</div>
-<div class="line">She will not join in the glad song again</div>
-<div class="line">With which she once subdued the spirit-pain</div>
-<div class="line i1">Of the earth’s pale-browed weepers.</div>
-<div class="line">For her the dance is ended&mdash;and for her</div>
-<div class="line">The flowers no more will their bright petals stir;</div>
-<div class="line i1">Nor the sad bulbul wake his melody:</div>
-<div class="line">The sunshine falls on every hillock’s crest,</div>
-<div class="line">The pulse of joy beats high in every breast;</div>
-<div class="line i1">But She, the loved and lost one, where is She?</div>
-<div class="line">&nbsp;</div>
-<div class="line">She lies where lie the last year’s faded flow’rs;</div>
-<div class="line i1">She sleeps where sleep the proudest;</div>
-<div class="line">And there are eyes that will weep burning show’rs,</div>
-<div class="line">And there are sighs will wear away the hours</div>
-<div class="line i1">When the heart’s grief is loudest.</div>
-<div class="line">Yet mourn her not, she had her day of pride,</div>
-<div class="line">The East’s dread sovereign chose her for his bride;</div>
-<div class="line i1">The sunlight rested on her favour’d brow:</div>
-<div class="line">Like a fair blossom blighted in its bloom,</div>
-<div class="line">She filled an early, but a cherished tomb,</div>
-<div class="line i1">And where the mighty linger, rests She now!</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>Despite the sentiment of the thing, however,
-the beautiful Odalique has been long forgotten;
-and the bevy of beauties who wander near her
-grave have no time to sigh over her fate. It
-was, nevertheless, consolatory to my romance to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">330</a></span>
-remark that the Sultan shot his arrows in another
-direction!</p>
-
-<p>On leaving the neighbourhood of the Toxopholites,
-I returned accompanied by a Greek lady
-to the araba, and drove higher up the valley;
-where we came in contact with the carriages of
-Azm&egrave; Sultane and her suite. On seeing us, she
-stopped, and, after inquiring if I were the Frank
-lady whom she had invited to her palace, she
-courteously and condescendingly expressed her
-regret that her indisposition had rendered her
-unable to receive me, but desired that I would
-hold myself engaged to spend another day in
-the Sera&iuml; ere long. She then, as a mark of
-especial favour, sent one of her negroes to the
-araba, with the infant to whom I have already
-made allusion, and whom I discovered to be the
-namesake of my lovely acquaintance, Heymin&egrave;
-Hanoum: the child was richly and fantastically
-dressed; and, when I had praised its beauty,
-admired its costume, and restored it to the attendant,
-I received a very gracious salutation
-from Her Highness, who moved on, followed by
-her suite.</p>
-
-<p>The Princess, who is the widow of a Pasha,
-is a noble-looking woman, with a very aristocratic
-manner, and strongly resembles her
-brother. She has evidently been handsome, but
-must now be more than sixty years of age. Her
-fair favourite, Nazip Hanoum, was seated beside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">331</a></span>
-her, but so closely veiled, that, until she saluted
-me, I was unable to recognise her.</p>
-
-<p>As we continued our drive, we passed a hundred
-groups of which an artist might have
-made as many studies. All was enjoyment and
-hilarity. Ca&iuml;ques came and went along the
-bright river; majestic trees stretched their long
-branches over the greensward; gay voices were
-on the wind; the cloud had passed away; and
-the sunlight lay bright upon the hill-tops. I
-know not a spot on earth where the long, sparkling
-summer day may be more deliciously spent
-than in the lovely Valley of the Sweet Waters.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">332</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Easter with the Greeks&mdash;Greek Church at Pera&mdash;Women’s Gallery&mdash;Interior
-of a Greek Church&mdash;The Sanctuary&mdash;The Screen&mdash;Throne
-of the Patriarch&mdash;The Holy Sepulchre&mdash;Singular Appearance of the
-Congregation&mdash;Sociability of the Ladies&mdash;<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Echelle des Morts</em>&mdash;Shipping&mdash;Boats
-and Boatmen&mdash;Church of the Fanar&mdash;Ancient
-Screen&mdash;Treasure Chests&mdash;The Sanctuary&mdash;Private Chapels&mdash;A
-Pious Illumination&mdash;Priests’ House&mdash;Prison&mdash;Remedy against Mahomedanism&mdash;Midnight
-Mass&mdash;Unexpected Greetings&mdash;The Patriarch&mdash;Logotheti&mdash;Russian
-Secretaries&mdash;Russian Supremacy in
-Turkey&mdash;Affinity of Religion between the Greeks and Russians&mdash;The
-Homage&mdash;Pious Confusion&mdash;Patriarch’s Palace&mdash;Lovely Night-Scene&mdash;Midnight
-Procession&mdash;Serious Impressions&mdash;Suffocating Heat&mdash;Dawn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> own Easter was over. The last dinner
-had been eaten, the last quadrille had been
-danced; politics had succeeded to parties, and
-diplomacy to dissipation; when the Greeks were
-preparing to celebrate the festival with all the
-pomp and circumstance of the most gorgeous
-and glowing of religions. I took this opportunity
-of paying my first visit to the Greek Church
-of Pera; an elegant edifice built at the expense
-of the Russian government, and richly decorated
-with blue and gold; where the service is performed
-both in Greek and Russ, all the priests
-attached to it being Russians.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">333</a></span>A Greek lady, whose acquaintance I had made,
-politely offered me the use of her seat, which I
-accepted the more gladly, that without such accommodation
-I must have failed in my attempts
-to witness the ceremony; most of the females
-being obliged to content themselves with hearing
-the service, without a hope of seeing it. This
-difficulty arises from the fact that the women
-are not permitted to occupy the body of the
-church, but are confined to a gallery so closely
-latticed that it is impossible for those below to
-catch the faintest glimpse of the secluded
-fair-ones.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of a Greek church differs
-from those of the Roman Catholics, infinitely
-more than do the several religions. The Sanctuary,
-in the midst of which stands the High
-Altar, is separated from the church by a close
-screen; and there are neither aisles nor side
-chapels. The whole edifice is lighted by chandeliers
-suspended from the ceiling in three
-straight lines, reaching from the Sanctuary to
-the principal entrance: and the screen is ornamented
-with the effigies of saints, hardly and
-drily painted; which frequently figure in such
-sort in their temples as thoroughly to exonerate
-them from the imputation of making to themselves
-the “likeness of anything in Heaven, or on
-earth, or in the waters under the earth.” Nor is
-this all; for the pious being to the full as prone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">334</a></span>
-to make votive offerings to their favourite saints
-as any Catholic in Spain or Portugal, the staring,
-wooden pictures are furthermore decorated
-with gold and silver hands, eyes, ears, or noses,
-as the case may be; which gives them so comical
-an effect that the gravest person cannot contemplate
-them without a smile.</p>
-
-<p>The centre of the screen is closed by a curtain
-above the low double door opening into
-the church&mdash;the veil shrouding from the
-eyes of the congregation “the holy of holies,”
-according to the old Jewish use. On the present
-occasion, the curtain was drawn back, and
-the High Priest was robing himself in front of
-the altar.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch’s throne was on the right hand,
-and immediately opposite to it was the pulpit;
-while at the bottom of the church on each side
-of the door stood two enormous chests of polished
-wood, containing the church plate and
-properties. In the centre of the marble floor
-was placed the boast and treasure of the chapel&mdash;a
-stone which once formed part of the Sepulchre
-of the Saviour, affirmed to have been
-brought from the Holy Land, and ultimately
-deposited here. The crush towards this point
-was enormous: the dense crowd shoving and
-elbowing each other most determinedly to secure
-an approach; which, when they had effected it,
-enabled them to cross themselves, according to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">335</a></span>
-the rite of their church, seven times successively
-with a rapidity only to be acquired by long
-practice, and to kiss each extremity of the stone,
-leaving a piece of money in the salver of the
-attendant priest.</p>
-
-<p>Huge wax candles of at least seven inches in
-diameter were burning in front of the Sanctuary,
-and on the canopy covering the Sepulchre;
-and the glare fell upon a dense crowd
-of heads, some shaven close, some decorated
-with a single long tress of hair hanging from
-the summit; some half-shaved, as though a
-platter had been adjusted to the cranium of the
-individual, and that the barber had operated
-round its edges; and others with long dishevelled
-elf-locks falling about their shoulders&mdash;the effect
-was perfectly ludicrous!</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the ladies in the gallery were not
-idle: compliments were exchanged&mdash;inquiries
-made and answered&mdash;and conversations carried
-on, as coolly as though the interlocutors had
-been quietly seated in their own houses: while
-every five or six minutes a priest made his appearance,
-bearing a salver to receive the donations
-of the pious and charitable. But I soon
-wearied of the nasal, monotonous chant of the
-officiating priests, which more than counteracted
-the light and gladsome aspect of the edifice;
-and, satisfied with having seen a great deal of
-paint and gilding, and a rich display of tissue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">336</a></span>
-and embroidery, as well as a holy scuffle among
-the crowd at a particular period of the service,
-to possess themselves of the candles that had
-lit up the Sepulchre, I escaped from the scene of
-pious confusion; and slowly taking my way
-through the cypress-shaded burial-ground, and
-onward to the Echelle des morts, I gladly stepped
-into the ca&iuml;que, to share, beneath the hospitable
-roof of a friend, in the magnificent ceremonials
-which were to take place in the ancient patriarchal
-church at the Fanar.</p>
-
-<p>As we traversed the port, I was struck by the
-various character of the shipping, more than
-usually conspicuous under a flood of bright
-sunshine. The vessels of war, (one of them the
-largest in the world) were lying like floating
-cities on the still surface of the mirror-like Bosphorus:
-the foreign merchant ships, anchored
-in dense ranks along the shore, with their sails
-furled, and their slender masts shooting upwards,
-like the tall stems of a wind-stripped
-forest&mdash;the Arab vessels, with their sharp high
-prows and sterns, precisely as I had often seen
-them represented on the antique medals&mdash;the
-steam-packets, dark and motionless like ocean-monsters,
-about to vomit forth their volumes of
-thick, suffocating smoke upon the clear air;
-while about, and around, and among all these,
-darted, and glided, and whirled, the slender
-ca&iuml;ques of polished and carved walnut wood,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">337</a></span>
-with their gracefully-clad rowers, and their
-minute gilded ornaments glittering in the light;
-the sharp shrill cry of “On the European side”&mdash;“On
-the Asiatic side!”&mdash;ringing upon the ear
-every moment, as the boatmen indicated each
-to the other which course to steer, in order to
-leave to all a free passage.</p>
-
-<p>We landed on a terrace overhanging the water,
-at the extremity of our friend’s garden; and
-after taking coffee with the ladies, immediately
-set forth to visit the church by daylight. Though
-more limited in its dimensions, and less rich in
-its decorations, than the church at Pera, it nevertheless
-pleased me infinitely better; there was
-an air of time-hallowed holiness about the whole
-of its interior, far more attractive than the unfaded
-paint and fresh gilding which I had seen
-in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch’s throne, simple, and even
-clumsy in its form and fashion, had existed for
-twelve hundred years, and was consequently respectable
-from its antiquity; close beside it
-stood the raised and high-backed chair of Logotheti;
-and about twenty feet beyond, stretched
-the magnificent screen of the Sanctuary, delicately
-carved in dark oak. This screen particularly
-attracted me, the workmanship was so
-minute and elaborate, and the columns which
-separated the panels in such high and bold relief.
-Here, as at Pera, dry, hard, savage-looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">338</a></span>
-Saints ornamented the spaces between them,
-and were equally decorated with the incongruous
-and disjointed offerings of their votaries.</p>
-
-<p>The most popular personage of the whole
-calendar among the Greeks is decidedly St.
-George, who had no less than two entire effigies
-in beaten silver in this church. The pulpit was
-of mosaic, thickly overstrown with stars of
-mother-of-pearl; and two large chests, similar
-to those which I have already named, were composed
-of the same materials. The women’s
-gallery was even more closely latticed than that
-at Pera, and the flood of light without was admitted
-so sparingly by the high and infrequent
-casements, that a solemn twilight reigned
-throughout the edifice, which accorded admirably
-with its antique and somewhat gloomy
-character.</p>
-
-<p>Thanks to the guidance under which we entered,
-the priest who had opened the doors for
-us was obliging enough to walk to the other
-extremity of the church, and thus leave us the
-opportunity of penetrating into the Sanctuary,
-which the profane foot of woman is supposed
-never to tread. It consisted of a small chapel,
-containing an altar by no means remarkable,
-spread with the sacramental plate: a high-backed
-chair of marble for the Patriarch, a
-fountain for the use of the officiating priests,
-a few miserable oil-paintings, and a vast number<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">339</a></span>
-of small pictures of Saints and Virgins, placed
-there during a certain time for “a consideration,”
-to become hallowed by the sanctity of
-the spot ere they were removed to the private
-chapels of the different families: every Greek,
-however limited in fortune, having an apartment
-in his house fitted up as an oratory.</p>
-
-<p>I was, however, much more amused (for that
-is the only applicable word) in watching the
-proceedings of a Greek lady who had accompanied
-me, than in contemplating the portly
-saints and florid martyrs by whom I was surrounded.
-A slight iron rail runs along the
-screen at the base of the paintings for the purpose
-of supporting the tapers which the zeal of
-the pious may be inclined to burn in their
-honour; and my companion was busily employed
-in lighting a score of these minute candles at a
-lamp that is constantly left burning for the
-purpose; humming in an under-tone, while she
-did so, the barcarolle in Masaniello which was
-exchanged, as she commenced her survey of
-the holy group, for such exclamations as the
-following:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The Virgin&mdash;I shall give her four, because
-my own name is Mary&mdash;and look, I pray you,
-at the pretty effect of her gold hand, and her
-silver crown, with the light flashing on them.
-Now comes St. George&mdash;I like St. George, so
-he shall have two. Who is this? Oh! St.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">340</a></span>
-Nicholas; I cannot bear St. Nicholas, so I shall
-pass him by.”</p>
-
-<p>I ventured to intercede in his favour.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then, as you wish it, there is one for
-him; but he never was a favourite of mine: there
-are two saints in the calendar to whom I never
-burn a taper, St. Nicholas and St. Demetrius.”</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, finally settled that no partialities
-were to be indulged on the present occasion,
-and consequently the effect produced
-was that of a miniature illumination. My curiosity
-being satisfied, and the pious offering of my
-companion completed, we proceeded to make
-a tour of the vast monastic-looking building
-forming one side of the enclosure, and which
-is appropriated to the priests. Ascending an
-external flight of steps, we found ourselves in
-a wide gallery, whence the apartments opened
-on the right and left, precisely as the cells are
-arranged in a convent. One of these small,
-but comfortable, rooms is allotted to each individual;
-and those which we visited were very
-carefully carpeted and curtained, with divans of
-chintz, and every luxury customary in Greek
-apartments. In many of them we found ladies
-taking coffee with their owners, while servants
-were hurrying to and fro, full of bustle and importance.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether there was an atmosphere of comfort
-about the establishment, which quite made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">341</a></span>
-me overlook its otherwise dreary extent; and
-as I passed out by another door, having before
-me the Palace of the Patriarch, I felt no inclination
-to commiserate the worldly condition of
-his subordinates.</p>
-
-<p>From the Priest’s House we proceeded to the
-prison,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">4</a> where we found one miserable urchin
-of twelve years old, “in durance vile” for an
-attempt to turn Musselmaun; he was ragged
-and almost barefooted, and some pious Turk
-had promised to recompense his apostacy with
-a new suit, and a pair of shoes; but, unfortunately
-for the cause of the Prophet, the boy was
-caught in the act of elusion, and delivered up
-by his exasperated parents to the authority of
-the Church, which had already kept him a prisoner
-for eight days, and was about to send him,
-with a chain about his leg, to spend a month in
-a public mad-house!</p>
-
-<p>What analogy the good Papas had found
-between the mosque and the mad-house I know
-not; but the punishment was certainly a most
-original and frightful one. The boy told us his
-own tale, and then added, with a broad grin,
-that he would take them in at last. Two other
-prisoners, accused of theft, were about to suffer
-their sentence in a day or two: exile in both
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">342</a></span>cases, accompanied by branding on the breast
-in the most aggravated of the two; and, meanwhile,
-close confinement. They were a couple
-of shrewd-looking, desperate ruffians, and laughed
-in his face as the keeper spoke of them. We
-were then shown the bastinado, and the rings
-and chains for insubordinate prisoners; and,
-after having made a donation which was received
-with a surprise perfectly untrammelled
-with gratitude, I returned to the residence of
-our hospitable friends, with the rattling of fetters
-in my ears, and a thousand gloomy fancies
-floating over my brain.</p>
-
-<p>At half past ten o’clock we repaired once more
-to the Church, in order to assist at the midnight
-mass; where a Greek lady very politely gave
-up her seat to me, that I might have an uninterrupted
-view of the ceremonies. The service had
-already commenced when we entered, and the
-whole interior of the edifice was one blaze of
-light. The thirty chandeliers suspended from
-the ceiling threw a many-coloured gleam on
-the crowd beneath them, from their pendants of
-tinted glass; and the huge candles in front of
-the Sanctuary, and the tapers burning before
-the saints, added to the brightness of the glare;
-which, penetrating through the lattices of the
-gallery, enabled me to contemplate as extraordinary
-a scene as I had ever witnessed in a
-place of worship. The fair tenants of the front<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">343</a></span>
-seats presented much the same appearance as
-a parterre of flowers; there were turbans of
-every tint, dresses of every dye, bonnets of
-every form: and such a constant flutter, fidget,
-and fuss; such bowing, smiling, and whispering,
-that I began to fancy there must be some mistake,
-and that we were, in fact, gathered together
-to witness some mere worldly exhibition.</p>
-
-<p>But the monotonous chanting of the priests,
-which had been momentarily suspended, was
-suddenly renewed; and I turned away from a
-score of polite greetings, offered by persons of
-whom I had not the slightest recollection, but
-to whom I had doubtlessly been presented during
-the carnival, in order to observe the proceedings
-beneath me.</p>
-
-<p>The Patriarch was seated on his throne,
-dressed in a vestment of white satin, clasped
-on the breast with an immense diamond ornament,
-over which was flung a scarf of gold
-tissue; the borders of the robe were wrought to
-about a foot in depth with portraits of the saints
-in needlework of different colours, interspersed
-with gold and silver threads. His crown of
-crimson velvet was entirely covered with immense
-pearls, fashioned into different figures; the
-intermediate spaces being occupied by rubies,
-emeralds, and brilliants, of great beauty and
-lustre. He held his staff in one hand, and in
-the other the Gospel, bound in white satin, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">344</a></span>
-studded with jewels; and, at every movement
-that he made, the tapers by which he was surrounded
-flashed back the radiance of his elaborately-gemmed
-habit in a coruscation perfectly
-dazzling.</p>
-
-<p>Beside him, and on a level with the throne,
-sat Logotheti, in an uniform richly embroidered
-with silver; my father was beside him; and at
-the foot of his chair stood Vogorede; while immediately
-in front of the throne, in a line with
-the pulpit, four of the Russian Secretaries occupied
-a crimson-cushioned seat, whence they
-had a full view of the Sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>Among the numerous causes, all working towards
-the same centre of Russian supremacy in
-Turkey, one of the most dangerous for the
-Moslem is the community of religion between
-the Russian and the Greek. The Autocrat has
-built a church for the Greeks in the vicinity of
-Constantinople, and the arms of Russia surmount
-the portal! The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em> of the Russian
-Embassy, while the members of all the other
-Legations are either sleeping or feasting, are
-meekly kneeling before the throne of the Greek
-Patriarch, and humbly kissing the hand which
-extended to them!</p>
-
-<p>The act in itself is simple. It is the effect
-that it produces on the minds of the mass
-which is to be dreaded. The expression of delighted
-admiration on the countenances of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">345</a></span>
-crowd was a perfect study, as, following in the
-wake of Logotheti and Vogoride, ere less important
-persons had an opportunity of doing
-homage to the Patriarch, the all-powerful agents
-of all-powerful Russia bent a willing knee to
-kiss the sacred hand. A common interest was
-created at once, and no tie is so sure as that of
-religious faith. The Greeks already writhe in
-their fetters&mdash;the bondmen loathe their task-masters&mdash;the
-tree is cankered at the core, and
-hollowed in the trunk: let Russia apply the axe,
-and it will fall.</p>
-
-<p>The Moslem, be he lured to ruin as smilingly
-as he may, and flattered into security as blandly
-as the criminal of his country, who finds the
-rope about his neck ere he knows that he is
-condemned; is the coveted prey of his semi-barbarous
-ally. The force of the Russian, and
-the guile of the Greek&mdash;external power and internal
-treachery&mdash;are at work against him; and
-what has he to oppose to these? High-sounding
-titles, and pompous phrases&mdash;a young and
-half-trained soldiery&mdash;a navy, unequal to the
-management of their magnificent shipping&mdash;and
-a Capital, protected by men, many of whom
-wear a Russian medal at their breast&mdash;a medal
-bestowed on them by the munificent Emperor of
-another nation, for having done their duty (according
-to Muscovite notions) towards their
-own!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">346</a></span>But let Turkey be supported for awhile, as
-her own efforts merit that she should be; let
-her find the ready help from European powers,
-in which she so fondly trusted&mdash;and she will,
-ere long, prove herself worthy to take her place
-among the nations. Her military and naval
-forces require only time; her soldiers have already
-given evidence of their courage, and,
-having so done when comparatively undisciplined,
-will naturally develop still higher attributes
-when acting as a well-organized body;
-in which each individual receives, as well as
-gives, support. Let the Russian medal be
-trampled in the dust of the city streets&mdash;and
-this will demand no effort on the part of those
-who wear it, into whose breasts it burns, and who
-consider it rather as a brand of disgrace, than
-as a creditable badge&mdash;and it will then require
-no spirit of prophecy to foretell the future prosperity
-of Turkey. To the East, Europe is indebted
-for her knowledge of military tactics and
-military subordination, and she can well afford
-to pay back the debt. Half a dozen experienced
-officers would, in a few months, change the
-whole appearance and nature of the Turkish
-army.</p>
-
-<p>Homage had been paid to the Patriarch,
-and the chanting became more animated, as,
-followed by a train of Archbishops and Bishops,
-he retired to the sanctuary, and added to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">347</a></span>
-already costly habiliments several other jewelled
-and embroidered draperies. He next received
-the sacrament, at which period of the ceremony
-every man, woman, and child, within the
-church hastened to light the taper that they
-had brought for the purpose, (the symbol of
-the Resurrection) which produced a sudden
-burst of light absolutely thrilling. As I looked
-down upon the struggling and stifling crowd
-beneath me, so closely wedged together that it
-was with difficulty they could raise the arm
-holding the taper, which each lit by that of his
-neighbour, the scene was most extraordinary.
-A dense vapour was even then rapidly spreading
-its heavy folds over the whole edifice, and, in
-a few moments, I could distinguish nothing but
-a sea of heads, and a multitude of pigmy lights,
-feebly struggling through the thick smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The fiery and impetuous Greeks, enthusiastic
-in all their feelings&mdash;in religion, in love, in hate,
-and in ambition&mdash;did not, in the present instance,
-confine themselves so scrupulously as an
-European congregation would have done, to
-the space assigned to them&mdash;half a dozen wild,
-bandit-looking individuals clambered into the
-pulpit&mdash;a score more clung to the steps&mdash;those
-who chanced to be nearest to the vacated stalls of
-the Bishops appropriated them without ceremony&mdash;others
-hung by the pillars which supported
-the gallery&mdash;and thus sufficient space was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">348</a></span>
-with difficulty ensured by the panting beadles
-for the passage of the procession.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment, I followed my friend from the
-church, and, four or five sturdy servants having
-with considerable effort forced a way for us to the
-Patriarch’s Palace, we hastened to take possession
-of his private sitting-room, which, as it
-overlooked the enclosure in which the church was
-situated, and where the procession was to halt,
-he had politely offered, in order to secure the
-gratification of my curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>The night was one of beauty. The pale moon
-was riding high among masses of fleecy clouds,
-which were pillowed upon the deep blue of the
-sky, forming towers, and palaces, and islets, so
-changeful and fleeting, that they looked like
-the ephemeral creations of fairy-land. A lofty
-and leafy plane tree, whose foliage had newly
-burst beneath the soft influence of spring, was
-sighing gently in the midnight wind; and the
-long dark outline of the monastic buildings, and
-the slanting roof of the church, loomed out in
-the faint moonlight, with a mysterious depth of
-shadow well suited to the solemnity of the hour.
-The wide doors of the sacred edifice suddenly
-fell back&mdash;the low chant of the choir swelled
-upon the night air&mdash;and forth rushed the eager
-crowd that had so lately thronged the church;
-each with his lighted taper in his hand, and
-pressing forward to a raised platform in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">349</a></span>
-centre of the enclosure, railed in for the convenience
-of the Patriarch and his train of dignitaries.</p>
-
-<p>Ere long, the whole of the wide space was like
-a sea, in which the dark waves flung themselves
-upwards in fiery sparks, while they rolled and
-swelled in gloom beneath the surface&mdash;or like a
-spot upon a sky of tempest, into which were
-gathered all the stars of heaven to form one galaxy
-of light amid the surrounding gloom. And
-forth into this place of brightness slowly moved
-the holy train from the chapel. First came the
-bearer of the golden crucifix, surrounded by
-gilded lanterns and gleaming candlesticks;
-and next the torch-bearers, whose waxen
-candles, linked together in threes with gaudily-coloured
-ribbons, represented the Trinity; then
-moved forward a train of priests, walking two
-and two, with their flowing robes of saffron-coloured
-satin, their luxuriant beards sweeping
-down to their breasts, their brimless caps, and
-their long locks falling upon their shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more picturesque than the
-head-dress of a Greek priest. As they are not
-permitted to use either scissors or razor from
-the period of their birth, when they are vowed
-to the Church by their parents, they reduce
-the beard by plucking it, according to the
-old Jewish law; and, being almost universally
-very fine men, they do this with a care and skill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">350</a></span>
-which heighten the effect of their appearance;
-while their long thick locks are, on ordinary occasions,
-hidden beneath their caps.</p>
-
-<p>This holy body was succeeded by the Patriarch,
-supported on either side by two of the Archbishops,
-who, in the Greek Church, represent
-the Apostles, as the Patriarch himself personates
-the Saviour, and followed by the ten
-others in robes of such dazzling brilliancy that
-any attempt at description would be idle. Immediately
-after these came the Bishops, walking
-two and two; succeeded in their turn by Logotheti
-and Vogoride, another train of priests, and
-finally by that portion of the congregation who
-had not been able to effect an earlier egress from
-the church.</p>
-
-<p>The junior priests arranged themselves in a
-circle at the foot of the platform, which was
-soon filled by the heads of the Church, and the
-lay dignitaries, among whom stood my father.
