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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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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54692 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54692)
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-Project Gutenberg's In the Far East, by William Henry Davenport Adams
-
-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: In the Far East
- A Narrative of Exploration and Adventure in Cochin-China,
- Cambodia, Laos, and Siam
-
-Author: William Henry Davenport Adams
-
-Release Date: May 9, 2017 [EBook #54692]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE FAR EAST ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-Bold text is indicated by =equals signs=, and italics by _underscores_.
-
-Page headers in the printed text are indicated by ~swung dashes~.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE FAR EAST.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: LAOTIAN BOAT DESCENDING A RAPID.
-
- Page 77.
-]
-
-
-
-
- IN THE FAR EAST:
-
- A Narrative of Exploration and Adventure
-
- IN COCHIN-CHINA, CAMBODIA,
- LAOS, AND SIAM.
-
- _BY THE AUTHOR OF
- “The Arctic World,” “The Mediterranean Illustrated,”
- &c. &c._
-
- WITH TWENTY-EIGHT FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
- LONDON: THOMAS NELSON AND SONS.
- EDINBURGH AND NEW YORK.
- 1879.
-
-
-
-
-Contents.
-
-
- I. THROUGH LAOS TO CHINA, 9
- II. EXPERIENCES AMONG THE CHINESE, 106
- III. RETURN TO SAIGON, 133
- IV. DR. MORICE AND THE MEKONG, 140
- V. M. MOUHOT IN CAMBODIA, 176
-
-
-
-
-List of Illustrations.
-
-
- LAOTIAN BOAT DESCENDING A RAPID, _Frontispiece_
- SCENE ON THE MEKONG, 13
- PEACOCK-HUNTING, 29
- MOUNTAIN-PEAK NEAR BASSAC, 33
- FUNERAL CEREMONY OF THE LAOTIANS, 37
- CORONATION OF THE KING OF OUBON, 45
- ANNAMITES AT LAKON, 51
- NATURAL PILLAR IN THE MOUNTAINS OF LAKON, 55
- TAPPING THE BORASSUS PALM, 59
- BUDDHIST TAT AT NONG KAY, 63
- MONASTERY OF WAT SISAKET, 67
- PASSAGE OF A RAPID, 71
- RICE-FIELD AND PAGODA AT MUONG MAI, 75
- PAGODA AT PAK LAY, 79
- BAMBOO BRIDGE AT XIENG KHONG, 83
- FOREST ROAD NEAR MUONG LIM, 87
- A NIGHT HALT NEAR SIEM-LAP, 91
- TRAVELLING IN A RAVINE NEAR SOP YONG, 95
- INTERVIEW WITH THE KING OF MUONG YOU, 99
- MOUNTAIN VILLAGE AND RICE-FIELDS NEAR POU-EUL, 103
- VALLEY OF KON-TCHANG, 109
- CROSSING A RAVINE, 113
- MERCHANT TRAIN IN YUNNAN, 137
- ANNAMITE LADY AND HER SERVANT, 141
- CHINESE HOUSE AT KHOLEN, 151
- VINH-LONG, 163
- SCENE AT TAYNINH, 167
- CHINESE MERCHANTS OF SAIGON, 173
-
-
-
-
-IN THE FAR EAST.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THROUGH LAOS TO CHINA.
-
-
-A considerable portion of the Indo-Chinese peninsula is occupied by
-the extensive country of Cambodia, or Camboja, known to the natives
-as _Kan-pou-chi_. It extends from lat. 8° 47′ to 15° N., along the
-basin of the Mekong, Makiang, or Cambodia river; and is bounded on the
-north by Laos; on the south, by the Gulf of Siam and the China Sea; on
-the east, by Cochin-China; and on the west, by Siam. Formerly it was
-independent; but since 1809 it has been included within the empire of
-Annam, except the province of Battabang, which belongs to the kingdom
-of Siam. But since the French established themselves at Saigon in
-1858, and have gradually obtained a controlling power in Annam (or
-Cochin-China), their influence has also extended to Cambodia.
-
-~COURSE OF THE MEKONG.~
-
-The largest river of Cambodia, and of the whole Indo-Chinese peninsula,
-is the Mekong, Makiang, or Cambodia, which, rising in the mountains of
-China, under the name of the Lan-tsan-kiang, flows in a south-easterly
-direction across the province of Yunnan; thence, under the name of the
-Kiou-long, traverses the territory of Laos; and afterwards, as the
-Mekong, intersects Cambodia, dividing the Annam portion from that which
-belongs to Siam; separates into several branches, and finally falls
-into the China Sea, after a fertilizing course of about fifteen hundred
-miles. Its two principal mouths are those of the Japanese and Oubequum
-channels. There are several smaller mouths, however, the southernmost
-of which is situated in lat. 9° 30′ N., and long. 106° 20′ E.
-
-Very little was known of this great river until the French had made
-themselves masters of Saigon. It has since been explored in parts of
-its course by M. Mouhot, Lieutenant Garnier, and others. The country
-which it waters possesses many features of interest; and the scenery
-through which it flows is often of a romantic and beautiful character.
-The manners and customs of the people dwelling on its banks are not
-unworthy of consideration; and we propose, therefore, to carry the
-reader with us on a voyage up this magnificent stream,--penetrating,
-under the guidance of Lieutenant Garnier, into hitherto unexplored
-parts of Cambodia, and even into China itself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~A FRENCH EXPEDITION.~
-
-In 1866 the French Government determined on despatching an expedition
-to explore the upper valley of the great Cambodian river, and placed
-it in charge of M. de Lagrée, a captain in the French navy. M. Thorel,
-a surgeon, was attached to it as botanist; M. Delaporte, as artist;
-Dr. Joubert, as physician and geologist; and among the other members
-were Lieutenant Garnier, to whose record of the expedition we are
-about to be indebted, and M. de Carné. After a visit to Ongcor, the
-capital of the ancient kingdom of the Khmers, with those vast memorials
-of antiquity described so graphically by M. Mouhot, the expedition
-proceeded to ascend the great river, passing the busy villages of
-Compong Luong and Pnom Penh--the latter the residence of the king of
-Cambodia. Here they abandoned the gun-brigs which had brought them
-from Saigon, and embarked themselves and their stores on board boats
-better fitted for river navigation.
-
-~BOATING ON THE MEKONG.~
-
-These boats or canoes are manned, according to their size, by a crew
-of six to ten men. Each is armed with a long bamboo, one end of which
-terminates with an iron hook, the other with a small fork. The men take
-up their station on a small platform in the fore part of the boat,
-plant their bamboos against some projection on the river-bank, tree
-or stone, and then march towards the stern; returning afterwards on
-the opposite side to repeat the process. This strange kind of circular
-motion suffices to impel the boat at the rate of a man walking at full
-speed, when the boatmen are skilful at their work, and the river-bank
-is straight and well defined. The master’s attention is wholly
-occupied, meanwhile, in keeping the bow of the canoe in the direction
-of the current, or rather slightly headed towards the shore. It is
-obvious that such a mode of navigation is liable to many interruptions,
-and cannot be commended on the score of swiftness or convenience.
-
-[Illustration: SCENE ON THE MEKONG]
-
-~FORMIDABLE RAPIDS.~
-
-On the 13th of July the canoes took their departure from Cratieh, and
-soon afterwards arrived at Sombor. They then effected the passage
-of the rapids of Sombor-Sombor--no great difficulty being experienced,
-owing to the rise of the waters. Beyond this point the broad bed of the
-great river was encumbered with a multitude of islands, low and green,
-while the banks were covered with magnificent forests. The voyagers
-noticed here some trees of great value--the yao; the ban-courg, the
-wood of which makes capital oars; and the lam-xe, which should be
-highly prized by the European cabinet-makers.
-
-~A WEARY VOYAGE.~
-
-On the 16th of July the voyagers again fell in with a series of
-formidable rapids. The sharp and clearly-defined shores of the islands
-which had hitherto enclosed the arm of the river they were navigating
-were suddenly effaced. The Cambodia was covered with innumerable clumps
-of trees, half under water; its muddy torrent rolled impetuously
-through a thousand canals, forming an inextricable labyrinth. Huge
-blocks of sandstone rose at intervals along the left bank, and
-indicated that strata of the same rock extended across the river-bed.
-At a considerable distance from the shore the poles of the boatmen
-found a depth of fully ten feet; and it was with extreme difficulty
-the canoes made way against the strong, fierce current, which in some
-confined channels attained a velocity of five miles an hour.
-
-Storms of wind and rain contributed to render the voyage more
-wearisome and the progress slower. It was no easy task at night to
-find a secure haven for the boats; and the sudden floods of the little
-streams at the mouth of which the voyagers sought shelter, several
-times subjected them to the risk of being carried away during their
-sleep, and cast all unexpectedly into the mid-current of the great
-river. They slept on board their boats, because the roof was some
-protection from the furious rains; but these soon soaked through the
-mats and leaves of which it was composed. The weather was warm, and
-thus these douche-baths were not wholly insupportable; and when the
-voyagers could not sleep, they found some consolation in admiring the
-fantastic illumination which the incessant lightnings kindled in the
-gloomy arcades of the forest, and in listening to the peals of thunder,
-repeated by a thousand echoes, and mingling with the hoarse continuous
-growl of the angry waters.
-
-Such are some of the features of the navigation of the lower part of
-the Cambodia. But our limits compel us to pass over several chapters
-of Lieutenant Garnier’s narrative, and to take it up after the voyagers
-had crossed the boundaries of Siam and Cambodia and entered Laos.
-
-~THE LAOTIANS DESCRIBED.~
-
-~LAOTIAN COSTUME.~
-
-Lieutenant Garnier describes the Laotians as generally well made and
-robust. Their physiognomy, he says, is characterized by a singular
-combination of cunning and apathy, benevolence and timorousness.
-Their eyes are less regular, their cheeks less prominent, the nose
-straighter, than is the case with other peoples of Mongolian origin;
-and but for their much paler complexion, which closely approaches that
-of the Chinese, we should be tempted to credit them with a considerable
-admixture of Hindu blood. The male Laotian shaves his head, and, like
-the Siamese, preserves only a small tuft of very short hair on the
-summit. He dresses himself tastefully, and can wear the finest stuffs
-with ease and dignity. He chooses always the liveliest colours; and
-the effect of a group of Laotians, with the brilliant hues of their
-costume set off by their copper-tinted skin, is very striking. The
-common people wear an exceedingly simple garb--the langouti, a piece of
-cotton stuff passed between the legs and around the waist. For those
-of higher rank the langouti is of silk; and is frequently accompanied
-by a small vest buttoned over the chest, with very narrow sleeves, and
-another piece of silk folded round the waist as a girdle, or round the
-neck as a scarf. Head-gear and foot-gear are things little used in
-Laos; but the labourers and boatmen, when working or rowing under a
-burning sun, protect the head with an immense straw hat, almost flat,
-much like a parasol. Personages of high rank, when they are in “full
-dress,” wear a kind of slipper, which appears to inconvenience them
-greatly, and is thrown off at the earliest opportunity.
-
-Most of the Laotians tattoo themselves on the stomach or legs, though
-the practice is much more prevalent in the north than in the south. The
-Laotian women do not wear much more clothing than their husbands. The
-langouti, instead of being brought up between the legs, is fastened
-round the waist, and allowed to hang down like a short tight petticoat
-below the knees. Generally, a second piece of stuff is worn over the
-bosom, and thrown back across either the right or left shoulder. The
-hair, always of a splendid jetty blackness, is twisted up in a chignon
-on the top of the head, and kept in its place by a small strip of
-cotton or plaited straw, frequently embellished with a few flowers.
-Every woman ornaments her neck, arms, and legs with rings of gold,
-silver, or copper, sometimes heaped one upon another in considerable
-quantity. The very poor are content with belts of cotton or silk; to
-which, in the case of children, are suspended little amulets given by
-the priests as talismans against witchcraft or remedies against disease.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Strictly speaking, polygamy does not exist in Laos. Only the well-to-do
-indulge in the embarrassing luxury of more wives than one; and even
-with these a favoured individual is recognized as the lawful spouse.
-
-~SLAVERY IN LAOS.~
-
-Unhappily, slavery prevails, as it does in Siam and Cambodia. A
-debtor may be enslaved, by judicial confiscation; but the “peculiar
-institution” is chiefly recruited from the wild tribes in the eastern
-provinces. The slaves are employed in tilling the fields, and in
-domestic labours; they are treated with great kindness. They often
-live so intimately and so familiarly with their masters, that, but for
-their long hair and characteristic physiognomy, it would be difficult
-to distinguish them in the midst of a Laotian “interior.”
-
-The Laotians are a slothful people, and, when not rich enough to own
-slaves, leave the best part of the day’s work to be done by the women,
-who not only perform the household labour, but pound the rice, till
-the fields, paddle the canoes. Hunting and fishing are almost the only
-occupations reserved for the stronger sex.
-
-~FISH-CATCHING PROCESSES.~
-
-We have not space to describe all the engines employed for catching
-fish, which, next to rice, is the principal food of all the riverine
-populations of the Mekong valley, and is furnished by the great river
-in almost inexhaustible quantities. The most common are large tubes of
-bamboo and ratan, having one or more funnel-shaped necks, the edges
-of which prevent the fish from escaping after they have once entered.
-These apparatus are firmly attached, with their openings towards the
-current, to a tree on the river-bank, or, by means of some heavy
-stones, are completely submerged. Every second or third day their owner
-visits them, and empties them of their finny victims. The Laotians
-also make use of an ingenious system of floats, which support a row of
-hooks, and realize the European “fishing by line,” without the help of
-the fisherman. There are various other methods adopted, such as the
-net and the harpoon; and in the employment of all these the Laotians
-display considerable activity and address.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us now accompany our French voyagers in their further ascent of the
-river. As we have already hinted, its navigation is not without its
-inconveniences, and even its dangers.
-
-~A SUDDEN STORM.~
-
-One evening, for example, they dropped anchor at the mouth of a
-small stream which, in foam and spray, came tumbling down from the
-mountains of Cambodia. After supper they lay down to rest on the mats
-which covered the deck of their vessels. Black was the sky, hot and
-oppressive the air; all around were visible the portents of a coming
-storm. The distant roar of the hurricane failed, however, to disturb
-the sleepers, who were spent and overcome with the fatigues of the day.
-But at last they were wakened effectually by a “thunder-plump,” which
-quickly flooded their canoes, and drove them upon deck.
-
-~THE FLOOD SUBSIDES.~
-
-In the midst of the elemental disorder, they became aware of a hoarse
-growling sound; the waters were violently agitated, and a great crest
-of foam rapidly advanced towards their feeble barks. In a few moments
-it was upon them. It swept clean over the voyagers and their canoes,
-and those of the latter which had been carelessly moored were borne
-down the rushing tide. At first an indescribable disorder prevailed;
-cries of distress rose in every direction; the canoes dashed violently
-against one another, or came into collision with uprooted trunks
-floating on the surface of the storm-tossed waters. Fortunately, the
-danger was quickly over; and as every boat had contrived to grapple
-some branch or rock, the voyagers discovered at daybreak that, whatever
-injuries these had sustained, no lives had been lost. The furious gale
-they had heard in the distance had raised the waters some twelve feet
-during the night; but the inundation subsided as rapidly as it had
-risen.
-
-Under the shade of wide-branching trees, and closely hugging the shore,
-the expedition continued its voyage. The neighbouring forests were
-remarkable for their luxuriant vegetation; troops of apes and squirrels
-of various species gambolled among the mighty trees, among which rose
-conspicuous the superb yao, the king of these forests, the trunk of
-which shoots up, free from knot or bough, to a height of eighty or one
-hundred feet; and out of which the Laotians hollow their piraguas. In
-the morning a wild beast now and then came down to the river to drink;
-and night was rendered hideous by the cries and trumpetings of deer,
-and tigers, and elephants.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE KHON CATARACT.~
-
-At length the voyagers came within hearing of the tremendous roar of
-the Khon cataract. Their boatmen, brisker than on ordinary occasions,
-hauled or propelled their vessels through a very labyrinth of rocks,
-submerged trees, and prostrate trunks still clinging to earth by their
-many roots. They knew that their hard labour was nearly at an end, and
-that at Khon the expedition would dismiss them, as fresh boats would
-be required above the cataract. As for their homeward voyage, what was
-it? To ascend the river had been the work of a week; the swift current
-would bear them back in less than a day.
-
-~A PLAGUE OF LEECHES.~
-
-The cataract of Khon is really a series of magnificent falls, of
-which one of the grandest is caused by the confluence of the Papheng.
-There, in the midst of rocks and grassy islets, an enormous sheet of
-water leaps headlong from a height of seventy feet, to fall back in
-floods of foam, again to descend from crag to crag, and finally glide
-away beneath the dense vegetation of the forest. As the river at this
-point is about one thousand yards in width, the effect is singularly
-striking. But still more imposing is the Salaphe fall, which extends
-over a breadth of a mile and a half, at the very foot of the mountains.
-In order to examine it at leisure, Lieutenant Garnier engaged a Laotian
-to conduct him to an island lying just above it. Before starting, the
-guide made certain preparations, of which Garnier could not understand
-the necessity, in spite of the Laotian’s efforts to explain them.
-Rolling up about his waist the light langouti, he plastered his feet
-and legs with a composition of lime and areca juice. This precaution
-proved to be far from useless; for, on landing on the island, they
-found the soil covered with thousands of leeches, some no larger than
-needles, but others two inches and a half to three inches in length. On
-the approach of the strangers, they reared themselves erect upon each
-dead leaf and blade of grass; they leaped, so to speak, upon them from
-every side. The thick coating which the Laotian guide had so prudently
-assumed preserved him from their bites; but Garnier, in a few moments,
-was victimized by dozens of these blood-suckers, which crawled up his
-legs and bled him in spite of all his efforts. He found it impossible
-to get rid of his determined antagonists; for one leech which he tore
-off, two fresh assailants seized upon him. Glad was he when he caught
-sight of a tall tree. He made towards it, scaled its trunk, and, when
-out of reach of his foes, set to work to deliver himself from the
-creatures which were feasting at his expense. Throwing off his clothes,
-he removed the leeches one by one, though it was not without difficulty
-that he loosened their hold. Even his waistband had not arrested their
-march, for he found that one audacious persecutor had actually reached
-his chest.
-
-~A VIEW OF THE CATARACT.~
-
-He felt more than repaid, however, for all his sufferings, when he
-arrived within sight of the cataract. With a breadth of two thousand
-yards, a prodigious mass of water came down in blinding foam, roaring
-like a furious sea when it breaks against an iron-bound coast. At
-another point, the flood was divided into eight or ten different
-cascades by as many projecting crags, richly clothed in leafage and
-vegetation. Beyond, nothing could be seen but one immense rapid,--a
-roaring, tumultuous deluge! The sandstone blocks and boulders which
-encumbered the river-bed were completely hidden by the whirl and eddy
-of the waves; and their position could be detected only by the foam on
-the surface, or the vapour floating wreath-like in the air. Further
-still, a few black points, a few ridges of rock, and a chain of small
-islets, stretched across to the opposite bank, which it was impossible
-to approach, and where, apparently, the cataract seemed to attain its
-greatest fury. Such was the great fall of Salaphe,--a scene of sublime
-grandeur, conveying the idea of everlasting strength and power.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~VISIT TO BASSAC.~
-
-While preparing to continue their ascent of the river, Lieutenant
-Garnier and his companions visited Bassac, one of the most important
-towns in Laos. It is situated in the heart of the richest tropical
-scenery; and the members of the expedition found it impossible to
-ramble in any direction without coming upon some fresh and beautiful
-landscape, or some object of the highest interest. The mountains which
-surround Bassac are clothed to their very summits with vegetation; and
-down the shadowy glens which furrow their rugged sides sparkle bright,
-pure streams on their way to the all-absorbing Mekong. The people of
-Bassac are a mild and peaceable race, and they received the strangers
-with cordial hospitality. The time was spent most agreeably in paying
-and receiving visits; in excursions among the beautiful scenery of the
-neighbourhood, the choicest “bits” of which they transferred to their
-sketch-books; in studying the manners and customs of the inhabitants;
-and in essaying their skill as marksmen against the wild denizens of
-the forest.
-
-~IN PURSUIT OF GAME~
-
-The larger game are generally caught by the hunters of Bassac in
-nets or snares. The chase on a grand scale is almost unknown. In
-the forests, however, the hunters sometimes call in the elephant to
-their assistance; they are thus able to get close to the wished-for
-prey, as the latter do not take alarm at the approach of an animal
-so well known. Lieutenant Garnier tells us that he enjoyed his sport
-in a modest fashion. Sometimes he spent whole days in traversing the
-dried-up swamps, in the shade of dense masses of trees bound together
-inextricably by every kind of liana and parasite. To such places resort
-numerous companies of peacocks and wild fowl during the hot season; but
-their pursuit is always difficult, and frequently dangerous. Indeed,
-the Laotians cherish a belief that the tiger and the peacock are
-always found in the same localities.
-
-[Illustration: PEACOCK HUNTING.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-~A MOUNTAIN EXCURSION.~
-
-One evening, seated at the foot of a tamarisk-tree, the fruit of which
-a troop of squirrels was busily crunching among the branches overhead,
-Garnier and his comrade, Dr. Thorel, took counsel together; with the
-conclusion that, on the day following, they would undertake a mountain
-excursion, and boldly attempt to scale one of the most elevated peaks.
-Accordingly, at dawn they started, attended by their usual escort--a
-native, christened Luiz.
-
-With swift feet they crossed the rice-plantations and marshes that
-separated them from the foot of the mountains; and by a narrow winding
-track reached the bed of a dried-up torrent, where they halted for
-a brief rest. Thence, plunging into the forest, they slowly climbed
-the precipitous heights, occasionally confronted by a rugged steep,
-or an immense mass of rock that seemed likely to baffle all their
-aspirations, but was eventually conquered by combined skill and
-resolution. The forest soon changed its character; the rarefaction of
-the air forced itself upon their notice; the daring adventurers rose
-above the clouds and vapours of the plain. On arriving at a narrow
-ledge of table-land they halted for breakfast. The first requisite was
-fresh water; rare enough at that season of the year, and at such a
-height! Close beside them, however, was the channel of a spent burn;
-and a careful search among the rocks revealed to them a pool, sheltered
-from wind and sun, brimming with crystal water,--and tenanted,
-moreover, by some mountain-eels, small but delicious. The pool being
-very shallow, a supply of the eels was soon obtained.
-
-~DETAILS OF THE ASCENT.~
-
-It did not take long to kindle a fire. The eels were dexterously
-grilled; and a savoury and substantial repast concluded with a dessert
-of wild bananas. Refreshed and invigorated, the mountain-climbers
-resumed their enterprise; and along a narrow crest, so narrow that two
-persons could not walk abreast, made their way through a labyrinth of
-vegetation. With watchful eye, and hand on trigger, they advanced.
-Suddenly a strayed peacock flew in front of them; but as their position
-was unfavourable for taking aim, they allowed it to pass by. They
-reached at last a kind of natural staircase, the ascent of which was
-rendered inconvenient by the showers of pebbles, loosened by their
-feet, which rolled to right and left over the precipice. All at
-once further progress apparently was rendered impossible by a mass
-of withered brushwood; which, on examination, proved to be the den,
-happily deserted, of a wild boar.
-
-~A SPLENDID PANORAMA.~
-
-Beyond this point the crest or ridge grew sharper and sharper; the
-shattered and accumulated rocks were held together only by the lianas
-which close-clasped them; and the adventurers were forced to crawl
-on their hands and knees, holding on by plant or crag. At length the
-brave effort was crowned with success. They gained the mountain-top,
-and enjoyed a panorama of wonderful beauty, in which peaks and forests
-blended their various hues, and wide green plains expanded in the
-golden sunshine, and the pagodas of Bassac rose like island-pinnacles
-out of a sea of verdure. The glorious picture, in all its variety of
-form and glow of colouring, was one on which the eye of man had never
-before rested; it was a picture of abounding fertility as well as of
-beauty and grandeur, and suggested the idea of almost inexhaustible
-resources, which in some future time may be developed by the enterprise
-and civilization of the West.
-
-[Illustration: MOUNTAIN-PEAK NEAR BASSAC.]
-
-~RETURN TO BASSAC.~
-
-In the course of their descent the explorers gained a broken ridge
-of rock, overshadowed by the branches of a stately tree, the
-roots of which clung round the weather-worn stones, and seemed to
-hold them together. At their approach, a swarm--we might almost say
-a cloud--of green pigeons whirled and fluttered out of the depths
-of the green foliage; returning to their resting-places after a few
-aerial evolutions. The ground beneath was strewn with small fruit, to
-which the pigeons are extremely partial; and showers continually fell
-about the explorers’ heads, loosened by the movement of the restless
-birds. With a little patience, they brought down half a dozen of the
-feathered spoilers; and then, through the forest shadows and down the
-mountain-declivities, they pursued their homeward march.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The following evening, Garnier and Dr. Thorel were invited to join
-a young Laotian in his walk. The latter led them across a pleasant
-breadth of garden-ground to an open space, strewn here and there with
-ashes and the refuse of wood-fires. Behind a clump of tall bamboos,
-some fifty spectators, seated in an oval ring, surrounded a couple
-of wrestlers, and displayed a lively interest in the various phases
-of their strife. At a few paces distant, three men were engaged in
-rekindling a fire which had died out for lack of fuel. Some bonzes,
-or priests, clothed in full long robes of yellow stuff, were viewing
-the spectacle from afar, or wending their way towards the neighbouring
-pagoda. Two or three women crouched on the ground, amidst baskets
-of fruit and large earthen vessels full of rice-wine, intended as
-refreshment for the spectators or the heated athletes.
-
-~LAOTIAN ATHLETES.~
-
-Among the bystanders was conspicuous a Laotian, attired in a langouti,
-and silken vest of dazzling colours, and sheltered by a parasol held
-over his head by a boy standing in the rear, who warmly encouraged one
-of the combatants, while a portion of the assembly evidently backed his
-antagonist. The struggle was protracted. Betting took place vigorously,
-and considerable sums were wagered on both sides. The white men seated
-themselves apart, in order to study in all its details a scene so
-full of animation. It was impossible not to admire the suppleness of
-the two athletes,--robust young men, trained to the combat from their
-very infancy; impossible not to take an interest in the skill and
-agility with which they eluded or endeavoured to surprise one another.
-Sometimes they paused, face to face, and regarded each other with
-fixed gaze, slightly curving their loins or shoulders; a moment,
-and they leaped from end to end of the arena, assuming theatrical
-attitudes--and, when occasion offered, dealing a vigorous blow of the
-fist which reddened the sun-bronzed skin.
-
-[Illustration: FUNERAL CEREMONY OF THE LAOTIANS.]
-
-~A STRANGE FUNERAL CEREMONY.~
-
-Their Laotian friend informed our travellers that they were witnessing
-nothing less than a funeral ceremony! In Laos, cremation is the
-universal custom; and the mortuary rites of a Laotian of rank generally
-terminate with a gladiatorial combat, at the conclusion and on the very
-site of the process of cremation.
-
-The national rule is, that the corpse of a Laotian mandarin shall
-be preserved for several days in its shroud within the proper
-mortuary-hut. Friends and kinsmen assemble therein, and console
-themselves as best they may with abundant eating and drinking; a custom
-which prevails elsewhere than in Laos! It does not appear that the
-Laotians regard death with any particular apprehension. Their special
-anxiety is to prevent the evil spirits from obtaining possession of
-the souls of the dead, and playing them malignant tricks. During the
-day these spirits will not attempt anything; but at night they gain
-courage, and to shelter the deceased from their manœuvres seems to
-be no easy task. However, by means of numerous prayers, and more
-particularly by keeping up a tremendous clamour, it is generally
-possible, the Laotians believe, to avert their disastrous influence.
-
-For this purpose all the bonzes of the neighbourhood are summoned;
-and taking up positions around the bier, they chant aloud their
-invocations. By day, and especially by night, the family assist them in
-keeping watch. The women decorate the coffin with floral offerings, as
-well as with ornaments of wax intended to facilitate combustion. The
-men, armed with gongs, tomtoms, and any other instrument they can seize
-upon, accompany, as noisily as possible, the chants of the bonzes.
-“Harmony” is not the object aimed at; but to secure the maximum of
-noise.
-
-When the day appointed for the final ceremony arrives, the uproar is
-redoubled at early morn, as a signal to the friends and relatives of
-the departed, who make their appearance in full costume.
-
-~THE FUNERAL PROCESSION.~
-
-A procession is then arranged for the purpose of carrying the corpse
-to the place of burning. The bonzes lead the way, the seniors coming
-last. Then follows the coffin, supported on the shoulders of a dozen
-young men, and surmounted by a kind of bamboo canopy, embellished with
-flowers and foliage, and destined, like the coffin, to be consumed on
-the funeral pyre. The men march next, with the wealthiest and most
-influential of the kinsmen of the deceased at their head. The rear is
-brought up by the women and children, carrying long bamboos ornamented
-with banderoles of various colours, which are planted in the ground
-during the process of cremation.
-
-~THE FUNERAL PYRE.~
-
-The pile is reared at one extremity of the burial-ground, where bamboo
-poles and the trunks of aged palms have been linked together with
-long lianas to form a kind of aerial barrier against the invasion of
-the evil spirits. It is composed of pieces of wood of equal length,
-carefully arranged in intercrossed layers, and it rises to the height
-of a man’s shoulders, so that the bearers, passing half to one side
-and half to the other, can deposit the coffin without effort. The men
-gather round in a circle; the women stand a little in the rear. The
-bonzes recite their prayers, and receive once more the offerings which
-the relatives of the deceased never fail to bring for them and their
-pagoda; after which the chief priest mounts the pile, and standing
-erect, with hands extended over the coffin, pronounces with a loud
-voice a concluding prayer.
-
-~PROCESS OF CREMATION.~
-
-As soon as he has descended, the attendants set fire to the resinous
-materials placed under the pile. A dazzling jet of flame shoots aloft,
-and soon envelopes the coffin. The ornaments are consumed in quick
-succession; the pile breaks down in a mass of flame and smoke; and
-into the midst falls the corpse, released from the charred and burning
-coffin. Yet, painful as this spectacle seems, no native exhibits the
-slightest emotion. The work of combustion is allowed to complete
-itself, and no one touches the ashes of humanity throughout the day.
-The women depart, while the men follow the president of the ceremonies
-to be present at the gladiatorial show in honour of the deceased which
-we have already described.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: CORONATION OF THE KING OF OUBON.]
-
-~CORONATION OF THE KING.~
-
-The voyagers next made their way to Oubon, where they arrived in time
-to witness the coronation of the king. The chief of every village, and
-the leading men of every province, and indeed all the inhabitants,
-had been invited to “assist” in the ceremony. On the morning of the
-appointed day, the strangers were deafened by an uproar of drums and
-gongs and other unmusical instruments. The noisy orchestra surrounded
-the palace; while the royal procession wound through the streets of
-Oubon, and defiled into its square or market-place. Mounted upon an
-elephant of great size, which was armed with a pair of formidable
-tusks, the king made his appearance, encircled by guards on foot and on
-horseback, and attended by his great dignitaries mounted like himself.
-A train of smaller elephants followed, carrying the court ladies.
-The _cortége_ finally directed its course to some spacious pavilions
-erected for the purpose, where the bonzes of the royal pagoda were
-offering up their prayers.
-
-A few minutes passed, and another tableau was presented. The king was
-seen enthroned in the largest pavilion. He arose, and, escorted by his
-principal officers, advanced into the middle of a wide platform, where
-the bonzes, still uttering their prayers, gathered about him. He threw
-off his clothes, replacing them by a mantle of white cloth. Then the
-bonzes drew apart, so as to open up a passage for him; and he proceeded
-to place himself, with his body bent into a curve, immediately
-underneath the sacred dragon. Prayers were recommenced, and the king
-received the anointing or consecrating _douche_; while a dignitary who
-stood at one corner of the dais set free a couple of turtle-doves, as
-a sign that all creation, down even to the animals, should be happy on
-so auspicious a day.
-
-When the water which was contained in the dragon’s body had completely
-douched the royal person, new garments were brought, over which was
-thrown a large white robe; and he returned to his place in the centre
-of the hall. A grand banquet of rice, and cucumbers, and eggs, and
-pork, and delicious bananas, washed down by copious draughts of
-rice-wine, concluded the day’s proceedings; and in the evening the town
-was lighted up with fireworks, while bands of singers and musicians
-traversed the streets.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE VOYAGE RESUMED.~
-
-Lieutenant Garnier, after a brief rest, resumed his exploration of
-the Mekong, passing through scenery which previously no European had
-visited. At night he and his companions halted at the most convenient
-spot, lighted a fire, cooked their meal of rice, and took their rest
-under the curtain of a starry sky, or beneath such shelter as they
-could hastily run up. Fatigue assisted them to a speedy slumber; yet
-their repose was often disturbed by the cries of the wild elephants
-which, in large numbers, roamed among the hills on the other side of
-the river, or by the roar of some tiger prowling along the bank. During
-the day their attention was sometimes diverted from the contemplation
-of the strange and picturesque scenery which surrounded them, by the
-necessity of piloting their boat through the rapids and whirlpools that
-obstruct the navigation of the river.
-
-~MOUNTAINS OF LAKON.~
-
-In this way they proceeded to Kemarat and Pennom; and, across an
-immense plain, remarkable for its fertility, followed the course of
-the river, which runs due north and south, broadening into a lake of
-such dimensions that its boundaries cannot be detected by the naked
-eye. One morning, as the mists cleared off, they were surprised at the
-appearance, on the northern horizon, of dim azure forms, resembling the
-deception of the mirage, or clouds of fantastic outline, or rather a
-mass of medieval ruins, with lofty towers and pinnacles, and shattered
-ramparts. The natives informed them that these were the mountains
-of Lakon, at the foot of which they would arrive on the following
-day. They found it difficult to believe in the existence of such
-mountains, the configuration of which grew stranger and more fantastic
-as they drew nearer to them; sometimes exhibiting sheer precipitous
-declivities, sometimes overhanging masses, while sometimes each summit
-appeared cloven into deep and shadowy chasms. These enormous rocks
-of marble of different tints have been heaped up in awful confusion
-by some convulsion of the terrestrial crust; and forced, by an
-inconceivable subterranean effort, through the sandstone formation
-which underlies the superficial strata of the country.
-
-~ARRIVAL AT LAKON.~
-
-Round the projecting angle of the mountain-mass the river lightly
-sweeps; and then its broad waters reflect the huts and pagodas of the
-important town of Lakon. The bank was lined with the barks of traders
-and fishers; ample nets, suspended to rows of bamboos, dried in the
-open air. Sheds erected for the convenience of voyagers, piles of
-wood and merchandise, and loaded rafts, gave an air of animation and
-activity to the approaches to the town. Our voyagers, well pleased to
-regain the society of their kind, made haste to unload their boats,
-while native porters carried their luggage to the house set apart for
-their accommodation: it stood on the margin of the river, overshadowed
-by the branches of a huge mango-tree. Here, as soon as the work was
-done, they stretched themselves on the floor, postponing until the
-morrow their exploration of the town.
-
-~A GLANCE AT THE TOWN.~
-
-At daybreak they were aroused by the noisy gong of a neighbouring
-pagoda. Already the river-bank and the town showed signs of life and
-movement. Curious faces were gathered round the strangers’ hut. A large
-bag of rice, fruit, fish, and some buffalo-steaks dried in the sun,
-arrived, sent by the mandarin provisionally intrusted with the charge
-of supplying their wants. The fresh genial morning tempted them forth,
-and they went from end to end of the town, which seemed both wealthy
-and populous. The pagodas were numerous, the huts well-constructed,
-the gardens green and admirably kept. The inhabitants appeared
-free and happy. Behind the town, in an open space on the border of
-the rice-fields, some bands of travellers lay encamped under roofs
-of interwoven foliage. The principal street, which ran along the
-river-bank, was shaded everywhere by the trees and creepers of the gay
-gardens that skirted its entire course. It made a pleasant promenade,
-as through each opening in the rich glossy foliage could be seen the
-white sands of the shore, the calm crystal river, the forest thickly
-crowding the opposite bank, and, beyond, the long line of the marble
-mountains.
-
-[Illustration: ANNAMITES AT LAKON.]
-
-~AN ANNAMITE SETTLEMENT.~
-
-After this excursion, our voyagers returned to their hut, which they
-found an object of attraction to all the curiosity-mongers of Lakon.
-The most distinguished ladies of the town had assembled to see the
-strangers, and offer in exchange for European ornaments their richest
-fruits and freshest vegetables. If Garnier and his companions were
-surprised at their appearance, they were still more surprised to find
-in the crowd a group of twenty Annamites, who had emigrated from the
-French colony of Cochin-China, and had been established at Lakon
-for some years. As Garnier’s escort was also composed of Annamites,
-the scene between the compatriots thus singularly brought together
-was one of unbounded ecstasy. Garnier went on a visit to the little
-Annamite settlement, which repeated in every detail the villages of
-Cochin-China. In each hut was to be seen the tiny domestic altar, with
-its lights, and incense, and small statue of Buddha, and broad bands of
-red paper, inscribed with Chinese characters and symbolical designs.
-There, too, were the large central table, a mother-of-pearl _plateau_,
-a complete “tea-equipage” (to use the late Lord Lytton’s phrase),
-and a bed surrounded by mosquito-curtains. And no less conspicuous
-was that want of cleanliness, both in dwelling and person, which
-characterize the natives of Cochin-China.
-
-~THE MARBLE MOUNTAINS.~
-
-We cannot describe all the objects of interest at Lakon, or all the
-excursions which Garnier made in its neighbourhood. The geologist and
-botanist of the expedition adventured a visit to the Marble Mountains.
-With a guide and a couple of elephants, they crossed the river, plunged
-into the forest-depths, and found their way to the quarries, where
-blocks of marble are excavated for the purpose of being made into lime
-of a dazzling whiteness. Then they penetrated into the grottoes and
-caverns with which the mountains abound. As they advanced, the scenery
-became more and more picturesque, and more and more savage: high rugged
-peaks rose above the forest trees; bushes and lianas and parasitical
-plants decked with festoons every rocky projection; here yawned a
-gloomy chasm, there towered aloft a mighty and awful precipice. But the
-scene of scenes burst upon them after they had threaded a gloomy maze
-of trees and intertangled bamboos. Two immense walls of sombre rock,
-several hundred yards in height, enclosed a broad ravine, which, at
-the further extremity, opened on a bare and shining plain. On the left,
-the wall extended to a great distance, forming a long line, decreasing
-in elevation through the natural effect of the perspective. That on
-the right towered above a pile of enormous rocks, heaped together in
-the wildest confusion; it seemed to turn like the enceinte of a strong
-fortification, and was terminated abruptly by a vertical line, broken
-by numerous gaps. Between these lofty barriers lay a barren plain;
-afar, some miniature pools glittered with a magical effect in the
-“pale moonlight.” The prospect was closed in the distance by the steep
-declivities of lofty mountains, surrounding and shutting up, as it
-were, this gigantic “cirque” or amphitheatre. About three hundred yards
-from the entrance rose two vertical rocks, like a couple of slender
-spires, or rather like two enormous tapers--rose to a prodigious
-height, isolated, and emerging from a clump of luxuriant verdure which
-flourished at their feet. One of these rocks was fully nine hundred
-feet in elevation. The other was not so lofty, and seemed to have
-partially fallen, the ground being everywhere strewn with its wreck.
-
-[Illustration: NATURAL PILLAR IN THE MOUNTAINS OF LAKON.]
-
-From this remarkable spectacle the French _savants_ proceeded to
-inspect a superb grotto excavated in the great wall of cliff, near
-the two pillar-like masses. By climbing some rocks they obtained an
-entry into it, and found it to form a spacious hall, varying from forty
-to eighty feet in height, of great depth, with a rounded, vaulted roof.
-The ground was thick with stalagmites; while stalactites of the most
-various shapes depended from the vault, and glittered, like so many
-mirrors, in the light of torches.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~PALM-WINE.~
-
-~HOW THE WINE IS COLLECTED.~
-
-A day or two afterwards, Garnier and his friends, in returning from
-a walk in the environs of Lakon, encountered some Laotians carrying
-vessels of bamboo, filled with a liquid which at first they supposed
-to be water. On tasting it, however, they discovered that it was the
-wine of the country; sweet-flavoured, and by no means disagreeable to
-the palate; not unlike, indeed, the product of some of the Rhenish
-vineyards. It was palm-wine, freshly made; and to enjoy its _bouquet_
-and full flavour it should be drunk in this condition, for it will not
-keep more than four-and-twenty hours without fermentation. The Laotians
-offered to conduct the strangers to a neighbouring plantation, where
-they might observe the different processes of its manufacture. The
-offer was accepted, and the party soon arrived at a clearing which was
-thickly planted with great borassus palms. To collect the wine,--which
-is, in fact, the sap of the tree,--nothing more is necessary than to
-make an incision in the middle of the head of the tree, at the point
-where the leaves branch off, and suspend beneath a bamboo, into which
-the sap falls, drop by drop. In order to reach the summit of these huge
-palms, which are straight and smooth as the main-mast of a ship, the
-Laotians have invented a simple and ingenious process. They transform
-the palm into a veritable ladder, by attaching to the trunk, with small
-strips of flexible ratan, projecting laths of bamboo, which, jutting
-out to right and left at intervals of twelve to fourteen inches, form
-so many “rungs,” and enable the ascent of the tree to be rapidly and
-easily accomplished.
-
-
-[Illustration: TAPPING THE BORASSUS PALM.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-~A RUINED CITY.~
-
-But we must no longer tarry at Lakon. We must once more launch the
-boats of our adventurous voyagers, and continue our exploration
-of the great river. It waters a populous country, and large towns
-are of frequent occurrence on its banks. We pass Hoûten, with its
-pagodas, its mountains, and green woods; Saniabury, with its rude
-pottery-manufacture; verdurous islands and shining sandbanks;
-and the mouths of the many streams which help to swell the abundant
-volume of the Mekong. From Saniabury the French expedition proceeded
-to Bouncang, a large and beautiful village at the mouth of the Nam
-San; thence to Nong Kay, where a Buddhist tat or pyramidal landmark,
-erected to indicate a sacred spot, or to enshrine a relic, has been
-washed away from the shore, and now lies half submerged, like a wrecked
-ship; and thence to Vien Chan, where the river widens into a channel
-of a thousand yards in width, before it enters the mountain region.
-Vien Chan, now a heap of ruins, was the former metropolis of the
-kingdom of Laos; and relics of antiquity spread over a considerable
-area testify to its ancient prosperity and splendour. The remains of
-the royal palace are interesting. It does not seem to have been built
-of very durable materials, the walls and staircases being faced with,
-and the pavement and flooring composed of, bricks, wood, or a kind of
-cement; but the entire structure still exhibits a certain elegance
-of character, and a remarkable wealth of decoration--the columns
-of wood have been tastefully carved and profusely gilded; and the
-whole is embellished with mouldings, and arabesques, and fantastic
-animal-figures.
-
-[Illustration: BUDDHIST TAT AT NONG KAY.]
-
-The absolute silence reigning within the precincts of a city formerly
-so rich and populous, was, however, much more impressive than any of
-its monuments; more impressive even than the deserted topes or Buddhist
-temples which raised their domes in the shadow of the surrounding
-forest.
-
-~THE BUDDHIST TEMPLES.~
-
-These, abandoned by their priests, and constructed of the same
-materials as the palace, are rapidly decaying. The rapid vegetation of
-the tropics, which softens happily the pitiful aspect of Desolation
-with its flowers and verdure, lends to these ruined sanctuaries, at a
-distance, a delusive air of age; tall grasses grow everywhere about the
-sacred precincts, creepers and parasites twine round each column, and
-vigorous trees force their crests through the shattered roofs in search
-of light.
-
-The most considerable temple is Wat Pha Keo, the royal pagoda. Its
-timber façade, delicately wrought, and sparkling with those plates
-of glass which the Laotians and the Siamese cunningly mingle with
-their gilding in order to produce a greater effect of brilliancy,
-shines forth in the midst of the forest, gracefully framed with
-blooming lianas, and profusely garlanded with foliage. Gold has been
-unsparingly lavished on the sides of the square columns which
-supported the half-shattered roof; and a Byzantine style of decoration,
-very remarkable in effect, has at one time covered every inch of
-space. Though this mode of ornamentation is by no means lasting,
-it is very charming; and the numerous pagodas in Vien Chan thus
-embellished produced, at a distance, a wonderful impression of dazzling
-magnificence.
