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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 08:33:28 -0800
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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54718 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54718)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of India Impressions, by Walter Crane
-
-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: India Impressions
- With some notes of Ceylon during a winter tour, 1906-7.
-
-Author: Walter Crane
-
-Release Date: May 14, 2017 [EBook #54718]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDIA IMPRESSIONS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-INDIA IMPRESSIONS
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE MANIKARNIKÁ GHÁT BENARES]
-
-
-
-
- INDIA IMPRESSIONS
- WITH SOME NOTES OF CEYLON
- DURING A WINTER TOUR, 1906–7
- BY WALTER CRANE, R.W.S. WITH
- A FRONTISPIECE IN COLOUR AND
- NUMEROUS OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS
- FROM SKETCHES BY THE AUTHOR
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- NEW YORK
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1907
-
-
-
-
- TO MY WIFE
- MY TRAVELLING COMPANION
- ON THIS TOUR, AND TO WHOM
- THE PROJECT WAS DUE, I
- NOW INSCRIBE ITS RECORD
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Although many books descriptive of India and Indian life have recently
-appeared, even a short visit to that wonderful country presents so
-extraordinary a series of spectacles to the European, especially to one
-seeing the East for the first time, that it occurred to me that a few
-notes and fresh impressions from an artist’s point of view, accompanied
-by sketches made on the spot, as well as illustrations of the lighter
-side of travel, might not be without interest to the public.
-
-Even apart from the enormous artistic interest and architectural
-splendours of India, which are so rich and abundant that one feels that
-hundreds of drawings would be necessary to give any adequate idea of
-their beauty, there is the human interest of these vast populations,
-among whom so many streams of race, language and religion are found,
-not to speak of the problems of government and administration they
-present.
-
-I cannot claim to have had any special facilities in seeing the
-country—no more at least than might be at the command of an ordinary
-English tourist, and have trusted chiefly to what powers of
-observation I may possess in describing the various cities visited,
-and the districts traversed, and I offer these notes strictly as
-personal impressions.
-
-Owing to ever increasing facilities of travel, the East is, in a sense,
-drawn nearer to the West, or, rather the West to the East, but nothing
-strikes the traveller so much as the apparently vast gulf dividing the
-dark-skinned races from the white—a gulf deeper and wider than the
-oceans.
-
-I mean the profound differences in ideas, in religion, in sentiment,
-in life, habit and custom. Western influence where even it has had any
-apparent effect—apart from commercial enterprise—seems to be but a thin
-veneer, and it is a constant wonder how the British should have been
-able to acquire and maintain their grasp over this vast peninsular, and
-to hold the balance between antagonistic races and creeds so long.
-
-But it is not a comfortable thought for an Englishman, loving freedom,
-and accustomed to the principles of popular and representative
-government at home, to realise that this vast empire is held under the
-strictest autocratic system; and that the national aspirations that
-are now beginning to make themselves heard and felt should be entirely
-ignored, and the voice of native feeling sternly suppressed.
-
-One can only hope that the great British people will take more trouble
-to study and understand their great Dependency, and not be prevented
-by official explanations from making independent inquiries and
-observations for themselves, and finally to “be just and fear not.”
-
-If, however, in any way and from any point of view, these impressions
-may serve, in however slight a degree, to increase the interest of my
-own countrymen and women in India, I shall be very glad.
-
- WALTER CRANE
-
- KENSINGTON, _July 1907_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- PREFACE vii
-
- I. THE VOYAGE 1
-
- II. BOMBAY AND THE CAVES OF ELLORA 21
-
- III. AHMEDABAD 48
-
- IV. AHMEDABAD TO AJMIR 62
-
- V. CHITORGARH AND UDAIPUR 74
-
- VI. JAIPUR 96
-
- VII. AGRA 112
-
- VIII. GWALIOR 127
-
- IX. DELHI 144
-
- X. AMRITZAR AND LAHORE 161
-
- XI. LUCKNOW 185
-
- XII. BENARES 200
-
- XIII. CALCUTTA—DARJEELING 218
-
- XIV. MADRAS AND THE SOUTH 239
-
- XV. NOTES OF CEYLON 290
-
-
- INDEX 319
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT
-
-
- PAGE
- ROUGH SKETCH MAP OF INDIA xvi
-
- LONDON TO PORT SAID, A HIEROGLYPHIC OF OUR VOYAGE 3
-
- COALING AT PORT SAID—AND AFTER! 6
-
- SPOILING THE EGYPTIANS? OR BEING DESPOILED BY THEM! 7
-
- SENSATION IN SOLAR TOPIS 7
-
- THE SUEZ CANAL 9
-
- THE PASSAGE OF THE RED SEA (THERM: 88° OR SO!) 12
-
- IN THE SAME BOAT—A CONTRAST AT ADEN 14
-
- SOME TYPES AMONG OUR FELLOW PASSENGERS 17
-
- LANDING AT BOMBAY 22
-
- AWAITING THE CUSTOMS—BOMBAY 23
-
- STREET PERFORMERS—BOMBAY 24
-
- INTERVIEW WITH CANDIDATES FOR THE POST OF BEARER—MOSTLY
- UNBEARABLE! 31
-
- A BED AT THE DAK BUNGALOW! MUNMAD (KEEP IT DA(R)K) 35
-
- WE ARE INTRODUCED TO THE CAVES OF ELLORA 39
-
- AND ITS WASPS 42
-
- THE FEET OF PILGRIMS (AT MOHAMMEDAN MOSQUES) 50
-
- POOR RELATIONS 52
-
- A FAMILY PARTY—CRANES ON A MANGO TREE (SARBARMATI RIVER) 54
-
- STREET SCENE, AHMEDABAD. ENGLISH TRAVELLERS SKETCHING AND
- MAKING PURCHASES 57
-
- THE CAMEL’S CRINOLINE (SUGAR CANE) AJMIR 71
-
- FIRST ELEPHANT RIDE. (CHITORGARH) 78
-
- RAJPUTS AND THEIR RARITIES. (UDAIPUR) 85
-
- HOTEL ACCOMMODATION (JAIPUR), “FOR YOUR EASE AND COMFORT” (OR
- RATHER FOR THE EASING OF YOUR RUPEES?) 98
-
- TO AMBER ON AN ELEPHANT 106
-
- SHOPPING IN JAIPUR 109
-
- AGGRAVATING AGRA 115
-
- THE MAINSTAY OF INDIA. AQUARIUS—THE WATER-BEARER 119
-
- TO GWALIOR FORT BY PALANQUIN 129
-
- CALLERS AT THE GUEST HOUSE, GWALIOR 137
-
- A DASH FOR THE DINING-CAR AT AGRA ROAD 146
-
- DELHI DRIVING. WANTED—A RULE OF THE ROAD 159
-
- SHE WON’T BE HAPPY TILL SHE GETS EVERYTHING PACKED UP 162
-
- DEMON HOTEL TOUTS AT AMRITZAR FIGHTING FOR THEIR PREY 163
-
- THROUGH AMRITZAR—SIT TIGHT AND HOLD A SMELLING BOTTLE! 165
-
- AN INDIAN AUTOLYCUS 168
-
- ENJOYING A LOG FIRE AT LAHORE 172
-
- “THE WOMAN IN WHITE” AT LAHORE (SUGGESTION FOR A DISGUISE
- PARTY) 175
-
- THE MERCHANTS OF KASHMIR 182
-
- IN HOSPITAL, LUCKNOW. THE OPERATING TABLE (PATIENT HAD A BIT OF
- GRIT IN HER EYE AFTER A TRAIN JOURNEY)—SIXTEEN RUPEES WERE
- EXTRACTED! 186
-
- JUGGLERS AT LUCKNOW—THE MANGO TREE TRICK 187
-
- BETTER LUCK AT LUCKNOW—THROUGH THE CHOWK ON AN ELEPHANT 195
-
- THE MAHARAJAH PLACES HIS CARRIAGE AT OUR DISPOSAL 202
-
- BENARES: VIEWING THE GHATS FROM THE MAHARAJAH’S PEACOCK BOAT 207
-
- WE SEE SNAKES AT BENARES 209
-
- THE MAHARAJAH’S RECEPTION, DECORATING THE VISITORS 214
-
- THE SOOTHSAYER AT CALCUTTA—(OR PALMISTRY UNDER THE PALMS) 220
-
- THE DARJEELING TOY-RAILWAY TRYING TO CATCH ITS OWN TAIL! 225
-
- CHARACTERS IN A TIBETAN MASQUE, DARJEELING 228
-
- THE SHY PEAK OF KINCHIN JUNGA 233
-
- A RIDE AT DARJEELING: “UP HILL SPARE ME” 234
-
- A HAILSTONE CHORUS—DEPARTURE FROM DARJEELING 236
-
- CALCUTTA TO MADRAS—SECTION OF SLEEPER—OR SOMETHING LIKE IT 240
-
- LADIES OR GENTLEMEN? (FASHIONS IN SOUTHERN INDIA) 243
-
- MADRAS—A JIN-RICKSHAW MADE FOR TWO 250
-
- TANJORE—NATIVE THEATRE—HOUSE FULL. PERFORMANCE FROM 9 P.M. TILL
- 2 A.M.—BUT WE DIDN’T STOP TO SEE IT THROUGH 265
-
- TRICHINOPOLY—OX TONGA—VITA BREVIS! 271
-
- THE SACRED ELEPHANTS OF SERINGHAM—SECURING TWO-ANNA PIECES 274
-
- THE RIVALS. OUR MOONSAWMY AND THE MADURA GUIDE 277
-
- TUTICORIN. DEPARTURE FOR COLOMBO. THE LAST OF THE KITES AND
- CROWS 287
-
- LANDING AT COLOMBO 291
-
- COMMON OBJECTS OF COLOMBO. (JIN-RICKSHAWUS BIPEDES) 293
-
- A CINGALESE WAITER 294
-
- IN CEYLON—EXTREMES MEET—THE MOTOR AND THE OX-CART 296
-
- TEA PLANTATION, CEYLON 303
-
- TEA AND RUBBER IN CEYLON—A RISING INDUSTRY 309
-
- A FEW TRIFLES THE WIFE WISHED TO BRING HOME FROM INDIA 316
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PLATES
-
-
- THE MANIKARNIKÁ GHAT, BENARES _Frontispiece_
-
- TO FACE PAGE
- THE KYLAS, CAVES OF ELLORA 38
-
- ARRIVAL OF MR DADABHAI NAOROJI AT BOMBAY, DECEMBER 14, 1906 46
-
- TOMB OF GUNJ BAKSH, SARKHEI 58
-
- SHRINE OF THE KWAJA, AJMIR 66
-
- THE MAHARAJAH’S PALACE AT UDAIPUR, FROM THE JAGMANDIR PAVILION 88
-
- THE MAHARAJAH’S STATE ELEPHANT, JAIPUR 102
-
- THE TAJ MAHAL, FROM THE GATEWAY 116
-
- IN THE BAZAAR, GWALIOR 134
-
- APPROACH TO THE PALACE OF MAN MANDIR, GWALIOR 138
-
- THE JAMA MUSJID MOSQUE, DELHI 152
-
- LAHORE—THE MOSQUE OF WAZA KHAN 182
-
- IRRIGATION WELL, LUCKNOW 196
-
- KINCHIN JUNGA FROM DARJEELING 232
-
- TANJORE—THE GREAT GATE OF THE TEMPLE 254
-
- SACRED TANK OF THE GREAT TEMPLE, MADURA 282
-
- UNDER THE PALMS AT THE GALLE FACE, CEYLON 292
-
-
-[Illustration: ROUGH-SKETCH SKELETON-MAP OF =INDIA= TO SHOW OUR RAILWAY
-ROUTE & POSITION OF THE PLACES VISITED]
-
-
-
-
-INDIA IMPRESSIONS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE VOYAGE
-
-
-A visit to India and the East had long been a cherished but somewhat
-vague dream with us. It seemed a far cry, and to make a break of a
-few months in the midst of the occupations of a busy life is always a
-difficult matter. The impossible, however, became in course of time
-possible, and even practicable. Inquiries as to ways and means had the
-effect of clearing our path; and having the _will_, the _way_ was soon
-discovered.
-
-“Only sixteen days to Bombay!” our Indian friends in London told us,
-and they were always urging us to go and see their wonderful country
-for ourselves. Mr Romesh Dutt and Dr Mulich had been visitors at our
-house. The former had presented his interesting translation of the
-“Ramayana,” illustrated by Miss Hardy, to my wife. Besides these we had
-from time to time made the acquaintance of several native gentlemen in
-London who were reading for the Indian Bar. They came and went, but all
-were earnest in their hope that we should visit India, and I think that
-they had discovered our sympathies were with those of their countrymen
-in their aspirations to participate in the administration of the
-affairs of their own country.
-
-The decisive step of booking our passage was at last taken in the
-summer of 1906, and the 19th day of November following saw us _en
-route_ for Marseilles, where we committed ourselves to the care of the
-Messageries Maritime, and embarked on the S.S. “La Nera” in due course,
-putting to sea on Wednesday, the 21st November.
-
-It was a lovely bright afternoon as we left the port, the southern
-sunshine flooding everything in golden light. It is a wonderful moment
-when the ship casts off. The great liner, which had seemed a part of
-the land itself while the stream of passengers passed up the gangways,
-and their baggage after them, begins to throb with life and movement—to
-tremble, as it were, with expectation of departure. As a swimmer about
-to take the water casts off all impedimenta, so the ship casts off her
-cables and all that links her to the shore, and glides off into the
-great blue deep, breasting the waves of the vast open sea. Incredibly
-fast as the engines beat the solid land fades away. The domes and
-towers and chimneys silhouetted against the bright sky, the people on
-the quays, the ships riding at anchor, the tossing harbour buoys, the
-small sailing craft flitting about, all are rolled by as on the canvas
-of a moving diorama, as the steamer clears the port, and all detail
-becomes merged and lost under the bold main outlines of the rocky
-coast, or the dim shapes of the distant mountains.
-
-As the long shining wake increases astern and the coast recedes, those
-nautical camp-followers the gulls, which have pursued the ship from the
-harbour, begin to diminish their numbers, though they wing a long way
-out to sea, attracted by the crumbs which occasionally fall from the
-region of the cook’s galley.
-
-[Illustration: LONDON TO PORT SAID, A HIEROGLYPHIC OF OUR VOYAGE]
-
-A glorious sunset inaugurated our first night at sea—of the order of
-the Golden Fleece, as it might be called—a distinct type, when in a
-windless sky a large field of delicate fleecy cirrus cloud spreads
-in a level field from west to east, and as the sun sinks its under
-edges are lighted up by golden light, changing to orange, scarlet, and
-crimson, when he disappears beneath the horizon. So our voyage began
-propitiously, and with a smooth sea. Early the next morning we passed
-through the Straits of Bonifazio, between Corsica and Sardinia, the
-coasts of which we had a glimpse of through our port-hole, and on the
-morning of the third day, after a little tossing, we sighted Sicily,
-passing Scylla and Charybdis at the entrance of the straits, and close
-to Messina. Etna soon came into view, its summit covered with a crown
-of snow (as we had seen it on our visit to Taormina in 1904).
-
-The Calabrian coast, too, was very interesting, the mountains
-of striking form, and the lines very varied all along to Cape
-Spartivento—the toe of the boot-shaped continent of Italy. We could see
-the little white towns along the coast and among the hills, and the
-monasteries perched high upon crags. Etna gradually faded away, like a
-vision, beyond the dark blue edge of the sea, and almost immediately
-after passing the cape we encountered a strong easterly wind from the
-Adriatic, which met the Mediterranean here.
-
-At sunset there were huge banks of grey clouds of fantastic shapes
-rising like high wooded islands, but we had moonlight on the waters
-every night.
-
-Those grey banks of cloud, however, were ominous, and by November
-the 24th the weather grew so rough that the “fiddle-strings” became
-necessary on the tables in the dining-saloon, where the attendance,
-too, grew distinctly thinner. Towards evening we sighted the cliffs of
-Crete (Candia), the fissured, mountainous, and dangerous-looking coast
-plainly visible in the sunlight, though a bank of cloud covered the
-summits of the island.
-
-After much tossing and rolling through another day and night the lights
-of Port Said were sighted about four o’clock on the morning of November
-26. There was a powerful search-light from the lighthouse. We got into
-harbour about 5.30, and the coaling began. It was a weird scene. Six
-black lighters were hauled alongside our steamer, three on the port bow
-and three on the starboard, and boats crowded to the water’s edge with
-coolies in long ragged garments and turbans, mostly of a dusky red and
-blue, the colours shining through the coal dust which darkened their
-naturally swarthy visages and forms. As these crowded boats approached
-with their weird passengers, one had an irresistible suggestion of
-Charon ferrying lost souls across the Styx—there was generally only
-one pair of oars, as the distance to the steamer from the wharf was
-very short. Well, these were our coal-slaves, upon whose cheap labour
-the speed of our steamers depends quite as much as on their own
-engines, one felt. From the boats they scrambled into the lighters—some
-shovelled up the coal into hand baskets of matting which others lifted
-on to their shoulders and carried across a narrow plank into the ship,
-forming a weird line of black figures silhouetted against the shining
-water. The coolies worked hard and fast in a black mist of coal dust
-and kept up a continual hubbub of cries in Arabic and other strange
-tongues which added to the weirdness of the scene.
-
-[Illustration: COALING AT PORT SAID—AND AFTER!]
-
-Port Said looked very new and flimsy, and was hopelessly vulgarised by
-flaming posters and advertisements of Western origin both in French and
-English. Boats swarmed round the ship’s side, and swarthy eager-eyed
-hotel touts came aboard in Fez caps, as well as a motley crowd of
-traders, Egyptian conjurers, and European musicians who played the
-latest popular waltzes. We were glad to escape the coal dust and go
-ashore, where an intelligent but probably not too scrupulous Egyptian
-guide undertook to show us everything, and we went with him round the
-town, passing through the market crowded with the picturesque life of
-the East, which indeed showed itself everywhere through the thin veneer
-of modern European commercialism. A venerable-looking prophet swept the
-streets, and, of course, there were plenty of street arabs ready to
-turn “cart-wheels” or anything that would turn a more or less honest
-penny in their direction, and the cry of “Backsheesh” was raised on
-the slightest provocation. Our guide took us into a small Mohammedan
-mosque, modern, but, of course, strictly according to the traditional
-plan and oriented towards Mecca. We had to put on loose canvas shoes
-over our own shoes to enter the sacred precincts, and our guide gave
-us a long exposition of the necessary ablutions to be performed by the
-faithful before and after prayers, and showed us the water tank fitted
-with taps, at one of which a devotee was busy having his wash.
-
-[Illustration: SPOILING THE EGYPTIANS? OR BEING DESPOILED BY THEM!]
-
-[Illustration: SENSATION IN SOLAR TOPIS]
-
-The bazaar bristled with European goods, and topis and cigarettes were
-much in evidence, though there were some charming Egyptian fabrics in
-the form of scarves brocaded with patterns in gold or silver thread or
-black on white fine linen.
-
-On the whitewashed walls of some of the houses I noticed some primitive
-paintings in distemper, apparently representing camels, travellers, and
-palm-trees, done in profile. They were carried horizontally across the
-front of the houses as a sort of frieze, and were curiously suggestive
-in a childlike way of a survival of the ancient Egyptian method of
-decorating. Our guide said that they indicated that the dweller in the
-house had visited Mecca. Returning to “La Nera” we found her indeed
-blacker than she was painted, as everything on board was covered with
-a fine coal dust, which the energy of the crew with copious hose-pipes
-eventually got rid of. The harbour of Port Said is always busy,
-many liners and transports coming and going, war vessels of various
-nationalities lying at anchor, boats plying to and fro, and young,
-lithe, brown-skinned natives on the quays, ready to dive for silver
-pieces, crouching shivering on the edge of the wharf, or in a boat, and
-crying in an almost continuous monotone, “à la mer,” “à la mer,” “à la
-mer,” until the hoped-for small coin is thrown into the water, when
-they adroitly dive and intercept it as it falls turning and glittering
-in the water, and reappear with it in their mouths, which soon open for
-more.
-
-[Illustration: THE SUEZ CANAL]
-
-We started again at 12.30 for Suez, entering the canal. Our steamer was
-stopped at the first village to allow two steamers to pass—the “Clan
-Campbell” of Glasgow and the “Herefordshire” of Liverpool.
-
-The weather was quite cool and cloudy and it turned out a showery
-afternoon. Flocks of pelicans were seen on the waters of the wide
-shallow lakes we passed. There was a stormy sunset, and there was
-lightning after nightfall, but later the moon shone brightly, falling
-on the wan sand of the banks, which had quite the effect of snow under
-its clear cold light.
-
-The steamer moved slowly through the canal at about the rate of five
-knots. A passenger was landed at Ismailia, after which we entered
-the bitter lakes, and next morning we were within fifteen miles from
-Suez, but our steamer had to stop owing to a transport ship having got
-aground ahead of us. A German steamer was close behind us, and while
-waiting many of the passengers landed and roamed about on the desert
-sand. It was not long, however, before the transport was got off, and
-she presently passed us, a huge white steamer named the “Rena,” crowded
-with English “Tommies” homeward bound.
-
-The passage of the Suez Canal is very interesting and comes as a
-welcome relief after tossing on the open sea out of sight of land. The
-long level lines of the sandy desert have a reposeful effect, but fine
-ranges of mountains are often seen beyond, and the desert is frequently
-varied with the
-
- “strip of herbage strown”
-
-embroidered with palm-trees, and these elements of Egyptian landscape
-steeped in the translucent atmosphere are relieved by striking
-bronze-coloured figures in blue robes and swarthy Arabs in white in the
-foreground on the sand-banks, or an occasional string of camels.
-
-We reached Suez about midday and anchored off the town. The Consul’s
-tug paid us a visit, and our vessel was soon surrounded by a small
-fleet of picturesque craft with lateen sails, and gunwales painted
-with eyes, and in the semblance of quaint fish in bands of green and
-white, manned by swarthy Arabs and Egyptians. These brought cargo and
-provisions to be hoisted on board, and the process took an hour or two,
-but in the afternoon we steamed away again and entered the Red Sea.
-
-The weather grew perceptibly warmer, but was still not oppressive,
-and there was a cool breeze in the evening. There was a beautiful
-roseate light at afterglow on the eastern shore, where Mount Sinai was
-pointed out, and the well of Moses, and the traditional place of the
-Israelites’ passage of the Red Sea. The sun set in gold and purple
-behind a bold range of craggy mountains on our starboard side, and a
-splendid moonlight night succeeded, the moon nearly at full.
-
-On the morning of the 28th November we passed “The Brothers” lightships
-to starboard, and the next day we were out of sight of land, with a
-pleasant breeze under the double awnings of the upper deck, enjoying
-the best summer weather, which we should think ourselves lucky to have
-in England. The Red Sea was really as blue as the Mediterranean, though
-of course subject to changes according to the sky, which turned to a
-wonderful clear greenish gold after sunset, powdered with small dark
-clouds which floated across it; a violet flush above the gold blending
-it into the deep blue of the upper sky, the small floating clouds
-against it showing ashy grey, while against the gold of the afterglow
-they looked nearly black, the sea being of a rather cold metallic blue.
-The serene weather and the splendour of the moonlit nights continued,
-but the temperature rose considerably, reaching 88° Fahr. in our cabin,
-which was on the starboard side of the ship. It is as well to remember
-that port side cabins are cooler for the outward voyage, and those on
-the starboard side for the homeward voyage, as going eastwards the heat
-of the sun falls on the starboard side necessarily for the greater part
-of the day, while going westwards of course the reverse is the case.
-This applies more particularly to the Red Sea.
-
-[Illustration: THE PASSAGE OF THE RED SEA
-
-(Therm: 88° or so!)]
-
-On November 30th we passed the island of Jubbelteer, on which was
-a lighthouse, and later, “The Twelve Apostles,” a series of rocky
-volcanic-looking islands of bold and angular outline, and apparently
-barren. Sea-birds, however, were seen with black and white bodies and
-brown wings flying close to the water.
-
-On December the 1st we passed Mocha, of coffee celebrity, and the
-island of Perrim, where there are lighthouses and signal stations,
-but, like the other islands we had seen, otherwise desolate in the
-extreme. Later the Arabian coast came into view and the sea was dotted
-with the sails of Arab dhows. The coast as we approached Aden showed
-volcanic-looking mountains, striking in form and bold in outline, with
-stretches of sand and rock between. Aden was reached about 2 P.M., a
-school of dolphins playing about the ship as if to welcome our arrival.
-
-Aden looked a queer uninviting place, baked dry by the sun—a cluster
-of temporary and barrack-like buildings huddled together anyhow along
-the rocky coast, with never a tree to be seen; the ragged, precipitous,
-barren edges of extinct volcanoes forming a background to the
-red-roofed barracks and bungalows.
-
-Several large white warships lay at anchor in the harbour, and lent a
-touch of gay colour by being decked with strings of bunting from stem
-to stern in honour of our Queen Alexandra’s birthday. A German liner
-got in just before us and we saw the coal lighters being rowed up to
-her. “La Nera” coaled here also, but it was a less grimy proceeding
-than at Port Said, as the coal was in sacks. The type of coolies, too,
-was very different, and there were many African negroes (Soumalis)
-among them, whose skins could hardly be made blacker than they were by
-nature. In addition to its cluster of coaling lighters, our vessel, now
-at anchor, was soon surrounded by boats filled with natives who swarmed
-round the gangways, and soon invaded the ship—a crowd of Soumali
-traders offering ostrich feathers and feather fans (of a European
-look), ostrich eggs, wicker bottle-shaped baskets, shell necklaces,
-and amber beads, who drove their trade amongst the passengers on deck,
-whilst others endeavoured to catch their eyes from the boats. Thin,
-lithe young natives with fuzzy hair were very numerous, and some had
-dyed their hair red, which had a grotesque effect with the black skin.