-The Patriarch read a portion of the scriptures,
-from an ample volume that lay open on the
-stand before him: the attendant priests chanted
-a psalm which rose and fell on the night wind
-in solemn cadences; and, finally, the elder of the
-Bishops, having placed in the hand of the Patriarch
-one of the triple candles which I have
-already named, wherewith to bless the people;
-and subsequently two linked together, representing
-the double nature of Christ; the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">351</a></span>
-crowd bowed their uncovered heads, and crossed
-themselves seven times, with the collected points
-of the two fore-fingers and the thumb; after
-which a passage was with difficulty forced
-through the crowd for the return of the procession,
-whose chant gradually died away upon the
-ear, as it disappeared beneath the portal of the
-church, and in five minutes more we were alone,
-gazing out upon the empty enclosure flickered
-with moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>It was a solemn moment! The pomp and circumstance
-of human worship had passed away,
-and we looked only on the uncertain moon, over
-which the light scud was rapidly drifting; while
-the only sound that fell upon our ears was the
-sighing of the midnight wind through the leaves
-of the tall plane tree. I bowed my head in silence
-upon the cushion against which I leaned&mdash;my
-excited fancies were suddenly sobered, my throbbing
-pulses stilled&mdash;Nature had spoken to my
-heart, and my spirit was subdued beneath her
-influence. It was a sudden and strange reaction;
-and, could I at that moment have escaped
-to the solitude of my own chamber, I do
-not think that one idle memory of the magnificence
-which I had so lately witnessed would
-have intruded on my reveries.</p>
-
-<p>Man’s pride, and pomp, and power, had
-fettered my fancy, and riveted my gaze&mdash;But it
-was night; the still, soft night, with its pale<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">352</a></span>
-moon, its mysterious clouds, and its sighing
-voice, which had touched my spirit. In such
-hours, the heart would be alone with <span class="smcap">God</span>!</p>
-
-<p>When we re-entered the church, I feared that
-I should have fainted; thick volumes of smoke
-were rolling heavily along the roof; the suffocating
-incense was mounting in columns from
-the censers&mdash;the myriad tapers were adding
-their heat to that of the burning perfume; and
-the transition from the light pure atmosphere
-without was sickening. I persisted, nevertheless,
-in my determination of remaining until the close
-of the ceremony, which concluded with the Declaration
-of Faith, read by Logotheti; and a portion
-of the Gospel, delivered from the pulpit by
-a priest, richly dressed in blue and silver.</p>
-
-<p>The grey light of morning was glimmering on
-the Bosphorus as we returned to the house,
-where we breakfasted, and then retired to bed
-with aching heads and dazzled eyes, to prepare
-for the fatigues of the morrow.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">353</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Feasting after Fasting&mdash;Visit to the Patriarch&mdash;Gorgeous Procession&mdash;Inconvenient
-Enthusiasm&mdash;Indisposition of the Patriarch&mdash;The Ceremony
-of Unrobing&mdash;The Impromptu Fair&mdash;The Patriarch at Home&mdash;The
-Golden Eggs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To</span> what a breakfast did we sit down the following
-morning! The long and rigorous fast
-was over, and a hearty vengeance was to be
-taken for the previous forty days of penance
-and abstinence. It was amusing to remark with
-what interest every dish was examined, and
-how universally each was rejected which was
-not composed of some hitherto forbidden luxury.
-The centre of the table was occupied by a porcelain
-bowl filled with eggs boiled hard, and
-stained a fine red with logwood; but it was
-placed there merely in compliance with the national
-custom, as an Easter emblem; for on
-this, the first day of emancipation from the
-thrall of fast, no individual of the party had
-a thought to bestow on such primitive fare.</p>
-
-<p>At the conclusion of the meal, I went, accompanied
-by my father, and a fine youth who had
-escaped from college for the Easter recess, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">354</a></span>
-who volunteered to act as interpreter, to pay
-a visit to the Patriarch, who had expressed a
-desire to make our acquaintance. We were
-conducted through several large, cold, scantily
-furnished apartments, presenting rather the
-appearance of belonging to a barrack than to
-an episcopal palace, with their floors thickly
-strown with bay leaves, which emitted a delicious
-perfume as we passed along, to the private
-sitting-room overlooking the court of the
-church, where we seated ourselves to await the
-arrival of the Patriarch, who had not yet left
-the Sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden rush from the door of the church
-called us to the windows, whence we could distinguish,
-in the distance, the gorgeous procession
-which was conducting the Patriarch home after
-eight and forty hours of constant ceremonial.
-We had ample time to enjoy the spectacle, for
-the throng was so dense, that it was with the
-utmost difficulty that the beadles and <em>kavasses</em>
-could force a passage through the excited and
-clamorous multitude, for the objects of their
-overweening and inconvenient enthusiasm. Nor
-was the difficulty likely to decrease, for the
-crowd were still pouring out from the church,
-clinging one to the other to secure their footing,
-and defying alike the many-thonged whips of
-the beadles, and the powerful elbows and staves
-of the police.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">355</a></span>The Patriarch, who had rigorously observed
-the fast throughout the whole of Lent; and
-who had, moreover, only partially recovered
-from a severe and lingering illness, was little
-able, after forty-eight consecutive hours of exertion,
-to contend with this unlooked-for and gratuitous
-demand upon his energies; and as he
-moved forward, supported by two of the Bishops,
-he continually implored the forbearance of the
-people, who, in their eagerness to kiss the hem
-of his garment, subjected him to no slight risk
-of suffocation. But he implored in vain; the
-crowd shouted and struggled&mdash;the beadles
-struck and shoved&mdash;and the priests threatened
-and expostulated&mdash;unheeded; while the Patriarch
-was ultimately lifted from his feet, and
-carried to the foot of the great stair leading to
-the palace, by half a dozen of his followers.</p>
-
-<p>The solemn chant of the approaching priests
-instantly re-echoed through the vast pile, and
-an avenue was formed from the portal of the
-building to the door of the apartment in which
-we stood. First entered the incense-bearer,
-who swung his censor twice or thrice at each
-extremity of the room, and then hastily withdrew;
-and he was almost immediately followed
-by the whole train of Bishops, sinking under the
-weight of jewels and embroidery in which they
-were attired, and who took their places in line
-along the edge of the divan, and there awaited in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">356</a></span>
-silence the arrival of the two Archbishops who
-preceded the Patriarch. The sight was dazzling!
-On all sides a mass of gold and precious stones,
-of tissue and embroidery, presented itself; and
-the eye actually ached with gazing. After the
-lapse of a few seconds, the Great Dignitaries also
-arrived: and as I advanced to kiss the hand of
-the Patriarch, I felt completely overawed by the
-magnificence of the spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>The ceremony of unrobing followed, during
-which the solemn chanting of the priests, who
-lined the gallery through which the train had
-passed, was never once interrupted; and as the
-Bishops cast off robe after robe of costly silk,
-gorgeous brocade, and glittering tissue, I only
-marvelled how they could have supported such
-a weight of dress amid the crowd that had so
-unmercifully pressed upon them below, without
-sinking under it!</p>
-
-<p>A furred mantle having been flung over the
-shoulders of the Patriarch, he was conducted
-from the apartment, followed by the Bishops;
-and we remained for a time watching the movements
-of the multitude in the court beneath,
-while he prepared himself to receive the numerous
-visits which he had to undergo, ere he
-could enjoy the repose that he so much needed.
-Triumphal arches, formed of green boughs and
-flowering shrubs, had been hastily set up in
-every direction, and beneath these stood the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">357</a></span>
-sherbet venders, and confectioners, without
-whom no festival is complete in the East.</p>
-
-<p>The church doors were already closed: and
-the versatile Greeks were now as ardent and
-eager in the pursuit of pleasure as they had
-been but an hour previously in that of salvation.
-Most of them were employed in re-arranging
-their turbans, which had been unwound in the
-late struggle; others were squatted on the
-ground, eating <em>yahourt</em> (a sort of coagulated
-buttermilk) out of small earthen basins, which
-they emptied with their forefinger, with a rapidity
-perfectly surprising; and others again
-surrounding a <em>mohalib&egrave;</em> merchant, whose large
-tray, neatly covered with a white cloth, china
-saucers, and shining brass spoons shaped like
-trowels, enhanced the relish of the dainty that
-he dispensed&mdash;a species of inferior blanc-manger,
-eaten with rose-water and powdered sugar.</p>
-
-<p>A servant having announced that the Patriarch
-awaited us in another department, we followed
-him to a spacious saloon in the opposite
-wing of the palace, where we found the magnificent
-Prelate seated in a cushioned chair raised
-a few steps from the floor. He had exchanged
-his party-coloured raiment for a flowing robe of
-violet silk with a falling collar of velvet, and
-wore about his neck a massive gold chain, from
-which was suspended a star of brilliants. On
-his right hand were two baskets of variegated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">358</a></span>
-wicker-work; the one containing eggs of a crimson
-colour richly gilt, and the other filled with
-eggs of white and gold; while on his left-hand, a
-larger basket was upheaped with others simply
-stained with logwood, like those which I had
-seen on the breakfast table.</p>
-
-<p>He received us with much politeness; and,
-through the medium of our young friend, who
-made an admirable Dragoman, he asked me
-several questions on the impressions which I had
-received in the East: appeared gratified at the
-admiration that I expressed of the gorgeous ceremonial
-to which I had so lately been a witness;
-and regretted that the exhaustion under which
-he was then suffering from the fatigues of the
-last two days rendered him unable to converse
-with me, as he had been desirous of doing.</p>
-
-<p>Coffee and sweetmeats were shortly afterwards
-served; and, as I was aware that the anti-room
-was thronged with persons who were waiting to
-pay their compliments to him, I rose to depart;
-when he presented to me a couple of the gilded
-eggs, which he accompanied by a flattering
-expression of the pleasure that my visit had
-afforded to him, and a hope that he should again
-see me when his health was re-established. I
-made as handsome a reply as I was capable of
-doing; pressed to my lips the holy fingers which
-were extended towards me, and took my leave.</p>
-
-<p>I was not aware, as I received the eggs, of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">359</a></span>
-extent of the compliment that had been paid to me,
-which I only learnt accidentally, on inquiring the
-origin and meaning of so singular an offering.
-The custom, as I was informed, is of so ancient
-a date, that no reason, save its antiquity, can
-now be adduced for its observance; but great
-ceremony is kept up in the distribution. To the
-principal persons of the nation the Patriarch
-gives two of those eggs which are gilt, to the
-next in rank one gilt and one plain&mdash;then follows
-one gilt&mdash;then two plain&mdash;and finally one&mdash;but,
-to each person who is admitted to the
-presence of the Patriarch, he is under the necessity
-of making the offering, be the guest who he
-may; and a day is set apart during the week,
-on which the whole of the male Greek population
-of Constantinople have the right to receive
-it at his hands, until extreme fatigue
-obliges him to resign the office to the Grand-Vicar.</p>
-
-<p>On returning to the house of our friends, we
-partook of coffee, and the delicious Easter cake
-peculiar to the Greeks; and immediately afterwards
-embarked in our ca&iuml;que, which was to
-convey us to the Echelles des Morts, in order to
-witness the festivities of the Armenians in the
-great cemetery.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">360</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">High Street of Pera&mdash;Dangers and Donkeys&mdash;Travelling in an Araba&mdash;Fondness
-of the Orientals for their Cemeteries&mdash;Singular Spectacle&mdash;Moral
-Supineness of the Armenians&mdash;M. Nubar&mdash;The Fair&mdash;Armenian
-Dance&mdash;Anti-Exclusives&mdash;Water Venders&mdash;Being &agrave; la
-Franka&mdash;Wrestling Rings&mdash;The Battle of the Sects.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> araba was already at the door when we
-arrived at home; and, weary with mounting
-the steep ascent to Pera, I gladly threw myself
-upon the crimson mattress, and among the yielding
-cushions, and prepared to become a spectator
-of this new festival in luxurious inaction.</p>
-
-<p>Let no one venture either on foot, on horseback,
-or in a carriage, along the all-but-interminable
-High Street of Pera, on a f&ecirc;te-day, if
-he be in a hurry! In the first place, two moderately-sized
-individuals who chance to be opposite
-neighbours may shake hands from their own
-doors without moving an inch forward&mdash;and in
-the next, there is no other road from Topphann&egrave;
-or Galata (the principal landing-places) to the
-Great Cemetery. And then the natives of the
-East have a very sociable, but extremely inconvenient
-habit of walking with their arms about
-each other’s necks, or holding hands like children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">361</a></span>
-in parties of five or six, although they are
-obliged, from the narrowness of the thoroughfare,
-to move along sideways; but, nevertheless,
-they will not slacken their hold until the
-necessity for so doing becomes sufficiently imperative
-to admit no alternative.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;"><a name="f4" id="f4"></a><img src="images/i_p361.jpg" width="350" height="442"
-alt="A STREET IN PERA." title="" />
-
-<p class="center">A STREET IN PERA.</p></div>
-
-<p>Another peculiarity attending an Eastern mob
-is its utter disregard of being run over, or
-knocked down: an Oriental will see your horse’s
-nose resting on his shoulder, and even then he
-will not move out of the way until you compel
-him; and when your arabajhe warns him that
-he is almost under the wheel of the carriage, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">362</a></span>
-looks at him as though he wondered at the
-wanton waste of words bestowed upon so insignificant
-a piece of information.</p>
-
-<p>But, if the bipeds are difficult of management,
-the quadrupeds are altogether unmanageable!
-Let those whose nerves are shattered by the
-rattle of the London carts come here, and have
-their temper tried by the donkeys of Constantinople.
-You have scarcely turned the corner of
-the street, and forced your way among the
-clinging, chattering, lounging mob, ere you
-come upon a gang of donkeys&mdash;your horse is
-restless, he champs the bit, paws with his foreleg,
-and backs among the crowd, in his impatience
-to get on; you must be contented to allow
-him the privilege of champing, pawing, and
-backing, for there is no contending against a
-string of a dozen donkeys, laden with tiles.</p>
-
-<p>While you are trying to look amused at your
-dilemma, and endeavouring with “favour and
-fair words” to induce their owner to arrange
-them in regular line in order to enable you to
-pass, you hear a portentous clatter a hundred
-yards a-head:&mdash;you look forward with foreboding,
-and your fears have not misled you: it
-is, indeed, “the meeting of the donkeys;” and
-another gang, heavily charged with earth, or
-bricks, or unhewn stone, are gravely approaching
-to entangle themselves among your first
-favourites, and to be dislodged only with blows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">363</a></span>
-and kicks very ill-calculated to pacify either you
-or your horse.</p>
-
-<p>In an araba your case is still more hopeless;
-for a horse <em>must</em> get on at last, by dint of
-intruding upon the pavement, and impudently
-poking his nose into every window; applying his
-shoulder to the back of one individual, and whisking
-his long tail into the face of another&mdash;but
-a carriage following a carriage must be satisfied
-to travel at the pace which may chance to be
-agreeable to its leader&mdash;while a carriage meeting
-a carriage is pushed one way, lifted another,
-driven against the walls of the houses, and
-shoved into the kennel, until you begin to consider
-it very doubtful whether you possess sufficient
-strength of wrist and tenacity of finger,
-to enable you to remain within, while such
-violent proceedings are taking place without.
-And when to these difficulties are superadded
-the inconvenience of a dense, reckless, pleasure-seeking
-mob, it must be conceded on all hands that
-the progress along the High Street of Pera on a
-festival day is by no means “easy travelling.”</p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of which I am about to speak
-we encountered three detachments of donkeys,
-four arabas, six horses laden with timber, and a
-flock of sheep&mdash;fortunately, we were by no means
-pressed for time; though how we escaped victimizing
-a few of the supine subjects of his Sublime
-Highness, I cannot take upon me to explain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">364</a></span>I have already spoken elsewhere of the indifference,
-if not absolute enjoyment, with which
-the inhabitants of the East frequent their burying-grounds;
-but on the occasion of this festival
-I was more impressed than ever by the
-extent to which it is carried. The whole of the
-Christian Cemetery had assumed the appearance
-of a fair&mdash;nor was this all, for the very
-tombs of the dead were taxed to enhance the
-comforts of the living; and many was the tent
-whose centre table, covered with a fringed cloth,
-and temptingly spread with biscuits, sweetmeats,
-and sherbet, was the stately monument of some
-departed Armenian! Grave-stones steadied the
-poles which supported the swings&mdash;divans, comfortably
-overlaid with cushions, were but chintz-covered
-sepulchres&mdash;the step that enabled the
-boy to reach his seat in the merry-go-round
-was the earth which had been heaped upon the
-breast of the man whose course was run&mdash;the
-same trees flung their long shadows over the
-sports of the living and the slumbers of the
-dead&mdash;the kibaub merchants had dug hollows
-to cook their dainties under the shelter of the
-tombs&mdash;and the smoking booths were amply
-supplied with seats and counters from the same
-wide waste of death.</p>
-
-<p>On one side, a slender train of priests were
-committing a body to the earth, and mingling
-their lugubrious chant with the shrill instru<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">365</a></span>ments
-of a party of dancers; on the other, a
-patrol of dismounted lancers were threading
-among the many-coloured tents, in order to
-maintain an order which the heavy-witted Armenians
-lacked all inclination to break.</p>
-
-<p>I never saw a set of people who bore so decidedly
-the stamp of having been born to slavery
-as the Armenians: they seem even to love the
-rattle of their chains; they have no high feeling,
-no emulation, no enthusiasm, no longing for “a
-place among the nations;” no aspirations after
-the bright and the beautiful; no ideas, in short,
-beyond a pitiful imitation of their Moslem masters,
-whom they consider as the <em>ne plus ultra</em> of
-all perfection.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of the upper class of Armenians
-I have already described. Give them a more
-becoming head-dress, and their costume is surpassingly
-graceful; but their advantages are
-all external; their dreams are all of piastres;
-they have no soul. If you talk to them of their
-subjection to the Osmanli, what do they reply?
-“All that you say may be very true, but it
-does not concern me&mdash;my affairs are in a most
-prosperous condition.”</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to make them sensible of their
-own social position; they listen, twirl their
-mustachioes, flourish their white handkerchiefs,
-replenish their chibouks, utter from time to time
-“<em>pekk&eacute;,</em>” (very well), with an inane smile, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">366</a></span>
-ultimately walk away, as well satisfied with
-themselves and with their tyrants as though
-the subject were one of the most irrelevant
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>From this sweeping accusation of apathy and
-self-depreciation, even after many months passed
-in the East, I can except only one individual;
-but that one is indeed a rare and a bright example
-to the rest of his countrymen. To those
-travellers who have visited Constantinople, and
-who have had the pleasure and advantage of
-his acquaintance, I need scarcely say that I
-allude to M. Nubar, the eminent merchant of
-Galata, whose extensive information, sound
-judgment, and habitual courtesy, render his
-friendship extremely valuable to those who are
-fortunate enough to secure it.</p>
-
-<p>To return, however, to the festival of the
-Champ des Morts, from which I have digressed.
-Every hundred yards that we advanced, the
-scene became more striking. One long line of
-diminutive tents formed a temporary street of
-eating-houses; there were kibaubs, pillauf,
-fritters, pickled vegetables, soups, rolls stuffed
-with fine herbs, sausages, fried fish, bread of
-every quality, and cakes of all dimensions.
-Escaping from this too savoury locality, we
-found ourselves among the sherbet venders,
-whose marquees, lined with blue or crimson,
-were pitched with more precision and regard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">367</a></span>
-to comfort and convenience than those of the
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">restaurateurs</em>. Mirrors, bouquets, and a display
-of goblets of all shapes and sizes, were skilfully
-set forth in many of them; some even indulged
-in the luxury of pictures, which were universally-glaring
-and highly-coloured French prints
-of female heads, of the most common description;
-and in these tents chairs and cushions
-were alike provided for the guests; while in one
-corner stood the mangal, ready to supply the
-necessary fragment of live coal for igniting the
-chibouk.</p>
-
-<p>Scattered among these more assuming establishments
-were the stands of the itinerant
-merchants, whose little cupolaed fountains threw
-up a slender thread of water to the accompaniment
-of a tinkling sound, produced by the contact
-of half a dozen thin plates of metal; while
-a circle of sherbet glasses, filled with liquids of
-different colours, and interspersed with green
-boughs, and suspended lemons, looked so cool
-and refreshing that they were more tempting
-by far than the aristocratic establishments of
-the marquee owners. Here and there a flat
-tomb, fancifully covered with gold-embroidered
-handkerchiefs, was overspread with sweetmeats
-and preserved fruits; while, in the midst of
-these rival establishments, groups of men were
-seated in a circle, wherever a little shade could
-be obtained, smoking their long pipes in silence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">368</a></span>
-with their diminutive coffee-cups resting on the
-ground beside them. The wooden kiosk overhanging
-the Bosphorus was crowded; and many
-a party was snugly niched among the acacias,
-with their backs resting against the tombs, and
-the sunshine flickering at their feet.</p>
-
-<p>But the leading feature of the festival was the
-Armenian dance, that was going forward in
-every direction, and which was so perfectly
-characteristic of the people that it merits particular
-mention. A large circle was formed,
-frequently consisting of between forty and fifty
-individuals, (chance comers falling in as they
-pleased without question or hindrance) holding
-each other by the hand, or round the neck, and
-wedged closely together so as to form a compact
-body; the leader of the dance being the
-only one who detached himself from the rest,
-and held the person next to him at arm’s length.
-In the centre of the ring stood, and sometimes
-danced, the musician, whose instrument was
-either a species of small, cracked guitar, with
-wire strings, which he struck with very slender
-regard to either time or tune; or a bagpipe precisely
-similar to that of Scotland, but not played
-in the same spirit-stirring style, the Armenian
-performer making no attempt at any thing beyond
-noise, and never by any accident forming
-three consecutive notes which harmonized; but
-his hearers were not fastidious, and the music<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">369</a></span>
-was, at least, in good keeping with the dance.
-Beside the minstrel, such as I have described
-him, moved the buffoon of the company, who
-also, by some extraordinary and perfectly Armenian
-concatenation of ideas, acted as Master
-of the Ceremonies.</p>
-
-<p>The leader flourished a painted muslin handkerchief,
-while he lifted up first one foot and
-then the other, as fowls do sometimes in a farmyard;
-poising the body on one leg for an instant,
-and then changing the position. This
-movement was followed by the whole of the
-party with more or less awkwardness; and thus
-hopping, balancing, and shifting their feet, they
-slowly worked round and round the circle,
-without changing either the time or the movement
-for several consecutive hours; the different
-individuals falling in and out of the ring
-as their inclination prompted, without disturbing
-in the slightest degree the economy of the
-dance. There was nothing exclusive in these
-Terpsichorean circles, where the smart serving-man’s
-neck was clasped by the sinewy hand of
-the street-porter, and where the embroidered
-Albanian legging and European shoe were
-placed in juxtaposition with the bare limb and
-heelless slipper. There must have been at least
-a dozen of these dances going forward in the
-fair, (for such I may truly call it), with a perseverance
-and solemnity perfectly astonishing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">370</a></span>
-when it is remembered that many of the individuals
-thus engaged had walked five and six
-leagues to share in the festival, and would have
-no resting-place but the earth whereon to sleep
-away their fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>Great was the commerce of the water-venders,
-who traversed the crowd in every direction,
-with their classically formed earthen jars upon
-their shoulders, and their crystal goblets in
-their hands, who, for a couple of <em>paras</em>, poured
-forth a draught of sparkling water, which almost
-made one thirsty to look at it; and were
-as particular and punctilious in cleansing the
-glass after every customer, as though they were
-under the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">surveillance</em> of his successor.</p>
-
-<p>A few, a very few, of the revellers had indulged
-in deeper potations, and were exhibiting proofs
-of their inebriety in their unsteady gait and
-uncertain utterance; but intemperance is not
-<em>yet</em> the common vice of the East; although it
-bids fair in time to become such. A very talented
-and distinguished individual, with whom
-I was lately conversing on the subject of the
-different degrees of civilization attained by particular
-nations, said of the Russians that they
-had commenced with champagne and ballet-dancers.
-Glorious was it, therefore, for the
-half dozen Armenians who were staggering
-among the crowd, to have profited as far as
-they could by so brilliant an example. Being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">371</a></span>
-intoxicated is, according to the Eastern phraseology,
-being <em>&agrave; la Franka</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from the crowd were wrestling-rings,
-where the combatants exhibited their prowess
-precisely after the fashion of the Ancient Romans;
-and on all sides were bands of Bohemians,
-as dark-eyed and as voluble as the
-gipsies of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The festival lasted three days, and not a single
-hand nor voice was raised in violence during the
-whole period; when, as if resolved to vindicate
-themselves from the aspersion of utter insensibility,
-the Catholic and Schismatic sects terminated
-their sports with a regular fight, in front
-of an Armenian church in Galata. The Schismatic
-party were returning to the place of embarkation
-in order to pass over to Constantinople,
-and singing at the pitch of their voices, at
-the precise moment when a priest of the opposite
-sect was performing mass in the church. A
-messenger was despatched to the revellers to
-enforce silence until they had quitted the precincts
-of the chapel; but his errand was a vain
-one; the Schismatics were not to be controlled;
-a crowd collected&mdash;the merits of the case were
-explained&mdash;the Catholics became furious, and
-insisted on the instant departure of the intruders&mdash;the
-Schismatics waxed valiant, and refused
-to move&mdash;and, finally, after a fight in which
-many blows were given and received, the Turks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">372</a></span>
-stepped in as mediators, and carried off a score
-of the combatants to Stamboul, where they were
-detained for the night, fined a few piastres, and
-dismissed like a set of lubberly schoolboys,
-who had wound up a holyday with a boxing-match!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">373</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Mosques at Midnight&mdash;Baron Rothschild&mdash;Firmans and Orders&mdash;A
-Proposition&mdash;Masquerading&mdash;St. Sophia by Lamplight&mdash;The Congregation&mdash;The
-Mosque of Sultan Achmet&mdash;Colossal Pillars&mdash;Return
-to the Harem&mdash;The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam&mdash;Count Bathiany&mdash;The Party&mdash;St.
-Sophia by Daylight&mdash;Erroneous Impression&mdash;Turkish Paradise&mdash;Piety
-of the Turkish Women&mdash;The Vexed Traveller&mdash;Disappointment&mdash;Confusion
-of Architecture&mdash;The Sweating Stone&mdash;Women’s
-Gallery&mdash;View from the Gallery&mdash;Gog and Magog at Constantinople&mdash;The
-Impenetrable Door&mdash;Ancient Tradition&mdash;Leads of the
-Mosque&mdash;Gallery of the Dome&mdash;The Doves&mdash;The Atmeidan&mdash;The
-Tree of Groans&mdash;The Mosque of Sultan Achmet&mdash;Antique Vases&mdash;Historical
-Pulpit&mdash;The Inner Court&mdash;The Six Minarets&mdash;The Mosque
-of Solimani&egrave;&mdash;Painted Windows&mdash;Ground-plan of the Principal
-Mosques&mdash;The Treasury of Solimani&egrave;&mdash;Mausoleum of Solyman the
-Magnificent&mdash;Model of the Mosque at Mecca&mdash;Mausoleums in General&mdash;Indispensable
-Accessories&mdash;The Medresch&mdash;Mosque of Sultan
-Mahmoud at Topphann&egrave;.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Although</span> I am about to describe to my readers
-a morning at the mosques, I must nevertheless
-first conduct them into the mosques at
-midnight, by recounting a visit to St. Sophia
-and Sultan Achmet, which I have hitherto forborne
-to mention, in the hope (since realized) of
-being enabled, ere my departure from Constantinople,
-both to form and to impart a better idea<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">374</a></span>
-of these magnificent edifices than my first adventurous
-survey had rendered me capable of
-doing.</p>
-
-<p>During a visit that I made to a Turkish
-family, with whom I had become acquainted,
-the conversation turned on the difficulty of obtaining
-a Firman to see the mosques; when it
-was stated that Baron Rothschild was the only
-private individual to whom the favour had ever
-been accorded: (probably upon the same principle
-that the Pope instituted the order of St.