-
-~WAT SISAKET.~
-
-~A BUDDHIST MONASTERY.~
-
-To the north, in the midst of the forest, is situated a smaller pagoda,
-which has undergone but little dilapidation,--that of Wat Sisaket.
-In its interior a number of small statues of Buddha are enshrined in
-gilded niches, which cover the wall from floor to ceiling, rivalling
-the terraces of Boro Bodor, the celebrated Buddhist monument of Java.
-Before the altar was elevated a candelabrum, remarkable for its
-originality of design and exquisite finish of workmanship. A few paces
-distant from the pagoda was situated the library, an indispensable
-appendage of all the temples of Laos; it was partly destroyed. As no
-native was near, the French explorers clambered up the worm-eaten
-pillars which supported and isolated from the soil the flooring of this
-literary tabernacle: in the interior some sacred books were scattered
-about; they were composed of long narrow strips cut from the leaves
-of a particular species of palm, gilded on the edges, and stitched
-together in books. Each contained seven or eight lines of that rounded
-writing peculiar to the peoples of the Indo-Chinese peninsula; which
-differs, as is recognized at the first glance, from the writing of
-India properly so-called, though derived from it. Finally, attached
-directly to the pagoda, the travellers found a rectangular gallery,
-opening internally on a court,--its walls covered, like those of the
-temple itself, with small niches containing Buddha statues. This was
-the vihara (_chon-khon_ in Laotian), or monastery, which served as the
-residence of the priests ministering in Wat Sisaket.
-
-[Illustration: MONASTERY OF WAT SISAKET.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-~A DANGEROUS PASS.~
-
-Some miles above Vien Chan, the Mekong enters a narrow valley, which is
-sharply defined and enclosed by two ranges of high hills. Its waters,
-hitherto majestic and tranquil, which had peacefully unfolded silver
-coil after coil over the vast plateau of central Laos, now accelerated
-their course, and tumbled and eddied among the rocks, ever restless
-and ever noisy. The noble river, which had previously measured its
-breadth by thousands of yards, now shut up within two barriers of
-constantly-increasing elevation, was now contained in a channel
-which rarely attained to five or six hundred yards in width, and from
-which it was no more to escape. In dry seasons it occupied only a small
-portion of this space, and it had presented a rugged and broken surface
-of rock; a grand mosaic, where fragments mingled of all the metamorphic
-formations--marbles, schists, serpentines, even jades,--curiously
-coloured, and sometimes admirably polished.
-
-[Illustration: PASSAGE OF A RAPID.]
-
-As the travellers advanced the river grew narrower, and, with a width
-of three hundred yards and a depth of twenty-five fathoms, flowed
-through a wild and wooded valley, uninhabited except by the animals of
-the forest. They passed the mouth of the Nam Thon; after which they
-came upon a dangerous series of rapids, where the foaming waters,
-hurled and driven from side to side, and swung round projecting rocks,
-and driven against the foot of precipitous banks, rushed downwards
-tumultuously, with all the clang and clash of billows breaking against
-a reef. To thread this water-labyrinth, it was necessary to obtain the
-assistance of a pilot from a neighbouring village; and even he was
-unwilling to promise that the boats of the expedition, light and small
-as they were, could be carried up to the next Muong, that of Xieng
-Cang. The boats, however, were unloaded, and the stores transferred to
-the shoulders of sturdy natives, who bore them along the rocks; while
-others towed the boats with many a lusty pull through the whirl and
-foam of the rapids. But so laborious and so difficult was the task,
-that two whole days were spent in effecting the passage of a few miles.
-
-~AT MUONG MAI.~
-
-~A CENTRE OF TRADE.~
-
-At length they reached Xieng Cang, or, as it is also called, Muong
-Mai, the “new Muong,” which is one of the most important centres of
-population on the left bank of the Mekong. The river here broadens
-considerably, and its waters are as peaceful as those of a woodland
-pool. Opposite to the town rises a beautiful chain of green mountains,
-in a series of gently-sloping terraces; and these are intersected by
-delightful Eden-valleys, finely wooded, enamelled with flowers, and
-brightened by the silver thread of a little brook. The village, or
-town, is well built; the houses are very lofty; and the inhabitants are
-employed, according to the season, in the manufacture of cotton and the
-cultivation of rice. The principal pagoda, situated on the threshold
-of the rice-fields, near a grove of graceful corypha palms, is richly
-ornamented in the interior, and, among other curiosities, contains
-an ancient carved _porte-cierges_ of wood. At the time of Garnier’s
-visit, some Birman traders had displayed the contents of their packs
-on the steps of the temple, and were selling to the natives their
-bright-coloured cotton stuffs and English hardware. A road having been
-made westward from Hoûten, Muong Mai is only a hundred leagues from
-Moulmein, which lies in nearly the same latitude, and is, as the reader
-knows, an English colony, and a busy commercial port, at the mouth
-of the Saluen. From this point spread over the interior of Laos the
-Peguans, or Birmans of the British possessions, whose knowledge of the
-wares most readily purchased by European merchants, and the high price
-at which they sell to the natives their English goods, enable them to
-accumulate considerable wealth.
-
-[Illustration: RICE-FIELD AND PAGODA AT MUONG MAI.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-~ARRIVAL AT PAK LAY.~
-
-Resuming their northward route, and bent upon tracing the river up to
-its mountain-source, they passed through a fertile and picturesque
-country, which has been made known to the Western nations by the
-enterprise of the traveller Mouhot. Leaving behind them the mouth of
-the Nam Lim, and diverging somewhat to the west, then again to the
-north, the voyagers arrived in the neighbourhood of Pak Lay, where they
-fell in with a M. Duyshart, a Hollander in the service of the king of
-Siam, and employed by him in a series of geographical researches, who
-was descending the river to Bangkok. They exchanged scientific notes,
-and it appeared that Duyshart had surveyed the course of the Cambodia
-or Mekong for one hundred and twenty miles above Luang Prabang.
-
-A few hours after this interesting rencontre, the French expedition
-crossed the boundary-line of the kingdom of Luang Prabang, and reached
-the extremity of the great rapid of Keng Sao. Successfully steering
-their course through its rocks and islets, they arrived at Pak Lay,
-a romantically-situated village, buried in the deep shadows of the
-primeval forest. To the north of the village, and almost hidden by the
-trees, is situated a small pagoda, entirely deficient in the accessory
-buildings which usually surround a temple at Laos, but better placed
-for the purpose of assisting the self-absorption of its priests and
-votaries.
-
-[Illustration: PAGODA AT PAK LAY.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-As the voyagers proceeded up the river, they now began to notice
-a gradual change in the character alike of the inhabitants and
-the vegetation. The calcareous mountains which dominated over the
-river-valley assumed the most irregular and fantastic forms, and forced
-it into a constant succession of broken curves and sharp angular turns.
-At times a mass of marble suddenly projected its high precipitous
-cliffs, which the river bathed with waters sometimes foaming, sometimes
-tranquil.
-
-~FISHING-STATIONS.~
-
-The Mekong was not at its full height at the time our voyagers ascended
-it: a great part of its bed lay bare; and a person, on landing, before
-he could reach the bank had to traverse wide spans rugged with rocks.
-Here and there spread immense sandbanks, on which were erected large
-fishing-stations--veritable towns of bamboo--already abandoned by the
-fishermen in anticipation of the quick-coming rise of the waters.
-
-For three days the expedition continued its course. Not a single hut
-was visible anywhere. The only incidents of their voyage were the
-rapids, which occurred at intervals of three or four miles. These, for
-the most part, were formed by the shingle and rocks accumulated at
-their mouth by the numerous streamlets which the river here receives.
-By dint of vigorous exertions, the native boatmen “poled” their light
-barks through each swift current. At times the scene was illuminated
-by the arrowy flashes of a storm-swept sky; and peals of thunder,
-resounding among the mountains in multitudinous reverberations, mingled
-with the roar of the waters. Hail frequently fell in heavy showers
-during these gales, which lasted usually about half an hour, and
-abruptly lowered the temperature four or five degrees.
-
-The river’s course was remarkably direct, and lay almost due north.
-At certain points it completely filled its bed; its breadth was then
-reduced to about one hundred and fifty yards; and the hills which
-bordered it were of so regular an appearance that the stream assumed
-all the features of an artificial canal. A series of miniature cascades
-flashed their silver spray in all directions, as they descended the
-verdurous slopes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~MODERN CAPITAL OF LAOS.~
-
-~A PICTURESQUE SCENE.~
-
-Luang Prabang, at which our voyagers in due course arrived, is the
-modern capital of Laos. It is picturesque and pleasant to the view, and
-enjoys the advantage of a favourable situation. Its houses are very
-numerous, and are arranged in parallel lines around a small central
-hillock, which, like a dome of verdure, rises above the mass of gray
-thatched roofs. On the summit a tat or dagoba elevates its sharp arrowy
-pinnacle above a belt of trees, so as to form a landmark for all the
-surrounding country. Upon the terraced declivities of this quasi-sacred
-eminence are situated several pagodas, the red roofs of which are
-vividly defined against the sombre green vegetation. At the foot of the
-cliffs, which are about fifty feet high, stretches a row of permanent
-rafts, on which numerous huts are erected, composing beneath the town a
-kind of second town or river-suburb, connected with the capital itself
-by zigzag paths, shining like white ribbons in the distance. Hundreds
-of boats of all sizes move rapidly along this floating city; while
-large and heavy rafts, coming down from the upper waters of the river,
-seek a convenient nook for mooring and unloading their cargoes. At the
-foot of the cliffs a crowd of boatmen and porters hurry to and fro; and
-the hum of voices mingles confusedly with the murmur of the stream, and
-the whisper of the palm-trees which wave their feathery crests upon its
-smiling and fertile banks.
-
-~UP THE RIVER.~
-
-After a brief sojourn at this interesting and lively city, the French
-voyagers, animated by their desire to open up a new channel of
-commercial enterprise, and discover a practicable route from Cambodia
-to China, resumed their ascent of the Mekong. They found that, above
-Luang Prabang, it narrowed considerably, and resumed its wild and
-romantic aspect. The mountains on either hand exhibited a succession of
-bold, dark, cloven crests; their lowest terraces, impending over the
-river-banks, being frequently ornamented by a pyramid, the tomb of a
-pious bonze or the shrine of an imaginary relic, the slender form of
-which harmonized well with the character of the landscape.
-
-[Illustration: BAMBOO BRIDGE AT XIENG KHONG]
-
-Passing the confluence of the Nam Hou, they came upon the cavern
-of Pak Hou, which the Buddhist priests have covered with religious
-decoration, and adorned with the gifts of munificent pilgrims. Thence
-they proceeded to Ban Tanoun; and from Ban Tanoun to Xieng Khong, the
-second in importance of the towns of the great province of Muong Nan.
-There they experienced some difficulty in obtaining permission to enter
-the Burmese territory; and, moreover, they found that they had nearly
-reached the limit of the navigable portion of the river. Few are the
-obstacles, however, which cannot be conquered by resolution and energy;
-and on the 14th of June the expedition left Xieng Khong in six
-light boats, drawing but little water, and continued the ascent of the
-river, which here bends to the westward, and flows across an apparently
-boundless plain. It is crossed near the town or village by a graceful
-but slender bridge of bamboo, from which may be obtained a charming
-view of its graceful sweep through a luxuriance of tropical vegetation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~AT MUONG LIM.~
-
-~A CAUCASIAN PEOPLE.~
-
-At Muong Lim the expedition were compelled to abandon their boats. Its
-members found themselves there in the midst of a population differing
-in race from any they had previously met with. They seem, these
-Mou-tsen, to be of Caucasian origin. Their costume is very complicated,
-and even tasteful; and the tinsel and embroidery with which they cover
-their persons gives them a certain resemblance to the inhabitants of
-some parts of Brittany. The head-gear of the women has, at all events,
-the merit of originality. It consists of a series of rings of bamboo,
-covered with plaited straw, and fastened on the top of the head. The
-brim of this kind of hat is enriched over the forehead with silver
-balls; above are two rows of pearl-white glass beads; on the left
-side depends a tuft of white and red cotton thread, from which issues
-a loop formed of strings of many-coloured pearls. This coiffure,
-which is capable of infinite modifications, is completed with an
-abundance of leaves and flowers. The women also wear a tight-fitting
-bodice, the sleeves and edges of which are trimmed with pearls, and
-a short petticoat reaching to the knee. The legs are wrapped round
-with leggings, which begin at the ankle, and cover the whole of the
-calf. These leggings, too, are ornamented with a row of pearls about
-half-way up. The toilette is completed by ear-rings of coloured beads
-or balls of blown silver, bracelets, belts, collars, and shoulder-belts
-crossed over the bosom. As for the men, they wear the usual turban,
-loose short pantaloons, and a waistcoat with silver buttons. With both
-sexes a necessary addition to the attire is a kind of cloak or mantle
-of leaves, in shape like a book half-open, which is fastened to the
-neck, and in rainy weather is brought up over the head like a loose
-cover. The women, when carrying burdens, add to their already complex
-costume a wooden board across the shoulders, so made as to fit into the
-neck; and to this is suspended the basket containing the load. In front
-the board is kept in its place by cords, which are attached to the
-waist-belt or held in the hand.
-
-[Illustration: FOREST ROAD NEAR MUONG LIM.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-~PLEASANT TRAVEL.~
-
-Having obtained the necessary authorization to push their researches
-further, the adventurers set out from Muong Lim on the 1st of July,
-with an escort of natives carrying their instruments, provisions, and
-stores. At Puleo, finding the demands of the porters more than their
-limited funds could afford to meet, they reduced their baggage to the
-smallest possible proportions, and were thus enabled to dispense with
-the services of some of their attendants. They found the banks of the
-Cambodia frequented by numerous caimans, whose eggs are collected and
-eaten by the inhabitants. By day the journey was rendered pleasant
-through the constant succession of novel scenes. They made their way
-over a hilly and richly-wooded country, occasionally coming upon cotton
-plantations of exceeding richness; at other times upon delicious
-rills of crystal which spread their silver network over a fresh green
-expanse of flower-enamelled sward. Then they crossed a stretch of
-fertile rice-fields; and again they plunged into fresh glades, where
-a path wound in and out of clumps of palms and tropical trees, and
-waving ferns and rare flowering shrubs grew in luxuriant masses.
-But sometimes, at night, their experience was rather painful. They
-generally constructed a rude shelter of boughs and interwoven leaves;
-but this was often insufficient to protect them against the heavy
-rains that fell during passing storms, and was useless, of course, as
-a defence against the legions of leeches and mosquitoes which haunted
-the forest-depths.
-
-~HOT WELLS DISCOVERED.~
-
-After leaving a place called Siem-lap, they arrived on the borders
-of a half-dried torrent, the rocky bed of which was strangely bare
-of vegetation. The stones, among which a thin thread of water found
-its way, were a curious appearance; they were white, and covered with
-saline incrustations. The travellers tasted the water; it was warm. The
-three or four sources of this singular stream rose, a short distance
-off, at the foot of a wall of rocks: as they escaped among the shingle
-they exhaled a cloud of vapour, and their temperature was shown by the
-thermometer to be not less than 154° F.
-
-[Illustration: A NIGHT HALT NEAR SIEM-LAP.]
-
-Through a beautiful ravine they made their way to the picturesque
-village of Sop Yong. The richest and most magnificent vegetation
-imaginable grew close to the very edge of the river, and the
-travellers were frequently compelled to take to its waters, swollen
-as they were by the constant rains, and breast as best they could the
-violence of the current.
-
-[Illustration: TRAVELLING IN A RAVINE NEAR SOP YONG.]
-
-~A SIGN OF CIVILIZATION.~
-
-The next stage after Sop Yong was Ban Passang, which is described as
-an agglomeration of villages situated on a fertile table-land, in the
-heart of a rice-growing district. It is situated in the territory of
-Muong Yong, the chief town lying further to the westward. For Muong
-Yong the travellers set out on the 7th of August. They traversed a
-plain abundantly watered by streams which all flow into the Nam Yong, a
-branch of the great river. Over the chief of these little tributaries,
-the Nam Ouang, is thrown a wooden bridge; and this agreeable
-accommodation, a very great rarity in the land of the Laotians,
-pleasantly surprised our gallant explorers; they looked upon it as the
-sign of a more advanced civilization, which before long would exhibit
-itself more completely. A considerable portion of the plain was laid
-out in rice-fields; the rest was all swamp and morass. They passed by
-several villages which wore an unusual aspect of ease and comfort.
-Pagodas with curved roofs attracted the eye, and bore witness to the
-influence of Chinese architecture and the vicinity of the Celestial
-Empire.
-
-~ARRIVAL AT MUONG YOU.~
-
-At Muong Yong the expedition was delayed until the 8th of September,
-owing to the difficulty of obtaining the permission of the king of
-Birmah to cross those Laotian territories which are now included within
-the borders of his extensive dominions. The interval was occupied in
-short excursions in the neighbourhood, and in studying the manners and
-customs of the inhabitants. It was with no small pleasure, however,
-that the French adventurers took their departure, and continued their
-bold advance into regions of which European geographers knew but
-little. Their route led them to the important town of Muong You, where
-they paid visits of courtesy to the principal mandarins, the Burman
-representative, and the king of Muong You himself. This prince received
-them with dignified hospitality, and entertained them at a banquet,
-which was “served up” in magnificent style, and with a dazzling
-display of gold and silver plate. He is described as a young man of
-twenty-six, with a graceful figure and handsome countenance. He was
-attired in a dress of green satin, embroidered with red flowers; and
-the fire of the rubies which hung pendent from his ears illuminated the
-silken reflections of his rich costume. He was seated on cushions
-glittering with gold tracery. Around him were ranged in respectful
-attitudes the mandarins of the palace; at his feet, the sword and
-vessels of gold, finely wrought, which are the symbol of royalty.
-
-[Illustration: INTERVIEW WITH THE KING OF MUONG YOU.]
-
-From Muong You the expedition struck across a romantic country--as yet
-provided with but few facilities for travellers--to Xieng Hong, where
-new impediments were thrown in the way of their further progress.
-Having obtained admission to the presence of the king, they succeeded,
-however, in obtaining the royal favour, and made their way along the
-valley of the Nam Yong, which is bounded on either hand by lofty
-mountains, to Muong La, or, as it is also called, Se-mao, situated on
-the frontier of China; that mysterious land which has preserved its
-own strange civilization intact for upwards of two thousand years, and
-still offers a sullen resistance to the progressive influences of the
-West.
-
-~ENTERING CHINA.~
-
-~CHANGE OF SCENE.~
-
-Once upon Chinese territory, they found their march comparatively
-easy. Order reigned everywhere; and in all directions could be seen
-the evidences of a constant and energetic industry. At Pou-eul, a
-village of salt-pits, with its smoke, its dusky houses, its hoarse
-sounds of active life, our travellers felt that they were once more in
-the midst of a thriving civilization, and could almost have believed
-that they were located in a small industrial town of Europe. Numerous
-convoys of asses, mules, oxen, and horses ascended and descended the
-long sloping street along which were erected the different factories,
-carrying thither wood and charcoal and cordage, and carrying away
-salt. Above the village rose a pagoda, crowning the summit of a hill
-so high that the murmur of the life below could not reach it. Groves
-of pines stretched far away on either hand; and along the declivities
-were ranged abundant rice-fields, situated one above the other in
-symmetrical terraces.
-
-[Illustration: MOUNTAIN VILLAGE AND RICE-FIELDS NEAR POU-EUL]
-
-The expedition had now left the valley of the Mekong, and were wholly
-uncertain whether the route prescribed for them by the Chinese
-authorities would bring them again in contact with the great Cambodian
-river. We propose, however, to follow M. Garnier, as his wanderings led
-him through a country hitherto unknown to Europeans.
-
-~THE FORTRESS OF THE EAST.~
-
-In the early part of November our adventurers struck the right bank of
-the Pa-pien-kiang of the Chinese, which is apparently identical with
-the Nam-La, an affluent of the Mekong. Thence they ascended into the
-table-land of Yunnan, rendered familiar to English ears in connection
-with the enterprise and murder of Mr. Margary; and reached Tong-kuan,
-or “the Fortress of the East,”--a strongly-built town, with a large
-garrison, posted on a commanding ridge between two river-valleys.
-Afterwards they crossed another considerable stream, the Poukou-kiang,
-and continued their march through valleys and over hills where the
-industry of man has softened the wilder features of the scenery, and
-made the wilderness to blossom like a garden. In a few days they made
-their appearance at Yuen-kiang, where they seem to have been welcomed
-with almost royal honours. The town is large and populous, with every
-indication of commercial activity and wealth. It has several handsome
-pagodas, which have something of the Buddhist type about them. The
-markets are well supplied with provisions of excellent quality and
-low price. Oranges are almost “given away;” and potatoes are so cheap
-and plentiful that an Irish peasant would think himself in an earthly
-paradise. The country around the town is highly cultivated; cotton
-being largely grown, and mulberry-trees for the silkworm nurseries.
-A rich and radiant plain is watered by the stream of the Ho-ti-kiang,
-which, opposite the town, measures about one-fifth of a mile in breadth.
-
-~DESCENDING THE HO-TI-KIANG.~
-
-At Pou-pio M. Garnier hired a light canoe, and, in company with some
-trading barks, began the descent of the Ho-ti-kiang, which for some
-distance swirled in a narrow channel between mountain-walls of two
-thousand five hundred to three thousand feet in height. Each torrent
-which rent these rocky barriers brought down with it an immense
-quantity of stones and pebbles, that encumbered the river-bed with
-shoals and banks, and pent up the waters in foaming rapids. M. Garnier
-was bound for Lin-ngan, but these numerous obstacles greatly impeded
-his progress. But by degrees the river-bed broadened, the heights
-receded on either hand, and the stream flowed with a full and tranquil
-current through a gently undulating country, well cultivated, and
-studded with populous villages.
-
-~ARRIVAL AT LIN-NGAN.~
-
-In due time he reached Lin-ngan, where, as the first European who had
-visited it, he became an object of special attraction. An inspection of
-the town showed him that it was neatly and regularly built, and of
-rectangular form, measuring about two thousand yards in length, by one
-thousand in breadth. In the centre were gardens and pagodas decorated
-with much taste; and a large and fully-stocked market was a scene of
-very picturesque animation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-EXPERIENCES AMONG THE CHINESE.
-
-
-The attentions which a curious populace lavish upon a stranger are apt
-to become a trouble and a burden, as Garnier experienced, when, after
-an interesting survey of the environs of Lin-ngan, he returned to the
-town. His steps were closely dogged by crowds of idlers and sightseers.
-On his arrival at the pagoda where lodging had been provided for him,
-behold! the balconies, the towers, the very roofs, were thronged with
-wondering eyes.
-
-As he entered the court, the multitude pressed in upon him, and hemmed
-him up at last in a narrow space, where they evidently designed to hold
-him fast until their curiosity was satiated. Angry and ashamed, he bore
-their scrutiny for an hour; when, his strength and patience giving
-way, he made a sudden exit into his lodgings, closing the door of the
-court behind him. It proved, however, an insufficient barrier against
-the surging throng. They broke through it in a second, and were with
-difficulty kept back a little by Garnier’s small escort of soldiers,
-who had attended him from Yuen-kiang. The lieutenant succeeded at last
-in closing the door. Then loud and long were the reproaches which the
-rearmost ranks heaped on those in front for having recoiled before a
-barbarian from the West!
-
-~ATTACK BY THE CHINESE.~
-
-A stone, hurled through the grating, struck Garnier full in the face;
-others followed, until there seemed every likelihood of his undergoing
-the tortures of the ancient punishment by lapidation! Yet he yielded
-not an inch, but leaning against the door, which shook before the storm
-of missiles, seized his revolver, and fired it in the air. Firearms
-of such deadly powers are not known at Lin-ngan, and the crowd, in
-the firm belief that by discharging his weapon Garnier had virtually
-disarmed himself, recommenced their volleys of stones. He fired again,
-and again, and again; and the people, terrified by a weapon which
-apparently was inexhaustible, fell back in a panic, and the danger
-proved to be past.
-
-Soon afterwards Garnier was joined by the rest of the expedition; and
-setting out from inhospitable Lin-ngan, the little company of explorers
-proceeded on their way to Yunnan, the capital of a province of the same
-name.
-
-Yunnan is a town of some importance, with a very numerous and
-industrious population. Every thoroughfare presents a scene of the
-liveliest activity. The town is surrounded by a high and massive wall;
-and from the south gate extends a long broad street, lined with shops,
-each of which has on its front a sign in gilded characters, while the
-interior is filled with wares of extraordinary richness and variety.
-Some Jesuit missionaries are stationed here.
-
-[Illustration: VALLEY OF KON-TCHANG.]
-
-~FROM YUNNAN TO MONG-KOU.~
-
-~A WELL-CULTIVATED DISTRICT.~
-
-The travellers now entered the green valley of Kon-tchang, through
-the leafy shades of which tumbles a sparkling, noisy stream, while on
-either hand rise venerable trees, with trunks bent and contorted as
-if by some sudden convulsion. Thence they ascended to Mong-kou by a
-difficult road, winding round the precipitous flank of a wind-swept
-height, the summit of which, some twelve thousand feet above the sea,
-was capped with snow. Wild and romantic was the character of the
-scenery, reminding the travellers of that of Switzerland. At intervals
-the expedition met with a check to its progress from the jealousy of
-the Chinese officials, but resolution and tact overcame every obstacle.
-Through the broad valley of Tong-chuen they debouched on a small but
-well-cultivated plain, where the solid embankment of the bed of a
-torrent formed a kind of causeway, raised seven to ten feet above the
-surrounding level. From the sides of this elevated dyke issue numerous
-canals, which distribute the fertilizing waters of the stream over all
-the thirsty fields. Here, as in many other districts of China, the
-patient industry of the labourer has transformed a devastating force
-into a fountain of wealth and fecundity. The aspect of the plain is
-very grateful to the eye. Yellow clusters of the colza mingle with
-the white or purple corollas of the poppies. From the ridge which
-terminates it is visible a deep cleft in the barrier of mountains that
-stretches far along the horizon. This is the valley of the Blue River,
-locally known as the Kin-cha-kiang, or “River of the Golden Sand.”
-
-Our explorers came upon this river on the 31st of January. It rolled
-its clear deep waters in a ravine two thousand feet below them. Their
-route, however, still lay along the mountain-sides, and they suffered
-severely from the rigour of the cold and the heavy storms of snow
-which beat continually upon their devoted heads. On the 3rd of February
-they crossed the most elevated point they had reached in all their
-wanderings,--the barometer indicating an elevation of nearly ten
-thousand feet. Then they began to descend, each stage opening up to
-their enraptured gaze a succession of glorious mountain-views, relieved
-by occasional glimpses of finely wooded valleys, and of bright streams
-that leaped and bounded in their haste to join the great river of the
-plains. As they descended the temperature necessarily grew warmer, and
-out of the inclemencies of winter they rapidly passed into the genial
-airs of spring.
-
-[Illustration: CROSSING A RAVINE.]
-
-~LAKE OF TALY.~
-
-~FORTRESS OF HIANG-KUAN.~
-
-On the 29th of February, from the summit of the col which forms the
-little valley of Kuang-tsa-pin, they discovered the lake of Taly, one
-of the finest and grandest pictures which had excited their admiration
-since they entered on their expedition. The background consists of a
-lofty chain of snow-capped mountains, at the foot of which the blue
-waters of the lake break up the plain into a maze of low promontories
-covered with gardens and villages. A short descent brought them to
-the borders of the lake, which they passed to the northward in order
-to reach its eastern shore. The many villages through which they
-took their way exhibited the cruellest traces of devastation. Only
-the cultivated fields seem to have been spared, and these presented
-a flourishing appearance. In due time they arrived before the gates
-of the fortress of Hiang-kuan; which, erected at the very base of the
-mountain, and on the margin of the lake, completely barred the passage.
-There they learned from the mandarin in charge, that he would not allow
-them to continue their journey, until permission had been obtained from
-the sultan of Taly. This reached them on the following day; and, on the
-2nd of March, the journey was resumed. They passed through Hiang-kuan,
-the walls of which bathe on the one side their feet in the waters of
-the lake, and on the other ascend the flanks of the mountain, which
-forms a tremendous precipice, rendering the defile very easy of defence.
-
-Beyond, the shore of the lake again expanded into a magnificent plain,
-in the centre of which is situated the city of Taly. At the southern
-extremity of the lake the mountains again close in upon its waters; and
-this second defile is commanded by another fortress--that of Hia-kuan.
-Hia-kuan and Hiang-kuan, surrounded by massive crenelated ramparts,
-are the two gates of Taly. Defended by brave men they would be
-impregnable, and render access to the city impossible except by water.
-
-~A DISAGREEABLE INCIDENT.~
-
-A great paved causeway crosses the plain of Hiang-kuan to Taly.
-Escorted by ten soldiers, the French travellers entered the latter
-city by its north gate. In a few moments an immense crowd gathered in
-their rear, and lined each side of the great street which traverses
-Taly from north to south. Having arrived in front of the sultan’s
-palace--a crenelated building of sombre and severe aspect--they
-halted to parley with a couple of mandarins who had been sent to meet
-them. During this vexatious pause they were surrounded and pressed
-upon by the crowd, and a soldier violently snatched off the hat of
-one of the strangers--probably in order that the sultan, who was
-regarding them from an upper balcony, might the better see his face.
-This insolence was punished immediately by a blow which drew blood
-from the aggressor’s countenance, and gave rise to an indescribable
-tumult. The interposition of the two mandarins, the resolute attitude
-of the Annamites, who grouped themselves around the French travellers,
-and unsheathed their sword-bayonets, arrested, however, the hostile
-demonstrations of the crowd, and they reached without further
-_contretemps_ the yamen assigned to them for a residence, situated at
-the southern extremity of the town.
-
-~ARRIVAL AT TALY.~
-
-Immediately after their arrival, a mandarin of higher rank than any
-they had previously seen presented himself as the formal representative
-of the sultan, and asked who they were, whence they came, and what they
-wanted.
-
-~THE FRENCHMAN AND THE MANDARIN.~
-
-Through the medium of one Père Leguilcher, a Jesuit missionary,
-who had accompanied them, Garnier replied, that they had been sent
-by the French Government to explore the countries watered by the
-Lan-tsan-kiang; that having arrived in Yunnan some months ago, they
-had learned that a new kingdom had been established at Taly, and had
-desired to pay their respects to its ruler, with the view of opening
-up commercial and friendly relations between France and him. Some
-explanations of the scientific object and really pacific character of
-their mission were added. Garnier offered an excuse also for having
-only presents of small value to offer to the sultan; and for being
-unable, along with the officers of the expedition, to appear before
-him in suitable costume, the length and difficulties of their journey
-having compelled them to leave behind almost all the baggage. The
-mandarin replied very graciously that there was no need for apologies
-on that score, and that as they were, they would be welcome. To
-prevent mistakes, Garnier then asked for details as to the ceremonial
-observed at an audience of the sovereign. It was customary, said the
-mandarin, to make three genuflexions before the sultan. On Garnier
-objecting to this servile homage, he consented to allow the French
-usage, with the condition that no one carried arms into the august
-presence. After an interchange of compliments, the mandarin took his
-leave, while the Frenchmen remained enraptured with his cordiality and
-straight-forwardness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before long he returned, accompanied by a ta-seu--that is, by one of
-the eight great dignitaries who compose the council of the sultan.
-Both requested Lieutenant Garnier to repeat the explanations he had
-previously given as to the objects of the expedition; and he did so, in
-the fewest words possible. “You were not, then, sent expressly by your
-sovereign to Taly?” “How could that be,” replied the lieutenant, “when
-at our departure nobody in France knew that the town had a king?”
-They then requested M. Garnier to intrust to them, for the purpose
-of showing them to the sultan, the Chinese letters, of which he was
-the bearer, to the king of Se-chuen. To this he consented; and they
-withdrew, apparently quite satisfied.
-
-The first night at Taly was undisturbed. The lieutenant’s intention
-was, if all went well, to leave his companions to rest themselves for
-a few days in the city; while he and Père Leguilcher pushed forward
-to the banks of the Lan-tsan-kiang, about four days’ journey, and
-ascended that river as far as Li-kiang-foo, where the remainder of the
-expedition would rejoin him in due course.
-
-~THE SULTAN’S ORDERS.~
-
-~THE SULTAN AND THE PRIEST.~
-
-At nine o’clock next morning, when he was collecting all the
-information necessary for the execution of this project, a messenger
-came from the sultan to fetch Père Leguilcher. He did not return
-until noon, and then his face was overclouded. The sultan refused
-to see them, and had issued orders that they were to quit the city
-on the following morning, and return by the route they came. “Make
-known to the strangers,” he had said, “that they may seize all the
-lands bordering upon the Lan-tsan-kiang, but they will be compelled
-to halt on the frontiers of my kingdom. They may subjugate the
-eighteen provinces of China; but that which I govern will cause them
-more trouble than all the rest of the empire. Dost thou not know,”
-he continued, “that it is but three days since I put to death three
-Malays? If I grant their lives to your companions, it is only because
-they are strangers, and on account of the letters of recommendation
-which they carry. But let them hasten their return. They may have
-sketched my mountains, and fathomed the depths of my rivers; but they
-will not succeed in conquering them. As for thee,” concluded the
-sultan, in a softer tone, “I know thy religion, and have read its
-books. Mohammedans and Christians are brothers. Return to thy place of
-residence, and I will make thee a mandarin, to the end that thou mayst
-govern thy people.”
-
-Throughout the interview, the father was kept standing, and not allowed
-to speak; overwhelmed with questions to which no reply was permitted,
-interpellated and hooted at by the crowd.
-
-To what circumstance, says M. Garnier, was so abrupt a change
-attributable? Undoubtedly to the influence of the military advisers of
-the king, who would be unable to believe in a purely scientific and
-disinterested mission. A despotism sprung from a revolution, abhorred
-by the masses whom it overwhelmed with imposts, existing only through
-terror and crime, is forced to be cruel and suspicious. The official
-relations between the French explorers and the Chinese authorities had
-placed the former, with regard to the sultan of Taly, in a delicate
-position which justified his mistrust.
-
-~THE EXPEDITION FOILED.~
-
-During the rest of the day, the travellers were visited by a great
-number of Mohammedan functionaries, actuated by curiosity or a desire
-to watch their doings. They thought it prudent, therefore, to abstain
-from sketching or taking notes. About five o’clock, the sultan sent
-for the chief of their escort; who returned soon afterwards, and said
-that he had orders to conduct them back to Hiang-kuan on the following
-morning. He showed M. Garnier at the same time a sealed document, which
-he had to convey to the mandarin of that fortress. A few presents
-attached him to the interests of the French explorers, who arranged to
-start with him at daybreak and avoid traversing the town. For Garnier
-feared lest, the sultan’s suspicions and anger being known, the crowd
-should break out into open hostility, or a few soldiers attempt to
-satisfy their ruler’s secret desire without actually compromising him.
-
-At nightfall, the lieutenant took care to see that all the weapons of
-his party were loaded, and instructed them what steps to take in case
-of a surprise. He sought, by liberal promises, to secure the complete
-fidelity of the porters.
-
-~A NIGHT OF SUSPENSE.~
-
-The night was spent in a painful condition of expectancy. A sentinel
-had been stationed at their door, who followed them each time they
-went out. M. Garnier dreaded every moment the arrival of an order to
-prohibit their departure, and transform their temporary confinement
-into definite captivity. About eleven o’clock one of the great
-mandarins of the sultan sent to inquire by what route they intended
-to return; and received for reply, that they did not know. The night
-passed without any other incident.
-
-At five in the morning they were on the march, well armed, and
-carefully grouped; they turned the city of Taly by the south and east,
-and with scarcely a halt crossed the twenty miles that separated them
-from Hiang-kuan. As they were about to enter the first gate of the
-fortress, the chief of their escort stopped them, and said he was
-ordered, pending the arrival of fresh instructions from the sultan, to
-lodge them in a small yamen which he obligingly pointed out.
-
-Garnier pretended to regard as a special act of courtesy what was
-evidently neither more nor less than a disguised sequestration, and
-replied that, after the cold welcome he had received at Taly, he could
-not accept the sultan’s hospitality. Unwilling, however, that this
-hurried retreat should look too like a flight, he added that if the
-mandarin of Hiang-kuan had any communications to make, he would await
-them in the little wayside _auberge_ where he had rested on his way to
-Taly.
-
-~LEAVING HIANG-KUAN.~
-
-The Mohammedan officer objected that he would be assuming a grave
-responsibility if he allowed any such modification of the sultan’s
-orders. But Garnier was resolute; having determined, if necessary, to
-force a passage before he could have time to arouse the garrison of
-Hiang-kuan. While the sultan’s lieutenant put his horse at a gallop to
-forewarn the governor of the dispute which had arisen, Garnier led his
-little company through the fortress gates, without encountering any
-fresh obstacles, and in a few minutes was encamped at the _auberge_
-already spoken of, with the open country before him.
-
-He had scarcely arrived when the governor of Hiang-kuan sent for Père
-Leguilcher. He offered him an enormous price for the revolver which
-Garnier had intended for the sultan, and stated that he had orders to
-furnish them with a new escort, and two mandarins to accompany them to
-the frontier, and regulate the stages of their journey; and further,
-that they were to pass the night at Hiang-kuan, and wait until the
-following morning for the arrival of the said mandarins and escort.
-
-~THE RETURN JOURNEY.~
-
-Garnier replied that he would make a present of the weapon, but that
-he did not sell arms; that in his journey he reserved to himself full
-liberty of action, and that he cared nothing at all about the mandarins
-and the promised escort. This he conclusively showed by starting in the
-evening for Ma-cha, a village situated at the northern extremity of the
-lake.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE MISSIONARY’S ALARM.~
-
-On the 5th of March the journey was continued; and by nightfall the
-expedition reached the town of Kuang-tia-pin. Their arrival was
-immediately made known to the commandant of the neighbouring fort, who
-sent for Père Leguilcher. The good monk was filled with alarm at the
-thought of the probable results of the interview. The commandant might
-have received orders to separate from their interpreter the little
-company of strangers; who, left to themselves, unacquainted with the
-language and ignorant of the customs of the country, might the more
-easily be entrapped into an ambuscade! On the other hand, the route lay
-underneath the guns of the fort, and it was imprudent to come to an
-open rupture with its governor. They contented themselves, therefore,
-with replying that the evening was too far advanced for a visit, but
-that Père Leguilcher would accept the invitation next morning.
-
-This answer did not satisfy; and three soldiers presented themselves
-with orders for the father to follow them.
-
-The poor missionary, overcome with terror, thought that his last hour
-had come. It seemed to him as dangerous to resist as to obey. M.
-Garnier had to decide for him; and he repeated to the soldiers the
-reply already given, and desired them to be content with it. They
-insisted on their instructions with all the insolence and astonishment
-inspired by a resistance to which they were unaccustomed. Alarmed by
-their threats, which Père Leguilcher understood much better than his
-companions, the missionary wished to comply; but Garnier detained him,
-while his Annamite attendants showed the soldiers “the way out.” The
-latter retired, vowing that they would return in great force, and that
-the heads of the strangers should soon be adorning the posts in the
-market-place.
-
-~PRUDENCE AND PRECAUTION.~
-
-By this time the travellers had become accustomed to such “brave
-words,” and gave little heed to them. They took, however, the necessary
-precautions: each man received a revolver in addition to his carbine,
-and even Père Leguilcher consented to equip himself with carnal
-weapons. All the approaches to the _auberge_ were guarded, and the
-utmost vigilance was maintained throughout the night. They were but ten
-in number; but as each was equipped with carbine and revolver, they
-could discharge seventy shots without reloading, which would suffice to
-keep at a respectful distance a whole regiment of Mohammedans. But no
-enemy made his appearance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~ARRIVAL AT THE MISSIONARY’S RESIDENCE.~
-
-At daybreak, after having passed in review before them all their
-porters, and appointed the town of Too-tong-tse as a rendezvous,
-Garnier and his companions, on horseback, escorted the Jesuit
-missionary to the gate of the fortress. They then informed the
-commandant that the father had come to pay the desired visit, but that
-it could not be prolonged beyond ten minutes; if at the expiration of
-that time the father had not returned, they would come in quest of him.
-This peremptory message was intended to produce an impression on people
-accustomed to see everybody trembling before them. Such language to
-them would be terrifically novel! It had a good effect. The governor of
-the fortress contented himself with communicating to Père Leguilcher
-the order he had received from Taly to escort them to the frontier. The
-father replied in the words which Garnier had addressed to the governor
-of Hiang-kuan, and his interlocutor did not insist; he even begged him
-to shorten the interview, for fear, he said, he should overstay the
-time allotted, and arouse the impatience of the “great men.” And so, an
-hour later, the whole party arrived in safety at the worthy father’s
-residence, where they enjoyed ten days of entire rest, rendered
-necessary by the fatigue and emotion they had recently undergone.
-
-On the 7th another messenger arrived from the fort, with a request
-that Père Leguilcher would come “alone” to consult with the governor
-on the stages of the travellers’ journey. No notice was taken of the
-communication.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~ABOUT THE TALY LAKE.~
-
-In spite of the rapidity with which M. Garnier had been compelled to
-pursue his march, he contrived to collect some interesting particulars
-of the country, its inhabitants, and resources.
-
-The lake of Taly, situated at an elevation above the sea-level of
-upwards of seven thousand five hundred feet, measures about twenty
-miles from north to south, with an average breadth of two miles. Its
-depth is very considerable,--exceeding three hundred and twenty feet
-at some points. There appear to be several islands scattered towards
-the south-east. The level of the lake is higher than that of the
-neighbouring rivers, and its overflow may possibly help to feed those
-on the north and east, which belong to the Blue River basin. Ostensibly
-it pours forth its waters at its southern extremity by a river which
-empties itself into the Mekong. At the mouth of this river, which is
-not navigable, stands the fortress of Hia-kuan, already spoken of.
-Shortly after issuing from the lake, it divides into two branches, but
-these unite again lower down. During the rainy season the waters rise
-fully seventeen feet; in the dry season, the chain of the Tien Song
-mountains, on the western shore of the lake, send down a succession of
-violent squalls, which greatly impede its navigation. This chain, the
-elevation of which is estimated at sixteen thousand feet, is clothed
-with snow for nine months in the year. On the opposite bank rises a
-mass of heights belonging to a range of inferior importance. Between
-these mountains and the lake some richly-cultivated fields slope gently
-to the edge of the deep blue waters.
-
-The lake abounds in fish, which are principally caught by birds trained
-for the purpose. The process adopted is better than that known in
-Europe as _de pêche au cormoran_.
-
-~THE LAKE FISHERMEN.~
-
-The fishermen set out at early morn, making a tremendous din and
-clamour, so as to awaken the attention of the numerous troops of birds
-slumbering around them. They embark on board flat-bottomed boats, each
-provided with a well, which they allow to drift along slowly, while one
-of them, stationed at the bow, throws into the water enormous balls
-of rice. The fish hasten in immense shoals to enjoy the banquet; and
-the fishing-birds, flocking round the boats in great numbers, dive and
-reappear immediately, each with a fish in its bill. As fast as they
-fill their pouch, the boatmen empty it into the interior of the bark,
-leaving to each winged fisher just enough to satisfy its appetite and
-encourage its ardour. In half an hour each boat is loaded, and the
-boatmen hasten to dispose of their stores at the nearest market.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE MIN-KIA POPULATION.~
-
-The plain of Taly formerly contained upwards of one hundred and fifty
-villages, which the sultan has attempted to repeople almost exclusively
-with Mohammedans. The eastern shore is inhabited by the Min-kia and
-Pen-ti populations, who are descended from the first Chinese colonists
-whom the Mongolian dynasty sent into Yunnan after the conquest of
-that province. The Min-kia come from the neighbourhood of Nankin.