-I noted a strange contrast in the same boat, too, which contained two
-natives, one of whom wore a sort of large-checked suit of pyjamas with
-his mop of red-dyed hair, while his companion had his head clean shaved
-with “nodings on”! Some natives seemed to have used face powder—at any
-rate had smeared some kind of whitening over their countenances with
-ghastly effect.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE SAME BOAT—A CONTRAST AT ADEN]
-
-The scene was a strange one altogether. The crowd of Europeans on deck,
-in which nearly every nationality was represented, mostly clad in topis
-and white garments, the black traders moving about them; the swarm of
-boats at the sides of the vessel full of bright spots of colour—scarlet
-turbans, white, orange, yellow, and purple in the costumes—swaying on
-the turquoise-coloured sea; brown-backed gulls flapping over the water
-and kites hovering over the harbour; and all steeped in the bright
-sunshine of the East. Many of the passengers went ashore in the native
-boats, but the scene seemed more amusing from the ship and we remained
-on deck.
-
-Aden itself looked more interesting at night, with bright lights here
-and there on the shore and on the ships, and the rising moon translated
-everything into terms of mystery and romance.
-
-I watched an Arab dhow set sail. It is one of the most beautiful of
-sailing vessels, and has a high old-fashioned poop—the line of the
-gunwale making a fine curve from stem to stern—a mainmast with a big
-lateen sail, two jibs on a short bowsprit, and a secondary smaller mast
-astern. The sun set behind the Arabian coast, the jagged peaks of which
-we had previously passed. The coaling did not finish till nightfall.
-The coolies seemed to undertake all the mechanical arrangements for the
-work, fixing the hauling gear and the necessary ropes and planks, and
-often in the process seeming to hang on to the ship with little more
-than their eyelids. When they pulled a rope together the cry to keep
-time sounded like “Leesah!” or “Leeshah!” with emphasis on the first
-syllable.
-
-The coaling finished, and the curious swarm of native life that had
-surrounded us departed, “La Nera” weighed anchor and pursued her course
-eastwards, skirting the rocky coast bathed in the moonlight as she made
-for the open Arabian Sea.
-
-The next day in the early morning we had sight of some flying-fish.
-They have almost the appearance of swallows at a distance, especially
-when seen against the light, but, glancing, as they leap out of the
-water, to disappear into it again very quickly, they flash in the sun
-like silver.
-
-The Arabian coast was still faintly visible towards the north, but
-gradually faded from view. The pleasant light breeze continued and it
-was not nearly so hot as in the Red Sea, in fact quite pleasant either
-on deck or below—especially with a “windle” fixed to the cabin port.
-
-We had made an interesting acquaintance on board, a French gentleman
-who knew India well and who was on his way to revisit that country,
-intending to join an English friend there on a shooting expedition.
-He was an old sportsman and had shot big game in Tibet. He united
-the keenness and experience of a sportsman with literary tastes
-and a love of history and archæology. This gentleman introduced
-us to “the green ray,” a phenomenon peculiar to the Eastern seas,
-I believe. Just at the moment when the sun disappears beneath the
-horizon there is the appearance of a vivid green spark flashing like
-a gem which seems to detach itself from the glowing orb and fly
-upward, instantly disappearing in the reddening haze. We witnessed
-this on several occasions, but in order to see it a clear sunset is
-absolutely necessary—that is to say that one must be able to see
-the sun sink below the horizon clear of cloud. The lovely moonlight
-nights continued, the moon being now ahead, and the apparent goal
-of the vessel’s course. One night, however, was disturbed by the
-steamer stopping in mid-ocean. One gets so accustomed to the throb
-of the engines on board a steamer that its sudden cessation is quite
-startling. Passengers clustered near the engine-room to learn the
-cause, which turned out to be something wrong with “a washer” which
-affected the movement of the shaft. After about three hours this was
-repaired and the “Nera” continued her course. She generally made about
-300 miles in the twenty-four hours.
-
-Incidents in the Indian Ocean were few and far between. Flying-fish
-were to be seen, but only in the early morning as a rule; a whale
-was noticed spouting, and two sharks were sighted. I saw, too, a
-large turtle turn over close to the ship’s side, but such sights very
-occasionally varied the wide seascape, and many were glad to turn to
-deck games or bridge for diversion, if they could not find it in books,
-or in observing their fellow passengers.
-
-[Illustration: SOME TYPES AMONG OUR FELLOW PASSENGERS]
-
-Certainly amongst these latter there was no want of interest or
-variety; they were quite an international group, and included English
-and Anglo-Indians returning after leave of absence in Europe to take
-up their official duties, civil or military, on new appointments
-with their wives and families; a large proportion of French (it
-being a French steamer); then there were Portuguese and Dutch (going
-out to Australia), Germans and Canadians, Armenians from Rangoon,
-and Indians from Bombay; several Armenian priests also, probably
-missionaries; there were negroes and Arabs in the fo’castle, and
-among the second-class passengers a characteristic group of English
-workmen—foremen engineers and navvies. They were bound for Bombay,
-having been engaged to direct coolie labour on new and extensive docks
-at that port, their contract being for three years, and their passage
-paid. I think they got very tired of doing nothing and did not feel
-quite happy with the French dinners, although the heaviest man of the
-party made it a rule to devour everything that was set before him,
-taking Saint Paul’s advice, and “asking no questions.” I think all the
-ages of man—and woman—were represented on board, including more than
-one infant “mewling and puling in its nurse’s arms.” A little sample of
-the big world chipped off and sent adrift on the ocean—a ship of life,
-not without its enigmas, its little ironies and uncertainties, tossed
-upon the very type of uncertainty—the sea.
-
-A ship, however, is a castle of indolence as far as the passengers are
-concerned, though the crew, I suspect, would tell a very different
-story, as, apart from the severe work of the engineers and stokers,
-their work never seems at an end, and it is only by constant washing,
-scrubbing, and sweeping that a steamer can be kept decently clean and
-habitable.
-
-To break the monotony of the five days’ voyage on the Indian Ocean
-a concert was got up by an energetic young lady and her friends.
-They went round the ship to discover what hidden musical or
-histrionic talent might be concealed under the more or less disguised
-personalities of the passengers, and they succeeded in drawing out
-enough for an evening’s entertainment on the saloon deck, which was
-picturesquely draped with bunting for the occasion, and a piano was
-wheeled into position. Various songs were given, and a French princess,
-who was among the passengers, recited. The young lady who had been the
-leading spirit in organising the concert herself gave some charming
-songs which she accompanied on a guitar, and a pretty song in Japanese
-costume and umbrella from “The Geisha,” I think, with much spirit.
-The proceeds went to the benefit of the orphans of the Messageries
-Maritimes sailors.
-
-After this violent excitement the days passed as days do at sea, the
-fine weather continuing with delightful monotony. The fresh easterly
-breeze was strong enough to fleck the blue plain with “white horses,”
-yet not cause any trying movement of the vessel, which ploughed
-steadily through the waves, driving the spray from its bows, and
-causing dancing rainbows on the foamy crests as they rebounded from the
-ship’s side. The sun rising in clear glory from the sea, disappeared
-each evening in tranquil splendour, showing the green ray, and the
-deep red along the horizon in the west afterwards, over the dark blue
-sea. The dark blue above and the illuminated sky between, recalled the
-favourite effect in Japanese prints by Hiroshigi, and at the same time
-testified to its truth.
-
-But all things have an end, even ocean voyages, and about four o’clock
-on the morning of Friday, December the 7th, our steamer slowed down and
-took on board the pilot, and we, cautiously steering past mysterious
-islands under the dawn, finally cast anchor in Bombay harbour.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-BOMBAY AND THE CAVES OF ELLORA
-
-
-The first impression of Bombay from the sea is perhaps a little
-disappointing from the pictorial point of view. The town spreads
-along the low flat coast, lined with long quays without any great
-domes or conspicuous noble buildings. One is aware of wharves and
-factory chimneys, and even the palms and gardens of Malabar Hill, and
-blue mountains inland do not altogether mitigate the commercial and
-industrial aspects of the place; but the light and colour of the East
-fuse all sorts of incongruities, and the feeling of touching a strange
-land and of setting foot for the first time in India is sufficiently
-exciting to throw a sort of glamour over everything.
-
-The steamers cannot disembark their passengers at the quays, so they
-have to be landed in boats which cluster about the sides of the big
-liner. The official tug comes alongside first, and the official visit
-is paid. We were due the evening before, and inquiries as to the why
-and wherefore of the delay had to be satisfied. Busy agents and eager
-hotel touts come on board, and all is bustle and preparation for
-landing.
-
-[Illustration: LANDING AT BOMBAY]
-
-Our Indian friend had been unexpectedly called away and was unable to
-meet us, but he committed us to the care of other friends at Bombay.
-We landed, however, with our friend the French explorer, with all our
-baggage, in a native boat, and by dint of a ragged lateen sail and oars
-plied by a swarthy, wild-looking crew, soon reached the quay, where a
-crowd of coolies waited to spring upon our belongings.
-
-[Illustration: AWAITING THE CUSTOMS—BOMBAY]
-
-Our French friend spoke Hindustanee fluently, fortunately for us; and
-amid the clamour of tongues which surrounded us, was able to arrange
-for an ox-cart to take our united baggage to the Custom-House, where,
-after an interview with some languid English officials clad in white
-drill and topis, having nothing contraband, we were duly passed, though
-our friend, possessing firearms, was delayed longer, and of course had
-to pay. The Bombay ox-carts are two-wheeled with high sides of timber,
-forming a square open lattice, and drawn by a pair of oxen. Committing
-our worldly goods to this delightful prehistoric vehicle, we took a
-carriage—a little, one-horse, open victoria, which is the street cab of
-Bombay, and similar to those in use in the towns of Italy—and drove to
-the Taj Mahal Hotel, a vast, new, modern caravanserai—which, however,
-was quite full, so we went on to the old-established “Watson’s” on the
-Esplanade, where we got a good room with a balcony and a view. There
-was also a pleasant covered terrace, or verandah, extending the whole
-length of the building, which on the north side, always in shade,
-faced a garden green with well-watered lawns and thickly planted with
-umbrageous mango and banyan trees, amid which the ubiquitous crows of
-India (resembling our hooded crow) kept up a continual cawing chorus
-as they flitted about, now swooping down on some ill-considered trifle
-in the street, or perching expectantly about the hotel precincts, on
-the lookout for scattered crumbs. Great brown kites hovered in the
-air, forming a second line of watchful but silent scavengers. The
-terrace also commanded a view of the street with all its varied types
-in costume, race, and colour and character. The prosperous, sleek
-Parsee merchant in his curious shiny, sloping high hat, long black
-alpaca or white tunic, and loose white nether garments and umbrella;
-Europeans in white drill and grey or white pith helmets, which gave
-a superficial family likeness to all who wore them; native servants,
-Hindu, Portuguese, and half-caste, in every variety of turban and
-costume, sitting or standing about in groups, waiting to be hired;
-wandering minstrels, dancing women, and jugglers and tumblers trying to
-catch the eye—and the small change—of the traveller; men with tom-toms
-and performing monkeys, water-carriers with their dripping goat-skin
-slung at their side, coolies and coolie women constantly passing to and
-fro from the quays, bearing their burdens on their heads; the bearer
-and the ayah in charge of faired-haired English children, passing in
-and out of the gardens; the British soldier in khaki, and the native
-policeman in blue with a flat yellow cap. These and such as these were
-the prevailing types in the scene from the hotel balcony, from whence,
-also, we could see the tram-cars, drawn by horses in big white topis,
-trailing up and down the Esplanade, while motors flashed by, and smart
-European ladies drove in their dog-carts. Beyond the trees of the
-garden rose a modern clock tower which told the burning hours in the
-familiar Westminster chimes.
-
-[Illustration: STREET PERFORMERS—BOMBAY]
-
-The modern British buildings of Bombay would probably in newspaper
-language be described as “handsome.” There were many showy and
-pretentious structures in a sort of Italian Gothic style, but they
-looked imported, and were decidedly out of place in a country which
-possesses such magnificent specimens of architecture of its own
-growth—as one might say. The many balconied and shuttered fronts,
-with projecting stories, the ridge-tiled roofs and plastered walls
-that we saw in the older quarters of the town seemed, as types of
-dwelling-houses at least, much more suitable and characteristic,
-and such types would surely be capable of adaptation to modern
-requirements. The Crawford Market is one of the sights of Bombay.
-Outside, with its steep roofs, belfry, and projecting eaves it has a
-rather English Gothic look, but inside the scene is entirely oriental,
-crowded with natives in all sorts of colours, moving among fish, fruit,
-grain, and provisions of all kinds, buying and selling amid a clamour
-of tongues—a busy scene of colour and variety, in a symphony of smells,
-dominated by that of the smoke of joss-sticks kept burning at some of
-the stalls as well as a suspicion of opium, which pervades all the
-native quarters in Indian cities. There is a sort of court or garden
-enclosed by the buildings, and here the live stock is kept—all sorts of
-birds and animals.
-
-A drive through the native bazaar of Bombay is a revelation. The
-carriage works its way with difficulty through the narrow, irregular
-street, crowded with natives in every variety of costume (or next to
-no costume), forming a wonderful moving pattern of brilliant colour,
-punctuated by swarthy faces, gleaming eyes, and white teeth. Shops of
-every kind line each side of the way, and these are rather dark and
-cavernous openings, shaded by awnings and divided by posts or carved
-pillars on the lowest story, but raised from the level of the streets
-by low platforms which serve the purposes of counter and working bench
-to the native merchant or craftsman who squats upon it, and often
-unites the two functions in his own person. He generally carries
-on his work in the presence of his whole family, apparently. All
-ages and sexes crowd in and about the shops, carrying on a perpetual
-conversazione, and the bazaar literally swarms with dusky, turbaned
-faces, varied by the deep red sari of the Hindu women, with their
-glittering armlets and anklets, or the veiled Mohammedan in her—well,
-pyjamas!
-
-The older house fronts above the shops were often rich with carving
-and colour, the upper stories being generally supported over the
-open shop by four columns. It reminded one of the arrangement of
-a mediæval street, as also in its general aspect, the shops being
-mostly workshops; and, as in the old days in Europe, could be seen
-different crafts in full operation, while the finished products of
-each were displayed for sale. There were tailors stitching away at
-garments, coppersmiths hammering their metal into shape, leather
-workers, jewellers, cook-shops, and many more, the little dark shops
-in most cases being crowded with other figures besides those of the
-workers—each like a miniature stage of life with an abundance of drama
-going on in all. The whole bazaar, too, was gay with colour—white,
-green, red, orange, yellow, and purple, of all sorts of shades and
-tones, in turban or robe—a perfect feast for the eye.
-
-In the course of our drive through the bazaar we met no less than
-three wedding processions, though rather broken and interrupted by the
-traffic. In one the bridegroom (who, with the Hindus and Mohammedans,
-is considered the most important personage in the ceremony as well
-as the spectacle) was in a carriage, on his way to fetch the bride,
-in gorgeous raiment and with a crown upon his head. He was followed
-by people bearing floral trophies, perhaps intended for decoration
-afterwards. These consisted of gilt vases with artificial flowers
-in them, arranged in rows close together, and carried in convenient
-lengths on a plank or shelf by young men bearers.
-
-Another of the bridegrooms was mounted on a horse, crowned and robed
-like a Byzantine emperor with glittering caparisons and housings, a
-tiny little dusky girl sitting behind him and holding on, who was said
-to be his little sister.
-
-The third bridegroom we saw was veiled, in addition to the bravery
-of his glittering attire. Flowers were strewn by boys accompanying
-him, and a little bunch fell into our carriage as we waited for the
-procession to go by, in which, of course, the musicians went before.
-We afterwards passed the house where the wedding was being celebrated,
-the guests assembling in great numbers to the feast, a tremendous noise
-going on, drums beating and trumpets blowing. In one of the processions
-very antique-looking trumpets or horns were carried of a large size,
-much resembling the military horns of ancient Roman times. These were
-Hindu weddings.
-
-We also had a glimpse of a Parsee wedding. This was in the open court
-of a large house arcaded from the street, brilliantly illuminated,
-where sat a great crowd of guests all attired in white.
-
-Working right through the native bazaar we reached the Victoria
-Gardens, a sort of Kew and Zoological rolled into one, being well
-stocked with fine palms and many varieties of tropical trees, as well
-as birds and animals, and all looking in good condition and well kept.
-Many Eurasians were here walking about, looking very weird in European
-dress. In these gardens are situated the Victoria and Albert Museum of
-Bombay.
-
-Sir George Birdwood had given me an introduction to H.H. the Aga
-Khan and we drove out to his abode, only to find, however, that His
-Highness had gone to Calcutta on his way to Japan. I was not much
-more fortunate with my other introductions to the eminent Parsee Sir
-Jamsetji Jijibhai, and Sir Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney. Although the
-son of the latter magnate did call upon us and brought us an invitation
-from Lady Jehangir, we were unable to accept it owing to the shortness
-of our stay in Bombay. I understood that the Calcutta Races in December
-attracted a great many of the rich Bombay residents, and this accounted
-for the absence from their homes of many at that time.
-
-We had a glimpse of some of the palaces on Malabar Hill, seeing
-the latter first against a glowing sunset. Fringed with palms and
-plantains, with its fantastic buildings silhouetted on the sky, it
-recalled the banks of storm cloud I had seen on the voyage, with their
-vaporous trees and aerial hanging gardens.
-
-A closer acquaintance did not impress us with any conviction of the
-healthiness of Malabar Hill, though of the sumptuousness of its houses,
-and often their fantastic character, and the luxuriance of its palms
-and gardens, there could be no doubt. We passed the grey wall of the
-Tower of Silence, the burial (?) place of the Parsees, where the crows,
-the kites, and the vultures were gathered together, but did not linger
-there. From the hill there is certainly a magnificent view of the city
-of Bombay: especially if seen just before sundown, when a golden glow
-seems to transfigure the scene; and later, looking down on the vast
-plain, the white houses partly hid in trees scattered along the shore,
-the quays, and the ships at anchor in the bay, all seem to sink like a
-dream into the roseate atmosphere of sunset. But even that lovely light
-is darkened by a heavy smoke cloud drifting on the city from the forest
-of gaunt factory chimneys rising in the East like the shadow of poverty
-which is always cast by the riches of the West.
-
-One rather wondered that Bombay was content to allow its best drive
-to be disfigured by a continuous succession of hideous commercial
-posters painted along the walls of one of its sides, the other being
-lined with palms and open towards the sea. This is, however, not worse
-indifference—in fact not so bad—as ours at home in allowing the posters
-along the railway lines to disfigure the charming and varied landscape
-of our own country.
-
-[Illustration: INTERVIEW WITH CANDIDATES FOR THE POST OF BEARER—MOSTLY
-UNBEARABLE!]
-
-One of the first necessities to the traveller in India, especially if
-he be ignorant of Hindustanee, is the engaging of a native bearer or
-servant. There is always a large class of these seeking engagements.
-They may be seen hanging about Messrs Cook’s Tourist Offices in groups.
-They usually wear white clothes and turbans, but the half-caste
-Portuguese are dressed in semi-European fashion with their cloth suits
-and small, flat, round caps of the sort which used to be termed “pork
-pie” in England, only lower. These are embroidered round the rim, and
-a similar sort of head covering is also worn by superior caste Hindus.
-For the post of bearer the traveller will find plenty of applicants
-when he makes his requirements known, in fact their number is rather
-embarrassing, and they all produce “chits” or letters of recommendation
-from former employers. These, indeed, are the only references to go
-upon, unless one happens to come with the personal testimony of a
-friend. The bearers mostly register their names at Cook’s offices,
-but they do not take any responsibility there for them in any way.
-These native servants expect 35 rupees (and upwards) a month, with an
-allowance for clothes, but out of this pay they find their own food.
-If, however, their food is provided, they take less pay—about 25
-rupees—but prices generally have an upward tendency. The engagement
-may probably be for three or four months, which gives the ordinary
-European tourist time to get round India, visiting the principal places
-of interest _en route_. A rupee in India is now only worth one shilling
-and four-pence, and fifteen rupees are the equivalent of a sovereign,
-it should be remembered.
-
-Of course the bearer’s travelling expenses and washing are paid as
-long as he is with his master, and his fare home when his engagement
-comes to an end, and then, too, probably he would get a present if
-his conduct has been satisfactory. One does not generally expect
-mirrors of virtue and trustiness on such terms. No doubt native
-bearers vary considerably in capacity and experience as well as in
-appearance, to say nothing of honesty and fidelity, and some are
-better as couriers than as body or camp servants, or vice versa. Some
-claim to be efficient _valets des places_ in addition to ordinary
-services, but it should be remembered that the bearer caste are not
-allowed to enter the sacred precincts of the great temples in India.
-Our choice, influenced mainly by a personal recommendation, fell on
-one Moonsawmy—a not unusual Hindu name. He had been in the service of
-Sir Samuel Baker and had had some experience in tiger-shooting, or at
-any rate had been out on such expeditions and in camp with the famous
-traveller and sportsman, but he had also acted as courier to English
-parties travelling in India, and professed to know the country well. We
-had planned an excursion to the caves of Ellora from Bombay with our
-friend M. Dauvergne, who had never seen them and was anxious to do so.
-Having mapped out our route we started on our expedition on December
-the 10th. Leaving Victoria Station, Bombay, at noon, we travelled by
-the G. I. P. (Great Indian Peninsular Railway), making our first train
-journey in India. The line crossed a cultivated plain at first, getting
-clear of Bombay; groups of date palms here and there were suggestive of
-Egypt. We passed native villages of different types, some with thatched
-roofs and some with tile—brown ridge tiles not unlike what one sees in
-Italy, and even corrugated iron was visible (alas!) here and there.
-The low huts built of sun-dried bricks or mud with flat roofs were the
-strangest and most eastern-looking. One could get glimpses, too, of the
-inhabitants, the Hindu women in saris, often of red or purple or blue,
-bearing on their heads water jars or bright brass or copper vessels,
-with much natural grace, some also carrying little brown babies
-supported by one arm on their hip.
-
-[Illustration: A BED AT THE DAK BUNGALOW! MUNMAD (KEEP IT DA(R)K)]
-
-Leaving the plains we entered a very interesting hill country covered
-with jungle and forests where we saw many teak trees and banyans,
-besides many varieties of acacia. Mountains of striking form came into
-view, suggestive of castled crags. We soon afterwards passed the Thull
-Ghat, where the line rises as much as 1050 feet in a distance of about
-ten miles—which means a steep gradient. We passed rice fields, also
-sugar canes, and a kind of Indian corn, but not maize, and castor-oil
-plants which are cultivated extensively. There were interesting and
-picturesque groups of natives at all the stations. Finally Munmad was
-reached towards six o’clock in the evening. This was our first stage,
-and the junction for Daulatabad our next, in the territory of the Nizam
-of Hyderabad. We, however, decided to stay the night at Munmad and go
-on the next morning—in fact, if I remember right, it was a case of
-necessity, as there was no train on that evening. So we were conducted
-to the Dak Bungalow, some little walk from the station, through a
-native village, with our baggage carried on the heads of women coolies.
-We found the bungalow a most inhospitable place of incredible bareness,
-and nothing to sleep on but narrow wooden framed couches, having a sort
-of stringy webbing full of holes. The gaunt draughty rooms were almost
-destitute of other furniture and had no conveniences of any kind. The
-native keeper of the place seemed helpless. There was no food to be
-had, and he could not have cooked it if there had been, so we had to
-make shift as best we could with what we had in our tea baskets. I
-should not advise any one to travel in India, at least at all off the
-track of hotels, without provisions and bedding. There was not much
-sleep to be had that night. The beds were frightfully uncomfortable
-and the room was cold. An Anglo-Indian official on the forest service
-occupied the best room, we afterwards discovered, but he, as is usual,
-travelled with his horses and several servants, including a cook,
-and a supply of necessaries of all sorts. We left the inhospitable
-bungalow early the next morning, processing through the village in
-the same way as that in which we had come, with our baggage on the
-heads of the coolie women. We made the acquaintance at Munmad of the
-charming, frisky little palm squirrels which abound everywhere in
-India—delightful little greenish-grey creatures with dark longitudinal
-stripes extending from their noses to their tails. They play about the
-dwellings quite familiarly, but are off like a shot up a tree and out
-of sight at the smallest alarm. Scaling the trunk of a tree spirally,
-they have almost the appearance of lizards, and they are certainly as
-nimble.
-
-The buffalo cow, too, is seen in every Indian village, a strange,
-dusky, rough-coated beast, with a weird, half-human, but rather
-sinister expression in its dark eyes, with long horns turned back upon
-their necks. They walk scornfully along to be milked, with an air which
-seems to say they thought the world but a poor place.
-
-We took train to Daulatabad and entered the Nizam’s territory. A police
-officer in his service was in the train, and was very intelligent
-and gave us much useful information. We now passed through a more
-arid-looking country than before, where cactuses and low trees grew
-sparsely on burnt yellow slopes and rocky hills, often of strange form,
-the country showing signs of a great upheaval from the sea.
-
-At Daulatabad, a small road station, a tonga was waiting for us, drawn
-by two poor broken-down ponies and a rather ragged red-turbaned driver.
-Our destination was the town of Rozah, a drive of some ten miles and
-mostly uphill, on a loose, rough road.
-
-A conspicuous object in the landscape at Daulatabad is the ancient
-fortress upon a steep hill rising abruptly from the plain. It was
-a famous stronghold, but was conquered by the Mohammedans in the
-thirteenth century. There are the ruins of the ancient city which it
-once protected, and within the citadel are remains of Hindu temples,
-one transformed into a mosque by the Moslems. Our road lay through
-the shattered gates which still marked the extent of the city with
-fragments of the outer walls, the whole area overgrown with trees and
-herbage, and clusters of native huts here and there. The road to Rozah
-is an almost continuous ascent, and in some places very steep, which
-made it very hard work for the wretched ponies which dragged our tonga,
-though, of course, we relieved it of our weight by walking up the worst
-hills. The sun was blazing, but there was a little shade to be had
-occasionally under the fine banyan trees which skirted the roadside.