-Gregory, and bestowed the first decoration upon
-the Hebraic Cr&oelig;sus) and that travellers were
-thus dependent on the uncertain chance of encountering,
-during their residence in Turkey,
-some distinguished person to whom the marble
-doors were permitted to fall back.</p>
-
-<p>In vain I questioned and cross-questioned; I
-failed to obtain a ray of hope beyond the very
-feeble one held out by this infrequent casualty;
-and I could not refrain from expressing the
-bitterness of my disappointment, with an emphasis
-which convinced my Musselmaun hearers
-that I was sincere.</p>
-
-<p>Hours passed away, and other subjects had
-succeeded to this most interesting one, when, as
-the evening closed in, I remarked that &mdash;&mdash; Bey,
-the eldest son of the house, was carrying on a
-very energetic <em>sotto voce</em> conversation with his
-venerable father; and I was not a little asto<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">375</a></span>nished
-when he ultimately informed me, in his
-imperfect French, that there was one method of
-visiting the mosques, if I had nerve to attempt
-it, which would probably prove successful; and
-that, in the event of my resolving to run the risk,
-he was himself so convinced of its practicability,
-that he would accompany me, with the consent
-of his father, attended by the old K&iuml;ara, or
-House-steward; upon the understanding (and
-on this the grey-bearded Effendi had resolutely
-insisted) that in the event of detection it was to
-be <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sauve qui peut</em>; an arrangement that would
-enable his son at once to elude pursuit, if he
-exercised the least ingenuity or caution.</p>
-
-<p>What European traveller, possessed of the least
-spirit of adventure, would refuse to encounter
-danger in order to stand beneath the dome of
-St. Sophia? And, above all, what wandering
-Giaour could resist the temptation of entering
-a mosque during High Prayer?</p>
-
-<p>These were the questions that I asked myself
-as the young Bey vowed himself so gallantly to
-the venture, (to him, in any case, not without its
-dangers) in order to avert from me the disappointment
-which I dreaded.</p>
-
-<p>I at once understood that the attempt must
-be made in a Turkish dress; but this fact was
-of trifling importance, as no costume in the
-world lends itself more readily or more conveniently
-to the purposes of disguise. After<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">376</a></span>
-having deliberately weighed the chances for and
-against detection, I resolved to run the risk;
-and accordingly I stained my eyebrows with
-some of the dye common in the harem; concealed
-my female attire beneath a magnificent
-pelisse, lined with sables, which fastened from
-my chin to my feet; pulled a <em>f&egrave;z</em> low upon my
-brow; and, preceded by a servant with a lantern,
-attended by the Bey, and followed by the
-K&iuml;ara and a pipe-bearer, at half-past ten o’clock
-I sallied forth on my adventurous errand.</p>
-
-<p>We had not mentioned to either the wife or
-the mother of the Bey whither we were bound,
-being fearful of alarming them unnecessarily;
-and they consequently remained perfectly satisfied
-with the assurance of the old gentleman,
-that I was anxious to see the Bosphorus by
-moonlight; though a darker night never spread
-its mantle over the earth.</p>
-
-<p>I am extremely doubtful whether, on a less
-exciting occasion, I could have kept time with
-the rapid pace of my companion, over the vile
-pavement of Constantinople; as it was, however,
-I dared not give way, lest any one among the
-individuals who followed us, and who were perhaps
-bound on the same errand, should penetrate
-my disguise.</p>
-
-<p>“If we escape from St. Sophia unsuspected,”
-said my chivalrous friend, “we will then make another
-bold attempt; we will visit the mosque of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">377</a></span>
-Sultan Achmet; and as this is a high festival,
-if you risk the adventure, you will have done
-what no Infidel has ever yet dared to do; but I
-forewarn you that, should you be discovered,
-and fail to make your escape on the instant, you
-will be torn to pieces.”</p>
-
-<p>This assertion somewhat staggered me, and
-for an instant my woman-spirit quailed; I contented
-myself, however, with briefly replying:
-“When we leave St. Sophia, we will talk of this,”
-and continued to walk beside him in silence. At
-length we entered the spacious court of the
-mosque, and as the servants stooped to withdraw
-my shoes, the Bey murmured in my ear:
-“Be firm, or you are lost!”&mdash;and making a
-strong effort to subdue the feeling of mingled
-awe and fear, which was rapidly stealing over
-me, I pulled the <em>f&egrave;z</em> deeper upon my eyebrows,
-and obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>On passing the threshold, I found myself in a
-covered peristyle, whose gigantic columns of
-granite are partially sunk in the wall of which
-they form a part; the floor was covered with
-fine matting, and the coloured lamps, which were
-suspended in festoons from the lofty ceiling,
-shed a broad light on all the surrounding objects.
-In most of the recesses formed by the
-pillars, beggars were crouched down, holding
-in front of them their little metal basins, to receive
-the <em>paras</em> of the charitable; while servants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">378</a></span>
-lounged to and fro, or squatted in groups upon
-the matting, awaiting the egress of their employers.
-As I looked around me, our own attendant
-moved forward, and raising the curtain
-which veiled a double door of bronze, situated
-at mid-length of the peristyle, I involuntarily
-shrank back before the blaze of light that
-burst upon me.</p>
-
-<p>Far as the eye could reach upwards, circles
-of coloured fire, appearing as if suspended in
-mid-air, designed the form of the stupendous
-dome; while beneath, devices of every shape
-and colour were formed by myriads of lamps of
-various hues: the Imperial closet, situated opposite
-to the pulpit, was one blaze of refulgence,
-and its gilded lattices flashed back the brilliancy,
-till it looked like a gigantic meteor!</p>
-
-<p>As I stood a few paces within the doorway,
-I could not distinguish the limits of the edifice&mdash;I
-looked forward, upward&mdash;to the right hand,
-and to the left&mdash;but I could only take in a given
-space, covered with human beings, kneeling in regular
-lines, and at a certain signal bowing their
-turbaned heads to the earth, as if one soul and
-one impulse animated the whole congregation;
-while the shrill chanting of the choir pealed
-through the vast pile, and died away in lengthened
-cadences among the tall dark pillars which
-support it.</p>
-
-<p>And this was St. Sophia! To me it seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">379</a></span>
-like a creation of enchantment&mdash;the light&mdash;the
-ringing voices&mdash;the mysterious extent, which
-baffled the earnestness of my gaze&mdash;the ten
-thousand turbaned Moslems, all kneeling with
-their faces turned towards Mecca, and at intervals
-laying their foreheads to the earth&mdash;the
-bright and various colours of the dresses&mdash;and
-the rich and glowing tints of the carpets that
-veiled the marble floor&mdash;all conspired to form a
-scene of such unearthly magnificence, that I felt
-as though there could be no reality in what I
-looked on, but that, at some sudden signal, the
-towering columns would fail to support the vault
-of light above them, and all would become
-void.</p>
-
-<p>I had forgotten every thing in the mere exercise
-of vision;&mdash;the danger of detection&mdash;the
-flight of time&mdash;almost my own identity&mdash;when
-my companion uttered the single word “<em>Gel</em>&mdash;Come”&mdash;and,
-passing forward to another door
-on the opposite side of the building, I instinctively
-followed him, and once more found myself
-in the court.</p>
-
-<p>What a long breath I drew, as the cold air
-swept across my forehead! I felt like one who
-has suddenly stepped beyond the circle of an
-enchanter, and dissolved the spell of some
-mighty magic.</p>
-
-<p>“Whither shall we now bend our way?”
-asked my companion, as we resumed our shoes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">380</a></span>"To Sultan Achmet,”&mdash;I answered briefly.
-I could not have bestowed many words on my
-best friend at that moment; the very effort at
-speech was painful.</p>
-
-<p>In ten minutes more we stood before the
-mosque of Sultan Achmet, and, ascending the
-noble flight of steps which lead to the principal
-entrance, we again cast off our shoes, and entered
-the temple.</p>
-
-<p>Infinitely less vast than St. Sophia, this
-mosque impressed me with a feeling of awe, much
-greater than that which I had experienced in
-visiting its more stately neighbour&mdash;four colossal
-pillars of marble, five or six feet in circumference,
-support the dome, and these were wreathed
-with lamps, even to the summit; while the number
-of lights suspended from the ceiling gave the
-whole edifice the appearance of a space overhung
-with stars. We entered at a propitious
-moment, for the Faithful were performing their
-prostrations, and had consequently no time to
-speculate on our appearance; the chanting was
-wilder and shriller than that which I had just
-heard at St. Sophia; it sounded to me, in fact,
-more like the delirious outcry, which we may
-suppose to have been uttered by a band of
-Delphic Priestesses, than the voices of a choir of
-uninspired human beings.</p>
-
-<p>We passed onward over the yielding carpets,
-which returned no sound beneath our footsteps:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">381</a></span>
-and there was something strangely supernatural
-in the spectacle of several human beings moving
-along, without creating a single echo in the vast
-space they traversed. We paused an instant
-beside the marble-arched platform, on which the
-muezzin was performing his prostrations to the
-shrill cry of the choir;&mdash;we lingered another, to
-take a last look at the kneeling thousands who
-were absorbed in their devotions; and then,
-rapidly descending into the court, my companion
-uttered a hasty congratulation on the successful
-issue of our bold adventure, to which I
-responded a most heartfelt ‘Amen’&mdash;and in less
-than an hour, I cast off my <em>f&egrave;z</em> and my pelisse
-in the harem of&mdash;&mdash;Effendi, and exclaimed to
-its astonished inmates:&mdash;“I have seen the
-mosques!”</p>
-
-<p>Knowing what I now know of the Turks, I
-would not run the same risk a second time,
-though the Prophet’s Beard were to be my recompense.
-There are some circumstances in
-which ignorance of the extent of the danger is
-its best antidote.</p>
-
-<p>But the feeling that remained on my mind
-was vague even to pain; I had seen St. Sophia,
-it is true, and seen it in all the glory of its million
-lamps; I had beheld it at a moment when
-no christian eye had ever heretofore looked on
-it; and when detection would have involved
-instant destruction. I had lifted aside the veil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">382</a></span>
-from the Holy of Holies&mdash;witnessed the prostration
-which followed the thrilling cry of “Allah
-Il Allah!”&mdash;and polluted, with the breath of a
-Giaour, the atmosphere of the True Believers&mdash;I
-had looked upon the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k-Islam, as he stood
-with his face turned Mecca-ward, his pale brow
-cinctured with gold, and his stately figure draped
-in white cachemere&mdash;and I had stood erect
-when every head was bowed, and every knee
-bent at the name of the Prophet; but still I had
-no definite idea of the mosque of St. Sophia; on
-the contrary, the wish that I had formerly felt
-to visit it grew to a positive craving from the
-hour in which I found myself at midnight beneath
-its fire-girdled dome, and glanced out into
-the deep and mysterious darkness beyond; and
-it was not until months afterwards that it was
-satisfied, when the arrival of Count Bathiany,
-an Hungarian nobleman, brother to the Princess
-Metternich, gave an opportunity to the curious
-of indulging their lion-hunting propensities.</p>
-
-<p>The party assembled at half-past ten in the
-morning at one of the gates of the city, near the
-Seraglio wall, known by the name of “The
-Gate of the Garden.” There were horsemen
-and pedestrians&mdash;ladies in arabas, and on foot&mdash;spruce
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em>, grave elderly gentlemen,
-anxious antiquaries, officers of the navy, dragomen,
-foreign nobles, native servants, and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">383</a></span>
-motley train of sailors and attendants, carrying
-the slippers of their several masters.</p>
-
-<p>But if the eye were confused by the number
-of objects by which it was attracted as our
-party passed, procession-like, through the narrow
-streets, amid the comments and not unfrequently
-the scowls of the Turks, who bear but
-impatiently this licensed profanation of their
-temples; the ear was infinitely more so by the
-confusion of languages which assailed it on all
-sides; here, two Russians almost set your teeth
-on edge as they exchanged a few sentences&mdash;there,
-a couple of Germans deluded you for the
-first moment into a belief that they were conversing
-in English&mdash;on one side, a dark-eyed
-stranger begged your pardon in his low soft
-Italian, for an awkwardness of which you were
-not conscious, and thus gave himself an opportunity
-of addressing you during the morning,
-without rudeness&mdash;and on the other, two smart
-midshipmen laughed out in the lightness of
-their hearts words which told of home, because
-they were breathed in the language of your own
-land&mdash;while a constant chorus of Turkish, Greek,
-and Arab, was kept up by the attendants in the
-rear.</p>
-
-<p>At length we reached St. Sophia; and I felt
-my heart beat quicker, as I once more traversed
-the flagged court, and passed the elegant fountain,
-at which the Faithful perform their ablu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">384</a></span>tions;
-with its projecting octagonal roof, its
-marble basin, and its covering of close iron net-work,
-to protect the spring from the pollution
-of the birds.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance of the peristyle to which I
-have before alluded, we put on the slippers
-we had provided, and, as soon as we had all
-passed, the doors were closed.</p>
-
-<p>How different was the aspect of every object
-around me from that which it wore on my
-last visit! Then, all was refulgent with light;
-and now, a sacred gloom hung upon the
-dark walls, and floated like a veil about our
-path. Few were they who did not pass on in
-silence; for there is a power and a sublimity in
-scenes like the one I am attempting to describe,
-which overawe for awhile even the most vulgar
-minds; while to the susceptible and contemplative
-the spell is deepened a thousand-fold.</p>
-
-<p>One burst, rather of sound than speech&mdash;the
-wordless tribute of irrepressible admiration&mdash;heralded
-our passage across the block of porphyry
-upon which close the interior doors of the
-mosque; and in less than a moment the richly carpeted
-floor of marble, porphyry, jasper, and verd-antique,
-was mosaiced with groups of gazers
-throughout its whole extent. Some stood riveted
-to the spot on which they had first halted,
-as if touched by the wand of an enchanter, and
-scarcely stirring a limb in the excess of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">385</a></span>
-absorbing contemplation; others hurried rapidly
-along, as though breathless with eager and impatient
-curiosity&mdash;one tall, pale man, with
-amber-coloured mustachioes and long thin fingers,
-was already taking notes, with his little
-red book resting against the boots that he
-carried in his hand; and a couple of antiquaries
-were just commencing a dispute <em>sotto voce</em> relatively
-to some pillars of Egyptian granite on
-the left hand side of the temple.</p>
-
-<p>Nor were the Imams idle; for they had instantly
-detected the unhandsome intrusion of
-one traveller with his boots on; an insult so
-great, that no Moslem can tolerate it; and they
-were busily employed in compelling their removal:
-accompanying the ceremony with certain
-epithets addressed to the Giaour, with
-which, if he were unfortunate enough to understand
-them, he had no opportunity of feeling
-flattered.</p>
-
-<p>Our party were not, however, the only tenants
-of the vast pile. A group of Ulemas were engaged
-in prayer as we entered, nor did they
-suffer our presence to interfere with their devotions;
-and almost in the centre of the floor
-knelt a party of women similarly engaged,
-while a couple of children, who had accompanied
-them, were chasing each other over the rich
-carpets.</p>
-
-<p>An erroneous impression has obtained in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">386</a></span>
-Europe that females do not attend, or rather,
-I should perhaps say, are not permitted to enter,
-the mosques; this, as I have just shewn, is by
-no means the case; the entrance is forbidden to
-them only during the midnight prayer. And,
-in like manner, I had been taught to believe,
-before I visited the country, that the Turks
-denied to their women the possession of souls:
-this is as false a position as the other. It is true
-that the lordly Moslem claims a paradise apart;
-where Hourii are to wreathe his brow with ever-blooming
-flowers&mdash;pour his sherbet in streams
-of perfume into its crystal vase&mdash;and fill his
-chibouk with fragrance.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> But, amid these voluptuous
-dreams, he does not quite overlook the
-eternal interests of his mere earthly partner; I
-do not believe that her future enjoyments are as
-clearly defined as those which he arrogates to
-himself&mdash;there is a little harem-like mystery
-flung over the destiny that awaits her; but,
-meanwhile, he does not altogether shut her out
-from the promise of a hereafter, from which he
-himself anticipates so full a portion of felicity.</p>
-
-<p>The Turkish women are intuitively pious;
-the exercises of religion are admirably suited to
-their style of existence. In the seclusion of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">387</a></span>harem the hour of prayer is an epoch of unwearying
-interest to the whole of its inhabitants;
-and there is something touching and
-beautiful in the humility with which, when they
-have spread their prayer-carpets, they veil themselves
-with a scarf of white muslin, ere they
-intrude into the immediate presence of their
-Maker.</p>
-
-<p>Being aware of all this, the appearance of
-females in the mosque of St. Sophia did not produce
-the same effect upon me as upon many of
-the party. Those who were lately from Europe
-could scarcely believe their eyes; and when,
-in reply to the remark of a person who stood
-near me, expressing his astonishment at such
-an apparition, I explained to him that the presence
-of females in the different mosques was
-of constant and hourly occurrence, he looked so
-exceedingly annoyed at the sweeping away of
-his ancient prejudices, that I verily believe he
-thought the deficiency of the whole female Empire
-of Turkey must be transferred to my own
-little person, and that I, at least, could have no
-soul.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the whole, the first view of St. Sophia
-disappointed me; I had carried away an idea of
-much greater extent; spacious as it was, I could
-now see from one extremity of the wide edifice
-to the other&mdash;I was no longer bewildered by the
-blaze of innumerable lights&mdash;and I know not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">388</a></span>
-wherefore, but I regretted the mysterious indistinctness
-of outline which had thralled me
-during my midnight visit.</p>
-
-<p>Ignorant as I am also of architecture as a
-science, I have a sufficient perception of the
-beautiful and the symmetrical, to make me
-lament the incongruous medley of different
-orders and materials by which I was surrounded.
-What gigantic pillars encircle the dome!&mdash;What
-individual treasures are collected together!
-But with what recklessness are they
-forced into juxtaposition! Columns of varying
-sizes and proportions; some of Egyptian granite,
-others of porphyry, others again of scagliola,
-and various precious marbles, are scattered,
-like the fragments of many distinct buildings,
-throughout the whole body of the edifice. The
-eye is bewildered, and the mind remains unsatisfied.</p>
-
-<p>Eight of the porphyry pillars are relics of the
-temple of Heliopolis; while those of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">verd-antique</em>
-are from that of Ephesus. The walls are lined
-with marble, jasper, porphyry, and verd-antique,
-to the height of a gallery which surrounds the
-temple; and which, like the base of the building,
-is floored with rich marbles, and supported
-by plain columns of the same material. But the
-dome, which was formerly adorned with minute
-mosaics, was white-washed when the Turks
-converted St. Sophia into a mosque; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">389</a></span>
-original richness of the design is now only to
-be deciphered in spots where the plaster has
-fallen away; added to which, the inferior Imams
-attached to the building make a trade of the
-fragments of mosaic that they are continually
-tearing down, and which are eagerly bought
-up by travellers, who thus encourage a Vandalism
-whose destructive effects are irreparable.</p>
-
-<p>Before we ascended to the gallery, we were introduced
-to one of the miracles of the place, in
-the shape of a column; a portion of whose surface
-is cased with iron, in one part of which a
-deep cavity is worn away beneath the metal;
-and into this orifice the visiter is invited to
-insert his finger, in order to convince himself
-of the humidity of the marble. This column is
-called by the Imams “the Sweating Stone;” but
-if the indignation of the inanimate matter at
-the transformation of a Christian temple into a
-Mahommedan mosque have really reduced it to
-a state of perpetual and palpable perspiration,
-I am under the necessity of confessing that the
-miracle was not wrought for me; for, on making
-the trial, I was conscious only of an extreme
-chill.</p>
-
-<p>Hence we ascended by a very dilapidated
-and crumbling spiral stair to the gallery, devoted
-originally to the use of the women, and
-capacious enough to contain several hundreds;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">390</a></span>
-and here the mosaic merchants plunged their
-hands into their breasts, and from amid the
-folds of their garments drew forth some thousands
-of the gilt and coloured stones which
-they had torn away from the elaborately-ornamented
-dome.</p>
-
-<p>These were soon disposed of, and then we
-were permitted to contemplate at our ease the
-marvels of the mighty pile, with its vast uncumbered
-space, its bronzed columns, (many of
-them clamped with iron to enable them to resist
-more powerfully the ravages of time,) and the
-huge, shapeless, mystic-looking masses of dark
-shadow immediately beneath the dome, which,
-after you have lost yourself in a thousand vague
-conjectures on their nature and purport, turn
-out to be nothing more than the mere daubing
-of some journeyman painter for the purpose of
-effacing two mighty cherubim, that, in days
-of yore, pointed to the Christian votary the way
-to Heaven, but which now, in the dim twilight
-of the place, look like familiar spirits, shapeless
-and grim, guarding the accumulated relics of
-the days of paganism, congregated beneath
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The view from this gallery, at the upper extremity
-of the mosque, is extremely imposing;
-from that point you take in, and feel, all the
-extent of the edifice, whose effect is rendered
-the more striking, from the fact that it is en<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">391</a></span>tirely
-laid bare beneath you, being totally free
-from the divisions and subdivisions which in
-Catholic chapels are necessary for the location
-of the different shrines. Plain and unornamented,
-save by the casing of marble already
-alluded to, the walls tower upward in
-severe beauty, until they reach the base of the
-stately dome, which is poized, as if by some
-mighty magic, on the capitals of a circle of
-gigantic and rudely fashioned pillars; immediately
-beneath you are the columns that support
-the gallery in which you stand, throughout
-the whole extent of the temple; while on
-your left hand the marble pulpit, with its flight
-of noble steps, shut in by a finely sculptured
-door of the same material, and on your right
-the Imperial closet, with its gilded lattices,
-complete the detail of the picture.</p>
-
-<p>The two huge waxen candles occupying the
-sides of the arched recess, or <em>mihrab</em>, at the
-eastern end of the building, are lighted every
-night, and last exactly twelve months; they are
-the very Gog and Magog of wax-chandlery, and
-must be at least eighteen inches in circumference.</p>
-
-<p>In making the tour of the gallery, we came
-upon a door that had been stopped with
-masonry; the frame into which it had originally
-fitted is of white marble, and remains quite
-perfect. There are traces of violence on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">392</a></span>
-brick-work, which appears to have been secured
-by some powerful cement that has indurated
-with age, until it has acquired the solidity of
-stone, and has become capable of resisting any
-ordinary effort to remove it; and this door is
-the second miracle of St. Sophia.</p>
-
-<p>The legend runs that the united attempts of
-all the masons of Stamboul are powerless
-against the rude masonry that blocks the entrance
-of this passage, by reason of a wondrous
-and most potent talisman, which human means
-have as yet failed to weaken; but that it conducts
-to an apartment in which a Greek Bishop
-is seated before a reading-desk perusing an open
-volume of so holy a nature, that no Moslem eye
-must ever rest upon it. Nor does the tradition
-end here, for both the Turks and Greeks have a
-firm faith in the prophecies which have been
-made, that St. Sophia will one day revert to the
-Christians, on which occasion the walled-up
-Bishop will emerge from his concealment, and
-chant a solemn high mass at the great altar.</p>
-
-<p>The latter portion of the legend would imply
-that the superstition is of remote origin. I felt
-glad of this&mdash;these mystic imaginings require
-to be enveloped in the mist of centuries, in order
-to elevate the ridiculous into the sublime, and
-to attract our fancy without revolting our
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>From the gallery we passed out upon the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">393</a></span>
-leads that cover the inferior cupolas of the
-building, and screen the mausoleums of the
-Sultans, and other distinguished personages,
-whose ashes repose within the holy precincts of
-St. Sophia; and, after traversing a number of
-these, and crouching through several low and
-narrow stone passages, stopping at intervals
-to contemplate the magnificent views that
-were spread out beneath us on all sides, and
-which varied every moment as we advanced, we
-at length found ourselves at the foot of the
-ruinous and crumbling stair, or rather ascent,
-(for the traces of steps are almost worn away)
-leading to the gallery encircling the dome.</p>
-
-<p>Few of the party were disheartened by the
-difficulty; and accordingly we slipped and
-scrambled towards the summit, and resolved
-to see all the marvels of the place; but when
-the narrow door which opens from the gallery
-was flung back by the guide, “a change came
-o’er the spirit of our dream”&mdash;and out of the
-hundred individuals who were lion-hunting at
-St. Sophia, there were only seven who possessed
-nerve enough to make the tour of the dome.
-Many a fair lady and gallant knight leant for
-an instant over the slender fence, and looked
-down into the body of the building while
-clinging firmly to the rail; gazing on men reduced
-to the dimensions of pigmies, and wide
-carpets dwindled to the proportions of a pocket<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">394</a></span>
-handkerchief; but a brief survey contented
-them, and they drew back from the dizzy spectacle,
-with swimming heads and aching eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Seven individuals only, as I have already
-mentioned, detached themselves from the throng,
-of which number I was one; and I understood
-at once the secret of the line of light that had
-struck me so forcibly on the night of my first
-visit, when I remarked the clustered lamps
-which were still attached to the lower railing
-of the gallery; and I wondered no longer at the
-sublime effect they had produced, as I perceived
-the immense height at which they had been
-placed.</p>
-
-<p>The path we had to follow was about a
-foot in width, and the slight railing that protected
-it was secured by iron bars to the wall
-beyond; but in two places the projecting ledge
-that formed the passage had lost its horizontal
-position, and sloped downwards at the outer
-edge, giving a most uncomfortable projection to
-the wooden fence; these little inconveniences
-were, however, amply compensated by the sublime
-effect of the edifice, seen thus, as it seemed,
-from the clouds; while the beautiful proportions
-of the dome became tenfold more evident as the
-eye took in its whole extent, unbewildered by
-the immense space which had baffled it from
-below.</p>
-
-<p>While I stood gazing on the magnificent spec<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">395</a></span>tacle
-spread out beneath me, a couple of doves
-winged their tranquil flight across the body of
-the mosque, to their resting-places on the opposite
-side of the building. As these birds are held
-sacred by the Musselmauns, they abound about
-all their public edifices, and multiply to an
-extraordinary extent; and their appearance,
-at a moment when my fancy was awakened, and
-my feelings excited, by the objects of beauty and
-of grandeur that surrounded me, produced an
-effect so powerful as to give birth to a very different
-train of ideas from those in which I had
-previously been indulging.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></p>
-
-<p>The tour of the gallery completed our survey
-of the far-famed St. Sophia; and flinging off
-the slippers which we had drawn over our shoes,
-we exchanged the marble floor, covered with
-yielding carpets, for the steep and stony streets
-leading to the mosque of Sultan Achmet.</p>
-
-<p>On passing through the Atmeidan (or Place
-of Horses) on one side of which the mosque is
-situated, a large plane tree was pointed out to
-me, from whose branches Sultan Mahmoud
-caused several of the principal Janissaries to
-be hanged, during the destruction of that formidable
-body, whence it is called by the Turks
-“the Tree of Groans.” The exterior of the build<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">396</a></span>ing
-was already familiar to me, as it was from
-the courtyard of Sultan Achmet that I had
-seen the procession of the Kourban-Ba&iuml;ram;
-but of its interior I retained only the same
-dreamy, indistinct impression which I had
-carried away on the same occasion from St.
-Sophia.</p>
-
-<p>The mosque of Sultan Achmet is remarkable
-for the immensity of the four colossal columns
-that support the dome, to which I have already
-alluded; and from the fact that the decree
-against the Janissaries was unrolled and read
-by the Chief Priest from its marble pulpit. An
-air of solemn and religious grandeur is shed
-over it by the dim twilight that enters through
-the windows of clouded glass; and it possesses
-a side gallery, roofed with mosaic and supported
-by marble pillars, which produces a very
-pleasing effect; but beyond this, there is little to
-attract in its detail, if, indeed, I except the curious
-and valuable collection of antique vases,
-many of them richly inlaid with mother-of-pearl,
-and various coloured stones, (and all of them, as
-the Imam assured us, authentic) which are suspended
-from the transverse bars of iron that
-support the lamps, intermixed with ostrich
-eggs, bunches of corn in the ear, and similar
-symbols of abundance.</p>
-
-<p>The inner court of the mosque is truly beautiful,
-being surrounded by an open cloister sup<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">397</a></span>ported
-by graceful columns in the Arabian taste,
-whose capitals resemble clusters of stalactites,
-and whose slender shafts shoot upwards almost
-with the lightness of a minaret. In the centre
-of the court, a stately fountain pours forth its
-sparkling waters; and on the left hand as you
-enter is situated the marble balcony from which
-are read all the Imperial Firmans that possess
-public interest. Near the gate of entrance,
-stands an immense block of porphyry of singular
-beauty, resting upon two masses of stone;
-on which the dead are exposed previous to
-their interment; no corpse being permitted to
-defile the interior of the mosque, and the Sultans
-themselves having the funeral prayers read over
-them in the open air.</p>
-
-<p>The mosque of Sultan Achmet is the only one
-in the city that has six minarets. This peculiarity
-arose from the desire of the Sultan to
-be the first monarch who should build a mosque
-in his capital, rivalling that of Mecca in the
-number of its minarets; but, as this could not
-be done without permission of the Mufti, compliance
-with the Imperial request was delayed,
-until steps had been taken to increase those
-at Mecca to seven, as it was not deemed expedient
-for any other mosque to enjoy the same
-privileges as that which is sanctified by the
-presence of the Prophet’s Tomb.</p>
-
-<p>These minarets are arranged with the most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">398</a></span>
-beautiful taste: two of them are attached to the
-main body of the building, while the four others
-pierce through the dense foliage of the stately
-forest trees which encircle the mosque, with an
-irregularity singularly graceful. Their transparent
-galleries of perforated masonry (three in
-number) girdle the slender shafts with the lightness
-and delicacy of net-work, and their pointed
-spires, touched with gold, gleam out like stars
-through the clear blue of the surrounding horizon.</p>
-
-<p>From the mosque of Sultan Achmet we proceeded
-to that of Solimani&egrave;, built by Solyman
-the Magnificent, which is considered to be the
-most elegant edifice in Stamboul. Its interior is
-eminently cheerful and attractive; and the splendid
-windows of stained glass are the spoils of its
-founder, who, subsequently to a victory obtained
-over the Persians, bore them away in triumph
-to enrich the present building, which was then in
-a state of progression. The four pillars that
-support the dome are slight and well-proportioned;
-but the four porphyry columns which
-form the angles of the temple are the boast
-of the edifice; they originally served as pedestals
-to as many antique statues, and are
-of surpassing symmetry. St. Sophia, amid all
-the remains which are collected beneath its roof,
-possesses nothing so fine; and, independently of
-these, there is a greater attempt at architectural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">399</a></span>
-elaboration throughout the whole building, than
-in either of the mosques that we had previously
-visited.</p>
-
-<p>The pulpit is very peculiar, being shaped
-somewhat like the blossom of the aram, which it
-the more resembles from the fact that the marble
-whereof it is formed is of the most snowy whiteness;
-and the great doors of the main entrance
-are richly inlaid with devices of mother-of-pearl.</p>
-
-<p>Attached to the wall, near the platform of the
-muezzin, hangs a long scroll of parchment, on
-which are traced, in black and gold, the ground-plans
-of the five principal mosques in the world&mdash;viz.