-The women do not mutilate their feet; and the young people of both
-sexes wear a kind of bonnet, of original form, ornamented by a silver
-pearl. Evidence of their admixture with the former inhabitants of the
-country is found in their costumes and language. These ancient Chinese
-emigrants are treated with contempt by pure-blooded Chinese; and hence
-results an antagonism which not a little contributed to ensure the
-neutrality of the Min-kia, at the beginning of hostilities between
-the Mohammedans and the Imperialists. But, after a while, the despotic
-and violent acts of the rulers of Taly exasperated even this pacific
-race; and, led by an energetic chief named Tong, the Min-kia long
-maintained a successful resistance against the Mohammedans. Tong fell
-in battle in 1866, and the conquerors pursued his family with merciless
-vengeance. At present, the natives of the districts contiguous to
-Taly, disorganized and without a leader, submit to, while hating, the
-domination of the sultan. The Pen-ti occupy more particularly the plain
-of Tong-chuen, north of the lake, and the district of the Pe-yen-tsin.
-Their costume is original and characteristic.
-
-~THE MOUNTAIN TRIBES.~
-
-Under different names, the Lolos, or representatives of the
-autochthonous race, inhabit the summits of the mountains, and assert
-their independence. With their continual forays they harass the
-dwellers in the plains. Certain districts in the vicinity of Pien-kio
-pay to one of these tribes, the Tcha-Su, an annual sum by way of
-blackmail, in order to secure their cattle. Even this payment, however,
-does not protect them from occasional depredations; and they cannot
-claim, when their herds are carried off, more than half their value.
-
-A considerable trade is carried on between Taly and Tibet, consisting
-of imports of _kuang-lien_, a bitter root much used in Chinese
-medicine, woollen stuffs, stag-horns, bear-skins, fox-skins, wax, oils,
-and resinous gums. Exports from Yunnan include tea, cottons, rice,
-wine, sugar, mercery, and hardware.
-
-~MINERAL TREASURES.~
-
-The industrial production of the kingdom of Taly has diminished
-considerably since the war. Formerly, it was of much importance from
-a metallurgical point of view. The copper mines of Long-pao, Ta-kong,
-and Pe-iang are the most valuable in the whole country, where are also
-found deposits of gold, silver, mercury, iron, lead, and zinc. At
-Ho-kin paper is made from bamboo. The stems of the plant are made up
-into bundles of equal length, which are peeled and macerated in lime.
-They are afterwards placed in an oven, and steamed for twenty days;
-then they are exposed to a current of cold water, and deposited in
-layers in a second oven, each layer being covered with a coating of
-pease-meal and lard. After another “cooking,” they are converted into
-a kind of paste, which is extended on trellis-work in excessively thin
-layers, and dried in the sun. In this way the manufacturers turn out
-their sheets of a paper coarse and uneven enough, but very stout.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-RETURN TO SAIGON.
-
-
-The French expedition, finding further progress impossible, resolved
-at length on retracing its steps to Saigon, and accordingly set out in
-that direction on the 15th of March. On the 3rd of April it arrived at
-Tong-chuen, where Lieutenant Garnier heard of the death of his chief,
-M. de Lagrée. Four days later, the gallant little band, several of its
-members suffering from fever, resumed its march. On the 9th, M. Garnier
-crossed the deep swift waters of the Ngieoo-nan in a ferry-boat, which
-runs on a cable moored from bank to bank. On the 11th he reached
-Tchao-tong.
-
-~AT TCHAO-TONG.~
-
-Here he and his comrades met with a kindly welcome, and were
-lodged in the house of a native priest, who had charge of the few
-Christian inhabitants of the town. The crowd, as usual, displayed an
-extraordinary amount of curiosity and importunity. The _tche-hien_, or
-administrator of the Tchao-tong district, paid them a visit immediately
-on their arrival, and invited them to dine with him on the following
-evening. The repast included fourteen courses at the least, to say
-nothing of the cucumber-seed, the mandarinas, and the li-tchi, served
-up as preliminaries. There was nothing, however, peculiarly worthy of
-the attention of gourmands, except a dainty dish of pigeons’ eggs, and
-a particular kind of fish, caught in a neighbouring pond, the flesh
-of which had a peculiar flavour. During the repast, the ladies of the
-household closely scrutinized the features of the strangers through a
-lattice, laughing heartily at their awkwardness in using the Chinese
-utensils.
-
-Tchao-tong, like all Chinese towns of importance, is surrounded by a
-bastioned wall, of rectangular plan, measuring about a mile and a half
-each way. Considerable suburbs prolong to the north, east, and west
-the streets which abut on the gates of the town. The latter has never
-been captured by the Mohammedans, and its inhabitants cherish a fierce
-hatred against the rebels of Taly.
-
-The plain of Tchao-tong seems to be the most extensive in Yunnan,
-and is carefully cultivated--a large portion of its area being
-appropriated to the growth of poppies for the manufacture of opium. Its
-inhabitants complain of want of water; and, in fact, their only sources
-of supply are some tiny rills, almost dry in the hot season. There are
-extensive deposits of anthracite and peat. A small pond, abounding in
-fish, lies to the south-west.
-
-[Illustration: MERCHANT TRAIN IN YUNNAN.]
-
-~ARTICLES OF COMMERCE.~
-
-Tchao-tong is one of the most important commercial _entrepôts_ between
-China and Yunnan. Enormous convoys of raw cotton, of English or native
-cotton stuffs, and of salt from Se-chuen, are here exchanged for the
-metals--tin and zinc more particularly--furnished by the environs
-of Tong-chuen, the medicinal substances which come from the west of
-Yunnan and the north of Tibet, and the nests of the _coccus sinensis_,
-which yield the pe-la wax. This insect breeds on a species of privet
-which grows in the mountainous parts of Yunnan and Se-chuen, and
-is thence transported to other trees favourable for the production
-of wax, which flourish in the warmer lowlands. Necessarily, these
-nests must be conveyed from point to point with great rapidity, lest
-the newly-hatched insects should die before arriving at their new
-abode; they are stored away in large baskets, divided into numerous
-compartments, and their bearers frequently accomplish thirty or forty
-leagues at double quick marching step.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE JOURNEY CONTINUED.~
-
-Resuming their journey, M. Garnier and his companions traversed a
-country of great beauty, studded with villages, and broken up into
-romantic highlands and wooded valleys, watered by copious rivers.
-On the 20th of April they reached Lao-oua-tan, a busy town on the
-Huang-kiang, at the point where the navigation of the river begins.
-Here they embarked on board a large boat with a capacity of thirty to
-forty tons, and began the descent of the river, admiring the skill with
-which the Chinese carried them through the successive rapids. In a
-couple of hours they arrived at Pou-eul-tou, a small port on the left
-bank, where Garnier and his companions landed, while their baggage and
-a part of the escort continued the journey by water. Garnier pressed
-forward through a truly Arcadian valley to Long-ki, the residence of
-the Vicar-Apostolic of Yunnan, Monseigneur Ponsot. It is needless to
-say that he was received with the warmest hospitality.
-
-~THE BLUE RIVER.~
-
-The next stage was Siu-tcheou-fou, a lively and busy town, where
-several Roman Catholic missionaries are stationed. Thence, in
-a couple of junks, the travellers descended the Blue River to
-Tchong-kin-fou, the great commercial centre of the province of
-Se-chuen. Resting here a while, they then continued their voyage to
-Han-keou, entering a region which has been carefully explored and
-described by officers of the British navy. The river all along its
-course presents an animated scene,--the junks ascending the stream
-being towed by boatmen on the banks, who time their steps to a rude
-and noisy song. M. Garnier arrived at Han-keou on the 4th of June,
-and once more entered upon the enjoyment of the comfort and security
-of civilized life, after a long, difficult, and perilous expedition,
-in which he had added largely to our knowledge of a region of vast
-commercial resources. On the 10th he embarked on board a steamer
-for Shanghai,--arriving there on the 12th. After a week’s stay he
-set out for Saigon; where he presented himself on the 29th, and was
-received with the honours due to his courage, his patience, and his
-perseverance. He has shown that the Mekong must hereafter become
-an important highway of commerce, and one of the great channels of
-communication with Yunnan and Tibet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-DR. MORICE AND THE MEKONG.
-
-
-We owe some additional information respecting the great river of
-Cambodia to Dr. Morice, who travelled in Cochin-China in 1872.
-
-[Illustration: ANNAMITE LADY AND HER SERVANT.]
-
-Of the Annamites, the inhabitants of Cochin-China, he says at the
-outset, that his first feeling with respect to them was one of
-disgust. Those faces more or less flattened, and often devoid of all
-intelligence or animation; those livid eyes; and, especially, that
-broad nose, and those thick upturned lips, reddened and discoloured by
-the constant use of betel-nut, do not answer to the European ideal of
-beauty. But after a long acquaintance with them, he, as is the case
-with other Western visitors, began to discern a glimpse of meaning in
-most countenances, and even to make distinctions between the ugly ones.
-He met with some eyes which were not oblique, some noses which had
-an almost Caucasian character, and his repugnance gradually disappeared.
-
-Still, from the most favourable point of view, they are a race of low
-stature and unprepossessing appearance; feeble, deficient in stamina,
-and never likely to make a noise in the world. Their French rulers grow
-into giants when compared with these dwarfs; and their muscular energy
-is far inferior to that of Europeans, whether owing to natural causes
-or to want of hygienic knowledge. As for their complexion, while some
-are deeply tinted, others are quite wan and pale. In two respects only
-can the Annamites be said to surpass their masters: in their ability to
-row ten hours consecutively, and in the impunity with which they can
-encounter the burning rays of a tropical sun.
-
-~CHARACTER OF THE ANNAMITES.~
-
-As for their character, it is that of a people whom slavery, ignorance,
-and sloth have rendered poor, timid, and apathetic. Yet they are
-capable of being raised to a higher moral and intellectual standard.
-They have many serious defects, it is true; they are deficient, for
-example, in the artistic sentiment. Even of the latter evidence is
-found in some surprising mural paintings, which reproduce, with loving
-fidelity, all that is bright and living in nature,--birds, insects,
-flowers. But, as a rule, the Annamites are insensible to the arts.
-Their shrill monotonous music is terrible to a cultured ear; and it may
-be doubted whether ours is agreeable to them. Of sculpture they know
-only the rudiments; their poetry is indifferent; they cannot dance.
-Their literary research is confined to an acquaintance with a few
-Chinese characters; and their scientific acquirements are a blank.
-
-~THEIR DRESS AND HABITATIONS.~
-
-Then as to their attire. They never abandon their clothes until they
-fall into rags and tatters, though they are insufficient to protect
-them against the variations of their climate, and more particularly
-against the keen frosty mornings of December and January. Their huts or
-hovels, nearly all built upon piles, half in the water and half in the
-earth or mud, are singularly unhealthy. The cultivation of rice, and
-their occupation as fishermen, have rendered them almost amphibious.
-Water rises frequently to the floor of an Annamite house, particularly
-in high tides, but it does not discompose the owner; who, in such an
-event, crouches contentedly on the domestic hearth, or rocks to and
-fro in his rude hammock, murmuring some monotonous air, or smoking a
-cigarette shaped like a blunderbuss.
-
-~THE PLAIN OF THE TOMBS.~
-
-At Saigon (or Sai-gun), the French settlement and seaport, situated
-at the mouth of a river of the same name, the traveller finds much
-to interest him. The Botanic Garden, for instance, will well repay
-inspection, stocked as it is with rare, beautiful, and curious
-specimens of tropical vegetation. Close at hand lies the so-called
-Plain of the Tombs; the scene, a century agone, of numerous battles
-between the inhabitants of Lower Cochin-China and the Annamites; and,
-between 1860 and 1864, of several engagements between the Annamites and
-the French. The uniformity of its vast expanse is broken by a number
-of mounds or tumuli; some on a modest, others on a splendid scale.
-Constructed of earth or brick, they are covered with a kind of cement,
-on which are depicted in vivid colours the figures of fantastic animals
-and impossible plants, while the name and titles of the deceased are
-inscribed in conspicuous characters.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here, one day, Dr. Morice chanced to be the spectator of an Annamite
-funeral, which is always celebrated with a certain amount of pomp,
-and attended by a numerous train of mourners. The coffin is planted
-in the centre of a small portable house, made of paper painted in
-brilliant colours, and cut into curious shapes. A score of bearers
-carry this miniature temple, resting upon their shoulders the bamboos
-which support it. A company of persons with torches scatter along the
-road their prayers to Buddha, traced on golden and silver papers, and
-set fire to them. In the rear march the friends and relatives of the
-departed, some uttering forced lamentations, all smiling “in their
-sleeves;” for these singular people are never so moved by their sorrow
-that they cannot laugh at a jest, or at any incident of which they
-immediately seize, as by intuition, the comic side.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE GECKO DESCRIBED.~
-
-Here too he saw some geckos: indeed, they were numerous enough to
-be considered the genii of the place. Inhabiting the forests and
-waste places, as well as the huts of the Annamites and the houses
-of the French, this large lizard, so common in Cochin-China, is one
-of the animals which give to the fauna of the country its peculiar
-character. Does the reader know what a gecko is like? If not, let him
-try to conceive of a gigantic terrestrial salamander; its skin, of
-a bluish-gray, covered with a quantity of tiny tubercles rising in
-the middle of an orange-tinted patch; its great eyes having a large
-gold-yellow iris; while, owing to the sucker-like lamellæ that line the
-under surface of its feet, it is able to walk easily on the smoothest
-surfaces, and utterly to defy the laws of gravitation. Its cry, to
-which it owes the name given to it in every language, is curiously
-sonorous; and when first heard, fairly startles the hearer. A shaky
-grumble or grunt serves as prelude; then, five, six, or eight times,
-lowering its voice regularly half a tone on each occasion, it jerks out
-its cadenced notes, which are sometimes written _gecko_, and sometimes
-_tacke_; the performance terminating with a grunt of satisfaction.
-
-~ITS FAMILIARITY WITH MAN.~
-
-The gecko grows as familiar with man as the domestic cat or
-dog,--entering human habitations freely, and rendering valuable service
-by the eagerness with which it devours flies, spiders, and other
-insect-plagues. During the day, it lurks generally in some obscure nook
-or dark corner; but at dusk sallies forth in search of prey, running
-up or down the steepest walls with wonderful swiftness, and giving
-utterance to a quick shrill noise by smacking its tongue against its
-palate. So flexible is its body, that it can adapt itself readily to
-any depression or irregularity in the surface of the ground, forming
-apparently a component part of it. This deception is facilitated by its
-dulness of colouring. It is a home-keeping animal, and never strays
-to any great distance from the lair which it has chosen. Despite its
-ugliness and its cry, which at night, when a dozen are heard replying
-to one another, becomes insupportably wearisome, it is one of man’s
-most useful allies in the animal-world, and merits his respect.
-
-A word as to the formation of its wide feet. All the toes are broadened
-considerably at the edges, and their under surface is divided into
-numerous transverse laminæ, from which exudes an adhesive fluid. Its
-claws are sharp, crooked, and retractile like those of a cat.
-
-~ABOUT THE MARGOUILLA.~
-
-Another animal of the same group, but much smaller, and closely
-resembling the tarenta of which the Toulonese are so afraid, is the
-_margouilla_, the “con-tan-lan” of the Annamites. It inhabits trees
-and houses with equal complacency. Every evening, when the tapers
-are lighted, it may be seen promenading along the ceiling, where it
-pounces upon the insects, uttering from time to time its short cry
-of satisfaction, which may be translated by the syllable _toc_ ten
-times repeated. It is partial to sugar; but as it is the inveterate
-enemy of the mosquitoes, no one begrudges it a dainty morsel from the
-sugar-basin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~EXCURSION TO KHOLEN.~
-
-From Saigon Dr. Morice made an excursion to Kholen, the second town in
-size and population in Cochin-China. It lies about three miles from
-Saigon, but is connected with it by a line of villages, of pagodas, and
-of the country-houses of the wealthier Chinese merchants. Kholen is the
-centre of all the Chinese commerce of the colony. The amount of rice,
-stuffs, and products exported from China, which is sold there, almost
-passes belief; and the stranger surveys with interest the animation of
-its busy streets, and the numerous Chinese junks and Annamite sampans
-moored alongside its quays.
-
-[Illustration: CHINESE HOUSE AT KHOLEN.]
-
-Among its peculiarities may be specialized its parks or preserves of
-crocodiles. A barrier of long and solid piles surrounds a space of
-about twenty square yards on the river-bank; in the mud and slime
-thus enclosed, and regularly inundated at high water, sprawl from one
-hundred to two hundred crocodiles. When the people wish to sacrifice
-one of these monsters, two of the piles are lifted up; a running knot
-is flung round the neck of the largest of the herd, which is then
-hauled outside; its tail is fastened close to its body lengthwise;
-its feet are cut off, and used to garnish its back; the jaws are tied
-together with ratan; and these vegetable bonds are so firm that the
-huge creature is incapable of movement, and can offer no defence. As
-for the flesh, though rather leathery, it appears to have a certain
-value, and is not so strongly impregnated with the odour of musk as
-some writers pretend. On Annamite tables it figures as a favourite dish.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~HATIAN-OF-THE-ROSES.~
-
-From Saigon Dr. Morice’s next excursion was to Gocong, which lies in
-the centre of a district famous for its rice-fields. Thence he made
-his way to Hatian (or Cancao), of which he gives a lively description
-furnished to him by a French colonist:--
-
-“Hatian-of-the-Roses is a small gem of flowers and verdure; magnificent
-pagodas, wooded hills, the limestone mass of Bonnet-à-Poil; everything
-which one finds nowhere else.”
-
-But, says Dr. Morice, he forgot the fever.
-
-There can be no doubt that Hatian is a lovely spot. It is situated
-on the borders of a lake which opens into the Gulf of Siam; a lake
-bordered on the west by ranges of green hills, luxuriantly clothed
-with magnificent trees. To the east extends a vast plain, in the
-centre of which rises the isolated mass of limestone known as the
-Bonnet-à-Poil. The fields are enamelled with flowers and studded with
-flowering bushes; and winding paths lead through a succession of scenes
-of the most various beauty.
-
-~THE PEPPER-PLANT.~
-
-The plant chiefly cultivated is the pepper-plant. On a soil raised
-several feet above the ordinary level are disposed parallel rows of
-sticks like those which are used in the Kentish hop-gardens, and round
-each of these coils a vigorous plant. It takes five years for a plant
-to become productive. Maize is also cultivated, but not to so large an
-extent.
-
-~FEAST OF THE TÊT.~
-
-While Dr. Morice was at Hatian, its Annamite inhabitants celebrated
-their feast of the _Têt_ or New-Year’s Day, in which are oddly mingled
-the religious rites of Buddhism, and the worship of the manes of
-their forefathers, the fear of the devil or _Maqui_, and the noisiest
-possible manifestations of popular mirth. It lasts at the least seven
-days,--with the rich much longer; and the entire settlement gives
-itself up for this period to the most unrestrained enjoyment.
-
-Before each house, on a table covered with a mat, is to be seen the
-offering of meat and drink, rice-spirit in a small white porcelain
-teapot, tea, betel with all its ingredients, fish, various kinds of
-Annamite vermicelli, roast duck, a quarter of pork, rice, bananas,
-and oranges. All this display is set out with flowers; then a couple
-of small tapers are lighted, and the manes, or domestic spirits, are
-respectfully invited to come and take their share of the consecrated
-love-feast. More: on a plate supported on a moderately high post,
-other and more delicate offerings are displayed,--composed generally
-of a bouquet of only two species of flowers, the one violet-tinted,
-the other yellow. As they are seen everywhere, it is probable that
-a symbolical meaning attaches to the union of these two flowers.
-Moreover, the rich plant an areca, the poor a large bamboo, in front of
-the various oblations, and to the top of each fasten a tiny basket of
-ratan, divided into five compartments. Finally, the altar of Buddha,
-which forms an indispensable appendage of every hut, is decked out with
-special pomp; and strips of yellow, red, and violet papers, inscribed
-with Chinese characters, are affixed to every door. These are intended
-to avert the presence of the evil spirit during the new year.
-
-~AN ANNAMITE PASTIME.~
-
-Meantime everybody, clothed in their best attire,--men, women, and
-children,--that is to say, in a striped tunic and pantaloons blue,
-red, yellow, violet, green, often with the two legs of different
-colours,--sallied forth to exchange greetings, or amuse themselves as
-best they might. Among the pastimes most in favour were the following.
-Javelin-throwing; in which a long lance of black wood was made to
-pass through a ring suspended from a post about three feet high, and
-this at a distance of six to nine yards. This game, which resembles
-the old Scotch exercise of tilting at a mark, requires considerable
-skill on the part of those who engage in it. Still more popular,
-especially among women and children, was the swing, single or double.
-And it was not without astonishment that the traveller found here, in
-the far East, a kind of “merry-go-round,” such as we see at our fairs
-and holiday fêtes, with a score of persons enjoying its revolutions.
-There was also the game of shuttle-cock, which was launched either
-with hand or foot. In the midst of all this turmoil might be heard the
-monotonous tomtom, the isolated sounds of some three-stringed guitars,
-and especially the sharp reports of petards, which are indispensable at
-every festival, and resemble sometimes the file-firing of infantry.
-
-~THEATRICAL PERFORMANCES.~
-
-For this great yearly revel every Annamite saves up his money
-for months, and when it comes he disburses his little store most
-conscientiously. Frequently an itinerant troop of actors comes--at
-least in the principal towns--to contribute its part to the general
-rejoicings. As it is the wealthy citizens who in turn defray the
-expense of its representations, we need hardly say that they are very
-largely attended. The plays included in their repertory are always
-of a noisy character, and plentifully sprinkled with coarse jokes,
-at the expense of the military mandarins, husbands, and especially
-the Chinese. Actors hideously painted, with the view of giving them a
-formidable appearance, perform in desperate combats, diversified by
-guttural cries and heroic poses of the most ridiculous character.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE FOUNDER OF HATIAN.~
-
-During his sojourn at Hatian, Dr. Morice paid a visit to a singularly
-constructed edifice--the ancient Chinese palace of the Maqueuou. This
-Chinese worthy, it is said, was a simple fisherman; but as the products
-of his avocation did not enrich him with sufficient rapidity, he
-began to cultivate a little ground, and started a pepper plantation.
-One day, while digging, he turned up a store of money,--a supply so
-ample that it enabled him to bring over to Hatian a large number of
-his compatriots. He trained them, enrolled them, practised them; and
-the result was that, one fine morning, Hatian, enriched and largely
-increased in population, declared itself independent of the empire of
-Annam, or rather Cambodia, and raised Maqueuou to the throne. He built
-for himself a splendid palace, and lived for many years afterwards,
-enjoying the rare pleasure of witnessing the realisation of his dreams.
-But when he died his organizing genius died with him. Hatian was again
-annexed to the empire, and the palace fell into ruin; only its four
-walls are now extant.
-
-The European stranger visits the spot with a feeling of respect for the
-memory of a bold and energetic man. With some difficulty he clears a
-path through the luxuriant vegetation, and arrives in front of walls of
-Cyclopean solidity. Two vast halls, almost choked with balsam, daturas,
-caster-oil plants, parasites, and refuse, form the entrance. Then come
-four smaller apartments, in better condition, and each provided with a
-great circular window. Here some geckos have established their abode,
-saluting the stranger with astonished glances and piercing cries.
-
-~MAQUEUOU’S TOMB.~
-
-Next comes an immense chamber, almost exactly square; and several tombs
-or memorial buildings are here overshadowed by venerable trees. The
-highest, raised in honour of Maqueuou himself, consists of successive
-courses of masonry, diminishing gradually from base to summit.
-Unfortunately, built of bad materials, it has been seriously injured by
-the action of the sun and the rains. A swarm of bees was domiciled in
-one of the crannies; and a tree, the seed of which had probably dropped
-from the bill of some wandering bird, soared upward from the very
-apex of the pyramid. Four smaller monuments, all oblong in shape, and
-traditionally appropriated to Maqueuou’s family, are scattered around
-the former. They still bear traces of the carving with which they were
-formerly decorated.
-
-Solitude and silence prevail within the precincts of this vast ruin.
-The geckos, the birds, and a squirrel or two, are its only inmates.
-
-Another remarkable object is the so-called pagoda of Maqui, or the
-devil. Dr. Morice was greatly surprised to see appended to its walls
-a complete series of water-colour sketches, on very stout paper,
-representing the tortures of an Inferno which would bear comparison
-with Dante’s. The satellites of the Annamite devil are shown in
-those pictures as engaged in the variety of occupations which the
-old medieval legends attributed to the imps of Beelzebub. They are
-roasting, impaling, cutting to pieces, and flaying the guilty; throwing
-them into caldrons of boiling water, grilling them over fires, and
-flinging them to the hungry jaws of enormous tigers.
-
-~AN UNPLEASANT GUEST.~
-
-~A COBRA CAPELLA.~
-
-That Hatian is not without its unpleasantnesses, Dr. Morice discovered
-in an unexpected fashion. Some workmen, in pulling down an old wall,
-came on the lair of a large serpent, which lay in “multitudinous coils”
-hatching its store of eggs. As everybody knew Dr. Morice’s zoological
-tastes, the workmen sent him immediate information of their “find,”
-and he quickly arrived on the spot, armed with a stick and a long
-and strong pair of nippers. Had it not been for its eggs, the animal
-would probably have retreated; but it remained rolled up in its hole,
-showing only its spotted and dusky-coloured head. To seize its neck
-with his nippers, was Dr. Morice’s instant manœuvre; and then, to the
-great terror of the Chinese workmen, he raised it up bodily, and
-proceeded to carry it off in triumph. Meanwhile, the irritated creature
-discharged at its captor’s forehead a jet of liquid, from which,
-at the time, he felt no disagreeable sensation. On reaching home,
-Dr. Morice deposited the reptile and its eggs in a chest lined with
-straw; which he nailed down carefully, and raised above the ground on
-vessels of water, as a protection against the attacks of ants. Then,
-and not till then, he washed his forehead, bathing, with due caution,
-the part touched by the fluid discharge; but still not believing that
-the serpent was one of the venomous kind. He troubled himself no more
-about his prisoner until, a few days later, he found in his chamber
-four tiny serpents, which he took up in his hand, in spite of their
-angry hissing. These he transferred to a glass jar. The next morning,
-wishing to examine them, he was unpleasantly surprised to find them
-rearing their head erect and expanding their neck laterally; and still
-more disagreeably surprised to detect on the neck thus expanded the
-characteristic V. They belonged to the genus of the spectacled serpent,
-the _naja_ of India, the dreaded _cobra capella_!
-
-~MOTHER AND PROGENY.~
-
-Dr. Morice hastened to bore some large holes in the chest containing
-the serpent and the eggs, and by means of these he introduced into the
-interior a quantity of burning sulphur. When, after a sufficient time
-had elapsed, he opened it, he found the mother and eighteen young ones
-suffocated, while four eggs still remained intact. How had the others
-been hatched? The circumstance was a novel one, for it was supposed
-that only the great serpents--the pythons and boas--hatched their eggs.
-At all events, it was an interesting fact that this animal had remained
-faithful to its brood. Among the sixteen young serpents, only one was a
-female, and most of them had already once changed their skin. They were
-about thirteen inches long, and their fangs were clearly discernible.
-Dr. Morice felt that he had good reason to be thankful that he had not
-been wounded by the _cobra capella_ when he so rashly pounced upon it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We next find our unwearied travellers undertaking a journey to Chaudoc,
-which is situated near the mouth of the Mekong. On both banks of the
-river, but more particularly on the right bank, are arranged the
-numerous Annamite huts; and above them frown the grim walls of a fort,
-which is in itself of the size of a small town. The province, of which
-Chaudoc is the capital, includes one hundred and five villages, and has
-a population of eighty-nine thousand souls, of whom eight thousand are
-Cambodians and sixteen thousand Malays.
-
-[Illustration: VINH-LONG.]
-
-~AT VINH-LONG.~
-
-Five days later Dr. Morice was at Vinh-Long, the fort of which is
-equal in magnitude to that of Chaudoc. In the rear of the great muddy
-moats and embankments of earth, sustained by huge piles, rise the
-officers’ barracks, and the entrenched redoubt containing the soldiers’
-quarters and the hospital. Bamboos and tall grasses have overgrown a
-portion of the immense enclosure, and in their tangled mass enormous
-pythons are frequently killed, while the _najas_ lie asleep in the dank
-inextricable vegetation of the trenches. The town itself is not without
-a certain agreeableness of aspect; its broad, straight streets are
-shaded by gigantic cocoa-nut palms.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE “BLACK LADY.”~
-
-Still continuing his explorations in the districts watered by the
-mouths of the Mekong, which forms a considerable delta, traversed by
-innumerable canals and branches, Dr. Morice arrived at Tayninh, which
-lies to the east of Saigon. It lines the river-bank for some distance;
-the houses of the Annamite population being built, not of mud and clay,
-as in the western districts of Cochin-China, but of good solid
-timber, and with much care and good taste. Their roofs are also of
-better construction: instead of the leaves of the water-palm, a close
-fine thatch is used, to which the action of the atmosphere soon gives
-a pleasant tint of age. Flourishing coffee-plantations surround the
-town, in the rear of which spread the shadows of a mighty forest, that
-spreads far up the sides of a chain of granite mountains of moderate
-elevation. The highest of these is the “Black Lady” (_Nui-ba-dinh_).
-On the summit, in a picturesque nook, stands a celebrated pagoda, the
-cells of its bonzes being excavated out of the neighbouring rock. The
-pagoda owes its repute to the neighbourhood of a miraculous spring; and
-this spring rejoices in a legend, which may be told as follows:--
-
-~THE PERPETUAL FOUNTAIN.~
-
-A bonze of indescribable holiness, who loved to offer up his prayers
-in the high places of earth, climbed the mountain one day in order to
-make his devotions on its lofty summit. Despite his sanctity, however,
-he was human; and as the mountain was of great elevation and equal
-barrenness, he soon grew faint with hunger, but more particularly with
-thirst. Disdainful, like all sages, of purely physical needs, he had
-not taken the precaution of providing himself with these precious
-necessaries of food and drink, which are the first thought of ordinary
-mortals. What was he to do? He began to pray; and lo! as he prayed, an
-enormous rock, which reared its dark front before him, was suddenly
-cleft open, and revealed to his delighted gaze a crystal spring falling
-into a basin of stone. From that time the well has never ceased to pour
-out abundant waters, which heal all the diseases of humanity;--though,
-strange to say, men, women, and children still die in Cochin-China!
-
-Ten minutes’ climbing brought Dr. Morice face to face with this
-perpetual marvel. His companions hastened to drink copious draughts of
-the fresh cold water; but Dr. Morice, rejecting the legend, and having
-less confidence than he ought to have had in temperance principles,
-resorted to his pocket flask, poured out a glass of French wine, and
-drank to the majesty of the glorious mountain.
-
-[Illustration: SCENE AT TAYNINH.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-On another occasion Dr. Morice took part in an exciting adventure,
-which had a painful issue. A tiger, whose depredations had become
-intolerable, having carried off the best dog of one of the best
-hunters of the country, it was decided that he must undergo immediate
-and condign punishment.
-
-The tiger is not often hunted in Cochin-China, where the elephant, that
-living fortress, does not place at the disposal of the European its
-high shoulders and formidable tusks. The inhabitants generally resort
-to snares.
-
-~TIGER-HUNTING.~
-
-~THE SOLDIER AND THE TIGER.~
-
-“An expedition having been resolved upon, we surrounded,” says Dr.
-Morice, “the hill which served as a retreat for the monster. More than
-one hundred and fifty natives were present, shouting, gesticulating,
-and creating the most awful clamour which ever troubled a tiger’s
-siesta. As for us, the French inspector, a French soldier, and myself,
-we were in the plain, sprinkled with small mounded graves, which
-extends behind Tayninh, and waited in patience until it pleased the
-tiger to show his precious skin. It seemed to be his opinion that
-the boldest policy was the best; for in less than half an hour after
-we had drawn our noisy cordon he emerged from the wood, and advanced
-towards us. He was received with a rolling fire. Of our four balls
-one at least struck him, for he made a movement of pain, and turned
-towards the soldier who had accompanied us. That our movements might
-be more free, we had separated at some distance from one another. The
-soldier immediately leaped upon a mound about three feet high, and
-with his loaded gun in his hand bided the wounded animal’s onset. A
-second ball from the inspector’s rifle hit him; but disregarding this
-new provocation, and yearning for his prey, he dashed towards the
-tumulus. With one bound he was at its foot, where he reared himself
-erect. Then took place a strange and lamentable scene, which showed
-how even the bravest lose their self-possession when face to face
-with these terrible beasts. That the soldier was a man of courage,
-numerous incidents had proved: it was he who had shown the most ardour
-in organizing the expedition; he had in his hand a first-rate rifle,
-and only the length of his arm apart was the white chest of the tiger,
-which seemed to await his death-dealing bullet. Well, for a few seconds
-he contented himself with striking the outstretched paws before him
-with the butt-end of his musket. The tiger extended his body, seized
-with one of his claws the unfortunate man’s leg, and began to drag him
-off.”
-
-“A man touched by a tiger is a dead man,” says a German naturalist;
-“and it is useless to risk the life of another in an attempt to snatch
-from the cruel beast the mutilated victim whose sufferings will soon be
-terminated by death.” Such cold-blooded reasoning never prevails on the
-scene of action. Both the doctor and the inspector pursued the tiger
-as he still hauled along their comrade’s body; and two bullets, more
-fortunate than their predecessors, arrested his course for ever.
-
-On examination, they found that their unfortunate companion had
-sustained a severe wound. Dr. Morice amputated his thigh in the hut
-to which he was transported; but, whether from loss of blood, which
-Europeans can ill afford in tropical latitudes, or from the violence of
-the shock to the nervous system, he died that same night.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~VISIT TO THE MARKET-PLACE.~
-
-~ANNAMITE AND CAMBODIAN.~
-
-From this painful scene it is pleasant to turn to the market-place of
-Tayninh, with its various specimens of the human race. Cambodians are
-tolerably numerous; their comparatively tall stature, their dark skin,
-their thick and heavy lower jaw, their hair cut close like the bristles
-of a brush, and especially their air of passive savagery, give them
-an appearance totally different from that of the Annamites. The two
-races detest each other cordially. The Annamite, proud of his lighter
-complexion, of his more advanced civilization, to say nothing of the
-numerous defeats he has inflicted on his neighbour, looks upon him as
-little above the Moïs or wild people of the mountains. The Cambodians
-are savages, he says, whose nature is radically bad and vicious; they
-think nothing of law or order; they are stupid, and almost devoid
-of reason. On the other hand, the Cambodian, with his gloomier and
-more silent disposition, his deeper religious sentiment, regards with
-compassion the volatile Annamite. A cordial understanding between the
-two peoples will hardly ever be possible. The Cambodian, in spite
-of his somewhat coarse features, is more Hindu than Indo-Chinese;
-and both his language and his writing have affinities with those
-of the aboriginal inhabitants of the great Indian peninsula. He is
-the morose and untamable denizen of the hills and woods; while his
-neighbour is the sociable and light-humoured inhabitant of the plains.
-Unhappy is the Cambodian! Hemmed in between the Siamese on the one
-hand, and the Annamites on the other, who together have robbed him
-of his richest provinces; rendered stationary by the operation of a
-feudal law which prevents him from acquiring lands of his own,--a
-vigorous hand is needed to support him, and enable him to preserve his
-autonomy, while the ameliorating influences of European civilization
-are gradually brought to bear upon him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE CHINESE ELEMENT.~
-
-Such are the two races which occupy the provinces watered by the lower
-branches of the great Cambodian river. In the large towns and seaports
-is found a considerable admixture of the Chinese element. Trade and
-commerce are almost entirely in the hands of Chinese merchants, who,
-here as elsewhere, exhibit an extraordinary amount of patience,
-industry, and thrift; and, here as elsewhere, untiringly amass large
-and even enormous fortunes. They preserve their nationality unaffected
-by the conditions in which they are placed; always a people apart, and
-always as distinct from the races around them as are the Jews from the
-nations of Europe.
-
-[Illustration: CHINESE MERCHANTS OF SAIGON.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-M. MOUHOT IN CAMBODIA.
-
-
-Much of the interesting and valuable information we have acquired of
-late years in reference to Siam, Cambodia, and Laos, we owe to the
-indefatigable labours of Henri Mouhot, the eminent French naturalist,
-who penetrated into regions previously unknown to Europeans in the
-years 1858, 1859, and 1860, and devoted himself to the service of
-Science with equal ability and zeal. He finally fell a victim to his
-heroic ardour--being seized with fever while on his way from Na-Lê to
-Luang Prabang, in Laos, on the 19th of October 1861, and dying, almost
-alone, with the exception of two faithful native servants, on the 10th
-of November.
-
-~TEMPLE OF ONGCOR.~
-
-He spent nearly four years in exploring the interior of Siam. As
-his biographer tells us, he first travelled through that country,
-then entered Cambodia, and afterwards made his way up the Mekong as
-far as the frontier of Laos. There he visited one of the wild and
-unconquered tribes which occupy the border-land between Cambodia and
-Laos and Cochin-China. Crossing the great lake Touli-Sap, he extended
-his researches into the remote provinces of Ongcor and Battambang,
-discovering some immense ruins of high antiquity, and more particularly
-those of the Temple of Ongcor the Great, which, with its terrace,
-portico, galleries, and peristyles, is perhaps a monument unparalleled
-in the world. The bas-reliefs with which it is adorned indicate
-considerable artistic skill on the part of those who designed and
-executed them. But what impresses the observer, not less than the
-beauty and grandeur of the various parts of the huge pile, is the size
-and number of the blocks of stone of which they are constructed. In a
-single temple as many as fifteen hundred and thirty-two columns! What
-means of transport, as Mouhot remarks, what a multitude of workmen,
-must such an enterprise have required, seeing that the mountain whence
-the stone was extracted is thirty miles distant! In each block may
-be seen holes an inch in diameter, and an inch and a fifth in depth,
-varying in number with the size of the blocks; but no traces of them
-are found in the columns and sculptured portions of the glorious
-structure. According to a Cambodian legend, these are the impressions
-of the fingers of a giant, who, after kneading an enormous quantity
-of clay, cut it into blocks and carved it, and then converted it into
-stone by pouring over it some wonderful liquid.
-
-“All the mouldings, sculptures, and bas-reliefs,” says Mouhot, “appear
-to have been executed after the erection of the building. The stones
-are everywhere fitted together in so perfect a manner that you can
-scarcely see where are the joinings; there is neither sign of mortar
-nor mark of chisel, the surface being as polished as marble. Was this
-incomparable edifice the work of a single genius, who conceived the
-idea, and watched over the execution of it? One is tempted to think
-so, for no part of it is deficient, faulty, or inconsistent. To what
-epoch does it owe its origin? As before remarked, neither tradition nor
-written inscriptions furnish any certain information upon this point;
-or rather, I should say, these latter are as a sealed book, for want of
-an interpreter,--and they may, perchance, throw light on the subject
-when some European savant shall succeed in deciphering them.”
-
-From the Mekong valley M. Mouhot passed into that of the great
-Siamese river, the Menam, visiting the province of Pechaburi. Thence
-he returned to Bangkok, and after suitable preparation started on
-an expedition to the north-east of Laos. His wanderings took him
-to Phrabat, Saohaïe, Chaiapume, and Korat. Returning to Chaiapume,
-he struck off in a westerly direction, and visited Poukieau,
-Monang-Mouna-Wa, Nam-kane, and Luang Prabang, capital of West Laos.
-At the time of his death he was bound for the provinces south-west of
-China.
-
-It will form, we think, a useful supplement to the account of the
-Mekong given in the preceding pages, if we condense M. Mouhot’s
-narrative of his partial ascent of that great river.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~JOURNEY TO UDONG.~
-
-
-We will take up our traveller’s route at Kamput, on the sea-coast,
-where he had an interview with the king of Cambodia, and obtained
-carriages to convey him to Udong, the capital. Udong is situated about
-one hundred and thirty-five miles to the north-east of Kamput, and
-four miles and a half from an arm of the Mekong which forms the Great
-Lake. After traversing a marshy plain he and his followers entered a
-noble forest, and “under green leaves” proceeded to Udong, resting at
-night in stations provided for the accommodation of travellers. These
-are about twelve miles apart, and are not only spacious but handsome.
-The road all the way proved to be in excellent order, and averaged
-from eighty to one hundred feet in width. A broad track in the middle
-is reserved for vehicles and elephants, while on either side extends
-a belt of turf, covered with shrubs, and bounded by the lofty and
-majestic trees of the forest. On drawing near the capital, M. Mouhot
-saw that the country exhibited signs of cultivation: fields of rice
-waved luxuriantly, and the country residences of the Cambodian nobles
-were surrounded by beautiful gardens. The capital was protected by a
-large moat, surmounted by a parapet, and enclosed by a palisade ten
-feet high. There were no sentinels at the gate, however, and M. Mouhot
-entered unchallenged; nay, more, without let or hindrance passed into
-the palace-court of the second king of Cambodia.
-
-~A CAMBODIAN PALACE.~
-
-~MOUHOT AND THE KING.~
-
-This distinguished personage soon heard of the stranger’s arrival,
-and despatched a couple of pages to summon him to his presence.
-Mouhot would have excused himself on the plea that his luggage had
-not arrived, and he was not in suitable attire. He was told that the
-king had no dress at all; and before he could invent a second excuse,
-the king’s Chamberlain arrived with a more peremptory message. Mouhot,
-therefore, repaired to the palace, the entrance of which was guarded
-by a dozen dismounted cannon, and was shown into the audience-chamber,
-the walls of which were whitened with chalk, and the floor paved with
-large Chinese tiles. Here, waiting for the king’s appearance, were
-collected several Siamese pages, from twenty-five to thirty years
-of age, all dressed alike in a langouti of red silk. As the king
-entered every forehead touched the ground. His manner was graceful and
-self-possessed, and the questions he asked were pertinent and sensible.
-Was M. Mouhot French or English? What was his business in Cambodia?
-What did he think of Bangkok? Then, with all the ease of a European
-sovereign, he held out his hand for Mouhot to kiss; and the latter
-withdrew, well pleased with the interview.
-
-~A BUSY SCENE.~
-
-An inspection of the city showed him that it contained a population
-of about twelve thousand souls; that it consisted in the main of a
-street one mile in length; and that the houses were built of planks
-or bamboos. It presents a very lively appearance, however, from the
-numbers of persons who are drawn to it by considerations of business
-or pleasure. “Every moment,” says Mouhot, “I met mandarins, either
-borne in litters or on foot, followed by a crowd of slaves carrying
-various articles: some, yellow or scarlet parasols, more or less huge
-according to the rank of the persons; others, boxes with betel. I also
-encountered horsemen, mounted on pretty, spirited little animals,
-richly caparisoned and covered with bells, ambling along, while a troop
-of attendants, covered with dust and sweltering with heat, ran after
-them. Light carts, drawn by a couple of small oxen, trotting along
-rapidly and noisily, were here and there to be seen. Occasionally a
-large elephant passed majestically by. On this side were numerous
-processions to the pagoda, marching to the sound of music; there,
-again, was a band of ecclesiastics in single file, seeking alms, draped
-in their yellow cloaks, and with the holy vessels on their backs.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-~THE GREAT BAZAAR OF CAMBODIA.~
-
-From Udong, with waggons and elephants provided by the king, M. Mouhot
-proceeded towards the Great Lake. The road was in excellent condition,
-and at some points built up more than ten feet above the level of the
-low, wooded country which borders on the great arm of the Mekong. The
-watercourses were spanned by handsome bridges of wood or stone. At
-Pinhalu, a village on the right bank of the river, is the residence
-of the French Vicar-Apostolic of the Cambodia and Laos mission. Here
-our traveller embarked in a small boat for Pemptielan, situated on
-the Mekong, about forty miles north of Pnom Penh. The branch which he
-descended was fifteen hundred yards wide, and its banks were inhabited
-by a tribe called the Thiâmes. Pnom Penh, which Mouhot reached after
-a perilous voyage, is the great bazaar of Cambodia. It contains a
-population of about ten thousand, nearly all Chinese; while double that
-number of Cochin-Chinese and Cambodians live upon the river in their
-boats. An active trade is carried on here in rice, fish, glass, brass
-wire, and cotton yarn.