-
-Towards evening we saw the domes of Rozah on a high plateau in front
-of us, and presently entered the town through a battlemented gate. It
-was a Mohammedan town with many important domed tombs, but it had a
-neglected and sparsely peopled aspect and a look of departed splendour.
-We made our way along a straggling street, and, passing through another
-gate, came out upon the other end of the plateau, from which we saw,
-opening before us as far as the eye could reach towards the west, the
-vast, green, fruitful plains of the Deccan. In command of this view we
-found our quarters for the night—the Travellers’ Bungalow—but this,
-the Nizam’s bungalow, was a great contrast to the one at Munmad, being
-clean and comfortable, with good beds and sufficient furniture and
-rugs, and a bath-room. The native in charge was able to provide food,
-too, and to cook a dinner, which, if not exactly Parisian, was, at all
-events, a vast improvement upon our last one. The sun set without a
-cloud, the last golden light lingering upon the white and black domes
-of the tombs around us. Then followed the afterglow, and then the
-darkness fell like a curtain, but the stars were intensely bright in
-the clear sky. The air was very pure and the silence of the place was
-profound. We were glad to rest after our long, hot, dusty journey, but
-I managed to get a sketch done before the light went.
-
-After breakfast the next morning (December 12) we started to walk to
-the caves at Ellora, which we found were only a short distance down the
-hill. A winding road led us past another of the Nizam’s bungalows to a
-sort of terrace in front of the first great cave, or, more properly,
-rock-cut temple, the Kylas, which, coming down the hill from above, one
-does not see until close upon it, and it is only on entering the court
-through the great gateway that one slowly realises the wonder of it. A
-huge temple of symmetric ground plan cut clean out of the great cliff,
-the straight sides of which are seen rising like a vast wall above it.
-A mass of intricate and richly carved detail, a veritable incrustation
-of carving of extraordinary richness rises before one. Standing clear
-in a spacious court, enclosed on three sides by a deep arcade cut in
-the sheer sides of the cliff (which shows the tool marks), having an
-outer row of massive detached columns and an inner row of engaged
-columns, and deep recessed chambers.
-
-[Illustration: THE KYLAS, CAVES OF ELLORA]
-
-On each side of the entrance to the temple in the court stand two
-isolated columns or pylons, and near these two great stone elephants.
-These columns and elephants really flank a big pedestal of stone with
-steps cut in it which lead up to a huge image of a Sacred Bull within a
-square chamber, from which a bridge is crossed and the portico of the
-temple is reached. Through this the great central hall, or nave, of
-the temple is entered, divided into four parts by groups of pillars,
-leaving an open passage up the middle and across to a portico on each
-side. From this chamber a few steps lead to the shrine of the Lingam,
-through a doorway. There are steps and doorways to each side of the
-shrine which lead on to open platforms, where are five recesses richly
-covered with sculptures of the Hindu mythology, as indeed is the whole
-temple, both within and without. The carved treatment and the whole
-idea of the scheme suggests that the original prototypes of such
-temples must have been structures of wood, and the elaborate treatment
-and small scale of some of the ornamental work seems reminiscent of
-wood-carving.
-
-[Illustration: WE ARE INTRODUCED TO THE CAVES OF ELLORA]
-
-The carved work may be said to be of two kinds. There was a sort of
-architectural or formal ornament in low relief resembling in style and
-treatment Assyrian work, in which the lotus frequently appeared treated
-as a flat rosette and used as pateræ, arranged in rows with intervals;
-and there was a high relief treatment of figure sculpture. Among the
-horizontal courses of carved decoration I noted a treatment of the
-garland or swag, the ends being twisted through rings from which they
-were represented as depending. These might have been of a Greek or
-Roman pattern.
-
-The exterior carving of the temple in the parts sheltered under eaves
-and by doorways showed traces of painting—the colours being red and
-green on white. The whole of the surfaces appear to have been coated
-with plaster to receive colour, in the same way as may be seen at the
-temple of Castor and Pollux at Girgenti.
-
-The stone when exposed to the weather was very much blackened and
-resembled the gritstone of Derbyshire in colour and texture.
-
-The Temple was dedicated to Siva, but the whole Hindu pantheon of the
-Vedic gods appeared to be sculptured in this marvellous place, as well
-as the different avators of Siva.
-
-The Hindu religion is really a great system of nature worship, all
-the powers, forces, and influences being personified and symbolised,
-nothing being accounted “common or unclean”—the elephant-headed Ganesha
-and the monkey god Hunuman taking their place as “eligible deities”—the
-whole scheme resting on the acknowledgment of the sexual origin of
-life. The generative organs themselves being revered as sacred, and
-symbolised in the mysterious Lingam which is enshrined in all the Hindu
-temples, and the object of special devotion.
-
-The god Siva and Parvati his spouse form the principal subject among
-the sculptures of the Kylas. A striking design rather Egyptian in
-feeling was to be seen in a large carved panel of Parvati represented
-as seated on the water, or rather on a mass of lotus leaves and
-flowers—the flower of life—with attendant elephants symmetrically
-arranged on each side, showering water upon the goddess from their
-trunks. In all countries religious symbols are taken from familiar
-and characteristic objects common to each, although, as Count Goblet
-d’Albiella points out in his most interesting and learned work on
-the “Migration of Symbols,” there is also a process of exchange and
-adaptation in ideas between different peoples and countries by means
-of which we get imported types, which, however, become naturalised and
-reappear in the form or convention peculiar to the country of their
-adoption.
-
-[Illustration: AND ITS WASPS!]
-
-As we gazed up at the cliffs from which this wonderful structure had
-been hewn, we noticed a number of green parrots fluttering about or
-clinging to the sheer walls of rock—like vivid green flashes of light
-upon the cold stone. Down in the court a number of extraordinarily
-large-sized wasps came buzzing about us. They looked formidable enough
-but did not do any damage, though their obtrusion did not facilitate
-the process of a sketching against time.
-
-Besides the Kylas, which is said to date from about 750–850 A.D., there
-were a number of other and smaller temples, cut in the face of the
-cliff at intervals extending along the hill on each side of the Kylas.
-The most ancient is supposed to date from 200 B.C. and the latest from
-the thirteenth century A.D. A guide on the spot showed us several
-Buddhist temples and these were much more cave-like in character. One
-had very fine massive carved and fluted columns.
-
-The second temple we saw suggested in its plan and form an apsidal
-basilica, and in detail wooden structure, the roof being carved in
-close ribs, curved to the form of a pointed arch, supported by a
-horizontal cornice and columns set very close together. A colossal
-figure of the seated Buddha filled the view at the end of the nave, but
-there was an ambulatory behind it. The figure was painted a dark red
-with white drapery and black hair, the eyes, with strongly marked white
-and black pupils, had a fixed stare which carried the whole length of
-the Temple.
-
-The next temple visited, also Buddhistic, was much plainer, and was
-being supported by new buttresses of masonry to prevent the cliff from
-falling. The third was larger but also quite plain and square cut, the
-structure of the pillars and cornice being again on timber principles;
-but none approached the Kylas in beauty and interest.
-
-The village of Ellora lay on the plain among trees about a mile and a
-half away from the foot of the cliff. Our guide pointed out some Jain
-temples there half hidden in masses of foliage and suggested a walk
-there, but by this time, between 10 and 11 o’clock in the morning, the
-sun was very powerful and the heat great, and as there was no shade
-till the village was reached and we had to get back to our bungalow,
-we gave it up and climbed the hill again. As we left the Kylas a large
-and most picturesque group of natives were squatted outside the gateway
-having a sort of picnic, a day out with their wives and numerous
-children, and they were wandering all over the temple chattering
-and laughing as they examined the sculptures and seemingly enjoying
-themselves much. They gazed at us curiously as we passed, as at some
-strange animals from an unknown country.
-
-M. Dauvergne took some photographs of the caves, while I managed to get
-a coloured sketch of the Kylas, and a few notes.
-
-We found the return journey to Daulatabad rather easier, being mostly
-downhill, though it was so precipitous in places that it was a marvel
-our poor ponies kept on their legs. We met many natives on the road,
-both Mohammedans and Hindus, as well as herds of goats, and asses with
-sacks of grain slung across their backs, black sheep and zebu carts.
-
-We reached Daulatabad station about the middle of the day, or early
-afternoon, and were fortunate enough (owing to the language at the
-command of our friend who explained our wants) to get quite an
-excellently cooked and nicely served tiffin in the waiting-room.
-
-There were interesting native figures about the station, and a group
-of figures at the village well not far off, where I got a sketch of
-a Hindu girl in a blue sari with a water jar on her head. She had a
-little round mark (Buddhist) like a red seal on her forehead, and her
-name was Hashuma.
-
-We got a train about 5.30 back to Munmad arriving there soon after
-9 at night. After dining at the station we bade farewell to our
-friend M. Dauvergne, who was travelling on to Bareilly, far up in the
-north-western provinces to join his shooting companion. Our train from
-Bombay did not leave until 3 A.M., but sleep was impossible owing to
-the noise, although we had a waiting-room to ourselves. It was only
-the usual conversazione which is carried on at every Indian station
-by the natives who throng the platforms, often waiting all night for
-a train, squatting in groups and keeping up a continual stream of
-talk. We were relieved when a faithful coolie announced the arrival of
-our train and carried in our bags. We had a compartment to ourselves
-for the most part until nearing Bombay, our only fellow-passengers
-being at different times a very quiet Hindu, and a British officer of
-the Royal Scots who did not travel far. But, before we got in, the
-carriage became crowded with every variety of costume, Parsee and Hindu
-merchants getting in for Bombay, until we were quite full up and—oh!
-so hot. Glad we were to get in at last, but not till noon—the hottest
-time of day—feeling rather fagged after our long journey. The heat
-in Bombay is very oppressive even in the so-called cool season. We
-generally lived in a temperature of about 88°, this in the dining-room
-being mitigated by electric fans; but it is always a relief when the
-sun declines, and a drive in the cool of the evening is delightful.
-
-We planned a rather extensive tour, and with the assistance of Messrs
-Cook, worked out a complete itinerary through India, ending at Ceylon,
-from whence we purposed to return in the following March.
-
-[Illustration: ARRIVAL OF MR. DADABHAI NAOROJI AT BOMBAY, DEC. 14, 1906]
-
-On December 14 M. Dadabhai Naoroji arrived by the _Arcadia_ at Bombay
-on his way to the National Congress at Calcutta of which he had been
-elected President. He had a great welcome. Flags and triumphal arches
-were put up along the esplanade, and he was brought from the Taj Mahal
-Hotel in a motor car decorated with flowers. An enormous crowd turned
-out to welcome him, chiefly of the Parsee community, and Parsees were
-conspicuous in the balconies of the houses and hotels along the route
-of the procession and parsee inscriptions of welcome hung across the
-streets. It was a striking scene from our balcony altogether. The
-last golden rays of the sun were slanting across the open esplanade
-alternating with broad luminous shadows and along the front streamed
-a vast white clad crowd—so different to the black crowds we are
-accustomed to in Europe—a white crowd varied with notes of bright
-colour and black here and there, and the red bunting floating around
-the bronze equestrian statue of King Edward VII. in the foreground:
-while the balconies were gay with Parsee ladies in their delicate
-embroidered silks, canary coloured, pink, blue, green, violet and
-scarlet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-AHMEDABAD
-
-
-We left Bombay for Ahmedabad on December the 15th. Finding that the
-best train was a night one, and as it was a journey of some three
-hundred miles or more, and time was an object, we made up our minds,
-though not given to night travelling, to make an exception to our
-usual practice, although we should lose the sight of the country by
-the way. Railway travelling in India is quite as comfortable as one
-might expect. The carriages, it is true, vary on different lines and
-according to age, but, as a rule, the trains have separate carriages
-for Europeans and for different classes of natives, and it is often
-quite possible to have an entire compartment even for a long distance.
-On some lines the first-class carriages are scarcely better than the
-second, but the fare is double. The best carriages have compartments
-containing two long leather-covered seats, each side under the
-windows, which can be turned into sleeping couches at night. There is
-a good space between them and also at the end between the doors, and
-a lavatory is always attached. Above the seats are slung two upper
-berths, so that the compartment _could_ be arranged for four sleepers.
-Any amount of light luggage can be taken into the compartments by
-passengers, but the heavy must be registered. The windows are protected
-from the sun by Venetian shutters, which can be let up or down, as well
-as glass, clear or toned, and sometimes fine wire screens. Outside
-there is a sort of hood, between which and the tops of the windows is a
-space for air, so that the fierce heat of the sun is tempered, and the
-carriage shielded to a certain extent from its rays.
-
-We found very well-appointed sleeping-cars to Ahmedabad, but divided
-into ladies’ and gentlemen’s compartments. As it happened, another
-couple were the only others travelling by the first-class sleeping-car
-besides ourselves, so that we were able to arrange between ourselves
-that husbands and wives were not divided, each pair having a
-compartment to themselves.
-
-Ahmedabad was reached about half-past seven in the morning. A crowd of
-coolies usually rush to seize your baggage on the arrival of a train,
-and our bearer was useful in keeping them at bay a bit. There was a Dak
-bungalow at Ahmedabad, but we did not feel any decided leaning towards
-it, and, finding there were quite decent bedrooms to be had at the
-station and that we could feed in the refreshment-room, we decided to
-stay there.
-
-[Illustration: THE FEET OF PILGRIMS (AT MOHAMMEDAN MOSQUES)]
-
-Carriages were to be had at from six to eight rupees a day, and we
-engaged one and had a drive through the town, stopping to see the
-mosques for which it is so famed. The Jama Musjid had a splendid,
-spacious court in front of it, walled around, the entrance being
-through a rather small door, where it is necessary for the visitors
-either to put off their shoes or to consent to have enormous loose
-ones of grass or matting tied on over their own, which seems to prevent
-desecration quite as efficiently. The mosque had fifteen domes, and
-inside was a forest of white pillars (260), and a large gallery for
-the women, screened with pierced stone-work in lovely patterns. There
-were the marble tombs of Ahmad Shah—the builder of the mosque—and his
-son and grandson, richly carved in delicate relief, the sides being
-arcaded, and under each arch the representation of a hanging lamp, or
-censer, some of the latter showing an ornamental treatment of smoke
-ascending from them.
-
-The marble pavements had a peculiar fine dull polish, noticeable in
-mosque pavements throughout India, which is the result of the constant
-movement of the bare feet of the natives passing over their surface.
-The tombs of the queens of Ahmad Shah were carved with remarkable
-fineness. One, inlaid with delicate trees in white marble or black, was
-as fine as any Persian cabinet work in ivory.
-
-The Queen’s Mosque, with three domes, contains charming carving and
-pierced screen-work.
-
-The mosque of Rani Sipri and her tomb are marvellously rich in fine
-carving in red sandstone and screen-work, and suggest in some of their
-forms and the rich incrustation of their ornament the influence of
-Hindu work, which, indeed, is a characteristic of many here. Beautiful
-pierced screens of stone-work, divided into panels by the supporting
-columns, enclose the tomb.
-
-[Illustration: POOR RELATIONS]
-
-For the loveliest designs, however, in pierced screen-work, one still
-turns to those of the windows of the Sidi Sayyids’ Mosque, especially
-to the two wherein palms and rose-trees are combined in a sort of
-natural formation to form a lovely mesh of intricate, yet perfectly
-coherent and balanced pattern, which fills the tympanum shape of
-low-arched windows; a design in light on dark seen from the outside,
-and in dark against light seen from within, when it fulfils its purpose
-of breaking up the light of the sun, and producing that enchanting
-luminous twilight so characteristic of Eastern interiors. There are
-reproductions of two of these windows at our Indian Museum at South
-Kensington, but I had long desired to see the originals, and I was
-not disappointed. The warm light of the late afternoon sun lingered
-in their interstices, and, seen from below, the under sides of the
-marble fret took rich golden reflections, which gave the designs quite
-a new aspect, and filled them with life and colour, giving the effect
-almost of sunlit foliage. We drove to see Shah Alam’s Mosque, built
-about 1420, which was reached in about half an hour beyond the city
-gates, along a cool avenue of acacias. The mosque has a fine court
-and minarets, and a splendid canopied tomb, with pillars inlaid with
-mother-o’-pearl; beautiful metal-work in pierced brass gates and
-screens.
-
-On returning from this drive we stopped near the river Sarbarmati in a
-grove of trees, chiefly banyan, mango, and acacia. Here a native boy
-set up a peculiar hooting sort of call, and presently we saw troops
-of silver grey monkeys dropping from the trees and gambolling along
-towards us between the stems—hundreds of them apparently—hurrying up to
-feed on the dried peas we scattered for them. They came crowding around
-us, but were quite friendly, and many would feed out of our hands. They
-varied much in size, but were mostly large, and carried their tails
-high in the air and curled over their backs in spirited curves when
-walking on all-fours. Many of the female monkeys carried their young
-ones with them. All looked beautifully clean and healthy, and were full
-of play—in fact as different as possible in their freedom from the poor
-captives in cages at zoological gardens. It was amusing to watch their
-pranks and to note the ease with which they would climb up into the
-trees, some of which were as full of monkeys almost as branches.
-
-As we left the monkeys we had another unusual sight. We saw a large and
-leafy mango tree leaning over the river, which seemed to have suddenly
-burst into white blossoms; but we soon perceived these supposed flowers
-begin to flutter, and winged ones detached themselves from the mass of
-white, which we then discovered were white cranes. They would rise in
-a cloud and settle again ever and anon among the green foliage. They
-were a small kind, not larger than a heron, and are common all over
-India. We often saw them afterwards rising by the side of the pools
-by the railway track, or fishing, or flying over the submerged paddy
-fields, but in smaller numbers, and never so beautifully.
-
-[Illustration: A FAMILY PARTY—CRANES ON A MANGO TREE (SARBARMATI
-RIVER)]
-
-On the white and dusty road to Ahmedabad we met numbers of wagons
-loaded with cotton bales and drawn by large white oxen. The country
-carts had wicker bodies, somewhat like those I have seen in Germany,
-and primitive massive wheels with eight spokes in a double cross.
-Camels were occasionally seen ridden by natives. As at Bombay, there
-were extensive cotton factories here, and cotton was very largely grown
-in the country around.
-
-The bazaars and the street life in Ahmedabad are most various and
-interesting, all sorts of trades and crafts being carried on. There
-is still a great quantity of silk-weaving done, and brocades wrought
-with gold thread. A proverb of the place quoted by Mr W. S. Caine has
-it that the prosperity of Ahmedabad hangs on three threads—“gold,
-silk, and cotton”; and these three threads still symbolise the main
-industries of the city. A picturesque incident in the streets is the
-silk-winder—in some open space in front of the shops you may sometimes
-see a native woman standing (like Mr Holman Hunt’s “Lady of Shalott”)
-within a low square enclosure formed of bamboo sticks wound with long
-strands of silk thread. She holds a sort of spindle in her left hand,
-and a long tapering wand in her right, by means of which she divides
-or regulates the thread as she winds it off on to the bamboo sticks,
-rapidly twirling the spindle as she does so. It is an extremely pretty
-and picturesque sight. The old methods of hand-weaving are practised,
-and for weaving the brocades or “kincobs” the treadles in the loom are
-lifted from above by a boy, who draws up the cords attached to the
-threads of the warp according to the pattern the weaver is working.
-It is said that the native trade in the finer brocaded silks has been
-injured owing to the richer natives following the European fashion
-of dressing plainly, the rich silk woven with gold thread being only
-worn on state occasions, another instance of the depressing influence
-of Western ideas and habits upon the East. The rich merchants, and
-the Maharajahs and their court officials no doubt believe they are
-improving their style in adopting fashions from Europe, but the effect
-is practically only to vulgarise the native taste. The native princes
-and the well-to-do merchants now dash about in imported motor cars
-in raiment of dingy tints, instead of proudly prancing upon stately
-elephants and clothed in splendour and colour. Eastern life is made
-less joyous in its aspects by such changes. The mass of the people
-do not change, however, and seem to have no desire to, and they are
-the common people everywhere who give the characteristic life and
-colour. Though they only wear cotton or muslin, the beauty and variety
-of the tints are wonderful, and fill the bazaars with a stream of
-ever-changing hues in the most unexpected combinations and harmonies.
-
-Driving through the bazaars at Ahmedabad, we came to a sort of open
-space from which several streets diverged, and here was being held
-a sort of open market of cloth—chiefly muslins and cottons of every
-variety of colour and pattern. These were laid out in piles on the
-ground, the merchants squatting by their goods or spreading them out
-to show their customers.
-
-[Illustration: STREET SCENE, AHMEDABAD
-
-ENGLISH TRAVELLERS SKETCHING AND MAKING PURCHASES]
-
-We stopped our carriage, and got our bearer to bring us some of
-the stuffs to look at and to inquire the prices, and we were soon
-surrounded by an eager crowd of dark faces and turbaned heads, and were
-nearly buried in a rainbow-tinted cloud of muslin and cotton cloth,
-amid which deliberate selection became difficult. I noted, however,
-many examples of the native method of dyeing cloths in patterns by the
-tying and dipping methods which often produce most delightful results,
-the pattern having a softer and more blended effect than the ordinary
-block printing. Although Manchester cottons were in evidence, it was
-pleasant to see that native methods were not forgotten, and were still
-in demand.
-
-The native pottery, too, at Ahmedabad is extremely interesting, the
-common forms are always good, as indeed they are throughout India.
-Enormous earthen jars are made here to hold grain, or for carrying
-water from the river on ox-carts. The ordinary earthen water-jar, which
-the Hindu women carry on their heads, resembles the ancient Greek
-Hydria in form, and is so beautiful that it is distressing to see
-it occasionally substituted by the hideous tin kerosine can—another
-European innovation—much more difficult to balance one would think.
-In the streets of Ahmedabad occasional features are small, richly
-carved octagonal minarets supported on posts, and looking like
-glorified pigeon houses. There is a big Hindu temple—a Jain temple
-of no antiquity, only about thirty or forty years old. The shrine of
-Hathi Sing. It has the characteristic pagoda domes, and is elaborately
-painted and decorated, though rather coarsely. The finest features were
-the marble pavements where, again, one noticed the peculiar soft polish
-given by bare feet.
-
-A very interesting excursion is that to Sarkhei, a drive of about
-seven miles outside the city gates. The road crosses the wide river
-Sarbarmati—or rather its bed, as the water shrinks into a rather narrow
-stream, and is almost lost sometimes among great stretches and banks
-of sand. At the water’s edge, as we passed, we saw the people busy
-washing clothes (which made a pretty coloured pattern when spread on
-the sands to dry) or themselves, or watering horses and bullocks, or
-refreshing their baskets of vegetables they had borne along the dusty
-ways by dipping them in the stream.
-
-[Illustration: TOMB OF GUNJ BAKSH, SARKHEI]
-
-Our road was deep in dust, but generally pleasantly shaded by fine old
-trees, chiefly banyan, teak trees, and acacias. The little striped
-squirrels were very numerous and active, frisking up and down and
-around the tree stems. Monkeys were occasionally seen—of the same
-silver grey sort we had seen on our visit to the Mosque of Shah Alam—in
-the jungles at the side of the road, or in the trees. A bird rather
-like a large bullfinch was common, and we saw many peacocks wandering
-about, and, of course, kites and crows everywhere. On the road we
-passed many a heavy-laden ox-cart, piled with bales of cotton, making
-their way to Ahmedabad, as well as droves of white asses, and many
-groups of natives. About two miles out we saw at the side of the road a
-large brick-built Mohammedan Tomb, said to be the tomb of the architect
-of Sarkhei, who was a Persian.
-
-Further on our carriage turned out of the main road down a narrow
-lane to the right and up a steep bit of hill, flagged with flat
-stones. Presently we arrived in front of a fine gateway of Moslem
-architecture, which formed the entrance to a large quadrangle, shaded
-by a very old acacia tree. We had to put on the usual clumsy canvas
-shoes before entering this court, which enclosed the splendid mosque
-and tomb of Gunj Baksh (begun by Mahmudshah in 1445 and finished by
-Begara in 1451), with a low, flat cupola, and many pilastered front,
-the structures of the caps showing Hindu influence. There is a finely
-worked lattice screen of brass surrounding the octagonal shrine within,
-containing the tomb. The floor is inlaid with coloured marbles, and
-the roof is rich with gilding. An open pavilion stood in the court in
-front of the shrine, raised upon a platform, with steps supported by
-sixteen carved marble pillars. Opposite to this is a charming portico,
-through which one can get a glimpse of the great tank, though it was
-almost dried up when we saw it, the water hardly enough to conceal an
-alligator, though white cranes were standing in the pool in the forlorn
-hope of catching fish, and monkeys gambolled about the steps. On the
-side of the court near the entrance are the tombs of Mahmud Begara and
-his two sons—of the usual Mohammedan type, an arcaded pattern in low
-relief along the sides; with censers hanging between the arches of
-similar type to those at Ahmedabad.
-
-There is a pathetic feeling of departed or half decayed splendour about
-Sarkhei, as well as a sense of romance and mystery, and one leaves
-it impressed with the idea of the refinement, sense of beauty, and
-spaciousness of the departed princely builders who lie buried within
-their own architectural dream.
-
-There are always a number of hangers on about Indian tombs and
-temples, self-constituted guides, and persons of indefinite status and
-occupation who cluster around the arriving and departing stranger, who
-has to smooth his path with backsheesh, and Sarkhei is no exception.
-We had a hot drive along the dusky highway back to Ahmedabad in the
-middle of the day, the sun blazing down very fiercely, and we were glad
-of the protection of the carriage hood.
-
-In the course of one of our evening drives about the town, our
-Moonsawmy pointed out an acacia tree we passed by the roadside which
-appeared to be full of what looked like large pendant pear-shaped fruit
-of black and golden brown colour. These, however, were really clusters
-of fruit-bats hanging in the tree until nightfall. Some of them, as we
-looked, were already moving and stretching out their wings in the last
-rays of the evening sun.