-those of Mecca, Medina, Jerusalem, St.
-Sophia, and Adrianople. It is evidently of great
-antiquity, and was precisely the description of
-relic which an antiquary would have valued;
-while even to the unscientific it was an object of
-considerable interest.</p>
-
-<p>There is one peculiarity in the mosque of
-Solimani&egrave;, which it were an injustice to the
-Turkish government to pass over in silence; and
-which is in itself so interesting, that I am surprised
-no traveller has yet made it matter of
-record.</p>
-
-<p>An open gallery, extending along the whole
-of the northern side of the edifice, is filled with
-chests of various sizes and descriptions, piled
-one on the other, and carefully marked; these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">400</a></span>
-chests contain treasure, principally in gold, silver,
-and jewels, to a vast amount; and are all the property
-of individuals, who, in the event of their
-leaving the country, family misunderstandings,
-or from other causes, require a place of safety
-in which to deposit their wealth. Each package
-being accurately described, and scrupulously
-secured, is received and registered at Solimani&egrave;
-by the proper authorities, and there it remains
-intact and inviolate, despite national convulsions
-and ministerial changes. No event, however
-unexpected, or however extraordinary, is
-suffered to affect the sacredness of the trust;
-and no consideration of country, or of religion,
-militates against the admission of such deposits
-as may be tendered, by persons anxious to secure
-their property against casualties.</p>
-
-<p>On one side may be seen the fortune of an
-orphan confided to the keeping of the Directors
-of the Institution during his minority; on the
-other, the capital of a merchant who is pursuing
-his traffic over seas. All classes and all creeds
-alike avail themselves of the security of the depository;
-and, although an individual may fail
-to reclaim his property for twenty, fifty, or even
-an unlimited number of years, no seal is ever
-broken, no lock is ever forced. And despite that
-this great National Bank, for as such it may
-truly be considered, offers not only an easy, but
-an efficient and abundant, mean of supply, no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">401</a></span>
-instance has ever been known in which government
-has made an effort to avail itself of the
-treasures of Solimani&egrave;. As the property is deposited,
-so is it withdrawn&mdash;the proper documents
-are produced, and the chest or desk is
-delivered up without the demand of a piastre
-from those who have acted as its guardians.</p>
-
-<p>The despotism of the Turkish government
-cannot, in this instance, be subject of complaint;
-when, amid all its reverses, and all its necessities,
-it has ever respected the property thus trustingly
-confided; while it can scarcely be denied that the
-admirable integrity, which is the great safeguard
-of the heaped-up wealth within the
-walls of the mosque, is at least as worthy of
-commendation, as the generous liberality which
-has foreborne to levy a tax upon so valuable a
-privilege.</p>
-
-<p>From the mosque we passed out by a charming
-covered walk to the mausoleum of the Magnificent
-Solyman; an elegant cupolaed building,
-with a fluted roof projecting about two feet
-forward, cased with marble on the outside, and
-finely painted within in delicate frescoes. An
-enormous plane tree flings its tortuous branches
-over the beautiful edifice, which has far more
-the aspect of a temple than a tomb; and the
-sunshine falls flickeringly on the marble steps,
-as it struggles through the fresh leaves. The
-floor is richly carpeted, and along the centre are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">402</a></span>
-ranged the sarcophagi of Solyman the Magnificent
-and his successor, of Sultan Akhmet, and
-of the two daughters of the Imperial founder of
-the mosque. Those of the Sultans are adorned
-with lofty turbans of white muslin, decorated
-with aigrettes, and attached to the sarcophagi
-by costly shawls; the tombs of the Princesses
-are covered plainly with cachemire of a dark
-green colour, and are considerably injured by
-time.</p>
-
-<p>An admirable model of the mosque of Mecca
-occupied a stand on the right of the entrance,
-and was an object of general curiosity; it was
-well executed, and gave an excellent idea not
-only of the building itself but of the approaches
-to it. The Tomb of the Prophet occupied the
-centre of the plan; and the line of road, covered
-with pilgrims, with its mountain barrier and
-halting-places, enabled the spectator to form an
-accurate judgment of the locality.</p>
-
-<p>In all mausoleums of this description, (and
-they abound in Constantinople) a priest each
-day lights up the huge wax candles that are
-placed at the feet of the sarcophagi, and leaves
-them burning while he reads a chapter from the
-Koran. Every part of the building is kept
-scrupulously clean, and a grain of dust is never
-suffered to pollute the tombs; the light is freely
-admitted to the interior, and no feeling of gloom
-connects itself with these resting-places of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">403</a></span>
-dead, which are the very types of luxury and
-comfort.</p>
-
-<p>Each mausoleum has its peculiar priest, which
-renders a fact that at first startled me infinitely
-less surprising; I allude to the immense
-number of individuals attached to the service of
-each mosque&mdash;St. Sophia alone, as I have been
-credibly informed, affording occupation to more
-than three hundred persons!</p>
-
-<p>Three accessories are indispensable to a
-mosque&mdash;a clock, a fountain, and a minaret;
-the clock determines the hour of prayer&mdash;the
-fountain enables the Faithful to perform their
-ablutions&mdash;and the minaret supplies the gallery
-whence the muezzin warns the pious to the
-temple of Allah.</p>
-
-<p>But, independently of these, every Imperial
-mosque possesses also its <em>Medresch</em> or College,
-where the <em>Sophtas</em> are instructed at the expense
-of the establishment; and its <em>Imaret</em>, or receiving-house
-for pilgrims, where wayfaring
-strangers are lodged and fed, and the poor are
-relieved at a certain hour each day, when a distribution
-of food takes place to all who think
-proper to solicit it. In the event of a <em>Kourban</em>,
-or sacrifice, it is in the <em>Imaret</em> that the animal
-is put to death, and shared among the needy
-who throng its entrance to benefit by the pious
-offering.</p>
-
-<p>The mosque of Sultan Mahmoud at Topp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">404</a></span>hann&egrave;
-is greatly enhanced in beauty by the
-splendid fountain and clock-house which he has
-built on either side of the entrance; and whose
-gilded lattice-work, and paintings in arabesque
-are truly Oriental in their taste; this small but
-elegant mosque is also remarkable for the gilt
-spires of its minarets, and the stately flight of
-marble steps by which it is approached.</p>
-
-<p>The ruins of a mosque still remain in Constantinople
-which was overthrown by an earthquake,
-wherein the tomb of the Sultan by
-whom it was built, was covered with a slab of
-red marble, said to have been the identical stone
-on which our Saviour was stretched on his
-descent from the cross, embalmed, and prepared
-for the sepulchre!</p>
-
-<p>All the principal mosques are surrounded,
-and partially overshadowed, by ancient and
-stately trees, that, in many cases, appear to be
-coeval with the edifice, and through whose leafy
-screen portions of the white building gleam out
-in strong relief; and these are dominated in their
-turn by the arrowy minarets, which, springing
-from a dense mass of foliage, cut sharply against
-the clear sky, and heighten the beauty of the
-picture.</p>
-
-<p>I have seldom spent a morning of more absorbing
-interest than that which I passed among
-the Mosques of Constantinople.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">405</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Antiquities of Constantinople&mdash;Ism&auml;el Effendi&mdash;The Atmeidan&mdash;The
-Obelisk&mdash;The Delphic Tripod&mdash;The Column of Constantine&mdash;The
-Tchernberl&egrave; Tasch&mdash;The Cistern of the Thousand and One Columns&mdash;The
-Boudroum&mdash;The Roman Dungeons&mdash;Y&egrave;r&egrave;-Batan-Sera&iuml;&mdash;The
-Lost Traveller&mdash;Extent of the Cistern&mdash;Aqueduct of Justinian&mdash;Palace
-of Constantine&mdash;Tomb of Heraclius&mdash;The Seven Towers&mdash;An
-Ambassador in Search of Truth&mdash;Tortures of the Prison&mdash;A
-Legend of the Seven Towers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> antiquities of Constantinople are few in
-number; and when the by-past fortunes of
-Byzantium are taken into consideration, not
-remarkably interesting. I shall consequently
-say little upon the subject, and the rather that
-more competent writers than myself have
-already described them; and that these reliques
-of departed centuries are not calculated to be
-treated <em>a tutto volo di penna</em>. But, as it is impossible
-to pass them over altogether in silence,
-I shall merely endeavour to describe their nature
-and the effect which they produced upon myself.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most curious remain of by-gone
-days now existing, and certainly that which is
-the least known, is <em>Y&egrave;r&egrave;-Batan-Sera&iuml;</em>, literally
-the “Swallowed up Palace,” anciently called<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">406</a></span>
-<em>Philoxmos</em>. I had heard much of this extraordinary
-old Roman work, but we had repeatedly
-failed in our attempts to visit it, from the fact
-of its opening into the court of a Turkish house,
-whose owner was not always willing to submit
-to the intrusion of strangers.</p>
-
-<p>We were not, however, fated to leave Constantinople
-without effecting our purpose; which
-we ultimately accomplished through the medium
-of one of the Sultan’s Physicians, who provided
-us with such attendance as insured our success.
-Ism&auml;el Effendi, Surgeon-in-chief of the Anatomical
-School attached to the Sera&iuml; Bournou,
-volunteered to become our escort, and we gladly
-availed ourselves of his kindness. He was a
-fine, vivacious, intelligent young man, endowed
-with an energy and mobility perfectly Greek,
-combined with that gentle and quiet courtesy so
-essentially Turkish: and we were, furthermore,
-accompanied by one of his friends, who spoke
-the French language with tolerable fluency;
-and a soldier of the Palace Guard, to prevent
-our collision with the passers-by; a precaution
-which the rapid and virulent spread of the
-Plague had rendered essentially necessary.</p>
-
-<p>We first directed our steps to the Atmeidan,
-or Place of Horses, the ancient race-course
-of the Romans; in which stands a handsome
-Egyptian obelisk of red granite, placed there
-by Theodosius, and resting upon a pedestal of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">407</a></span>
-white marble, whereon are coarsely represented
-his victories in very ill-executed <em>alto relievo</em>.
-The obelisk is sixty feet in height, and elaborately
-ornamented with hieroglyphics.</p>
-
-<p>Near it are the remains of the Delphic Tripod;
-the brazen heads of the serpents are wanting;
-and it is asserted that one of them was struck
-off by Sultan Akhmet at a single blow of his
-scimitar.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"><a name="f5" id="f5"></a><img src="images/i_p407.jpg" width="400" height="439"
-alt="COLUMN OF CONSTANTINE. TRIPOD. EGYPTIAN OBELISK." title="" />
-
-<p class="caption">COLUMN OF CONSTANTINE.&nbsp;&nbsp;TRIPOD.&nbsp;&nbsp;EGYPTIAN OBELISK.</p></div>
-
-<p>The Turks are extremely jealous of this interesting
-remain, as they have a tradition that,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">408</a></span>
-when it is either destroyed or displaced, Constantinople
-will fall once more into the hands and
-under the power of the Christians; and so universal
-is this superstition, that a pretty little
-girl of about eight years of age, who saw us examining
-it, approached us, and said earnestly;
-“You may look, but you cannot buy this with
-all your gold, for it is our talisman, and you
-are Franks and Infidels.”</p>
-
-<p>About one hundred paces beyond the Tripod,
-the lofty monument of Constantine, denuded of
-the coating of metal by which its coarse masonry
-is said to have been once concealed, rears
-its head ninety feet from the earth; and appears,
-from its immense height and small circumference,
-superadded to the apparently careless
-and insecure manner in which the stones are
-put together, to stand erect only by a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>But far more curious than either of these is
-the <em>Tchernberl&egrave; Tasch</em>, or Burnt Pillar, situated
-at a short distance from the Tower of the Seraskier.
-It was originally brought by Constantine
-from the Temple of Apollo, at Rome, and
-was placed upon an hexagonal pedestal, within
-which were built up several portions of the Holy
-Cross; whence the small square in which it
-stood became a place of prayer. When first
-transported to Constantinople, it was surmounted
-by a statue of the God, from the chisel of
-Phidias, of which the head was surrounded by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">409</a></span>
-halo. But the conqueror appropriated the figure,
-and caused to be inscribed beneath it, “The
-Justice of the Sun to the Illustrious Constantine.”</p>
-
-<p>The destruction of the statue is diversely
-explained by different writers. Genaro Esquilichi
-declares it to have been destroyed by a
-thunderbolt; Anna de Comnena asserts that
-it was overthrown by a strong southerly wind
-during the reign of Alexius de Comnena, and
-that it killed several persons in its fall; while
-other authors mention that it was merely mutilated
-by the first accident, and utterly ruined by
-the second. The pedestal bears an inscription
-now nearly obliterated, which may be thus
-rendered from the original Greek:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="line">“O Christ, Master and Protector of the World,</div>
-<div class="line">I dedicate to Thee this City, subject to Thee;</div>
-<div class="line">And the Sceptre, and the Empire of Rome.</div>
-<div class="line">Guard the City, and protect it from all evil.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The pillar is ninety feet in height, and the
-pedestal measures thirty feet at its base; it has
-suffered severely from fire as well as from time,
-and a strong wire-work has been carefully
-erected about it to prevent its falling to pieces,
-as it is rent and riven in every direction. It is
-to be deplored that this interesting relic is
-built in on all sides by unsightly houses.</p>
-
-<p>From the <em>Tchernberl&egrave; Tasch</em> we proceeded to
-visit a cistern called by the Turks <em>Bin-Vebir-Direg</em>,
-or the “Thousand and One,” in allusion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">410</a></span>
-to the number of columns that support it. It
-is an immense subterranean, of which the roof
-is in reality sustained by three hundred and
-thirty-six pillars of coarse marble, each formed
-of two or more blocks.</p>
-
-<p>These pillars are now buried to one-third of
-their height in the earth, the water-courses
-having been turned, and the cistern dried up,
-for the purpose of receiving the rubbish which
-was flung out when the foundations of St. Sophia
-were laid. It is now occupied by silk-winders,
-and they have become so accustomed to the
-sight of visiters that they scarcely suffer you to
-descend the first flight of steps before they all
-quit their wheels, and begin shouting for <em>backschish</em>.
-The channel worn in the stone by the
-passage of the water that once flowed into the
-cistern is distinguishable on three different sides
-of the subterranean, which is lit by narrow
-grated windows level with the roof; and the
-echoes, prolonged and flung back by the vaulted
-recesses, have a sound so hollow and supernatural
-that they appear like the distant mutterings
-of fiends.</p>
-
-<p>As we were about to quit <em>Bin-Vebir-Direg</em>,
-one of the silk-spinners informed us that there
-was another smaller <em>Boudroum</em>, or subterranean
-in the neighbourhood, to which he offered to conduct
-us; honestly admitting, at the same time,
-that the atmosphere that we should breathe there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">411</a></span>
-was so unwholesome that few persons ventured
-to indulge their curiosity by descending into it.
-Thither we accordingly went, and the less reluctantly
-as we ascertained by the way that
-this also had been converted into a spinning
-establishment, where fifty or sixty persons were
-constantly employed.</p>
-
-<p>A short walk over the rubbish of an ancient
-fire brought us to the narrow door of this second
-subterranean. And we had not descended a
-dozen steps, ere we were perfectly convinced of
-the accuracy of the information given to us by
-the guide. Each felt as though a wet garment
-had suddenly been wound about him; and the
-appearance of the miserable beings who were
-turning the cotton wheels, sufficiently demonstrated
-the unhealthiness of the atmosphere;
-they were all deadly white, and looked like a
-society of recuscitated corpses. We had heard a
-confusion of voices from the moment that we
-approached the neighbourhood of <em>Bin-Vebir-Direg</em>,
-but all was silence within the <em>Boudroum</em>
-where we now found ourselves; while the
-blended curiosity and astonishment with which
-every eye was turned upon us, was a convincing
-proof that the unfortunates who tenanted it
-were little used to the sight of strangers.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately that we had descended into the
-vault, they simultaneously desired us to keep in
-continual motion during our stay, alleging that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">412</a></span>
-the exercise consequent on their occupation was
-their only preservative against destruction; and
-confirming the truth of their statement by the
-melancholy tale of a man who had come a few
-weeks previously to visit one of their company,
-and who remained quietly smoking upon his
-mat for several hours, after which he was seized
-with lethargy, and died.</p>
-
-<p>As the lower orders of Orientals universally
-believe every Frank to be, if not actually a Physician
-by profession, at least perfectly conversant
-with the “healing art,” a group of the
-pallid wretches by whom we were surrounded
-immediately began to apply to my father for
-advice and assistance; when the good-natured
-Ism&auml;el Effendi volunteered to prescribe for them,
-and listened with the greatest patience to a list
-of ailments, engendered by the fetid atmosphere,
-and quite beyond the reach of medicine.</p>
-
-<p>This cistern, although of considerably less extent
-than <em>Bin-Vebir-Direg</em>, being supported only
-by one and thirty pillars, is nevertheless infinitely
-handsomer, as the columns are at least
-thrice the circumference of the “Thousand and
-One,” and uncovered to their base; two only are
-imperfect; and the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coup-d&oelig;il</em> from mid-way of
-the stone stair is most imposing.</p>
-
-<p>On emerging from this dim and vapour-freighted
-vault, we inquired of the guide whom
-we had retained, whether he could direct us to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">413</a></span>
-any other object of interest in that quarter of
-the city; when, after some hesitation, allured
-by the promise held out to him of a liberal
-<em>backschish</em>, he at length admitted that there
-was a <em>Boudroum</em> about half a mile from thence,
-which was but little known, and into which
-no Frank had ever been admitted. Then followed
-a host of assurances of the danger that
-he incurred by pointing it out to us, and of
-which we readily understood the motive; and,
-after receiving a second promise of reward, he
-ultimately led the way through one or two
-narrow streets; when passing under a large doorway,
-we found ourselves in a dilapidated Khan,
-where a dozen old men were seated on low stools,
-winding silk. Here our conductor procured
-lights, after which he preceded us down a flight
-of steps, terminating in a second door, whence
-a short stair descended into an extensive vault,
-supported by eight double arches of solid masonry,
-as perfect as though they had only been
-completed on the previous day.</p>
-
-<p>Traversing this vault, we entered a second,
-perfectly dark, of which the outer wall was
-strengthened by four large pillars. At the extreme
-end of this inner subterranean, we found
-a flight of ruined stone steps, which we ascended
-with some difficulty, and, on arriving at the
-summit of the stair, discovered that we were
-standing in a dilapidated Roman dungeon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">414</a></span>From this point several other cells branched
-off in different directions. The entrance of one,
-which appeared to be a <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cachot forc&eacute;</em>, was so
-blocked by the masses of stone that had fallen
-from the roof, that we were unable to penetrate
-into it; but on the other side we passed into a
-range of dungeons, of which the partition walls,
-at least a foot in thickness, had been torn down.
-The iron rings by which the prisoners had been
-chained, still remained, as did also the sleeping
-places hollowed in the masonry; but the most
-curious and frightful feature of the locality was
-a water-course, which, passing along the entire
-line of cells, emptied itself into a small dungeon,
-situated under the arched vault that I have
-already described, and thus offered a ready
-mean of destruction to the oppressor, and a
-dreadful and hopeless death to the captive.</p>
-
-<p>I was sincerely glad to leave this gloomy remain
-of by-past power, and to breathe once more
-the pure air of Heaven, on my way to <em>Y&egrave;r&egrave;-Batan-Sera&iuml;</em>,
-where we arrived after a long and
-very fatiguing walk. After a little hesitation,
-the door of the Turkish house to which I have
-elsewhere alluded was opened to us, and, passing
-through the great entrance hall, we traversed
-the courtyard, and descending a steep slope of
-slippery earth, found ourselves at the opening of
-the dim mysterious Palace of Waters.</p>
-
-<p>The roof of this immense cistern, of which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">415</a></span>
-extent is unknown, is supported, like that of <em>Bin-Vebir-Direg</em>,
-by marble columns, distant about
-ten feet from each other, but each formed from
-a single block; the capitals are elaborately
-wrought, and in one instance the entire pillar
-is covered with sculptured ornaments.</p>
-
-<p>At the period of our visit, Constantinople had
-been long suffering from drought, and the water
-in the cistern was consequently much lower
-than usual, a circumstance that greatly tended to
-augment the stateliness of its effect. There was
-formerly a boat upon it, but it has been destroyed
-in consequence of the numerous accidents to
-which it gave rise.</p>
-
-<p>The Ki&auml;ra of the Effendi who owned the
-house, had accompanied us to the vault; and he
-mentioned two adventures connected with it
-that had taken place within his own knowledge,
-and which he related to us as having
-both occurred to Englishmen.</p>
-
-<p>The first and the saddest was the tale of a
-young traveller, who about six years ago arrived
-at Constantinople, and in his tour of the capital,
-obtained permission to see the <em>Y&egrave;r&egrave; Batan Sera&iuml;</em>.
-The boat was then upon the water; and, not
-satisfied with gazing on the wonders of the place
-from land, he sprang into the little skiff, and
-accompanied by the boatman who was accustomed
-to row the family in the immediate vicinity
-of the opening, he pushed off, after having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">416</a></span>
-received a warning not to be guilty of the imprudence
-of advancing so far into the interior
-as to lose sight of the light of day. This warning
-he was unhappy enough to disregard. Those
-who stood watching his progress remarked that
-he had provided himself with a lamp, and they
-again shouted to him to beware: but the wretched
-man was bent upon his purpose; and having, as
-it is supposed, induced the boatman, by the promise
-of a heavy reward, to comply with his wish,
-the flame of the lamp became rapidly fainter
-and fainter, and at length disappeared altogether
-from the sight of those who were left behind;
-and who remained at their station anxiously
-awaiting its return. But they lingered in
-vain&mdash;they had looked their last upon the unfortunates
-who had so lately parted from them in
-the full rush of life and hope&mdash;the boat came no
-more&mdash;and it is presumed that those within it,
-having bewildered themselves among the columns,
-became unable to retrace their way, and
-perished miserably by famine.</p>
-
-<p>I should have mentioned that the spot on
-which we stood was not the proper entrance to
-the cistern, of whose existence and situation
-they are even now ignorant, but an opening
-formed by the failure of several of the pillars,
-by which accident the roof fell in, and disclosed
-the water-vault beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Another similar but less extensive failure of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">417</a></span>
-extraordinary fabric in a yard near the Sublime
-Porte betrayed its extent in that direction; a
-third took place in the immediate neighbourhood
-of St. Sophia; and a fourth within the
-walls of the Record Office; thus affording an
-assurance that the cistern extended for several
-leagues beneath the city. Further than this the
-Constantinopolitan authorities cannot throw
-any light on its dimensions; and, as far as I was
-individually concerned, I am not quite sure that
-this fact did not increase the interest of the
-locality&mdash;the mysterious distance into which
-man is forbidden to penetrate&mdash;the long lines
-of columns deepening in tint, and diminishing
-in their proportions as they recede&mdash;the sober
-twilight that softens every object&mdash;and the
-dreamy stillness that lords it over this singular
-Water Palace, which the voice of man can
-awaken for a brief space into long-drawn and
-unearthly echoes, that sweep onward into the
-darkness, and ere they are quite lost to the
-ear, appear to shape themselves into words:
-all combined to invest the spot with an awful
-and thrilling character, which, to an imaginative
-mind, were assuredly more than an equivalent
-for the privilege of determining its
-limits.</p>
-
-<p>The second local anecdote related to us by
-the Ki&auml;ra was that of an Englishman, who,
-only a few months previous to our visit, had re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">418</a></span>quested
-permission to make use of the little boat
-that had replaced the one in which the traveller,
-to whom I have already alluded, had been lost.
-Many objections were started; and the fate of
-his unfortunate countryman was insisted upon
-as the reason of the refusal; but on his repeated
-promises of prudence, the old Effendi at length
-consented to his wish; and having lighted a
-couple of torches, and affixed them to the stern
-of the boat, the traveller drew out a large quantity
-of strong twine, which he made fast to one
-of the pillars, leaving the ball to unwind itself
-as he proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>As no one could be found who was willing to
-accompany him, he started alone; and hour
-after hour went by without sign of his return;
-until, as the fourth hour was on the eve of
-completion, the flame of the torches lit up the
-distance, and was reflected back by the gleaming
-columns. The wanderer sprang from the
-boat chilled and exhausted; and, in answer to
-the inquiries of those about him, he stated that
-he had progressed for two hours in a straight
-line, but that he had seen nothing more than
-what they looked upon themselves&mdash;the vaulted
-roof above his head, the water beneath his feet,
-and a wilderness of pillars rising on all sides,
-and losing themselves in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>This second adventure so alarmed the worthy
-old Osmanli to whom the boat belonged, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">419</a></span>
-he caused it to be immediately destroyed; and
-visitors are now compelled to content themselves
-with a partial view of <em>Y&egrave;r&egrave;-Batan-Sera&iuml;</em> from
-the ruined opening.</p>
-
-<p>Marcian’s Column, called by the Turks <em>Kestachi</em>,
-which is situated in the garden of a Turkish
-house near the gate of Adrianople, is a splendid
-remain, of which the capital is supported by
-four magnificent eagles. The hexagonal pedestal
-is ornamented with wreaths of oak leaves,
-and the height of the shaft is nearly eighty
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>Of the remains of the Aqueduct of Justinian
-I have already spoken; and hundreds of beautiful
-and graceful columns, and thousands of
-sculptured fragments, are to be seen intermingled
-with the masonry of the city walls.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient Palace of Constantine, vulgarly
-named the Palace of Belisarius, stands in that
-quarter of the city called Balata, a corruption
-of <em>Balati</em>, “the gate of the palace.” It is impossible
-to visit this curious ruin with any
-pleasure, as it has been given up to the needy
-Jews, who have established within its walls a
-species of pauper barrack, redolent of filth. It
-is of considerable extent, and principally remarkable
-for the curious arrangement of its
-brick-work; there are, however, the remains of
-a handsome doorway, and outworks of great
-strength.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">420</a></span>About ten days before I left the country, some
-workmen, employed in digging the foundation
-of an outbuilding at the Arsenal, brought to
-light a handsome sarcophagus of red marble,
-containing the bodies of Heraclius, a Greek
-Emperor, who flourished during the reign of
-Mahomet, and his consort. The two figures representing
-the Imperial pair are nearly perfect.
-That of the Emperor holds in one hand a globe,
-and with the other grasps a sceptre; while the
-Empress is represented with her crown resting
-upon her open palm. At their feet are the busts
-of two worthies, supposed to be portraits of
-celebrated warriors, but the inscriptions beneath
-them are nearly obliterated.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately that the identity of the occupants
-of this lordly tomb was ascertained, orders
-were given that an iron railing, breast-high,
-should be erected to protect the relic from
-injury, the Turks having a tradition that Heraclius
-died a Mahomedan. The fact is, however,
-more than doubtful; although it is well known
-that Mahomet sent him an invitation to abjure
-Christianity, and to become a True Believer;
-but, at the period of this occurrence, Heraclius
-was bowed by years, and sunk in sensual enjoyments.