-
-~ASCENT OF THE MEKONG.~
-
-Just below this busy town M. Mouhot’s boat passed into the main channel
-of the Mekong--the “Mother of Rivers”--and began to ascend it, steering
-towards the north. Shoals of porpoises accompanied it, occasionally
-bounding out of the water with a lively splash; red-billed pelicans
-watched for their finny prey from the reedy banks; and storks and
-herons stood in silent meditation.
-
-The current of the Mekong, as we have already stated, flows with great
-rapidity, and renders navigation slow and laborious. It took M. Mouhot
-five days to pass the island of Ko-Sutin; and the rate of velocity
-increasing as he advanced to the northward, he was seldom able to
-accomplish more than two miles a day. On arriving at the rapids and
-cataracts he was compelled to abandon his boats and embark, with his
-followers and stores, in light canoes; and even these it was necessary
-at times to carry ashore, and convey along the bank on men’s shoulders
-until a smooth part of the river was gained.
-
-At Pemptielan Mouhot landed, and delivered to its mandarin a letter
-from the king, ordering him to furnish the traveller with all the
-appliances requisite for his overland journey. He immediately started
-him on his way with a suitable number of waggons drawn by oxen, but the
-soil in the forests was so marshy that they were continually sinking
-in some deep slough, from which they could be extricated only by the
-greatest exertions. Thus their progress was limited to sixty miles in
-five days. At length he reached the village of Brelum, in the centre
-of a district occupied by the savage Stiêns. Here, in order to study
-their manners and the physical features of the country, he remained
-three months, though it is difficult to conceive of a situation less
-pleasing to or suitable for a man of European culture. The gloomy
-forests around were infested with elephants, rhinoceroses, tigers,
-buffaloes, and wild boars. More formidable, because less easily
-avoided, were the snakes, scorpions, and centipedes which swarmed in
-every direction, and constantly made their way into the houses. Brelum,
-however, is the seat of a Roman Catholic mission, and from its head,
-Father Guilloux, the traveller received a cordial hospitality which
-alleviated the dreariness of his sojourn.
-
-~RESIDENCE AT PEMPTIELAN.~
-
-He describes the Stiêns as dwelling in villages, each of which forms
-a distinct and independent community. They love “the deep shade of
-the pathless woods,” where they live on the products of their bow and
-arrows. They work with great skill in iron and ivory; and the women
-weave and dye a delicate stuff, which they wear in the form of a long
-loose scarf. In the neighbourhood of their villages, if the country
-be open, they cultivate various kinds of vegetables and fruit-trees,
-as well as rice, maize, and tobacco. In the fields thus planted they
-spend the rainy season, building small huts, raised above the swampy
-ground on piles--a protection at once from the swollen waters and
-the leeches, the latter of which are a plague of no inconsiderable
-proportions.
-
-~THE RICE CULTIVATION.~
-
-There is a certain peculiarity in their method of cultivating rice.
-On the beginning of the rains the Stiên selects his piece of ground,
-and with nimble hatchet clears it of its growth of bamboos, but not
-attempting to meddle with the large trees. As soon as the canes have
-dried he sets fire to them, and in this way clears his ground and
-manures it simultaneously. Then he takes two long bamboos and lays
-them in a line on the ground; with a dibble in each hand he makes on
-either side a row of holes about an inch and a half deep, at short
-distances. Having finished _his_ share of the work the man retires to
-enjoy his ease, while his wife enters on the scene, and from a basket
-slung to her waist dips out a handful of rice, a few grains of which
-she drops into each hole with equal neatness and rapidity. No more is
-necessary. Nature does the rest. The heavy rains soon wash the soil
-over the holes; and the heat of the climate soon causes the seed to
-germinate. Meanwhile the cultivator sits and smokes in his hut, or
-proves his skill with bow and arrow at the expense of the goats, apes,
-or wild boars. At the end of October is reaped the harvest. Generally,
-for some weeks previously much privation and distress are experienced,
-and the improvident Stiên, who never takes thought of the morrow in
-the season of plenty, is reduced to feed upon wild roots, maize seeds,
-young bamboo shoots, and even serpents, bats, and toads. For this sorry
-fare the Stiên compensates himself as soon as the harvest is gathered.
-A general feasting commences: one village inviting the inhabitants
-of another; oxen being freely slaughtered; and eating and drinking
-prevailing from morn to night, and almost from night to morn, to the
-sound of tambourine and tomtom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~ABOUT THE STIÊNS.~
-
-Like the Annamites, the Stiêns wear the hair long, but twisted up,
-and fastened by a bamboo comb, with a pheasant’s crest on the top
-of a piece of brass wire by way of ornament. They are mostly of
-tall stature, strong, and well-limbed; with regular features, thick
-eyebrows, and a good forehead. Their hospitality is abundant, and a
-stranger, on his arrival, is immediately entertained with rice-wine,
-a pipe of peace, and a fatted pig or fowl. Their dress is simplicity
-itself,--a long scarf about two inches wide; and even with this they
-dispense when “at home” in their cabins. They have neither priests nor
-temples; and their religion appears to consist of a belief in a supreme
-being called _Brâ_; to whom, on occasions of calamity and suffering,
-they sacrifice a pig or an ox, and sometimes a human victim.
-
-~THEIR RESPECT FOR THE DEAD.~
-
-They are very careful in burying their dead; and a member of the family
-of the deceased invariably visits the grave daily, to sow a few grains
-of rice for his sustenance. Prior to any meal, they spill a little rice
-for the same purpose; and similar offerings are made in the fields
-and places which the dead were accustomed to visit. Plumes of reed
-are attached to the top of a long bamboo, and lower down the stem are
-fastened smaller bamboos containing a few drops of wine or water; and,
-finally, on “a slight trellis-work raised above the ground” some earth
-is laid, with an arrow planted in it, and a few grains of cooked rice,
-a leaf, a little tobacco, and a bone spread about.
-
-The Stiêns believe that animals have souls; that these wander about
-after death; and that, therefore, it is necessary to propitiate
-them, lest they should be troublesome and vexatious. Sacrifices are
-accordingly offered, in proportion to the size and strength of the
-animal; and the reader will conceive that in the case of an elephant
-they are on a very grand scale. The North American Indian, it may be
-remarked, cherishes a similar superstition in respect to the bear and
-the buffalo.
-
-~THEIR HUNTING WEAPONS.~
-
-According to M. Mouhot, a Stiên is seldom seen without his cross-bow
-in his hand, his knife slung over his shoulder, and a basket--for his
-arrows, and the game they bring down--on his back. In the chase he
-displays the most untiring energy, gliding through the woods “with
-the speed of a deer.” In the use of the cross-bow practice brings
-perfection. For the larger animals the arrows are steeped in a poison
-which is described as being peculiarly rapid and fatal in its effects.
-
-The Stiêns, let it be said in conclusion, are, like most savage races,
-exceedingly partial to ornaments, and particularly to bracelets made of
-bright-coloured beads. The men usually wear one above the elbow, and
-one at the wrist; but the women load both arms and legs. Brass wire and
-glass ornaments form their currency; a buffalo or an ox being valued
-at six armfuls of thick brass wire, which is also about the price of a
-pig. A pheasant, however, or a hundred ears of maize, may be procured
-for a small piece of fine wire or a bead necklace.
-
-Both men and women perforate their ears, widening the hole annually by
-the insertion of plugs of bone or ivory fully three inches in length.
-A plurality of wives is allowed to the chiefs and richer men of the
-tribe; the poor are content with one wife, simply because they cannot
-afford to maintain a harem.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~HUNTING THE TIGER.~
-
-About the fauna of this portion of the Mekong valley little need be
-said, and that little we shall confine to the tiger, which is as strong
-and ferocious as his celebrated congener of Bengal. Yet a couple of
-men, with no other weapons than pikes, will frequently sally forth to
-the attack. When the object of their daring enterprise is discovered,
-the stronger of the two hunters lowers his pike. Sometimes, if not
-emboldened by hunger, the tiger refuses the challenge, and bounds into
-the forest shade; more frequently he charges with a sudden rush, and
-then, if the force of his leap do not carry him over the head of the
-hunter, he falls upon the pike, which the hunter raises by pressing
-the handle on the earth. Immediately his companion rushes forward,
-and plunges his weapon into the animal’s flank; then the two, by sheer
-force, pin him to the ground, and hold him there until he dies. If the
-first man miss his aim, and break his pike, his death is certain; and
-not seldom his comrade also perishes.
-
-~A CIRCLE OF PIKES.~
-
-But generally a tiger-hunt brings to the front all the men of the
-village, together with volunteers from the neighbouring villages. Led
-by the most experienced among them, they track the animal to his lair,
-which they proceed to enclose with a circle--each man being posted at
-a convenient distance, but so as to leave no space unguarded through
-which the tiger may escape. “Some of the most daring then venture into
-the centre,” says Mouhot, “and cut away the brushwood, during which
-operation they are protected by others armed with pikes. The tiger,
-pressed on all sides, rolls his eyes, licks his paws in a convulsive
-manner as though preparing for combat; then, with a frightful howl,
-he makes his spring. Immediately every pike is raised, and the animal
-falls pierced through and through. Accidents not infrequently happen,
-and many are often severely hurt; but they have no choice but to wage
-war against the tigers, which leave them no rest, force the enclosures,
-and carry off domestic animals and even men, not only from the roads
-and close vicinity of the houses, but from the interiors of the
-buildings. In Annam, the fear inspired by the tigers, elephants, and
-other wild animals, makes the people address them with the greatest
-respect; they give them the title of ‘grandfather’ or ‘lord,’ fearing
-that they may be offended, and show resentment by attacking them.”
-It is a pity that poets and romancists, when enlarging on the joys
-of a savage life, its freedom from the restraints of civilization,
-and the opportunities it affords for communion with Nature, omit all
-reference to its inconveniences,--such, for instance, as the immediate
-neighbourhood of an elephant or a tiger!
-
- * * * * *
-
-~LAKE TOULI-SAP.~
-
-After a sojourn of three months among the Stiêns, M. Mouhot returned
-to Udong by the route which he had previously followed. Of Pnom Penh,
-he says that it is situated at the confluence of the Mekong with its
-tributary, which he proposes to name the Mé-Sap. This arm or tributary
-it is which forms the great Cambodian lake Touli-Sap; an immense sheet
-of water, upwards of one hundred and twenty miles in length, and four
-hundred miles in circumference, and as full of motion as a sea. Its
-shores are low, and covered with half-submerged trees; but in the
-distance may be seen a magnificent range of mountains, with the clouds
-resting on their summits.
-
-~RUINS OF BUDDHIST TEMPLES.~
-
-To the east of the Great Lake lies the province of Ongcor, or Nokhor,
-in which, and along the banks of the Mekong, lie ruins of immense
-grandeur, bearing witness to the ancient wealth and populousness of the
-kingdom of Tsiampois (Cochin-China). To the most remarkable of these
-monuments, the great temple of Ongcor-Wat, we have already alluded. Its
-founders are unknown. Ask the Cambodians, and they reply: “It is the
-work of Pra-Enn, the king of the angels;” or else, “It is the work of
-giants;” or, “It was built by the leper King;” or, “It made itself.”
-
-~ON THE MOUNTAIN-SUMMIT.~
-
-Two miles and a half to the north of Ongcor, on the summit of Mount
-Bakhêng, rises another magnificent Buddhist temple, not less than one
-hundred and twenty feet in height. At the foot of the mountain two
-stately lions, each formed, with its pedestal, out of a single block of
-limestone, keep watch in the silent shadows of the forest-trees. Thence
-dilapidated stone staircases lead to the mountain-top, from which a
-view of singular beauty and extent is obtained. On the one side are
-visible the wooded plain and pyramidal temple of Ongcor, with its noble
-colonnades, and the mountain of Crôme,--the horizon being bounded by
-the shining waters of the Great Lake. In the opposite direction extends
-the long mountain-chain, the quarries of which, it is said, supplied
-the materials of the temples; and among the dense masses of foliage at
-its feet glimmers a fair and silvery lake. The entire region is now
-as lonely and deserted as formerly it must have been full of life and
-cheerfulness. The solitude is disturbed only by the occasional song of
-bird, or wild, unearthly cry of beast of prey.
-
-A smooth surface has been obtained on the top of the mountain by
-laying down a thick floor of lime. At regular intervals are four rows
-of deep holes, in some of which still stand the columns that formerly
-supported two roofs, and formed a corridor leading from the staircase
-to the body of the building. The arms or branches of this gallery were
-connected with four towers, built partly of stone and partly of brick.
-In the two of these which are in the best preservation are kept large
-rudely-fashioned idols, evidently of great antiquity. In one of the
-others is a large stone, with an inscription still visible; the figure
-of a king with a long beard is carved upon the outer wall.
-
-~M. MOUHOT’S DESCRIPTION.~
-
-A wall, says Mouhot, surrounds the top of the mountain, and encloses
-yet another building--quadrangular in shape, and composed of five
-stories, each about ten feet high, while the basement story is two
-hundred and twenty feet square. These stories form so many terraces,
-which serve as bases to seventy-two small but elegant pavilions; and
-they are embellished with mouldings, colonnades, and cornices. M.
-Mouhot describes the work as perfect; and is of opinion that, from its
-good state of preservation, it must be of later date than the towers.
-Each pavilion, it may be assumed, formerly contained an idol.
-
-On either side of the quadrangle ascends a staircase, seven feet wide,
-with nine steps to each story, and lions on each terrace. The centre
-of the terrace formed by the last story is simply a mass of ruins from
-the shattered towers. Near the staircase lie two gigantic blocks of
-fine stone, wrought as smooth as marble, and shaped like pedestals for
-statues.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~GARNIER’S DESCRIPTION.~
-
-[So far from M. Mouhot. It will be interesting, however, to supplement
-his description with the details given by Lieutenant Garnier.
-
-The ascent of the so-called mountain, he says, is easily accomplished:
-after a little time the traveller arrives at a kind of platform
-excavated in the rock, the surface of which appears formerly to have
-been carefully levelled with cement. A small brick building attracts
-the eye; it is erected over the imprint of Buddha’s foot, the gilding
-and outlines of which are, like the building itself, of very modern
-date. But we soon discover, in the rock, numerous holes which served
-as foundations for the columns of the temple; and beyond, some of
-these columns are still standing. If we follow up the traces of this
-colonnade, we arrive at an enclosure which was opened of old, perhaps,
-by a monumental gate; but there are not sufficient vestiges extant to
-enable us safely to reconstruct this part of the edifice. Within the
-enclosure, and symmetrically placed on either side of the colonnade, we
-find two ruined buildings; and in their interior numerous statues and
-fragments of statues have been carefully preserved by the inhabitants.
-Continuing our exploration westward, we arrive at length at the foot
-of the principal monument. This consists of five terraces excavated
-on the crest of the hill in exact gradation. Their general plan is
-rectangular, and one recedes behind the other at least thirteen feet.
-We ascend them by means of staircases constructed in the middle of each
-side, and guarded by stone lions mounted upon pedestals. At the angle
-of each terrace, and about thirty feet from each staircase, are raised
-admirably built little turrets, sixteen feet in height. Each of these
-sixteen turrets contains a statue.
-
-~A MASS OF RUINS.~
-
-~A PICTURESQUE PANORAMA.~
-
-In the centre of the upper terrace is a platform or base, about three
-and a quarter feet high, and measuring one hundred feet from north to
-south by one hundred and three feet from east to west. On this base
-were raised of old the towers which dominated the neighbouring country.
-But it is occupied now by a mass of ruins. By carefully examining
-them, we are able to make out that these towers were three in number,
-of which the central was the largest, and that they faced the east.
-The view from the summit of the ruins is truly enchanting. At our feet
-extends the verdurous sea of forest, its vague and undefinable murmurs
-just audible to the attentive ear. In a northerly direction the dense
-forest-shadows stretch far and far away until lost in the dim horizon;
-and the eye seeks vainly to discover in its midst the crests of some of
-the lofty monuments of Ongcor. To the south-east, however, the towers
-and colonnades of Ongcor-Wat are clearly marked out upon the great
-open plain; and the few groves of palms and clusters of fruit-trees
-which surround it give to the landscape an Oriental character of poetry
-and grace. Westward, a small lake reflects in its glassy surface the
-surrounding verdure. To the south we catch glimpses, through the warm
-vapours which veil the horizon, of the Great Lake.
-
-What a fairy-like aspect, from the summit of these towers, must the
-mountain itself, in the old time, have presented, with its lions, and
-its turrets, and its staircases of stone descending even to the plain
-and to the city of Ongcor-Thôm, with its ramparts and its innumerable
-gilded towers, which the forest now covers with its vast monotonous
-shroud of verdure!
-
-From the extent of the débris accumulated at the foot of the monument,
-we may conjecture that formerly a double row of buildings of brick
-surrounded it; these were probably occupied by a garrison or a numerous
-military guard. The position of Mount Bakhêng with reference to the
-neighbouring city made it a kind of Acropolis; and doubtless it was so
-used from the very foundation of the city. But while Mouhot ascribes
-the monument which it supports to the very infancy of Cambodian art,
-the leader of Garnier’s expedition considered it of later date. The
-fashion of the ornamentation and the style of the architecture seemed
-to him almost identical with those of other Khmer ruins. Moreover, in
-his opinion this architecture sprang into existence, so to speak, all
-at once; was complete in itself; had neither a period of development
-nor one of decay;--as if it had been introduced from without by a
-conquering race, which afterwards had been swept away by some sudden
-catastrophe.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-~MOUHOT AT BANGKOK.~
-
-After a careful survey of the ruins of Ongcor and Ongcor-Thôm (or “the
-Great”), M. Mouhot returned to Bangkok, and made preparations to visit
-the north-eastern provinces of Laos.
-
-While at Bangkok he witnessed a succession of fêtes, of which he
-records details so interesting, that, by way of digression, we venture
-to transfer them to these pages.
-
-~A ROYAL PROCESSION.~
-
-The river Menam, he says, was covered with large and handsome boats,
-gay with gilding and gorgeous with elaborate carving; among which the
-heavy barges of the rice-merchants, and the small craft of poor women
-carrying to market their betel-nuts and bananas, seemed out of place.
-It is only on such occasions as these that the king, princes, and
-mandarins display their wealth and pomp. The king, when Mouhot saw him,
-was proceeding to a pagoda to make his offerings; and was followed by
-his mandarins, each in a splendid barge, with rowers attired in the
-brightest colours. In their train came a number of canoes filled with
-red-coated soldiers. The royal barge was easily distinguished by its
-throne and canopy, and by the profuseness of its carving and gilding.
-Some of the royal children sat at the feet of the king, who waved a
-recognition to every European he saw.
-
-All the vessels lying in the river were dressed out with flags; while
-every floating house had an altar erected, on which various objects
-were placed, and aromatic woods burned with pleasant odours. In the
-court barges the various dignitaries, mostly men of “good round
-paunch,” lay indolently upon triangular embroidered cushions spread on
-a kind of dais. They were surrounded by officials, women, and children,
-either kneeling or lying flat, and holding the golden urns which are
-used for spittoons, or the golden tea-pots and betel-boxes. Each boat
-carried from eighty to a hundred rowers, wearing a large white scarf
-round the loins, and a red langouti, but leaving the head and greater
-part of the body bare. They lifted their paddles simultaneously, and
-struck the water in excellent concert; while at the prow stood a slave
-with an oar to prevent collisions, and another at the stern employed
-an oar for steering purposes. At intervals the rowers raised “a wild,
-exulting cry of ‘Ouah! ouah!’” while the voice of the steersman, in a
-louder and more sustained note, rose above the rest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-~MOUHOT’S JOURNEY TO KHAO-KHOC.~
-
-From this holiday city, however, M. Mouhot tore himself away, and
-entered on his lonely and hazardous journey. He soon reached the pure
-breezy air and picturesque scenery of the mountains of Nophaburi and
-Phrabat, and ascended the Menam to Saohaïe, the starting-point for all
-caravans going to Korat. He thence continued his voyage to Khao-Khoc,
-which has been fortified by the king of Siam as an asylum in case of a
-European invasion of the south. Here he resided for some months, on the
-borders of a vast unexplored forest, studying the manners and customs
-of the Laotians. In February 1861 he arrived at Chaiapune. It was
-not until he had encountered and conquered obstacles that would have
-broken the heart of any man less enthusiastic or less courageous that
-he succeeded in making his way to Korat. As he describes it as “a nest
-of robbers and assassins, the resort of all the scum of the Laotian
-and Siamese races,” the rendezvous of “bandits and vagrants escaped
-from slavery or from prison,” he would hardly have found it a pleasant
-resting-place; and as soon as he could obtain a supply of elephants for
-himself and his followers, he resumed his journey, striking, across the
-country to Poukieau.
-
-~“ACROSS COUNTRY.”~
-
-Here he ascended gradually a range of mountains abounding in resinous
-trees and frequented by deer, tigers, elephants, and rhinoceros. This
-chain extends directly north, continually increasing in height and
-breadth, and throwing off numerous spurs towards the east, where the
-deep shadowy valleys collect their waters, and pour them into the
-Mekong.
-
-~THE ELEPHANT “AT HOME.”~
-
-Throughout this mountainous region elephants are the only means
-of transport. Every village, consequently, possesses one of these
-valuable animals; some no fewer than fifty or a hundred. Otherwise,
-intercommunication would be impossible for seven months out of the
-twelve. “The elephant,” says Mouhot, “ought to be seen on these roads,
-which I can only call devil’s pathways, and are nothing but ravines,
-ruts two or three feet deep, full of mud; sometimes sliding with his
-feet close together on the wet clay of the steep slopes, sometimes
-half-buried in mire,--an instant afterwards mounted on sharp rocks
-where one would think a Blondin alone could stand; striding across
-enormous trunks of fallen trees, crushing down the smaller trees and
-bamboos which oppose his progress, or lying down flat on his stomach,
-that the cornacs (drivers) may the easier place the saddle on his back;
-a hundred times a day making his way, without injuring them, between
-trees where there is barely room to pass; sounding with his trunk the
-depth of the water in the streams or marshes; constantly kneeling down
-and rising again, and never making a false step. It is necessary, I
-repeat, to see him at work like this in his own country, to form any
-idea of his intelligence, docility, and strength, or how all these
-wonderful joints of his are adapted to their work--fully to understand
-that this colossus is no rough specimen of Nature’s handiwork, but a
-creature of especial amiability and sagacity, designed for the service
-of man.”
-
-After leaving Korat, Mouhot crossed five considerable rivers--the
-Menam-Chie, the Menam-Leuye, the Menam-Ouan, the Nam-Pouye, and the
-Nam-Houn,--all tributaries of the mighty Mekong; and the last-named
-river he once more reached, at Pak Lay, in lat. 19° 16′ 58″, on June
-the 24th, 1861. The Mekong here is much broader than the Menam at
-Bangkok, and dashes through the mountain ravine with the impetuosity of
-a torrent and the roar of the sea. Its navigation between Pak Lay and
-Luang Prabang is interrupted by several rapids.
-
-~AT LUANG PRABANG.~
-
-Luang Prabang, where Mouhot arrived on the 25th of July, is a
-pleasantly-situated town, occupying an area of one square mile, and
-containing a population of eight thousand. The mountains which, both
-above and below it, enclose the broad and copious Mekong, form at
-this point a kind of circular valley or amphitheatre, nine miles in
-diameter, and, with their woods, and luxuriant verdure, and lawny
-slopes, combine in a picturesque panorama, reminding one of the Alpine
-lakes.
-
-The town extends on both banks of the stream, but chiefly on the left
-bank, where the houses surround an isolated mount about three hundred
-and fifty feet in height, covered by a pagoda.[*]
-
-[*] A fuller description of Luang Prabang, as given by Garnier, who
-visited it six years after Mouhot, will be found on page 78.
-
-~THE RIVER NAM KAN.~
-
-An important tributary of the Mekong, the Nam Kan, skirts on the
-east and north the little hill at the foot of which Luang Prabang is
-situated, and divides the latter into two unequal parts, the larger
-of which lies to the south of the point of confluence. The banks of
-this stream, for a considerable distance inland, are lined with an
-uninterrupted series of pagodas and great gardens, in the latter
-of which the betel-nut is cultivated, and peaches, plum-trees, and
-oleanders flourish: a sign that the traveller here enters a very
-temperate region, where the fruits and plants of Central Asia may be
-successfully cultivated.
-
-In the southern district of the city is placed the palace of the
-king, an enormous aggregate of huts, enclosed by a high and strong
-palisade, and forming a rectangle, one side of which is contiguous to
-the base of the central mount. As this sacred hillock is there almost
-perpendicular, the ascent to its pagoda-crowned summit is effected by
-a flight of several hundred steps excavated in the rock. A daily and
-excessively animated market is held under some sheds situated near
-the junction of the Nam Kan and the Mekong; but they are insufficient
-to accommodate all the vendors, and open booths, stalls, or shops are
-prolonged for upwards of half a mile in a wide street parallel to the
-river.
-
-~COMMERCIAL LIFE AT LUANG PRABANG.~
-
-M. Garnier remarks that this was the first market, in the European
-sense of the word, which he had seen since leaving Pnom Penh. This
-sudden activity, he adds, and comparatively considerable commerce,
-to judge from the numerous and diverse types which at Luang Prabang
-represented all the nations of Indo-China and India, were obviously
-due less to a change of race or increased product of the soil than to
-a radical difference of government. The countries of Southern Laos, in
-their era of independence, had been celebrated for their wealth and
-commercial enterprise; but Siamese tyranny and monopoly have blighted
-their prosperity. If life be reviving at Luang Prabang, it is because
-the Siamese court have awakened to a perception of the fact that a
-milder rule was essential for so powerful a province.
-
-~HISTORICAL NOTES.~
-
-The foundation of Luang Prabang appears to date only from the early
-part of the eighteenth century. No reference to it occurs in the
-careful account of Siam compiled by the Jesuit missionary La Loubère
-in 1687-88. Its distance from the theatre of the wars which desolated
-Indo-China in the eighteenth century, greatly contributed to assure
-its prosperity, and was probably one of the principal causes which led
-to its foundation. Its government skilfully contrived to obtain the
-nominal protection of China, by sending an envoy once every eight years
-with a couple of elephants, as a sign of homage; and it has secured the
-goodwill of the Annamite empire, by consenting to pay a small triennial
-tribute. The mountainous country to be traversed before an army can
-reach Luang Prabang, and the energy which its population owes to the
-admixture of numerous savage and warlike tribes inhabiting the borders
-of Tonquin and Laos, invest this province with exceptional means for
-resisting aggression on the part of Siam.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But we have exhausted our space; and, after leading the reader into
-territories which have before them a splendid future, and following
-with him the course of the great Cambodian river into regions almost
-unknown to Europeans--regions the resources of which are immense, but
-need the science and energy of Europe for their development--we must
-bring our narrative to a close.
-
-We have accompanied Mouhot to Luang Prabang. Thence he returned to Pak
-Lay, where, he says, he had the pleasure of again seeing the beautiful
-stream which he had come to regard as an old friend. “I have so long
-drunk of its waters,” he writes; “it has so long either cradled me on
-its bosom or tried my patience,--at one time flowing majestically among
-the mountains, at another muddy and yellow as the Arno at Florence.”
-
-~DEATH OF MOUHOT.~
-
-Revisiting Luang Prabang on the 25th of July, he left it again on the
-9th of August. A few months later his adventurous career, as we have
-already stated, was terminated by an attack of jungle fever.
-
-Hitherto, it has been to the research and adventure of French
-travellers that geographers have principally owed their knowledge of
-the Mekong. Let us hope that before long some Englishmen will follow in
-their steps!
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
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-16mo, cloth, 50 cts.
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----- =BIBLE HISTORY=, in connection with the General History of the
-World, with Notices of Scripture Localities, and Sketches of Social and
-Religious Life. 12mo, cloth, $1.50.
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-=COMPER GRAY= (James).--=CLASS AND DESK= (The). A Manual for Sunday
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-$1.25, namely:
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- Vol. 1. The Old Testament--Genesis to Esther.
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- Vol. 3. The New Testament--The Gospels.
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-Explanations. 16mo, paper covers, 13 cts. 16mo, cloth limp, 25 cts.
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-=EDERSHEIM= (Dr.).--=THE TEMPLE=, Its Ministry and Services. Small 4to,
-gilt edges, $2.50.
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-32mo, cloth, 50 cts.
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----- =OUR WORK.= Four Lectures on the Principles and Practice of Sunday
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-Concordance, Maps, &c., &c., in the “OXFORD TEACHERS’ BIBLE.” 16mo,
-cloth, 75 cts.
-
-=JOSEPHUS’ COMPLETE WORKS.= Translated by W. Whiston, M.A. 8vo, cloth,
-$1.75.
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-$1.25.
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-Canada. By MRS. TRAILL. With colored frontispiece and vignette and many
-illustrations. 16mo, cloth extra, $1.00.
-
-=A. L. O. E.--FLORA=; Or, Self-Deception. Illustrated. 12mo, cloth
-extra, gilt edges, $1.25.
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-extra, beveled, with illustrations, 50 cts.; 18mo, cloth extra,
-beveled, with tinted illustrations, 75 cts.; 12mo, cloth, chromo side,
-with numerous illustrations, $1.25.; 12mo, cloth, chromo side, gilt
-edges, with numerous illustrations, $1.50.
-
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-PIEDMONT.= By J. P. MEILLE, Pastor of the Waldensian Church in Turin.
-With an INTRODUCTORY NOTICE by the late Rev. WM. ARNOT. 12mo, cloth,
-$1.25.
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-of Eminent Naturalists and Celebrated Travelers. By author of “Above
-Rubies,” etc. Colored plates. 12mo, cloth extra, $1.50.
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-illustrations, 75 cts.; 12mo, cloth extra, beveled, $1.00.
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-ANNIE LUCAS. 12mo, cloth, $2.00.
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-etc. 12mo, cloth extra, $1.00.
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-$1.25.
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-“Sea-Birds and the Story of their Lives,” etc. With 32 illustrations.
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-Cochin-China, Cambodia, Laos and Siam. 16mo, cloth extra, many
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-cloth, $1.50.
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-=UNDER THE SOUTHERN CROSS.= A Tale of the New World. By the author of
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-=WHITE-ROCK COVE= (The). A Tale for the Young. With six colored plates.
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-THOMAS NELSON AND SONS, 42 BLEECKER STREET, NEW YORK.
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-AGENTS FOR OXFORD UNIVERSITY BIBLES, ETC., ETC.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-Illustrations have been moved next to the relevant text, and may no
-longer match the locations in the List of Illustrations.
-
-
-The following apparent errors have been corrected:
-
-advertisement "CAMPBELL OVERON" changed to "CAMPBELL OVEREND"
-
-advertisement "Reformation," changed to "Reformation."
-
-
-Archaic or inconsistent spelling and punctuation have otherwise been kept as printed.
-
-
-The following are used inconsistently in the text:
-
-Battambang and Battabang
-
-Birman and Burman
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's In the Far East, by William Henry Davenport Adams
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-Project Gutenberg's In the Far East, by William Henry Davenport Adams
-
-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
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-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: In the Far East
- A Narrative of Exploration and Adventure in Cochin-China,
- Cambodia, Laos, and Siam
-
-Author: William Henry Davenport Adams
-
-Release Date: May 9, 2017 [EBook #54692]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE FAR EAST ***
-
-
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-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
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-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-In the html version of this eBook, images with blue borders are linked to larger versions of the illustration.
-</div>
-
-<div class="nomobile figcenter" style="width: 561px;">
-<img src="images/coverspine.jpg" width="625" height="800" alt="cover" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h1 class="nobreak">IN THE FAR EAST.</h1>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 561px;">
-<a id="LAOTIAN_BOAT_DESCENDING_A_RAPID"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t002bh.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t002b.jpg" width="561" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div><p class="caption center">LAOTIAN BOAT DESCENDING A RAPID.</p>
-
-
-<p class="right">Page <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="p4 center">
-<span class="x-large">IN THE FAR EAST:</span><br />
-
-<span class="blackletter">A Narrative of Exploration and Adventure</span><br />
-
-IN COCHIN-CHINA, CAMBODIA, LAOS, AND SIAM.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">
-<i>BY THE AUTHOR OF<br />
-<span class="small">“The Arctic World,” “The Mediterranean Illustrated,”<br />
-&amp;c. &amp;c.</span></i></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center small">
-WITH TWENTY-EIGHT FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">
-LONDON: THOMAS NELSON AND SONS.<br />
-<span class="small">EDINBURGH AND NEW YORK.</span><br />
-1879.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>Contents.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="right">I.</td><td>THROUGH LAOS TO CHINA,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">II.</td><td>EXPERIENCES AMONG THE CHINESE,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">III.</td><td>RETURN TO SAIGON,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">IV.</td><td>DR. MORICE AND THE MEKONG,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">V.</td><td>M. MOUHOT IN CAMBODIA,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-</div>
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>List of Illustrations.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">LAOTIAN BOAT DESCENDING A RAPID,</td><td class="right"><a href="#LAOTIAN_BOAT_DESCENDING_A_RAPID"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SCENE ON THE MEKONG,</td><td align="right"><a href="#SCENE_ON_THE_MEKONG">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">PEACOCK-HUNTING,</td><td align="right"><a href="#PEACOCK_HUNTING">29</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">MOUNTAIN-PEAK NEAR BASSAC,</td><td align="right"><a href="#MOUNTAIN-PEAK_NEAR_BASSAC">33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">FUNERAL CEREMONY OF THE LAOTIANS,</td><td align="right"><a href="#FUNERAL_CEREMONY_OF_THE_LAOTIANS">37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">CORONATION OF THE KING OF OUBON,</td><td align="right"><a href="#CORONATION_OF_THE_KING_OF_OUBON">45</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ANNAMITES AT LAKON,</td><td align="right"><a href="#ANNAMITES_AT_LAKON">51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">NATURAL PILLAR IN THE MOUNTAINS OF LAKON,</td><td align="right"><a href="#NATURAL_PILLAR">55</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TAPPING THE BORASSUS PALM,</td><td align="right"><a href="#TAPPING_THE_BORASSUS_PALM">59</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">BUDDHIST TAT AT NONG KAY,</td><td align="right"><a href="#BUDDHIST_TAT_AT_NONG_KAY">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">MONASTERY OF WAT SISAKET,</td><td align="right"><a href="#MONASTERY_OF_WAT_SISAKET">67</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">PASSAGE OF A RAPID,</td><td align="right"><a href="#PASSAGE_OF_A_RAPID">71</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">RICE-FIELD AND PAGODA AT MUONG MAI,</td><td align="right"><a href="#RICE-FIELD_AND_PAGODA_AT_MUONG_MAI">75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">PAGODA AT PAK LAY,</td><td align="right"><a href="#PAGODA_AT_PAK_LAY">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">BAMBOO BRIDGE AT XIENG KHONG,</td><td align="right"><a href="#BAMBOO_BRIDGE_AT_XIENG_KHONG">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">FOREST ROAD NEAR MUONG LIM,</td><td align="right"><a href="#FOREST_ROAD">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A NIGHT HALT NEAR SIEM-LAP,</td><td align="right"><a href="#A_NIGHT_HALT_NEAR_SIEM-LAP">91</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">TRAVELLING IN A RAVINE NEAR SOP YONG,</td><td align="right"><a href="#TRAVELLING_IN_A_RAVINE">95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">INTERVIEW WITH THE KING OF MUONG YOU,</td><td align="right"><a href="#INTERVIEW_WITH_THE_KING">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">MOUNTAIN VILLAGE AND RICE-FIELDS NEAR POU-EUL,</td><td align="right"><a href="#MOUNTAIN_VILLAGE_AND_RICE-FIELDS">103</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">VALLEY OF KON-TCHANG,</td><td align="right"><a href="#VALLEY_OF_KON-TCHANG">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">CROSSING A RAVINE,</td><td align="right"><a href="#CROSSING_A_RAVINE">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">MERCHANT TRAIN IN YUNNAN,</td><td align="right"><a href="#MERCHANT_TRAIN_IN_YUNNAN">137</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">ANNAMITE LADY AND HER SERVANT,</td><td align="right"><a href="#ANNAMITE_LADY_AND_HER_SERVANT">141</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">CHINESE HOUSE AT KHOLEN,</td><td align="right"><a href="#CHINESE_HOUSE_AT_KHOLEN">151</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">VINH-LONG,</td><td align="right"><a href="#VINH-LONG">163</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">SCENE AT TAYNINH,</td><td align="right"><a href="#SCENE_AT_TAYNINH">167</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">CHINESE MERCHANTS OF SAIGON,</td><td align="right"><a href="#CHINESE_MERCHANTS_OF_SAIGON">173</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-</div>
-<div class="chapter">
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="p4 x-large center">IN THE FAR EAST.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THROUGH LAOS TO CHINA.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/zill_t009.png" width="122" height="125" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">A considerable</span> portion of the Indo-Chinese
-peninsula is occupied by the
-extensive country of Cambodia, or Camboja,
-known to the natives as <i>Kan-pou-chi</i>. It
-extends from lat. 8° 47′ to 15° N., along the basin
-of the Mekong, Makiang, or Cambodia river; and is
-bounded on the north by Laos; on the south, by
-the Gulf of Siam and the China Sea; on the east,
-by Cochin-China; and on the west, by Siam. Formerly
-it was independent; but since 1809 it has
-been included within the empire of Annam, except
-the province of Battabang, which belongs to the
-kingdom of Siam. But since the French established
-themselves at Saigon in 1858, and have gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-obtained a controlling power in Annam (or Cochin-China),
-their influence has also extended to Cambodia.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">COURSE OF THE MEKONG.</div>
-
-<p>The largest river of Cambodia, and of the whole
-Indo-Chinese peninsula, is the Mekong, Makiang, or
-Cambodia, which, rising in the mountains of China,
-under the name of the Lan-tsan-kiang, flows in a
-south-easterly direction across the province of Yunnan;
-thence, under the name of the Kiou-long,
-traverses the territory of Laos; and afterwards, as
-the Mekong, intersects Cambodia, dividing the Annam
-portion from that which belongs to Siam; separates
-into several branches, and finally falls into the
-China Sea, after a fertilizing course of about fifteen
-hundred miles. Its two principal mouths are those
-of the Japanese and Oubequum channels. There
-are several smaller mouths, however, the southernmost
-of which is situated in lat. 9° 30′ N., and
-long. 106° 20′ E.</p>
-
-<p>Very little was known of this great river until
-the French had made themselves masters of Saigon.
-It has since been explored in parts of its course by
-M. Mouhot, Lieutenant Garnier, and others. The
-country which it waters possesses many features of
-interest; and the scenery through which it flows is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-often of a romantic and beautiful character. The
-manners and customs of the people dwelling on its
-banks are not unworthy of consideration; and we
-propose, therefore, to carry the reader with us on
-a voyage up this magnificent stream,&mdash;penetrating,
-under the guidance of Lieutenant Garnier, into
-hitherto unexplored parts of Cambodia, and even
-into China itself.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">A FRENCH EXPEDITION.</div>
-
-<p>In 1866 the French Government determined on
-despatching an expedition to explore the upper
-valley of the great Cambodian river, and placed it
-in charge of M. de Lagrée, a captain in the French
-navy. M. Thorel, a surgeon, was attached to it as
-botanist; M. Delaporte, as artist; Dr. Joubert, as
-physician and geologist; and among the other members
-were Lieutenant Garnier, to whose record of
-the expedition we are about to be indebted, and
-M. de Carné. After a visit to Ongcor, the capital
-of the ancient kingdom of the Khmers, with those
-vast memorials of antiquity described so graphically
-by M. Mouhot, the expedition proceeded to ascend
-the great river, passing the busy villages of Compong
-Luong and Pnom Penh&mdash;the latter the residence
-of the king of Cambodia. Here they aban<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>doned
-the gun-brigs which had brought them from
-Saigon, and embarked themselves and their stores
-on board boats better fitted for river navigation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">BOATING ON THE MEKONG.</div>
-
-<p>These boats or canoes are manned, according to
-their size, by a crew of six to ten men. Each is
-armed with a long bamboo, one end of which terminates
-with an iron hook, the other with a small
-fork. The men take up their station on a small
-platform in the fore part of the boat, plant their
-bamboos against some projection on the river-bank,
-tree or stone, and then march towards the stern;
-returning afterwards on the opposite side to repeat
-the process. This strange kind of circular motion
-suffices to impel the boat at the rate of a man
-walking at full speed, when the boatmen are skilful
-at their work, and the river-bank is straight
-and well defined. The master’s attention is wholly
-occupied, meanwhile, in keeping the bow of the
-canoe in the direction of the current, or rather
-slightly headed towards the shore. It is obvious
-that such a mode of navigation is liable to many
-interruptions, and cannot be commended on the
-score of swiftness or convenience.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="SCENE_ON_THE_MEKONG"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t013h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t013.jpg" width="550" height="359" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SCENE ON THE MEKONG</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FORMIDABLE RAPIDS.</div>
-
-<p>On the 13th of July the canoes took their
-departure from Cratieh, and soon afterwards arrived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-at Sombor. They then effected the passage of the
-rapids of Sombor-Sombor&mdash;no great difficulty being
-experienced, owing to the rise of the waters. Beyond
-this point the broad bed of the great river was
-encumbered with a multitude of islands, low and
-green, while the banks were covered with magnificent
-forests. The voyagers noticed here some trees
-of great value&mdash;the yao; the ban-courg, the wood
-of which makes capital oars; and the lam-xe, which
-should be highly prized by the European cabinet-makers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A WEARY VOYAGE.</div>
-
-<p>On the 16th of July the voyagers again fell in
-with a series of formidable rapids. The sharp and
-clearly-defined shores of the islands which had
-hitherto enclosed the arm of the river they were
-navigating were suddenly effaced. The Cambodia
-was covered with innumerable clumps of trees, half
-under water; its muddy torrent rolled impetuously
-through a thousand canals, forming an inextricable
-labyrinth. Huge blocks of sandstone rose at intervals
-along the left bank, and indicated that strata
-of the same rock extended across the river-bed. At
-a considerable distance from the shore the poles of
-the boatmen found a depth of fully ten feet; and
-it was with extreme difficulty the canoes made way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-against the strong, fierce current, which in some
-confined channels attained a velocity of five miles
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Storms of wind and rain contributed to render
-the voyage more wearisome and the progress slower.
-It was no easy task at night to find a secure haven
-for the boats; and the sudden floods of the little
-streams at the mouth of which the voyagers sought
-shelter, several times subjected them to the risk of
-being carried away during their sleep, and cast all
-unexpectedly into the mid-current of the great river.
-They slept on board their boats, because the roof
-was some protection from the furious rains; but
-these soon soaked through the mats and leaves of
-which it was composed. The weather was warm,
-and thus these douche-baths were not wholly insupportable;
-and when the voyagers could not
-sleep, they found some consolation in admiring the
-fantastic illumination which the incessant lightnings
-kindled in the gloomy arcades of the forest, and in
-listening to the peals of thunder, repeated by a
-thousand echoes, and mingling with the hoarse
-continuous growl of the angry waters.</p>
-
-<p>Such are some of the features of the navigation
-of the lower part of the Cambodia. But our limits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-compel us to pass over several chapters of Lieutenant
-Garnier’s narrative, and to take it up after the
-voyagers had crossed the boundaries of Siam and
-Cambodia and entered Laos.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE LAOTIANS DESCRIBED.</div>
-
-
-<p>Lieutenant Garnier describes the Laotians as generally
-well made and robust. Their physiognomy,
-he says, is characterized by a singular combination
-of cunning and apathy, benevolence and timorousness.
-Their eyes are less regular, their cheeks less
-prominent, the nose straighter, than is the case
-with other peoples of Mongolian origin; and but for
-their much paler complexion, which closely approaches
-that of the Chinese, we should be tempted
-to credit them with a considerable admixture of
-Hindu blood. The male Laotian shaves his head,
-and, like the Siamese, preserves only a small tuft
-of very short hair on the summit.