-
-We passed through the triple arched ancient gateway which stands at
-the head of the main street. The bazaars were crowded with buyers and
-sellers, chiefly of cotton and other stuffs. The people themselves in
-every variety of costume formed a wonderful scheme of colour, varied by
-the brownskins of babies and little children playing about quite naked,
-and the brown backs of the workers bending over their crafts. The whole
-scene fused in the light of afterglow and rich in tone and chiaroscuro.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-AHMEDABAD TO AJMIR
-
-
-The railway station at Ahmedabad has the unusual distinction of two
-striking minarets of brick-work, richly cut and moulded in successive
-circular tiers, which rise to a considerable height from amid the
-palms and plantains of a small well-watered Eastern garden, with
-many straight-cut paths between the thickly planted trees. These are
-the remains of a Mohammedan mosque which once stood there. It is an
-unusually interesting and pleasant place to wander in while waiting for
-a train.
-
-Our bearer secured a comfortable coupé for our journey to Ajmir, which
-was to be our next halting-place. We had originally intended to visit
-Mount Abu to see the wonderful Jain temples of Delwara, but before we
-reached the Abu road heavy rain came on, and as it would have meant a
-pony ride of sixteen miles from the station to Mount Abu, we decided to
-go on to Ajmir without a break.
-
-Leaving Ahmedabad at 8.15 we breakfasted in the train, there being
-a restaurant car put on. The trains not being corridor trains it is
-necessary to get out at the stopping stations and find one’s way to the
-car and back to one’s carriage again.
-
-The country at first was very flat and generally cultivated, but with
-occasional belts of jungle, where monkeys and peacocks were seen. Fine
-banyan and acacia trees here and there. Ploughing with oxen was going
-on, and the yoke of oxen drawing at the irrigation wells was a frequent
-sight.
-
-About the middle of the day dark clouds rolled up and we had a heavy
-shower with promise of more to come. Mountains came into view at the
-same time as the change in the weather, and it was not long before we
-reached Abu Road Station. The fine mountain range on the left of the
-line amid which Mount Abu was situated was veiled in cloud and rain,
-but as we left the mountains the sky cleared again, and we entered
-a flat, desert-like region covered with stunted trees or dry scrub
-bush, stretching for miles. A strange-looking country was afterwards
-traversed, where huge granite boulders lay on the earth like mounds and
-partly overgrown, others might have been imagined to be the shells of
-gigantic tortoises. At a station called Mori this characteristic was
-the most striking. The stations on this line through Rajpootana were
-built after the Moslem fashion and had a superficial resemblance to
-mosques, being domed, the smaller buildings and wayside signal huts
-being treated in the same manner.
-
-After a rainy sunset of orange and grey, darkness soon fell, and it was
-not long before we reached Ajmir after about twelve hours’ travel—a
-distance of over three hundred miles. We found fairly comfortable
-quarters at the station refreshment-rooms, the bedrooms being above
-and opening on to spacious terraces from which interesting views of
-the town and country could be had. The only drawbacks were the noises.
-What with the shrieks of the engines, and the perpetual conversazione
-carried on on the platforms, which were generally thronged with most
-picturesque crowds of natives, sleep was very broken.
-
-Ajmir is very beautifully situated, with a fine background of
-hills, the town itself being on a slope with an old fort crowning a
-height immediately above it. There is a large military station, the
-cantonments with the residency and the English bungalows lying on a
-plain quite away from the native town.
-
-We hired a carriage and drove around the town the morning after our
-arrival, visiting the old palace and massive fortress built by the
-Emperor Akbar, who has left so many noble buildings in the north-west
-of India to testify to his power and influence in the past. We
-entered through a noble gateway into a large quadrangle surrounded by
-tremendously high, thick walls and having octagonal bastions at four
-corners. A pavilion rose in the centre of the court, raised upon a
-platform led up to by steps of marble. Extensive restorations were
-being carried on under the Indian Government, so much so that one had
-fears they were in danger of going too far in the direction of renewal,
-and did not draw the line with sufficient decision at the limits of
-preservation and repair. Certainly new work was being put in freely. It
-was interesting, however, to see that most beautiful and characteristic
-Indian craft of piercing patterns in marble being carried on. The
-native carver, turbaned and grey-bearded, was squatting on the ground
-busy with a small marble grill or screen. He was drilling a geometric
-diaper pattern through a panel of marble which had a worked moulding
-for frame. The slab was bedded in clay to keep it from under the
-worker’s hands, and to prevent splitting. When the holes were drilled
-he finished the work with chisels and mallet, working out the different
-bevels and facets of the quatre-foils, and putting in the work that
-which gave all the richness and the effect of the pattern. He seemed
-pleased to have his work noticed, and anxious that we should see it
-in its finished state he went to where a group of native women were
-at work on other similar grills which had left the carver’s hands,
-cleaning the pierced patterns from the clay, and showed the completed
-panels clear cut in the white marble. It was noticeable that the women
-only did the cleaning and polishing up, but not the carving.
-
-We had a fine view from the ramparts and minarets of the pavilion.
-
-From the fort we went on driving through the bazaars of Ajmir, which
-were highly interesting but less busy and crowded, perhaps, than at
-Ahmedabad. Gay coloured cottons and muslins, embroidered slippers,
-pottery, and grain of all kinds were mostly in evidence, the latter
-arranged in heaps on cloths spread on the ground in front of the shops,
-and measured out by the traders squatting by their merchandise. The
-fronts of the native houses here were mostly in white plaster, often
-painted with designs in blue and yellow of formal flowers in vases,
-or quaint animals and figures in profile. There was much fancy and
-variety in the design of the little arcaded projecting balconies
-corbelled out from the wall, and ogee arched windows, and moulded
-plaster and painted ornament.
-
-We presently, at the end of the principal street, approached the
-magnificent double gateway of the famous Dargah—named the Dilkasha (or
-“heart-expanding”) gate. From the street one really sees three ogee
-arches of different heights in succession, one beyond the other, the
-highest being flanked by towering minarets crowned with cupolas. The
-whole gateway in the bright morning sunlight looked a fairy-like aerial
-structure, fair and white, and glittering here and there with gold, and
-tile patterns in blue and yellow.
-
-The Dargah of Ajmir is revered as the burial-place of one Kwaja Sahib,
-a saint of the thirteenth century. His beautiful white and gold domed
-shrine enclosing his silver tomb occupies the centre of the inner
-court, and is visited by troops of pilgrims. A great festival is
-held in honour of the saint every year, when Ajmir is thronged with
-pilgrims. Two enormous iron pots are shown, standing each side the
-entrance to the Dargah, in which at the festival are cooked tons of
-food freely given to the pilgrims. The biggest pot is reputed to hold
-no less than 10,000 lbs. of food. The food consists of mess of rice,
-oil, sugar, raisins, and almonds, which is rather suggestive of a sort
-of plum pudding, and on this scale costs about £100.
-
-[Illustration: SHRINE OF THE KWAJA, AJMIR]
-
-On first entering the Dargah through the great gateway one sees a large
-paved court with several domed tombs and a mosque, and rising high
-the old fort of Tarrgarh, white-walled on the brown hill, is seen
-above. I noted a very fine bronze many-branched candelabra on one of
-the domed tombs. Passing through this court the second court is entered
-where stands the shrine. It is surrounded by a low marble balustrade,
-and is picturesquely overshadowed by a large ancient ilex tree, through
-the spreading branches of which with their masses of rich dark foliage
-glows the colour and gold of the richly decorated shrine. Through
-the open doors gleam the silver of the tomb, and the ivory-like dome
-fretted and crested with gold sparkling in the full light of the sun
-pierces the deep blue sky. Curious low tapering pedestals with small
-cupolas at the top are placed about the courts and around the shrine at
-intervals. These are pierced with small recesses, in which, on festival
-occasions, small lamps are placed. Beyond the shrine we come out upon
-a high-walled terrace which extends with a succession of bays along
-the sides of a deep narrow tank, flights of steps leading down to the
-water’s edge at different points.
-
-It is the custom when visitors leave the Dargah for the attendants to
-hang garlands of flowers about their necks, and in return for this
-graceful attention an offering to the shrine—or to its hangers on—is
-expected.
-
-The visitor is, however, rather carefully watched inside the Dargah.
-The shrine itself is not allowed to be entered. Shoes must be removed
-on entering the court, or the big canvas shoes put on over them. On
-sketching intent I was not allowed to pitch a camp stool near the
-shrine or in the sacred precincts, and even open umbrellas, for shade,
-were objected to by these jealous watchful devotees.
-
-From the Dargah we went to see the roofless mosque of
-“Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra,” which being interpreted signifies “The house
-of two and a half days.” It is on the hill opposite the fort, but
-on the lower slope, and is approached through narrow streets, and
-finally reached by a steep flight of steps which lead to the gateway
-of the court of the mosque. It is now little more than a beautiful
-red sandstone carved screen of open pointed arches, but the detail is
-exceedingly rich and happy in scale, and largely consists of bordering
-inscriptions outlining the arches and their rectangular framings, the
-texts being in both Cufic and Togra characters, and both these and the
-surface decoration generally are delicately but sharply cut in sunk
-carving, which preserves a certain unity of ornamental effect. Arranged
-along the side of the court are many carved fragments which are the
-remains of the Jain Temple, transformed into the Mussulman Mosque in
-the year 1236 by Altamash, who conquered the city, and was said to have
-effected the transformation in two and a half days.
-
-The mosque was not used for worship. In the court a rope or cord maker
-was at work. The white strands stretched over canes from the man
-working at one end of the walk to where at the other end his assistant
-sat at a sort of wheel by means of which the strands were twisted into
-a cord of the required thickness.
-
-After this we drove to the Daulat Bagh (Garden of splendour)—then
-passing through a beautiful park full of pine-trees we came to the
-white marble pavilion built by Shah Jehan, standing on a marble
-balustraded terrace, and overlooking a lovely lake, bounded by
-mountains—a lovely spot. The pavilion has been restored by the Indian
-government, and looks quite new. Marble, however, does not seem to
-weather or discolour in the Indian climate, and the difference between
-new and old is not nearly so marked as in European countries, while
-the imitative faculty of the Hindu workman and the traditions of
-craftsmanship under which he still works help to complete the illusion
-when restoration is done. New or old, it was an enchanting place,
-especially when the evening sun floods the whole scene with golden
-light, streaming through the trees, and filling the marble porticoes
-with warm colour. The lake still as a mirror, reflecting the fairy
-palace and the dreamy distance in its glassy surface. The chief
-commissioner should be happy to have his residence in the midst of this
-lovely garden. The lake is as useful too as it is beautiful, as from it
-is obtained the water supply of Ajmir.
-
-Another of our evening drives was through the cantonments outside the
-native city. We passed through the English military quarters, and
-saw the long low barrack-like bungalows of the soldiers, clean and
-neat, but bare and ugly. There were more comfortable bungalows of
-the officers and other English residents in gardens and amid trees,
-with entrance gates and drives, almost suburban, allowing for little
-differences in detail. The names of the residents, for instance, were
-painted in white block-letters on ugly black boards placed outside the
-gates of the gardens. There was the usual club house in a landscape
-garden, and here a military band of native infantry was playing,
-conducted by a man in a straw hat. English ladies, and children with
-their native aejahs and bearers scattered about the lawns.
-
-On the road a little distance from the town a large number of natives
-were busy making up the road over a new bridge across the railway. Many
-of these coolies were very attenuated, and might have come from the
-famine districts.
-
-Passing through the bazaar on my return from sketching in the Dargah, I
-noticed among the stalls of a crowded and picturesque native street a
-craftsman at work putting a border pattern upon the edge of a piece of
-orange-coloured muslin. He first printed or stamped the border, a small
-leaf and flower pattern, from a wood block with some sort of size of a
-brown colour, and when this was sufficiently “tacky” he laid on silver
-leaf over the pattern thus defined by the block in size, and finished
-by brushing away the superfluous leaf with a soft brush, much as our
-gilders do.
-
-A quaint effect was produced by the camels here, laden with great
-sheafs of sugar-cane, which trailed behind, spreading out over their
-hind quarters in a way that suggested skirts or a crinoline—viewed from
-behind.
-
-[Illustration: THE CAMEL’S CRINOLINE (SUGAR CANE) AJMIR]
-
-From our terrace over the railway station we could observe the varied
-groups of natives which continually thronged the platforms and the
-yards outside. Certainly the native in India makes constant use of the
-railways, although the railways do not take any trouble to make them
-comfortable. The native carriages seem always in an overcrowded state,
-and many of them are rather suggestive of cattle trucks with rough
-wooden partitions. Troups of natives will come to a railway station
-and camp all night waiting for some train in the morning. On inquiring
-what classes or manner of people these poor travellers mostly were, I
-was told that they comprised chiefly pilgrims to various shrines and
-festivals in different parts of the country, and small traders. The
-Ryot, or agriculturist, did not travel much, as might be supposed.
-The people usually bore great bundles with them, bedding presumably,
-and other necessaries for long journeys. These the women carried upon
-their heads. In the evenings groups of natives would be seen gathered
-round fires made on the ground. These were often mere flares of straw,
-and did not last very long, though they may have served to mitigate the
-chill of the nightfall, which is always so sudden in India.
-
-As evidence of the extraordinary variety of colour arrangements in the
-costume of the natives in the bazaars, here are a few notes made of the
-colours worn by passers-by, both men and women, at Ajmir observed in
-the course of a few minutes.
-
-1. Citron tunic, emerald green turban, white trousers.
-
-2. Buff turban black tunic, white trousers.
-
-3. (Woman.) Large vermilion cloak, pink skirt.
-
-4. Pea green turban, crimson velvet tunic, white trousers.
-
-5. Orange turban, black tunic, white trousers.
-
-6. White turban, wound round a red fez, deep brown orange cloak thrown
-over brown jacket and white breeches.
-
-7. Orange muslin simply covering head and body, scarlet trousers.
-(Mohammedan woman.)
-
-8. Turquoise turban, golden orange tunic (long) lined with pale yellow.
-
-The agricultural country folks generally wore white, though it was
-rather a dusky white. Groups of herdsmen were occasionally seen with
-long straight wands, their dark faces and bare limbs emerging from
-white cotton turbans, tunics and cloaks.
-
-Travellers in India as well as English residents are often greeted
-with salaams in the native bazaars and passers-by on the road. The
-word “salaam” is pronounced by natives sometimes in a tone almost of
-command, but as far as I could understand it was intended to suggest a
-mutual exchange of salutations, or even the word alone might be taken
-as a salutation sometimes; but it is always expected that an answering
-salute of some kind will be given, but it is said that one should
-never salute with the left hand if it is wished to avoid offence.
-The ordinary mode of salutation in any country should be carefully
-observed, as in no way can offence be more easily given, however
-inadvertently, by any apparent neglect of what are considered the
-ordinary courtesies of life sanctioned by the customs of a country.
-
-It is true that the native children seemed sometimes inclined to mock
-at a stranger, in a spirit of monkey mischief, perhaps, but there
-are little street gamins in any city, and the latest product of our
-civilisation, the London street arab, would be difficult to beat
-anywhere, East or West.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-CHITORGARH AND UDAIPUR
-
-
-From Ajmir there is a branch line to Chitorgarh and Udaipur, and no
-traveller in India should miss the opportunity of visiting both these
-highly interesting places. Leaving Ajmir, the railway runs south
-through a rather flat country, passing Naisirabad, an important British
-military station. The English “Tommy” in khaki, and white helmet and
-putties, or the sun-burned, brown-booted and spurred British cavalry
-officer, were in evidence at the railway station. Among the native
-crowd here we saw a turbaned man in pink carrying a very thin, aged
-woman, probably his mother, pick-a-back fashion.
-
-A very dry and almost desert tract of country is traversed after this,
-though occasionally varied by irrigated fields and green crops. The
-irrigation wells, worked by oxen as before, and the native ploughing,
-were the chief incidents in the landscape. The plough is a very
-primitive-looking implement with a single shaft, with a cross handle
-fixed at right angles to the shaft, which consists of a sharpened piece
-of wood, tipped with iron. The plough is drawn by a pair of zebus,
-and is light enough for the man to lift up and turn at the end of the
-furrow, or even to be carried home on his shoulder at the end of the
-day. There were thick hedges of spikey sort of cactus, branching out
-from a main stem, something like candelabra, the fronds growing in a
-longitudinal, rigid form. These hedges fenced the railway line from the
-fields on the desert. Another plant of common occurrence, both here and
-all over India, was a broad-leaved shrub of symmetric order, having
-small, pale, lilac flowers, the stems rather a yellow, and the leaves a
-lightish blue green. We noted also a sort of wild laburnam. The prickly
-pear was common, and a sort of prickly acacia-like shrub much liked by
-camels. The trees were mostly various acacias, the banyan tree (Ficus),
-and the teak. In places we saw both date and cocoa palms. At one
-station (Mandal) the level plains, with pyramidal hills in the distance
-and a grove of palms and camels in the foreground, again recalled Egypt.
-
-The cultivated crops we passed were cotton, tobacco, rice, wheat, and
-sugar cane.
-
-At every station may be seen the water filter, a wooden tripod stand,
-holding three red earthen water-jars, one above the other. The natives
-drink quantities of water, and always carry a small drinking-vessel
-of bright brass, which they take every opportunity of filling. The
-water-bearer is a characteristic figure everywhere, and comes up to the
-train with his cry, “Panee! panee!” which (with an Italian prepossessed
-ear) is more suggestive of another, and solid, necessary of life.
-Bread, however, in Hindustanee, happens to be “roti.”
-
-Having left Ajmir by the 9.20 A.M. train, we arrived at Chitorgarh
-about five in the evening, and put up at the station rooms for the
-night. There was a considerable crowd on the long, open, gravelled
-platform, mainly natives, with a small contingent of English and
-American tourists. European tourists in India, however, were generally
-few and far between, the United States being much more numerously
-represented. A picturesque group was formed by a native resident from
-Udaipur, with his retinue, waiting for their train on. The chief was
-a venerable and a kindly-looking man, with white hair and beard,
-reminding one rather of the late G. F. Watts. He was gaily dressed in
-a pink turban and a lilac silk coat, and was seated on a chair on the
-platform, surrounded by his attendants in scarlet; among these was his
-trumpeter, with a bugle slung around him, and a quad of four soldiers
-in khaki and turbans.
-
-We found the Traveller’s Bungalow was about three-quarters of a mile or
-so away from the station. The bedrooms were all taken by the English
-and American parties, but we could feed there, so, retaining our
-quarters at the station, we walked to the Bungalow for our dinner.
-It was a lovely moonlight night, with bright stars, but there was a
-cold north wind as we were guided by our bearer with a lantern along
-a rather rough track, and crossed the railway to the Bungalow, a new
-stone building, bare and cheerless as they make them, standing all by
-itself in a stoney yard without a tree near it. The dinner, or supper,
-was not very rewarding, and we trudged back again to the station in the
-cold moonlight. The station we found quieter than usual. The servants
-of the resident had encamped upon the platform, and formed picturesque
-groups around fires, cooking and gossiping; their master sleeping in
-the train, which was drawn up ready to start for Udaipur early the next
-morning.
-
-It seems highly necessary for travellers in India anywhere off the
-track of hotels to provide themselves with bedding of some sort, at
-least quilts, rugs, sheets, and pillows. The nights at this time of
-year in Rajpootana are quite cold, and warm wraps are welcome.
-
-The next morning we engaged a large elephant—which waited at the
-station to take travellers to Chitorgarh—to carry us to the fort and
-deserted city on the height we could see from the station. This was a
-distance of some seven miles there and back, it was said.
-
-[Illustration: FIRST ELEPHANT RIDE. (CHITORGARH)]
-
-The elephant was made by the driver to kneel while we mounted, by means
-of a ladder of bamboo, and seated ourselves on the flat, cushioned
-seat, having a low hand-rail and a foot board, slung by ropes. The
-elephant moved with a peculiar swaying, swinging movement, not unlike
-that of a ship, though regular. We started over a stretch of rough,
-common-like ground, broken into hillocks and hollows, overgrown with
-scrub bush, the track not being very definite. The elephant picked its
-way most carefully over the rough parts, especially when descending a
-hollow. We reached a roadway which led over a bridge across a river,
-and brought us up to the city of Chitor at the foot of the hill, and
-extending upon its lower slopes. We entered the city through a Moslem
-arched gateway, and threaded our way through the narrow streets,
-our elephant filling the whole of the roadway. Pottery, beads, glass
-bracelets, cheap lacquered ornaments, and small merchandise of various
-kinds were spread out on the ground, their proprietors squatting by
-their stock in trade. The native houses were small and low, for the
-most part hardly more than huts of mud, roofed with sun-baked tiles,
-laid scalewise over a trellis of bamboo, often very dilapidated. There
-were remains of better houses and older, with arcaded balconies, and
-here and there we passed a small white-washed temple, with quaint
-elephants with gay housings painted in profile on the white walls
-each side the entrance. These elephants are drawn in a very spirited
-manner, and are generally represented going at a trot, and full of
-action with trunk and tail in the air, decorated with bells on his feet
-and gorgeous red and yellow housings and domed howdah, set off by the
-solid black of the elephant and his ivory tusks, the turbaned driver
-flourishing his goad. From our commanding eminence, the elephant’s
-back, we could take a comprehensive survey of the life of the city,
-and see the people at work at various trades. The inhabitants did not
-take much notice of us; some would stare and others would salaam as we
-passed. I imagine the elephant with European travellers on its back
-not infrequently passed through Chitor, although we managed to startle
-a tethered camel in one of the streets considerably, and the animal
-tugged at its rope and plunged alarmingly at the sight of our elephant.
-
-Leaving the city of Chitor, which seemed very poverty-stricken, we
-reached the first gate of the fortress, and began the ascent of some
-200 or 300 feet. The road zigzags up the side of the rocky plateau,
-upon the summit of which the fort and ancient city were built, the
-ancient capital of Rajpootana. Massive walls protect this road on the
-outer side, and a continuous warder’s walk runs along it, with flights
-of stone steps to the roadway at intervals. We passed through five
-gateways on the way up, generally enriched with sculptured ornament—the
-last one, Ram Pol, being the richest, and this was finely carved
-with Hindu detail and symbols, having friezes of elephants. There
-have been extensive restorations at Chitorgarh. The whole length of
-the wall seems to have been gone over, and replastered, and in many
-places rebuilt with new stone. The tops of the gates were crenellated
-in a fashion which suggested a perpetuation in stone of an earlier
-type of wooden palisading, a horizontal band connecting the rounded or
-pointed stone heads, the divisions between each being continued below
-it. In many cases the old massive wooden gates were left under the
-archways, bound with old iron bands. By the way, at Ajmir we noted that
-the wooden doors of the gateways to the courts were covered with old
-horse-shoes nailed on, close together, in some instances actually over
-the old rich carved work, and apparently with the same idea of good
-omen as is associated with the same emblem in our country.
-
-Arrived at the summit there were wonderful ruins to be seen. Scattered
-over the plateau, half overgrown, amid heaps of shattered stones and
-carved fragments, there were the remains of Mohammedan palaces and
-Hindu or Jain Temples, rich within and without with intricate carving.
-
-The guides showed us where the Hindu Queen and the women of the city,
-all suffocated themselves in a subterranean chamber to escape their
-fate had they fallen into the hands of the Mohammedan conquerors, when
-Ala-ud-din took Chitor by storm in 1290.
-
-The hand of the restorer was seen here again and had been in some
-parts rather too thorough. I noticed an arcade over the gateway of the
-Moslem Palace, which seemed to have been entirely rebuilt in a kind of
-pale green marble, almost the colour of jade, quite sharply cut and
-new, and out of keeping with the old work more or less battered and
-ruined around it. The famous Tower of Victory had been extensively
-restored, even the carving in parts recut. This is going too far, as
-it is impossible to unite modern workmanship with old, even in India.
-Watchful and careful, timely repair is the only way to preserve ancient
-buildings, but there should be no attempt made to replace lost carving
-and decoration by modern imitation.
-
-We entered over broken steps a wonderful Jain temple, very richly
-carved, with a remarkable domed ceiling over the central chamber,
-arranged in a series of concentric circles, intersected by figures of
-dancing girls, with emblems radiating from the centre. Another Jain
-temple formed a most picturesque pile, and a delightful mass of light
-and shade filled in with intricate detail, in the full sunlight. In
-these temples a favourite deity is Ganesha, the elephant-headed god,
-whose carved image constantly appears.
-
-In one part of the ancient city we came upon some natives preparing
-cotton yarn for hand-weaving. The yarn was stretched in long lengths
-across horizontal canes supported by vertical ones. They seemed to be
-cleaning the threads with combs and brushes. The little black-bristled
-hand-brushes placed on the top of the turbaned heads when not in use
-had a very quaint effect.
-
-Having explored the ruins of Chitorgarh, we remounted our good
-elephant, which waited for us, and descended, moving rather joltingly
-down the long hill, and frightening a pony and a camel tethered in the
-main street of Chitor. The sun was now blazing, it being noontide,
-though tempered by the still cool wind from the north, which we had
-found really cold in the morning.
-
-Returning the way we had come to our quarters at the station, after
-taking tiffin at the bungalow we arranged to go on to Udaipur in the
-morning, and were advised to sleep in the train, which waited in the
-station all night, and left at 6.20 A.M. for Udaipur. So we packed up
-and went on board and took our berths, which were on the whole more
-comfortable than the station beds.
-
-In the morning our compartment was invaded by a young Indian who wanted
-a seat, but we had kept it to ourselves during the night, which was
-cold enough, and we were glad of all our wraps. The young Indian was a
-pleasant, bright, and intelligent young fellow who spoke English well,
-well clad in the style of a native gentleman, with plenty of wraps and
-overcoats. He was obviously curious about us, and wanted to know all we
-would tell him. He seemed to have a great wish to see London, and asked
-us about the cost of living there, and whether a Hindu could live there
-according to his religion without meat. He described India as “a poor
-country,” and wondered that we should journey so far to see it. He was
-bound for some town where his father lived, sixty miles by tonga from
-Udaipur, being under orders not to stop at the latter place, as his
-father had told him there was plague there, and wished him to come on.
-
-The train passed through a very flat and rather cheerless country,
-exceedingly dry, and for the most part covered with long jungle grass,
-but varied here and there by green crops under irrigation.