-Anxious to evade a war with Mahomet,
-whose successes were then at their height,
-he despatched an ambiguous reply to the message,
-and died ere he had given the Mussel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">421</a></span>mauns
-reason to suspect the real motive of his
-supineness. Hence the Turks claimed the sarcophagus
-of Heraclius as the tomb of a True
-Believer; and a marble mausoleum is to be built
-over it, similar to those which contain the ashes
-of the Sultans.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"><a name="f6" id="f6"></a><img src="images/i_fp449.jpg" width="500" height="326"
-alt="THE SEVEN TOWERS." title="" />
-<table summary="seven" width="100%" border="0"><tr>
-<td class="left f06">Miss Pardoe del.</td>
-<td class="right f06">Day &amp; Haghe Lith.<sup>rs</sup> to the King.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f08" colspan="2">THE SEVEN TOWERS.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-<td class="center f06" colspan="2"><i>Henry Colburn 13 G.<sup>t</sup> Marlborough St 1837.</i></td>
-</tr></table></div>
-
-<p>The Seven Towers&mdash;that celebrated prison of
-which the very name is a spell of power&mdash;are
-rapidly crumbling to decay, but must continue
-to be among the most interesting of the antiquities
-of Constantinople, as long as one stone
-remains upon another.</p>
-
-<p>Although situated in a populous part of the
-city, this fortress is, nevertheless, an isolated
-building; and four of the towers to which it
-owes its name are destroyed, but of those that
-still exist, one contains the apartments originally
-appropriated to state prisoners, and is
-also the residence of the Military Commandant
-and the officers of the garrison. When it
-ceased to be a state prison for attainted Turks,
-the fortress of the Seven Towers was exclusively
-reserved for the reception of the Russian Ambassadors,
-on the occasion of any misunderstanding
-between the Ottoman and Muscovite courts;
-and it is almost a ludicrous fact that, during
-the reign of Mustapha III., His Excellency
-Count Obrescoff, representative of Her Imperial
-Majesty, the Empress of all the Russias, not
-only suffered an imprisonment of three years in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">422</a></span>
-this fortress, but actually passed several days
-at the bottom of a dry well, into which it was
-the Sublime pleasure of the Sultan to cause him
-to be lowered.</p>
-
-<p>If His Highness acted upon the impression
-that the Muscovite Minister would succeed
-during his subterranean sojourn in discovering
-the moral deity who is said to be concealed
-therein, there is every reason, from existing circumstances,
-to believe that the experiment was
-a failure, or that she declined being withdrawn
-from her retreat.</p>
-
-<p>Instruments of torture&mdash;racks, wheels, and
-oubliettes&mdash;are rife within this place of gloom
-and horror. One chasm, upon whose brink you
-stand, is called the “Well of Blood,” and is said
-to have overflowed its margin with the ensanguined
-stream which was once warm with life&mdash;a
-small court, designated the “Place of
-Heads,” is pointed out as having been cumbered
-with the slain, until the revolting pile was
-of sufficient height to enable the spectator to
-look out from its summit upon the waves of the
-glittering Propontis; and more than one stone
-tunnel is shown, into which the wretched captive
-was condemned to crawl upon his hands
-and knees, and there left to die of famine.</p>
-
-<p>But I shall pass by these tales of terror,
-to narrate a Legend of the Seven Towers, less
-known than the objects which are exhibited to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">423</a></span>
-every visiter, and more calculated to interest
-the reader.</p>
-
-<p>On the declaration of war with Russia made
-by the Turks in 1786, Baron Bulhakoff, the
-Russian Minister, despite his representation
-that the imprisonment of the Muscovite Ambassadors
-on such occasions had been abolished
-by treaty, was, nevertheless, sent to the Seven
-Towers by order of Codza Youssouf Pasha, the
-Grand V&egrave;zir, with the assurance that treaties
-were very good things in a time of peace, but
-mere waste paper in the event of war. The
-discomfited Ambassador was, however, treated
-with great civility, and was even permitted
-to select such members of the Legation as
-he desired should bear him company during
-his captivity; strict orders being given to the
-Commandant of the castle to accede to every
-request of his prisoner which did not tend to
-compromise his safety; and upon his complaining
-of the accommodations of the Tower, he was
-moreover permitted to erect a kiosk on the walls
-of the fortress, whence he had a magnificent view
-of the Sea of Marmora and its glittering islands,
-and to construct a spacious and handsome
-apartment within the Tower itself.</p>
-
-<p>I have already stated that the Commandant
-was lodged beneath the same roof as his prisoner;
-but I have yet to tell that he had an only
-daughter, so young, and so lovely, that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">424</a></span>
-might have taken her stand between the two
-Houri who wait at the portal of Paradise to
-beckon the Faithful across its threshold, without
-seeming less beautiful than they. Fifteen springs
-had with their delicate breathings opened the
-petals of the roses since the birth of R&egrave;ch&egrave;di<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">7</a>
-Hanoum, and she had far out-bloomed the brightest
-blossoms of the fairest of seasons. Her voice,
-when it was poured forth in song, came through
-the lattices of her casement like the tones of a
-distant mandolin sweeping over the waters of
-the still sea&mdash;when you looked upon her, it was
-as though you looked upon a rose; and when
-you listened, you seemed to listen to the nightingale.</p>
-
-<p>R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum had never yet poured the
-scented sherbet in the garden of flowers. Her
-young heart was as free as the breeze that
-came to her brow from the blue bosom of the
-Propontis; and when she heard that a Muscovite
-Giaour was about to become an inmate of
-the Tower, she only trembled, for she knew that
-he was the enemy of her country.</p>
-
-<p>Terror was, however, soon succeeded by curiosity.
-Only a few weeks after the compulsatory
-domestication of the Ambassador at the
-Seven Towers, his kiosk was completed; and
-from her closed casements the young Hanoum
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">425</a></span>could see all that passed in the vast apartment
-of the prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>Her first glance at the dreaded Infidel was
-transient; but soon she took another, and a
-longer look; and curiosity was, in its turn, succeeded
-by sympathy. The Russian prisoner
-was the handsomest man on whom her eye had
-ever rested, and it was not thus that she had
-pictured to herself the dreaded Muscovite. He
-was unhappy too, for in his solitary moments
-he paced the floor with hurried and unequal
-steps, like one who is grappling with some painful
-memory; and at times sat sadly, with his
-head pillowed on his hand, and his fingers
-wreathed amid the wavy hair which encircled
-his brow; looking so mournful, and above all so
-fascinating, that the fair R&egrave;ch&egrave;di at last began
-to weep as she clung to her lattice, with her
-gaze riveted upon him; and to find more happiness
-in those tears, than in all the simple
-pleasures that had hitherto formed the charm
-of her existence.</p>
-
-<p>Little did the young Hanoum suspect that
-she loved the Giaour. She never dreamt of passion;
-but, with all the generous anxiety of innocence,
-unconscious that a warmer feeling
-than that of mere pity urged her to the effort,
-she began to muse upon the means of diminishing
-the irksomeness of a captivity which she
-was incapable of terminating. The first, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">426</a></span>
-most natural impulse led her to sweep her hands
-across the chords of her Zebec; and as she
-remarked the start of agreeable surprise with
-which the sound was greeted by the courtly
-prisoner, her young heart bounded with joy, and
-the wild song gushed forth in a burst of sweetness
-which chained the attention of the captive,
-and afforded to the delighted girl the opportunity
-of a long, long look, that more than repaid
-her for her minstrelsy.</p>
-
-<p>During the evening she watched to ascertain
-whether a repetition of her song would be expected,
-and she did not watch in vain; for more
-than once the Russian noble leant from his casement,
-and seemed to listen; but he came not
-there alone; one of his companions in captivity
-was beside him; and R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum, although
-she guessed not wherefore, had suddenly become
-jealous of her minstrelsy, and would not exhibit
-it before a third person.</p>
-
-<p>On the morrow, an equally graceful, and
-equally successful effort whiled the prisoner for
-a time from his sorrows. A cluster of roses,
-woven together with a tress of bright dark hair,
-was flung from the casement of the young
-beauty, at a moment when the back of the
-stranger was turned towards her. It fell at his
-feet, and was secured and pressed to his lips,
-with a respectful courtesy that quickened the
-pulses of the donor; but not a glimpse of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">427</a></span>
-fair girl accompanied the gift; and it seemed as
-though the Baron had suspected wherefore, for
-ere long he was alone in his apartment; and,
-when he had dismissed his attendants, he once
-more advanced to the window, and glanced
-anxiously towards the jealous lattices by which
-it was overlooked.</p>
-
-<p>There was a slight motion perceptible behind
-the screen; a white hand waved a greeting;
-and the imprisoned noble bent forward to obtain
-a nearer view of its fair owner. For a moment
-R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum stood motionless, terrified at
-the excess of her own temerity; but there was
-a more powerful feeling at her heart than
-fear; and in the next, she forced away her
-prison-bars for an instant; and, with the telltale
-hand pressed upon her bosom, stood revealed
-to her enraptured neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>From that day the young beauty allowed
-herself to betray to the captive her interest in
-his sorrows; she did more; she admitted that she
-shared them; and ere long there was not an
-hour throughout the day in which the thoughts
-of R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum were not dwelling on the
-handsome prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>Thus were things situated during two long
-years, when the death of the reigning Sultan, at
-the termination of that period, induced the Ambassadors
-of England and France to demand
-from his successor, Selim III., the liberty of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">428</a></span>
-Russian Minister. The request was refused,
-for the war was not yet terminated; and the
-new Sovereign required no better pretext for
-disregarding the representations of the European
-Ambassadors, than the continuation of
-hostilities between the two countries. But Selim
-had other and more secret reasons for thus
-peremptorily negativing their prayer; and it
-will be seen in the suite that they did not arise
-from personal dislike to the captive Muscovite.</p>
-
-<p>Like Haroun Alraschid of Arabian memory,
-the new Sultan, during the first weeks of his
-reign, amused himself by nocturnal wanderings
-about the streets of the city in disguise; attended
-by the subsequently famous Huss&egrave;in, his
-first and favourite body-page; and immediately
-that he had refused compliance with the demand
-of the Ambassadors, he resolved on paying an
-<em>incognito</em> visit to his prisoner at the Seven
-Towers. As soon as twilight had fallen like
-a mantle over the gilded glories of Stamboul, he
-accordingly set forth; and having discovered
-himself to the Commandant, and enjoined him to
-secresy, he entered the anti-chamber of the
-Baron, where he found one of his suite, to whom
-he expressed his desire to have an interview
-with the captive Ambassador.</p>
-
-<p>The individual to whom the Sultan had addressed
-himself recognised him at once; but,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">429</a></span>
-without betraying that he did so, contented
-himself with expressing his regret that he was
-unable to comply with the request of his visitor,
-the orders of the Sultan being peremptory, that
-the Baron should hold no intercourse with any
-one beyond the walls of the fortress.</p>
-
-<p>On receiving this answer, Selim replied gaily
-that the Sultan need never be informed of the
-circumstance; and that, being a near relation of
-the Commandant, and having obtained his permission
-to have a few minutes’ conversation with
-the prisoner, he trusted that he should not encounter
-any obstacle either on the part of the
-Baron himself, or on that of his friends.</p>
-
-<p>The Dragoman, with affected reluctance,
-quitted the room, to ascertain, as he asserted,
-the determination of His Excellency, but in
-reality to inform him of the Imperial masquerade;
-and in five minutes more the disguised
-Sultan and his favourite were ushered into the
-apartment of the Ambassador.</p>
-
-<p>After some inconsequent conversation, Selim
-inquired how the Baron had contrived to divert
-the weary hours of his captivity; and was answered
-that he had endeavoured to lighten them
-by books, and by gazing out upon the Sea of
-Marmora from his kiosk. Bulhakoff sighed
-as he made the reply, and remembered how
-much more they had been brightened by the
-affection of the fair R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum; and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">430</a></span>
-almost felt as though he were an ingrate that he
-did not add her smiles and her solicitude to the
-list of his prison-blessings.</p>
-
-<p>“The same volume and the same kiosk cannot
-please for ever;” said the Sultan with a
-smile; “and you would not, doubtlessly, be
-sorry to exchange your books against the conversation
-of your fellow-men; nor your view of
-the blue Propontis for one more novel. A prison
-is but a prison at the best, even though you
-may be locked up with all the courtesy in the
-world. But your captivity is not likely to endure
-much longer. <em>Shekiur Allah!</em>&mdash;Praise be to
-God&mdash;I am intimately acquainted with the Sultan’s
-favourite; and I know that, had not the
-meddling ministers of England and France
-sought to drive the new sovereign into an act
-of justice, which he had resolved to perform from
-inclination, you would have been, ere this, at
-liberty. Do not therefore be induced to lend
-yourself or your countenance to any intrigue
-that they may make to liberate you, and which
-will only tend to exasperate His Highness; but
-wait patiently for another month, and at its
-expiration you will be set free, and restored to
-your country.”</p>
-
-<p>“I trust that you may prove a true prophet&mdash;”
-said the Baron; and his visitors shortly afterwards
-departed.</p>
-
-<p>The days wore on; the month was almost at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">431</a></span>
-an end, and yet the captive noble had never
-ventured to breathe to the fair girl who loved
-him the probability of his liberation. He shrank
-from the task almost with trembling, for he felt
-that even to him the parting would be a bitter
-one&mdash;even to him, although he was about to recover
-liberty, and country, and friends. What,
-then, would it be to her? to “his caged bird,”
-as he had often fondly called her&mdash;who knew no
-joy save in his presence&mdash;no liberty save that of
-loving him! As the twilight fell sadly over the
-sea, and the tall trees of the prison-garden
-grew dark and gloomy in the sinking light,
-he remembered how ardently they had both
-watched for that still hour, soon to be one of tenfold
-bitterness to the forsaken R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum;
-and there were moments in which he almost
-wished that she had never loved him.</p>
-
-<p>But the hour of trial came at last. Selim had
-redeemed his word, and Bulhakoff was free. His
-companions in captivity would fain have quitted
-the fortress within the hour; but the liberated
-prisoner lingered. He gave no reason for his
-delay; he offered no explanation of his motives;
-he simply announced his resolution not to quit
-the Tower until the morrow; and then he shut
-himself into his chamber, and passed there several
-of the most bitter hours of his captivity.</p>
-
-<p>Once more twilight lay long upon the waters&mdash;the
-time of tryst was come&mdash;the last which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">432</a></span>
-beautiful young Hanoum was ever to keep with
-her lover. She had long forgotten the possibility
-of his liberation; and when she stole
-from her chamber to the shadow of the tall
-cypresses that had so often witnessed their
-meeting, her heart bounded like her step. But
-no fond smile welcomed her coming&mdash;no reproach,
-more dear than praise, murmured
-against her tardiness&mdash;Bulhakoff was leaning
-his head against the tree beside which he stood,
-and the young beauty had clasped within her
-own the chill and listless hand that hung at his
-side, ere with a painful start he awakened from
-his reverie.</p>
-
-<p>The interview was short; but brief as was its
-duration it had taught the wretched girl that for
-her there was no future save one of misery. She
-did not weep&mdash;her burning eyeballs were too
-hot for tears. She <em>could</em> not weep, for the drops
-of anguish would have dimmed the image of
-him whom she had loved, and was about to lose.
-She made no reply to the withering tidings he
-had brought, for what had words to do with
-such a grief as her’s? She was like one who
-dreamt a fearful dream; and when she turned
-away to regain her chamber, she walked with a
-firm step, for her heart was broken; and she had
-nothing now left to do but to veil from her lover
-the extent of her own anguish, lest she should
-add to the bitterness of his.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">433</a></span>The morrow came. The Baron turned a long,
-soul-centered look-towards the lattices of his
-young love, and quitted her for ever; and, ere
-many weeks were spent, the same group of
-cypresses which had overshadowed the trysting-place
-of R&egrave;ch&egrave;di Hanoum gloomed above her
-grave.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">434</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Baloucl&egrave;&mdash;The New Church&mdash;Delightful Road&mdash;Eyoub&mdash;The Cemetery&mdash;The
-Rebel’s Grave&mdash;The Mosque of Blood&mdash;The Hill of Graves&mdash;The
-Seven Towers&mdash;The Palace of Belisarius&mdash;The City Walls&mdash;Easter
-Festivities&mdash;The Turkish Araba&mdash;The Armenian Carriage&mdash;Travellers&mdash;Turkish
-Women&mdash;Seridjhes&mdash;Persians&mdash;Irregular
-Troops&mdash;The Plain of Baloucl&egrave;&mdash;Laughable Mistake&mdash;Extraordinary
-Discretion&mdash;The Church of Baloucl&egrave;&mdash;The Holy Well&mdash;Absurd
-Tradition&mdash;The Chapel Vault&mdash;Enthusiasm of the Greeks&mdash;A
-Pleasant Draught&mdash;Greek Substitute for a Bell&mdash;Violent Storm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> next expedition was to Baloucl&egrave;, where
-the Greeks have recently built a small, but
-elegant church, upon the spot once occupied by
-a very spacious edifice, which had gone to ruin.
-The ride, though long and somewhat fatiguing,
-was most delightful; the road leading us across
-the hills, to the fair Valley of the Sweet Waters,
-along the banks of the sparkling Barbyses, past
-the Imperial kiosks; and onward to the beautiful
-village of Eyoub, the stronghold of the Constantinopolitan
-Turks, wherein they allow no Giaour
-to reside; and the marble floor of whose thrice-holy
-mosque no infidel foot has ever trodden.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">435</a></span>The situation of Eyoub is eminently picturesque.
-It is backed by gently-swelling hills,
-clothed with trees, where the delicate acacia
-and the majestic maple are mingled with the
-scented lime and the dark and rigid cypress,
-whose blended shadows fall over a thousand
-graves, and turn away the sunlight from the
-lettered tombs of many a lordly Musselmaun.
-Eyoub possesses also a melancholy interest from
-the fact, that in its beautiful cemetery stands
-the rude mausoleum of the rebel Ali of Tepeleni
-who revolted in Albania, wherein are deposited
-the heads of himself, his three sons, and his
-grandson. Nor is this all; for a small mosque,
-almost buried amid tall trees, may be distinguished
-at the point where the main street
-sweeps downward to the water’s edge, whose
-modest minaret is painted a dull red from its
-base to its spire, and which bears the thrilling
-designation of the “Mosque of Blood.”</p>
-
-<p>I have elsewhere mentioned that the Osmanlis
-do not permit their temples to be desecrated by
-the admission of the dead beneath their roofs;
-and this humble pile earned its awful appellation
-at the siege of Constantinople, when its doors
-were forced by the combatants, and its narrow
-floor cumbered with slain. Since that period, its
-single minaret has been painted as I have described;
-and it possesses an additional interest
-from its vicinity to the bleak, naked, tree<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">436</a></span>less
-hill, whereon were interred all the True
-Believers who perished at that memorable
-period, and whose ashes still remain undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more romantic than the appearance
-of the Seven Towers, the remains of
-the Palace of Belisarius, and the crumbling
-walls of the city, extending along the whole
-line of road to Baloucl&egrave;, like a succession of
-ruined castles; and overtopped by forest trees,
-whose bright foliage forms a striking contrast
-from the grey and mouldering rampart. At intervals,
-towers thickly overgrown with ivy, and
-tottering to their fall, raise their fantastic outline
-against the sky; while the moat is in many
-places entirely concealed by the wild fig trees,
-and the dense underwood, that have sprung in
-wild luxuriance from the rich soil.</p>
-
-<p>At the period of our visit, the Easter festivities
-were at their height, and the road was covered
-with groups of travellers, all hurrying
-towards the same point. There was the gilded
-araba of the Turkish lady, with its covering of
-crimson cloth, and its carved lattices; followed
-by a mounted negro. Then came the bullock-carriage
-of an Armenian family, gaily painted
-and cushioned, its oxen half covered with
-worsted tassels and finery, and glittering about
-the head with foil and gold leaf; while a long
-curved stick, extending backward from each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">437</a></span>
-yoke as far as the carriage, was painted in
-stripes of blue and yellow, and adorned with
-pendent tassels of coloured worsted. Both
-animals wore their charm against the Evil Eye;
-and the whole equipage was sufficiently well-appointed
-to have done honour to the harem of
-a Pasha, while the bright dark eyes and delicate
-hands of its occupants would have been an
-equal triumph for his taste. But at the first
-glance you saw that the carriage was not that
-of a Turk, for the painted hoops were plainly
-covered by a white awning, the symbol of the
-<em>ra&iuml;ah</em>. The haughty Osmanli has reserved to
-himself the privilege of seating his wives beneath
-draperies of crimson, blue, or purple, fringed
-with gold; while the Armenian, the Greek, and
-the Jew, when making use of this popular conveyance,
-are obliged to content themselves with
-a simple awning of white linen. Here galloped
-a reckless Greek, urging his good hack to the
-top of its speed; there moved along a stately
-Turk, with the hand of his groom resting on the
-flank of his well-fed horse, and his pipe-bearer
-walking five paces behind him. Now it was a
-party of Franks, booted, spurred, and looking
-in silent scorn upon the incongruous trappings
-of the natives, and now a group of foot-passengers,
-walking at a pace which I never saw
-equalled in England.</p>
-
-<p>As we approached Baloucl&egrave;, the features of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">438</a></span>
-the scene became still more striking. The low
-wall that skirted the road was covered with
-Turkish women, squatted upon their rugs and
-carpets, with the arabas in which they had travelled
-ranged along behind them. Seridjhes
-were walking droves of horses to and fro, and
-waiting for customers to hire them; travelling
-merchants were retailing yahourt and mohalib&egrave;
-to the hungry and the weary; Bulgarians were
-playing their awkward antics to attract the
-attention of the idle, and the piastres of the
-profuse; and the halt and the blind were seated
-by the wayside, to invoke the paras of the charitable.
-Parties of Persians, with large white
-turbans, silken robes, and eyes as black as midnight,
-were walking their well-trained horses
-through the crowd; and a detachment of the
-Irregular Troops, with their jester at their head,
-in a cap made of sheepskin, adorned with three
-fox-tails, and a vest of undressed leather, drove
-back the people on either side, as they made
-their way through the throng with a sort of
-short run. They had precisely the appearance
-of banditti, each being dressed and armed according
-to his own means or fancy; while
-their huge mustachioes, and the elf locks that
-escaped from beneath their turbans, added to
-the ferocious character of their aspect.</p>
-
-<p>The plain on which the Church is situated is
-thickly wooded in its immediate neighbourhood,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">439</a></span>
-and on this occasion was covered with a dense
-crowd of merry human beings. The same
-amusements as I have described at the Armenian
-festival were in full career; but the heavy
-meaningless dance of the Champs des Morts was
-here exchanged for the graceful roma&iuml;ka, which
-was going forward in every direction.</p>
-
-<p>For every other female whom I saw on the
-ground, I remarked at least a hundred and
-fifty Turkish women; and the astonishment
-excited by the appearance of the Greek lady
-by whom I was accompanied, and myself among
-these latter, was most amusing. As the greater
-number of them had never before seen a Frank
-lady on horseback, they concluded that we
-had each lost a leg; and the “Mashallahs!”
-with which they contemplated our gaiety were
-innumerable. But as a Turkish woman never
-scruples to address a stranger in the street; and
-as our being actually crippled was a matter of
-uncertainty; they were resolved to satisfy their
-minds on this very important point; and several
-of them accordingly addressed themselves to
-the gentlemen of our party, in order to resolve
-the doubt; exclaiming with an energy worthy
-of the occasion: “For the love of God, tell us
-if your wives have lost a leg, or not!”</p>
-
-<p>When they had been assured to the contrary,
-their next conclusion was still more amusing.
-It was clear that none but rope-dancers could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">440</a></span>
-balance themselves upon the back of a horse
-without having one leg on either side of the
-saddle&mdash;ergo, we were collectively, ladies and
-gentlemen, the identical party of rope-dancers,
-whom the Sultan had engaged for the marriage
-festivities of his Imperial daughter: and so
-perfectly convinced were they of their own sagacity
-on this second occasion, that I am only
-surprised that they had sufficient discretion to
-refrain from requesting us to give them a specimen
-of our abilities.</p>
-
-<p>The Church of Baloucl&egrave; stands in the centre
-of an enclosed court, within which are also
-situated the houses of the priests. A handsome
-flight of stone steps leads downward to the
-portal; and, as you cross the threshold, the interior
-of the edifice produces on you the effect
-of something that has sprung into existence
-at the touch of an enchanter’s wand. It looks
-as though it were built of porcelain, all is so
-fresh and so glittering. It is entirely lined with
-white and gold, and the paint upon the walls is
-so highly varnished, that you can scarcely distinguish
-it from the polished marble that composes
-the screen of the sanctuary; the latticed
-gallery of the women is fancifully decorated and
-gilt; and the elegant pulpit is shaped like an
-inverted minaret.</p>
-
-<p>But the principal attraction of the Church of
-Baloucl&egrave;, and that which lends to it its distin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">441</a></span>guishing
-character of sanctity, is the Holy Well,
-dedicated to the Virgin, which, on the occasion
-of all high festivals, is opened for the benefit
-and edification of the pious. Situated in a vault
-immediately beneath the chancel, protected by
-a balustrade of marble, and lighted by the lamp
-that is constantly burning before the shrine
-of the Madonna, rises the spring whose holy
-and healing qualities are matter of devout belief
-with the Greeks; and in which the lower orders
-of the people gravely assert that fish are to be
-seen swimming about, cooked on one side and
-crude on the other.</p>
-
-<p>This somewhat extraordinary circumstance
-is accounted for by a variety of legends; the
-most comprehensible of the whole being that
-which affirms that, some holy man or woman
-having been refused food on this very spot,
-when on a pilgrimage to a shrine of the Virgin,
-situated in the neighbourhood, the well-disposed
-fish, whose pious self-immolation has been thus
-immortalised, sprang from the waters of the
-spring, and flung themselves upon the heated
-ashes of the fire, whereon the churlish host, who
-refused help to the weary and wayworn pilgrims,
-had just prepared his own meal. How
-the travellers were induced to refrain from the
-savoury repast; and how the fish contrived to
-return to the stream after being well cooked on
-one side, the legend sayeth not; and those who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">442</a></span>
-are inclined to doubt the fact of their present
-existence had better make a descent into the
-vault on the occasion of an Easter festival; and,
-should they still continue sceptical, after the
-scene which they will then and there witness,
-nothing that I can say will awaken their faith.</p>
-
-<p>After having duly flung a few piastres upon
-the salver held by the priest who guarded the
-door; and protected on either side by a gentleman,
-to secure me from the pressure of the
-crowd, I commenced my slippery descent into
-the subterranean chapel. The stone steps were
-running with water, spilt by the eager motions
-of those who were bearing it away; nor was
-this all, for, as they handed it to each other over
-the heads of such as chanced to obstruct their
-passage, an occasional shower fell upon us from
-above, whose holiness by no means sufficed to
-counteract its chill.</p>
-
-<p>When I gained the chapel, and paused to
-take breath, a most singular scene presented
-itself. The narrow space was cumbered with
-individuals, who were shouting, struggling, and
-even fighting their way, to the margin of the
-Well: an image of the Virgin tricked out in gold
-and embroidery, before which burned the lamp
-that lit up the subterranean, gleamed out in vain
-from a niche opposite to the spring: the very
-piety of her votaries had induced them to turn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">443</a></span>
-their backs upon her; and I believe that mine
-was the only eye which rested upon her altar.</p>
-
-<p>Some, who had succeeded in filling the
-vessels which they had brought with them,
-were standing bare-headed, throwing the cold
-stream over their shaven crowns: others, who
-had suffered from lameness, were emptying their
-earthen jars upon their feet; some were pouring
-it down their chests, and others again down
-their throats.</p>
-
-<p>By the strenuous endeavours of my friends,
-and the assistance of a sickly-looking priest
-who was collecting paras among the crowd, I
-succeeded in obtaining a draught of the water;
-and, whether it arose from the stream having
-been thickened by the dipping in of so many
-vessels, or that the half fried fish imparted to it
-a disagreeable flavour of the charcoal ashes;
-or, again, that it was really and simply of very
-indifferent quality, I cannot take upon me to
-decide; while I am quite competent to declare
-that I never swallowed a more unsatisfactory
-beverage, and that nothing less than a very
-painful thirst would have induced me to venture
-upon a second trial.</p>
-
-<p>On escaping from the subterranean, (and it
-was really an escape)! I went to examine the
-machine which in all the principal Greek churches
-acts as the substitute for a bell, whose use is
-not permitted by the Turks. It is a very in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">444</a></span>artificial
-instrument, being merely a bar of iron
-resting lightly between two perpendicular pieces
-of timber, which, on being struck with a short
-bar of cypress-wood, emits a clear ringing sound,
-that may be heard to a considerable distance.