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">LAOTIAN COSTUME.</span>
-
-He dresses himself
-tastefully, and can wear the finest stuffs with
-ease and dignity. He chooses always the liveliest
-colours; and the effect of a group of Laotians, with
-the brilliant hues of their costume set off by their
-copper-tinted skin, is very striking. The common
-people wear an exceedingly simple garb&mdash;the langouti,
-a piece of cotton stuff passed between the
-legs and around the waist. For those of higher<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-rank the langouti is of silk; and is frequently
-accompanied by a small vest buttoned over the
-chest, with very narrow sleeves, and another piece
-of silk folded round the waist as a girdle, or round
-the neck as a scarf. Head-gear and foot-gear are
-things little used in Laos; but the labourers and
-boatmen, when working or rowing under a burning
-sun, protect the head with an immense straw hat,
-almost flat, much like a parasol. Personages of high
-rank, when they are in “full dress,” wear a kind of
-slipper, which appears to inconvenience them greatly,
-and is thrown off at the earliest opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the Laotians tattoo themselves on the
-stomach or legs, though the practice is much more
-prevalent in the north than in the south. The
-Laotian women do not wear much more clothing
-than their husbands. The langouti, instead of being
-brought up between the legs, is fastened round the
-waist, and allowed to hang down like a short tight
-petticoat below the knees. Generally, a second
-piece of stuff is worn over the bosom, and thrown
-back across either the right or left shoulder. The
-hair, always of a splendid jetty blackness, is twisted
-up in a chignon on the top of the head, and kept
-in its place by a small strip of cotton or plaited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-straw, frequently embellished with a few flowers.
-Every woman ornaments her neck, arms, and legs
-with rings of gold, silver, or copper, sometimes
-heaped one upon another in considerable quantity.
-The very poor are content with belts of cotton or
-silk; to which, in the case of children, are suspended
-little amulets given by the priests as talismans
-against witchcraft or remedies against disease.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Strictly speaking, polygamy does not exist in
-Laos. Only the well-to-do indulge in the embarrassing
-luxury of more wives than one; and even
-with these a favoured individual is recognized as
-the lawful spouse.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">SLAVERY IN LAOS.</div>
-
-<p>Unhappily, slavery prevails, as it does in Siam
-and Cambodia. A debtor may be enslaved, by judicial
-confiscation; but the “peculiar institution” is
-chiefly recruited from the wild tribes in the eastern
-provinces. The slaves are employed in tilling the
-fields, and in domestic labours; they are treated
-with great kindness. They often live so intimately
-and so familiarly with their masters, that, but for
-their long hair and characteristic physiognomy, it
-would be difficult to distinguish them in the midst
-of a Laotian “interior.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Laotians are a slothful people, and, when not
-rich enough to own slaves, leave the best part of
-the day’s work to be done by the women, who not
-only perform the household labour, but pound the
-rice, till the fields, paddle the canoes. Hunting
-and fishing are almost the only occupations reserved
-for the stronger sex.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FISH-CATCHING PROCESSES.</div>
-
-<p>We have not space to describe all the engines
-employed for catching fish, which, next to rice, is
-the principal food of all the riverine populations of
-the Mekong valley, and is furnished by the great
-river in almost inexhaustible quantities. The most
-common are large tubes of bamboo and ratan,
-having one or more funnel-shaped necks, the edges
-of which prevent the fish from escaping after they
-have once entered. These apparatus are firmly
-attached, with their openings towards the current,
-to a tree on the river-bank, or, by means of some
-heavy stones, are completely submerged. Every
-second or third day their owner visits them, and
-empties them of their finny victims. The Laotians
-also make use of an ingenious system of floats,
-which support a row of hooks, and realize the European
-“fishing by line,” without the help of the
-fisherman. There are various other methods adopted,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-such as the net and the harpoon; and in the employment
-of all these the Laotians display considerable
-activity and address.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Let us now accompany our French voyagers in
-their further ascent of the river. As we have
-already hinted, its navigation is not without its
-inconveniences, and even its dangers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A SUDDEN STORM.</div>
-
-<p>One evening, for example, they dropped anchor
-at the mouth of a small stream which, in foam and
-spray, came tumbling down from the mountains of
-Cambodia. After supper they lay down to rest on
-the mats which covered the deck of their vessels.
-Black was the sky, hot and oppressive the air; all
-around were visible the portents of a coming storm.
-The distant roar of the hurricane failed, however, to
-disturb the sleepers, who were spent and overcome
-with the fatigues of the day. But at last they were
-wakened effectually by a “thunder-plump,” which
-quickly flooded their canoes, and drove them upon
-deck.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>In the midst of the elemental disorder, they
-became aware of a hoarse growling sound; the
-waters were violently agitated, and a great crest of
-foam rapidly advanced towards their feeble barks.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-In a few moments it was upon them. It swept
-clean over the voyagers and their canoes, and those
-of the latter which had been carelessly moored
-were borne down the rushing tide. At first an indescribable
-disorder prevailed; cries of distress rose in
-every direction; the canoes dashed violently against
-one another, or came into collision with uprooted
-trunks floating on the surface of the storm-tossed
-waters.
-
-<span class="sidenote">THE FLOOD SUBSIDES.</span>
-
-Fortunately, the danger was quickly over;
-and as every boat had contrived to grapple some
-branch or rock, the voyagers discovered at daybreak
-that, whatever injuries these had sustained, no lives
-had been lost. The furious gale they had heard in
-the distance had raised the waters some twelve feet
-during the night; but the inundation subsided as
-rapidly as it had risen.</p>
-
-<p>Under the shade of wide-branching trees, and
-closely hugging the shore, the expedition continued
-its voyage. The neighbouring forests were remarkable
-for their luxuriant vegetation; troops of apes
-and squirrels of various species gambolled among
-the mighty trees, among which rose conspicuous the
-superb yao, the king of these forests, the trunk of
-which shoots up, free from knot or bough, to a
-height of eighty or one hundred feet; and out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-which the Laotians hollow their piraguas. In the
-morning a wild beast now and then came down to
-the river to drink; and night was rendered hideous
-by the cries and trumpetings of deer, and tigers,
-and elephants.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE KHON CATARACT.</div>
-
-<p>At length the voyagers came within hearing of
-the tremendous roar of the Khon cataract. Their
-boatmen, brisker than on ordinary occasions, hauled
-or propelled their vessels through a very labyrinth
-of rocks, submerged trees, and prostrate trunks still
-clinging to earth by their many roots. They knew
-that their hard labour was nearly at an end, and
-that at Khon the expedition would dismiss them, as
-fresh boats would be required above the cataract.
-As for their homeward voyage, what was it? To
-ascend the river had been the work of a week; the
-swift current would bear them back in less than a
-day.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A PLAGUE OF LEECHES.</div>
-
-<p>The cataract of Khon is really a series of magnificent
-falls, of which one of the grandest is caused
-by the confluence of the Papheng. There, in the
-midst of rocks and grassy islets, an enormous sheet
-of water leaps headlong from a height of seventy
-feet, to fall back in floods of foam, again to descend<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-from crag to crag, and finally glide away beneath
-the dense vegetation of the forest. As the river at
-this point is about one thousand yards in width, the
-effect is singularly striking. But still more imposing
-is the Salaphe fall, which extends over a breadth
-of a mile and a half, at the very foot of the mountains.
-In order to examine it at leisure, Lieutenant
-Garnier engaged a Laotian to conduct him to an
-island lying just above it. Before starting, the
-guide made certain preparations, of which Garnier
-could not understand the necessity, in spite of the
-Laotian’s efforts to explain them. Rolling up about
-his waist the light langouti, he plastered his feet
-and legs with a composition of lime and areca juice.
-This precaution proved to be far from useless; for,
-on landing on the island, they found the soil covered
-with thousands of leeches, some no larger than
-needles, but others two inches and a half to three
-inches in length. On the approach of the strangers,
-they reared themselves erect upon each dead leaf
-and blade of grass; they leaped, so to speak, upon
-them from every side. The thick coating which
-the Laotian guide had so prudently assumed preserved
-him from their bites; but Garnier, in a few
-moments, was victimized by dozens of these blood-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>suckers,
-which crawled up his legs and bled him in
-spite of all his efforts. He found it impossible
-to get rid of his determined antagonists; for one
-leech which he tore off, two fresh assailants seized
-upon him. Glad was he when he caught sight of
-a tall tree. He made towards it, scaled its trunk,
-and, when out of reach of his foes, set to work to
-deliver himself from the creatures which were feasting
-at his expense. Throwing off his clothes, he
-removed the leeches one by one, though it was
-not without difficulty that he loosened their hold.
-Even his waistband had not arrested their march,
-for he found that one audacious persecutor had
-actually reached his chest.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A VIEW OF THE CATARACT.</div>
-
-<p>He felt more than repaid, however, for all his
-sufferings, when he arrived within sight of the
-cataract. With a breadth of two thousand yards,
-a prodigious mass of water came down in blinding
-foam, roaring like a furious sea when it breaks
-against an iron-bound coast. At another point, the
-flood was divided into eight or ten different cascades
-by as many projecting crags, richly clothed in leafage
-and vegetation. Beyond, nothing could be seen
-but one immense rapid,&mdash;a roaring, tumultuous
-deluge! The sandstone blocks and boulders which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-encumbered the river-bed were completely hidden
-by the whirl and eddy of the waves; and their
-position could be detected only by the foam on the
-surface, or the vapour floating wreath-like in the
-air. Further still, a few black points, a few ridges
-of rock, and a chain of small islets, stretched across
-to the opposite bank, which it was impossible to
-approach, and where, apparently, the cataract seemed
-to attain its greatest fury. Such was the great fall
-of Salaphe,&mdash;a scene of sublime grandeur, conveying
-the idea of everlasting strength and power.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">VISIT TO BASSAC.</div>
-
-<p>While preparing to continue their ascent of the
-river, Lieutenant Garnier and his companions
-visited Bassac, one of the most important towns in
-Laos. It is situated in the heart of the richest
-tropical scenery; and the members of the expedition
-found it impossible to ramble in any direction without
-coming upon some fresh and beautiful landscape,
-or some object of the highest interest. The
-mountains which surround Bassac are clothed to
-their very summits with vegetation; and down the
-shadowy glens which furrow their rugged sides
-sparkle bright, pure streams on their way to the
-all-absorbing Mekong. The people of Bassac are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-a mild and peaceable race, and they received the
-strangers with cordial hospitality. The time was
-spent most agreeably in paying and receiving visits;
-in excursions among the beautiful scenery of the
-neighbourhood, the choicest “bits” of which they
-transferred to their sketch-books; in studying the
-manners and customs of the inhabitants; and in
-essaying their skill as marksmen against the wild
-denizens of the forest.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">IN PURSUIT OF GAME</div>
-
-<p>The larger game are generally caught by the
-hunters of Bassac in nets or snares. The chase on
-a grand scale is almost unknown. In the forests,
-however, the hunters sometimes call in the elephant
-to their assistance; they are thus able to get close
-to the wished-for prey, as the latter do not take
-alarm at the approach of an animal so well known.
-Lieutenant Garnier tells us that he enjoyed his
-sport in a modest fashion. Sometimes he spent
-whole days in traversing the dried-up swamps, in the
-shade of dense masses of trees bound together inextricably
-by every kind of liana and parasite. To
-such places resort numerous companies of peacocks
-and wild fowl during the hot season; but their
-pursuit is always difficult, and frequently dangerous.
-Indeed, the Laotians cherish a belief that the tiger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-and the peacock are always found in the same
-localities.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="PEACOCK_HUNTING"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t029h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t029.jpg" width="550" height="374" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PEACOCK HUNTING.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">A MOUNTAIN EXCURSION.</div>
-
-<p>One evening, seated at the foot of a tamarisk-tree,
-the fruit of which a troop of squirrels was busily
-crunching among the branches overhead, Garnier and
-his comrade, Dr. Thorel, took counsel together; with
-the conclusion that, on the day following, they
-would undertake a mountain excursion, and boldly
-attempt to scale one of the most elevated peaks.
-Accordingly, at dawn they started, attended by their
-usual escort&mdash;a native, christened Luiz.</p>
-
-<p>With swift feet they crossed the rice-plantations
-and marshes that separated them from the foot of
-the mountains; and by a narrow winding track
-reached the bed of a dried-up torrent, where they
-halted for a brief rest. Thence, plunging into the
-forest, they slowly climbed the precipitous heights,
-occasionally confronted by a rugged steep, or an
-immense mass of rock that seemed likely to baffle
-all their aspirations, but was eventually conquered
-by combined skill and resolution. The forest soon
-changed its character; the rarefaction of the air forced
-itself upon their notice; the daring adventurers rose
-above the clouds and vapours of the plain. On<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-arriving at a narrow ledge of table-land they halted
-for breakfast. The first requisite was fresh water;
-rare enough at that season of the year, and at such
-a height! Close beside them, however, was the
-channel of a spent burn; and a careful search
-among the rocks revealed to them a pool, sheltered
-from wind and sun, brimming with crystal water,&mdash;and
-tenanted, moreover, by some mountain-eels,
-small but delicious. The pool being very shallow,
-a supply of the eels was soon obtained.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DETAILS OF THE ASCENT.</div>
-
-<p>It did not take long to kindle a fire. The eels
-were dexterously grilled; and a savoury and substantial
-repast concluded with a dessert of wild
-bananas. Refreshed and invigorated, the mountain-climbers
-resumed their enterprise; and along a
-narrow crest, so narrow that two persons could not
-walk abreast, made their way through a labyrinth
-of vegetation. With watchful eye, and hand on
-trigger, they advanced. Suddenly a strayed peacock
-flew in front of them; but as their position
-was unfavourable for taking aim, they allowed it to
-pass by. They reached at last a kind of natural
-staircase, the ascent of which was rendered inconvenient
-by the showers of pebbles, loosened by their
-feet, which rolled to right and left over the preci<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>pice.
-All at once further progress apparently was
-rendered impossible by a mass of withered brushwood;
-which, on examination, proved to be the den,
-happily deserted, of a wild boar.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A SPLENDID PANORAMA.</div>
-
-<p>Beyond this point the crest or ridge grew sharper
-and sharper; the shattered and accumulated rocks
-were held together only by the lianas which close-clasped
-them; and the adventurers were forced to
-crawl on their hands and knees, holding on by
-plant or crag. At length the brave effort was
-crowned with success. They gained the mountain-top,
-and enjoyed a panorama of wonderful beauty,
-in which peaks and forests blended their various
-hues, and wide green plains expanded in the golden
-sunshine, and the pagodas of Bassac rose like island-pinnacles
-out of a sea of verdure. The glorious
-picture, in all its variety of form and glow of
-colouring, was one on which the eye of man had
-never before rested; it was a picture of abounding
-fertility as well as of beauty and grandeur, and
-suggested the idea of almost inexhaustible resources,
-which in some future time may be developed by
-the enterprise and civilization of the West.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 519px;">
-<a id="MOUNTAIN-PEAK_NEAR_BASSAC"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t033h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t033.jpg" width="519" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MOUNTAIN-PEAK NEAR BASSAC.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">RETURN TO BASSAC.</div>
-
-<p>In the course of their descent the explorers
-gained a broken ridge of rock, overshadowed by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-branches of a stately tree, the roots of which clung
-round the weather-worn stones, and seemed to hold
-them together. At their approach, a swarm&mdash;we
-might almost say a cloud&mdash;of green pigeons whirled
-and fluttered out of the depths of the green foliage;
-returning to their resting-places after a few aerial
-evolutions. The ground beneath was strewn with
-small fruit, to which the pigeons are extremely
-partial; and showers continually fell about the explorers’
-heads, loosened by the movement of the restless
-birds. With a little patience, they brought down
-half a dozen of the feathered spoilers; and then,
-through the forest shadows and down the mountain-declivities,
-they pursued their homeward march.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The following evening, Garnier and Dr. Thorel
-were invited to join a young Laotian in his walk.
-The latter led them across a pleasant breadth of
-garden-ground to an open space, strewn here and
-there with ashes and the refuse of wood-fires. Behind
-a clump of tall bamboos, some fifty spectators,
-seated in an oval ring, surrounded a couple of
-wrestlers, and displayed a lively interest in the
-various phases of their strife. At a few paces distant,
-three men were engaged in rekindling a fire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-which had died out for lack of fuel. Some bonzes,
-or priests, clothed in full long robes of yellow stuff,
-were viewing the spectacle from afar, or wending
-their way towards the neighbouring pagoda. Two
-or three women crouched on the ground, amidst
-baskets of fruit and large earthen vessels full of
-rice-wine, intended as refreshment for the spectators
-or the heated athletes.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LAOTIAN ATHLETES.</div>
-
-<p>Among the bystanders was conspicuous a Laotian,
-attired in a langouti, and silken vest of dazzling
-colours, and sheltered by a parasol held over
-his head by a boy standing in the rear, who
-warmly encouraged one of the combatants, while a
-portion of the assembly evidently backed his antagonist.
-The struggle was protracted. Betting
-took place vigorously, and considerable sums were
-wagered on both sides. The white men seated
-themselves apart, in order to study in all its details
-a scene so full of animation. It was impossible not
-to admire the suppleness of the two athletes,&mdash;robust
-young men, trained to the combat from their very
-infancy; impossible not to take an interest in the
-skill and agility with which they eluded or endeavoured
-to surprise one another. Sometimes
-they paused, face to face, and regarded each other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-with fixed gaze, slightly curving their loins or shoulders;
-a moment, and they leaped from end to end
-of the arena, assuming theatrical attitudes&mdash;and,
-when occasion offered, dealing a vigorous blow of
-the fist which reddened the sun-bronzed skin.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="FUNERAL_CEREMONY_OF_THE_LAOTIANS"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t037h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t037.jpg" width="550" height="371" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>FUNERAL CEREMONY OF THE LAOTIANS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A STRANGE FUNERAL CEREMONY.</div>
-
-<p>Their Laotian friend informed our travellers that
-they were witnessing nothing less than a funeral
-ceremony! In Laos, cremation is the universal
-custom; and the mortuary rites of a Laotian of
-rank generally terminate with a gladiatorial combat,
-at the conclusion and on the very site of the process
-of cremation.</p>
-
-<p>The national rule is, that the corpse of a Laotian
-mandarin shall be preserved for several days in its
-shroud within the proper mortuary-hut. Friends
-and kinsmen assemble therein, and console themselves
-as best they may with abundant eating and
-drinking; a custom which prevails elsewhere than in
-Laos! It does not appear that the Laotians regard
-death with any particular apprehension. Their
-special anxiety is to prevent the evil spirits from
-obtaining possession of the souls of the dead, and
-playing them malignant tricks. During the day
-these spirits will not attempt anything; but at
-night they gain courage, and to shelter the deceased<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-from their manœuvres seems to be no easy task.
-However, by means of numerous prayers, and more
-particularly by keeping up a tremendous clamour,
-it is generally possible, the Laotians believe, to avert
-their disastrous influence.</p>
-
-<p>For this purpose all the bonzes of the neighbourhood
-are summoned; and taking up positions around
-the bier, they chant aloud their invocations. By
-day, and especially by night, the family assist them
-in keeping watch. The women decorate the coffin
-with floral offerings, as well as with ornaments of
-wax intended to facilitate combustion. The men,
-armed with gongs, tomtoms, and any other instrument
-they can seize upon, accompany, as noisily as
-possible, the chants of the bonzes. “Harmony” is
-not the object aimed at; but to secure the maximum
-of noise.</p>
-
-<p>When the day appointed for the final ceremony
-arrives, the uproar is redoubled at early morn, as a
-signal to the friends and relatives of the departed,
-who make their appearance in full costume.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FUNERAL PROCESSION.</div>
-
-<p>A procession is then arranged for the purpose of
-carrying the corpse to the place of burning. The
-bonzes lead the way, the seniors coming last. Then
-follows the coffin, supported on the shoulders of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-dozen young men, and surmounted by a kind of
-bamboo canopy, embellished with flowers and foliage,
-and destined, like the coffin, to be consumed on
-the funeral pyre. The men march next, with the
-wealthiest and most influential of the kinsmen of
-the deceased at their head. The rear is brought up
-by the women and children, carrying long bamboos
-ornamented with banderoles of various colours, which
-are planted in the ground during the process of
-cremation.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FUNERAL PYRE.</div>
-
-<p>The pile is reared at one extremity of the burial-ground,
-where bamboo poles and the trunks of aged
-palms have been linked together with long lianas to
-form a kind of aerial barrier against the invasion of
-the evil spirits. It is composed of pieces of wood
-of equal length, carefully arranged in intercrossed
-layers, and it rises to the height of a man’s shoulders,
-so that the bearers, passing half to one side and half
-to the other, can deposit the coffin without effort.
-The men gather round in a circle; the women stand
-a little in the rear. The bonzes recite their prayers,
-and receive once more the offerings which the relatives
-of the deceased never fail to bring for them
-and their pagoda; after which the chief priest
-mounts the pile, and standing erect, with hands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-extended over the coffin, pronounces with a loud
-voice a concluding prayer.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PROCESS OF CREMATION.</div>
-
-<p>As soon as he has descended, the attendants set
-fire to the resinous materials placed under the pile.
-A dazzling jet of flame shoots aloft, and soon envelopes
-the coffin. The ornaments are consumed in
-quick succession; the pile breaks down in a mass
-of flame and smoke; and into the midst falls the
-corpse, released from the charred and burning coffin.
-Yet, painful as this spectacle seems, no native exhibits
-the slightest emotion. The work of combustion
-is allowed to complete itself, and no one
-touches the ashes of humanity throughout the day.
-The women depart, while the men follow the president
-of the ceremonies to be present at the gladiatorial
-show in honour of the deceased which we
-have already described.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="CORONATION_OF_THE_KING_OF_OUBON"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t045h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t045.jpg" width="550" height="360" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CORONATION OF THE KING OF OUBON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CORONATION OF THE KING.</div>
-
-<p>The voyagers next made their way to Oubon,
-where they arrived in time to witness the coronation
-of the king. The chief of every village, and
-the leading men of every province, and indeed all
-the inhabitants, had been invited to “assist” in
-the ceremony. On the morning of the appointed
-day, the strangers were deafened by an uproar of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-drums and gongs and other unmusical instruments.
-The noisy orchestra surrounded the palace; while
-the royal procession wound through the streets of
-Oubon, and defiled into its square or market-place.
-Mounted upon an elephant of great size, which was
-armed with a pair of formidable tusks, the king
-made his appearance, encircled by guards on foot
-and on horseback, and attended by his great dignitaries
-mounted like himself. A train of smaller elephants
-followed, carrying the court ladies. The
-<i>cortége</i> finally directed its course to some spacious
-pavilions erected for the purpose, where the bonzes
-of the royal pagoda were offering up their prayers.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes passed, and another tableau was
-presented. The king was seen enthroned in the
-largest pavilion. He arose, and, escorted by his
-principal officers, advanced into the middle of a wide
-platform, where the bonzes, still uttering their
-prayers, gathered about him. He threw off his
-clothes, replacing them by a mantle of white cloth.
-Then the bonzes drew apart, so as to open up a
-passage for him; and he proceeded to place himself,
-with his body bent into a curve, immediately
-underneath the sacred dragon. Prayers were recommenced,
-and the king received the anointing or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-consecrating <i>douche</i>; while a dignitary who stood at
-one corner of the dais set free a couple of turtle-doves,
-as a sign that all creation, down even to the
-animals, should be happy on so auspicious a day.</p>
-
-<p>When the water which was contained in the
-dragon’s body had completely douched the royal
-person, new garments were brought, over which was
-thrown a large white robe; and he returned to his
-place in the centre of the hall. A grand banquet of
-rice, and cucumbers, and eggs, and pork, and delicious
-bananas, washed down by copious draughts of
-rice-wine, concluded the day’s proceedings; and in
-the evening the town was lighted up with fireworks,
-while bands of singers and musicians traversed the
-streets.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE VOYAGE RESUMED.</div>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Garnier, after a brief rest, resumed his
-exploration of the Mekong, passing through scenery
-which previously no European had visited. At
-night he and his companions halted at the most
-convenient spot, lighted a fire, cooked their meal of
-rice, and took their rest under the curtain of a
-starry sky, or beneath such shelter as they could
-hastily run up. Fatigue assisted them to a speedy
-slumber; yet their repose was often disturbed by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-the cries of the wild elephants which, in large numbers,
-roamed among the hills on the other side of the
-river, or by the roar of some tiger prowling along
-the bank. During the day their attention was
-sometimes diverted from the contemplation of the
-strange and picturesque scenery which surrounded
-them, by the necessity of piloting their boat through
-the rapids and whirlpools that obstruct the navigation
-of the river.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MOUNTAINS OF LAKON.</div>
-
-<p>In this way they proceeded to Kemarat and Pennom;
-and, across an immense plain, remarkable for
-its fertility, followed the course of the river, which
-runs due north and south, broadening into a lake
-of such dimensions that its boundaries cannot be
-detected by the naked eye. One morning, as the
-mists cleared off, they were surprised at the appearance,
-on the northern horizon, of dim azure forms,
-resembling the deception of the mirage, or clouds of
-fantastic outline, or rather a mass of medieval ruins,
-with lofty towers and pinnacles, and shattered ramparts.
-The natives informed them that these were
-the mountains of Lakon, at the foot of which they
-would arrive on the following day. They found it
-difficult to believe in the existence of such mountains,
-the configuration of which grew stranger and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-more fantastic as they drew nearer to them; sometimes
-exhibiting sheer precipitous declivities, sometimes
-overhanging masses, while sometimes each
-summit appeared cloven into deep and shadowy
-chasms. These enormous rocks of marble of different
-tints have been heaped up in awful confusion
-by some convulsion of the terrestrial crust;
-and forced, by an inconceivable subterranean effort,
-through the sandstone formation which underlies
-the superficial strata of the country.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT LAKON.</div>
-
-<p>Round the projecting angle of the mountain-mass
-the river lightly sweeps; and then its broad waters
-reflect the huts and pagodas of the important town
-of Lakon. The bank was lined with the barks of
-traders and fishers; ample nets, suspended to rows
-of bamboos, dried in the open air. Sheds erected
-for the convenience of voyagers, piles of wood and
-merchandise, and loaded rafts, gave an air of animation
-and activity to the approaches to the town.
-Our voyagers, well pleased to regain the society of
-their kind, made haste to unload their boats, while
-native porters carried their luggage to the house set
-apart for their accommodation: it stood on the margin
-of the river, overshadowed by the branches of a
-huge mango-tree. Here, as soon as the work was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-done, they stretched themselves on the floor, postponing
-until the morrow their exploration of the
-town.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A GLANCE AT THE TOWN.</div>
-
-<p>At daybreak they were aroused by the noisy
-gong of a neighbouring pagoda. Already the river-bank
-and the town showed signs of life and movement.
-Curious faces were gathered round the
-strangers’ hut. A large bag of rice, fruit, fish, and
-some buffalo-steaks dried in the sun, arrived, sent
-by the mandarin provisionally intrusted with the
-charge of supplying their wants. The fresh genial
-morning tempted them forth, and they went from
-end to end of the town, which seemed both wealthy
-and populous. The pagodas were numerous, the
-huts well-constructed, the gardens green and admirably
-kept. The inhabitants appeared free and happy.
-Behind the town, in an open space on the border of
-the rice-fields, some bands of travellers lay encamped
-under roofs of interwoven foliage. The principal
-street, which ran along the river-bank, was shaded
-everywhere by the trees and creepers of the gay
-gardens that skirted its entire course. It made a
-pleasant promenade, as through each opening in the
-rich glossy foliage could be seen the white sands of
-the shore, the calm crystal river, the forest thickly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-crowding the opposite bank, and, beyond, the long
-line of the marble mountains.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 531px;">
-<a id="ANNAMITES_AT_LAKON"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t051h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t051.jpg" width="531" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ANNAMITES AT LAKON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AN ANNAMITE SETTLEMENT.</div>
-
-<p>After this excursion, our voyagers returned to
-their hut, which they found an object of attraction
-to all the curiosity-mongers of Lakon. The most
-distinguished ladies of the town had assembled to
-see the strangers, and offer in exchange for European
-ornaments their richest fruits and freshest
-vegetables. If Garnier and his companions were
-surprised at their appearance, they were still more
-surprised to find in the crowd a group of twenty
-Annamites, who had emigrated from the French
-colony of Cochin-China, and had been established
-at Lakon for some years. As Garnier’s escort was
-also composed of Annamites, the scene between the
-compatriots thus singularly brought together was
-one of unbounded ecstasy. Garnier went on a visit
-to the little Annamite settlement, which repeated in
-every detail the villages of Cochin-China. In each
-hut was to be seen the tiny domestic altar, with its
-lights, and incense, and small statue of Buddha, and
-broad bands of red paper, inscribed with Chinese
-characters and symbolical designs. There, too, were
-the large central table, a mother-of-pearl <i>plateau</i>, a
-complete “tea-equipage” (to use the late Lord Lyt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>ton’s
-phrase), and a bed surrounded by mosquito-curtains.
-And no less conspicuous was that want of
-cleanliness, both in dwelling and person, which characterize
-the natives of Cochin-China.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MARBLE MOUNTAINS.</div>
-
-<p>We cannot describe all the objects of interest at
-Lakon, or all the excursions which Garnier made in
-its neighbourhood. The geologist and botanist of
-the expedition adventured a visit to the Marble
-Mountains. With a guide and a couple of elephants,
-they crossed the river, plunged into the forest-depths,
-and found their way to the quarries, where blocks
-of marble are excavated for the purpose of being
-made into lime of a dazzling whiteness. Then they
-penetrated into the grottoes and caverns with which
-the mountains abound. As they advanced, the
-scenery became more and more picturesque, and
-more and more savage: high rugged peaks rose
-above the forest trees; bushes and lianas and parasitical
-plants decked with festoons every rocky projection;
-here yawned a gloomy chasm, there towered
-aloft a mighty and awful precipice. But the scene
-of scenes burst upon them after they had threaded
-a gloomy maze of trees and intertangled bamboos.
-Two immense walls of sombre rock, several hundred
-yards in height, enclosed a broad ravine, which, at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-the further extremity, opened on a bare and shining
-plain. On the left, the wall extended to a great
-distance, forming a long line, decreasing in elevation
-through the natural effect of the perspective. That
-on the right towered above a pile of enormous rocks,
-heaped together in the wildest confusion; it seemed
-to turn like the enceinte of a strong fortification,
-and was terminated abruptly by a vertical line,
-broken by numerous gaps. Between these lofty
-barriers lay a barren plain; afar, some miniature
-pools glittered with a magical effect in the “pale
-moonlight.” The prospect was closed in the distance
-by the steep declivities of lofty mountains,
-surrounding and shutting up, as it were, this gigantic
-“cirque” or amphitheatre. About three hundred
-yards from the entrance rose two vertical rocks, like
-a couple of slender spires, or rather like two enormous
-tapers&mdash;rose to a prodigious height, isolated,
-and emerging from a clump of luxuriant verdure
-which flourished at their feet. One of these rocks
-was fully nine hundred feet in elevation. The other
-was not so lofty, and seemed to have partially fallen,
-the ground being everywhere strewn with its wreck.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 541px;">
-<a id="NATURAL_PILLAR"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t055h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t055.jpg" width="541" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>NATURAL PILLAR IN THE MOUNTAINS OF LAKON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From this remarkable spectacle the French <i>savants</i>
-proceeded to inspect a superb grotto excavated in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-great wall of cliff, near the two pillar-like masses.
-By climbing some rocks they obtained an entry into
-it, and found it to form a spacious hall, varying
-from forty to eighty feet in height, of great depth,
-with a rounded, vaulted roof. The ground was
-thick with stalagmites; while stalactites of the most
-various shapes depended from the vault, and glittered,
-like so many mirrors, in the light of torches.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">PALM-WINE.</div>
-
-<p>A day or two afterwards, Garnier and his friends,
-in returning from a walk in the environs of Lakon,
-encountered some Laotians carrying vessels of bamboo,
-filled with a liquid which at first they supposed
-to be water. On tasting it, however, they discovered
-that it was the wine of the country; sweet-flavoured,
-and by no means disagreeable to the
-palate; not unlike, indeed, the product of some of
-the Rhenish vineyards. It was palm-wine, freshly
-made; and to enjoy its <i>bouquet</i> and full flavour it
-should be drunk in this condition, for it will not
-keep more than four-and-twenty hours without fermentation.
-The Laotians offered to conduct the
-strangers to a neighbouring plantation, where they
-might observe the different processes of its manufacture.
-The offer was accepted, and the party soon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-arrived at a clearing which was thickly planted
-with great borassus palms.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">HOW THE WINE IS COLLECTED.</span>
-
-To collect the wine,&mdash;which
-is, in fact, the sap of the tree,&mdash;nothing more
-is necessary than to make an incision in the middle
-of the head of the tree, at the point where the leaves
-branch off, and suspend beneath a bamboo, into which
-the sap falls, drop by drop. In order to reach the
-summit of these huge palms, which are straight and
-smooth as the main-mast of a ship, the Laotians have
-invented a simple and ingenious process. They
-transform the palm into a veritable ladder, by attaching
-to the trunk, with small strips of flexible ratan,
-projecting laths of bamboo, which, jutting out to
-right and left at intervals of twelve to fourteen
-inches, form so many “rungs,” and enable the ascent
-of the tree to be rapidly and easily accomplished.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 505px;">
-<a id="TAPPING_THE_BORASSUS_PALM"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t059h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t059.jpg" width="505" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>TAPPING THE BORASSUS PALM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">A RUINED CITY.</div>
-
-<p>But we must no longer tarry at Lakon. We
-must once more launch the boats of our adventurous
-voyagers, and continue our exploration of the great
-river. It waters a populous country, and large
-towns are of frequent occurrence on its banks. We
-pass Hoûten, with its pagodas, its mountains, and
-green woods; Saniabury, with its rude pottery-manufacture;
-verdurous islands and shining sand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>banks;
-and the mouths of the many streams which
-help to swell the abundant volume of the Mekong.
-From Saniabury the French expedition proceeded to
-Bouncang, a large and beautiful village at the mouth
-of the Nam San; thence to Nong Kay, where a
-Buddhist tat or pyramidal landmark, erected to indicate
-a sacred spot, or to enshrine a relic, has been
-washed away from the shore, and now lies half submerged,
-like a wrecked ship; and thence to Vien
-Chan, where the river widens into a channel of a
-thousand yards in width, before it enters the mountain
-region. Vien Chan, now a heap of ruins, was
-the former metropolis of the kingdom of Laos;
-and relics of antiquity spread over a considerable
-area testify to its ancient prosperity and splendour.
-The remains of the royal palace are interesting. It
-does not seem to have been built of very durable
-materials, the walls and staircases being faced with,
-and the pavement and flooring composed of, bricks,
-wood, or a kind of cement; but the entire structure
-still exhibits a certain elegance of character,
-and a remarkable wealth of decoration&mdash;the columns
-of wood have been tastefully carved and profusely
-gilded; and the whole is embellished with mouldings,
-and arabesques, and fantastic animal-figures.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="BUDDHIST_TAT_AT_NONG_KAY"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t063h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t063.jpg" width="550" height="354" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BUDDHIST TAT AT NONG KAY.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The absolute silence reigning within the precincts
-of a city formerly so rich and populous, was, however,
-much more impressive than any of its monuments;
-more impressive even than the deserted
-topes or Buddhist temples which raised their domes
-in the shadow of the surrounding forest.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BUDDHIST TEMPLES.</div>
-
-<p>These, abandoned by their priests, and constructed
-of the same materials as the palace, are
-rapidly decaying. The rapid vegetation of the
-tropics, which softens happily the pitiful aspect of
-Desolation with its flowers and verdure, lends to these
-ruined sanctuaries, at a distance, a delusive air of
-age; tall grasses grow everywhere about the sacred
-precincts, creepers and parasites twine round each
-column, and vigorous trees force their crests through
-the shattered roofs in search of light.</p>
-
-<p>The most considerable temple is Wat Pha Keo,
-the royal pagoda. Its timber façade, delicately
-wrought, and sparkling with those plates of glass
-which the Laotians and the Siamese cunningly
-mingle with their gilding in order to produce a
-greater effect of brilliancy, shines forth in the midst
-of the forest, gracefully framed with blooming lianas,
-and profusely garlanded with foliage. Gold has
-been unsparingly lavished on the sides of the square<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-columns which supported the half-shattered roof;
-and a Byzantine style of decoration, very remarkable
-in effect, has at one time covered every inch of
-space. Though this mode of ornamentation is by
-no means lasting, it is very charming; and the
-numerous pagodas in Vien Chan thus embellished
-produced, at a distance, a wonderful impression of
-dazzling magnificence.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">WAT SISAKET.</div>
-
-<p>To the north, in the midst of the forest, is situated
-a smaller pagoda, which has undergone but
-little dilapidation,&mdash;that of Wat Sisaket. In its
-interior a number of small statues of Buddha are
-enshrined in gilded niches, which cover the wall
-from floor to ceiling, rivalling the terraces of Boro
-Bodor, the celebrated Buddhist monument of Java.
-Before the altar was elevated a candelabrum, remarkable
-for its originality of design and exquisite finish
-of workmanship. A few paces distant from the
-pagoda was situated the library, an indispensable
-appendage of all the temples of Laos; it was partly
-destroyed. As no native was near, the French
-explorers clambered up the worm-eaten pillars which
-supported and isolated from the soil the flooring of
-this literary tabernacle: in the interior some sacred
-books were scattered about; they were composed of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-long narrow strips cut from the leaves of a particular
-species of palm, gilded on the edges, and stitched
-together in books. Each contained seven or eight
-lines of that rounded writing peculiar to the peoples
-of the Indo-Chinese peninsula; which differs, as is
-recognized at the first glance, from the writing of
-India properly so-called, though derived from it.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A BUDDHIST MONASTERY.</span>
-
-
-Finally, attached directly to the pagoda, the
-travellers found a rectangular gallery, opening
-internally on a court,&mdash;its walls covered, like those
-of the temple itself, with small niches containing
-Buddha statues. This was the vihara (<i>chon-khon</i>
-in Laotian), or monastery, which served as the residence
-of the priests ministering in Wat Sisaket.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 539px;">
-<a id="MONASTERY_OF_WAT_SISAKET"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t067h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t067.jpg" width="539" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MONASTERY OF WAT SISAKET.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">A DANGEROUS PASS.</div>
-
-<p>Some miles above Vien Chan, the Mekong enters
-a narrow valley, which is sharply defined and enclosed
-by two ranges of high hills. Its waters, hitherto
-majestic and tranquil, which had peacefully unfolded
-silver coil after coil over the vast plateau of central
-Laos, now accelerated their course, and tumbled and
-eddied among the rocks, ever restless and ever noisy.
-The noble river, which had previously measured its
-breadth by thousands of yards, now shut up within
-two barriers of constantly-increasing elevation, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-now contained in a channel which rarely attained
-to five or six hundred yards in width, and from
-which it was no more to escape. In dry seasons it
-occupied only a small portion of this space, and it
-had presented a rugged and broken surface of rock;
-a grand mosaic, where fragments mingled of all
-the metamorphic formations&mdash;marbles, schists, serpentines,
-even jades,&mdash;curiously coloured, and sometimes
-admirably polished.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="PASSAGE_OF_A_RAPID"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t071h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t071.jpg" width="550" height="355" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PASSAGE OF A RAPID.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As the travellers advanced the river grew narrower,
-and, with a width of three hundred yards
-and a depth of twenty-five fathoms, flowed through
-a wild and wooded valley, uninhabited except by
-the animals of the forest. They passed the mouth
-of the Nam Thon; after which they came upon a
-dangerous series of rapids, where the foaming waters,
-hurled and driven from side to side, and swung
-round projecting rocks, and driven against the foot of
-precipitous banks, rushed downwards tumultuously,
-with all the clang and clash of billows breaking
-against a reef. To thread this water-labyrinth, it
-was necessary to obtain the assistance of a pilot
-from a neighbouring village; and even he was unwilling
-to promise that the boats of the expedition,
-light and small as they were, could be carried up to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-the next Muong, that of Xieng Cang. The boats,
-however, were unloaded, and the stores transferred
-to the shoulders of sturdy natives, who bore them
-along the rocks; while others towed the boats with
-many a lusty pull through the whirl and foam of
-the rapids. But so laborious and so difficult was
-the task, that two whole days were spent in effecting
-the passage of a few miles.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AT MUONG MAI.</div>
-
-<p>At length they reached Xieng Cang, or, as it is
-also called, Muong Mai, the “new Muong,” which
-is one of the most important centres of population
-on the left bank of the Mekong. The river here
-broadens considerably, and its waters are as peaceful
-as those of a woodland pool. Opposite to the town
-rises a beautiful chain of green mountains, in a series
-of gently-sloping terraces; and these are intersected
-by delightful Eden-valleys, finely wooded, enamelled
-with flowers, and brightened by the silver thread of
-a little brook. The village, or town, is well built;
-the houses are very lofty; and the inhabitants are
-employed, according to the season, in the manufacture
-of cotton and the cultivation of rice. The
-principal pagoda, situated on the threshold of the
-rice-fields, near a grove of graceful corypha palms,
-is richly ornamented in the interior, and, among<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-other curiosities, contains an ancient carved <i>porte-cierges</i>
-of wood.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A CENTRE OF TRADE.</span>
-
-At the time of Garnier’s visit,
-some Birman traders had displayed the contents of
-their packs on the steps of the temple, and were
-selling to the natives their bright-coloured cotton
-stuffs and English hardware. A road having been
-made westward from Hoûten, Muong Mai is only a
-hundred leagues from Moulmein, which lies in nearly
-the same latitude, and is, as the reader knows, an
-English colony, and a busy commercial port, at the
-mouth of the Saluen. From this point spread
-over the interior of Laos the Peguans, or Birmans
-of the British possessions, whose knowledge of the
-wares most readily purchased by European merchants,
-and the high price at which they sell to the
-natives their English goods, enable them to accumulate
-considerable wealth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 530px;">
-<a id="RICE-FIELD_AND_PAGODA_AT_MUONG_MAI"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t075h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t075.jpg" width="530" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>RICE-FIELD AND PAGODA AT MUONG MAI.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT PAK LAY.</div>
-
-<p>Resuming their northward route, and bent upon
-tracing the river up to its mountain-source, they
-passed through a fertile and picturesque country,
-which has been made known to the Western nations
-by the enterprise of the traveller Mouhot. Leaving
-behind them the mouth of the Nam Lim, and
-diverging somewhat to the west, then again to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-north, the voyagers arrived in the neighbourhood of
-Pak Lay, where they fell in with a M. Duyshart,
-a Hollander in the service of the king of Siam,
-and employed by him in a series of geographical
-researches, who was descending the river to Bangkok.
-They exchanged scientific notes, and it appeared
-that Duyshart had surveyed the course of the Cambodia
-or Mekong for one hundred and twenty miles
-above Luang Prabang.</p>
-
-<p>A few hours after this interesting rencontre, the
-French expedition crossed the boundary-line of the
-kingdom of Luang Prabang, and reached the extremity
-of the great rapid of Keng Sao. Successfully steering
-their course through its rocks and islets, they
-arrived at Pak Lay, a romantically-situated village,
-buried in the deep shadows of the primeval forest.
-To the north of the village, and almost hidden by
-the trees, is situated a small pagoda, entirely deficient
-in the accessory buildings which usually surround
-a temple at Laos, but better placed for the purpose
-of assisting the self-absorption of its priests and
-votaries.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="PAGODA_AT_PAK_LAY"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t079h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t079.jpg" width="550" height="372" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>PAGODA AT PAK LAY.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As the voyagers proceeded up the river, they
-now began to notice a gradual change in the char<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>acter
-alike of the inhabitants and the vegetation.
-The calcareous mountains which dominated over the
-river-valley assumed the most irregular and fantastic
-forms, and forced it into a constant succession
-of broken curves and sharp angular turns. At
-times a mass of marble suddenly projected its high
-precipitous cliffs, which the river bathed with waters
-sometimes foaming, sometimes tranquil.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FISHING-STATIONS.</div>
-
-<p>The Mekong was not at its full height at the
-time our voyagers ascended it: a great part of its
-bed lay bare; and a person, on landing, before he
-could reach the bank had to traverse wide spans
-rugged with rocks. Here and there spread immense
-sandbanks, on which were erected large fishing-stations&mdash;veritable
-towns of bamboo&mdash;already abandoned
-by the fishermen in anticipation of the quick-coming
-rise of the waters.</p>
-
-<p>For three days the expedition continued its course.