-
-Camels were occasionally seen, generally ridden by two men; also there
-were many herds of oxen and buffaloes. As usual, there were many
-interesting types and groups to be observed at the stations.
-
-Approaching Udaipur, the country broke into hills and became more
-interesting. We reached Udaipur Station about 11.30, and bidding
-good-bye and exchanging cards with the young Hindu, we parted with our
-baggage into a little open cart called a “tum-tum,” and were driven
-some distance, along a dusty road, to the Udaipur Hotel, which looked
-like an expanded bungalow with a second storey added on. Here we found
-pleasant quarters and decent beds.
-
-At the table-d’hôte there was a rather frigid Anglo-Indian family, a
-colonel on a tour of official inspection and his secretary and their
-ladies; also a voluble American lady, whom we had seen at Ajmir, and a
-rather lofty and superior English military man and his wife, who, we
-were afterwards informed, were the guests of the Maharajah.
-
-In meeting one’s compatriots aboard or indeed anywhere without an
-introduction one is reminded by their manner strongly of the Oxford Don
-who could not do anything to save an unfortunate undergraduate from
-drowning because “he had not been introduced.”
-
-Here, in a remote part of India, chance had thrown half-a-dozen English
-people together at the same table, and yet they would hardly speak
-to each other, that is to say to any new-comer outside their own
-party. Nothing, however, daunts the American traveller, especially the
-American lady. She ignores the social ice, or if she perceives it she
-boldly breaks it with a hatchet, as it were, rushing in under the guns
-of the most frigid and unapproachable personalities with a cheerful and
-persistent fire of conversation, popping in leading questions with the
-most artless and childlike confidence. This mode of attack generally
-succeeds, too, apparently. I have seen severe English official and
-military-looking men, after some show of resistance, unconditionally
-surrender, and presently empty their intellectual pockets on the demand
-of these light-hearted, table-d’hôte, globe-trotting inquisitors.
-
-A picturesque feature of hotel life in India is the impromptu bazaar
-formed under the arcade, which always shades the rooms on the ground
-floor, by the travelling merchants, who spread out their wares to tempt
-the traveller.
-
-In Rajpootana, the land of warriors, collections of arms, swords,
-sword-sticks, knives and daggers, and fearsome and wonderful blades
-of all sorts form a conspicuous part of the stock-in-trade of these
-native merchants, the glittering steel making a brave show with the
-bright-coloured stuffs, jewellery, and embroideries. At Udaipur they
-offered also native pictures, painted in tempera, somewhat crude but
-distinctly decorative, and complete with painted borders or frames.
-They represented elephants, tigers, maharajahs sabring wild swine,
-and such-like, painted in profile in frank flat colours, the animals
-singularly faithful in silhouette to nature. In dealing with these
-travelling traders, bargaining is, of course, expected, and usually
-they are willing to accept about half the price originally asked.
-
-[Illustration: RAJPUTS AND THEIR RARITIES. (UDAIPUR)]
-
-An impressive sight at Udaipur is the place of tombs, or the
-burning-place, which is a beautiful garden surrounded by a high wall,
-full of magnificent domed tombs and cenotaphs. This is the place where
-the Kings of Udaipur, since it became the capital of Rajpootana,
-have been buried, or rather cremated, with their wives. The city of
-Udaipur—a glimpse of which, with its crenellated walls and the huge
-pile of the Maharajah’s palace rising above the trees, is seen from the
-hotel—is entered, after a short drive through a fine double gateway.
-A huge old mango tree grows over the street just inside. Udaipur is a
-white town; the streets are very picturesque, having arcaded bazaars
-and pretty fantastic balconies here and there, and the native life is
-of course very varied and full of colour. The main street rises up to
-the eminence on which the palace stands. At an angle before this is
-reached, a steep flight of white steps leads up to the gate of the
-court of the great temple of Juggernath—a Jain temple dedicated to
-Vishnu—the second person in the Hindu Trinity. It was the finest of
-its kind we have yet seen. We were allowed to walk around the court
-and examine the carvings, but not inside the temple. Two great stone
-elephants stand facing one another at the entrance to the court—a
-similar arrangement to that noted at Ellora. There is an elaborate
-shrine over the gateway in which is a seated bronze or brass figure of
-Vishnu with his lotus flower, snakes, and other emblems. The exterior
-of the temple is a wonderful mass of carving. On the plinth was a
-continuous narrow frieze of elephants on a small scale, having the
-effect of a richly carved moulding; above this was a line of horses,
-all saddled and bridled but without riders; above this again was a band
-of human figures. Over these were carved on a larger scale a series of
-figures of dancing-girls in different attitudes. These dancers always
-form an important element in the carved decoration of Jain temples.
-
-We next visited the palace of the Maharajah, which occupies the highest
-ground in the city of Udaipur. It is a vast, romantic-looking pile.
-The steep street leads the traveller up to a great arched gateway, and
-through this is entered a large oblong court. On the right, the vast
-white palace walls rise to a great height, with hardly any windows, but
-high up are seen fairy-like arcades, balconies, and domed minarets,
-glittering with blue tile-work and gold.
-
-A native custodian conducted us over the Palace. Entering an inner
-court, we ascended a steep stone staircase at an angle, the treads
-rising about nine or twelve inches high. There were native paintings
-on the walls of richly caparisoned state elephants bearing maharajahs,
-tigers, and other figures. We passed through a succession of rooms and
-courts at different levels, the walls of white marble inlaid with a
-very fine sort of glass mosaic, not tessellated but let in in pieces
-cut large or small according to the forms to be expressed. These were
-generally figures always in severe profile, in elaborate costume,
-and jewels the details of which were carefully and richly rendered.
-Flowers and delicate palm trees varied the designs, done in the same
-way, the leaves and small component parts being cut complete in the
-glass. There were also formal floral borders outlining the arches of
-the arcades, and forming ceiling patterns in some of the rooms, and on
-the walls were hung in frames delicate paintings on vellum, heightened
-with gold, such as one sees in old Indian illuminated MSS. In some of
-the corridors it was rather a shock to see inserted in the windows
-pieces of crudely stained European glass, such as were in vogue in
-conservatories here in the “forties.” One room was entirely decorated
-with coloured glass, the walls being veneered with a zigzag pattern in
-red and white glass.
-
-Other and smaller rooms in the Zenana quarters, which we had now
-reached, and all at the top storey of the Palace, were lined with old
-Dutch tiles, others again with Chinese blue and white tiles. These
-rooms had graceful, arcaded balconies which commanded extensive views.
-We had a bird’s-eye view of the palace courts and the stable yards,
-where elephants were tethered in long rows, the busy natives moving
-about with horses and oxen. Beyond were seen the clustering, small
-white houses with flat roofs, broken by domes here and there, the green
-wooded country and the hills far away, while on the other side of the
-palace the lake with its pavilioned islands mirrored the sunset framed
-in the blue mountains.
-
-At night we frequently heard the weird cries of the jackals which prowl
-around most places in India after dark, and when all is quiet in human
-habitations. It is a very wild, shrill sound, rising almost to a shriek
-at times. We also thought we caught another note—the laughter of the
-hyena.
-
-[Illustration: THE MAHARAJAH’S PALACE AT UDAIPUR. FROM THE JAGMANDIR
-PAVILION]
-
-A charming excursion by boat may be made to the palace of Jagmandir,
-which occupies the whole of an island on the lake, a fairy-like
-pavilion enclosing luxuriant palms and fruit trees within its courts
-and gardens in which one realised the architecture and scenery of the
-Arabian Nights.
-
-We reached the lakeside through a fine triple-arched gate which led
-to a flight of steps descending into the water. Here a striking scene
-burst upon us. A crowd of dark Hindu women thronged the steps, clad for
-the most part in rich red saris of different tones, varied by orange
-and purple drapery and the glitter of their silver bangles and anklets.
-They were busy cleaning their brass water jars, scrubbing and polishing
-them on the steps at different levels; some standing in the water,
-whilst others, filling their vessels and poising them on their heads,
-would move away stately and erect, like walking caryatids.
-
-Presently a rather heavy boat with two native oarsmen, which had been
-summoned by our guide moved from the palace to the steps and we, with
-our bearer, embarked, and were rowed over to the enchanting island
-and the fairy-like palace of Jagmandir where Shah Jehan lived when in
-revolt against his father, Jahangir. On the way we rowed around another
-island showing white arcades and domes emerging from green bowery
-foliage of mangoes and palms.
-
-Landing at the steps we found the Jagmandir a most lovely place, full
-of arcaded courts, and marble pavements, pointed windows and balconies
-and marble walls enclosing green gardens full of roses, and palms,
-and plantains, a kingly pavilion, displaying all the invention and
-refinement of Mogul art. Inside, too, the palace was full of interest.
-There was a charming little painted chamber, the walls treated in a
-sort of tapestry manner with Indian scenes and decorative landscapes
-rich with trees and varied with all the characteristic birds and
-animals (the white cranes on the mango tree which we had seen in
-reality at Ahmedabad were there) kites and crows, and antelopes, and
-the Maharajah and his horsemen hunting the tiger amid these painted
-forests and jungles. On one wall the Maharajah himself was painted
-at full length in profile in a white turban and dress also white
-embroidered with gold, with a gold nimbus about his head as he is
-supposed to be descended from Rama, and is considered a sacred person
-connected with the sun—a large sun face modelled and gilded appears on
-the palace wall.
-
-Another room was said to have been painted by a French artist. He had
-taken the lotus as a motive and had tuned it into a formal scroll
-pattern in the frieze, but it was not a success, and had not the
-interest or the spirit or decorative instinct of the native artist.
-
-The chief salon had Parisian carpets on the floor, and a dreadful blue
-glass chandelier, and other horrors in glass and furniture of Western
-origin. Opening out of this salon was a bedroom raised a step or two on
-a higher level and the principal feature here was a large bedstead in
-glass and silver! On the walls of one of the courts was a decoration in
-gesso inlaid with glass, which was both delicate and effective. There
-were figures decoratively treated in severe profile, combined with
-trees and flowers somewhat Persian in feeling and similar in style to
-some we had seen in the Maharajah’s palace.
-
-From the landing-place I made a sketch of that palace in the sunlight
-reflected in the calm waters of the lake. Then, at noon we rowed back
-to the town and returned in our tonga to the hotel.
-
-Another of the sights of Udaipur is to see the Maharajah’s wild pigs
-fed. He has an arena near the town for the cruel sport of pig-sticking,
-but keeps vast herds of pigs upon the mountain sides at the head of the
-lake. It is a beautiful drive to the spot through the city and out at a
-further gate, and through groves and along a terrace-like road by the
-lakeside, to a white building on a high ground overlooking the wooded
-and rocky mountain side, partially covered with low forest; there from
-a terrace we could see many swine feeding. They are like a small kind
-of wild boar, but differing in size, and very fierce, bristling their
-backs and charging one another over the food, which was Indian corn,
-scattered broadcast among them by two natives, one carrying the sack
-of grain and the other distributing it from a sort trencher. There
-was a sort of Brobdingnagian mouse-trap on the ground, presumably to
-catch the boars in, when wanted for the arena. There were but few boars
-at first to be seen, but they seemed to know the feeding time, and
-gradually gathered in large numbers, and when the grain was scattered,
-by their constant rushes after it and violent charges with each others
-soon raised such a thick cloud of dust that they became lost to view
-as in a thick mist, and could only hear their hoofs scraping over
-the rocky ground, and their savage grunts and squeaks. A number of
-peacocks hovered on the outskirts on the look out for stray grain as
-well as blue rocks and crows which often perched on the hogs’ backs!
-The terrace from which we surveyed this strange scene was really the
-parapeted flat roof of the keeper’s dwelling. A flight of steps led up
-to a higher terrace which surrounded a deep sort of bear-pit, where a
-select family of hogs seemed to be treated with peculiar distinction.
-Not for these the fierce struggle for grain upon the mountain side,
-when the battle was to the strong; no, these were fed upon a special
-food—a sort of large brown rissole composed of buttermilk and
-sugar-cane; but the hogs were fat and did not devour these attractive
-morsels, even with half the zest which their less favoured relatives
-outside ate up the scattered maize. The reason of the comparative
-luxury in which these selected hogs lived, we learned, was that they
-had fought with tigers, and thus were treated as superior beings, by
-order of the Maharajah.
-
-The wooded shores of the lake and the mountains beyond were very
-beautiful in the still evening atmosphere, as we drove back to Udaipur,
-the road by the lake being so narrow that two carriages could not pass,
-and, meeting the Resident, we had to pull in to one side to let his
-carriage get by.
-
-There was a charming view of Udaipur from our hotel seen through the
-trees, the massive Maharajah’s palace dominating the city, and bathed
-in the roseate early morning sunlight it looked particularly lovely.
-I worked at a sketch of this on Christmas morning; I remember, having
-to be up at seven o’clock in order to catch the effect, which soon
-changed. We had the most brilliant moonlight nights here, too.
-
-We visited the Maharajah’s gardens where was a sort of Zoo. There
-were some handsome tigers in rather small cages, hogs, leopards, one
-lion, deer, guinea-pigs, geese, cockatoos, and other birds and beasts,
-including some melancholy dogs of various breeds, chained at intervals
-around a courtyard. These were supposed to be in hospital.
-
-From the Zoo we drove through a fine wooded park to the Museum called
-the Victoria Institute, where a native curator showed us round. It
-was a white building in the Moslem style but quite new. It included
-a library in which was placed a bad statue of our late Queen. There
-were modelled heads in coloured plaster, ranged in cases numbered and
-ticketed, of all the Hindu castes, each with their proper caste mark
-upon their foreheads. There was a miscellaneous collection otherwise,
-native arts and industries and antiquities, as well as European,
-being represented very sparsely. The whole thing had a sort of forced
-and artificial character in such surroundings and was quite empty of
-visitors. We were, however, early there.
-
-In driving through the gate of the city, a funeral passed us—a band
-of young men bearing on a stretcher the corpse which was swathed in
-red cotton and tightly bound up like a mummy. The bearers moved at
-a quick, almost jaunty pace, approaching a trot, and with them were
-other natives who chanted a sort of song. If it was an equivalent for
-a dirge it was quite a cheerful one—but then the Hindus, as well as
-the Mohammedans and Indians, look upon death as a happy translation
-to another existence, and the accompaniments of gloom to which we are
-accustomed in Christian countries have no existence here.
-
-We departed, on Christmas Day in the morning, from Chitor and Ajmir
-again, returning by the way we came. Udaipur is at the end of the
-branch line from Ajmir which has not I believe been in existence many
-years.
-
-On the way to the station I noticed some very primitive huts clustered
-in a group on a rising ground above the road. They almost exactly
-resembled the huts of the early Britons and Gauls as they appear on
-Trajan’s column, being circular in form, built of mud or sun-baked
-bricks and roofed with a sort of rude thatch laid over a bamboo
-trellis. In this land of wonders and contrasts truly, one sees
-everything both in customs and dwellings from the most primitive to the
-most elaborate and luxurious, from the most ancient to the most modern
-forms of life. It is sad to note, however, that at least as far as the
-outward aspects of life are concerned, all that Western contact seems
-to have done for the people of India is to introduce corrugated iron,
-Manchester cotton, and the kerosene can—with petrol and its smell!
-
-At Udaipur station there was a great native crowd of every variety of
-type, wonderful in colour and costume. Many of the men carried sabres
-as well as walking-sticks which seem to be the marks of superior caste
-in Rajputana. There were, too, the usual crowd of poorer travellers
-with their extraordinary bundles and brown babies. A native woman stood
-on the platform with a huge sheaf of sugar-cane which she sold in
-pieces to the travellers, and, of course, there were the sweet stuff
-sellers, and the inevitable betel-nut.
-
-Reaching Chitorgarh in the late afternoon the old fort with its zigzag
-walled road looked quite familiar, and at the station our elephant was
-in waiting again.
-
-We could not get on to Ajmir until night, and so did not arrive
-there until about 5.30 in the morning. Coming from a plague-stricken
-district passengers were not allowed to leave the train until a medical
-inspection had taken place. An English doctor with a native attendant
-bearing a lantern came round and went through the farce of feeling
-everybody’s pulse before anybody was allowed to leave the station. We
-only stopped, however, to get some tea and await a train for Jaipur,
-our next destination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-JAIPUR
-
-
-In our travels through India we met comparatively few of our own
-countrymen and women. The English (or the British) have not as yet
-taken much to touring in the Empire of which such a proud boast is
-constantly made. The English in India are usually residents connected
-with civil or military posts. They go out to take up their official
-duties, and directly they get leave they rush “home”—England is always
-spoken of as “home,” even by residents in India of long standing. It
-generally happens that the officials and their families are quartered
-at some particular station in a particular district, and may remain
-there all their time, so that the English resident in India generally
-does not see any other parts of the great peninsular, and is not
-acquainted with the country beyond his own district. A tourist,
-therefore, in a few months may have a more complete general or even
-particular acquaintance with India at large, as regards its great
-cities and famous monuments, than many a resident who has spent the
-best part of his life in one station, and who always takes his leave at
-“home.”
-
-French tourists are occasionally met with, but Americans are the most
-numerous, and they are met with everywhere. The early morning train
-we had taken from Ajmir to Jaipur was invaded by a party of no less
-than forty of our Transatlantic cousins, who overflowed it and filled
-our compartment with an incredible amount of hand baggage. They seemed
-to be, as far as one could make out, connected with some mission. They
-reminded me rather of a gathering in one of the cities of the United
-States at which I was present (Philadelphia, I think), where one of my
-American friends remarked, “Now, all these you see here are types, but
-none of them are worth studying”!
-
-The country traversed between Ajmir and Jaipur is mostly plain, and
-very desert-like in places, with distant mountain ranges beyond, not
-unlike Arizona in general character. Green crops under irrigation are,
-however, occasionally seen, and among them not unfrequently may be
-noticed a pair of large, grey-plumaged cranes, feeding in the young
-corn, which do not take to flight at the approach of the train. We
-reached Jaipur about noon and put up at Rustom’s Hotel, a comparatively
-short drive from the station. The hotel stands in the middle of a large
-enclosure divided by a low wall from the high road. Tents are pitched
-along one side of the building to afford extra sleeping accommodation,
-and a sort of bungalow annexe is prepared to take overflow guests. From
-pleasant rooms on the terrace we had a view of the Tiger Fort and the
-road with its constant procession of natives, ox-carts, and camels and
-horsemen trooping into the city about a mile off. A row of tall acacia
-trees screened the late afternoon sun, and barred-like fretwork the
-golden light of afterglow, and we often watched the peacocks flying up
-to roost among the branches, their beautiful forms silhouetted against
-the orange sky between the interstices of the leaves.
-
-[Illustration: HOTEL ACCOMMODATION (JAIPUR), “FOR YOUR EASE AND
-COMFORT” (OR RATHER FOR THE EASING OF YOUR RUPEES?)]
-
-The native proprietor, or manager, during the preliminary ceremony of
-taking our names, and in getting a form of application to the Resident
-filled up for permission to visit the Maharajah’s palace and the palace
-at Amber, made polite speeches, expressing himself only anxious for
-“our ease and comfort”—of course without any thought of prospective
-rupees. Clusters of native huts built of mud with thatched roofs occur
-at frequent intervals around Jaipur outside the city walls; from our
-terrace at the hotel we could see several. There was apparently a
-small village within a stone’s-throw. One evening the strains of
-what sounded like a native chant or song in chorus were wafted to us
-from this village, and we heard that a native wedding was going on
-there; but the illusion was somewhat destroyed when we learned that
-the supposed native music proceeded from the mouth of a gramophone! It
-is said that special ones are now prepared for the Indian market with
-popular native songs and music—another boon from the West.
-
-Jaipur is a city within high crenellated walls, built of rubble and
-plastered with cement. The same form of palisade-like battlement
-crested the walls here as at Chitorgarh, and is the common form in
-Mogul defensive buildings. Among the native huts which cluster outside
-the walls, I noticed some of wicker; many of the huts, too, had wicker
-screens—a sort of lattice-work made of bamboo—covering the otherwise
-open fronts.
-
-Jaipur is known as the rose-coloured city. The Maharajah must be very
-fond of pink, in fact he may be said to have “painted the town red.”
-The whole of the main fronts of the houses facing the streets are
-distempered in a kind of darkish rose pink—really red—the rosy hue
-being largely due to the luminous atmosphere in the full sunlight, and
-it becomes still rosier in the flush of evening. It is dark enough at
-anyrate to show a decoration of lines of floral devices and patterns
-painted in white upon the red walls. The whole scheme, no doubt, was
-suggested by the red sandstone buildings inlaid with white marble
-which are the glory of Delhi and Agra. It is not a sort of imitation
-calculated to deceive any one, however, but clearly a scheme of painted
-decoration emulating the effect of the solid materials mentioned. The
-city has, owing to this treatment, a very distinctive scenic aspect
-of its own, and is very striking, the brilliant and varied pattern of
-vivid colour in the costume of the natives in the bazaars, with this
-roseate background, producing quite a unique effect. One has, however,
-after a time an impression of unreality and unsubstantiality, as of
-stage scenery which will presently be shifted. The Maharajah of Jaipur
-has the reputation of being very advanced and modern in his ideas.
-He has at anyrate set up gasworks in his city, which also possesses
-a large public garden laid out in the European manner, and is both
-horticultural and zoological, and contains a museum and a bronze statue
-of Lord Mayo.
-
-It seems rather a mistake, in a climate like that of India, to lay
-out grounds with broad serpentine paths and drives unshaded by trees,
-and vast lawns which can only be kept up with a pretence of greenness
-by constant and laborious watering. It is another of the mistaken
-foreign importations. The Eastern type of garden, on the other hand,
-is quite appropriate and adapted to the necessities of the climate.
-Its characteristics are narrow, straight paths between closely planted
-groves of trees, acacias, plantains, palms, and fruit trees, and varied
-with tanks and fountains, and cool marble pavilions, the whole enclosed
-in a protecting wall like an earthly paradise.
-
-[Illustration: THE MAHARAJAH’S STATE ELEPHANT, JAIPUR]
-
-It does not cheer the English traveller in the East—at least I never
-heard that it did—to see a low wall surmounted by a cast-iron
-railing and common-place but pretentious gates, enclosing a joyless
-“public garden” of a British vestry type.
-
-The proprietors of the art depots in the bazaars of Jaipur are very
-enterprising, and resort to all kinds of allurements to induce the
-traveller to enter and purchase. To begin with, the tourist in his
-carriage is peppered with a perfect hail of white business cards flung
-at him by active touts, who are always on the alert for the passing
-stranger in the bazaars, who receives such seductive invitations as
-“See my shop?”—“Very nice things”—“Don’t want you to buy—only to look!”
-
-We visited a large art-dealer’s store. It was prettily arranged around
-a small covered court, lighted from the top. An arcade divided a series
-of rooms along each side, both on the ground and on a second floor.
-This court was richly carpeted and furnished with seats, coffee tables,
-and divans. One device of the proprietor or manager was to invite
-prospective customers to witness a dance of nautch girls in this court,
-presumably to conduce to a favourable mood for extensive purchases.
-
-At this place was a great display of Jaipur enamels, applied in a
-variety of ways from small jewellery to large, chased, brass dishes
-and trays. I saw a large dish prepared by the native craftsman (who
-was sitting at work at the entrance) for champlévé enamel, very deftly
-chased, though the modern reproductions of the traditional Indian
-patterns strike one as rather mechanical. The skill of the craftsman
-is there, but the feeling and initiative of the artist is too often
-wanting.
-
-Rajput arms and armour hung on the white walls of the court, and there
-was an immense stock of all sorts of metal-work and jewellery, mostly
-modern, and numbers of small portable articles in brass, evidently
-meant for the eye and the pocket of the tourist; amongst these were
-quantities of small pierced brass boxes in the form of cushions. I saw
-some interesting old Indian miniature pictures from MSS.—one of a rajah
-shooting a bow: he was standing upon a globe which rested on the back
-of an ox, which again stood upon the back of a fish.
-
-There were some suits of chain mail of extraordinary fineness, and
-wonderful engraved blades of many kinds. Besides the well-known Jaipur
-enamelled jewellery there was a quantity of precious stones—garnets,
-amethysts, sardonyx, onyx, and jade. Another speciality of Jaipur
-work are the charming spherical rolling lamps. These are spheres of
-brass chased and pierced all over with floral pattern, and made to
-open. Inside, by a very ingenious bit of mechanism, a small lamp is so
-suspended that it always maintains a horizontal position, and though
-the sphere may be rolled along the ground it never upsets the lamp
-within. They are used in the temples at festival times. These lamps are
-made at the Art School at Jaipur, where many native handicrafts are
-practised.
-
-Continuing our drive about the city we were introduced to the
-Maharajah’s state elephant. He was a fine beast, and occupied a low
-walled court, all to himself and his keeper. His forehead, trunk, and
-ears were decorated with an elaborate painted arabesque—a pattern in
-which vermilion, yellow, and turquoise predominated. His enormous
-tusks had had their points truncated, and these were tipped and bound
-with moulded bands of brass. The animal was tethered by one of his
-hind feet to a post, and stood in the shade of the high palace wall,
-tranquilly munching stalks of some kind of corn. I reproduce the sketch
-I made at the time of the elephant and the old man, his keeper.
-
-After tiffin we visited the palace. One could not say much for the
-taste of some of the decorations. We were shown several large durbar
-halls with open colonnades, which, however, were closed by hangings,
-which our guide—a tall, grey-whiskered Rajput—lifted up to show the
-interiors. The vaulted ceilings were painted with patterns on rather
-a large scale and in crude reds and blues, rather open and spread out
-over the white plaster, and somewhat coarse in form. We were then led
-through the gardens, which were laid out with long tanks with flagged
-walks each side, lined with gas lamps, but there was no water in the
-tanks. Farther on we passed through a gateway at the top of a flight
-of steps to the alligator tank. Here a native attendant having tied a
-piece of meat to the end of a string, another set up a curious weird
-call, while yet another ran on to the shore of the lake or tank, and
-did his best to wake up one or two very torpid alligators which lay in
-the sunshine by seizing hold of their tails and making them take to the
-water. Finally, after much persuasion, two alligators were induced to
-come up for the food. One of these—an old one with no teeth (none of
-them have tongues)—opened its horrid white mouth and snapped at the
-piece of meat which the man dangled at the end of the string. Meanwhile
-big yellow turtles swam up to join in the game, at which they were much
-quicker than the alligators. Large brown kites, too, seeing what was
-going on, hovered about expectantly, and dexterously caught fragments
-thrown to them in mid air. The ubiquitous crow was there also, ready
-for any unconsidered trifles.