-In the smaller churches two sticks are beaten
-together, but this signal avails only when the
-congregation is nestled near the walls of the
-temple.</p>
-
-<p>Having secured the water that they had
-taken so much trouble to obtain, the enthusiastic
-and light-hearted Greeks were pouring
-out of the chapel as we returned; and ere we
-could mount our horses many of them had
-already joined the dancers, and were engaged
-in winding through the graceful mazes of the
-roma&iuml;ka, while others were busied in filling
-their chibouks in the neighbourhood of the
-coffee-tents.</p>
-
-<p>A mass of heavy vapours, rising up against the
-wind, and arraying themselves like a host about
-to do battle, warned us not to linger long at so
-considerable a distance from home; and, profiting
-by the intimation of a coming storm, we started
-off at a gallop, to the increased astonishment
-of the Turkish women, who were still clustering
-like bees upon the wall. But our speed availed
-us nothing: we had not cleared the hills above
-Kahaitchana when the enemy was upon us; and
-a tempest of blended hail, rain, and wind bore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">445</a></span>
-us company for the remainder of the journey; and
-thus we were fairly drenched ere we reached
-Pera, notwithstanding our offerings at the shrine
-of the Virgin, and our pilgrimage to the Holy
-Well.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">446</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Figurative Gratitude of the Seraskier Pasha&mdash;Eastern Hyperbole&mdash;Reminiscences
-of Past Years&mdash;A Vision Realized&mdash;Strong Contrasts&mdash;The
-Marriage F&ecirc;tes&mdash;Popular Excitement&mdash;Crowded Streets&mdash;The
-Auspicious Day&mdash;Extravagant Expectations&mdash;The Great Cemetery&mdash;Dolma
-Batch&egrave;&mdash;The Grand Armoury&mdash;Turkish Women&mdash;Tents
-of the Pashas&mdash;The Bosphorus&mdash;Preparations&mdash;Invocation&mdash;The
-Illuminated Bosphorus&mdash;A Stretch of Fancy&mdash;A Painful Recollection&mdash;Natural
-Beauties of the Bosphorus&mdash;The Grave-Yard&mdash;Evening
-Amusements&mdash;Well Conducted Population.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> a letter of thanks recently addressed by
-the Seraskier Pasha to the Sultan, in acknowledgment
-of some honour conferred upon him
-by his Imperial Master, he exclaims in an affected
-burst of enthusiastic gratitude:&mdash;“Your
-Sublime favour has been as a southern sun
-piercing even to the remote corner of my insignificance.
-Had I all the forest boughs of the
-Universe for pens, and the condensed stars of
-Heaven for a page whereon to inscribe your
-bounties, I should still lack both space and
-means to record them!”</p>
-
-<p>Even in this style should he or she who
-undertakes to become their chronicler, shape the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">447</a></span>
-periods in which are detailed the marriage festivities
-of the Princess Mihirm&agrave;h. The pen
-should be tipped with diamond-dust, and the
-paper powdered with seed-pearl. All the hyperboles
-of the Arabian story-tellers should be
-heaped together, as the colours of the rainbow
-are piled upon the clouds which pillow the setting
-sun; and, as the gorgeous tail of the peacock
-serves to withdraw the eye from its coarse and
-ungainly feet, so should the glowing sentences
-that dilate on the glories of the show, veil from
-the vision of the reader the paltry details that
-would tend to dissolve the enchantment.</p>
-
-<p>How often have I hung entranced over the
-sparkling pages of the “Hundred and One
-Nights.” How little did I ever expect to see
-them brought into action. When a mere girl,
-I remember once to have laid the volume on
-my knees; and, with my head pillowed on my
-hand, and my eyes closed, to have attempted
-to bring clearly before my mental vision the
-Caravan of the Merchand Abdullah, when
-he departed in search of the Valley of Diamonds.</p>
-
-<p>Years have since passed over me, and that
-gorgeous description is no longer a mere dream.
-I have looked upon its realization&mdash;I have seen
-the flashing of the jewels in the sunshine&mdash;the
-prancing of the steeds impatient of a rider&mdash;the
-rolling of the fifty chariots&mdash;the gathering of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">448</a></span>
-the throng of princes&mdash;the eunuchs and the
-horsemen&mdash;winding their way over hill and
-through valley, under a sky of turquoise, along
-the bank of a clear stream; and within sight of
-a sea whose shore was studded with palaces,
-and upon whose blue bosom a fleet of stately
-ships were riding at anchor within an arrow’s
-flight of land.</p>
-
-<p>But I have also seen more than this. I have
-seen not only the machinery at work, but the
-wheels that worked it; not only the brilliant
-effect, but the combination of paltry means used
-to produce it&mdash;the blending of the magnificent
-and the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mesquin</em>&mdash;a thousand minute details,
-unimportant in themselves, and yet operating
-so powerfully on the imagination, that they clipped
-the wings of Fancy, and wrung the wand
-from the grasp of the Enchanter.</p>
-
-<p>There is no consistency, no keeping, in Oriental
-splendour. The Pasha, with the diamond
-on his breast, is generally attended by a running
-footman who is slip-shod; and the Sultana,
-whose araba is veiled by a covering of crimson
-and gold, not infrequently figures in pantaloons
-of furniture chintz, and an antery of printed
-cotton. The same startling contrasts meet you
-at every step: and tourists and historians pass
-them over, because they destroy the continuity
-of their narrations, and the rounding of their
-periods; and yet they are as characteristic of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">449</a></span>
-the people as the chibouk or the turban, and
-therefore equally worthy of record.</p>
-
-<p>The F&ecirc;tes were to continue for eight days&mdash;the
-diamond was to be shivered into fragments,
-and thus divided into many portions without
-sacrificing its lustre. All the population of Constantinople
-was in a ferment&mdash;the charshees
-had yielded up their glittering store of gold and
-silver stuffs&mdash;the diamond-merchants had exhausted
-themselves in elegant conceits&mdash;the
-confectioners had realized the fabled garden of
-enchantment visited by Aladdin in his search
-for the magic lamp, and the candied fruits
-peeped from amid their sugary cases, like masses
-of precious ore, and clusters of jewels&mdash;the silk-bazar
-of Broussa was a waste&mdash;the environs of
-Pera resembled a scattered camp&mdash;the heights
-around the valley of Dolma Batch&egrave; were guarded
-by mounted troops&mdash;provisions of every description
-trebled their price: and one vessel, laden
-with a hundred and fifty thousand fowls for
-the market of Constantinople, which arrived
-from the Archipelago, was secured for the exclusive
-use of the Sultan’s kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Pashas were daily pouring in from the provinces&mdash;tribute
-was flung into the yawning
-coffers of the state&mdash;audiences of congratulation
-kept the Imperial Palace in a constant
-whirl&mdash;and the streets of the city were thronged
-with a motley crowd, either invited thither by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">450</a></span>
-the authorities, or attracted by the hope of profit.
-Bulgarians, in parties of three or four, impeded
-the progress of every respectable passenger who
-would fain have threaded his way among them
-unmolested; and by dint of stunning him with
-their discordant instruments, and intruding
-themselves upon his path to exhibit their coarse
-and ungainly dances, wrung from him by their
-sturdy perseverance a donation whose impulse
-was certainly not one of charity. Bohemian
-gipsies, some of them so lovely that they seemed
-formed to command the prosperity which they
-subtly promised to others, were bestowing palaces
-and power on every side at the slender price of
-a few paras. Arabian tumblers, turned loose for
-the first time in the streets of a great capital,
-and appearing scarcely able to keep their feet
-upon the solid earth, jostled you at every corner.
-Persian rope-dancers stalked gravely and solemnly
-along, with large white turbans, and
-flowing robes. Bedouin jugglers were grouped
-in coffee-shops and smoking-booths, awaiting
-the moment when their services would be required;
-and bewildering the sober brains of the
-surrounding Turks with loud vauntings of the
-feats with which they proposed to delight his
-Sublime Highness, and to astonish his people.
-Altogether, Constantinople resembled a human
-kaleidoscope, whose forms and features varied
-at every turn; and even those who, like myself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">451</a></span>
-had no immediate interest in the festival, caught
-a portion of the popular excitement, and became
-anxious for the period of its celebration.</p>
-
-<p>At length, the auspicious morning dawned
-which the Court Astrologer had declared to
-herald happiness to the Princess; and all Stamboul
-had crossed the Bosphorus with the rising
-sun to share in the Imperial festivities.</p>
-
-<p>Long before mid-day Pera also was a desert:
-the stream of life had flowed in one sole direction,
-and every avenue leading to Dolma
-Batch&egrave; was thronged with human beings,
-anxious and excited, and yet scarcely knowing
-what they anticipated. The marriage festival
-had been the one engrossing subject of discourse
-and speculation for so many months&mdash;such extravagant
-suggestions had been hazarded, and
-such wild assertions had been made, that the
-imagination of the crowd had run riot; and, had
-the fountains poured forth liquid ore, and the
-heavens themselves rained diamond-dust, I am
-not sure that such events would have caused
-any extraordinary manifestation of astonishment,
-from the mass of spectators who had clustered
-themselves like bees in the neighbourhood
-of the palace.</p>
-
-<p>The Great Cemetery looked as though every
-grave had given up its dead; there was scarcely
-space to pass among the crowd which thronged
-it. Dancing, smoking, and gambling for sugar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">452</a></span>plums,
-(the only stake that a Turk ever hazards
-on a game of chance) divided the attention
-of the loiterers, with swings, round-abouts,
-and mohalib&egrave; merchants. Pillauf and kibaubs
-were preparing in every direction for the refreshment
-of the hungry; and tinted and perfumed
-sherbets, carefully guarded from the sun,
-were whiling in their turn the weary and the
-warm to pause on their onward path, and indulge
-in their tempting freshness.</p>
-
-<p>The tents were flaunting their bright colours
-in the sunshine; the smoking booths were filled
-with guests; the little wooden kiosk on the edge
-of the height was unapproachable; the long line
-of wall surrounding the Artillery Barrack was,
-as usual on all festive occasions, covered with
-Turkish women; and the whole space beneath
-was instinct with life and motion.</p>
-
-<p>From the point of the hill above the sea the land
-shoots sharply down into the valley of Dolma
-Batch&egrave;, clothed with fruit trees, whose perfumed
-blossoms, then in the height of their beauty,
-were emptying their tinted chalices, on the air.
-The road leading to the Palace is cut along the
-side of the declivity, forming on its upper edge
-a lofty ridge which was fringed throughout its
-whole length with tents; in the distance rose the
-Military College, spanning the crest of the hill
-like a diadem; with the gilded and glittering crescent
-that crowns the dome of its mosque flashing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">453</a></span>
-in the sunshine. On the right hand the view was
-bounded by the dense forest of cypresses rising
-above the tombs of the Turkish cemetery, which
-swept darkly downwards to the Bosphorus that
-was laughing in its loveliness, and reflecting on
-its waveless bosom the lovely height of Scutari
-which hemmed in the landscape. And as the eye
-wandered onward along the channel, it took in
-the dusky shore of Asia, with its kiosk-crowned
-and forest-clad mountains; until the line was
-lost in the gradually failing purple, that blent
-itself at last with the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately beneath the hill, and close upon
-the shore, stands the Palace of Dolma Batch&egrave;,
-with its walls of many tints, and its fantastic
-irregularity of outline; while behind its spacious
-gardens, sloping gently upward, and clothed
-with turf, rises a stretch of land which was now
-crowded with Turkish women. Nothing could
-be more picturesque than their appearance: the
-nature of the ground having enabled them to
-arrange themselves amphitheatrically, and from
-thence to command an uninterrupted view of
-the esplanade in front of the Grand Armoury,
-which is enclosed on its opposite side by a raised
-terrace, along whose edge were pitched the
-tents of the Pashas. There must have been at
-least five hundred women clustered together on
-that one small stretch of land; and in the distance
-it presented precisely the appearance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">454</a></span>
-a meadow covered with daisies, with here and
-there a corn-poppy flaunting in the midst; the
-white yashmacs and red umbrellas lending
-themselves readily to the illusion.</p>
-
-<p>The tents of the Pashas were many of them
-very magnificent: the Grand V&egrave;zir’s was hung
-with crimson velvet, richly embroidered; while
-that of Achmet Pasha was lined with green
-satin, and fringed with gold; and the whole
-were richly carpeted, and surrounded by handsome
-sofas. The reception-marquee, in which
-the Sultan was to entertain a party of guests
-daily, was situated in the rear of those that I
-have just described: and the kitchen, ingeniously
-fitted up with stoves, dressers, and tables,
-hewn in the hill-side, was tenanted by five hundred
-cooks.</p>
-
-<p>The Bosphorus was crowded with ca&iuml;ques,
-almost as countless as its ripple; and immediately
-in front of the Palace, and nearly in the
-centre of the stream, were anchored two rafts,
-supporting small fortified castles, whence the
-fireworks were to be displayed.</p>
-
-<p>A survey of these different preparations proved
-to be the principal amusement of the day, as
-the rope-dancing on the Esplanade of the Armoury
-was not sufficiently attractive to detain
-any individual less indolent than a Turkish
-woman; and consequently, after having completed
-our tour of observation, we returned to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">455</a></span>
-Pera in order to repose ourselves, and to prepare
-for the magnificent spectacle that awaited us
-in the evening.</p>
-
-<p>And now, ye Spirits of Fire, who guard the subterranean
-flames which are only suffered to flash
-forth at intervals from the crater of some fierce
-volcano&mdash;Ye, whose brows are girt with rays
-of many-coloured radiance, whose loins are cinctured
-by the lightning, and whose garments are
-of the tint which hangs like a drapery over the
-cineritious remnants of a conflagrated city&mdash;Ye,
-who must have left your vapoury palaces, and
-bowed your flame-crowned heads upon your
-gleaming wings, in blighted pride to see your
-lordliest pageants overmatched&mdash;lend me a pen
-of fire, drawn from the pinion of your bravest
-sprite, and fashioned with an unwrought diamond;
-for thus only can I record the glorious
-scene that burst upon me, as, at the close of
-day, I stood upon a height above the channel,
-when a festive people had recorded their participation
-in the gladness of their Monarch, in
-characters of fire.</p>
-
-<p>The moon rode high in Heaven, but her beam
-looked pale and sickly, as it faded before the
-brighter light with which men had made night
-glorious; while the stars seemed but fading
-sparks, that had been emitted by the stupendous
-line of fire girdling the Bosphorus&mdash;It was
-a spectacle of enchantment!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">456</a></span>Not an outline could be traced of any of the
-lordly piles which fringe the coast. The summit
-of the Asian shore was dimly perceptible, as it
-cut sharply against the clear deep blue of the
-horizon; but there was no intrusive object of
-mortal creation for the every day necessities of
-life, to recall the wandering fancy back to earth.
-Nothing can be conceived more beautiful than
-the whole scene. A range of palaces of the
-most fantastic forms, wrought in fire, and seeming
-to be poized upon the waves, along which
-they threw their gleaming shadows, stretched
-far as the eye could reach. Portals of variegated
-light&mdash;terraces of burnished gold, or of beaten
-silver&mdash;groves of forest trees, whose leaves
-were emeralds&mdash;fruits, heaped in stately vases,
-each one a priceless gem&mdash;altars, upon which
-burnt flames of liquid metal&mdash;pavilions of
-crystal&mdash;and halls, lined with columns of sapphire,
-and lighted by domes of carbuncles, were
-among the objects that appeared to have sprung
-up from the depths of the ocean, and to be now
-riding upon its bosom.</p>
-
-<p>The sensation which this gorgeous scene produced
-upon me, for the first few moments, was
-almost painful. I deemed myself thralled&mdash;I
-doubted my own identity&mdash;I almost expected
-the earth to fail beneath my feet, for earth had
-no share in the spectacle on which I looked&mdash;I
-saw boats passing and repassing over a lake of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">457</a></span>
-molten silver&mdash;I saw palaces of fire based upon
-its surface, and heaving with its undulations&mdash;a
-marine monster, whose eyes were dazzling, and
-whose nostrils vomited forth flames that shot
-high into the air, wound its slow way among the
-gliding barks, and none heeded its vicinity&mdash;I
-beheld huge dark masses covered with stars of
-light, which were reflected in the stream beneath,
-looking like rocky craters that would shortly
-burst, and cast forth the imprisoned fires&mdash;carriages
-and horses, guided by spectral hands,
-followed over the same cold clear surface&mdash;and
-suddenly, with a hissing sound which startled
-me from my reverie, and a burst of light almost
-blinding, up sprang a cluster of fiery serpents
-into the pure ether, mocking the pale moon with
-their transient brilliancy, and then falling back
-in starry showers.</p>
-
-<p>The dream of fancy was dispelled at once:&mdash;A
-handful of rockets sufficed to arouse me from
-one of the wildest visions in which I ever remember
-to have indulged&mdash;for I no sooner saw
-them run shimmering along the sky, than I
-sickened at the memory of the frightful catastrophe
-which attended their preparation; when
-eighty-four miserable human beings fell victims
-to the explosion of the powder-room of the manufactory.
-My enthusiasm was at an end: but my
-admiration of the magnificent scene, amid which
-I stood, continued unabated; the channel of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">458</a></span>
-Bosphorus, beautiful under all circumstances,
-and at all times, offered facilities, and enhanced
-effects, in an exhibition like that on which I
-looked, that cannot probably be exceeded in the
-world; and I felt at once that, even had man
-done less, nature would still have made the
-pageant peerless.</p>
-
-<p>We at length turned reluctantly away from
-the City of Fire on which we had been so long
-looking; and, threading among the tents that
-occupied the crest of the hill, we passed out
-through the fair of the Great Cemetery. Every
-booth was thronged. In one, a set of Fantoccini
-were performing their miniature drama;
-in another, an Improvvisatore was regaling a
-circle of listeners with a gesticulation and volubility
-which appeared to excite great admiration
-in his auditors; while in a third, a trio of
-Bohemian minstrels, squatted upon a mat,
-were accompanying their wild recitative by a
-few chords struck almost at random upon their
-mandolins.</p>
-
-<p>In the distance, a wreath of lamps defined
-the outline of the Military College; while lower
-in the valley gleamed out the costly chandeliers
-which lit up the tents of the Pashas. The hills
-were sprinkled over with lights; the terrace at
-the extremity of the palace was a wall of fire;
-and the scene was all life and gladness. Crowds
-thronged the narrow road; but not a sound of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">459</a></span>
-discord, not a word uttered in menace or in
-defiance, escaped from the lips of a single individual;
-all were tranquil, orderly, and well
-conducted; the sole aim of each was amusement;
-and this great eastern mob, amounting
-to between forty and fifty thousand persons, collected
-together from all the surrounding country,
-from the heart of a great city, and from the
-shores of two different quarters of the earth,
-appeared to act from one common impulse, and
-to have one common interest.</p>
-
-<p>It is questionable whether such a fact as this
-could be recorded of any other country.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">460</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Repetition&mdash;The Esplanade&mdash;The Kiosk and the Pavilion&mdash;A Short
-Cut&mdash;Dense Crowd&mdash;A Friend at Court&mdash;Curious <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Coup d’&OElig;il</em>&mdash;The
-Arena&mdash;The Orchestra&mdash;First Act of the Comedy&mdash;Disgusting
-Exhibition&mdash;The Birth of the Ballet&mdash;Dancing Boys&mdash;Second Act
-of the Drama&mdash;Insult to the Turkish Women&mdash;The Provost Marshal&mdash;Yusuf
-Pasha, the Traitor&mdash;Clemency of the Sultan&mdash;Forbearance
-of an Oriental Mob&mdash;Renewal of the Ballet&mdash;Last Act of the Drama&mdash;Theatrical
-Decorations&mdash;Watch-dogs and Chinese&mdash;Procession of
-the Trades&mdash;Frank Merchants&mdash;Thieves and Judges&mdash;Bedouin
-Tumblers&mdash;Fondness of the Pashas for Dancing&mdash;The Wise Men of
-the East.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> were worse than idle to follow the daily
-progress of the F&ecirc;tes. It were but to weary the
-reader with repetitions, or to delude him with
-fictions; for the same actors being engaged
-during the whole of the festival, only varied their
-exhibitions sufficiently to emancipate themselves
-from the reproach of actual repetition. So monotonous,
-indeed, did I find the second representation
-I was induced to witness, that I never
-ventured upon a third.</p>
-
-<p>I have already mentioned that the Esplanade
-of the Grand Armoury had been selected as one
-of the spots upon which the sports were to take
-place; but I learnt from an individual who had
-possessed himself of the important secret, that
-the principal performers were to exhibit on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">461</a></span>
-piece of land situated between the palace walls,
-and the kiosk in which the Pashas did the
-honours to the dinner-guests of the Sultan,
-after the termination of their repast; while a
-garden Pavilion, whose windows opened upon
-this space, was to be tenanted by his Sublime
-Highness, his Imperial daughters, the Sultana,
-their mother, and half a dozen of the most
-favoured ladies of the harem, who, from the
-painted lattices, could look forth upon the scene.</p>
-
-<p>This arrangement sufficiently attested the
-superiority of the situation; and, accordingly,
-avoiding the crowd of the Champs des Morts,
-and the thronged descent into the valley, we
-drove across the hills beyond the Military College;
-and then, skirting the height above Dolma
-Batch&egrave;, suddenly descended almost under the
-walls of the Palace. But the chosen spot was
-surrounded by guards, and the crowd were
-clustered densely in their rear; so densely, indeed,
-that the <em>arabadjhe</em> declared our further
-progress to be altogether impracticable.</p>
-
-<p>From this dilemma we were fortunately extricated
-by an officer of Achmet Pasha’s household;
-who, perceiving the difficulty, hastened
-to remove it, which he effected in no very gentle
-manner by striking the individuals who impeded
-our passage right and left with the flat
-of his sword, until he established us immediately
-behind the line of military.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">462</a></span>The performances had not yet commenced,
-and I had consequently time to contemplate the
-animated scene before me. On my right was
-the kiosk, whose wide casements were crowded
-with Pashas; on my left the Garden Pavilion,
-which had the honour of screening from the
-gaze of the vulgar the Brother of the Sun and
-his train of attendant beauties; behind me rose
-the hill whose summit was covered with the
-tents of the Imperial suite, and whose rise was
-occupied by a crowd of Turkish females; and
-before me stretched the Bosphorus. A small
-opening, leading down from the arena towards
-the shore, was occupied by a detachment of
-military: and beneath the windows of the kiosk,
-mats had been spread for about a hundred
-women, who were comfortably established under
-the long shadows of the building.</p>
-
-<p>At the other extremity of the circle, thirteen
-Jews, seated crescent-wise, were playing upon
-tambourines; while as many more, squatted in
-their rear, were each beating upon a sort of
-coarse drum, whose only attribute was noise;
-and the time to be observed by the musicians
-was regulated by an individual, with a venerable
-white beard and a staff of office. This head-splitting
-orchestra continued to accompany the
-whole performance, with very slight intervals of
-rest; and was quite in keeping with the remainder
-of the exhibition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">463</a></span>Not the slightest effort had been made to
-level the piece of land thus converted into
-a temporary theatre, and which was stony
-and uneven to a degree that must have disconcerted
-any individuals less philosophical than
-those who were to exhibit their histrionic and
-terpsichorean talents before the Ottoman Emperor
-and his August Court. In fact, the whole
-of the scenic preparations were conducted in so
-primitive a manner that you saw at once no
-deceit was intended, and that, if you suffered
-yourself to be led away by the incidents of the
-drama, you would not be deluded thereto by
-any effort of the actors.</p>
-
-<p>The first arrival upon the scene was that of
-four ragged personages, apparently intended
-to represent the street porters who ply for hire
-about the quays and markets; and these interesting
-individuals sustained a long and animated
-conversation, setting forth the dull condition
-of the Queen of Cities, in which neither
-feast nor festival had been held since the Ba&iuml;ram.
-Their lamentations at length attracted the
-attention of a fifth loiterer of the same class,
-who, joining the group, gave a new tone to the
-subject by announcing the approaching marriage
-of the High and Peerless Princess Mihirm&agrave;h&mdash;the
-daughter of His Sublime Highness
-Mahmoud the Powerful, the Emperor of the
-East, and Conqueror of the World!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">464</a></span>The intelligence was received with enthusiasm,
-and the new comer was encouraged to
-proceed with his narration; in which he accordingly
-set forth not only the beauties and
-virtues of the Imperial Bride, and the high and
-endearing qualities of her affianced husband,
-but also gave a <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">catalogue raisonn&eacute;</em> of all the
-sports and ceremonies which were to be observed
-on the happy occasion of her nuptials; and it
-is only fair to believe that he did so with some
-address, as a murmur of admiration ran through
-the crowd who were devouring his discourse.</p>
-
-<p>After asserting that the whole universe had
-been taxed to produce novelties worthy of the
-illustrious event, he proposed to exhibit to his
-companions an ingenious machine that had been
-imported from Europe, and which was to be
-exhibited by a friend of his own. Hereupon, a
-sort of buffoon was introduced, attended by two
-men, who fixed a swing with a lattice seat between
-two slight wooden frames, which they
-were obliged to support during the remainder
-of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>One by one, the respectable worthies whom
-I have attempted to describe were seated in the
-swing, and rocked gently backwards and forwards
-by the proprietor of the show; and during
-this time an old Jew, with a long white beard
-and tattered garments, followed by a deformed
-and hideous dwarf, joined himself to the party,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">465</a></span>
-but at a sufficient distance to indicate that he
-was conscious of his unworthiness to intrude
-upon their notice.</p>
-
-<p>A mischievous whim suddenly prompted the
-hilarious Mussulmauns to make the quailing
-dwarf a party in their pastime, and they accordingly
-placed him in the swing, and amused
-themselves for a time with his abortive attempts
-to escape; but, wearying of the jest, they agreed
-to replace him by his master; and, despite the
-prayers and terror of the hoary Jew, they compelled
-him to occupy the crazy seat, which, failing
-beneath his weight, precipitated him to the
-ground, where, falling upon his head, he remained
-apparently lifeless.</p>
-
-<p>At this period of the performance, half a score
-of the members of the orchestra left their places,
-and walked demurely out of the ring, in order
-to swell the crowd which shortly afterwards
-advanced to raise the body of the murdered
-man, and convey him away to burial.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be conceived more disgusting
-than the scene that followed; all the actors
-being actually Jews, selected from the very dregs
-of the people, and compelled to exhibit the degradation
-of their social state for the amusement
-of their task-masters. A wretched bier,
-borne by four men, was brought forward, on
-which the supposed corpse was flung with a
-haste and indecency betokening strong alarm;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">466</a></span>
-and it was about to disappear with its loathsome
-freight, when its passage was obstructed by a
-party of police, who, occupying the centre of
-the path along which it was passing, and remaining
-erect on its approach, were supposed to
-awaken in the bosoms of the bearers one of the
-strongest superstitions of the Jews of Turkey;
-who, when they are carrying a body to the
-grave that is met by a Christian or a Mahommedan
-who refuses to bend down and pass
-under the bier, consider the corpse so contaminated
-by the contact as to be without the pale
-of salvation; and, setting down the body under
-this impression on the spot where the encounter
-has taken place, they abandon it to the tender
-mercies of the local authorities.</p>
-
-<p>This wretched and revolting superstition was
-enacted by the degraded wretches who were
-hired on the present occasion to expose the abjectness
-of their people, with all the painful exactness
-which could delude the spectator into
-the belief that he beheld a scene of actual and
-unpremeditated horror. A distracted wife tore
-off her turban, and plucked out handfuls of her
-dishevelled hair; the body was rolled over into
-the dust: a scuffle ensued between the Jewish
-rabble and the armed kavasses, in which a few
-blows were given that appeared to fall more
-heavily than was altogether necessary to the
-effect of the scene; and the Jew, recovering from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">467</a></span>
-his trance amid the shouting and yelling of the
-combatants, was borne off in triumph by his
-tribe, with a wild chorus that terminated the
-first act of the drama!</p>
-
-<p>At intervals, the disgust which this hateful
-exhibition tended to excite in my bosom was
-relieved by the arrival of some tardy Pasha,
-attended by a train of domestics; who, entering
-the arena by the passage to which I have
-already alluded as opening from the shoreward
-side of the enclosure, guided his richly caparisoned
-steed, whose housings were bright with
-gems and embroidery, through the motley throng
-of actors; while his diamond star glittered in
-the sunshine, and his gold-wrought sword-belt
-and jewelled weapon-hilt flashed back the light
-that glanced upon them.</p>
-
-<p>My pen wearies of its office, as I pursue the
-detail of the morning’s performance; but I
-compel myself to the task, in order to convey to
-my readers an accurate idea of the Turkish
-drama&mdash;for this coarse, revolting, and aimless
-exhibition, whose description I have commenced,
-is the highest effort that the histrionic
-art has yet made in Turkey; and I am bound
-to add that the effect which it produced upon
-the spectators was one of unequivocal gratification.</p>
-
-<p>The retreat of the Jewish party was succeeded
-by the arrival of a group of ballet dancers, con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">468</a></span>sisting
-of about a score of youths from fourteen
-to twenty years of age, dressed in a rich costume
-of satin, fringed and ribbed with gold, varying
-in colour, according to the fancy of the wearer.