-Not a single hut was visible anywhere. The only
-incidents of their voyage were the rapids, which
-occurred at intervals of three or four miles. These,
-for the most part, were formed by the shingle and
-rocks accumulated at their mouth by the numerous
-streamlets which the river here receives. By dint
-of vigorous exertions, the native boatmen “poled”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-their light barks through each swift current. At
-times the scene was illuminated by the arrowy
-flashes of a storm-swept sky; and peals of thunder,
-resounding among the mountains in multitudinous
-reverberations, mingled with the roar of the waters.
-Hail frequently fell in heavy showers during these
-gales, which lasted usually about half an hour, and
-abruptly lowered the temperature four or five
-degrees.</p>
-
-<p>The river’s course was remarkably direct, and lay
-almost due north. At certain points it completely
-filled its bed; its breadth was then reduced to about
-one hundred and fifty yards; and the hills which
-bordered it were of so regular an appearance that
-the stream assumed all the features of an artificial
-canal. A series of miniature cascades flashed their
-silver spray in all directions, as they descended the
-verdurous slopes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">MODERN CAPITAL OF LAOS.</div>
-
-<p>Luang Prabang, at which our voyagers in due
-course arrived, is the modern capital of Laos. It is
-picturesque and pleasant to the view, and enjoys the
-advantage of a favourable situation. Its houses are
-very numerous, and are arranged in parallel lines
-around a small central hillock, which, like a dome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-of verdure, rises above the mass of gray thatched
-roofs. On the summit a tat or dagoba elevates its
-sharp arrowy pinnacle above a belt of trees, so as to
-form a landmark for all the surrounding country.
-Upon the terraced declivities of this quasi-sacred
-eminence are situated several pagodas, the red roofs
-of which are vividly defined against the sombre
-green vegetation.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A PICTURESQUE SCENE.</span>
-
-At the foot of the cliffs, which
-are about fifty feet high, stretches a row of permanent
-rafts, on which numerous huts are erected, composing
-beneath the town a kind of second town or
-river-suburb, connected with the capital itself by
-zigzag paths, shining like white ribbons in the distance.
-Hundreds of boats of all sizes move rapidly
-along this floating city; while large and heavy rafts,
-coming down from the upper waters of the river,
-seek a convenient nook for mooring and unloading
-their cargoes. At the foot of the cliffs a crowd of
-boatmen and porters hurry to and fro; and the hum
-of voices mingles confusedly with the murmur of
-the stream, and the whisper of the palm-trees which
-wave their feathery crests upon its smiling and fertile
-banks.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">UP THE RIVER.</div>
-
-<p>After a brief sojourn at this interesting and lively
-city, the French voyagers, animated by their desire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-to open up a new channel of commercial enterprise,
-and discover a practicable route from Cambodia to
-China, resumed their ascent of the Mekong. They
-found that, above Luang Prabang, it narrowed considerably,
-and resumed its wild and romantic aspect.
-The mountains on either hand exhibited a succession
-of bold, dark, cloven crests; their lowest terraces,
-impending over the river-banks, being frequently
-ornamented by a pyramid, the tomb of a pious bonze
-or the shrine of an imaginary relic, the slender form
-of which harmonized well with the character of the
-landscape.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="BAMBOO_BRIDGE_AT_XIENG_KHONG"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t083h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t083.jpg" width="550" height="358" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BAMBOO BRIDGE AT XIENG KHONG</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Passing the confluence of the Nam Hou, they
-came upon the cavern of Pak Hou, which the Buddhist
-priests have covered with religious decoration,
-and adorned with the gifts of munificent pilgrims.
-Thence they proceeded to Ban Tanoun; and from
-Ban Tanoun to Xieng Khong, the second in importance
-of the towns of the great province of
-Muong Nan. There they experienced some difficulty
-in obtaining permission to enter the Burmese territory;
-and, moreover, they found that they had
-nearly reached the limit of the navigable portion of
-the river. Few are the obstacles, however, which
-cannot be conquered by resolution and energy; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-on the 14th of June the expedition left Xieng Khong
-in six light boats, drawing but little water, and
-continued the ascent of the river, which here bends
-to the westward, and flows across an apparently
-boundless plain. It is crossed near the town or
-village by a graceful but slender bridge of bamboo,
-from which may be obtained a charming view of its
-graceful sweep through a luxuriance of tropical vegetation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">AT MUONG LIM.</div>
-
-<p>At Muong Lim the expedition were compelled to
-abandon their boats. Its members found themselves
-there in the midst of a population differing in race
-from any they had previously met with. They
-seem, these Mou-tsen, to be of Caucasian origin.
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A CAUCASIAN PEOPLE.</span>
-
-
-Their costume is very complicated, and even tasteful;
-and the tinsel and embroidery with which they
-cover their persons gives them a certain resemblance
-to the inhabitants of some parts of Brittany. The
-head-gear of the women has, at all events, the merit
-of originality. It consists of a series of rings of
-bamboo, covered with plaited straw, and fastened on
-the top of the head. The brim of this kind of hat
-is enriched over the forehead with silver balls; above
-are two rows of pearl-white glass beads; on the left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-side depends a tuft of white and red cotton thread,
-from which issues a loop formed of strings of many-coloured
-pearls. This coiffure, which is capable of
-infinite modifications, is completed with an abundance
-of leaves and flowers. The women also wear
-a tight-fitting bodice, the sleeves and edges of which
-are trimmed with pearls, and a short petticoat
-reaching to the knee. The legs are wrapped round
-with leggings, which begin at the ankle, and cover
-the whole of the calf. These leggings, too, are
-ornamented with a row of pearls about half-way
-up. The toilette is completed by ear-rings of coloured
-beads or balls of blown silver, bracelets, belts,
-collars, and shoulder-belts crossed over the bosom.
-As for the men, they wear the usual turban, loose
-short pantaloons, and a waistcoat with silver buttons.
-With both sexes a necessary addition to the attire is
-a kind of cloak or mantle of leaves, in shape like a
-book half-open, which is fastened to the neck, and
-in rainy weather is brought up over the head like a
-loose cover. The women, when carrying burdens,
-add to their already complex costume a wooden
-board across the shoulders, so made as to fit into the
-neck; and to this is suspended the basket containing
-the load. In front the board is kept in its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-place by cords, which are attached to the waist-belt
-or held in the hand.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 519px;">
-<a id="FOREST_ROAD"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t087h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t087.jpg" width="519" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>FOREST ROAD NEAR MUONG LIM.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">PLEASANT TRAVEL.</div>
-
-<p>Having obtained the necessary authorization to
-push their researches further, the adventurers set
-out from Muong Lim on the 1st of July, with an
-escort of natives carrying their instruments, provisions,
-and stores. At Puleo, finding the demands of
-the porters more than their limited funds could
-afford to meet, they reduced their baggage to the
-smallest possible proportions, and were thus enabled
-to dispense with the services of some of their attendants.
-They found the banks of the Cambodia frequented
-by numerous caimans, whose eggs are collected
-and eaten by the inhabitants. By day the
-journey was rendered pleasant through the constant
-succession of novel scenes. They made their way
-over a hilly and richly-wooded country, occasionally
-coming upon cotton plantations of exceeding richness;
-at other times upon delicious rills of crystal
-which spread their silver network over a fresh green
-expanse of flower-enamelled sward. Then they
-crossed a stretch of fertile rice-fields; and again they
-plunged into fresh glades, where a path wound in
-and out of clumps of palms and tropical trees, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-waving ferns and rare flowering shrubs grew in
-luxuriant masses. But sometimes, at night, their
-experience was rather painful. They generally constructed
-a rude shelter of boughs and interwoven
-leaves; but this was often insufficient to protect
-them against the heavy rains that fell during passing
-storms, and was useless, of course, as a defence
-against the legions of leeches and mosquitoes which
-haunted the forest-depths.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HOT WELLS DISCOVERED.</div>
-
-<p>After leaving a place called Siem-lap, they arrived
-on the borders of a half-dried torrent, the rocky bed
-of which was strangely bare of vegetation. The
-stones, among which a thin thread of water found
-its way, were a curious appearance; they were white,
-and covered with saline incrustations. The travellers
-tasted the water; it was warm. The three or
-four sources of this singular stream rose, a short
-distance off, at the foot of a wall of rocks: as they
-escaped among the shingle they exhaled a cloud
-of vapour, and their temperature was shown by the
-thermometer to be not less than 154° F.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="A_NIGHT_HALT_NEAR_SIEM-LAP"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t091h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t091.jpg" width="550" height="358" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>A NIGHT HALT NEAR SIEM-LAP.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Through a beautiful ravine they made their way
-to the picturesque village of Sop Yong. The richest
-and most magnificent vegetation imaginable grew
-close to the very edge of the river, and the travellers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-were frequently compelled to take to its waters,
-swollen as they were by the constant rains, and
-breast as best they could the violence of the current.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 523px;">
-<a id="TRAVELLING_IN_A_RAVINE"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t095h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t095.jpg" width="523" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>TRAVELLING IN A RAVINE NEAR SOP YONG.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A SIGN OF CIVILIZATION.</div>
-
-<p>The next stage after Sop Yong was Ban Passang,
-which is described as an agglomeration of villages
-situated on a fertile table-land, in the heart of a
-rice-growing district. It is situated in the territory
-of Muong Yong, the chief town lying further to the
-westward. For Muong Yong the travellers set out
-on the 7th of August. They traversed a plain
-abundantly watered by streams which all flow into
-the Nam Yong, a branch of the great river. Over
-the chief of these little tributaries, the Nam Ouang,
-is thrown a wooden bridge; and this agreeable accommodation,
-a very great rarity in the land of the
-Laotians, pleasantly surprised our gallant explorers;
-they looked upon it as the sign of a more advanced
-civilization, which before long would exhibit itself
-more completely. A considerable portion of the
-plain was laid out in rice-fields; the rest was all
-swamp and morass. They passed by several villages
-which wore an unusual aspect of ease and comfort.
-Pagodas with curved roofs attracted the eye, and
-bore witness to the influence of Chinese architecture
-and the vicinity of the Celestial Empire.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT MUONG YOU.</div>
-
-<p>At Muong Yong the expedition was delayed until
-the 8th of September, owing to the difficulty of
-obtaining the permission of the king of Birmah to
-cross those Laotian territories which are now included
-within the borders of his extensive dominions. The
-interval was occupied in short excursions in the
-neighbourhood, and in studying the manners and
-customs of the inhabitants. It was with no small
-pleasure, however, that the French adventurers took
-their departure, and continued their bold advance
-into regions of which European geographers knew
-but little. Their route led them to the important
-town of Muong You, where they paid visits of
-courtesy to the principal mandarins, the Burman
-representative, and the king of Muong You himself.
-This prince received them with dignified hospitality,
-and entertained them at a banquet, which
-was “served up” in magnificent style, and with
-a dazzling display of gold and silver plate. He is
-described as a young man of twenty-six, with a
-graceful figure and handsome countenance. He
-was attired in a dress of green satin, embroidered
-with red flowers; and the fire of the rubies which
-hung pendent from his ears illuminated the silken
-reflections of his rich costume. He was seated on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-cushions glittering with gold tracery. Around
-him were ranged in respectful attitudes the mandarins
-of the palace; at his feet, the sword and
-vessels of gold, finely wrought, which are the symbol
-of royalty.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="INTERVIEW_WITH_THE_KING"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t099h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t099.jpg" width="550" height="362" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>INTERVIEW WITH THE KING OF MUONG YOU.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From Muong You the expedition struck across a
-romantic country&mdash;as yet provided with but few
-facilities for travellers&mdash;to Xieng Hong, where new
-impediments were thrown in the way of their further
-progress. Having obtained admission to the
-presence of the king, they succeeded, however, in
-obtaining the royal favour, and made their way
-along the valley of the Nam Yong, which is bounded
-on either hand by lofty mountains, to Muong La,
-or, as it is also called, Se-mao, situated on the
-frontier of China; that mysterious land which has
-preserved its own strange civilization intact for
-upwards of two thousand years, and still offers a
-sullen resistance to the progressive influences of the
-West.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ENTERING CHINA.</div>
-
-<p>Once upon Chinese territory, they found their
-march comparatively easy. Order reigned everywhere;
-and in all directions could be seen the evidences
-of a constant and energetic industry. At
-Pou-eul, a village of salt-pits, with its smoke, its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-dusky houses, its hoarse sounds of active life, our
-travellers felt that they were once more in the midst
-of a thriving civilization, and could almost have
-believed that they were located in a small industrial
-town of Europe.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">CHANGE OF SCENE.</span>
-
-Numerous convoys of asses, mules,
-oxen, and horses ascended and descended the long
-sloping street along which were erected the different
-factories, carrying thither wood and charcoal and
-cordage, and carrying away salt. Above the village
-rose a pagoda, crowning the summit of a hill so high
-that the murmur of the life below could not reach
-it. Groves of pines stretched far away on either
-hand; and along the declivities were ranged abundant
-rice-fields, situated one above the other in
-symmetrical terraces.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="MOUNTAIN_VILLAGE_AND_RICE-FIELDS"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t103h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t103.jpg" width="550" height="352" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MOUNTAIN VILLAGE AND RICE-FIELDS NEAR POU-EUL</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The expedition had now left the valley of the
-Mekong, and were wholly uncertain whether the
-route prescribed for them by the Chinese authorities
-would bring them again in contact with the
-great Cambodian river. We propose, however, to
-follow M. Garnier, as his wanderings led him through
-a country hitherto unknown to Europeans.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FORTRESS OF THE EAST.</div>
-
-<p>In the early part of November our adventurers
-struck the right bank of the Pa-pien-kiang of the
-Chinese, which is apparently identical with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-Nam-La, an affluent of the Mekong. Thence they
-ascended into the table-land of Yunnan, rendered
-familiar to English ears in connection with the enterprise
-and murder of Mr. Margary; and reached
-Tong-kuan, or “the Fortress of the East,”&mdash;a
-strongly-built town, with a large garrison, posted on
-a commanding ridge between two river-valleys.
-Afterwards they crossed another considerable stream,
-the Poukou-kiang, and continued their march through
-valleys and over hills where the industry of man
-has softened the wilder features of the scenery,
-and made the wilderness to blossom like a garden.
-In a few days they made their appearance at
-Yuen-kiang, where they seem to have been welcomed
-with almost royal honours. The town is
-large and populous, with every indication of
-commercial activity and wealth. It has several
-handsome pagodas, which have something of
-the Buddhist type about them. The markets are
-well supplied with provisions of excellent quality
-and low price. Oranges are almost “given away;”
-and potatoes are so cheap and plentiful that an Irish
-peasant would think himself in an earthly paradise.
-The country around the town is highly cultivated;
-cotton being largely grown, and mulberry-trees for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-the silkworm nurseries. A rich and radiant plain
-is watered by the stream of the Ho-ti-kiang, which,
-opposite the town, measures about one-fifth of a mile
-in breadth.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DESCENDING THE HO-TI-KIANG.</div>
-
-<p>At Pou-pio M. Garnier hired a light canoe, and,
-in company with some trading barks, began the
-descent of the Ho-ti-kiang, which for some distance
-swirled in a narrow channel between mountain-walls
-of two thousand five hundred to three thousand
-feet in height. Each torrent which rent these
-rocky barriers brought down with it an immense
-quantity of stones and pebbles, that encumbered
-the river-bed with shoals and banks, and pent up
-the waters in foaming rapids. M. Garnier was
-bound for Lin-ngan, but these numerous obstacles
-greatly impeded his progress. But by degrees
-the river-bed broadened, the heights receded on
-either hand, and the stream flowed with a full
-and tranquil current through a gently undulating
-country, well cultivated, and studded with populous
-villages.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT LIN-NGAN.</div>
-
-<p>In due time he reached Lin-ngan, where, as the
-first European who had visited it, he became an
-object of special attraction. An inspection of the
-town showed him that it was neatly and regularly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-built, and of rectangular form, measuring about
-two thousand yards in length, by one thousand in
-breadth. In the centre were gardens and pagodas
-decorated with much taste; and a large and fully-stocked
-market was a scene of very picturesque
-animation.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">EXPERIENCES AMONG THE CHINESE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/zill_t106.png" width="122" height="125" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">The</span> attentions which a curious populace
-lavish upon a stranger are apt to become
-a trouble and a burden, as Garnier
-experienced, when, after an interesting survey of
-the environs of Lin-ngan, he returned to the town.
-His steps were closely dogged by crowds of idlers
-and sightseers. On his arrival at the pagoda where
-lodging had been provided for him, behold! the
-balconies, the towers, the very roofs, were thronged
-with wondering eyes.</p>
-
-<p>As he entered the court, the multitude pressed in
-upon him, and hemmed him up at last in a narrow
-space, where they evidently designed to hold him
-fast until their curiosity was satiated. Angry and
-ashamed, he bore their scrutiny for an hour; when,
-his strength and patience giving way, he made
-a sudden exit into his lodgings, closing the door<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-of the court behind him. It proved, however, an
-insufficient barrier against the surging throng. They
-broke through it in a second, and were with difficulty
-kept back a little by Garnier’s small escort
-of soldiers, who had attended him from Yuen-kiang.
-The lieutenant succeeded at last in closing the door.
-Then loud and long were the reproaches which the
-rearmost ranks heaped on those in front for having
-recoiled before a barbarian from the West!</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ATTACK BY THE CHINESE.</div>
-
-<p>A stone, hurled through the grating, struck Garnier
-full in the face; others followed, until there
-seemed every likelihood of his undergoing the tortures
-of the ancient punishment by lapidation! Yet
-he yielded not an inch, but leaning against the door,
-which shook before the storm of missiles, seized
-his revolver, and fired it in the air. Firearms of
-such deadly powers are not known at Lin-ngan, and
-the crowd, in the firm belief that by discharging his
-weapon Garnier had virtually disarmed himself,
-recommenced their volleys of stones. He fired
-again, and again, and again; and the people, terrified
-by a weapon which apparently was inexhaustible,
-fell back in a panic, and the danger proved to be
-past.</p>
-
-<p>Soon afterwards Garnier was joined by the rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-of the expedition; and setting out from inhospitable
-Lin-ngan, the little company of explorers proceeded
-on their way to Yunnan, the capital of a province of
-the same name.</p>
-
-<p>Yunnan is a town of some importance, with a
-very numerous and industrious population. Every
-thoroughfare presents a scene of the liveliest activity.
-The town is surrounded by a high and massive wall;
-and from the south gate extends a long broad street,
-lined with shops, each of which has on its front a
-sign in gilded characters, while the interior is filled
-with wares of extraordinary richness and variety.
-Some Jesuit missionaries are stationed here.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 519px;">
-<a id="VALLEY_OF_KON-TCHANG"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t109h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t109.jpg" width="519" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VALLEY OF KON-TCHANG.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FROM YUNNAN TO MONG-KOU.</div>
-
-<p>The travellers now entered the green valley of
-Kon-tchang, through the leafy shades of which
-tumbles a sparkling, noisy stream, while on either
-hand rise venerable trees, with trunks bent and
-contorted as if by some sudden convulsion. Thence
-they ascended to Mong-kou by a difficult road, winding
-round the precipitous flank of a wind-swept
-height, the summit of which, some twelve thousand
-feet above the sea, was capped with snow. Wild and
-romantic was the character of the scenery, reminding
-the travellers of that of Switzerland. At intervals
-the expedition met with a check to its progress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-from the jealousy of the Chinese officials, but resolution
-and tact overcame every obstacle. Through
-the broad valley of Tong-chuen they debouched on
-a small but well-cultivated plain, where the solid
-embankment of the bed of a torrent formed a kind
-of causeway, raised seven to ten feet above the surrounding
-level. From the sides of this elevated
-dyke issue numerous canals, which distribute the
-fertilizing waters of the stream over all the thirsty
-fields. Here, as in many other districts of China,
-the patient industry of the labourer has transformed
-a devastating force into a fountain of wealth and
-fecundity.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A WELL-CULTIVATED DISTRICT.</span>
-
-The aspect of the plain is very grateful
-to the eye. Yellow clusters of the colza mingle
-with the white or purple corollas of the poppies.
-From the ridge which terminates it is visible a deep
-cleft in the barrier of mountains that stretches far
-along the horizon. This is the valley of the Blue
-River, locally known as the Kin-cha-kiang, or
-“River of the Golden Sand.”</p>
-
-<p>Our explorers came upon this river on the 31st of
-January. It rolled its clear deep waters in a ravine
-two thousand feet below them. Their route, however,
-still lay along the mountain-sides, and they suffered
-severely from the rigour of the cold and the heavy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-storms of snow which beat continually upon their
-devoted heads. On the 3rd of February they
-crossed the most elevated point they had reached in
-all their wanderings,&mdash;the barometer indicating an
-elevation of nearly ten thousand feet. Then they
-began to descend, each stage opening up to their
-enraptured gaze a succession of glorious mountain-views,
-relieved by occasional glimpses of finely wooded
-valleys, and of bright streams that leaped and bounded
-in their haste to join the great river of the plains.
-As they descended the temperature necessarily grew
-warmer, and out of the inclemencies of winter they
-rapidly passed into the genial airs of spring.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 521px;">
-<a id="CROSSING_A_RAVINE"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t113h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t113.jpg" width="521" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CROSSING A RAVINE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LAKE OF TALY.</div>
-
-<p>On the 29th of February, from the summit of the
-col which forms the little valley of Kuang-tsa-pin,
-they discovered the lake of Taly, one of the finest
-and grandest pictures which had excited their
-admiration since they entered on their expedition.
-The background consists of a lofty chain of snow-capped
-mountains, at the foot of which the blue
-waters of the lake break up the plain into a maze
-of low promontories covered with gardens and
-villages. A short descent brought them to the
-borders of the lake, which they passed to the northward
-in order to reach its eastern shore. The many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-villages through which they took their way exhibited
-the cruellest traces of devastation. Only
-the cultivated fields seem to have been spared, and
-these presented a flourishing appearance.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">FORTRESS OF HIANG-KUAN.</span>
-
-In due
-time they arrived before the gates of the fortress of
-Hiang-kuan; which, erected at the very base of the
-mountain, and on the margin of the lake, completely
-barred the passage. There they learned from the
-mandarin in charge, that he would not allow them
-to continue their journey, until permission had been
-obtained from the sultan of Taly. This reached
-them on the following day; and, on the 2nd of
-March, the journey was resumed. They passed
-through Hiang-kuan, the walls of which bathe on
-the one side their feet in the waters of the lake, and
-on the other ascend the flanks of the mountain, which
-forms a tremendous precipice, rendering the defile
-very easy of defence.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond, the shore of the lake again expanded
-into a magnificent plain, in the centre of which is
-situated the city of Taly. At the southern extremity
-of the lake the mountains again close in upon
-its waters; and this second defile is commanded by
-another fortress&mdash;that of Hia-kuan. Hia-kuan and
-Hiang-kuan, surrounded by massive crenelated ram<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>parts,
-are the two gates of Taly. Defended by
-brave men they would be impregnable, and render
-access to the city impossible except by water.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A DISAGREEABLE INCIDENT.</div>
-
-<p>A great paved causeway crosses the plain of
-Hiang-kuan to Taly. Escorted by ten soldiers, the
-French travellers entered the latter city by its north
-gate. In a few moments an immense crowd gathered
-in their rear, and lined each side of the great street
-which traverses Taly from north to south. Having
-arrived in front of the sultan’s palace&mdash;a crenelated
-building of sombre and severe aspect&mdash;they halted
-to parley with a couple of mandarins who had been
-sent to meet them. During this vexatious pause
-they were surrounded and pressed upon by the
-crowd, and a soldier violently snatched off the hat
-of one of the strangers&mdash;probably in order that the
-sultan, who was regarding them from an upper
-balcony, might the better see his face. This insolence
-was punished immediately by a blow which
-drew blood from the aggressor’s countenance, and
-gave rise to an indescribable tumult. The interposition
-of the two mandarins, the resolute attitude
-of the Annamites, who grouped themselves around
-the French travellers, and unsheathed their sword-bayonets,
-arrested, however, the hostile demonstra<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>tions
-of the crowd, and they reached without further
-<i>contretemps</i> the yamen assigned to them for a residence,
-situated at the southern extremity of the
-town.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT TALY.</div>
-
-<p>Immediately after their arrival, a mandarin of
-higher rank than any they had previously seen presented
-himself as the formal representative of the
-sultan, and asked who they were, whence they came,
-and what they wanted.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FRENCHMAN AND THE MANDARIN.</div>
-
-<p>Through the medium of one Père Leguilcher, a
-Jesuit missionary, who had accompanied them,
-Garnier replied, that they had been sent by the
-French Government to explore the countries watered
-by the Lan-tsan-kiang; that having arrived in
-Yunnan some months ago, they had learned that a
-new kingdom had been established at Taly, and had
-desired to pay their respects to its ruler, with the
-view of opening up commercial and friendly relations
-between France and him. Some explanations
-of the scientific object and really pacific character of
-their mission were added. Garnier offered an excuse
-also for having only presents of small value to offer
-to the sultan; and for being unable, along with the
-officers of the expedition, to appear before him in
-suitable costume, the length and difficulties of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-journey having compelled them to leave behind almost
-all the baggage. The mandarin replied very
-graciously that there was no need for apologies on
-that score, and that as they were, they would be
-welcome. To prevent mistakes, Garnier then asked
-for details as to the ceremonial observed at an audience
-of the sovereign. It was customary, said the
-mandarin, to make three genuflexions before the
-sultan. On Garnier objecting to this servile homage,
-he consented to allow the French usage, with the condition
-that no one carried arms into the august
-presence. After an interchange of compliments, the
-mandarin took his leave, while the Frenchmen remained
-enraptured with his cordiality and straight-forwardness.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Before long he returned, accompanied by a ta-seu&mdash;that
-is, by one of the eight great dignitaries who
-compose the council of the sultan. Both requested
-Lieutenant Garnier to repeat the explanations he had
-previously given as to the objects of the expedition;
-and he did so, in the fewest words possible. “You
-were not, then, sent expressly by your sovereign to
-Taly?” “How could that be,” replied the lieutenant,
-“when at our departure nobody in France<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-knew that the town had a king?” They then requested
-M. Garnier to intrust to them, for the purpose
-of showing them to the sultan, the Chinese
-letters, of which he was the bearer, to the king of
-Se-chuen. To this he consented; and they withdrew,
-apparently quite satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>The first night at Taly was undisturbed. The
-lieutenant’s intention was, if all went well, to leave
-his companions to rest themselves for a few days in
-the city; while he and Père Leguilcher pushed forward
-to the banks of the Lan-tsan-kiang, about
-four days’ journey, and ascended that river as far as
-Li-kiang-foo, where the remainder of the expedition
-would rejoin him in due course.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE SULTAN’S ORDERS.</div>
-
-<p>At nine o’clock next morning, when he was collecting
-all the information necessary for the execution
-of this project, a messenger came from the sultan
-to fetch Père Leguilcher. He did not return until
-noon, and then his face was overclouded. The sultan
-refused to see them, and had issued orders that they
-were to quit the city on the following morning, and
-return by the route they came.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">THE SULTAN AND THE PRIEST.</span>
-
-“Make known to
-the strangers,” he had said, “that they may seize
-all the lands bordering upon the Lan-tsan-kiang,
-but they will be compelled to halt on the frontiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-of my kingdom. They may subjugate the eighteen
-provinces of China; but that which I govern will
-cause them more trouble than all the rest of the
-empire. Dost thou not know,” he continued, “that
-it is but three days since I put to death three
-Malays? If I grant their lives to your companions,
-it is only because they are strangers, and on account
-of the letters of recommendation which they carry.
-But let them hasten their return. They may have
-sketched my mountains, and fathomed the depths of
-my rivers; but they will not succeed in conquering
-them. As for thee,” concluded the sultan, in a softer
-tone, “I know thy religion, and have read its books.
-Mohammedans and Christians are brothers. Return
-to thy place of residence, and I will make thee a
-mandarin, to the end that thou mayst govern thy
-people.”</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the interview, the father was kept
-standing, and not allowed to speak; overwhelmed
-with questions to which no reply was permitted,
-interpellated and hooted at by the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>To what circumstance, says M. Garnier, was so
-abrupt a change attributable? Undoubtedly to the
-influence of the military advisers of the king, who
-would be unable to believe in a purely scientific and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-disinterested mission. A despotism sprung from a
-revolution, abhorred by the masses whom it overwhelmed
-with imposts, existing only through terror
-and crime, is forced to be cruel and suspicious. The
-official relations between the French explorers and
-the Chinese authorities had placed the former, with
-regard to the sultan of Taly, in a delicate position
-which justified his mistrust.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE EXPEDITION FOILED.</div>
-
-<p>During the rest of the day, the travellers were
-visited by a great number of Mohammedan functionaries,
-actuated by curiosity or a desire to watch
-their doings. They thought it prudent, therefore,
-to abstain from sketching or taking notes. About
-five o’clock, the sultan sent for the chief of their
-escort; who returned soon afterwards, and said that
-he had orders to conduct them back to Hiang-kuan
-on the following morning. He showed M. Garnier
-at the same time a sealed document, which he had
-to convey to the mandarin of that fortress. A few
-presents attached him to the interests of the French
-explorers, who arranged to start with him at daybreak
-and avoid traversing the town. For Garnier
-feared lest, the sultan’s suspicions and anger being
-known, the crowd should break out into open
-hostility, or a few soldiers attempt to satisfy their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-ruler’s secret desire without actually compromising
-him.</p>
-
-<p>At nightfall, the lieutenant took care to see that
-all the weapons of his party were loaded, and instructed
-them what steps to take in case of a surprise.
-He sought, by liberal promises, to secure the complete
-fidelity of the porters.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A NIGHT OF SUSPENSE.</div>
-
-<p>The night was spent in a painful condition of
-expectancy. A sentinel had been stationed at their
-door, who followed them each time they went out.
-M. Garnier dreaded every moment the arrival of an
-order to prohibit their departure, and transform their
-temporary confinement into definite captivity. About
-eleven o’clock one of the great mandarins of the
-sultan sent to inquire by what route they intended
-to return; and received for reply, that they did
-not know. The night passed without any other
-incident.</p>
-
-<p>At five in the morning they were on the march,
-well armed, and carefully grouped; they turned
-the city of Taly by the south and east, and with
-scarcely a halt crossed the twenty miles that separated
-them from Hiang-kuan. As they were about
-to enter the first gate of the fortress, the chief of
-their escort stopped them, and said he was ordered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-pending the arrival of fresh instructions from the
-sultan, to lodge them in a small yamen which he
-obligingly pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>Garnier pretended to regard as a special act of
-courtesy what was evidently neither more nor less
-than a disguised sequestration, and replied that, after
-the cold welcome he had received at Taly, he could
-not accept the sultan’s hospitality. Unwilling,
-however, that this hurried retreat should look too
-like a flight, he added that if the mandarin of Hiang-kuan
-had any communications to make, he would
-await them in the little wayside <i>auberge</i> where he
-had rested on his way to Taly.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">LEAVING HIANG-KUAN.</div>
-
-<p>The Mohammedan officer objected that he would
-be assuming a grave responsibility if he allowed any
-such modification of the sultan’s orders. But Garnier
-was resolute; having determined, if necessary, to
-force a passage before he could have time to arouse
-the garrison of Hiang-kuan. While the sultan’s lieutenant
-put his horse at a gallop to forewarn the
-governor of the dispute which had arisen, Garnier
-led his little company through the fortress gates,
-without encountering any fresh obstacles, and in a
-few minutes was encamped at the <i>auberge</i> already
-spoken of, with the open country before him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He had scarcely arrived when the governor of
-Hiang-kuan sent for Père Leguilcher. He offered
-him an enormous price for the revolver which
-Garnier had intended for the sultan, and stated that
-he had orders to furnish them with a new escort, and
-two mandarins to accompany them to the frontier,
-and regulate the stages of their journey; and further,
-that they were to pass the night at Hiang-kuan, and
-wait until the following morning for the arrival of
-the said mandarins and escort.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE RETURN JOURNEY.</div>
-
-<p>Garnier replied that he would make a present of
-the weapon, but that he did not sell arms; that in
-his journey he reserved to himself full liberty of
-action, and that he cared nothing at all about the
-mandarins and the promised escort. This he conclusively
-showed by starting in the evening for
-Ma-cha, a village situated at the northern extremity
-of the lake.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MISSIONARY’S ALARM.</div>
-
-<p>On the 5th of March the journey was continued;
-and by nightfall the expedition reached the town of
-Kuang-tia-pin. Their arrival was immediately made
-known to the commandant of the neighbouring fort,
-who sent for Père Leguilcher. The good monk was
-filled with alarm at the thought of the probable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-results of the interview. The commandant might
-have received orders to separate from their interpreter
-the little company of strangers; who, left to
-themselves, unacquainted with the language and
-ignorant of the customs of the country, might the
-more easily be entrapped into an ambuscade! On
-the other hand, the route lay underneath the guns
-of the fort, and it was imprudent to come to an open
-rupture with its governor. They contented themselves,
-therefore, with replying that the evening was
-too far advanced for a visit, but that Père Leguilcher
-would accept the invitation next morning.</p>
-
-<p>This answer did not satisfy; and three soldiers
-presented themselves with orders for the father to
-follow them.</p>
-
-<p>The poor missionary, overcome with terror, thought
-that his last hour had come. It seemed to him as
-dangerous to resist as to obey. M. Garnier had to
-decide for him; and he repeated to the soldiers the
-reply already given, and desired them to be content
-with it. They insisted on their instructions with
-all the insolence and astonishment inspired by a resistance
-to which they were unaccustomed. Alarmed
-by their threats, which Père Leguilcher understood
-much better than his companions, the missionary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-wished to comply; but Garnier detained him, while
-his Annamite attendants showed the soldiers “the
-way out.” The latter retired, vowing that they
-would return in great force, and that the heads of
-the strangers should soon be adorning the posts in
-the market-place.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">PRUDENCE AND PRECAUTION.</div>
-
-<p>By this time the travellers had become accustomed
-to such “brave words,” and gave little heed
-to them. They took, however, the necessary precautions:
-each man received a revolver in addition
-to his carbine, and even Père Leguilcher consented
-to equip himself with carnal weapons. All the
-approaches to the <i>auberge</i> were guarded, and the
-utmost vigilance was maintained throughout the
-night. They were but ten in number; but as each
-was equipped with carbine and revolver, they could
-discharge seventy shots without reloading, which
-would suffice to keep at a respectful distance a
-whole regiment of Mohammedans. But no enemy
-made his appearance.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARRIVAL AT THE MISSIONARY’S RESIDENCE.</div>
-
-<p>At daybreak, after having passed in review before
-them all their porters, and appointed the town of
-Too-tong-tse as a rendezvous, Garnier and his companions,
-on horseback, escorted the Jesuit missionary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-to the gate of the fortress. They then informed the
-commandant that the father had come to pay the
-desired visit, but that it could not be prolonged
-beyond ten minutes; if at the expiration of that time
-the father had not returned, they would come in
-quest of him. This peremptory message was intended
-to produce an impression on people accustomed
-to see everybody trembling before them.
-Such language to them would be terrifically novel!
-It had a good effect. The governor of the fortress
-contented himself with communicating to Père
-Leguilcher the order he had received from Taly to
-escort them to the frontier. The father replied in
-the words which Garnier had addressed to the governor
-of Hiang-kuan, and his interlocutor did not insist;
-he even begged him to shorten the interview, for fear,
-he said, he should overstay the time allotted, and
-arouse the impatience of the “great men.” And so,
-an hour later, the whole party arrived in safety at
-the worthy father’s residence, where they enjoyed
-ten days of entire rest, rendered necessary by the
-fatigue and emotion they had recently undergone.</p>
-
-<p>On the 7th another messenger arrived from the
-fort, with a request that Père Leguilcher would come
-“alone” to consult with the governor on the stages<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-of the travellers’ journey. No notice was taken of
-the communication.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">ABOUT THE TALY LAKE.</div>
-
-<p>In spite of the rapidity with which M. Garnier
-had been compelled to pursue his march, he contrived
-to collect some interesting particulars of the
-country, its inhabitants, and resources.</p>
-
-<p>The lake of Taly, situated at an elevation above
-the sea-level of upwards of seven thousand five hundred
-feet, measures about twenty miles from north
-to south, with an average breadth of two miles. Its
-depth is very considerable,&mdash;exceeding three hundred
-and twenty feet at some points. There appear to
-be several islands scattered towards the south-east.
-The level of the lake is higher than that of the
-neighbouring rivers, and its overflow may possibly
-help to feed those on the north and east, which
-belong to the Blue River basin. Ostensibly it pours
-forth its waters at its southern extremity by a river
-which empties itself into the Mekong. At the mouth
-of this river, which is not navigable, stands the fortress
-of Hia-kuan, already spoken of. Shortly after
-issuing from the lake, it divides into two branches,
-but these unite again lower down. During the rainy
-season the waters rise fully seventeen feet; in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-dry season, the chain of the Tien Song mountains,
-on the western shore of the lake, send down a succession
-of violent squalls, which greatly impede its
-navigation. This chain, the elevation of which is
-estimated at sixteen thousand feet, is clothed with
-snow for nine months in the year. On the opposite
-bank rises a mass of heights belonging to a
-range of inferior importance. Between these mountains
-and the lake some richly-cultivated fields slope
-gently to the edge of the deep blue waters.</p>
-
-<p>The lake abounds in fish, which are principally
-caught by birds trained for the purpose. The process
-adopted is better than that known in Europe as
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">de pêche au cormoran</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE LAKE FISHERMEN.</div>
-
-<p>The fishermen set out at early morn, making a
-tremendous din and clamour, so as to awaken the
-attention of the numerous troops of birds slumbering
-around them. They embark on board flat-bottomed
-boats, each provided with a well, which they allow
-to drift along slowly, while one of them, stationed
-at the bow, throws into the water enormous balls of
-rice. The fish hasten in immense shoals to enjoy
-the banquet; and the fishing-birds, flocking round
-the boats in great numbers, dive and reappear immediately,
-each with a fish in its bill. As fast as they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-fill their pouch, the boatmen empty it into the
-interior of the bark, leaving to each winged fisher
-just enough to satisfy its appetite and encourage its
-ardour. In half an hour each boat is loaded, and
-the boatmen hasten to dispose of their stores at the
-nearest market.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MIN-KIA POPULATION.</div>
-
-<p>The plain of Taly formerly contained upwards of
-one hundred and fifty villages, which the sultan
-has attempted to repeople almost exclusively with
-Mohammedans. The eastern shore is inhabited by
-the Min-kia and Pen-ti populations, who are
-descended from the first Chinese colonists whom the
-Mongolian dynasty sent into Yunnan after the conquest
-of that province. The Min-kia come from
-the neighbourhood of Nankin. The women do not
-mutilate their feet; and the young people of both
-sexes wear a kind of bonnet, of original form, ornamented
-by a silver pearl. Evidence of their admixture
-with the former inhabitants of the country is
-found in their costumes and language. These ancient
-Chinese emigrants are treated with contempt by
-pure-blooded Chinese; and hence results an antagonism
-which not a little contributed to ensure the
-neutrality of the Min-kia, at the beginning of hos<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>tilities
-between the Mohammedans and the Imperialists.
-But, after a while, the despotic and violent
-acts of the rulers of Taly exasperated even this
-pacific race; and, led by an energetic chief named
-Tong, the Min-kia long maintained a successful
-resistance against the Mohammedans. Tong fell in
-battle in 1866, and the conquerors pursued his
-family with merciless vengeance. At present, the
-natives of the districts contiguous to Taly, disorganized
-and without a leader, submit to, while
-hating, the domination of the sultan. The Pen-ti
-occupy more particularly the plain of Tong-chuen,
-north of the lake, and the district of the Pe-yen-tsin.
-Their costume is original and characteristic.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE MOUNTAIN TRIBES.</div>
-
-<p>Under different names, the Lolos, or representatives
-of the autochthonous race, inhabit the summits
-of the mountains, and assert their independence.
-With their continual forays they harass the dwellers
-in the plains. Certain districts in the vicinity of
-Pien-kio pay to one of these tribes, the Tcha-Su, an
-annual sum by way of blackmail, in order to secure
-their cattle. Even this payment, however, does not
-protect them from occasional depredations; and they
-cannot claim, when their herds are carried off, more
-than half their value.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A considerable trade is carried on between Taly
-and Tibet, consisting of imports of <i>kuang-lien</i>, a
-bitter root much used in Chinese medicine, woollen
-stuffs, stag-horns, bear-skins, fox-skins, wax, oils, and
-resinous gums. Exports from Yunnan include tea,
-cottons, rice, wine, sugar, mercery, and hardware.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MINERAL TREASURES.</div>
-
-<p>The industrial production of the kingdom of Taly
-has diminished considerably since the war. Formerly,
-it was of much importance from a metallurgical point
-of view. The copper mines of Long-pao, Ta-kong,
-and Pe-iang are the most valuable in the whole
-country, where are also found deposits of gold, silver,
-mercury, iron, lead, and zinc. At Ho-kin paper
-is made from bamboo. The stems of the plant are
-made up into bundles of equal length, which are
-peeled and macerated in lime. They are afterwards
-placed in an oven, and steamed for twenty days;
-then they are exposed to a current of cold water,
-and deposited in layers in a second oven, each layer
-being covered with a coating of pease-meal and lard.
-After another “cooking,” they are converted into a
-kind of paste, which is extended on trellis-work in
-excessively thin layers, and dried in the sun. In
-this way the manufacturers turn out their sheets of
-a paper coarse and uneven enough, but very stout.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">RETURN TO SAIGON.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/zill_t133.png" width="121" height="125" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">The</span> French expedition, finding further progress
-impossible, resolved at length on
-retracing its steps to Saigon, and accordingly
-set out in that direction on the 15th of March.
-On the 3rd of April it arrived at Tong-chuen,
-where Lieutenant Garnier heard of the death of his
-chief, M. de Lagrée. Four days later, the gallant
-little band, several of its members suffering from
-fever, resumed its march. On the 9th, M. Garnier
-crossed the deep swift waters of the Ngieoo-nan in a
-ferry-boat, which runs on a cable moored from bank
-to bank. On the 11th he reached Tchao-tong.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AT TCHAO-TONG.</div>
-
-<p>Here he and his comrades met with a kindly
-welcome, and were lodged in the house of a native
-priest, who had charge of the few Christian inhabitants
-of the town. The crowd, as usual, displayed
-an extraordinary amount of curiosity and impor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>tunity.
-The <i>tche-hien</i>, or administrator of the
-Tchao-tong district, paid them a visit immediately
-on their arrival, and invited them to dine with him
-on the following evening. The repast included
-fourteen courses at the least, to say nothing of the
-cucumber-seed, the mandarinas, and the li-tchi, served
-up as preliminaries. There was nothing, however,
-peculiarly worthy of the attention of gourmands,
-except a dainty dish of pigeons’ eggs, and a particular
-kind of fish, caught in a neighbouring pond,
-the flesh of which had a peculiar flavour. During
-the repast, the ladies of the household closely scrutinized
-the features of the strangers through a lattice,
-laughing heartily at their awkwardness in using the
-Chinese utensils.</p>
-
-<p>Tchao-tong, like all Chinese towns of importance,
-is surrounded by a bastioned wall, of rectangular
-plan, measuring about a mile and a half each way.
-Considerable suburbs prolong to the north, east, and
-west the streets which abut on the gates of the
-town. The latter has never been captured by the
-Mohammedans, and its inhabitants cherish a fierce
-hatred against the rebels of Taly.</p>
-
-<p>The plain of Tchao-tong seems to be the most
-extensive in Yunnan, and is carefully cultivated&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-large portion of its area being appropriated to the
-growth of poppies for the manufacture of opium.
-Its inhabitants complain of want of water; and, in
-fact, their only sources of supply are some tiny rills,
-almost dry in the hot season. There are extensive
-deposits of anthracite and peat. A small pond,
-abounding in fish, lies to the south-west.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 526px;">
-<a id="MERCHANT_TRAIN_IN_YUNNAN"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t137h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t137.jpg" width="526" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>MERCHANT TRAIN IN YUNNAN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ARTICLES OF COMMERCE.</div>
-
-<p>Tchao-tong is one of the most important commercial
-<i>entrepôts</i> between China and Yunnan. Enormous
-convoys of raw cotton, of English or native cotton
-stuffs, and of salt from Se-chuen, are here exchanged
-for the metals&mdash;tin and zinc more particularly&mdash;furnished
-by the environs of Tong-chuen, the medicinal
-substances which come from the west of
-Yunnan and the north of Tibet, and the nests of the
-<i>coccus sinensis</i>, which yield the pe-la wax. This
-insect breeds on a species of privet which grows in
-the mountainous parts of Yunnan and Se-chuen,
-and is thence transported to other trees favourable
-for the production of wax, which flourish in the
-warmer lowlands. Necessarily, these nests must be
-conveyed from point to point with great rapidity,
-lest the newly-hatched insects should die before
-arriving at their new abode; they are stored away
-in large baskets, divided into numerous compart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>ments,
-and their bearers frequently accomplish thirty
-or forty leagues at double quick marching step.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE JOURNEY CONTINUED.</div>
-
-<p>Resuming their journey, M. Garnier and his companions
-traversed a country of great beauty, studded
-with villages, and broken up into romantic highlands
-and wooded valleys, watered by copious rivers.