-
-The life of the bazaars at Jaipur is singularly varied and interesting.
-The streets are unusually wide as native streets go in India. They find
-room to shake out long strips of newly dyed cotton to dry—a man holding
-the cloth at each end and waving it wildly about to dry, so that great
-plashes of yellow or orange and pink are apt to illuminate the streets
-here and there, as this process is a frequent incident. The brightest
-red, yellow, green, and blue and pink are also seen in the costumes
-or rather draperies of the people—the Hindu women in their graceful
-saris, generally in different shades of red; the Mohammedan women
-veiling their heads and shoulders in some vivid-coloured muslin—so
-that one had a general impression of people walking about attired in
-rainbows. Quaint, two-wheeled vehicles were numerous, often elaborately
-painted and decorated, called recklas, having awnings over them, and
-were driven by a superior caste of natives—possibly they might be a
-sort of equivalent for the gig of respectability which Carlyle writes
-of. Then there were the heavier ox-carts of the peasant, some of them
-with a domed cover draped in red within which hidden from view sat the
-women and children. Another kind of cart was built of bamboo, a curious
-lattice of the same forming the pole and yoke for a pair of oxen.
-
-Shaving, massage, cleaning teeth, washing, and all the necessary
-operations, which in the west are generally performed in private, are
-in Indian native quarters carried on in the open. The natives do not
-seem to know what privacy is or to feel the need of it. The little
-naked brown babies everywhere playing freely about are delightful.
-
-Great flocks of pigeons (blue rocks) are always flying about or
-swooping down to be fed with grain in the open spaces by women; but
-they are driven away from the heaps of grain for sale in the bazaars.
-
-The women carry everything upon their heads, and seem to do most of
-the porterage—bearing endless baskets of brown fuel made in rough flat
-cakes, bundles of wood, straw, sugar-cane, green stuff, bedding, and
-water jars. In Rajputana the women wear a rather full skirt under the
-sari, in many pleats rather after the style of an Albanian fustanelle.
-Masses of bracelets, sometimes completely covering their brown arms,
-are worn, either of coloured glass, or lacquered metal, or silver, and
-silver anklets as a rule with little bells attached.
-
-Armed horsemen are frequently seen riding in from or out into the
-country. Elephants, camels, and flocks of goats vary the street scenes,
-and residents’ carriages with outriders; camels are also sometimes
-used to draw vehicles, driven in pairs.
-
-[Illustration: TO AMBER ON AN ELEPHANT]
-
-Musicians, with the peculiar long handled Indian guitar, jugglers,
-conjurers, snake charmers, vendors of stuffs and embroideries, and
-photograph sellers haunt the open arcades of the hotels and use every
-device to attract the attention of travellers.
-
-A visit to the deserted city of Amber and its palace is one of the
-principal excursions outside Jaipur. It is best to start early in the
-morning, as there is a four to six miles drive by carriage to reach
-the place whence the ascent to Amber on elephants’ backs is made. The
-road thither takes the visitor through a section of the city of Jaipur,
-and passes out on the other side into a road skirted with trees and
-gardens, from amidst which rise the domes of the pavilions of wealthy
-Rajputs. The Alligator lake is again passed, and some distance beyond
-this the foot of the hill is reached, when the traveller is expected to
-leave his carriage and mount one of the elephants in waiting there to
-take him up to Amber—another two miles.
-
-It is necessary to be furnished with a formal permission from the
-Resident to visit Amber. Formerly elephants were placed at the
-disposal of visitors by the Maharajah, but since tourists became
-numerous elephants must be hired by them. They are by no means richly
-caparisoned elephants. The housings leave much to be desired, and the
-seats are much out of repair, and one is lucky to find the foot-board
-slung at a usable level and fairly horizontal, and if the protecting
-rail of the seat does not slip out.
-
-For those who are willing to sacrifice processional dignity and
-spectacular effect, however, as well as a slow shaking, it is quite
-possible to walk—for the able bodied, and before the sun is high.
-
-After a steepish hill at first the road descends again, and passing
-along the border of a small lake, turns round at its head and again
-ascends to the palace on a considerable height, of which a distant view
-is obtained, as one approaches it, from the road. It is a striking
-pile of Mohammedan architecture. Three great gateways are passed
-on the steep approach up the rocky sides of the hill, and the road
-is protected by a wall, as at Chitorgarh. Finally the great gateway
-leading into the courtyard of the palace is reached, and we dismount
-from the elephant and are surrounded by a number of hangers-on, one
-of which comes forward to act as guide over the palace, which showed
-traces of considerable restoration. The great doors of solid brass
-were exceedingly fine (both here and at the Maharajah’s palace in
-Jaipur—really the best things there). There were also doors beautifully
-inlaid with ivory and ebony to some of the zenana rooms, all the
-doors being interesting for their woods and joinery. There were some
-delicate pierced marble screens over the gateway of the inner court
-which had a most lovely effect seen against the sky. The rooms were
-very elaborately decorated with a sort of veneer of small pieces of
-looking-glass arranged in arabesque, and united by cloisonné of gesso
-forming the lines of divisions of the pattern, similar to that we had
-seen at Udaipur. This decoration, carried all over a vaulted ceiling,
-in the sunlight reflected from the floor, glittered like beaten silver.
-On the lower halls were delicate marble panels of floral designs in
-relief.
-
-The palace as a whole did not strike us as so beautiful as that at
-Udaipur, although vastly more so than the Maharajah’s at Jaipur.
-
-[Illustration: SHOPPING IN JAIPUR]
-
-From the roof and terraces we looked down on gardens and pavilions
-and on the lake below, then partially dry, and wondered how this vast
-palace with all its luxurious decoration came to be deserted. A temple
-at the main entrance, however, is still maintained for worship, which
-is that of Kali—one of the aspects or secondary characters of Parvati,
-the wife of Siva—a savage, blood-thirsty goddess only propitiated by
-animal sacrifices. A goat or a kid is still sacrificed daily here. It
-was pathetic enough to see the innocent, unconscious intended victim—a
-poor little kid tied at the corner of the platform of the temple by
-a little heap of sand. Mr W. S. Caine gives a graphic account of how
-the head of the victim is instantaneously cut off by the officiating
-priest, an act he witnessed, but we felt no desire to see this
-execution.
-
-On our way back I saw a curious instance of the boldness of a kite
-and the unerring way in which they swoop at their prey. A native was
-walking down the hill in front of us carrying a piece of bread in his
-hand, from which he ate, swinging it at his side between whiles. A kite
-hovering above made a sudden swoop at the bread, which he struck with
-his beak, scattering the crumbs, though he did not succeed in knocking
-it quite out of the man’s hand.
-
-Driving in the evening through the bazaars at Jaipur we stopped
-the carriage to purchase some native cottons and muslins, and were
-immediately surrounded by a noisy, struggling crowd of rival traders
-who filled the carriage with their gay coloured stuffs, and literally
-covered us up with them. Our bearer negotiated the bargains, and in the
-end we carried off some characteristic textile souvenirs. On the way
-back to our hotel we stopped to see the Maharajah’s horses, passing
-through a gateway into a large exercise ground, down the sides of which
-ran a long open shed, with horses tethered in a line, each horse being
-secured by long ropes from each hind fetlock fastened to pegs on iron
-rings fixed in the ground, which sloped down to the open court. In
-addition to these each horse was tied by a halter, with a rope each
-side to rings in the manger, and all, of course, had cloths on. There
-were no partitions between the animals, which I suppose was the reason
-of their being so carefully secured. There were some very fine animals
-among them, and the native grooms were very willing to show them
-off—for a little backsheesh. There were white Arabs, Walers, English
-hunters, and a tiny Burmese pony.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-AGRA
-
-
-We left Jaipur for Agra on the 29th of December, finding the usual
-excited crowd at the station. The train passed through a rather dry,
-plain country, though varied by crops under irrigation. We changed at
-a junction named Bandakni, the train we were in going on to Delhi. It
-was a refreshment station. Here a good tiffin was procurable. Going on
-about 4.30 in the afternoon, we entered a more fertile and interesting
-country, the crops being more abundant, and the wells also. There were
-some fine groves of trees, and distant ranges of hills to be seen.
-Curious mounds and tumbled boulders varied the plains here and there in
-places. Peacocks were plentiful, and they even occasionally strayed on
-to the railway metals at the stations. Antelopes were also to be seen,
-and once an animal resembling a wolf was seen in the jungle. A jungle,
-by the way, is not necessarily a slice of tropical forest, full of long
-grass, tangled creepers, and tigers, but may be any bit of uncultivated
-country.
-
-We reached Agra about 9 P.M. after a comfortable journey. We put up at
-the Metropole Hotel—a kind of extended bungalow, with a two-storied
-centre and two long, low wings of rooms under the usual arcaded
-arrangement, with a garden in the middle. The rooms were spacious and
-lofty, but bare, cheerless and cold. The traveller of course must not
-expect any old-fashioned welcome or personal interest in his comfort or
-welfare in any country at any modern hostelry in these days. He writes
-or wires for his room, and he may be thankful if it is ready for him
-when he arrives. He must be content to be merely No. So-and-so, and
-may not even see the host or manager at all. There was, naturally,
-more or less of a rush on Agra about this time, as the preparations
-for the reception of the Amir of Afghanistan were far advanced, and
-distinguished visitors were beginning to arrive. The English tourist
-who had not furnished himself with introductions in such a place
-was apparently regarded as a mere worm by the superior military and
-official British circles.
-
-Driving to the fort next morning we were stopped by an English sentry,
-who produced a written card of Regulations forbidding the entrance of
-carriages, so we got out and walked through the Emperor Akbar’s great
-Delhi gate (1566), which is on a fine scale, and passed on to the Pearl
-Mosque, the Moti Musjid, built by Shah Jehan in 1654—the private chapel
-of the court of the Mogul Emperors—a beautiful white marble building in
-a fair court. An Arabic inscription records when it was built and why.
-
-We passed on to the great square of the fort which was busily preparing
-for the reception of the Amir, who was expected to arrive on the 9th
-of January. They were actually building out an extra portico in solid
-masonry adding it on to the existing Durbas Hall (Diwan-i-Khas), which
-was so blocked with workmen and materials it was not possible to see
-much inside, and our bearer, who was by way of acting as guide when
-he could, was roughly turned back by an English official. We made the
-round of the great Akbar’s Fort, which is certainly on a noble scale,
-and returning to the Delhi gate by ugly and mean British barrack
-buildings, which have been put up within its massive walls, we could
-not but be struck with the contrast between the work of one Empire and
-that of another. Over Akbar’s great gate, however, floated our Union
-Flag.
-
-[Illustration: AGGRAVATING AGRA]
-
-Our next expedition was to the renowned Taj Mahal, the beautiful
-marble tomb erected by Shah Jehan in memory of his favourite wife, and
-which was to be his own monument also. The way thither lies through
-the cantonments and the government gardens. We passed through great
-encampments, then in a state of busy preparation. On the road was being
-erected a large triumphal arch in the Moslem style, upon which native
-workmen were engaged painting and decorating. Native police in khaki
-and red turbans lined the route at intervals, and saluted as we drove
-past. The Viceroy’s camp was beautifully laid out and arranged with
-turf, walks, and flowers. We saw a procession of native women carrying
-palms and plants in pots on their heads, from ox-carts unloading them,
-for the camp. Camping in India, indeed, seems to be a fine art, and
-is carried out in every detail with the utmost completeness. In the
-government gardens the ideas of the English landscape gardener were in
-evidence. They were laid out with serpentine walks and drives in the
-modern public parks style, the large shadeless stretches of would-be
-turf struggling to show a little green under repeated waterings, with
-groups of young trees here and there. A big statue of Queen Victoria
-was placed conspicuously on the high ground in the centre of one of
-these desert-like lawns. A little beyond we came to the magnificent
-gate of the Taj, a noble structure of red sandstone and white marble,
-approached by steps. Passing through its deep shadow under the great
-arch the wonderful tomb in all its pearly whiteness, with its graceful
-dome and slender minarets, rising sparkling in the full sunlight above
-a green bower of trees against the deep blue of the sky, and reflected
-in the still water of the long tank, breaks upon the sight like a fairy
-vision. The tank with terraced walks, flagged with stone, extends from
-the steps of the entrance gateway to the front of the Taj itself, its
-long line only broken by a raised marble terrace with seats about half
-way. Rows of slender cypresses enforce the long perspective which leads
-the eye up to the shrine. The Moslems certainly felt the importance of
-spacing and proportion, and the art of leading the eye and preparing
-the mind for the appreciation of beautiful art and architecture by
-careful planning of the setting and surroundings of their great temples
-and tombs. Space is as important an element in their design as the
-exquisite handicraft which produced their unrivalled detail. The Taj
-itself is on a raised platform of stone, and is flanked on each side by
-two noble mosques of red sandstone splendidly inlaid with white marble.
-It was the rich decorative effect of such materials no doubt which
-suggested to the Maharajah of Jaipur the painting of his town red,
-which I refer to in a previous chapter, but the reality compared with
-the imitation is as wine to water.
-
-[Illustration: THE TAJ MAHAL, FROM THE GATEWAY]
-
-The Taj first impresses one by its beautiful proportion, and the
-completeness of its ensemble. It is like a fair woman whose general
-carriage and aspect charms the eye before we are near enough to
-appreciate the full beauty of her face and form, or to note the
-exquisite taste of her delicate attire.
-
-As one approaches this wonderful shrine which, although so ornate,
-possesses a fine breadth in general effect, the beauty and finish of
-its decorative detail excites a new admiration. There are delicate
-designs of lilies and tulips and crown imperials cut in marble in low
-relief, forming the panelling of the lower walls. These are framed
-in small-scale, formal floral designs, inlaid with precious stones,
-such as jasper, coral, bloodstone, sardonyx, lapis-lazuli, onyx,
-turquoise, and other kinds done in a manner associated with Florentine
-work, and it is said Italian workmen were employed here. Then we have
-the crowning beauty of the pierced work in the marble screens which
-enclose the tombs, and break the brilliant light at the apertures
-under the dome. These are the jewellery and lace of this architectural
-personality. There is something of the fine lady about her—if one may
-use the personal pronoun, but one cannot forget the twenty thousand
-workmen whose twenty-two years’ toil contributed to her splendour;
-and it is recorded, too, that their work was done under conditions of
-semi-starvation, and at the price of many lives, over and above the
-four millions of money at which the cost is usually estimated. Well,
-it remains _their_ monument as well as that of Shah Jehan and his wife
-Arjamand Banu: 1648 is the date of the completion of the Taj.
-
-I was somewhat disappointed not to find the eastern garden described
-by Edwin Arnold, and which was seen here by Mr W. S. Caine—a bowery,
-romantic garden full of fruit trees—“orange and lemon, pomeloes,
-pomegranates, palms, flowering shrubs and trees, with marble fish-ponds
-and fountains, speaking of the East in every whisper of their leaves
-and plash of their waters.” There is still a charming garden, but
-an Anglicised one, with open lawns, broken by masses of beautiful
-and varied but rather consciously and professionally arranged trees
-and shrubs and palms. The hand and taste of the modern gardener is
-a little too evident. It looks as if the original somewhat wild and
-characteristic Eastern garden had been taken in hand by an expert from
-Kew, and it had been tamed, its wild locks cut off, and the remainder
-combed and brushed.
-
-There is an English country-seat or even suburban suggestion about it
-in parts. I cannot but think that it was a pity not to maintain the
-garden in its Eastern character, considering the monument it encloses.
-However, it would take even more professional treatment to prevent
-beautiful trees and flowers from being delightful.
-
-The garden is still a pleasant place to wander in, and interesting
-views of the white domes and minarets, rising above masses of foliage,
-can be had everywhere in it. Here, at the end of December, one enjoyed
-the temperature, and the sunshine, tempered by the shade of trees, of
-a normal June day in England.
-
-[Illustration: THE MAINSTAY OF INDIA. AQUARIUS—THE WATER-BEARER]
-
-As regards the garden, I was told that when it was in its original
-state as a fruit garden a certain amount of revenue was realised by
-the sale of the produce. When Lord Curzon heard of this he considered
-it not fitting, and I understood that he was responsible for the
-alteration in the character of the garden, which requires the constant
-attention of the water-bearer with his goatskin.
-
-Agra possesses a fine mosque in the Jama Musjid, built by Shah Jehan in
-1644. It is a building of red sandstone and white marble. The big dome
-is inlaid in zigzags of white marble and red sandstone alternately,
-the whole surface being covered in this way with striking effect.
-
-It is an interesting drive through the bazaars and over the bridge of
-boats across the river Jumna, and through a native village, to the
-mausoleum of Itmad-ud-Daulat. In this beautiful building, which is
-approached through a massive arched gateway of red sandstone and across
-a walled garden, one sees a prototype of the Taj Mahal. In this case
-there is a central dome and four minarets, only the cupola is lower
-and of a flatter curve, and the minarets are not detached from the
-body of the building which is much lower than the Taj. In the design
-and execution of its decorative detail, however, it surpasses the
-Taj in inventiveness, and variety and richness, both in pierced and
-carved work and its _pietra dura_. The detail of the Taj, beautiful
-and finely finished as it is, has in comparison, perhaps, rather the
-look of having been done to order, whereas in buildings of earlier date
-like this one we seem to see the more spontaneous invention of the
-craftsman. The restoring hand of Lord Curzon, however, has touched this
-monument also, and a new marble balustrade around the flat roof has
-been added under his orders. There are lovely views from the minarets.
-
-We visited the Taj Mahal again by moonlight. It was the 30th of
-December and the moon was full, but it was chilly driving out after
-dinner and wraps were necessary. There was a light mist from the river
-which hung over the garden, and slightly veiled the lower part of the
-building as we approached it down one of the long paths chequered by
-the shadows of the trees. The front was in shadow and looked mysterious
-in the mist, but the dome seemed made of pearl rounded in the full
-moonlight in splendid relief against the dark deep blue of the night
-powdered with brilliant stars, while the four minarets were like
-helmeted sentinels in shining armour, guarding the sacred shrine.
-
-The moonlight was bright enough for me to make a sketch by. I also
-made two coloured drawings of the Taj by daylight, one of which—“the
-Taj Mahal from the rose garden” was afterwards purchased by H.M. The
-Queen, and the other, from the gate, is reproduced here. Agra was full
-of British and native soldiers, and more were continually arriving.
-We passed trains of field artillery marching through the government
-gardens, and bell tents covered the ground like mushrooms. In many
-places earth banks had been cut in tiers for seats, and strings of
-small flags fluttered across many of the streets, and there were also
-seats and stands of timber being erected. Agra could think of nothing
-but the Amir.
-
-The English and other churches are not admirable examples of modern
-architecture, and never seem to look at home in India. There was a
-Roman Catholic Church here after the manner of an eighteenth century
-one, but any merit it might have had was obscured by its colour. It
-had been, so to speak, put into a grey uniform with buff facings. The
-English Church was treated in the same way. This must be military
-influence. My impression certainly was that civilians did not count for
-much at Agra.
-
-In the bazaars we found we were able to make purchases with rather less
-accompaniment of drama than at Jaipur. European goods were much in
-evidence, of the cheap and nasty sort as a rule, ugly socks and scarves
-and cottons, and tin ware. I saw a crowd of natives clustering round
-the trumpet mouth of a gramophone—an instrument which seems to have
-considerable charms for them.
-
-It was chilly enough in the early mornings and in the evenings at Agra,
-and our ground-floor rooms were none of the warmest, although, of
-course, the sun was very powerful in the middle of the day. The Hotel
-proprietors were looking forward to full houses and high prices during
-the Amir’s visit, and enormous sums were mentioned as probable charges
-for rooms, but we had no intention of staying through the festivities.
-
-Our last excursion from Agra was to Sikandra—five miles away to the
-North West—where we drove to see the tomb of Akbar. The road was a
-dusty one, but through pleasant acacia avenues. We passed through
-several mud-built villages, and presently saw white minarets rising
-above a belt of trees in the distance. At one part of the road where
-the square tower of an English Mission Church was seen among trees we
-were reminded for a moment of a bit of Norfolk, but only for a moment.
-Soon we reached the great red-stone gateway which was on a splendid
-scale, and elaborately inlaid with marble, exceedingly fine in style,
-parts had been restored, and all the four white marble minarets were
-said to be new and placed there by Lord Curzon, not I presume without
-good evidence of the former existence of such minarets, but such
-renewals cannot possess any historic interest and are in doubtful
-taste. The gate was adorned with Togra and Arabic inscriptions, which,
-cut in sunk relief in white marble, formed a frame work enclosing
-panels of larger pattern in marble inlay. Pilasters of red sandstone on
-the front were in zigzag courses, alternately white and red, like the
-work on the dome of the Jama Musjid at Agra.
-
-From the gateway a long and broad flagged way, intersected by tanks,
-led us up to the tomb, across a wide park full of fine trees, tamarinds
-and mangoes chiefly. Arrived at the great tomb, the cupolas of which
-we had seen in front of us as we walked, we first entered a sort
-of hall or atrium with richly decorated roof and walls in coloured
-plaster, heightened with gold, and with an Arabic text in gold running
-round the frieze. There were beautiful designs of trees and vines in
-panels. Parts had been picked out in new gold and colour, at somebody’s
-expense, to bring out the pattern, but the new work looked hard and
-mechanical though on good lines, and the new gold was staring; the
-effect of this partial restoration being of course patchy. Still, if
-such restorations are allowable at all, it is better that they should
-be frank and make no pretence at being really a part of the original
-work. It would, however, in this case have been far better to have left
-it alone, as the old gold and colour still remaining on the walls and
-vault was rich and deep in tone.
-
-From this hall we entered a small corridor, two native attendants
-going before us with lanterns to guide our steps. This passage led
-into a vast dark domed chamber, in the midst of which was the plain
-marble tomb of the great Akbar. It was impressive in its simplicity,
-without any inscription or ornament, the usual narrow parallelogram
-with a moulded base. One of the men uttered a deep prolonged note
-like the exclamation Ah! but sustained and dwelling on the A. This
-was answered by a profound and long-continued echo or reverberation,
-dying gradually away, caused I suppose by the height and shape of the
-dome. One might imagine it was the voice of the dead Emperor. After
-seeing three more tombs, one of which was richly and delicately carved
-(a lady’s), we ascended to the terraced roof, and from there to a
-second arcaded terrace, from which still a third was reached up steps
-of ever increasing height in the treads, and finally to a top story,
-emerging upon a beautiful spacious arcaded court of white marble, but
-with warm tints in it which made it very much the tone of ivory. There
-were delicate, pierced, marble screens on each side, through which the
-evening sun sparkled like gold. In the centre of the court on a raised
-dais was the second tomb of Akbar, according to the usual Mohammedan
-custom of placing an upper tombstone to indicate the position of the
-actual tomb in the vault below. This tomb was most elaborately and
-delicately carved in white marble, with beautifully designed floral
-patterns and Arabic texts and borders of scroll work, which were
-like reproductions in marble relief of the designs in the best type
-of Persian carpets. The aged native custodians told us that the
-famous koh-i-noor diamond was once here on Akbar’s tomb. It might be
-interesting to trace its history to its present position.
-
-The foliated cresting of the parapet of this marble court was also
-delicately carved. Altogether the building was one of the finest things
-of its type we had yet seen in India. The blend of Hindu construction
-with Mogul work in the corbelled supports of the minarets was
-noticeable. These corbels were trebled at the angles, and like most of
-the building were of red sandstone.
-
-There was a fine view of the country from this highest story of the
-tomb, and we could even see the white dome of the Taj Mahal five or six
-miles away. The drive from Agra took about an hour, and the sun had set
-before we returned.
-
-This being New Year’s day Moonsawmy our bearer smilingly came up with
-an offering—a plum cake with a pink sugared top and “A Happy New Year”
-on it, as if it had come out of an English confectioner’s—and this,
-too, was accompanied by a garland of yellow and white flowers after
-the native manner—one for each of us. He said this was customary,
-and with his good wishes he managed to convey a gentle hint that his
-“jentilmens” usually made him a little present in return. This rather
-rubbed a little of the sugar off, but, of course, we did not forget
-him. He was not a bad servant on the whole, though rather too old
-and cunning a bird in some ways. He had rather extravagant ideas in
-ordering carriages, which we afterwards discovered were not totally
-unconnected with certain commissions extracted from the carriage
-proprietors. No doubt, however, native bearers regard the European
-tourist as fair game—it is not unheard of in Europe—and they, like
-other classes after their manner, lose no opportunity of making the
-most of the chances of their rather uncertain profession.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-GWALIOR
-
-
-We left Agra for Gwalior on the 2nd of January. Departing from Agra
-Road about 11 in the morning we arrived at Gwalior between 3 and 4
-o’clock in the afternoon. We hoped to meet an Indian friend here, who
-was a doctor in the suite of the Maharajah, and whom we had known in
-London when he was studying for his degree. He was, however, absent
-at Calcutta, so we had to shift for ourselves. There was, however, an
-excellent guest-house built by the Maharajah for the use of visitors
-to Gwalior, not far from the station, where we found comfortable
-quarters, very superior to most of the hotels we had had experience
-of. The building itself was a charming pavilion in the Mogul style,
-with domes, arcades, and pierced stone work balconies, and elaborately
-carved doorways, the material of which it was built being a sort of
-yellow sandstone. We were allotted a spacious room opening on to a
-pleasant terrace and connected with balconies which extended entirely
-around the house, and from here we could see the famous Rock of Gwalior
-with its fort and Temples and the old palace of Man Mandir conspicuous
-at its further end. There was a large central hall or living room, and
-in this was a blazing fire which shed its cheery light and welcome
-warmth. There was a good piano and English furniture. There was a sort
-of clerestory high in the lofty wall, but no direct light, so that in
-the daytime this room was in comparative gloom, by no means ungrateful
-after the glare of the sun. The dining-room was fully lighted and
-opened on to a portico. In front of the building was a garden with a
-rather burnt up piece of lawn encircled by a carriage drive.