-They all wore their own long hair, curled in
-ringlets, and floating about their shoulders; and
-their appearance was so extremely disagreeable,
-notwithstanding the splendour of their
-costume, that I was surprised to learn that
-they all belonged to the Sultan, or to different
-wealthy Pashas, who take so much delight in
-seeing them dance as to keep several constantly
-in their pay.</p>
-
-<p>As I had been assured that the whole of the
-exhibition remained precisely similar to the
-scenic amusements of the ancient Romans, I contemplated
-it with more patience than I should
-otherwise have been able to exert: for I soon
-discovered that the dancing was quite upon
-a par with the dramatic portion of the entertainment.
-If that upon which I now looked
-were indeed the germ whence sprang the most
-graceful and the most elegant of all the movements
-of which the human form is susceptible&mdash;if
-this were indeed the birth of the Ballet&mdash;then
-is it a fair child that may truly blush for its
-parentage: for the exhibition was coarse, monotonous,
-and wearisome, nor did it possess one
-redeeming attribute. An unceasing circuit of
-the enclosure&mdash;a wreathing of arms and hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">469</a></span>kerchiefs&mdash;an
-affected inclination of the head
-first to the one side, and then to the other&mdash;a
-beating of feet upon the earth, and a succession
-of prostrations before the Pashas, appeared to
-be the extent of talent of which the dancers were
-capable; and the only variation that I was
-able to discover was an increase of speed, which
-rendered the heavy movements of the exhibitors
-only the more conspicuous. The very appearance,
-moreover, of this party of petticoated
-and long-haired youths was revolting to my
-English ideas: and, despite the acclamations
-with which they were liberally greeted, I felt
-glad when they made their parting obeisance,
-and gave place to the second series of performers.</p>
-
-<p>A Turk, f&egrave;zed and coated, next entered upon
-the scene&mdash;a sort of Oriental Jacques, melancholy
-and gentlemanlike, who told a tale of
-blighted love, and consequent sadness; at
-whose termination he was accosted by the
-buffoon, who in his turn delivered a panegyric
-on the loveliness of the veiled beauties of Stamboul,
-which however failed in its effect upon
-the slighted suitor; who, with sundry contortions,
-and wringings of the hands, professed his
-inability ever to love again.</p>
-
-<p>The buffoon, resolved, as it appeared, to make
-trial of his constancy; or outraged at the affectation
-of so anti-Turkish a display of sensibility,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">470</a></span>
-shortly withdrew; and returned accompanied
-by three of the Ballet dancers, disguised as
-females, and wearing the <em>yashmac</em> and the
-<em>feridjhe</em>. Of course, curiosity succeeded to indifference,
-and passion to curiosity; and a scene
-of love-making ensued, that consisted of attempts
-to induce the ladies to unveil; experiments
-with the swing, which occasionally broke
-down to the great amusement of the spectators;
-and energetic asseverations on the one part and
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>During the scene, the principal dancer, who
-personated the attractive fair-one, displayed
-considerable talent in his part; the <em>feridjhe</em>
-was thrown aside; and those Franks who were
-present, and who could not necessarily hope to
-gain even a glimpse of a Turkish female in the
-costume of the harem, had here an excellent
-opportunity of forming an idea of their appearance;
-and not only of their appearance, but
-of their manners also, for the resemblance
-was perfect; and, to render the ridicule still
-more complete, the dress was that of the last
-Palace adoption&mdash;the antery and trowsers,
-wedded to the wadded silk jacket and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gigot</em>
-sleeves!</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the performance, he danced
-the dance of the harem, with a degree of skill
-that few of the female dancers ever attain;
-and which elicited great applause from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">471</a></span>
-audience; and, had the exhibition ended here,
-it would have been rather absurd than revolting;
-but the jealous Musselmauns, who veil the
-casements of their harems with lattices, and
-the faces of their women with <em>yashmacs</em>, sat not
-only quietly but admiringly by, while all, and
-probably more than all, the secrets of the interior
-were laid bare, and caricatured for the
-amusement of the vulgar. There could not
-have been a high-minded Turkish woman present,
-who did not blush at least as deeply for her
-husband as for herself; and not a pure-hearted
-female of any nation, who did not feel more contempt
-for the instigators of the insult than for
-its objects.</p>
-
-<p>Not one of the least extraordinary portions
-of the day’s performances was enacted by a
-young Pasha, recently promoted to that distinguished
-rank, with the additional titles of General,
-and Provost-Marshal of the Ottoman
-armies. This very heavy and coarse-looking
-individual, who was formerly Commandant of
-the Military College in its days of neglect and
-utter uselessness, is the son of Yusuf Pasha, the
-treacherous Chief who sold Varna to the Russians,
-and escaped into the Northern States,
-where he remained secure, until the kind-hearted
-Nicholas had wrung his pardon from the betrayed
-Sultan; who in his plenitude of mercy not
-only forgave the crime of his false servant, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">472</a></span>
-rewarded his affected penitence with the Pashalik
-of Belgrade, which he now enjoys.</p>
-
-<p>Mustapha Pasha, his son, figured on the occasion
-of the F&ecirc;tes with a diamond star upon his
-breast, and grasping a whip bound with gold
-wire, and furnished with a long lash, which he laid
-about the heads and shoulders of the mob with
-a most lavish hand, whenever they advanced an
-inch or two beyond their allotted boundary. I
-confess that I could not help smiling as I pictured
-to myself the reception which His Highness
-Mustapha Pasha, General of Brigade, and
-Provost Marshal of the Ottoman Armies, would
-have received from a sturdy English mob, when
-they felt his long whip among them! I suspect
-that his labours would have been brief, and his
-office not altogether a safe one.</p>
-
-<p>Could I have disengaged my carriage from the
-crowd, I should at once have retired, perfectly
-satisfied with the specimen I had obtained of
-the Turkish taste in theatricals; but the arabas
-were standing four deep, and pressed upon
-from behind by a dense mob; and I was consequently
-compelled to remain a patient spectator
-of the whole performance. Intrigues with Greek
-serving-men, domestic quarrels ending in blows,
-and similarly well-conceived incidents, filled up
-the canvass, until the end of the second act,
-when a fresh set of ballet dancers, amounting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">473</a></span>
-to nearly one hundred, and clad in the beautiful
-old Greek dress, entered, and made their bow
-to the Pashas.</p>
-
-<p>During their performance, which was similar
-to that of the first party, although less gracefully
-executed, a new feature was added to the
-exhibition. An attempt at side scenes was evident,
-though I confess that for the first few
-minutes I was at a loss to imagine the intention
-of the very primitive machinery that was introduced.
-A couple of frames, similar to those
-on which linen is dried in England, were placed
-on a line about twenty feet apart, while, in the
-centre, a low railing of about six feet in length
-divided the distance. A poor old wretch, with
-a rope about his neck, was then tied to each
-frame, and made to squat down upon his hands
-and knees, to represent a watch-dog; and some
-green almonds were scattered about him for his
-food.</p>
-
-<p>These miserable individuals, whose hired and
-voluntary degradation made me heart-sick, were
-both of them old men, whose beards were grey,
-and whose age should have exempted them
-from such an office as their necessities had induced
-them to fulfil. Beside these were placed
-two youths dressed as Chinese, with long braids
-hanging down their backs, and feather fans in
-their hands; not very unlike the figures which
-adorn the old china in the cabinet of an anti<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">474</a></span>quary.
-Next came forward a procession composed
-of all the trades of Constantinople, from
-the Jew who vends fried fish at the corners of
-the streets, to the Frank merchant, who, when
-he closes his office, becomes one of the “Exclusives”
-of Pera.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the Frank was very roughly
-handled. His hat was struck off, and made a
-football for all the ragamuffins by whom he was
-surrounded; and the comments which were uttered
-alike upon his costume and his country
-were by no means courteous or conciliatory. But
-it could scarcely be expected that more delicacy
-would be observed towards a Frank than had
-been shown to the women of the country; and,
-this specimen of bad taste apart, the procession
-was the best point of the performance; as the
-individuals who composed it appeared to have
-been principally “taken in the fact,” and forced
-upon the scene; thus affording faithful rather
-than flattering representations of their several
-callings.</p>
-
-<p>When the procession moved off, the serious
-business of the drama was resumed; the three
-females re-entered on the scene, accompanied
-by their mother, and a Greek serving-man,
-laden with their parasols and essence-bottles;
-and followed by two thieves, who concealed
-themselves behind the Chinese statues, for
-such I found that the two quaint figures who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">475</a></span>
-had so quietly walked to their places were intended
-to represent. After a vast deal of absurd
-grimace and buffoonery, rugs were spread in
-front of the low railing, and the four females
-and the Greek servant seated themselves, to
-listen to a tale told by the old woman.</p>
-
-<p>While they were thus engaged, the melancholy
-Jacques of the previous act stole upon their
-privacy, when an absurd exhibition of screaming
-and fainting took place; during which the two
-thieves contrived, without any attempt at self-concealment,
-to possess themselves of the cachemires
-and handkerchiefs of the ladies, and,
-moving a few paces apart, they began to divide
-the spoil; when the buffoon, in his turn, prowling
-about the neighbourhood, discovered the
-theft, and, raising a hue and cry, at which the
-dogs were let loose by the party, hastened during
-the confusion to seize upon the booty of the
-robbers. The outcry attracted the attention of
-the Cadi, who entered, accompanied by his attendants,
-to ascertain the cause of the tumult;
-when the ladies, with tears and shrieks, declared
-the amount of their losses, and demanded
-justice.</p>
-
-<p>Of course the good taste which had made a
-jest of the feelings of their allies, and the morals
-of their women, would not permit the Turkish
-comedians to spare their judges; and accordingly
-the Cadi was a huge caricature of hu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">476</a></span>manity,
-with spectacles as large as saucers,
-and a beard of sheep skin. A hurried trial
-ensued, in which, while the Cadi was ogling the
-females, the buffoon was making himself merry
-at the expense of the Cadi; the executioner with
-his bastinado, and the clerk with his ink-horn
-and parchment, were both forthcoming; and the
-drama ended by the capture of the thieves, and
-the restoration of the stolen property!</p>
-
-<p>A confused dance, accompanied by the wild,
-shrill chanting of the dancers, which I can compare
-to nothing but the orgies of a troop of
-Bacchantes, succeeded the departure of the
-actors, and the whole arena appeared in motion.
-The drums and tambourines gave out their
-loudest discord; gold and silver glittered in the
-sunshine; arms were tossed in the air; the long
-tresses of the performers floated on the wind;
-and I was delighted when the appearance of a
-troop of Bedouin Arabs, summoned to Stamboul
-expressly for the occasion, possessed themselves
-of the open space to exhibit their feats of
-strength and address. They were magnificently
-attired in coloured satins, and formed a very
-curious group; but their accomplishments would
-scarcely have secured for them an engagement
-in a respectable English booth. It was altogether
-pitiable.</p>
-
-<p>When I at length contrived to escape from
-the crowd, I left a party of the dancing boys<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">477</a></span>
-performing their evolutions in the Kiosk of the
-Pashas. Their Highnesses had not yet had a
-surfeit of the senseless pastime; and the youths
-were reaping a golden harvest.</p>
-
-<p>The days are gone by in which people were
-wont to talk of the “Wise Men of the East.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">478</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Succession of Banquets&mdash;The Ch&egrave;&iuml;k Islam and the Clergy&mdash;Sectarian
-Prejudices&mdash;The Military Staff&mdash;The Naval Chiefs&mdash;The Imperial
-Household&mdash;The Pashas&mdash;The Grand Vizier&mdash;Magnificent Procession&mdash;Night
-Scene on the Bosphorus&mdash;The Palace of the Seraskier
-Pasha&mdash;Palace of Azm&egrave; Sultane&mdash;Midnight Serenade&mdash;Pretty Truants&mdash;The
-Shore of Asia&mdash;Ambassadorial Banquet&mdash;War Dance&mdash;Beautiful
-Effects of Light.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> of the most characteristic features of
-the marriage festivities was the succession of
-banquets given by the Sultan to the different
-high personages, belonging to, or connected
-with, his Empire.</p>
-
-<p>The first day was sacred to the Clergy, and
-the procession was a most interesting one. At
-its head walked the Ch&egrave;&iuml;k Islam, with the
-golden circlet about his brow, and his graceful
-robes of white cachemire falling around him in
-heavy folds; a party of the principal Imams
-followed. Then came the High Chief of the
-Turning Dervishes, with his lofty hat of
-white felt folded about with a shawl of the
-sacred green, and shrouded in his ample mantle.
-Other sects of Dervishes succeeded; and after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">479</a></span>
-them came Hadjis from the Holy Shrine of
-Mahomet&mdash;Emirs with their voluminous white
-turbans&mdash;and Fakirs from the far East. A short
-space behind advanced the Greek Patriarch,
-with his jewelled crown, and robes of embroidered
-satin; supported by a group of prelates.
-Following close upon his steps, next moved
-forward the Armenian Archbishop, similarly
-attended, and gorgeously attired; and as he
-advanced, he made way for the Jewish Hah&#257;m-bachi,
-or Grand Rabbi, with his flowing beard
-and inlaid crosier; a throng of Rabbis were in
-his train; and altogether the scene was one of
-a most interesting character.</p>
-
-<p>On the arrival of these holy men at the banquetting
-tent, a delicate difficulty presented
-itself. The heads of the Greek and Armenian
-churches resolutely refused to sit at table with,
-or to eat from the same dish as, their Israelitish
-companion; while the Jew, on his side,
-declared the utter impossibility of his partaking
-of the same food as that eaten by his Christian
-brethren. The stately Ch&egrave;&iuml;k Islam, meanwhile,
-was sitting by in uninterested silence; wondering,
-in the tolerance of his own heart and creed,
-why men serving the same God should not “dip
-with each other in the dish.”</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty was at length surmounted; for,
-as the Jewish law did not permit the Hah&#257;m-bachi
-to partake of flesh that had not been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">480</a></span>
-slaughtered by one of his own tribe, there was
-nothing left for him but a dinner of cheese and
-salad, which was accordingly spread on a side-table;
-while the scrupulous Christian prelates,
-who had refused the companionship of the representative
-of the ancient religion, seated themselves
-quietly on either side of the High Priest
-of Mahomet, and made an excellent dinner.
-The honours were done by four of the principal
-Pashas; and, at the close of the repast, the
-party adjourned to the kiosk to which I have
-already made reference, in order to enjoy the
-flight of the rockets, and the fairy wonders of the
-illuminated Bosphorus.</p>
-
-<p>To the church succeeded the army; and on
-the morrow Achmet Pasha, and the principal
-Officers of the Staff, were the invited guests.</p>
-
-<p>The magnificent shipping in the harbour next
-gave up its chiefs; and again Achmet Pasha,
-as temporary High Admiral, headed the board.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day, all the members of the
-Imperial Household were feasted in their turn;
-and, on the fifth, came the princely train of
-Pashas.</p>
-
-<p>The Grand V&egrave;zer rode first on a magnificent
-white Arabian, whose housings were wrought
-with gold and seed-pearl. His bridle-rein was
-richly worked with coloured silks; and his golden
-stirrups were finely chased. His sword-hilt
-blazed with diamonds: and the brilliant order<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">481</a></span>
-that he wore upon his breast burnt in the sunlight;
-fifteen servants on foot surrounded his
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>He was followed by the four newly-elected
-V&egrave;zirs: the Oumouri-Mulki&egrave;naziri, or Minister
-of the Interior; the Oumouri-Karidji&egrave;-Naziri, or
-Minister of the Exterior; the Minister of Military
-Finance: and the Lord High Comptroller
-of the Mint; by the Seraskier Pasha, the Generallissimo
-of the Imperial Armies, the Grand
-Master of the Artillery, and a crowd of out-dwelling
-Pashas, who had been summoned by
-the Sultan to assist at the festival.</p>
-
-<p>I never witnessed a more magnificent or profuse
-display of diamonds, and embroidery; of
-proud steeds, and glittering parade. The crowd
-of running footmen&mdash;the trampling of impatient
-chargers&mdash;the clashing of jewelled weapons
-against the gilded stirrups&mdash;the noise, the
-hurry, and the glare, baffle all description; and
-when at length the princely train had disappeared
-within the tent, and the grooms were
-leading away the splendid animals, who, freed
-from the control of a rider, were rearing and
-prancing among the crowd, I felt like one suddenly
-awakened from a gorgeous dream, and
-had only a severe headache left, to convince me
-that I had really been a spectator of the splendid
-scene.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening, well furred and cloaked, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">482</a></span>
-descended to the pier of Topphann&egrave;; and
-having secured one of the large ca&iuml;ques that
-ply to the islands, we stepped on board; and,
-rowing out into the middle of the channel, contemplated
-at our ease the wonders which surrounded
-us. From the centre of the stream,
-the whole mass of waters appeared to be girdled
-with fire; the shore was wrapt in darkness, and
-the edifices of light seemed to lift themselves
-almost to the clouds. I can conceive nothing
-finer of its kind; and we continued almost
-motionless where we had first paused, our
-ca&iuml;que heaving gently upon the bosom of the
-blue waters; until a large flight of rockets gave
-us a momentary view of the surrounding shores;
-but, above all, of the surface of the channel.</p>
-
-<p>If I had been surprised at the density of the
-crowd on shore, I was tenfold more so at the
-floating throng which had almost choked up
-the passage of the Bosphorus. Every light and
-manageable craft that could be made available,
-was astir that night, from the ca&iuml;que of the
-Pasha, to the little, round, tub-like boat of the
-Archipelagon trader; while the countless white
-yashmacs of the women gleamed out in the
-light of the rockets like a dense ridge of surf,
-as you approached nearer to the edge of the
-shore; a circumstance which was readily accounted
-for by the fact that no Turkish female
-is allowed to walk the streets after eight o’clock<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">483</a></span>
-at night, and that this was consequently their
-only method of witnessing the illuminations.</p>
-
-<p>Having contemplated the general effect from
-a distance, we with some difficulty made our
-way through the ca&iuml;ques which were closely
-wedged together opposite the Palace of Dolma
-Batch&egrave;, just in time to escape one of the magnificent
-explosions produced by the Greek fires,
-that were blazing up out of the water in every
-direction, and which burst not five yards from
-our boat.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the illuminations, that of the Seraskier
-Pasha, taken individually, was by far the most
-brilliant. The whole <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fa&ccedil;ade</em> of the palace was
-one blaze of light; and, in lieu of the oil by which
-the lamps were filled in every other instance,
-he had fed the flame with some ardent spirit,
-which gave to it the fitful tint and the flashing
-brilliancy of diamonds. A magnificent screen
-in arabesques, on the opposite coast, at the
-small summer palace of Scutari, was the next
-most attractive object of the Bosphorus. But it
-is only as a whole that such a pageant should
-be judged; and all those who looked upon the
-one which I have attempted to describe, will
-doubtlessly concede that it was a spectacle of
-beauty which has probably never been exceeded.</p>
-
-<p>We made our way slowly, but without much
-difficulty, along the European shore, until we
-reached the Palace of Azm&egrave; Sultane; but for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">484</a></span>
-a while after we had gained that point all further
-progress was impossible. There must have been
-many hundred ca&iuml;ques wedged together in front
-of her terrace, and not less than fifty of them
-contained musicians. We had intended to disembark
-at the palace steps, and to pay a visit
-to Nazip Hanoum, but were obliged to abandon
-the idea, as we became instantly aware that
-the thing was impracticable. We therefore remained
-quietly in our boat, under the bright
-light of the magnificent screen upon whose
-surface coloured lamps were intermixed with
-orange boughs and exotic flowers. The terrace
-was crowded; and I saw more than one
-light and fairy figure, that even the feridjhe failed
-wholly to conceal, which looked as though its
-owner should rather have been peering through
-the slender lattices, than from beneath the
-shade of a yashmac; but the occasion was so
-rife with excitement, and the voices from the
-ca&iuml;ques were so enticing, that doubtlessly more
-than one fair Dilaram and Leyla played truant
-that evening after the prescribed hour.</p>
-
-<p>Having at length contrived to make our way
-through this crowd of worshippers, for such they
-must have been, we left the Palace far behind us
-in a few minutes, and escaped from the noise
-and even danger which were the present characteristics
-of its vicinity. Our sturdy boatmen,
-bending to their oars, soon brought us opposite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">485</a></span>
-to the dwelling of the bride, whose whole extent
-was bright with festooned fires; but my spirit
-had begun to weary with the perpetual glare,
-and I rejoiced when we struck out once more
-into the middle of the channel, and running under
-the shore of Asia, whose infrequent lights
-at this point of the stream rather relieved than
-pained the eye, left far behind us the clamorous
-merriment of the crowd. We had the moon high
-above us; the pale and placid moon, which had
-for many nights been mocked by a radiance
-more dazzling than her own; while the myriad
-stars that were twinkling their silver eyes as
-if in wonder at the scene beneath them, were reflected
-in the clear water as in a mirror. It was
-a heavenly night; and as we glided slowly along
-under the Asian mountains, the song of a hundred
-nightingales came to us from the groves
-and gardens of the coast.</p>
-
-<p>The transition was extraordinary; and, after
-the excitement, the hurry, and the exertion of
-the previous day, the quiet of the hour fell upon
-me like a happy dream; and I remember that I
-shed tears as I lay back upon my cushions, and
-looked upwards to the calm moon, and listened
-to the thrilling melody of the midnight woods,
-and felt the soft wind fanning the hair upon my
-brow; but they were tears in which there was
-no bitterness; an outpouring of the wearied
-spirit that relieved its weight; and when we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">486</a></span>
-once more became entangled in the floating
-crowd, and dashed forward into the blinding
-light of the fire-girt Palaces, the heart-laugh
-which went ringing over the ripple might sometimes
-have been traced to me.</p>
-
-<p>The mere worldling will sneer at this admission;
-but those whose misfortune it is to feel
-deeply will understand the seeming inconsistency.</p>
-
-<p>The sixth day was fixed upon for the Ambassadorial
-Banquet, where the representatives
-of the Mighty Ones of the Earth were to
-feast together at the board of the Brother of the
-Sun, and Emperor of the World. A table, well-appointed
-in the European style, had been prepared;
-and the banquetting tent was neatly
-fitted up with draperies and mirrors.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening a new and distinct feature was
-added to the entertainments, by the introduction
-in the outer court of the Palace of a raised
-platform, on which a score of performers, clad
-in half armour, attempted a species of war-dance
-to the light of a dozen bonfires, which
-flashed and faded by turns; now revealing the
-glittering costume of the struggling and straggling
-combatants, and now enveloping them in a
-cloud of dense black smoke, as impenetrable as
-the waves of Erebus. The whole thing was a
-failure; and the only charm attendant on the
-exhibition, was the singular transition of light<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">487</a></span>
-and shade that played over the surface of the
-painted palace, and which produced effects almost
-magical; now touching the lofty portal
-with a golden gleam, and then fading away
-into a faint green, caught from the leafy boughs
-which fed the fires.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks are decidedly not a dancing nation.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">488</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">Monotonous Entertainments&mdash;Bridal Preparations&mdash;Common Interest&mdash;Appearance
-of the Surrounding Country&mdash;Ride to Arnautkeui&mdash;Sight-loving
-Ladies&mdash;Glances and Greetings&mdash;Pictorial Grouping&mdash;The
-Procession&mdash;The Trousseau&mdash;A Steeple-Chase.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Thus</span> far all had been monotonous from its
-constant repetition; the same dramas had been
-enacted, the same lamps had been lighted, and
-the same banquets had been prepared; but the
-seventh day was the eve of the Imperial marriage,
-on which the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">trousseau</em> of the bride was to
-be borne in state from the Palace of Dolma
-Batch&egrave;, to her own glittering Sera&iuml; on the Bosphorus.
-The period was arrived when her
-slaves, on withdrawing her from the bath, were
-to braid her long tresses with threads of gold,
-and strings of pearl, and to stain the palms of
-her hands and the soles of her feet with henna.</p>
-
-<p>At an early hour the streets of Pera were
-crowded with arabas and saddle-horses; and
-my own eager little chesnut was neighing out
-his impatience under my window before eight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">489</a></span>
-o’clock. It was a glorious morning, bright and
-sunny, without a cloud; and, as I sprang into
-my saddle, I felt that this was a day on which
-the Fates had resolved to weave a white thread
-into the web of my existence.</p>
-
-<p>All the three hundred thousand persons said
-to have been collected in Constantinople on the
-occasion of the Imperial marriage, must have
-been beside our path that morning! I never
-before beheld such a gathering of human beings.
-There had been divided interests during the
-previous days of festival: different points of
-attraction, which had wrenched asunder the
-mighty mass of mortality, and fashioned it into
-divers portions; but on the present occasion,
-men’s minds were all bent upon one object; and
-this community of purpose had collected them
-together in one vast multitude.</p>
-
-<p>The road was guarded by armed sentinels;
-and about an arrow’s flight from the Military
-College, on the line from Dolma Batch&egrave; to the
-Palace of the Princess, a handsome tent had
-been pitched for the Ambassadors, which was
-already thronged. Every rising ground was
-occupied as far as the eye could reach; and the
-outline of the road along which the procession
-was to pass, was marked by clusters of females,
-seated so closely together that from a short distance
-they appeared to form one compact body.
-Behind these were ranged lines of arabas, filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">490</a></span>
-with Turkish, Greek, and Armenian ladies;
-while on the open space beyond, horsemen galloped
-to and fro; pedestrians, who had been too
-tardy to secure advantageous places, straggled
-from spot to spot, in the hope of establishing
-themselves among some knot of friends; and
-water-venders, with their long-necked earthen
-jars and crystal goblets, passed from one party
-to another, disposing, at an usurious interest, of
-their tempting merchandize.</p>
-
-<p>As there was no sign of the procession when
-we reached the Ambassadorial tent, we resolved
-to canter on to Arnautkeui, and amuse ourselves
-by a survey of the wayside groups; and
-a most interesting ride it was. As the Turkish
-women generally, on any occasion which takes
-them from their homes at an early hour, profit
-by the circumstance to remain in the open air
-all day, none of our party were surprised at
-the well-organized arrangements that were
-making on all sides. The whole line of road
-from Dolma Batch&egrave; to the kiosk above the
-Palace of Arnautkeui was edged with spectators;
-and wherever a tree afforded the means
-of doing so, shawls and rugs had been stretched
-against the sun, producing a very cheerful
-and pretty effect. The number of Turkish
-females collected together on this occasion may
-be imagined when I state that a friend of mine,
-on whose veracity I have the most perfect re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">491</a></span>liance,
-assured me that he knew it to be a fact,
-that several of these sight-loving ladies had actually
-sold the tiles off the roofs of their houses,
-in order to raise money enough to enable them
-to hire an araba for the last two days of the
-Festival!</p>
-
-<p>Nor was this all; for a still more startling
-fact came to my knowledge from so authentic a
-source that I state it without hesitation. A
-Turkish female in a respectable station of society,
-having in vain importuned her husband
-for the means of witnessing the festivities in a
-manner suited to her rank, and receiving for an
-answer the assurance that he was unable to
-comply with her request; finding that she had
-no hope of success save through her own ingenuity,
-set herself to work to devise some expedient
-by which she might raise the necessary
-sum; and having taken into her confidence a
-favourite slave who was to accompany her in
-the event of any fortunate discovery, it was
-at length decided between them that she should
-sell her son, a fine little boy of about five years
-of age. No sooner said than done; she adjusted
-her yashmac and feridjhe, took her child
-by the hand, and, followed by her attendant,
-proceeded to the house of a slave merchant,
-where the bargain was soon made, and the sum
-of three thousand piastres given in exchange for
-the little Musselmaun!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">492</a></span>The astonishment of the husband may be
-conceived, when on the morrow he saw his wife
-seated in an araba in the midst of a bevy of her
-fair friends, without being able to discover how
-she had contrived to secure a carriage at so expensive
-a period. He demanded an explanation
-in vain; and it was not until he inquired for
-his child, and detected a mysterious confusion in
-the manner of his wife, that a suspicion of the
-fact flashed upon him. He insisted on hearing
-the truth; and when he at length learnt it, he
-hurried like a madman to the slave-merchant,
-and demanded back his boy; but the dealer in
-human beings had no expensive sympathies;
-and he only answered the agonized intreaties of
-the father, by asserting his willingness to deliver
-up the child when the money which he had
-given for him was repaid. The wretched parent
-had it not to give; and finding that his misery
-produced no effect upon the slave-merchant, he
-hurried in his anguish to the Seraskier, who,
-having heard the tale, summoned to his presence
-the mother, the child, and the merchant;
-and after having ascertained that the fact was
-precisely as it had been stated to him, he expressed
-to the former his horror of the unnatural
-deed of which she had been guilty, and received
-for answer that she had acted under the firm
-conviction that her husband had merely refused
-to supply her with money from an impulse of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">493</a></span>
-avarice; and that, being devoted to his child, he
-would immediately purchase him back. The
-apology, poor as it was, was admitted; and the
-Seraskier, finding that the father really did not
-possess the means of recovering his boy, generously
-paid the price of his liberty, and restored
-him to his parents; only cautioning the mother
-not to attempt a second sale of the same description,
-as, in the event of such an occurrence,
-she should herself be her child’s ransom.</p>
-
-<p>Hear this, ye Englishwomen, who have been
-accustomed to believe that the Turkish females
-are always under lock and key&mdash;Hear this: and
-then imagine to what a pitch they carry their
-love of dissipation and expense.</p>
-
-<p>Not the least amusing part of the ride was the
-multitude of recognitions and salutations consequent
-upon our progress through the crowd.