-On the 20th of April they reached Lao-oua-tan, a
-busy town on the Huang-kiang, at the point where
-the navigation of the river begins. Here they
-embarked on board a large boat with a capacity of
-thirty to forty tons, and began the descent of the
-river, admiring the skill with which the Chinese
-carried them through the successive rapids. In a
-couple of hours they arrived at Pou-eul-tou, a small
-port on the left bank, where Garnier and his companions
-landed, while their baggage and a part of
-the escort continued the journey by water. Garnier
-pressed forward through a truly Arcadian valley
-to Long-ki, the residence of the Vicar-Apostolic
-of Yunnan, Monseigneur Ponsot. It is needless
-to say that he was received with the warmest
-hospitality.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE BLUE RIVER.</div>
-
-<p>The next stage was Siu-tcheou-fou, a lively and
-busy town, where several Roman Catholic mis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>sionaries
-are stationed. Thence, in a couple of
-junks, the travellers descended the Blue River to
-Tchong-kin-fou, the great commercial centre of the
-province of Se-chuen. Resting here a while, they
-then continued their voyage to Han-keou, entering
-a region which has been carefully explored and
-described by officers of the British navy. The
-river all along its course presents an animated scene,&mdash;the
-junks ascending the stream being towed by
-boatmen on the banks, who time their steps to a
-rude and noisy song. M. Garnier arrived at Han-keou
-on the 4th of June, and once more entered
-upon the enjoyment of the comfort and security of
-civilized life, after a long, difficult, and perilous
-expedition, in which he had added largely to our
-knowledge of a region of vast commercial resources.
-On the 10th he embarked on board a steamer for
-Shanghai,&mdash;arriving there on the 12th. After a
-week’s stay he set out for Saigon; where he presented
-himself on the 29th, and was received with
-the honours due to his courage, his patience, and his
-perseverance. He has shown that the Mekong must
-hereafter become an important highway of commerce,
-and one of the great channels of communication with
-Yunnan and Tibet.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">DR. MORICE AND THE MEKONG.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/zill_t140.png" width="124" height="125" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">We</span> owe some additional information respecting
-the great river of Cambodia to Dr.
-Morice, who travelled in Cochin-China
-in 1872.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 503px;">
-<a id="ANNAMITE_LADY_AND_HER_SERVANT"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t141h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t141.jpg" width="503" height="800" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ANNAMITE LADY AND HER SERVANT.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the Annamites, the inhabitants of Cochin-China,
-he says at the outset, that his first feeling
-with respect to them was one of disgust. Those
-faces more or less flattened, and often devoid of all
-intelligence or animation; those livid eyes; and,
-especially, that broad nose, and those thick upturned
-lips, reddened and discoloured by the constant use
-of betel-nut, do not answer to the European ideal of
-beauty. But after a long acquaintance with them,
-he, as is the case with other Western visitors, began
-to discern a glimpse of meaning in most countenances,
-and even to make distinctions between the
-ugly ones. He met with some eyes which were not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-oblique, some noses which had an almost Caucasian
-character, and his repugnance gradually disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Still, from the most favourable point of view,
-they are a race of low stature and unprepossessing
-appearance; feeble, deficient in stamina, and never
-likely to make a noise in the world. Their French
-rulers grow into giants when compared with these
-dwarfs; and their muscular energy is far inferior to
-that of Europeans, whether owing to natural causes
-or to want of hygienic knowledge. As for their
-complexion, while some are deeply tinted, others are
-quite wan and pale. In two respects only can the
-Annamites be said to surpass their masters: in their
-ability to row ten hours consecutively, and in the
-impunity with which they can encounter the burning
-rays of a tropical sun.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">CHARACTER OF THE ANNAMITES.</div>
-
-<p>As for their character, it is that of a people whom
-slavery, ignorance, and sloth have rendered poor,
-timid, and apathetic. Yet they are capable of being
-raised to a higher moral and intellectual standard.
-They have many serious defects, it is true; they
-are deficient, for example, in the artistic sentiment.
-Even of the latter evidence is found in some surprising
-mural paintings, which reproduce, with loving
-fidelity, all that is bright and living in nature,&mdash;birds,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-insects, flowers. But, as a rule, the Annamites
-are insensible to the arts. Their shrill monotonous
-music is terrible to a cultured ear; and it
-may be doubted whether ours is agreeable to them.
-Of sculpture they know only the rudiments; their
-poetry is indifferent; they cannot dance. Their
-literary research is confined to an acquaintance with
-a few Chinese characters; and their scientific acquirements
-are a blank.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THEIR DRESS AND HABITATIONS.</div>
-
-<p>Then as to their attire. They never abandon
-their clothes until they fall into rags and tatters,
-though they are insufficient to protect them against
-the variations of their climate, and more particularly
-against the keen frosty mornings of December
-and January. Their huts or hovels, nearly all built
-upon piles, half in the water and half in the earth
-or mud, are singularly unhealthy. The cultivation
-of rice, and their occupation as fishermen, have rendered
-them almost amphibious. Water rises frequently
-to the floor of an Annamite house, particularly
-in high tides, but it does not discompose the
-owner; who, in such an event, crouches contentedly
-on the domestic hearth, or rocks to and fro in his
-rude hammock, murmuring some monotonous air, or
-smoking a cigarette shaped like a blunderbuss.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PLAIN OF THE TOMBS.</div>
-
-<p>At Saigon (or Sai-gun), the French settlement
-and seaport, situated at the mouth of a river of
-the same name, the traveller finds much to interest
-him. The Botanic Garden, for instance, will well
-repay inspection, stocked as it is with rare, beautiful,
-and curious specimens of tropical vegetation.
-Close at hand lies the so-called Plain of the Tombs;
-the scene, a century agone, of numerous battles
-between the inhabitants of Lower Cochin-China and
-the Annamites; and, between 1860 and 1864, of
-several engagements between the Annamites and the
-French. The uniformity of its vast expanse is
-broken by a number of mounds or tumuli; some on
-a modest, others on a splendid scale. Constructed
-of earth or brick, they are covered with a kind of
-cement, on which are depicted in vivid colours the
-figures of fantastic animals and impossible plants,
-while the name and titles of the deceased are inscribed
-in conspicuous characters.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here, one day, Dr. Morice chanced to be the spectator
-of an Annamite funeral, which is always celebrated
-with a certain amount of pomp, and attended
-by a numerous train of mourners. The coffin is
-planted in the centre of a small portable house,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-made of paper painted in brilliant colours, and cut
-into curious shapes. A score of bearers carry this
-miniature temple, resting upon their shoulders the
-bamboos which support it. A company of persons
-with torches scatter along the road their prayers to
-Buddha, traced on golden and silver papers, and set
-fire to them. In the rear march the friends and
-relatives of the departed, some uttering forced
-lamentations, all smiling “in their sleeves;” for
-these singular people are never so moved by their
-sorrow that they cannot laugh at a jest, or at any
-incident of which they immediately seize, as by intuition,
-the comic side.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GECKO DESCRIBED.</div>
-
-<p>Here too he saw some geckos: indeed, they were
-numerous enough to be considered the genii of the
-place. Inhabiting the forests and waste places, as
-well as the huts of the Annamites and the houses of
-the French, this large lizard, so common in Cochin-China,
-is one of the animals which give to the
-fauna of the country its peculiar character. Does
-the reader know what a gecko is like? If not, let
-him try to conceive of a gigantic terrestrial salamander;
-its skin, of a bluish-gray, covered with a
-quantity of tiny tubercles rising in the middle of an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-orange-tinted patch; its great eyes having a large
-gold-yellow iris; while, owing to the sucker-like
-lamellæ that line the under surface of its feet, it is
-able to walk easily on the smoothest surfaces, and
-utterly to defy the laws of gravitation. Its cry, to
-which it owes the name given to it in every language,
-is curiously sonorous; and when first heard,
-fairly startles the hearer. A shaky grumble or
-grunt serves as prelude; then, five, six, or eight
-times, lowering its voice regularly half a tone on
-each occasion, it jerks out its cadenced notes, which
-are sometimes written <i>gecko</i>, and sometimes <i>tacke</i>;
-the performance terminating with a grunt of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ITS FAMILIARITY WITH MAN.</div>
-
-<p>The gecko grows as familiar with man as the
-domestic cat or dog,&mdash;entering human habitations
-freely, and rendering valuable service by the eagerness
-with which it devours flies, spiders, and other
-insect-plagues. During the day, it lurks generally
-in some obscure nook or dark corner; but at dusk
-sallies forth in search of prey, running up or down
-the steepest walls with wonderful swiftness, and
-giving utterance to a quick shrill noise by smacking
-its tongue against its palate. So flexible is its body,
-that it can adapt itself readily to any depression or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-irregularity in the surface of the ground, forming
-apparently a component part of it. This deception
-is facilitated by its dulness of colouring. It is a
-home-keeping animal, and never strays to any great
-distance from the lair which it has chosen. Despite
-its ugliness and its cry, which at night, when a
-dozen are heard replying to one another, becomes
-insupportably wearisome, it is one of man’s most
-useful allies in the animal-world, and merits his
-respect.</p>
-
-<p>A word as to the formation of its wide feet. All
-the toes are broadened considerably at the edges,
-and their under surface is divided into numerous
-transverse laminæ, from which exudes an adhesive
-fluid. Its claws are sharp, crooked, and retractile
-like those of a cat.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ABOUT THE MARGOUILLA.</div>
-
-<p>Another animal of the same group, but much
-smaller, and closely resembling the tarenta of which
-the Toulonese are so afraid, is the <i>margouilla</i>, the
-“con-tan-lan” of the Annamites. It inhabits trees
-and houses with equal complacency. Every evening,
-when the tapers are lighted, it may be seen
-promenading along the ceiling, where it pounces
-upon the insects, uttering from time to time its
-short cry of satisfaction, which may be translated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-by the syllable <i>toc</i> ten times repeated. It is partial
-to sugar; but as it is the inveterate enemy of the
-mosquitoes, no one begrudges it a dainty morsel
-from the sugar-basin.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">EXCURSION TO KHOLEN.</div>
-
-<p>From Saigon Dr. Morice made an excursion to
-Kholen, the second town in size and population in
-Cochin-China. It lies about three miles from Saigon,
-but is connected with it by a line of villages, of
-pagodas, and of the country-houses of the wealthier
-Chinese merchants. Kholen is the centre of all the
-Chinese commerce of the colony. The amount of
-rice, stuffs, and products exported from China, which
-is sold there, almost passes belief; and the stranger
-surveys with interest the animation of its busy
-streets, and the numerous Chinese junks and Annamite
-sampans moored alongside its quays.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="CHINESE_HOUSE_AT_KHOLEN"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t151h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t151.jpg" width="550" height="336" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CHINESE HOUSE AT KHOLEN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among its peculiarities may be specialized its
-parks or preserves of crocodiles. A barrier of long
-and solid piles surrounds a space of about twenty
-square yards on the river-bank; in the mud and
-slime thus enclosed, and regularly inundated at high
-water, sprawl from one hundred to two hundred
-crocodiles. When the people wish to sacrifice one
-of these monsters, two of the piles are lifted up; a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-running knot is flung round the neck of the largest
-of the herd, which is then hauled outside; its tail
-is fastened close to its body lengthwise; its feet
-are cut off, and used to garnish its back; the jaws
-are tied together with ratan; and these vegetable
-bonds are so firm that the huge creature is incapable
-of movement, and can offer no defence. As for the
-flesh, though rather leathery, it appears to have a
-certain value, and is not so strongly impregnated
-with the odour of musk as some writers pretend.
-On Annamite tables it figures as a favourite dish.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">HATIAN-OF-THE-ROSES.</div>
-
-<p>From Saigon Dr. Morice’s next excursion was to
-Gocong, which lies in the centre of a district famous
-for its rice-fields. Thence he made his way to
-Hatian (or Cancao), of which he gives a lively description
-furnished to him by a French <span class="lock">colonist:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hatian-of-the-Roses is a small gem of flowers
-and verdure; magnificent pagodas, wooded hills, the
-limestone mass of Bonnet-à-Poil; everything which
-one finds nowhere else.”</p>
-
-<p>But, says Dr. Morice, he forgot the fever.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt that Hatian is a lovely
-spot. It is situated on the borders of a lake which
-opens into the Gulf of Siam; a lake bordered on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-the west by ranges of green hills, luxuriantly clothed
-with magnificent trees. To the east extends a vast
-plain, in the centre of which rises the isolated mass
-of limestone known as the Bonnet-à-Poil. The
-fields are enamelled with flowers and studded with
-flowering bushes; and winding paths lead through
-a succession of scenes of the most various beauty.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PEPPER-PLANT.</div>
-
-<p>The plant chiefly cultivated is the pepper-plant.
-On a soil raised several feet above the ordinary
-level are disposed parallel rows of sticks like those
-which are used in the Kentish hop-gardens, and
-round each of these coils a vigorous plant. It takes
-five years for a plant to become productive. Maize
-is also cultivated, but not to so large an extent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">FEAST OF THE TÊT.</div>
-
-<p>While Dr. Morice was at Hatian, its Annamite
-inhabitants celebrated their feast of the <i>Têt</i> or New-Year’s
-Day, in which are oddly mingled the religious
-rites of Buddhism, and the worship of the manes of
-their forefathers, the fear of the devil or <i>Maqui</i>,
-and the noisiest possible manifestations of popular
-mirth. It lasts at the least seven days,&mdash;with the
-rich much longer; and the entire settlement gives
-itself up for this period to the most unrestrained
-enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>Before each house, on a table covered with a mat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-is to be seen the offering of meat and drink, rice-spirit
-in a small white porcelain teapot, tea, betel
-with all its ingredients, fish, various kinds of Annamite
-vermicelli, roast duck, a quarter of pork, rice,
-bananas, and oranges. All this display is set out
-with flowers; then a couple of small tapers are
-lighted, and the manes, or domestic spirits, are
-respectfully invited to come and take their share of
-the consecrated love-feast. More: on a plate supported
-on a moderately high post, other and more
-delicate offerings are displayed,&mdash;composed generally
-of a bouquet of only two species of flowers, the one
-violet-tinted, the other yellow. As they are seen
-everywhere, it is probable that a symbolical meaning
-attaches to the union of these two flowers.
-Moreover, the rich plant an areca, the poor a large
-bamboo, in front of the various oblations, and to
-the top of each fasten a tiny basket of ratan,
-divided into five compartments. Finally, the altar
-of Buddha, which forms an indispensable appendage
-of every hut, is decked out with special pomp; and
-strips of yellow, red, and violet papers, inscribed
-with Chinese characters, are affixed to every door.
-These are intended to avert the presence of the
-evil spirit during the new year.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AN ANNAMITE PASTIME.</div>
-
-<p>Meantime everybody, clothed in their best attire,&mdash;men,
-women, and children,&mdash;that is to say, in a
-striped tunic and pantaloons blue, red, yellow, violet,
-green, often with the two legs of different colours,&mdash;sallied
-forth to exchange greetings, or amuse
-themselves as best they might. Among the pastimes
-most in favour were the following. Javelin-throwing;
-in which a long lance of black wood was
-made to pass through a ring suspended from a post
-about three feet high, and this at a distance of six
-to nine yards. This game, which resembles the old
-Scotch exercise of tilting at a mark, requires considerable
-skill on the part of those who engage in
-it. Still more popular, especially among women
-and children, was the swing, single or double.
-And it was not without astonishment that the
-traveller found here, in the far East, a kind of
-“merry-go-round,” such as we see at our fairs and
-holiday fêtes, with a score of persons enjoying its
-revolutions. There was also the game of shuttle-cock,
-which was launched either with hand or foot.
-In the midst of all this turmoil might be heard the
-monotonous tomtom, the isolated sounds of some
-three-stringed guitars, and especially the sharp
-reports of petards, which are indispensable at every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-festival, and resemble sometimes the file-firing of
-infantry.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THEATRICAL PERFORMANCES.</div>
-
-<p>For this great yearly revel every Annamite saves
-up his money for months, and when it comes he
-disburses his little store most conscientiously. Frequently
-an itinerant troop of actors comes&mdash;at least
-in the principal towns&mdash;to contribute its part to the
-general rejoicings. As it is the wealthy citizens
-who in turn defray the expense of its representations,
-we need hardly say that they are very largely
-attended. The plays included in their repertory
-are always of a noisy character, and plentifully
-sprinkled with coarse jokes, at the expense of the
-military mandarins, husbands, and especially the
-Chinese. Actors hideously painted, with the view
-of giving them a formidable appearance, perform in
-desperate combats, diversified by guttural cries and
-heroic poses of the most ridiculous character.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE FOUNDER OF HATIAN.</div>
-
-<p>During his sojourn at Hatian, Dr. Morice paid a
-visit to a singularly constructed edifice&mdash;the ancient
-Chinese palace of the Maqueuou. This Chinese
-worthy, it is said, was a simple fisherman; but as
-the products of his avocation did not enrich him
-with sufficient rapidity, he began to cultivate a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-ground, and started a pepper plantation. One day,
-while digging, he turned up a store of money,&mdash;a
-supply so ample that it enabled him to bring over
-to Hatian a large number of his compatriots. He
-trained them, enrolled them, practised them; and
-the result was that, one fine morning, Hatian,
-enriched and largely increased in population, declared
-itself independent of the empire of Annam,
-or rather Cambodia, and raised Maqueuou to the
-throne. He built for himself a splendid palace, and
-lived for many years afterwards, enjoying the rare
-pleasure of witnessing the realisation of his dreams.
-But when he died his organizing genius died with
-him. Hatian was again annexed to the empire, and
-the palace fell into ruin; only its four walls are now
-extant.</p>
-
-<p>The European stranger visits the spot with a
-feeling of respect for the memory of a bold and energetic
-man. With some difficulty he clears a path
-through the luxuriant vegetation, and arrives in
-front of walls of Cyclopean solidity. Two vast
-halls, almost choked with balsam, daturas, caster-oil
-plants, parasites, and refuse, form the entrance. Then
-come four smaller apartments, in better condition,
-and each provided with a great circular window.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-Here some geckos have established their abode,
-saluting the stranger with astonished glances and
-piercing cries.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MAQUEUOU’S TOMB.</div>
-
-<p>Next comes an immense chamber, almost exactly
-square; and several tombs or memorial buildings
-are here overshadowed by venerable trees. The
-highest, raised in honour of Maqueuou himself,
-consists of successive courses of masonry, diminishing
-gradually from base to summit. Unfortunately,
-built of bad materials, it has been seriously injured
-by the action of the sun and the rains. A swarm
-of bees was domiciled in one of the crannies; and a
-tree, the seed of which had probably dropped from
-the bill of some wandering bird, soared upward
-from the very apex of the pyramid. Four smaller
-monuments, all oblong in shape, and traditionally
-appropriated to Maqueuou’s family, are scattered
-around the former. They still bear traces of the
-carving with which they were formerly decorated.</p>
-
-<p>Solitude and silence prevail within the precincts
-of this vast ruin. The geckos, the birds, and a
-squirrel or two, are its only inmates.</p>
-
-<p>Another remarkable object is the so-called pagoda
-of Maqui, or the devil. Dr. Morice was greatly
-surprised to see appended to its walls a complete<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-series of water-colour sketches, on very stout paper,
-representing the tortures of an Inferno which would
-bear comparison with Dante’s. The satellites of
-the Annamite devil are shown in those pictures as
-engaged in the variety of occupations which the old
-medieval legends attributed to the imps of Beelzebub.
-They are roasting, impaling, cutting to pieces, and
-flaying the guilty; throwing them into caldrons of
-boiling water, grilling them over fires, and flinging
-them to the hungry jaws of enormous tigers.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AN UNPLEASANT GUEST.</div>
-
-<p>That Hatian is not without its unpleasantnesses,
-Dr. Morice discovered in an unexpected
-fashion. Some workmen, in pulling down an old
-wall, came on the lair of a large serpent, which lay
-in “multitudinous coils” hatching its store of eggs.
-As everybody knew Dr. Morice’s zoological tastes,
-the workmen sent him immediate information of
-their “find,” and he quickly arrived on the spot,
-armed with a stick and a long and strong pair of
-nippers. Had it not been for its eggs, the animal
-would probably have retreated; but it remained
-rolled up in its hole, showing only its spotted and
-dusky-coloured head. To seize its neck with his
-nippers, was Dr. Morice’s instant manœuvre; and
-then, to the great terror of the Chinese workmen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-he raised it up bodily, and proceeded to carry it off
-in triumph. Meanwhile, the irritated creature discharged
-at its captor’s forehead a jet of liquid, from
-which, at the time, he felt no disagreeable sensation.
-On reaching home, Dr. Morice deposited the reptile
-and its eggs in a chest lined with straw; which he
-nailed down carefully, and raised above the ground
-on vessels of water, as a protection against the attacks
-of ants. Then, and not till then, he washed his forehead,
-bathing, with due caution, the part touched by
-the fluid discharge; but still not believing that the
-serpent was one of the venomous kind. He troubled
-himself no more about his prisoner until, a few days
-later, he found in his chamber four tiny serpents,
-which he took up in his hand, in spite of their
-angry hissing. These he transferred to a glass jar.
-The next morning, wishing to examine them, he
-was unpleasantly surprised to find them rearing
-their head erect and expanding their neck laterally;
-and still more disagreeably surprised to detect on
-the neck thus expanded the characteristic V.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A COBRA CAPELLA.</span>
-
-They
-belonged to the genus of the spectacled serpent, the
-<i>naja</i> of India, the dreaded <i>cobra capella</i>!</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">MOTHER AND PROGENY.</div>
-
-<p>Dr. Morice hastened to bore some large holes in
-the chest containing the serpent and the eggs, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-by means of these he introduced into the interior a
-quantity of burning sulphur. When, after a sufficient
-time had elapsed, he opened it, he found the
-mother and eighteen young ones suffocated, while
-four eggs still remained intact. How had the others
-been hatched? The circumstance was a novel one,
-for it was supposed that only the great serpents&mdash;the
-pythons and boas&mdash;hatched their eggs. At all
-events, it was an interesting fact that this animal
-had remained faithful to its brood. Among the
-sixteen young serpents, only one was a female, and
-most of them had already once changed their skin.
-They were about thirteen inches long, and their
-fangs were clearly discernible. Dr. Morice felt that
-he had good reason to be thankful that he had not
-been wounded by the <i>cobra capella</i> when he so
-rashly pounced upon it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We next find our unwearied travellers undertaking
-a journey to Chaudoc, which is situated near
-the mouth of the Mekong. On both banks of the
-river, but more particularly on the right bank, are
-arranged the numerous Annamite huts; and above
-them frown the grim walls of a fort, which is in
-itself of the size of a small town. The province, of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-which Chaudoc is the capital, includes one hundred
-and five villages, and has a population of eighty-nine
-thousand souls, of whom eight thousand are
-Cambodians and sixteen thousand Malays.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="VINH-LONG"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t163h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t163.jpg" width="550" height="360" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>VINH-LONG.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AT VINH-LONG.</div>
-
-<p>Five days later Dr. Morice was at Vinh-Long, the
-fort of which is equal in magnitude to that of
-Chaudoc. In the rear of the great muddy moats and
-embankments of earth, sustained by huge piles, rise
-the officers’ barracks, and the entrenched redoubt
-containing the soldiers’ quarters and the hospital.
-Bamboos and tall grasses have overgrown a portion
-of the immense enclosure, and in their tangled mass
-enormous pythons are frequently killed, while the
-<i>najas</i> lie asleep in the dank inextricable vegetation
-of the trenches. The town itself is not without a
-certain agreeableness of aspect; its broad, straight
-streets are shaded by gigantic cocoa-nut palms.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE “BLACK LADY.”</div>
-
-<p>Still continuing his explorations in the districts
-watered by the mouths of the Mekong, which forms
-a considerable delta, traversed by innumerable canals
-and branches, Dr. Morice arrived at Tayninh, which
-lies to the east of Saigon. It lines the river-bank
-for some distance; the houses of the Annamite population
-being built, not of mud and clay, as in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-western districts of Cochin-China, but of good solid
-timber, and with much care and good taste. Their
-roofs are also of better construction: instead of the
-leaves of the water-palm, a close fine thatch is used,
-to which the action of the atmosphere soon gives a
-pleasant tint of age. Flourishing coffee-plantations
-surround the town, in the rear of which spread the
-shadows of a mighty forest, that spreads far up the
-sides of a chain of granite mountains of moderate
-elevation. The highest of these is the “Black
-Lady” (<i>Nui-ba-dinh</i>). On the summit, in a picturesque
-nook, stands a celebrated pagoda, the cells
-of its bonzes being excavated out of the neighbouring
-rock. The pagoda owes its repute to the
-neighbourhood of a miraculous spring; and this
-spring rejoices in a legend, which may be told as
-<span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE PERPETUAL FOUNTAIN.</div>
-
-<p>A bonze of indescribable holiness, who loved to
-offer up his prayers in the high places of earth,
-climbed the mountain one day in order to make his
-devotions on its lofty summit. Despite his sanctity,
-however, he was human; and as the mountain
-was of great elevation and equal barrenness,
-he soon grew faint with hunger, but more particularly
-with thirst. Disdainful, like all sages, of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-purely physical needs, he had not taken the precaution
-of providing himself with these precious necessaries
-of food and drink, which are the first thought
-of ordinary mortals. What was he to do? He
-began to pray; and lo! as he prayed, an enormous
-rock, which reared its dark front before him, was
-suddenly cleft open, and revealed to his delighted
-gaze a crystal spring falling into a basin of stone.
-From that time the well has never ceased to pour
-out abundant waters, which heal all the diseases of
-humanity;&mdash;though, strange to say, men, women,
-and children still die in Cochin-China!</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes’ climbing brought Dr. Morice face
-to face with this perpetual marvel. His companions
-hastened to drink copious draughts of the fresh cold
-water; but Dr. Morice, rejecting the legend, and
-having less confidence than he ought to have had
-in temperance principles, resorted to his pocket
-flask, poured out a glass of French wine, and drank
-to the majesty of the glorious mountain.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="SCENE_AT_TAYNINH"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t167h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t167.jpg" width="550" height="363" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>SCENE AT TAYNINH.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On another occasion Dr. Morice took part in an
-exciting adventure, which had a painful issue. A
-tiger, whose depredations had become intolerable,
-having carried off the best dog of one of the best<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-hunters of the country, it was decided that he must
-undergo immediate and condign punishment.</p>
-
-<p>The tiger is not often hunted in Cochin-China,
-where the elephant, that living fortress, does not
-place at the disposal of the European its high shoulders
-and formidable tusks. The inhabitants generally
-resort to snares.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TIGER-HUNTING.</div>
-
-<p>“An expedition having been resolved upon, we
-surrounded,” says Dr. Morice, “the hill which served
-as a retreat for the monster. More than one hundred
-and fifty natives were present, shouting, gesticulating,
-and creating the most awful clamour which
-ever troubled a tiger’s siesta. As for us, the French
-inspector, a French soldier, and myself, we were in
-the plain, sprinkled with small mounded graves,
-which extends behind Tayninh, and waited in
-patience until it pleased the tiger to show his precious
-skin. It seemed to be his opinion that the
-boldest policy was the best; for in less than half
-an hour after we had drawn our noisy cordon he
-emerged from the wood, and advanced towards us.
-He was received with a rolling fire. Of our four
-balls one at least struck him, for he made a movement
-of pain, and turned towards the soldier who
-had accompanied us. That our movements might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-be more free, we had separated at some distance
-from one another.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">THE SOLDIER AND THE TIGER.</span>
-
-The soldier immediately leaped
-upon a mound about three feet high, and with his
-loaded gun in his hand bided the wounded animal’s
-onset. A second ball from the inspector’s rifle hit
-him; but disregarding this new provocation, and
-yearning for his prey, he dashed towards the tumulus.
-With one bound he was at its foot, where he
-reared himself erect. Then took place a strange
-and lamentable scene, which showed how even the
-bravest lose their self-possession when face to face
-with these terrible beasts. That the soldier was a
-man of courage, numerous incidents had proved: it
-was he who had shown the most ardour in organizing
-the expedition; he had in his hand a first-rate
-rifle, and only the length of his arm apart was the
-white chest of the tiger, which seemed to await his
-death-dealing bullet. Well, for a few seconds he
-contented himself with striking the outstretched
-paws before him with the butt-end of his musket.
-The tiger extended his body, seized with one of his
-claws the unfortunate man’s leg, and began to drag
-him off.”</p>
-
-<p>“A man touched by a tiger is a dead man,” says
-a German naturalist; “and it is useless to risk the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-life of another in an attempt to snatch from the
-cruel beast the mutilated victim whose sufferings
-will soon be terminated by death.” Such cold-blooded
-reasoning never prevails on the scene of
-action. Both the doctor and the inspector pursued
-the tiger as he still hauled along their comrade’s
-body; and two bullets, more fortunate than their
-predecessors, arrested his course for ever.</p>
-
-<p>On examination, they found that their unfortunate
-companion had sustained a severe wound. Dr.
-Morice amputated his thigh in the hut to which he
-was transported; but, whether from loss of blood,
-which Europeans can ill afford in tropical latitudes,
-or from the violence of the shock to the nervous
-system, he died that same night.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">VISIT TO THE MARKET-PLACE.</div>
-
-<p>From this painful scene it is pleasant to turn to
-the market-place of Tayninh, with its various specimens
-of the human race. Cambodians are tolerably
-numerous; their comparatively tall stature,
-their dark skin, their thick and heavy lower jaw,
-their hair cut close like the bristles of a brush, and
-especially their air of passive savagery, give them
-an appearance totally different from that of the
-Annamites. The two races detest each other cor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>dially.
-The Annamite, proud of his lighter complexion,
-of his more advanced civilization, to say
-nothing of the numerous defeats he has inflicted on
-his neighbour, looks upon him as little above the
-Moïs or wild people of the mountains.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">ANNAMITE AND CAMBODIAN.</span>
-
-The Cambodians
-are savages, he says, whose nature is radically
-bad and vicious; they think nothing of law
-or order; they are stupid, and almost devoid of
-reason. On the other hand, the Cambodian, with
-his gloomier and more silent disposition, his deeper
-religious sentiment, regards with compassion the
-volatile Annamite. A cordial understanding between
-the two peoples will hardly ever be possible.
-The Cambodian, in spite of his somewhat coarse
-features, is more Hindu than Indo-Chinese; and
-both his language and his writing have affinities
-with those of the aboriginal inhabitants of the great
-Indian peninsula. He is the morose and untamable
-denizen of the hills and woods; while his
-neighbour is the sociable and light-humoured inhabitant
-of the plains. Unhappy is the Cambodian!
-Hemmed in between the Siamese on the one hand,
-and the Annamites on the other, who together have
-robbed him of his richest provinces; rendered stationary
-by the operation of a feudal law which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-prevents him from acquiring lands of his own,&mdash;a
-vigorous hand is needed to support him, and enable
-him to preserve his autonomy, while the ameliorating
-influences of European civilization are gradually
-brought to bear upon him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE CHINESE ELEMENT.</div>
-
-<p>Such are the two races which occupy the provinces
-watered by the lower branches of the great
-Cambodian river. In the large towns and seaports
-is found a considerable admixture of the Chinese
-element. Trade and commerce are almost entirely
-in the hands of Chinese merchants, who, here as
-elsewhere, exhibit an extraordinary amount of
-patience, industry, and thrift; and, here as elsewhere,
-untiringly amass large and even enormous
-fortunes. They preserve their nationality unaffected
-by the conditions in which they are placed; always
-a people apart, and always as distinct from the races
-around them as are the Jews from the nations of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="CHINESE_MERCHANTS_OF_SAIGON"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_t173h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t173.jpg" width="550" height="376" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>CHINESE MERCHANTS OF SAIGON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">M. MOUHOT IN CAMBODIA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/zill_t176.png" width="125" height="125" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="upper-case">Much</span> of the interesting and valuable information
-we have acquired of late years in
-reference to Siam, Cambodia, and Laos,
-we owe to the indefatigable labours of Henri Mouhot,
-the eminent French naturalist, who penetrated into
-regions previously unknown to Europeans in the
-years 1858, 1859, and 1860, and devoted himself
-to the service of Science with equal ability and zeal.
-He finally fell a victim to his heroic ardour&mdash;being
-seized with fever while on his way from Na-Lê to
-Luang Prabang, in Laos, on the 19th of October
-1861, and dying, almost alone, with the exception of
-two faithful native servants, on the 10th of November.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">TEMPLE OF ONGCOR.</div>
-
-<p>He spent nearly four years in exploring the
-interior of Siam. As his biographer tells us, he
-first travelled through that country, then entered
-Cambodia, and afterwards made his way up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-Mekong as far as the frontier of Laos. There he
-visited one of the wild and unconquered tribes
-which occupy the border-land between Cambodia
-and Laos and Cochin-China. Crossing the great
-lake Touli-Sap, he extended his researches into the
-remote provinces of Ongcor and Battambang, discovering
-some immense ruins of high antiquity, and
-more particularly those of the Temple of Ongcor
-the Great, which, with its terrace, portico, galleries,
-and peristyles, is perhaps a monument unparalleled
-in the world. The bas-reliefs with which it is
-adorned indicate considerable artistic skill on the part
-of those who designed and executed them. But
-what impresses the observer, not less than the beauty
-and grandeur of the various parts of the huge pile,
-is the size and number of the blocks of stone of
-which they are constructed. In a single temple as
-many as fifteen hundred and thirty-two columns!
-What means of transport, as Mouhot remarks, what
-a multitude of workmen, must such an enterprise
-have required, seeing that the mountain whence
-the stone was extracted is thirty miles distant! In
-each block may be seen holes an inch in diameter,
-and an inch and a fifth in depth, varying in number
-with the size of the blocks; but no traces of them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-are found in the columns and sculptured portions
-of the glorious structure. According to a Cambodian
-legend, these are the impressions of the
-fingers of a giant, who, after kneading an enormous
-quantity of clay, cut it into blocks and carved it,
-and then converted it into stone by pouring over it
-some wonderful liquid.</p>
-
-<p>“All the mouldings, sculptures, and bas-reliefs,”
-says Mouhot, “appear to have been executed after
-the erection of the building. The stones are everywhere
-fitted together in so perfect a manner that
-you can scarcely see where are the joinings; there
-is neither sign of mortar nor mark of chisel, the
-surface being as polished as marble. Was this incomparable
-edifice the work of a single genius, who
-conceived the idea, and watched over the execution
-of it? One is tempted to think so, for no part of it
-is deficient, faulty, or inconsistent. To what epoch
-does it owe its origin? As before remarked, neither
-tradition nor written inscriptions furnish any certain
-information upon this point; or rather, I should
-say, these latter are as a sealed book, for want of
-an interpreter,&mdash;and they may, perchance, throw
-light on the subject when some European savant
-shall succeed in deciphering them.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From the Mekong valley M. Mouhot passed into
-that of the great Siamese river, the Menam, visiting
-the province of Pechaburi. Thence he returned to
-Bangkok, and after suitable preparation started on
-an expedition to the north-east of Laos. His wanderings
-took him to Phrabat, Saohaïe, Chaiapume,
-and Korat. Returning to Chaiapume, he struck off
-in a westerly direction, and visited Poukieau,
-Monang-Mouna-Wa, Nam-kane, and Luang Prabang,
-capital of West Laos. At the time of his death he
-was bound for the provinces south-west of China.</p>
-
-<p>It will form, we think, a useful supplement to the
-account of the Mekong given in the preceding pages,
-if we condense M. Mouhot’s narrative of his partial
-ascent of that great river.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">JOURNEY TO UDONG.</div>
-
-
-<p>We will take up our traveller’s route at Kamput,
-on the sea-coast, where he had an interview with the
-king of Cambodia, and obtained carriages to convey
-him to Udong, the capital. Udong is situated about
-one hundred and thirty-five miles to the north-east of
-Kamput, and four miles and a half from an arm of the
-Mekong which forms the Great Lake. After traversing
-a marshy plain he and his followers entered a noble
-forest, and “under green leaves” proceeded to Udong,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-resting at night in stations provided for the accommodation
-of travellers. These are about twelve
-miles apart, and are not only spacious but handsome.
-The road all the way proved to be in excellent order,
-and averaged from eighty to one hundred feet in
-width. A broad track in the middle is reserved for
-vehicles and elephants, while on either side extends
-a belt of turf, covered with shrubs, and bounded by
-the lofty and majestic trees of the forest. On drawing
-near the capital, M. Mouhot saw that the
-country exhibited signs of cultivation: fields of
-rice waved luxuriantly, and the country residences
-of the Cambodian nobles were surrounded by beautiful
-gardens. The capital was protected by a large
-moat, surmounted by a parapet, and enclosed by a
-palisade ten feet high. There were no sentinels at
-the gate, however, and M. Mouhot entered unchallenged;
-nay, more, without let or hindrance passed
-into the palace-court of the second king of Cambodia.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A CAMBODIAN PALACE.</div>
-
-<p>This distinguished personage soon heard of the
-stranger’s arrival, and despatched a couple of pages
-to summon him to his presence. Mouhot would
-have excused himself on the plea that his luggage
-had not arrived, and he was not in suitable attire.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-He was told that the king had no dress at all; and
-before he could invent a second excuse, the king’s
-Chamberlain arrived with a more peremptory message.
-Mouhot, therefore, repaired to the palace,
-the entrance of which was guarded by a dozen
-dismounted cannon, and was shown into the audience-chamber,
-the walls of which were whitened with
-chalk, and the floor paved with large Chinese tiles.
-Here, waiting for the king’s appearance, were collected
-several Siamese pages, from twenty-five to
-thirty years of age, all dressed alike in a langouti
-of red silk.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">MOUHOT AND THE KING.</span>
-
-As the king entered every forehead
-touched the ground. His manner was graceful and
-self-possessed, and the questions he asked were
-pertinent and sensible. Was M. Mouhot French
-or English? What was his business in Cambodia?
-What did he think of Bangkok? Then, with all
-the ease of a European sovereign, he held out his
-hand for Mouhot to kiss; and the latter withdrew,
-well pleased with the interview.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A BUSY SCENE.</div>
-
-<p>An inspection of the city showed him that it contained
-a population of about twelve thousand souls;
-that it consisted in the main of a street one mile
-in length; and that the houses were built of planks
-or bamboos. It presents a very lively appearance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-however, from the numbers of persons who are
-drawn to it by considerations of business or pleasure.
-“Every moment,” says Mouhot, “I met
-mandarins, either borne in litters or on foot, followed
-by a crowd of slaves carrying various articles: some,
-yellow or scarlet parasols, more or less huge according
-to the rank of the persons; others, boxes with
-betel. I also encountered horsemen, mounted on
-pretty, spirited little animals, richly caparisoned
-and covered with bells, ambling along, while a troop
-of attendants, covered with dust and sweltering with
-heat, ran after them. Light carts, drawn by a
-couple of small oxen, trotting along rapidly and
-noisily, were here and there to be seen. Occasionally
-a large elephant passed majestically by. On
-this side were numerous processions to the pagoda,
-marching to the sound of music; there, again, was
-a band of ecclesiastics in single file, seeking alms,
-draped in their yellow cloaks, and with the holy
-vessels on their backs.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE GREAT BAZAAR OF CAMBODIA.</div>
-
-<p>From Udong, with waggons and elephants provided
-by the king, M. Mouhot proceeded towards
-the Great Lake. The road was in excellent condition,
-and at some points built up more than ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-feet above the level of the low, wooded country
-which borders on the great arm of the Mekong.
-The watercourses were spanned by handsome bridges
-of wood or stone. At Pinhalu, a village on the
-right bank of the river, is the residence of the
-French Vicar-Apostolic of the Cambodia and Laos
-mission. Here our traveller embarked in a small
-boat for Pemptielan, situated on the Mekong, about
-forty miles north of Pnom Penh. The branch which
-he descended was fifteen hundred yards wide, and its
-banks were inhabited by a tribe called the Thiâmes.
-Pnom Penh, which Mouhot reached after a perilous
-voyage, is the great bazaar of Cambodia. It contains
-a population of about ten thousand, nearly
-all Chinese; while double that number of Cochin-Chinese
-and Cambodians live upon the river in their
-boats. An active trade is carried on here in rice,
-fish, glass, brass wire, and cotton yarn.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ASCENT OF THE MEKONG.</div>
-
-<p>Just below this busy town M. Mouhot’s boat
-passed into the main channel of the Mekong&mdash;the
-“Mother of Rivers”&mdash;and began to ascend it,
-steering towards the north. Shoals of porpoises
-accompanied it, occasionally bounding out of the
-water with a lively splash; red-billed pelicans
-watched for their finny prey from the reedy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-banks; and storks and herons stood in silent meditation.</p>
-
-<p>The current of the Mekong, as we have already
-stated, flows with great rapidity, and renders navigation
-slow and laborious. It took M. Mouhot five
-days to pass the island of Ko-Sutin; and the rate of
-velocity increasing as he advanced to the northward,
-he was seldom able to accomplish more than two
-miles a day. On arriving at the rapids and cataracts
-he was compelled to abandon his boats and
-embark, with his followers and stores, in light canoes;
-and even these it was necessary at times to carry
-ashore, and convey along the bank on men’s shoulders
-until a smooth part of the river was gained.</p>
-
-<p>At Pemptielan Mouhot landed, and delivered to
-its mandarin a letter from the king, ordering him to
-furnish the traveller with all the appliances requisite
-for his overland journey. He immediately started
-him on his way with a suitable number of waggons
-drawn by oxen, but the soil in the forests was so
-marshy that they were continually sinking in some
-deep slough, from which they could be extricated
-only by the greatest exertions. Thus their progress
-was limited to sixty miles in five days. At length
-he reached the village of Brelum, in the centre of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-a district occupied by the savage Stiêns. Here, in
-order to study their manners and the physical
-features of the country, he remained three months,
-though it is difficult to conceive of a situation less
-pleasing to or suitable for a man of European culture.
-The gloomy forests around were infested with
-elephants, rhinoceroses, tigers, buffaloes, and wild
-boars. More formidable, because less easily avoided,
-were the snakes, scorpions, and centipedes which
-swarmed in every direction, and constantly made
-their way into the houses. Brelum, however, is the
-seat of a Roman Catholic mission, and from its head,
-Father Guilloux, the traveller received a cordial
-hospitality which alleviated the dreariness of his
-sojourn.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">RESIDENCE AT PEMPTIELAN.</div>
-
-<p>He describes the Stiêns as dwelling in villages,
-each of which forms a distinct and independent
-community. They love “the deep shade of the
-pathless woods,” where they live on the products of
-their bow and arrows. They work with great skill
-in iron and ivory; and the women weave and dye
-a delicate stuff, which they wear in the form of a
-long loose scarf. In the neighbourhood of their
-villages, if the country be open, they cultivate
-various kinds of vegetables and fruit-trees, as well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-as rice, maize, and tobacco. In the fields thus
-planted they spend the rainy season, building small
-huts, raised above the swampy ground on piles&mdash;a
-protection at once from the swollen waters and the
-leeches, the latter of which are a plague of no inconsiderable
-proportions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE RICE CULTIVATION.</div>
-
-<p>There is a certain peculiarity in their method of
-cultivating rice. On the beginning of the rains the
-Stiên selects his piece of ground, and with nimble
-hatchet clears it of its growth of bamboos, but not
-attempting to meddle with the large trees. As soon
-as the canes have dried he sets fire to them, and in
-this way clears his ground and manures it simultaneously.