-
-We found a singular silent and reserved company of Anglo-Indians at
-dinner—a lady and three gentleman—only one of the latter manifesting
-the slightest interest in us. No one appeared at breakfast the
-following morning but an English governess and a child she was in
-charge of.
-
-[Illustration: TO GWALIOR FORT BY PALANQUIN]
-
-We started in a carriage to drive to the fort, stopping on the way
-to see the tomb of Mohammed Ghaus, the dome of which is visible
-from the guest-house. It is a noble tomb of yellow sandstone, with
-fine screen-work. It dates from the early part of Akbar’s reign. We
-crossed a river by a bridge and entered a decayed-looking native town,
-passing up a straggling street of low houses to the first gate of the
-fortress. There we might have hired an elephant to take us up the
-steep road to the fort, but the elephant had been already bespoke by
-a party of British officers. A palanquin (or jhampan) was produced,
-however, in which my wife seated herself and was carried up the hill
-by four bearers, four more accompanying them as relays. As for me
-I preferred to walk up, and our Moonsawmy went with us. We passed
-through several gateways. The Hindu carvings of one called the Ganesha
-Gate had been defaced by the Mohammedans. Soon the towers of the old
-palace of Man Mandir rose in view near the summit, each crowned with a
-circular cupola. It is a striking building of remarkable character in
-reddish-yellow sandstone, faced in parts by turquoise blue and yellow
-tiles, courses of these tiles running across the façade. The angle
-tower and some of the tile-work at the top had been restored. There
-was a frieze of geese in yellow on a turquoise-blue ground, the birds
-in profile, each showing an expanded wing and set close together. The
-design resembled the carved figures of birds often seen on the Jain
-temples. The architecture here being Hindu, was much more massive than
-the Mogul work hitherto seen, and showed much variety and invention
-in the carved corbels and brackets in the interior. I made a note of
-a peacock bracket in which the tail is effectively treated, the bird
-being considerably formalised in adapting it to its architectural
-purpose. There was another of a fantastic elephant. Elephant heads with
-their uplifted trunks, by the way, were carved as brackets to support
-the balconies at the Guest House, where also I noted that the detail
-of some of the carved work of the door heads at the old palace had
-been reproduced. The doorways were rather low and small, and the whole
-building had more the character of a castle than a palace. On the flat
-table land on the summit of the rock there were several Jain temples,
-masses of carving within and without. The Sas Bahu is the principal
-Jain temple, and there is also a Hindu temple on the rock—near the
-farther end from Man Mandir—the Teli-ka Mandir. This stands in a
-graveyard, full of carved fragments and upright stones. The elephant
-bearing the party of British officers passed us as we were exploring
-the temples. There are some ugly barracks, which are very much out
-of keeping with the historic architecture of the Rock. The old fort
-has stood many a siege. Caine calls it “the cockpit of Central India,”
-and “it has been stormed or starved into submission a dozen times at
-least.” It seems to have been originally fortified in 773 A.D., and
-at various periods since to have alternately fallen into the hands of
-Hindu or Mussulman, as now one and now the other prevailed. Akbar the
-Great took it in 1556, and we find the East India Company in possession
-in 1780, who took it from Sindhia and gave it to the Rana of Gohad.
-Then Sindhia retook it, and so it has remained with the Sindhias (to
-which family the present Maharajah belongs) practically ever since. The
-Rock has always been well supplied with water and has many tanks.
-
-We had a commanding prospect of the country, stretching in a vast plain
-for miles around. We could see the Maharajah’s palace amidst its parks
-and gardens—a white building among the green foliage, and nearer the
-foot of the Rock the new town of Gwalior, called Lashkar. We descended
-on the farther (northern) side of the rock by a winding road, and from
-here we saw some huge carved figures cut in the face of the sandstone
-cliffs in bold relief. Most of these are said to represent Adinath,
-the first Jain pontiff, but there is a seated figure of Nemnath, the
-twenty-second pontiff. Each bear their symbols, that of the first
-being a bull and of the second a shell. There are life-size as well as
-small figures cut on the lower parts of the cliff. The effect of these
-strange carvings is very weird. They have an impersonal and unrelated
-look, and give one the impression of being more ancient than they
-really are; but they only date from A.D. 1441 to 1474.
-
-We found our carriage waiting for us at the foot of the hill, having
-driven round the Rock from the old town, and we got back to the Guest
-House about noon.
-
-In the late afternoon we drove to the Maharajah’s palace, and
-presenting our cards, were shown over the rooms by a very polite
-English officer. The building is in a sort of late Italian Renaissance
-style, all white outside, with a great display of pilasters and
-columned porticoes. We entered a vast durbar hall in white and gold,
-with modern French-looking furniture with curly legs upholstered in
-green. There were many photographs of recent English Governor-Generals
-on the walls, as well as indifferent full-length, life-sized portraits
-in oil of the late Maharajah. The best of these was said to have been
-painted by one Scott—a landscape painter (!). In one of the smaller
-rooms there was an English water-colour drawing of Sussex Downs by
-A. F. Grace (whom I remember at Heatherly’s in student days), and
-several photographic official groups of the usual type, in which the
-Maharajah is seated by the Prince of Wales, surrounded by rows of
-officials and notabilities, all with “eyes front.” We wrote our names
-in the visitors’ book, and then drove through the grounds, which
-are very extensive. In one part lions are kept—apparently in a most
-insecure way, as they not unfrequently escape and ravage the country
-round. In fact, this had quite recently happened, and natives had been
-killed by them. A very taciturn gentleman at the Guest House had been
-pointed out to us by the more genial of our fellow-countrymen there as
-the official who had been sent by the Maharajah to fetch the wandering
-lions back, and he had been over a distance of about three hundred
-miles before he succeeded in “rounding them up.” He did not tell us,
-however, how it was done, though he had a look as of one who “could
-a tale unfold”—not to speak of a lion’s tail! When we saw the place
-where these lions were kept we were not surprised that they should have
-been able to escape if they had a mind to. We looked down on them as
-they were gnawing some bones. They were loose in a sort of open court,
-overgrown with grass, and enclosed within four plastered walls which
-any cat could have scaled, no palisading or iron railing at the top.
-There were five lions and one lioness visible. The remains of their
-repast of meat was pounced on by kites and crows with much clamour.
-
-We next saw the Maharajah’s elephants, and passed down a long line of
-them, chained by the fore-legs, down one side of an open courtyard,
-all eating what looked like the stalks of Indian corn. There were
-about thirty elephants here. One of them was handsomely painted on the
-forehead in a similar way to the state elephant we saw at Jaipur, but
-none of them had quite such big tusks. Returning through the gardens,
-we passed the older palace; also a white building, but in the Mogul
-style, with many domes and minarets, and facing a large tank with
-marble steps.
-
-Our party at the Guest House was increased at dinner by two very
-pleasant American ladies, who, owing to their powers of conversation,
-caused the very reserved Anglo-Indians to melt a little and show some
-signs of human interest, especially when one of the ladies related her
-thrilling experiences during the San Francisco earthquake.
-
-The next morning we visited the newer city of Gwalior, which we had
-seen from the fort. The streets were fairly wide, and some had varied
-and picturesque fronts in plaster-work. We were driven to the gate of
-a big and rather new Hindu temple, spoiled by the insertion of crude
-pieces of coloured glass, of the commonest European make, in the
-fan-lights of the doors on each side. A sacred bull of black marble and
-a snake fetish were the most interesting things there.
-
-In the same court was an older temple raised on a flight of steps. To
-approach this, one’s shoes had to be taken off, and from the door only
-a peep was allowed into the dark interior, which, as far as I could see
-was painted all over with figures of deities and emblems in a barbaric
-way in coarse and crude colours. The thing to look at, it appeared, was
-a portrait of the late Maharajah in his jewels, on what we should call
-the high altar, which was suddenly illuminated by artificial light by
-one of the native attendants.
-
-Zebu cows were wandering freely about in the court of the temple, and
-here for a wonder no fees were taken.
-
-[Illustration: IN THE BAZAAR, GWALIOR]
-
-We went into the new market, which had been opened by the Prince
-of Wales on his visit the previous year. It was not, however,
-very busy, and many of the stalls were empty. It seemed of doubtful
-advantage to the natives, who preferred to do business in the bazaars.
-There appeared to be a good supply of fresh vegetables, but very few
-buyers. The most interesting stalls were those of the bead sellers.
-There were beads of every variety of colour and size. The stalls were
-about the height of ordinary shop-counters, and on these platforms,
-which extended without divisions along the centre and sides of the
-market hall, the native traders squatted with their wares in front of
-them, women as well as men. Some of them were engaged in stringing
-the beads, and one man was plaiting a cord, the strands of which were
-fixed to a hook fixed on an upright stick supported on a stand. He
-used his toes like fingers to hold out and divide the strands as he
-worked. With the assistance of our bearer we made some purchases, and
-again later in the bazaar, when, as the carriage was stopped, I made a
-sketch of the scene in front of us, but under difficulties, as we were
-immediately surrounded on all sides by an eager concourse of swarthy,
-interested spectators, who refused to budge in spite of the rather mild
-remonstrances or commands of a native policeman, who, I imagine, used
-the Hindu equivalent for “Pass along” or “Move on,” but they didn’t.
-Under this “crowd of witnesses” I endeavoured to complete my sketch,
-and then we moved on.
-
-Extending our drive on the Morar Road, we passed the camp of the
-Maharajah’s soldiers in waiting for the Amir’s coming, as after the
-Agra reception was over he was to pay a visit to the palace at Gwalior
-for tiger-shooting. We enjoyed a quiet life at Gwalior, and I was able
-to make several drawings unhindered by too curious crowds. The Guest
-House was one of the quietest places imaginable, although visitors came
-and went and even motor-cars were seen. There was something almost
-mysterious in the way guests would appear and disappear—at table one
-day and vanished the next; covers would be laid too for guests who
-never appeared.
-
-Tents which were pitched on the ground outside the Guest House for
-other unseen visitors would be clean gone as we looked out in the
-morning. Everything seemed so transitory; even a native boy, when I
-wanted to make a drawing of him, was nowhere to be found, and I had to
-make the best of it with an unwilling and quite inferior substitute,
-who had no idea of keeping still, and even ended the seance by
-squatting on the ground with his back to one!
-
-It struck me that the natives do not like being drawn or painted, as a
-rule, to judge by the various attempts one made to secure models. The
-one wanted always disappeared when the time came, and another, but not
-a better and without the same characteristics, offered.
-
-The little palm squirrels were very numerous here, and would scamper
-about the terraces and balconies of the Guest House, and even chase
-each other into our rooms, or come up for the crumbs we scattered,
-sitting up on their haunches to nibble at them, held in their fore-paws
-in true squirrel fashion. Equally familiar were the sparrows which
-flew in and out, unmolested and fearless, even perching sometimes on
-the breakfast table. The crows too would congregate on the balcony
-rails if any feeding was going on, frequently joining us at afternoon
-tea, at a respectful distance, though within short range of the
-scattered crumbs.
-
-[Illustration: CALLERS AT THE GUEST HOUSE, GWALIOR]
-
-We witnessed several very lovely sunsets over the Rock of Gwalior, a
-type of frequent occurrence being an arrangement of long, low stratus
-clouds, brilliantly illuminated on their under edges as the sun sank
-below the horizon, the light deepening from orange into crimson.
-Another type consisted of golden fleeces of high cirrus clouds,
-rippling out over spaces of turquoise.
-
-We paid another visit to the old town of Gwalior and climbed the hill
-as far as the third gate, where I made a sketch showing the towers of
-the Man Mandir Palace through the arch.
-
-From a terrace extending along the hill near this gate there is a fine
-panoramic view, the old town lying below, partly ruined and deserted, a
-mass of crumbling walls and complicated roof plans mingled with trees
-and gardens.
-
-The first gate at the foot of the hill, where is the guard-house, is
-interesting as showing the inlaid enamelled tile-work which decorates
-it partially. Deep turquoise is the prevailing colour, and it is used
-for the field or background of the designs, and is inlaid in pieces cut
-to fit the interstices of the pattern in the yellow sandstone. In a
-frieze of geese in close formal procession, the birds were cut in sunk
-relief, and the spaces between were filled with turquoise pieces. The
-tile decoration on the Man Mandir Palace has been done in the same way,
-yellow and green tiles being also used.
-
-We drove through the bazaar of the old town, a queer, half-ruined, and
-ragged place, but exceedingly picturesque, the natives squatting on
-their stalls, presiding over curious preparations of food and other
-wares, with chatting, many-coloured groups crowding around. Some of
-the people would look curiously at us, some would salaam, some were
-indifferent, others were derisive or sullen.
-
-[Illustration: APPROACH TO THE PALACE OF MAN MANDIR, GWALIOR]
-
-There was rather an important-looking mosque with minarets in the
-town, but many of the houses were roofless and deserted.
-
-In crossing the bridge over the river we noted the people washing
-clothes, and a pretty pattern of colour was formed when the stuffs
-were spread out over the sandbanks to dry. Here, in central India,
-we were able to see more of the everyday life of the people, and had
-more opportunities of quiet observation of country life than usual.
-The peasants did not seem to have the curiosity of the natives in the
-towns, when one sat down to make a drawing, but they went on their
-way, bearing their burdens, or driving ox-carts, or herds of goats, or
-buffalo cows, or asses.
-
-It was quite a change to get a grey cloudy effect which occurred one
-morning when I had found an interesting subject by the river side. On
-the way thither we passed a village burning-place, strewn with heaps
-of ashes where the dead had been burned. The river had shrunk to a
-small, shallow stream, and at the spot where I sat was crossed by
-stepping-stones, over which groups of natives constantly passed to and
-fro. Cattle and ox-carts splashed through a shallow ford at intervals,
-and higher up natives bathed their brown bodies in the water. We were
-on the outskirts of the old town of Gwalior, and could see above on the
-rock the dark shapes of the Jain temples looming up against the sky,
-while around us were domes of cenotaphs, fragments of tombs, and broken
-walls, overshadowed by groups of fine banyan trees and mangoes. At an
-old draw-well near by groups of native women were continually coming
-and going, bearing their water-jars on their heads, their draperies
-forming delightful schemes of colour.
-
-A dark thin Hindu in a white turban and waist-cloth was ploughing up
-his small patch of land near the river for potatoes, which members of
-his family working with him were preparing to sow. There were several
-sons—youths—two women, and some small children, all working on the land.
-
-I made a note of the plough, a very primitive implement, having a
-single shaft fixed at a right angle to the share, with a cross-handle
-at the top. This the ploughman held with one hand—his left—guiding the
-plough, while with his right he drove a small pair of zebus under a
-yoke, who dragged it along. The share was a wedge-shaped piece of wood,
-tipped with iron at the point and along its edge.
-
-Moonsawmy talked to the man while I made my notes, and he told me
-afterwards that the ploughman never managed to earn as much as 200
-rupees in the year, though he and his family—I suppose about ten or a
-dozen all told—were constantly at work. His patch of land being near
-the river, one would have thought favourable for raising crops; but it
-appeared the river not infrequently was completely dry, and they were
-hard put to it for water for the soil. The income of the whole family
-worked out at about thirteen pounds a year at the most, which, taking
-into consideration that it had to be the support of about a dozen
-people, seemed narrow enough, and one could easily understand that the
-slightest failure of the crops would mean something like famine.
-
-This state of things bears out the estimates of the average income of
-the Indian ryot, calculated by the late William Digby, C.I.E., after
-long residence and experience in India, the results of whose study of
-the question are given in detail, from undisputed authorities, in his
-striking work, “Prosperous British India,” in which is accumulated an
-appalling mass of evidence, all pointing to the conclusion that for
-famine should very largely be read _poverty_, which is also the root
-cause of bubonic plague. The railways, of course, might convey corn to
-the starving districts, but where the people have no money to pay for
-it they must starve all the same, Government relief-works being the
-only alternative; but this sort of relief must often be too late for
-poor creatures reduced by hunger and too weak to work.
-
-The ordinary unprejudiced observer is naturally inclined to ask, Why
-this desperate poverty in an industrious population, supposed to be
-under beneficent British rule and administration? The answer must
-be sought in the fact that thirty millions and upwards are annually
-extracted from the country without any equivalent return, and this must
-necessarily mean a heavy burden of taxation on the chief sources of
-wealth, land and labour.
-
-One of the greatest principles of our Constitution of which our
-public men are never tired of boasting is, “No taxation without
-representation,” or, “Taxation and representation must go hand in
-hand.” This principle is, however, entirely ignored in India, where
-British rule is as autocratic as that of Russia. Is it surprising in
-these circumstances that there should be “unrest”?
-
-The educated Hindu or Mohammedan—the many who come to England and are
-trained in English Universities, or read for the Bar, or study for
-their degrees in medicine, feel that there is no part or lot for them
-in the administration of the affairs of their own country except in a
-very subordinate way. I understand that the highest Government post a
-native can attain to is the office of assistant-commissioner.
-
-Time was when, after the great upheaval of the Mutiny—which was really
-an attempt to regain possession of the reins of government by the
-native princes of Oude, the principle of native representation under
-British administration was advocated by leading English politicians.
-Nothing, however, came of it, and the policy of the India Office has
-remained unchanged through all the changes of party government, there
-being no difference in this matter between Liberals and Conservatives.
-A Liberal like Mr John Morley, when in office as Indian Secretary,
-promptly orders the arrest and deportation without trial of Indian
-agitators under an old law of the East India Company which has never
-been ratified by the English Parliament.
-
-Mr Laipat Rai, however, appears to be a self-sacrificing and devoted
-advocate of the cause of his people, and as editor certainly cannot
-have written so strongly against the English Government as Mr H. M.
-Hyndman, who has for years past denounced the conduct of the India
-Office, while challenging attention to and redress of the system under
-which the people of India are impoverished.
-
-The attenuated ploughman who has been the occasion of these remarks was
-a typical figure. Looking on such figures, able only to secure a bare
-subsistence, so common throughout India, one cannot but feel that all
-the magnificence and luxury of the Maharajahs, as well as the heavy
-burden of the cost of the British Government, is maintained by the
-sweat of the brows and the ceaseless toil of such as these.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-DELHI
-
-
-After a stay of about a week at the Guest House at Gwalior we took the
-road again, or rather the railroad, Delhi being the next place on our
-itinerary. We thought, however, to break the journey for a few hours at
-Agra, and get a view of the entry of the Amir, which was fixed for the
-9th of January.
-
-It was a lowering, cloudy morning when we left our quarters and made
-for the railway station, where we had a long wait in the darkness.
-An enormous throng of natives filled the platform, squatting on the
-ground or standing about in groups, talking or sleeping under covers
-which hid them from head to foot. Most were closely wrapped up about
-the shoulders, cloths being wound over the turban, even so that they
-had generally a top-heavy look with bare legs. Their wraps were only
-of cotton though, as a rule, and did not seem adequate against the
-chill of the morning. One little swarthy man was busy writing, making
-entries on sheets of paper or perhaps bills of lading. He squatted on
-the platform against one of the piers of the arcade, writing by the aid
-of a lantern’s light. I noticed only one European besides ourselves in
-the throng, and he appeared to be an English official and wore a pith
-helmet.
-
-At last up came the train from Jhansi, and we got in, a slumbering
-English officer occupying one of the berths. The sky, which was the
-only gloomy and threatening one we had experienced in India, and
-certainly looked leaden and hopeless enough, soon turned to rain, and
-under such an aspect the country looked desolate in the extreme. The
-tawny earth and fuzzy, dry grass, sparse trees of prickly acacia and
-scrub bushes, the broken hillocks and mounds of clay, looked more
-fruitless and forlorn under the steady, soaking rain; groups of poor
-country folk in their thin cotton clothing huddled together, waiting at
-the stations we passed, or could be seen splashing through the muddy
-pools to catch the train.
-
-Nearing Agra, we saw heavy artillery trains with field guns trailing
-along the wet roads. Troops had been pouring into Agra for some time,
-and while at Gwalior a native regiment of cavalry (lancers) rode by the
-Guest House, preceded by their baggage on mules and camels.
-
-At Agra Road Station the rain was pouring in torrents. There is an
-immense, long, exposed platform, along which we made our way to cover
-under the station shed, which was already crammed with people, mostly
-English and American visitors, army officers, and officials.
-
-The weather being quite hopeless, we gave up the idea of seeing
-anything of the procession, which of course was a military one, and
-then finding there was a dining-car in waiting, we had a scamper
-through the rain again down the platform to reach it.
-
-[Illustration: A DASH FOR THE DINING-CAR AT AGRA ROAD]
-
-After tiffin we were just in time to catch a train on to Delhi—in fact
-it had actually started, but the courteous station-master sent an
-official to stop it for us, and to see us safely in with our baggage.
-It was now nearly noon, but our train, a slow passenger one, was not
-due at Delhi until 5.30. The rain continued steadily, and damp groups
-of natives were gathered at the different stopping stations in various
-stages of discomfort. They did not, however, appear to mind the wet so
-much as one would have expected, but swathed themselves in all sorts of
-curious wraps up to the eyes, leaving the legs and feet bare, and some
-even squatted on the wet ground.
-
-The country was again a plain for the most part, and extensively
-cultivated under irrigation, several irrigation canals being crossed
-by the railway. Green crops of young corn seemed almost hidden by
-charlock, the yellow fields having almost the effect of our buttercup
-meadows in May. Flocks of black and white cranes were seen, as well as
-a large, blue, grey-plumaged kind, which are usually seen in pairs in
-the green corn. Three superior-caste Hindus got into our compartment
-and occupied the cross-bench at one end. One had a bad cough, but they
-kept their windows open and did not seem to mind draughts. Coughs and
-throat troubles seemed, indeed, too common in India, and we often heard
-distressing coughs in the hotels at night.
-
-The sky towards evening began to clear in the west, the whole solid
-field of rain cloud gradually lifting like a curtain, and the sun
-shining out while the rain continued, a brilliant rainbow appeared as
-if painted on the black wall of cloud to the eastward.
-
-The line passes through a part of old Delhi, a vast region of broken
-tombs and ruined walls lying outside the walls of the present city, and
-afar off we could see the domes and minarets of the Great Jama Musjid
-Mosque.
-
-We got in in good time, and collecting our heavy baggage sent on
-from Gwalior, drove to Maiden’s Hotel, through streets dark with rain
-and standing in pools of water, a stormy orange sunset casting a warm
-glow over everything. The hotel was on the usual Indian plan, with a
-centre and two arcaded wings enclosing a court, along which a series
-of ground-floor, bungalow-like bed- and bath-rooms extended, chilly
-enough at this time of year in the mornings and evenings, especially
-in wet weather. The hotel itself was under English management, and
-there were large open fires in the dining-room and salon, which looked
-comfortable, and the cookery was superior to most of the others
-we had experienced. Letters from England awaited us, and added to
-our satisfaction. No doubt the mails are delivered with wonderful
-regularity, and so long as the traveller can arrange his tour in
-order that his letters shall meet him at certain places, and does not
-leave before the mail arrives, no complications occur. It is only
-when letters follow one about instead of preceding one that delay and
-difficulties occur.
-
-The next morning (January 10) was grey, chill, and damp, when we
-started after breakfast to see Delhi. The hotels and the British
-residential quarter lie quite outside the native town, as is usually
-the case, amid spacious, park-like grounds, here pleasantly undulating,
-and varied with gardens and fine groups of trees. The town is walled,
-and has a broad dry ditch as a farther defence. We drove through the
-famous Kashmir Gate, renowned for the British assault at the time of
-the Mutiny, which remains in the battered condition in which it was
-left after the siege, with great shot-holes in its masonry, as well
-as in the walls each side. A tablet records the circumstances of the
-siege, and the names of the officers and soldiers who distinguished
-themselves at that terrific time.
-
-The gate has two ogee-pointed arches, enclosed in rectangular mouldings
-in the usual Mogul fashion. As one enters the city, inscribed tablets
-recording incidents of the siege are numerous, and the British
-authorities have certainly been most careful to preserve the memory of
-their side of the fight along with the names of their military heroes,
-and every noteworthy spot in the struggle is commemorated in this way.
-In addition to such incidental monuments there is the Mutiny Memorial,
-an important red-sandstone erection (110 feet high) outside the gates,
-upon a rising ground, and so placed that a complete view can be
-obtained from its summit of the lines of the siege.
-
-At the fort, which was formerly the Imperial Palace of the Moguls
-(built in A.D. 1628–58 by Shah Jehan), it is distressing to see the
-ruthless destruction of superb buildings for which the British have
-been responsible, and the barbarous way in which hideous barrack
-structures have been substituted. The fort, or palace, is entered
-through a noble, deep-red sandstone gate. The Lahore, or, as it is
-now called, the Victoria Gate, and the fine court, is marred by these
-ugly modern military barracks for which so much beauty was sacrificed.
-We were shown two splendid halls, the Diwan-i-am, or public hall of
-audience, and the Diwan-i-khas, or private hall of audience. This
-is of white marble with beautiful inlays of precious stones, with
-a richly decorated ceiling in colour and gold. A marble pedestal is
-pointed out as the place whereon the wonderful peacock throne stood.
-This must indeed have been gorgeous, the seat between two peacocks with
-spread tails, and these encrusted with sapphires, diamonds, rubies,
-and emeralds, representing the natural colours of the plumage, a true
-emblem of oriental magnificence. Over the arches of the arcade in this
-hall is a Persian inscription in raised and gilt characters, which
-reads, “If there is a paradise on earth, it is this, it is this, it
-is this.” This costly “paradise,” again, was built by the builder of
-the Taj Mahal, Shah Jehan, who seems to have outshone all the Mogul
-emperors by the splendour of his buildings. Of course there are no
-diamonds, or rubies, or emeralds left, and even the small stones used
-in the decorative floral inlays have in many cases been picked out. It
-is said that Lord Curzon employed Florentine workmen to replace some of
-this work at his own expense.