-Here a veiled lady greeted us from her gilded
-araba; and there a laughing Greek saluted us
-from beneath his wayside tent. On one side, we
-were joined by a rival party of mounted Franks;
-and on the other we were beckoned aside by
-some pretty friend, who was seated under the
-shade of a cluster of overhanging branches.</p>
-
-<p>Had there been nothing further to anticipate,
-the mere sight of the great congregation of
-human beings collected together that morning,
-would of itself have been a highly interesting
-spectacle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">494</a></span>Probably in no other country upon earth can
-you encounter such groups as you do in Turkey;
-they always appear as though they had been
-arranged by an artist; and I find myself on
-every occasion just about to describe them, when
-I remember that I have already done so more
-than once; and am compelled, however reluctantly,
-to forego the inclination.</p>
-
-<p>Having reached the crest of the hill above
-Arnautkeui, we turned our horses’ heads once
-more towards Dolma Batch&egrave;; and had almost
-reached the Palace when the sound of a military
-band came cheerfully on the wind, and we were
-obliged to gallop off, in order to secure an elevated
-station whence we could conveniently
-witness the passage of the procession.</p>
-
-<p>We were fortunate enough to possess ourselves
-of a spot of ground that overhung the road,
-along which we reined up our horses in line,
-and awaited the arrival of the pageant.</p>
-
-<p>The Band led the way, playing the Sultan’s
-Grand March upon their wind instruments,
-and the military followed in good order; it was a
-squadron of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">&eacute;lite</em> of the Turkish Army, the
-Cavalry of the Imperial Guard, whose several
-troops are distinguished by the different colour
-of their horses. I counted four negro officers as
-they passed us.</p>
-
-<p>The Troops were succeeded by fifty Field
-Officers, the General Staff of the Empire, well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">495</a></span>
-mounted and attended; and they, in their turn,
-gave place to twenty Great Officers of the Imperial
-Household. With these individuals commenced
-the interest and Orientalism of the spectacle;
-the flashing diamonds upon their breasts
-and hands, and the glittering housings of their
-horses, relieving the monotonous slowness with
-which they progressed. This splendid train was
-followed by fourteen led mules, laden with packages,
-covered with the gold and silver stuffs of
-Broussa, and secured upon the animals with
-cords of silk. The packages contained the velvet
-and satin mattresses intended for the harem of
-the Princess, and all the minor articles necessary
-to her household; which are supplied by the Sultan,
-even to the feather-brush that beats aside
-the flies from the dinner-table.</p>
-
-<p>Next came twelve beautiful white mules, magnificently
-housed, and led by pages dressed in a
-scarlet uniform: a present to the Princess from
-her Imperial Father.</p>
-
-<p>Nine carriages of silver net-work, roofed and
-draperied with coloured silk, each drawn by four
-bay horses, followed next in line; and through
-the transparent lattices glittered the costly sofa-furniture
-of tissue and embroidery; the velvet
-cushions, and the golden fringes which were to
-adorn the saloons of the bridal Palace.</p>
-
-<p>After these came three open droskys, with
-pages running at the bridle-rein of the superb<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">496</a></span>
-leaders, who seemed impatient of the pace at
-which they travelled, and scattered the foam
-from their mouths as they champed their embossed
-bits; and these were overlaid with cloths
-of crimson velvet fringed with gold, on which was
-displayed a collection of richly-chased silver plate.</p>
-
-<p>Then followed five other carriages, drawn like
-the foregoing by four stately horses, containing
-trunks covered with coloured velvets and gold
-and silver stuffs, and clamped and hinged with
-wrought silver, laden with the linen of the Imperial
-Bride.</p>
-
-<p>Next came forward what, at the first glance,
-seen as it was through the cloud of dust raised
-by the carriages, seemed to be a moving tulip-bed,
-extending far as the eye could reach. Nor
-was the illusion an overstrained one; for this
-portion of the procession proved to be a train
-of one hundred and fifty men, each attended by
-a page, and bearing upon his head a basket of
-wicker-work, covered with gold tissue, and surmounted
-by a raised dome of coloured gauze,
-decorated with bunches of artificial flowers.
-Beneath these transparent screens might be seen
-the toilette of the young Princess; her golden
-ewers, and jewel-studded basins&mdash;her diamond-covered
-essence-boxes, and gemmed water-vases&mdash;her
-glittering porcelain, her emerald-mounted
-hair-brushes&mdash;and all the costly gauds which
-litter so magnificently the chambers of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">497</a></span>
-great. Golden cages, filled with stuffed birds&mdash;inlaid
-caskets, heavy with perfumes&mdash;musical
-instruments, rich with laboured gold and jewels&mdash;salvers,
-upheaped with gold coins&mdash;and ten
-thousand brilliant toys, if not without a name,
-yet almost without a use, followed in their turn;
-and then came pyramids of sweetmeats, glittering
-like fruits which had suddenly been hardened
-into gems; and trays of shawls, each one a
-fortune in itself, enveloped separately in wrappers
-of coloured gauze, tied with long loops of
-ribbon.</p>
-
-<p>But the most gorgeous display was yet to
-come; embroidered handkerchiefs whose gold
-and silver threads were mingled with silks
-of many hues, and whose texture was almost
-as impalpable as the gossamer&mdash;jackets of
-velvet worked on the sleeves and breasts with
-precious stones&mdash;trowsers sprinkled with stars
-of gold and silver&mdash;anteries of white silk,
-wrought with coloured jewels&mdash;robes of satin
-powdered with seed-pearl&mdash;slippers as diminutive
-as that of Cinderella, fringed with floss
-silk, and powdered with rubies; and finally,
-sixteen bearers, balancing upon their heads
-cages of silver wire, resting on cushions of
-crimson velvet, whereon were displayed the
-bridal diamonds. The sunshine was flashing on
-them as they passed us, and at times it was impossible
-to look upon them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">498</a></span>It seemed as though the trees of the Sera&iuml;
-must have dropped diamonds, to supply the profusion
-of the Imperial Father. It is impossible
-to describe them&mdash;the diadems and bracelets,
-the necklaces and wreaths, the rings and clasps:
-suffice it that every female article of dress or
-ornament, for which this costly stone could be
-made available, was here in its magnificence;
-and assuredly the gifts of the Queen of Sheba to
-King Solomon must have sunk into insignificance
-before the bridal <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">trousseau</em> of the Princess
-Mihirm&agrave;h&mdash;“The Glory of the Moon!”</p>
-
-<p>Forty mounted negroes appointed to her
-household followed, like demons of darkness,
-on the footsteps of the flashing treasure which
-I have just described; and I can safely declare
-that I never beheld so hideous an assemblage
-of human beings. The diamonds were quite
-secure, I should imagine, from all depredators,
-under the charge of these frightful guardians&mdash;these
-gnomes, gloating over the produce of the
-“dark gold mines,” where no light could intrude
-in which they might mirror their own
-ugliness; and His Sublime Highness, or rather
-his Master of the Ceremonies, appeared to have
-been of the same opinion; for although a guard
-preceded the procession, none followed it; and
-the termination of the pageant came so abruptly
-upon me after its greatest splendour, that I felt
-as though some accident had detained the re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">499</a></span>maining
-actors in the show, and that something
-more must follow; but as, after the lapse of a
-moment, I discovered that all was really over,
-there was nothing for it but a steeple chase
-“over bank, bush, and briar,” in order to get
-once more in advance of the procession, and thus
-secure a second view.</p>
-
-<p>On this we accordingly determined; and after
-a gallop over ploughed fields, and a few leaps
-over sundry intervening fences and ditches, we
-found ourselves on the height above Arnautkeui,
-just as the gorgeous train was beginning to
-descend the hill.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">500</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">The Bridal Day&mdash;Ceremony of Acceptance&mdash;The Crowd&mdash;The Kislar
-Agha and the Court Astrologer&mdash;Order of the Procession&mdash;The
-Russian Coach&mdash;The Pasha and the Attach&eacute;s&mdash;The Seraskier&mdash;Wives
-of the Pashas&mdash;The Sultan and the Georgian Slave.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> morrow was the bridal day, when the
-fortunate Sa&iuml;d Pasha was to receive his Imperial
-Bride beneath his own roof, and to look upon
-her for the first time. As yet he had not had
-even a glimpse of her through her yashmac, their
-only interview having taken place on his arrival
-from the Dardanelles, when he had been summoned
-to the palace to throw himself at her
-feet, and to return thanks for the honour she
-was about to confer upon him. This interview,
-if such indeed a meeting may be termed
-in which one of the parties only has a sight of
-the other, is one of the ceremonies <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">&agrave; la rigeur</em>
-in the Imperial marriages of the East.</p>
-
-<p>The bridegroom elect is led into a room, at
-whose upper extremity a door stands ajar;
-and behind this sits the lady splendidly habited,
-and surrounded by a train of slaves. A small
-portion of her embroidered antery is suffered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">501</a></span>
-to pass the opening of the door; and a side
-lattice, veiled with thin gauze, enables her to
-take a view of her suitor as he approaches;
-which he does slowly, and upon his knees, the
-whole length of the apartment. On arriving
-near the “Door of Light” that conceals the
-Princess, he thrice bows his forehead to the
-earth, ere he ventures to implore a ratification
-of his hopes. The officious Kislar Agha replies
-for the bride; and after a second prostration,
-the Pasha returns thanks “in a neat speech;”
-and with the permission of the same personage,
-he then raises to his lips the hem of the Imperial
-garment, and retires in the same humble posture
-in which he entered.</p>
-
-<p>The <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">on dit</em> at the Palace whispered the disappointment
-of the bride on the present occasion,
-that the choice of her Imperial father had not
-fallen on Mustapha Pasha of Adrianople, whom
-she had once seen by accident, and by whose
-personal beauty she had been much attracted.
-It is, nevertheless, possible that this glimpse of
-her destined bridegroom reconciled her to her
-destiny; for, as it is the appearance only to which
-Turkish females generally attach any importance
-in their husbands, the young Pasha of the Dardanelles
-could safely compete with all his rivals,
-being really a very handsome and intelligent-looking
-person.</p>
-
-<p>Had I not known that such a thing was alto<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">502</a></span>gether
-impossible, I should have said, when I
-pulled up my panting horse on the height above
-the palace, that the same groups occupied the
-same spots where I had seen them on the previous
-day. The scene did not appear to have altered
-in a single feature. I saw the same smiling
-faces, and received the same kindly greetings;
-laughed at the same dirty, stupid-looking sentinels,
-and bought a cool draught from the same
-water-vender for a twenty para piece; and, altogether,
-I had some difficulty in persuading
-myself that I had really talked politics with a
-hot-headed Englishman, theology with a Greek
-Papas, and nonsense with a Sardinian Secretary,
-and moreover had slept through a long night,
-since I last stood upon that sunny hill, and
-looked far and wide upon the same wilderness
-of human beings.</p>
-
-<p>The procession of the preceding day had been
-announced to start from Dolma Batch&egrave; at eight
-o’clock, but the mid-day muezzin had been called
-from the minarets, ere the first trumpeter issued
-from the portal. Profiting, therefore, by our experience,
-we partook of a quiet breakfast on the
-present occasion, ere we sped to the scene of
-action; and we had judged rightly in so doing,
-for we were yet considerably in advance of the
-bridal train. Nevertheless, it is certain that the
-baggage-mules and the treasure-carriages required
-more time to prepare them for the jour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">503</a></span>ney
-than the Imperial Bride, and her attendant
-train of ladies; for the Kislar Agha was yet
-girding on his sword with all the quiet precision
-of a man who has no cause for haste, when a
-negro of the Sera&iuml; rushed into the apartment,
-and startled him with the intelligence that her
-Highness was not only ready to start, but actually
-in the Great Saloon of the Harem, waiting
-for him to precede her to her carriage. At
-this announcement the portly personage suffered
-his weapon to fall from his hands; and tossing
-his arms above his head, he filled the apartment
-with his outcries.</p>
-
-<p>“Who has done this? Who has insidiously
-counselled this haste? Where is the traitor
-who would destroy the Imperial Daughter of
-our noble Sultan? (May his beard be white!)
-It yet wants ten minutes of the time appointed
-by the astrologer&mdash;the lucky moment is not
-come&mdash;and until it arrives, she shall not set her
-foot without the palace, were it ten times her
-bridal day.”</p>
-
-<p>At length, however, the auspicious moment
-really did arrive, when the Kislar Agha was himself
-the first to hasten the departure of the Princess.
-The procession was the very triumph of
-mystery. All the high-born beauties of Stamboul
-were to pass us by, and we were only to imagine
-the loveliness on which we were to have no opportunity
-of looking. The Sultan’s Band opened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">504</a></span>
-the march, and executed with great precision a
-piece of martial music, composed for the occasion
-by their talented leader Donizetti; a regiment of
-cavalry followed, and was succeeded in its turn
-by a gorgeous train of Pashas, among whom rode
-the bridegroom; and then came the European
-carriage of the Sultan, drawn by four bay
-horses, each led by a page in a scarlet and gold
-uniform. This was succeeded by the Imperial
-State Coach, of silver gilt, the raised cornice
-above the roof inlaid with cornelians, agates,
-and jaspers, the magnificent gift of the Emperor
-of Russia to his Turkish ally&mdash;the gilded
-lattices, through which gleamed the jealous curtains
-of rose-coloured silk, were closely shut;
-and the Imperial Bride was the sole tenant of
-the costly vehicle. This carriage, which was
-drawn by six stately horses from the personal
-stud of the Autocrat, was followed by that in
-which the Princess had been accustomed to
-drive on state occasions; the windows were
-thrown back, and the curtains undrawn&mdash;it was
-empty. Next came the Sultana-Mother, the
-Princess Salih&egrave;, and the younger sister of the
-bride, a sweet-looking girl of eleven or twelve
-years of age, who sat beside her veiled relatives
-in a heavy head-dress of black velvet, overcharged
-with diamonds; but whose fair young
-face laughed out in loveliness beneath the
-hideous disfigurement. These were succeeded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">505</a></span>
-by a second Russian carriage, drawn by four
-horses similar to those in the State Coach, an
-offering of Russian policy to Achmet Pasha,
-whose Buyuk Hanoum was within, attended by
-three female slaves.</p>
-
-<p>The train amounted in all to forty-seven carriages
-and four; many of them tenanted by
-five and even six individuals, whose coquettishly
-arranged yashmacs afforded at times something
-more than a glimpse of their fair faces; a fact
-of which the negro guard appeared so well
-aware, that on some suggestion from one of
-them to a Pasha, who rode immediately in front
-of the Imperial carriage, on the second apparition
-of our party by the wayside, (which, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soit
-dit en passant</em>, must have been sufficiently attractive
-to the veiled beauties, being principally
-composed of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">attach&eacute;s</em> to the different embassies),
-His Excellency addressed himself to me in very
-tolerable French, and told me that, although I
-was individually at liberty to accompany the
-procession to the Palace-gates if I wished to do
-so, he must request that the gentlemen would
-not attempt to advance further. But the prohibition
-was more readily uttered than obeyed;
-and we only just waited for a first glimpse of
-the fifty negroes who formed the rear-guard, ere
-we were off again, as fast as our generous
-horses would carry us.</p>
-
-<p>And well should we have been repaid when we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">506</a></span>
-pulled up mid-way of the steep descent leading to
-the Palace, had it only been by the spectacle of
-the wily old Seraskier, who rode beside the window
-of the State Coach, in a state of admirably
-got-up agitation; first shouting to the troop of
-attendants who hung on to the wheels, like a
-man in the last agony; and then modulating his
-voice to the extremest gentleness of which it
-was susceptible, to implore of the Imperial
-Bride not to imagine that there existed the
-slightest danger; half the fuss that he was
-making meanwhile, being more than sufficient
-to satisfy her that she was on the eve of being
-hurled over the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>On her arrival in the Court of the Palace,
-Sa&iuml;d Pasha, on his knees beside the carriage,
-received her in his arms, and carried her into
-the Great Saloon of the Harem; the ladies of
-the Court, who had the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">entr&eacute;e</em>, followed in succession;
-the golden gates were closed: and the
-excluded had nothing more to do than to shake
-the dust from their garments&mdash;and truly it was
-about an inch thick&mdash;to swallow a glass of iced
-lemonade in the saddle, and to gallop back,
-under a burning sun, to their respective homes.</p>
-
-<p>Each Pasha, on the occasion of an Imperial
-marriage, sends on a stated day his Buyuk
-Hanoum, or principal wife, to the Palace, attended
-by two slaves, to congratulate the
-Princess on her approaching nuptials; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">507</a></span>
-these are the ladies who subsequently form the
-reception circle at her new home. At the visit
-of felicitation, when the Sultan receives them
-on the part of his august daughter, they are
-presented by the munificent sovereign with an
-antery, jacket, and trowsers of rich stuff, a pair
-of embroidered slippers, and a diamond ring;
-the same articles, but fitted in value to their
-station, being bestowed also on their attendants.
-In this magnificent costume they are expected
-to appear on the bridal day; and on their departure
-from the Presence, they place their own
-gifts in the hands of the Kislar Agha, which
-are always of the extremest richness that the
-means of the Pasha will permit.</p>
-
-<p>An amusing anecdote is connected with this
-ceremony, which, being authentic, I may as well
-relate. The Imperial Presentation negatives
-the necessity of yashmacs, and thus Sultan
-Mahmoud enjoys the exclusive privilege of forming
-a judgment on the taste of his Pashas. On
-the marriage of the Princess Salih&egrave;, the Reiss
-Effendi forwarded to the Imperial Presence the
-mother of his sons, a lady to whom nature had
-not originally been lavish of her gifts, and who
-had subsequently lost an eye during an attack
-of plague. His Sublime Highness was observed
-to fidget upon his sofa as the presentation took
-place, but the Buyuk Hanoum was received with
-all the honours due to the exalted rank of her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">508</a></span>
-husband, and departed laden with the rich gifts
-of Imperial generosity.</p>
-
-<p>On the morrow, however, a ca&iuml;que impelled
-by three rowers, and freighted with a closely
-veiled female under the guard of a party of the
-negroes of the Sera&iuml;, pushed off from the Palace
-of Dolma Batch&egrave;, and ran alongside the
-terrace of that of the minister; when the lady
-was landed, and, on being conducted into the
-presence of the Reiss Effendi, her veil was withdrawn,
-and she proved to be a lovely Georgian
-slave of about sixteen years of age, in all the
-first burst of her young beauty&mdash;a present to
-the noble from his Imperial Master, accompanied
-by a command, that should another occasion
-occur in which the wives of the Pashas were required
-to appear before the Sultan, the Reiss
-Effendi would cause the dark-eyed Georgian to
-act as the representative of a lady, whose age
-and infirmities must render all court ceremonials
-extremely irksome to her feelings.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the lovely slave was one of the
-bridal train of the Princess Mihirm&agrave;h!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">509</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
-
-<p class="indent f08">A New Rejoicing&mdash;Processions&mdash;Change in the Valley&mdash;The
-Odalique’s Grave&mdash;The Palace of Eyoub&mdash;The State Apartments&mdash;Return
-to Pera.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A couple</span> of days of rest succeeded to the
-marriage festivities, and during that time all
-the tents which had fringed the height above
-Dolma Batch&egrave; were transferred to the Valley
-of the Sweet Waters, whither they were followed
-by the tumblers, rope-dancers, and jugglers,
-who had delighted the crowd in the
-purlieus of the Imperial Palace. A new rejoicing
-to succeed the bridal f&egrave;tes; the two younger
-sons of the Sultan, and eight thousand children,
-belonging to every class of the Turkish population,
-from the Pashas to the charcoal-venders
-of the metropolis and its vicinity, were to be
-circumcised with much pomp at Kahaitchana.
-A temporary building, shaped like a crescent,
-and capable of containing the whole number,
-had been erected above the upper kiosk, and
-near the border of the stream, across which a
-new bridge had been thrown; the pavilion was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">510</a></span>
-lined throughout with rich hangings, and well
-cushioned, and presented a very gay and pretty
-appearance.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan entertained the Imperial Family
-at his Palace on the Barbyses; the Pashas gave
-daily dinners in their tents; and there was not an
-araba in Constantinople or Pera that was not in
-requisition.</p>
-
-<p>After passing to Eyoub in our ca&iuml;que, we hired
-a close araba, in which we drove to the valley.
-The scene was a very animated one; lines of
-coffee-tents clung to the sides of the heights;
-groups of women, seated on their mats, were
-scattered over the greensward; itinerant fruit-merchants
-wandered to and fro, with their
-strawberries neatly arranged in small baskets
-wreathed with oak leaves, and their cherries
-heaped in pyramids; mohalib&egrave; and yahourt
-were to be seen on all sides: the little fountains
-of the sherbet-venders were tinkling like distant
-sheep-bells; and, high above the heads of the
-crowd, a rope-dancer was balancing himself in
-mid-air, with his crimson satin vestment flaring
-in the hot sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>One pretty feature in the scene was the constant
-succession of scholastic processions; each
-mosque sending its little troop, headed by an
-Imam, to parade the valley, and to chant a
-prayer for the preservation of the Sultan’s sons;
-after which all the children of the Turkish, Greek,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">511</a></span>
-Armenian, Catholic, and Jewish schools, accompanied
-by their masters, passed before the Sultan,
-and shared in the festivities, to which they
-had been especially invited. Nor was the appearance
-of the Turkish children who assisted
-at the ceremony less interesting; as they all,
-save those belonging to the more distinguished
-families, who wore a vast quantity of gold embroidery
-about their coats and f&egrave;zes, were
-dressed in a kind of uniform, provided for them
-by the Sultan; and had their long hair plaited in
-innumerable braids, and woven together with
-gold threads, sometimes to a quarter of a yard
-in breadth.</p>
-
-<p>For the first hour I was exceedingly amused.
-The Barbyses was alive with ca&iuml;ques&mdash;the air
-was loud with music and laughter&mdash;the greensward
-was crowded with arabas and idlers; and
-every shady tree had a colony beneath its
-boughs. But I soon wearied of the coil and
-confusion by which I was surrounded; the
-green, fresh, quiet valley had lost all its charm;
-I could scarcely recognize my favourite spots;
-nor was it until the close of twilight, when the
-illuminated glories of the port flashed out like
-a circle of fire in the distance, that I became reconciled.
-The moon silvered over the rippling
-river; the nightingales were loud in the Palace
-gardens; a million of twinkling stars were relieving
-the deep blue of the summer sky; while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">512</a></span>
-here and there erections of many-coloured light
-rose flashing out amid the leafy boughs of the
-crowd-invaded glen. Pashas came and went in
-their noiseless ca&iuml;ques; dulcimers and tambourines
-deadened at times the music of the
-night bird; and the low wind, which heaved the
-elastic branches of the water willow, and came
-sighing along the ripple of the sweet river, rendered
-the valley by night a scene of enchantment.</p>
-
-<p>I wandered to the grave of the Odalique: the
-moonlight was resting upon the record-stone;
-and a nightingale, seated amid the branches of
-the overhanging tree, was breathing out its
-song of mournful melody: it was far away from
-the idle throng of revellers, and I was weak
-enough to be glad that it was so.</p>
-
-<p>The night was so lovely that we dismissed
-our araba, and determined on returning in a
-ca&iuml;que as far as the Palace of Eyoub, where I
-had been invited by the Princess Azm&egrave; to pass
-the night; but, on arriving there, we found that
-the Sultana and the principal ladies of her
-household had been detained by the Sultan,
-and would not return until the following day.</p>
-
-<p>As, however, I was fearful that the opportunity
-of seeing this palace might not recur, from
-the fact that the Princess never inhabits it save
-on occasions of festival at Kahaitchana, when
-she profits by its vicinity to the valley, I availed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">513</a></span>
-myself of the offer of the house-steward to show
-me over the state apartments, which are entirely
-unfurnished, but in themselves extremely magnificent.
-The screen of light that extended
-along the whole front of the building cast its
-glare through the unshuttered windows, and
-was reflected back by the gilded walls and
-glittering cornices. The decorations throughout
-are heavy, but of the greatest richness, and
-by far the most Oriental in their character, of
-any that I had yet seen. The palace was built
-by Sultan Selim, and its situation is beautiful.
-What was formerly the reception-room of that
-unfortunate Sovereign, is entirely lined with
-gilding, the walls being niched, and overhung
-with stalactited cornices similar to those which
-decorate many of our old cathedral tombs; and
-the weight of this elaborate ornament is relieved
-by a ceiling of faint blue, sprinkled with silver
-stars. But the absence of furniture, and the
-vast extent of the building, gave an air of desolation
-and discomfort to its whole appearance,
-which even the well-matted and curtained rooms
-that had been temporarily fitted-up for the
-use of the Sultana’s harem failed to overcome:
-and, consequently, when I had satisfied my curiosity,
-I pleaded the absence of Her Highness,
-and those individuals of her suite with whom I
-was acquainted, as my apology for not availing
-myself of her flattering invitation; and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">514</a></span>
-reentering-our ca&iuml;que, we dashed out into the
-centre of the port; and after contemplating for
-a time its temporary glories, were landed at the
-Echelle des Morts, and, passing along beneath
-the moon-touched and sighing cypresses of the
-grave-yard, soon found ourselves at Pera.</p>
-<hr />
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">1</span></a> As an example of the morals of the Greek clergy, it may not be
-impertinent to mention that this house was bequeathed by the Archbishop
-of Dercon, who died a few months ago at Therapia, to Hesterine,
-<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">la dame de ses pens&eacute;es</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">2</span></a> Signifying mistress, or lady.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">3</span></a> Mihirm&agrave;h, the glory of the moon.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">4</span></a> The fact of the Patriarch being not only the head of the church, but
-also the chief magistrate of his nation, will account for the proximity
-of the prison to the Episcopal Palace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">5</span></a> I am aware that I may here be taxed with an anachronism, and
-reminded that in the days of Mahomet the use of tobacco was altogether
-unknown in Turkey; but I, nevertheless, maintain my position, being
-perfectly convinced that the Hourii would now beckon in vain to a
-paradise of which the chibouk did not form a feature.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">6</span></a> The height of the mosque to the summit of the dome is 185 French
-feet; the dome itself, from the gallery to the leads, 47, and its diameter,
-54.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">7</span></a> Mignionette.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-<p class="center f08">END OF VOL I.</p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center f06">
-LONDON:<br />
-F. SHOBERL, JUN., LEICESTER STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td>
- Transcriber's Note:<br />
- <br />
- The book cover image was created by the transcriber
- and is placed in the public domain.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF THE SULTAN; AND DOMESTIC MANNERS OF THE TURKS, IN 1836, VOL. 1 (OF 2)***</p>
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