-Then he takes two long bamboos and
-lays them in a line on the ground; with a dibble in
-each hand he makes on either side a row of holes
-about an inch and a half deep, at short distances.
-Having finished <i>his</i> share of the work the man retires
-to enjoy his ease, while his wife enters on the scene,
-and from a basket slung to her waist dips out a
-handful of rice, a few grains of which she drops
-into each hole with equal neatness and rapidity.
-No more is necessary. Nature does the rest. The
-heavy rains soon wash the soil over the holes; and
-the heat of the climate soon causes the seed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-germinate. Meanwhile the cultivator sits and smokes
-in his hut, or proves his skill with bow and arrow
-at the expense of the goats, apes, or wild boars.
-At the end of October is reaped the harvest.
-Generally, for some weeks previously much privation
-and distress are experienced, and the improvident
-Stiên, who never takes thought of the morrow
-in the season of plenty, is reduced to feed upon wild
-roots, maize seeds, young bamboo shoots, and even
-serpents, bats, and toads. For this sorry fare the
-Stiên compensates himself as soon as the harvest is
-gathered. A general feasting commences: one village
-inviting the inhabitants of another; oxen being freely
-slaughtered; and eating and drinking prevailing from
-morn to night, and almost from night to morn, to
-the sound of tambourine and tomtom.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">ABOUT THE STIÊNS.</div>
-
-<p>Like the Annamites, the Stiêns wear the hair
-long, but twisted up, and fastened by a bamboo
-comb, with a pheasant’s crest on the top of a piece
-of brass wire by way of ornament. They are mostly
-of tall stature, strong, and well-limbed; with regular
-features, thick eyebrows, and a good forehead. Their
-hospitality is abundant, and a stranger, on his arrival,
-is immediately entertained with rice-wine, a pipe of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-peace, and a fatted pig or fowl. Their dress is simplicity
-itself,&mdash;a long scarf about two inches wide;
-and even with this they dispense when “at home”
-in their cabins. They have neither priests nor
-temples; and their religion appears to consist of a
-belief in a supreme being called <i>Brâ</i>; to whom, on
-occasions of calamity and suffering, they sacrifice a
-pig or an ox, and sometimes a human victim.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THEIR RESPECT FOR THE DEAD.</div>
-
-<p>They are very careful in burying their dead; and
-a member of the family of the deceased invariably
-visits the grave daily, to sow a few grains of rice for
-his sustenance. Prior to any meal, they spill a little
-rice for the same purpose; and similar offerings are
-made in the fields and places which the dead were
-accustomed to visit. Plumes of reed are attached to
-the top of a long bamboo, and lower down the stem
-are fastened smaller bamboos containing a few drops
-of wine or water; and, finally, on “a slight trellis-work
-raised above the ground” some earth is laid, with
-an arrow planted in it, and a few grains of cooked
-rice, a leaf, a little tobacco, and a bone spread about.</p>
-
-<p>The Stiêns believe that animals have souls; that
-these wander about after death; and that, therefore,
-it is necessary to propitiate them, lest they should be
-troublesome and vexatious. Sacrifices are accord<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>ingly
-offered, in proportion to the size and strength
-of the animal; and the reader will conceive that
-in the case of an elephant they are on a very grand
-scale. The North American Indian, it may be remarked,
-cherishes a similar superstition in respect to
-the bear and the buffalo.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THEIR HUNTING WEAPONS.</div>
-
-<p>According to M. Mouhot, a Stiên is seldom seen
-without his cross-bow in his hand, his knife slung
-over his shoulder, and a basket&mdash;for his arrows, and
-the game they bring down&mdash;on his back. In the
-chase he displays the most untiring energy, gliding
-through the woods “with the speed of a deer.” In
-the use of the cross-bow practice brings perfection.
-For the larger animals the arrows are steeped in a
-poison which is described as being peculiarly rapid
-and fatal in its effects.</p>
-
-<p>The Stiêns, let it be said in conclusion, are, like
-most savage races, exceedingly partial to ornaments,
-and particularly to bracelets made of bright-coloured
-beads. The men usually wear one above the elbow,
-and one at the wrist; but the women load both
-arms and legs. Brass wire and glass ornaments
-form their currency; a buffalo or an ox being valued
-at six armfuls of thick brass wire, which is also
-about the price of a pig. A pheasant, however, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-a hundred ears of maize, may be procured for a
-small piece of fine wire or a bead necklace.</p>
-
-<p>Both men and women perforate their ears, widening
-the hole annually by the insertion of plugs of
-bone or ivory fully three inches in length. A
-plurality of wives is allowed to the chiefs and richer
-men of the tribe; the poor are content with one
-wife, simply because they cannot afford to maintain
-a harem.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">HUNTING THE TIGER.</div>
-
-<p>About the fauna of this portion of the Mekong
-valley little need be said, and that little we shall
-confine to the tiger, which is as strong and ferocious
-as his celebrated congener of Bengal. Yet a couple
-of men, with no other weapons than pikes, will frequently
-sally forth to the attack. When the object
-of their daring enterprise is discovered, the stronger
-of the two hunters lowers his pike. Sometimes, if
-not emboldened by hunger, the tiger refuses the
-challenge, and bounds into the forest shade; more
-frequently he charges with a sudden rush, and then,
-if the force of his leap do not carry him over the
-head of the hunter, he falls upon the pike, which
-the hunter raises by pressing the handle on the
-earth. Immediately his companion rushes forward,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-and plunges his weapon into the animal’s flank;
-then the two, by sheer force, pin him to the ground,
-and hold him there until he dies. If the first man
-miss his aim, and break his pike, his death is certain;
-and not seldom his comrade also perishes.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="sidenote">A CIRCLE OF PIKES.</div>
-
-<p>But generally a tiger-hunt brings to the front all
-the men of the village, together with volunteers
-from the neighbouring villages. Led by the most
-experienced among them, they track the animal to
-his lair, which they proceed to enclose with a circle&mdash;each
-man being posted at a convenient distance, but
-so as to leave no space unguarded through which the
-tiger may escape. “Some of the most daring then
-venture into the centre,” says Mouhot, “and cut
-away the brushwood, during which operation they
-are protected by others armed with pikes. The
-tiger, pressed on all sides, rolls his eyes, licks his
-paws in a convulsive manner as though preparing
-for combat; then, with a frightful howl, he makes
-his spring. Immediately every pike is raised, and
-the animal falls pierced through and through.
-Accidents not infrequently happen, and many are
-often severely hurt; but they have no choice but to
-wage war against the tigers, which leave them no
-rest, force the enclosures, and carry off domestic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-animals and even men, not only from the roads and
-close vicinity of the houses, but from the interiors
-of the buildings. In Annam, the fear inspired by
-the tigers, elephants, and other wild animals, makes
-the people address them with the greatest respect;
-they give them the title of ‘grandfather’ or ‘lord,’
-fearing that they may be offended, and show resentment
-by attacking them.” It is a pity that poets
-and romancists, when enlarging on the joys of a
-savage life, its freedom from the restraints of civilization,
-and the opportunities it affords for communion
-with Nature, omit all reference to its inconveniences,&mdash;such,
-for instance, as the immediate
-neighbourhood of an elephant or a tiger!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">LAKE TOULI-SAP.</div>
-
-<p>After a sojourn of three months among the Stiêns,
-M. Mouhot returned to Udong by the route which
-he had previously followed. Of Pnom Penh, he
-says that it is situated at the confluence of the
-Mekong with its tributary, which he proposes to
-name the Mé-Sap. This arm or tributary it is
-which forms the great Cambodian lake Touli-Sap;
-an immense sheet of water, upwards of one hundred
-and twenty miles in length, and four hundred miles
-in circumference, and as full of motion as a sea.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-Its shores are low, and covered with half-submerged
-trees; but in the distance may be seen a magnificent
-range of mountains, with the clouds resting on their
-summits.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">RUINS OF BUDDHIST TEMPLES.</div>
-
-<p>To the east of the Great Lake lies the province of
-Ongcor, or Nokhor, in which, and along the banks
-of the Mekong, lie ruins of immense grandeur, bearing
-witness to the ancient wealth and populousness
-of the kingdom of Tsiampois (Cochin-China). To
-the most remarkable of these monuments, the great
-temple of Ongcor-Wat, we have already alluded.
-Its founders are unknown. Ask the Cambodians,
-and they reply: “It is the work of Pra-Enn, the
-king of the angels;” or else, “It is the work of
-giants;” or, “It was built by the leper King;” or,
-“It made itself.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">ON THE MOUNTAIN-SUMMIT.</div>
-
-<p>Two miles and a half to the north of Ongcor, on the
-summit of Mount Bakhêng, rises another magnificent
-Buddhist temple, not less than one hundred and
-twenty feet in height. At the foot of the mountain
-two stately lions, each formed, with its pedestal, out
-of a single block of limestone, keep watch in the
-silent shadows of the forest-trees. Thence dilapidated
-stone staircases lead to the mountain-top,
-from which a view of singular beauty and extent is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-obtained. On the one side are visible the wooded
-plain and pyramidal temple of Ongcor, with its
-noble colonnades, and the mountain of Crôme,&mdash;the
-horizon being bounded by the shining waters of the
-Great Lake. In the opposite direction extends the
-long mountain-chain, the quarries of which, it is said,
-supplied the materials of the temples; and among
-the dense masses of foliage at its feet glimmers a
-fair and silvery lake. The entire region is now as
-lonely and deserted as formerly it must have been
-full of life and cheerfulness. The solitude is disturbed
-only by the occasional song of bird, or wild,
-unearthly cry of beast of prey.</p>
-
-<p>A smooth surface has been obtained on the top of
-the mountain by laying down a thick floor of lime.
-At regular intervals are four rows of deep holes, in
-some of which still stand the columns that formerly
-supported two roofs, and formed a corridor leading
-from the staircase to the body of the building. The
-arms or branches of this gallery were connected
-with four towers, built partly of stone and partly
-of brick. In the two of these which are in the best
-preservation are kept large rudely-fashioned idols,
-evidently of great antiquity. In one of the others
-is a large stone, with an inscription still visible;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-the figure of a king with a long beard is carved
-upon the outer wall.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">M. MOUHOT’S DESCRIPTION.</div>
-
-<p>A wall, says Mouhot, surrounds the top of the
-mountain, and encloses yet another building&mdash;quadrangular
-in shape, and composed of five stories, each
-about ten feet high, while the basement story is two
-hundred and twenty feet square. These stories form
-so many terraces, which serve as bases to seventy-two
-small but elegant pavilions; and they are embellished
-with mouldings, colonnades, and cornices.
-M. Mouhot describes the work as perfect; and is of
-opinion that, from its good state of preservation, it
-must be of later date than the towers. Each pavilion,
-it may be assumed, formerly contained an idol.</p>
-
-<p>On either side of the quadrangle ascends a staircase,
-seven feet wide, with nine steps to each story,
-and lions on each terrace. The centre of the terrace
-formed by the last story is simply a mass of ruins
-from the shattered towers. Near the staircase lie
-two gigantic blocks of fine stone, wrought as smooth
-as marble, and shaped like pedestals for statues.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">GARNIER’S DESCRIPTION.</div>
-
-<p>[So far from M. Mouhot. It will be interesting,
-however, to supplement his description with the
-details given by Lieutenant Garnier.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The ascent of the so-called mountain, he says, is
-easily accomplished: after a little time the traveller
-arrives at a kind of platform excavated in the rock,
-the surface of which appears formerly to have been
-carefully levelled with cement. A small brick building
-attracts the eye; it is erected over the imprint
-of Buddha’s foot, the gilding and outlines of which
-are, like the building itself, of very modern date.
-But we soon discover, in the rock, numerous holes
-which served as foundations for the columns of the
-temple; and beyond, some of these columns are still
-standing. If we follow up the traces of this colonnade,
-we arrive at an enclosure which was opened
-of old, perhaps, by a monumental gate; but there
-are not sufficient vestiges extant to enable us safely
-to reconstruct this part of the edifice. Within the
-enclosure, and symmetrically placed on either side
-of the colonnade, we find two ruined buildings; and
-in their interior numerous statues and fragments of
-statues have been carefully preserved by the inhabitants.
-Continuing our exploration westward, we
-arrive at length at the foot of the principal monument.
-This consists of five terraces excavated on
-the crest of the hill in exact gradation. Their
-general plan is rectangular, and one recedes behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-the other at least thirteen feet. We ascend them
-by means of staircases constructed in the middle of
-each side, and guarded by stone lions mounted upon
-pedestals. At the angle of each terrace, and about
-thirty feet from each staircase, are raised admirably
-built little turrets, sixteen feet in height. Each of
-these sixteen turrets contains a statue.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A MASS OF RUINS.</div>
-
-<p>In the centre of the upper terrace is a platform
-or base, about three and a quarter feet high, and
-measuring one hundred feet from north to south by
-one hundred and three feet from east to west. On
-this base were raised of old the towers which dominated
-the neighbouring country. But it is occupied
-now by a mass of ruins. By carefully examining
-them, we are able to make out that these towers
-were three in number, of which the central was the
-largest, and that they faced the east. The view
-from the summit of the ruins is truly enchanting.
-
-
-
-<span class="sidenote">A PICTURESQUE PANORAMA.</span>
-
-
-At our feet extends the verdurous sea of forest, its
-vague and undefinable murmurs just audible to the
-attentive ear. In a northerly direction the dense
-forest-shadows stretch far and far away until lost
-in the dim horizon; and the eye seeks vainly to
-discover in its midst the crests of some of the lofty
-monuments of Ongcor. To the south-east, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-the towers and colonnades of Ongcor-Wat are clearly
-marked out upon the great open plain; and the
-few groves of palms and clusters of fruit-trees which
-surround it give to the landscape an Oriental character
-of poetry and grace. Westward, a small lake
-reflects in its glassy surface the surrounding verdure.
-To the south we catch glimpses, through the
-warm vapours which veil the horizon, of the Great
-Lake.</p>
-
-<p>What a fairy-like aspect, from the summit of these
-towers, must the mountain itself, in the old time,
-have presented, with its lions, and its turrets, and
-its staircases of stone descending even to the plain
-and to the city of Ongcor-Thôm, with its ramparts
-and its innumerable gilded towers, which the forest
-now covers with its vast monotonous shroud of
-verdure!</p>
-
-<p>From the extent of the débris accumulated at
-the foot of the monument, we may conjecture that
-formerly a double row of buildings of brick surrounded
-it; these were probably occupied by a
-garrison or a numerous military guard. The position
-of Mount Bakhêng with reference to the neighbouring
-city made it a kind of Acropolis; and
-doubtless it was so used from the very foundation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-of the city. But while Mouhot ascribes the monument
-which it supports to the very infancy of
-Cambodian art, the leader of Garnier’s expedition
-considered it of later date. The fashion of the
-ornamentation and the style of the architecture
-seemed to him almost identical with those of other
-Khmer ruins. Moreover, in his opinion this architecture
-sprang into existence, so to speak, all at
-once; was complete in itself; had neither a period
-of development nor one of decay;&mdash;as if it had been
-introduced from without by a conquering race, which
-afterwards had been swept away by some sudden
-catastrophe.]</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">MOUHOT AT BANGKOK.</div>
-
-<p>After a careful survey of the ruins of Ongcor and
-Ongcor-Thôm (or “the Great”), M. Mouhot returned
-to Bangkok, and made preparations to visit the
-north-eastern provinces of Laos.</p>
-
-<p>While at Bangkok he witnessed a succession of
-fêtes, of which he records details so interesting, that,
-by way of digression, we venture to transfer them
-to these pages.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">A ROYAL PROCESSION.</div>
-
-<p>The river Menam, he says, was covered with
-large and handsome boats, gay with gilding and
-gorgeous with elaborate carving; among which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-heavy barges of the rice-merchants, and the small
-craft of poor women carrying to market their betel-nuts
-and bananas, seemed out of place. It is only
-on such occasions as these that the king, princes,
-and mandarins display their wealth and pomp. The
-king, when Mouhot saw him, was proceeding to a
-pagoda to make his offerings; and was followed by
-his mandarins, each in a splendid barge, with rowers
-attired in the brightest colours. In their train came
-a number of canoes filled with red-coated soldiers.
-The royal barge was easily distinguished by its
-throne and canopy, and by the profuseness of its
-carving and gilding. Some of the royal children
-sat at the feet of the king, who waved a recognition
-to every European he saw.</p>
-
-<p>All the vessels lying in the river were dressed
-out with flags; while every floating house had an
-altar erected, on which various objects were placed,
-and aromatic woods burned with pleasant odours.
-In the court barges the various dignitaries, mostly
-men of “good round paunch,” lay indolently upon
-triangular embroidered cushions spread on a kind
-of dais. They were surrounded by officials, women,
-and children, either kneeling or lying flat, and
-holding the golden urns which are used for spit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>toons,
-or the golden tea-pots and betel-boxes. Each
-boat carried from eighty to a hundred rowers, wearing
-a large white scarf round the loins, and a red
-langouti, but leaving the head and greater part of
-the body bare. They lifted their paddles simultaneously,
-and struck the water in excellent concert;
-while at the prow stood a slave with an oar
-to prevent collisions, and another at the stern employed
-an oar for steering purposes. At intervals
-the rowers raised “a wild, exulting cry of ‘Ouah!
-ouah!’” while the voice of the steersman, in a
-louder and more sustained note, rose above the rest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="sidenote">MOUHOT’S JOURNEY TO KHAO-KHOC.</div>
-
-<p>From this holiday city, however, M. Mouhot
-tore himself away, and entered on his lonely and
-hazardous journey. He soon reached the pure
-breezy air and picturesque scenery of the mountains
-of Nophaburi and Phrabat, and ascended the Menam
-to Saohaïe, the starting-point for all caravans going
-to Korat. He thence continued his voyage to
-Khao-Khoc, which has been fortified by the king
-of Siam as an asylum in case of a European invasion
-of the south. Here he resided for some months,
-on the borders of a vast unexplored forest, studying
-the manners and customs of the Laotians. In Feb<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>ruary
-1861 he arrived at Chaiapune. It was not
-until he had encountered and conquered obstacles
-that would have broken the heart of any man less
-enthusiastic or less courageous that he succeeded in
-making his way to Korat. As he describes it as
-“a nest of robbers and assassins, the resort of all
-the scum of the Laotian and Siamese races,” the
-rendezvous of “bandits and vagrants escaped from
-slavery or from prison,” he would hardly have
-found it a pleasant resting-place; and as soon as
-he could obtain a supply of elephants for himself
-and his followers, he resumed his journey, striking,
-across the country to Poukieau.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“ACROSS COUNTRY.”</div>
-
-<p>Here he ascended gradually a range of mountains
-abounding in resinous trees and frequented by
-deer, tigers, elephants, and rhinoceros. This chain
-extends directly north, continually increasing in
-height and breadth, and throwing off numerous
-spurs towards the east, where the deep shadowy
-valleys collect their waters, and pour them into the
-Mekong.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE ELEPHANT “AT HOME.”</div>
-
-<p>Throughout this mountainous region elephants
-are the only means of transport. Every village,
-consequently, possesses one of these valuable animals;
-some no fewer than fifty or a hundred.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-Otherwise, intercommunication would be impossible
-for seven months out of the twelve. “The elephant,”
-says Mouhot, “ought to be seen on these
-roads, which I can only call devil’s pathways, and
-are nothing but ravines, ruts two or three feet deep,
-full of mud; sometimes sliding with his feet close
-together on the wet clay of the steep slopes, sometimes
-half-buried in mire,&mdash;an instant afterwards
-mounted on sharp rocks where one would think a
-Blondin alone could stand; striding across enormous
-trunks of fallen trees, crushing down the smaller
-trees and bamboos which oppose his progress, or lying
-down flat on his stomach, that the cornacs (drivers)
-may the easier place the saddle on his back; a
-hundred times a day making his way, without
-injuring them, between trees where there is barely
-room to pass; sounding with his trunk the depth
-of the water in the streams or marshes; constantly
-kneeling down and rising again, and never making
-a false step. It is necessary, I repeat, to see him
-at work like this in his own country, to form any
-idea of his intelligence, docility, and strength, or
-how all these wonderful joints of his are adapted
-to their work&mdash;fully to understand that this colossus
-is no rough specimen of Nature’s handiwork,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-but a creature of especial amiability and sagacity,
-designed for the service of man.”</p>
-
-<p>After leaving Korat, Mouhot crossed five considerable
-rivers&mdash;the Menam-Chie, the Menam-Leuye,
-the Menam-Ouan, the Nam-Pouye, and the
-Nam-Houn,&mdash;all tributaries of the mighty Mekong;
-and the last-named river he once more reached, at
-Pak Lay, in lat. 19° 16′ 58″, on June the 24th,
-1861. The Mekong here is much broader than the
-Menam at Bangkok, and dashes through the mountain
-ravine with the impetuosity of a torrent and
-the roar of the sea. Its navigation between Pak
-Lay and Luang Prabang is interrupted by several
-rapids.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">AT LUANG PRABANG.</div>
-
-<p>Luang Prabang, where Mouhot arrived on the
-25th of July, is a pleasantly-situated town, occupying
-an area of one square mile, and containing
-a population of eight thousand. The mountains
-which, both above and below it, enclose the broad
-and copious Mekong, form at this point a kind of
-circular valley or amphitheatre, nine miles in diameter,
-and, with their woods, and luxuriant verdure,
-and lawny slopes, combine in a picturesque panorama,
-reminding one of the Alpine lakes.</p>
-
-<p>The town extends on both banks of the stream,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-but chiefly on the left bank, where the houses surround
-an isolated mount about three hundred and
-fifty feet in height, covered by a pagoda.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">*</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">THE RIVER NAM KAN.</div>
-
-<p>An important tributary of the Mekong, the Nam
-Kan, skirts on the east and north the little hill at
-the foot of which Luang Prabang is situated, and
-divides the latter into two unequal parts, the larger
-of which lies to the south of the point of confluence.
-The banks of this stream, for a considerable distance
-inland, are lined with an uninterrupted series of
-pagodas and great gardens, in the latter of which
-the betel-nut is cultivated, and peaches, plum-trees,
-and oleanders flourish: a sign that the traveller here
-enters a very temperate region, where the fruits and
-plants of Central Asia may be successfully cultivated.</p>
-
-<p>In the southern district of the city is placed the
-palace of the king, an enormous aggregate of huts,
-enclosed by a high and strong palisade, and forming
-a rectangle, one side of which is contiguous to the
-base of the central mount. As this sacred hillock is
-there almost perpendicular, the ascent to its pagoda-crowned
-summit is effected by a flight of several
-hundred steps excavated in the rock. A daily and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-excessively animated market is held under some
-sheds situated near the junction of the Nam Kan
-and the Mekong; but they are insufficient to accommodate
-all the vendors, and open booths, stalls, or
-shops are prolonged for upwards of half a mile in a
-wide street parallel to the river.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">COMMERCIAL LIFE AT LUANG PRABANG.</div>
-
-<p>M. Garnier remarks that this was the first market,
-in the European sense of the word, which he had
-seen since leaving Pnom Penh. This sudden activity,
-he adds, and comparatively considerable commerce,
-to judge from the numerous and diverse types which
-at Luang Prabang represented all the nations of
-Indo-China and India, were obviously due less to a
-change of race or increased product of the soil than
-to a radical difference of government. The countries
-of Southern Laos, in their era of independence,
-had been celebrated for their wealth and commercial
-enterprise; but Siamese tyranny and monopoly
-have blighted their prosperity. If life be reviving
-at Luang Prabang, it is because the Siamese court
-have awakened to a perception of the fact that a
-milder rule was essential for so powerful a province.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">HISTORICAL NOTES.</div>
-
-<p>The foundation of Luang Prabang appears to date
-only from the early part of the eighteenth century.
-No reference to it occurs in the careful account of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-Siam compiled by the Jesuit missionary La Loubère
-in 1687-88. Its distance from the theatre of the
-wars which desolated Indo-China in the eighteenth
-century, greatly contributed to assure its prosperity,
-and was probably one of the principal causes
-which led to its foundation. Its government skilfully
-contrived to obtain the nominal protection of
-China, by sending an envoy once every eight years
-with a couple of elephants, as a sign of homage;
-and it has secured the goodwill of the Annamite
-empire, by consenting to pay a small triennial tribute.
-The mountainous country to be traversed before an
-army can reach Luang Prabang, and the energy
-which its population owes to the admixture of
-numerous savage and warlike tribes inhabiting the
-borders of Tonquin and Laos, invest this province
-with exceptional means for resisting aggression on
-the part of Siam.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But we have exhausted our space; and, after
-leading the reader into territories which have before
-them a splendid future, and following with him
-the course of the great Cambodian river into regions
-almost unknown to Europeans&mdash;regions the resources
-of which are immense, but need the science and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-energy of Europe for their development&mdash;we must
-bring our narrative to a close.</p>
-
-<p>We have accompanied Mouhot to Luang Prabang.
-Thence he returned to Pak Lay, where, he
-says, he had the pleasure of again seeing the beautiful
-stream which he had come to regard as an
-old friend. “I have so long drunk of its waters,” he
-writes; “it has so long either cradled me on its
-bosom or tried my patience,&mdash;at one time flowing
-majestically among the mountains, at another muddy
-and yellow as the Arno at Florence.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">DEATH OF MOUHOT.</div>
-
-<p>Revisiting Luang Prabang on the 25th of July,
-he left it again on the 9th of August. A few months
-later his adventurous career, as we have already
-stated, was terminated by an attack of jungle fever.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, it has been to the research and adventure
-of French travellers that geographers have
-principally owed their knowledge of the Mekong.
-Let us hope that before long some Englishmen will
-follow in their steps!</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center">THE END.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
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-<div class="center">
-<table class="left" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>600</td><td>French Morocco,</td><td>gilt edges,</td><td>stiff covers,</td><td>silk</td><td>book mark</td><td class="right">$2</td><td>35</td></tr>
-<tr><td>601</td><td>French Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td>circuit covers,</td><td class="center">„</td><td class="center">„</td><td class="right">2</td><td>75</td></tr>
-<tr><td>605</td><td>Persian Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td>flexible covers,</td><td class="center">„</td><td class="center">„</td><td class="right">2</td><td>75</td></tr>
-<tr><td>608</td><td>Imitation Seal Skin,</td><td class="center">„</td><td colspan="3">Divinity circuit, silk sewed, lined with leather, and band</td><td class="right">3</td><td>50</td></tr>
-<tr><td>610</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td>gilt edges,</td><td colspan="3">stiff covers</td><td class="right">3</td><td>25</td></tr>
-<tr><td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>611</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td>gilt edges,</td><td colspan="3">flexible covers</td><td class="right">$3</td><td>25</td></tr>
-<tr><td>612</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td colspan="3">circuit covers</td><td class="right">4</td><td>50</td></tr>
-<tr><td>615</td><td>Levant Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td colspan="3">Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, silk sewed, flexible back</td><td class="right">5</td><td>75</td></tr>
-<tr><td>616</td><td colspan="5">Levant Morocco, Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, <i>best</i> silk sewed, flexible back, red and gold edges</td><td class="right">7</td><td>25</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-<p><b>NONPAREIL 8vo.</b> (Size 4&frac12; × 7 × 1&frac34; inches.) Postage, 16 cents.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="left" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>661</td><td>Turkey Morocco, gilt edges, flexible covers</td><td class="right">$4</td><td>25</td></tr>
-<tr><td>665</td><td>Levant Morocco, Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, silk sewed, flexible back</td><td class="right">6</td><td>75</td></tr>
-<tr><td>666</td><td>Levant Morocco, Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, <i>best</i> silk sewed, flexible back, red and gold edges</td><td class="right">8</td><td>25</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-<p><i>Other styles are in preparation and will be ready shortly.</i></p>
-
-
-<p><b>MINION 8vo.</b> (Size 5 × 7&frac34; × 1&frac12; inches.) Postage, 18 cents.</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="left" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>705</td><td colspan="3">Persian Morocco, gilt edges, flexible covers</td><td class="right">$4</td><td>25</td></tr>
-<tr><td>708</td><td colspan="3">Imitation Seal Skin, gilt edges, Divinity circuit, silk sewed, lined with leather, and band</td><td class="right">5</td><td>25</td></tr>
-<tr><td>710</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td>gilt edges,</td><td>stiff covers</td><td class="right">5</td><td>00</td></tr>
-<tr><td>711</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td>flexible covers</td><td class="right">5</td><td>00</td></tr>
-<tr><td>715</td><td>Levant Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td>Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, silk sewed, flexible back</td><td class="right">7</td><td>50</td></tr>
-<tr><td>716</td><td colspan="3">Levant Morocco, Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, <i>best</i> silk sewed, flexible back, red and gold edges</td><td class="right">10</td><td>25</td></tr>
-<tr><td>718</td><td colspan="3">Seal Skin, Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, <i>best</i> silk sewed, flexible back, red and gold <i>solid</i> edges</td><td class="right">14</td><td>00</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-<p><b>LARGE MARGIN, MINION 8vo. FOR MSS. NOTES.</b>
-Postage, 28 cents.</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="left" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td>905</td><td>Persian Morocco,</td><td>gilt edges,</td><td>stiff covers</td><td class="right">$7</td><td>50</td></tr>
-<tr><td>910</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td>stiff covers</td><td class="right">10</td><td>50</td></tr>
-<tr><td>911</td><td>Turkey Morocco,</td><td class="center">„</td><td>flexible covers</td><td class="right">10</td><td>50</td></tr>
-<tr><td>915</td><td>Levant Morocco</td><td class="center">„</td><td>Divinity circuit, kid-lined and band, silk sewed, flexible back</td><td>14</td><td>00</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p class="p2">For samples of type and further information apply to all Booksellers, or to</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="large">THOMAS NELSON &amp; SONS,</span><br />
-Agents for the Oxford University Bible House,<br />
-42 BLEECKER ST., NEW YORK.<br />
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="p4 large center blackletter">Sunday School Aids, Bible History &amp;c.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2"><b>BLAIKIE</b> (Rev. W. G.), <b>D.D.&mdash;BIBLE GEOGRAPHY.</b> With
-colored Maps. 16mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>BIBLE HISTORY</b>, in connection with the General History
-of the World, with Notices of Scripture Localities, and Sketches of
-Social and Religious Life. 12mo, cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>COMPER GRAY</b> (James).&mdash;<b>CLASS AND DESK</b> (The). A
-Manual for Sunday School Teachers. 4 vols. 12mo, cloth, $5.00; or
-sold separately, each, $1.25, namely:</p>
-
-<p>
-Vol. 1. The Old Testament&mdash;Genesis to Esther.<br />
-Vol. 2. The Old Testament&mdash;Job to Malachi.<br />
-Vol. 3. The New Testament&mdash;The Gospels.<br />
-Vol. 4. The New Testament&mdash;The Epistles.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><b>DICTIONARY OF SCRIPTURE PROPER NAMES</b>, with
-their Pronunciations and Explanations. 16mo, paper covers, 13 cts.
-16mo, cloth limp, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>EDERSHEIM</b> (Dr.).&mdash;<b>THE TEMPLE</b>, Its Ministry and Services.
-Small 4to, gilt edges, $2.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>GREEN</b> (Rev. S. G.).&mdash;<b>LECTURES TO CHILDREN ON
-SCRIPTURE DOCTRINES.</b> 32mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>GROSER</b> (W. H.).&mdash;<b>BIBLE MONTHS</b>; Or, The Seasons in Palestine
-as Illustrative of Scripture. Illustrated. 16mo, cloth, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>OUR WORK.</b> Four Lectures on the Principles and Practice of
-Sunday School Teaching. 18mo, cloth, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>HELPS TO THE STUDY OF THE BIBLE</b>, Containing the
-Notes, Tables, Index, Concordance, Maps, &amp;c., &amp;c., in the “<span class="smcap">Oxford
-Teachers’ Bible</span>.” 16mo, cloth, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>JOSEPHUS’ COMPLETE WORKS.</b> Translated by W. Whiston,
-M.A. 8vo, cloth, $1.75.</p>
-
-<p><b>NEW COMPANION TO THE BIBLE</b> for Bible Classes, etc.
-Maps. 12mo, cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><b>PHILIPS’ SCRIPTURE ATLAS.</b> 32mo, paper covers, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>TREASURY OF SCRIPTURE KNOWLEDGE.</b> 500,000
-Scripture references and parallel passages from Canne, Brown, Blayney,
-Scott, etc., etc. 16mo, Turkey morocco, gilt edges, $5.00.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="p4 center large blackletter">Selected List of Sunday School Books.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>JUVENILES, &amp;c.</i>,</p>
-
-<p class="center">PUBLISHED BY T. NELSON &amp; SONS.</p>
-
-
-<p><b>ADA AND GERTY</b>; Or, Hand in Hand Heavenward. By <span class="smcap">Louisa
-M. Gray</span>. 12mo, cloth extra, beveled, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>AFAR IN THE FOREST</b>; Or, Pictures of Life and Scenery in the
-Wilds of Canada. By <span class="smcap">Mrs. Traill</span>. With colored frontispiece and
-vignette and many illustrations. 16mo, cloth extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>A. L. O. E.&mdash;FLORA</b>; Or, Self-Deception. Illustrated. 12mo, cloth
-extra, gilt edges, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><b>ANNALS OF THE POOR.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Leigh Richmond</span>, M.A.
-32mo, cloth extra, beveled, with illustrations, 50 cts.; 18mo, cloth extra,
-beveled, with tinted illustrations, 75 cts.; 12mo, cloth, chromo
-side, with numerous illustrations, $1.25.; 12mo, cloth, chromo side,
-gilt edges, with numerous illustrations, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>BECKWITH</b> (General)&mdash;<b>HIS LIFE AND LABORS AMONG
-THE WALDENSES OF PIEDMONT.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. P. Meille</span>, Pastor
-of the Waldensian Church in Turin. With an <span class="smcap">Introductory Notice</span>
-by the late Rev. <span class="smcap">Wm. Arnot</span>. 12mo, cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><b>BRIGHTWELL</b> (C. L.).&mdash;<b>LIVES OF LABOR</b>; Or, Incidents in
-the Career of Eminent Naturalists and Celebrated Travelers. By
-author of “Above Rubies,” etc. Colored plates. 12mo, cloth extra,
-$1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>BUNYAN’S PILGRIM’S PROGRESS.</b> 18mo, cloth, beveled,
-tinted illustrations, 75 cts.; 12mo, cloth extra, beveled, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>CITY AND CASTLE</b> (The). A Story of the Reformation in Switzerland.
-By <span class="smcap">Annie Lucas</span>. 12mo, cloth, $2.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>CROWN OF GLORY</b> (The); Or, “Faithful Unto Death.” A
-Scottish Story of Martyr Times. By the author of “Little Hazel,
-the King’s Messenger,” etc. 12mo, cloth extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>CUPPLES</b> (Mrs. George).&mdash;<b>FABLES</b>. Illustrated by Stories from
-Real Life. With numerous woodcuts. 18mo, cloth extra. First
-series, 75 cts.; Second series, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>MAMMA’S STORIES ABOUT DOMESTIC PETS.</b>
-Fully illustrated. 18mo, cloth extra, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>MY PRETTY SCRAP-BOOK</b>; Or, Picture Pages and Pleasant
-Stories for Little Readers. With illustration on every page. 18mo,
-cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>SHADOWS ON THE SCREEN</b>; Or, an Evening with the
-Children. With illustration on every page. 18mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p><b>CUPPLES</b> (Mrs. George).&mdash;<b>STORY OF OUR DOLL.</b> Large
-Type, 40 illustrations. 16mo, cloth, illuminated side, 60 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>STORY OF MISS DOLLIKINS</b> (The). With colored
-frontispiece, vignette, and 47 engravings. Oblong 24mo, illuminated
-side, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>WALKS AND TALKS WITH GRANDPAPA.</b> With
-illustration on every page. 18mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>DOUDNEY</b> (Sarah).&mdash;<b>GREAT SALTERNS.</b> Illustrated. 12mo,
-cloth extra, gilt edges, $1.75.</p>
-
-<p><b>EARLY GENIUS</b>, As Illustrated by Bacon, Galileo, Newton, Cimabue,
-Giotto, Michael Angelo, Julius II., etc. By the author of
-“Success in Life,” etc. Finely illustrated. 16mo, cloth extra, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>FALL OF JERUSALEM, AND THE ROMAN CONQUEST
-OF JUDEA.</b> Illustrated. 18mo, cloth extra, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>GALILEO, THE ASTRONOMER OF PISA.</b> Colored frontispiece.
-18mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>GAUSSEN</b>, (Prof. L.).&mdash;<b>WORLD’S BIRTHDAY</b> (The). A
-book for the young. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell Overend</span>. With
-colored plates. 16mo, cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><b>GOOD OUT OF EVIL.</b> A Tale for Children. By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Surr</span>,
-author of “Sea-Birds and the Story of their Lives,” etc. With 32
-illustrations. 16mo, cloth extra, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>HAPPY HOLIDAYS AT WOODLEIGH HOUSE</b>; Or, Aunt
-Elsie and her Guests. 8 tinted illustrations. 16mo, cloth extra, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><b>HERSCHELS</b> (Story of the). A Family of Astronomers. Colored
-frontispiece. 18mo, cloth, 50 cents.</p>
-
-<p><b>HOLY WELL</b> (The). An Irish Story. With colored frontispiece.
-18mo, cloth extra, 25 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>IN THE FAR EAST.</b> A Narrative of Exploration and Adventure
-in Cochin-China, Cambodia, Laos and Siam. 16mo, cloth extra, many
-illustrations, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>KANE</b> (Dr.), <b>THE ARCTIC HERO</b>. A Narrative of his Adventures
-and Explorations in the Polar Regions. By <span class="smcap">M. Jones</span>. Fully
-illustrated. 16mo, cloth extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>KIRBY</b> (Mary and Elizabeth).&mdash;<b>AUNT MARTHA’S CORNER
-CUPBOARD.</b> Stories about Tea, Coffee, Sugar, Honey, etc. With
-colored frontispiece, vignette, and numerous woodcuts. 12mo, cloth
-extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b>LEONIE</b>; Or, Light Out of Darkness; and, <b>WITHIN IRON
-WALLS</b>; A Tale of the Siege of Paris. Twin Stories of the Franco-German
-War. By <span class="smcap">Annie Lucas</span>. 12mo, cloth extra, $2.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>LITTLE ROBINSON OF PARIS</b>; Or, The Triumph of Industry.
-From the French by <span class="smcap">Lucy Landon</span>. Tinted frontispiece and
-vignette, 18mo, cloth, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>LITTLE SNOWDROP AND HER GOLDEN CASKET.</b>
-By the author of “Little Hazel,” etc. With colored frontispiece and
-vignette. 12mo, cloth extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>MASTER AND SERVANT</b>; Or, Richard Owen’s Choice. By
-Mrs. <span class="smcap">Lamb</span>. 18mo, cloth limp, gilt edges, 10 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>MERCHANT ENTERPRISE</b>; Or, Pictures of the History of
-Commerce from the Earliest Times. By <span class="smcap">J. Hamilton Fyfe</span>. With
-illustrations. 12mo, cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>MILLER</b> (Mrs. Hugh).&mdash;<b>STORIES OF THE CAT</b>, and her
-Cousins, the Lion, the Tiger, and the Leopard. Colored frontispiece,
-and many illustrations. 18mo, cloth extra, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p>---- <b>STORIES OF THE DOG</b>, and His Cousins, the Wolf, the
-Jackal, and the Hyena. With Stories illustrating their place in the
-Animal World. Illustrated. 18mo, cloth extra, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>NELLY’S TEACHERS. AND WHAT THEY LEARNED.</b>
-A Story for the Young. By <span class="smcap">Kate Thorne</span>. 12mo, cloth extra, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>NEBULÆ AND COMETS.</b> Colored frontispiece and vignette,
-and numerous illustrations. 16mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>NOBLE WOMEN</b> (Stories of the Lives of). By <span class="smcap">W. H. Davenport
-Adams</span>. 12mo, cloth, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p><b>NO CROSS, NO CROWN</b>; Or, The Dark Year of Dundee. A
-Tale of the Scottish Reformation. By the author of “Spanish
-Brothers.” Illustrated. 12mo, cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>PAULL</b> (M. A.).&mdash;<b>VIVIANS OF WOODIFORD</b>; Or, True
-Hearts make Happy Homes. By the author of “Tim’s Troubles,”
-etc. Illustrated. 12mo, cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>PENDOWER.</b> A Story of Cornwall, in the Time of Henry the
-Eighth. By <span class="smcap">M. Filleul</span>. 12mo, cloth extra, $2.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>PLANETARY SYSTEM</b> (The). Colored frontispiece and vignette,
-with numerous illustrations. 18mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b>PORTER</b> (Rev. J. L.), A.M.&mdash;<b>GIANT CITIES OF BASHAN</b>
-(The), and Syria’s Holy Places. Illustrated. 12mo, cloth, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>SEA AND THE SEA-SHORE</b> (The). Lessons in the Study of
-Nature and Natural History. With numerous engravings. 12mo,
-cloth extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>SNOWDROP</b>; Or, the Adventures of a White Rabbit. With colored
-frontispiece and vignette, and twenty illustrations. 16mo, cloth
-extra, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>SPANISH BROTHERS.</b> A Tale of the Sixteenth Century. By
-the author of “Dark Year of Dundee.” 12mo, cloth, $2.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>STARS</b> (The). Colored frontispiece and vignette, and numerous illustrations.
-18mo, cloth. 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>STORY OF BENVENUTO CELLINI, THE ITALIAN
-GOLDSMITH.</b> Colored frontispiece and vignette. 18mo, cloth
-extra, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>STORY OF SIR HUMPHREY DAVY AND THE INVENTION
-OF THE SAFETY LAMP.</b> Colored frontispiece and
-vignette. 18mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>SUN AND MOON</b>&mdash;Their Physical Character, Appearance and
-Phenomena. Colored frontispiece and vignette, and numerous illustrations.
-18mo, cloth, 50 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>SWEDISH TWINS</b> (The). A Tale for the Young. By the author
-of “The Babes in the Basket.” 18mo, cloth extra, illustrated, 75 cts.</p>
-
-<p><b>THRESHOLD OF LIFE</b> (The). A Book of Illustrations and Lessons
-for the Encouragement and Counsel of Youth. By <span class="smcap">W. H. Davenport
-Adams</span>. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>TROT’S LETTERS TO HER DOLL.</b> By <span class="smcap">Mary E. Bromfield</span>.
-With beautiful colored frontispiece and vignette. 12mo, cloth extra,
-$1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>UNDER THE OAKS</b>; Or, Won by Love. <span class="smcap">By Author of</span> “<span class="smcap">Little
-Hazel</span>,” etc. Colored frontispiece and vignette. 12mo, cloth extra,
-$1.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>UNDER THE SOUTHERN CROSS.</b> A Tale of the New
-World. By the author of “Spanish Brothers.” 12mo, cloth, $2.00.</p>
-
-<p><b>WHICH IS MY LIKENESS?</b> Or, Seeing Ourselves as We See
-Others. By <span class="smcap">Cousin Kate</span>. With tinted plates. 12mo, cloth extra,
-$1.50.</p>
-
-<p><b>WHITE-ROCK COVE</b> (The). A Tale for the Young. With six
-colored plates. 12mo, cloth extra, gilt edges, $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">THOMAS NELSON AND SONS, 42 BLEECKER STREET, NEW YORK.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">AGENTS FOR OXFORD UNIVERSITY BIBLES, ETC., ETC.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTE</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">*</span></a> A fuller description of Luang Prabang, as given by Garnier, who visited it
-six years after Mouhot, will be found on page <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Transcriber's Note</h2>
-
-<p>Illustrations have been moved next to the relevant text, and may no longer match the locations in the List of Illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>Page headers in the printed text are presented as sidenotes.</p>
-
-<p>The following apparent errors have been corrected:</p>
-
-<ul><li>advertisement "<span class="smcap">Campbell Overon</span>" changed to "<span class="smcap">Campbell Overend</span>"</li>
-
-<li>advertisement "Reformation," changed to "Reformation."</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Archaic or inconsistent spelling and punctuation have otherwise been kept as printed.</p>
-
-
-<p>The following are used inconsistently in the text:</p>
-<ul>
-<li>Battambang and Battabang</li>
-
-<li>Birman and Burman</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's In the Far East, by William Henry Davenport Adams
-
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