-
-The decoration of the walls and ceilings in the zenana rooms,
-consisting of painted and gilded arabesques, was very lovely, and the
-marble Akab Baths exquisite. The river (Jumna) formerly flowed up to
-the walls of the palace on that side, and from a beautiful minaret we
-could see the river beyond a belt of green foliage, and get a fine
-perspective view up and down of the palace wall and buildings.
-
-Near by, on the other side of the court, is the Rung Mahal, which
-is distinguished by particularly fine pierced screen-work. The
-vaulted rooms connected with this building were till recently used
-as officers’ mess-rooms, when all their beautiful decoration were
-obliterated with whitewash.
-
-Opposite to the Akab Baths is the Moti Musjid, called the Pearl Mosque,
-a most exquisite little building of white marble, a cluster of three
-domes and many slender pinnacles terminated by lotus flowers. It has
-many-cusped arches of Saracenic character, and a fine bronze door.
-
-It is sad to think that these lovely buildings are after all only
-remnants of what were once on this spot when this Imperial Palace
-was complete in all its splendour. The Burj-i-Shameli, the great
-marble bath-room; the Metiaz-Mehal, a huge quadrangle of palaces
-enclosing a garden 300 feet square; the Nobatkhama or music gate, the
-Golden Mosque, the hareem courts, and fifty other lovely pavilions,
-fountains, and gardens—think of it! The late W. S. Caine, writing
-in his “Picturesque India,” adds the following passage: “These and
-other glories of the palace have all been swept away by successive
-barbarians. Nadir Shah, Ahmed Khan, and the Maratha chiefs were content
-to strip the buildings of their precious metals and jewelled thrones:
-to the government of the Empress of India was left the last dregs of
-vandalism, which, after the Mutiny, pulled down these perfect monuments
-of Mughal art, to make room for the ugliest brick buildings from Simla
-to Ceylon.”
-
-The Jama Musjid at Delhi is on a splendid scale, a mosque of red
-sandstone inlaid with white marble. There are four great gateways,
-approached by long flights of steps, through which the great arcaded
-square court, in which the mosque stands, is entered. Reputed relics
-of Buddha are shown to visitors at a shrine at one corner of the
-court. On the eastern side the mosque faces an open plain from which a
-large slice of the native city, which once surrounded the mosque, had
-been cleared by the Government. This gives a clear view of the noble
-building on this side, but must have been rather distinctive of the
-character of the place, and one would have thought the mosque, standing
-so high as it does, would have easily dominated the native houses. In
-fact, if it had been designed for a site on an open plain, there would
-have been no necessity to raise it on such a lofty platform. Modern
-improvers are apt to forget the logic of art.
-
-We went up a side street in the native town on the other side of the
-mosque to see the Jain temple, which is an interesting and richly
-decorated small building in the Mogul style of architecture, approached
-by a doorway in the street and reached by a flight of steps. It is
-extremely beautiful in detail. In the curious street there were many
-interesting Mogul doorways. We stopped at a stall to buy some specimens
-of the glass and lacquered bracelets commonly worn by the native women
-which only cost a few annas.
-
-[Illustration: THE JAMA MUSJID MOSQUE, DELHI]
-
-The Chandni Chowk (or silver street) is the main business street or
-bazaar of Delhi. It is very wide, and has a sort of long island down
-the middle planted with trees. This was said to have been originally
-an aqueduct. It runs east and west, and we saw a striking effect one
-evening—the glowing sunset behind the dark masses of the trees, the end
-of the vista lost in mysterious gloom; twinkling lights, here and
-there, about the white awnings of the stalls under the trees; white
-turbaned figures of natives moving noiselessly up and down, ox-carts
-and pony tongas, wandering sacred zebus, and all the mixed and varied
-character of an Indian bazaar form a wonderful and picturesque ensemble.
-
-Individualistic commercial competition is well illustrated in the
-Chandni Chowk. The traveller is besieged by touts thrusting their cards
-into his hand, or throwing them into his carriage, or surrounding it
-with the most importunate solicitations to see their shops.
-
-We visited an ivory carver’s workshop in a street leading out of the
-Chowk. My impression was about this, as in regard to other native
-handicrafts, that it was now a craft as distinct from an art. We saw
-the carvers at work, quite a number. It was a species of factory. There
-were draughtsmen and designers, and miniature painters and inlayers,
-quite distinct from the carvers. The former draw the patterns on the
-ivory with a pencil. There were some young boys learning to draw
-from the craft; one was drawing a bird on a slate. The skill of the
-ivory-carvers was very wonderful: they could carve a figure inside an
-open scroll-work and leave it distinct, and there were feats of this
-kind of which they seemed to be most proud; but these craftsmen seemed
-to work almost mechanically, no doubt entirely to order, and without
-any initiative of their own in the way of design. They sat cross-legged
-on the floor, and more in one room than our factory inspectors would
-probably approve. The works here were mostly produced for ready sale
-to the tourist. Elephants and paper knives were—I was going to say,
-walking hand in hand—all over the shop, and small models of the Taj
-Mahal ran them close, models of native ox-carts, tongas, and palkis,
-the native ploughman and his yoke of oxen, and such-like images of
-familiar things of Indian life; elaborate chess-men, and inlaid caskets
-with little miniatures of the Taj Mahal and the Jama Musjid inserted,
-in fact all sorts of ivory toys were there, consciously prepared for
-the Western eye, and too often the Western want of taste. A loquacious
-Parsee-looking proprietor or manager showed us over this establishment.
-He had the air of a general director of the works, etc. While not at
-all pressing, he took care to show all his attractive things, beginning
-at the most elaborate and costly articles, and skilfully grading
-downwards, until in price they were within measurable distance of the
-visitor’s purse.
-
-My wife found that native home-spun linen and silks for embroidery were
-difficult to find in the Chandni Chowk, where there were plenty of
-European goods.
-
-On January 11th there was a slight frost. The early morning was quite
-misty, too, but the sun came out later, and there was a strong cold
-wind from the east in spite of the clear, bright, blue sky and the
-brilliant sunshine. It suited Delhi far better than the grey sky under
-which we had seen it the first morning of our visit, and was favourable
-for our excursion to the Kutab Minar, eleven miles out. Driving
-through the Delhi and Kashmir Gates again, and along the road past the
-Jama Musjid, and out again at a farther gate to the south-east, we
-traversed the region known as Old Delhi, a wonderful tract of ruined
-cities, shattered buildings, mingled with noble tombs, mosques, and
-minarets, extending for many miles outside the present city. Domes of
-tombs were seen on all sides, and broken walls, and the ground was
-strewn with bricks and stones. Trees (acacias and tamarinds mostly)
-bordered the road. Our native coachman (a good guide) spoke of No. 8
-city, and pointed out its ruined gate, under which we passed. Farther
-on we took a branch road and stopped before the noble gate of the
-ancient city of Indrapat with its strong walls and bastions. Leaving
-our carriage, we passed through the gate and on past a squalid group of
-wretched huts, where poverty-stricken natives huddled together about
-their tumble-down dwellings, and where native children were inclined to
-be rude. Farther along the broken path we reached a spacious octagonal
-mosque of red sandstone on a marble platform. This was the mosque
-of Shir Shah (A.D. 1541). The contrast between the dignity of this
-building and the squalor of the village was striking and saddening.
-
-Resuming our road, we next reached the splendid tomb of Humayun (built
-by Akbar the Great about 1560 A.D., in memory of his father the
-Emperor Humayun). An important gateway led into a garden with long
-tanks and flagged pathways, bordered by formal green hedges, which
-led up to a spacious platform upon which the noble tomb was built. In
-the central chamber under the tomb the actual tombstone was screened
-by pierced marble. There was also a smaller chamber of tombs, each
-side the central one. The building was of red sandstone, inlaid with
-white marble with a central dome and four minarets. It seemed to be a
-prototype of the great Akbar’s own tomb we had seen at Sikandra.
-
-Then on again we went, making another short detour from the main road
-to the cemetery of Nizam-ud-din. Entering through the gateway, we came
-upon a deep tank, surrounded with buildings. On the flattened dome of
-one—the Nizam’s well-house—sat a group of brown-skinned youths, ready
-to dive into the water, a dive of about seventy feet, for backsheesh,
-and the entertainment of the visitor. A passage from this led into
-a marble court, in the centre of which was the white, marble-domed
-tomb of the Nizam, brilliantly decorated with arabesques in colour.
-It reminded one of the shrine of the Kwaja in the Dargarh at Ajmir.
-There were also other tombs in the court, one to the poet Khusru, whose
-songs are said to be still popular in India. An interesting one is
-that of Jahanara Begum, daughter of the Emperor Shah Jehan, on which
-is an inscription to the effect that she begs that nothing but grass
-may cover her. Certainly her wishes are fulfilled, as the grass grows
-freely in the marble-sided tomb which has no cover. Up some steps was
-the modern tomb of Mirza Jahangir, but a beautiful marble one.
-
-The carving in marble and ornaments of all these tombs were exceedingly
-delicate and beautiful, and would compare well with the work on the Taj
-Mahal.
-
-The visitor on leaving is embarrassed by the number of claimants of
-fees. There seemed to be a different custode for every tomb in the
-place, and the crowd of hangers-on, hungry for backsheesh, rather
-spoils the pleasure which the sight of so much beautiful work gives.
-
-Returning to the road again and continuing our drive, it was not long
-before we descried the great Kutab Minar rising up above the trees in
-front of us. We had indeed caught a glimpse of it miles away, when the
-tower was almost lost in the haze. There is a good little bungalow
-close by where the traveller can get tiffin, or put up for the night if
-so minded.
-
-The Minar, tapering upwards to an astonishing height (238 feet),
-piercing the clear blue sky, is of red sandstone with a white marble
-top story. There are five stories, and the summit was formerly crowned
-by a small cupola and open arcade, which was destroyed by a storm,
-and a model of it has been placed near by. Successive bands of small
-carving are carried across the deep flutings, both semicircular and
-rectangular alternately on the lower storey, semicircular in the
-second, rectangular in the third, a plain cylinder forming the fourth,
-while the fifth and last is partly fluted and partly plain. These bands
-are composed of texts from the Koran, the Arabic characters having
-a rich ornamental effect, the carving being wonderfully sharp and
-unimpaired, although it dates from the twelfth and the latter part of
-the thirteenth century (A.D. 1210–20), having been built as a tower of
-Victory, commenced by Kutab-ud-din, and completed by his successor,
-Altamsh.
-
-The tower was built in the centre of the old Hindu fortress of Lalkot
-(A.D. 1060). At its foot are various ruins, the most extensive being
-those of a fine Mohammedan mosque, constructed out of the materials of,
-and incorporated with an ancient Hindu temple, the original columns of
-the latter remaining to form the colonnade of the court.
-
-The images of the Hindu gods have been mostly defaced when they
-occurred in the carving.
-
-There is a fine Mogul arch of red sandstone, similar in treatment and
-style to “the mosque of two and a half days” at Ajmir. In front of
-this, in the centre of the court, stands a remarkable pillar of solid
-wrought iron, supposed to date from A.D. 300 to 400. It is dedicated to
-Vishnu, and there are lines in Sanscrit inscribed around it. The wonder
-is that such a massive thing in iron could have been forged at that
-early period.
-
-Returning to Delhi by a different road we passed another
-important-looking tomb, also near the outskirts of the present city,
-the ruins of the Observatories built by different rajahs in the
-eighteenth century, which impress one as weighty evidences of the
-philosophical knowledge and culture of these native princes. A moon
-observatory was pointed out to us, and a vast circular building. The
-groups of ruined buildings hereabout recalled to us the Roman Campagna
-and its fragments.
-
-Our coachman (who was perhaps more careful as a guide than as a Jehu)
-collided rather violently with a tonga just outside the city, and the
-consequences might have been serious, but the wheels were the chief
-sufferers, and the tonga must have got the worst of the jolt, one of
-the native passengers being thrown out. No bones were broken, and the
-incident did not seem to be regarded as at all an unusual occurrence.
-There seems no rule of the road in India, and so risks are constantly
-run. In the crowded streets the drivers rely on the power of their
-lungs to shout out warnings of their approach, and it is a marvel
-people escape being run over, and that collisions are not more frequent
-and worse than they are.
-
-[Illustration: DELHI DRIVING. WANTED—A RULE OF THE ROAD]
-
-At the hotel, where the custom of small, separate, circular
-dining-tables obtained, we happened to meet a very agreeable
-Anglo-American family from Ceylon, who were travelling in India, and
-were returning to their home at Colombo, before visiting Japan and
-Europe. We discovered we had several friends in common, and promised to
-visit them when we came to Ceylon.
-
-I got a coloured drawing of the Jama Musjid from the plain before
-mentioned, where a few trees afforded a little shade, the sun being
-very strong, although a cool wind was still blowing from the east.
-The light was particularly clear and the shadows sharp, so that the
-architecture looked remarkably distinct, the effect being almost hard.
-
-We had a stroll in the park-like grounds near the Club. There was an
-old and much overgrown Mogul archway here, which had been considerably
-battered in the siege. There were fine cypresses and other trees, and
-among them little flights of green parroquets flew with their shrill
-scream—their flight and their notes reminding one of our swifts.
-Toucans were also to be seen, and of course the palm squirrels. We
-watched a whole colony of them sleeping in the hollow of a fine old
-banyan tree.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-AMRITZAR AND LAHORE
-
-
-We left Delhi by a night train—the Punjab Mail—for Amritzar, but we
-had a long wait at the station, as the train was two hours late. The
-station was thronged with natives bound for some religious festival
-connected with the approaching eclipse of the sun. There was a seething
-mass of dark humanity at the entrance, through which we had almost to
-fight our way to the platform.
-
-Our route was by way of Umballa, which we reached in the early morning.
-The country was wrapped in a thick white mist before the sun rose, when
-it gradually cleared. Beyond Umballa the country was very flat, the
-dry lands varied with green crops and yellow with charlock, as before,
-and dotted with acacia trees. Occasionally we crossed wide rivers,
-or river beds, and the usual flocks of white cranes and brown kites
-were seen. Jullumpore was another junction where our train stopped. It
-looked an interesting place from the railway, a walled town with towers
-and ancient mosques. After leaving Pillour (the refreshment station) a
-very broad river was crossed, and on the wide sands of the dry part of
-its bed, almost like a desert, we saw a train of thirty camels moving
-slowly in single file.
-
-We did not reach Amritzar until about 1 P.M., more than three hours
-after time! On emerging from the station, despite our bearer, we were
-nearly torn to pieces by hotel touts.
-
-[Illustration: SHE WON’T BE HAPPY TILL SHE GETS EVERYTHING PACKED UP]
-
-The Alexandra hotel had been named to us and we asked for its
-representative, but it appeared there was no such hotel at Amritzar.
-Each rival tout clamoured for our custom, declaring that the hotel
-he represented was the true and only successor to the mythical
-Alexandra.[A] One went so far as to say he had received a post-card
-from us, but when asked to produce it only showed a letter from some
-one else! Finally we got into a carriage, which was immediately stormed
-by the irrepressible touts, one seating himself on the box, one on
-the step each side, and I don’t know how many hanging on behind. Not
-liking the look of the first hotel they took us to, we tried a second
-and decided to put up there, and so gradually shook off the touts.
-There was more of an Eastern character about our quarters here than we
-had hitherto experienced. The hotel was quite an Oriental serai in an
-Eastern garden, our rooms being in a sort of Indian villa, opening on
-to a terrace with steps down into the garden, with its narrow straight
-paths between fruit trees, and our room was rather like a small temple
-or chapel with recessed walls and ogee arched doorways, a raftered
-ceiling, and clerestory windows. Built for coolness, no doubt, we now
-found it positively cold in the mornings and evenings, and although
-there was a fireplace the lighting of a wood fire made matters worse,
-for we were nearly smoked out.
-
- [A] We learned afterwards that it was the custom to change the
- names of hotels every six months or so.
-
-[Illustration: DEMON HOTEL TOUTS AT AMRITZAR FIGHTING FOR THEIR PREY]
-
-There were several English or Anglo-English at table preserving their
-characteristic frigidity in the presence of strangers. A gentleman from
-Manchester was the only one who showed a friendly disposition and who
-had any conversation.
-
-Driving through the city we had recourse to smelling-bottles, as owing
-to the open drains each side the streets the odours which saluted our
-nostrils were rather trying. I had noticed these open gulleys at Delhi
-and in the native quarters in other towns. They run close in front of
-the houses and open shops of the bazaars, and are crossed by slabs of
-stone placed across them at intervals to give access to the houses, and
-as all sorts of refuse finds its way into them it is not surprising
-they should be offensive sometimes, though it had not been nearly so
-noticeable elsewhere. Amritzar is said to have the benefit of the
-advice of an English sanitary engineer.
-
-The street did not strike us as so varied and interesting as other
-cities we had seen, and the house fronts seemed plainer and more
-modern, as a rule, though the streets were narrow enough.
-
-[Illustration: THROUGH AMRITZAR—SIT TIGHT AND HOLD A SMELLING BOTTLE!]
-
-From a sort of terrace we got our first view of the Golden Temple,
-which is built in the centre of the large tank or lake in the centre
-of the city. A broad paved causeway connects with the paved walk
-along two sides of the lake. After the magnificent and beautifully
-proportioned Mogul architecture of Agra and Delhi, the Golden
-Temple, built at the beginning of the nineteenth century is rather
-disappointing, despite its gilded domes, the building looking rather
-squat, though the gold reflected in the rippling water has a charming
-effect. The gilded dome of the Atal tower also shows over the
-buildings behind the temple seen from the terrace. Leaving our carriage
-at this spot we were surrounded and eyed by a curious crowd. Rival
-guides apparently contended for us, and there was a sudden quarrel,
-ending in a free fight, between two of them, the end of which we did
-not remain to see. The temple and its precincts is held most sacred by
-the Sikhs, Amritzar being their religious centre, the place is most
-jealously watched. It seemed impossible to get away from the crowd, who
-appeared to be none too friendly to strangers, and sketching was out of
-the question without a bodyguard.
-
-We had a very courteous and kind reception from Dr Dinghra, three of
-whose sons we had known in London. One son and his wife were staying
-with him, and we spent a pleasant hour under his hospitable roof, and
-he presented us with handsome saddle bags, made of the local carpet,
-on leaving. He also introduced us to one of the leading citizens,
-a magistrate, who had an extensive pile carpet manufactory, and he
-showed us over the works. These were long sheds, having round arched
-arcades opening on to a court, and in these were a series of high-warp
-hand-looms with rows of shuttles filled with the different coloured
-wools hanging from the top. The weavers sat, or rather squatted, in
-a row on the ground in front of the warp and worked in the pattern.
-They were young boys and youths trained to the work early. They used a
-small curved knife like a small sickle to shear off the ends of their
-threads and press them home when a particular bit of coloured pattern
-was finished. Little oblong labels written in Arabic were placed on the
-warp in front of each weaver, which gave the written directions for
-the colours to be used in the work. No individual judgment or choice
-appeared to be exercised by the weavers.
-
-There was a design room also open to the court under an arcade, here
-some quite aged natives were preparing designs, sketching them out in
-pencil or charcoal on squared paper, quite in the European method, and
-in some cases working from photographs of special carpets.
-
-I learned from the manager that the working hours in this factory were
-from 8 A.M. till dark. The boy weavers only got one and a half annas
-a day! We finally were shown the finished product—a whole series of
-large handsome carpets being rolled out for us to see. One of these, of
-a Persian kind of design, would be priced at 200 rupees, the manager
-said. Before leaving we were requested to write our names, and any
-remarks on our visit, in a visitor’s book, where the list had been
-headed by the Prince and Princess of Wales, who visited these works on
-their tour in India in 1905.
-
-In the forenoon of January 14th we saw the eclipse of the sun from
-our terrace. It rather took us by surprise—the light quickly becoming
-curiously pale like moonlight and the air unusually chilly. We could
-see the sun turned into a crescent quite distinctly, and pass through
-various phases like a moon, till it gradually regained its normal shape
-and power shortly after noon.
-
-[Illustration: AN INDIAN AUTOLYCUS]
-
-As we sat on the terrace a native pedlar approached with two
-portentous bundles. He salaamed, and proceeded to unload his wares
-in front of us. His stock, however, consisted entirely of European
-goods—small wares such as tapes and buttons, studs, soaps and perfumes,
-patent medicines, and such articles as are supposed to meet the wants
-of travellers. This Indian Autolycus addressed us as “Father” and
-“Mother,” and like the “Mad Hatter” commenced his speeches by saying
-“me very poor man,” following this announcement by urgent appeals
-to us to buy, after each purchase, beginning all over again afresh.
-Probably he felt he had to make the most of his English, as well as of
-his stock and his opportunities.
-
-After another look at the Golden Temple, which it was impossible to
-approach without a crowd and without clumsy canvas shoes over our own,
-we made our way round to the Atal tower. Here, again, before entering
-the anything but clean marble court shoes had to be put off. It is an
-octagonal shrine, or tomb, having curious beaten metal plates, gilded
-figure designs in repoussé over the doors, but the decorative art here
-was much inferior in design and detail to what we had seen further
-south.
-
-We then drove to the public gardens in which stands the pavilion of
-Ranji Singh. The gardens are full of beautiful palms and trees of
-many different kinds, including fine cypresses and splendid clumps
-of bamboos. The roads around Amritzar are lined with trees, and one
-sees enormous banyans spreading their great branches and masses of
-dark green foliage and casting deep shadows on the long avenues. Large
-plantations and fruit gardens, too, surround the city, so that it has a
-very attractive look although on a dead level.
-
-Oranges of a large rough-skinned kind are grown here. They are
-deep-coloured, and more like lemons in shape. There was also a very
-small circular orange about the size of a large cherry in the hotel
-garden, where roses, pansies, and violets were blooming freely. The
-native gardener was generally to the fore in offering us small posies
-or buttonholes whenever he had an opportunity and for a consideration.
-
-We left Amritzar for Lahore on January the 15th, having another
-long wait for the Punjab mail, this time three hours behind time.
-However, about noon another train came up and we were advised by the
-stationmaster to go on by that in preference to waiting longer for the
-mail. This train, he said, would take us to Lahore more quickly than
-the quick train, which sounds like a contradiction in terms. It is only
-about an hour’s journey.
-
-The country between Amritzar and Lahore is, again, flat and has no
-striking features. Fields under irrigation green with young crops of
-corn, often smothered in charlock, alternated with dry fields or the
-standing canes of ripe crops, and stubbles of some newly reaped. The
-wells were plentiful. Some of the irrigation wells in this district
-are of a different pattern and mechanism to the simple draw-well seen
-generally. A pair of oxen turn a horizontal heavy wooden wheel which
-has slots at regular intervals around the outside of its rim. These
-slots catch the projecting spokes or straight cogs of another wheel,
-also horizontally placed and smaller in size, and this in turn by means
-of the cogs moves a large water wheel arranged in a vertical position,
-the projecting cogs catching the spokes of this wheel, which has a
-series of leather buckets or water pots attached to its broad rim, on
-the same principle as we see in dredging machines. As the wheel turns
-the buckets are dipped one after the other into the well, and as they
-rise again full empty their contents into a trough immediately in
-front of the wheel, which communicates with another trough connected
-with the irrigating trenches, which are thus supplied with water.
-
-The station at Lahore was comparatively quiet and was a pleasing
-contrast to the turbulent crowd at Amritzar. The Charing Cross hotel
-received us, but anything less suggestive of the associations its
-name recalled it would be difficult to imagine. It was of the usual
-extended bungalow type, with long arcades in front of ranges of ground
-floor rooms, spacious and lofty and reminding rather of the vast
-rooms one sees on the stage with raftered ceilings and whitewashed
-walls. The lower wall of our sitting-room, however, was hung with very
-interesting Indian hand-painted cotton hangings, which gave it rather
-a distinguished appearance. There was a bedroom, something between a
-prison and a chapel, and dressing and the usual bath rooms, with zinc
-tubs, opening out beyond. There were large sitting and dining rooms,
-the latter an enormous one, like the nave of a church, lighted by a
-clerestory only, and cold enough, where people dined rather frigidly,
-each group at a safe distance at separate little round tables. We were
-glad of a log-fire in the evenings, though the sun was powerful enough
-during the day. “The Charing Cross post office” was close by, which
-had one pigeon hole, and where the stamps were sold outside under the
-verandah, by a native squatting on the ground.
-
-[Illustration: ENJOYING A LOG FIRE AT LAHORE]
-
-A fine broad avenue through the English quarter is called “The Mall,”
-and here the principal government buildings are situated, the Law
-courts and the Museum, and the principal stores and bungalows. This
-British residential and business quarter is quite distinct and lies
-quite clear outside the walls of the native city of Lahore. It is
-laid out in broad drives with tan rides at the side, and bordered
-with trees. Bungalows and shops and stores in the shape of bungalows
-standing detached in gardens are arranged pleasantly from the modern
-residential point of view, and forms quite a “garden city,” only marred
-by the atrocious way in which the traders announce their names and
-business in staring white block-letters on black boards. One piano
-warehouse, I noticed, had even a sky sign. Even the private residences
-are often disfigured in the same way by black boards with the name of
-the occupier in the ugliest block-letters.
-
-The gardens and hedges, often of roses trained on trellises of bamboo,
-are kept very trim up and down the Mall.
-
-Smart English ladies and officers ride or drive about in their
-dog-carts with native tigers behind. We met a very imposing and
-original turn out—a fine pair of brown camels, well matched, were
-harnessed to a sort of barouche, each ridden, postilion-wise, by
-native servants in scarlet, one in the same colour behind the
-carriage, which contained two English ladies. This was probably the
-Lieutenant-Governor’s carriage. Bicycles were much in use both by
-Europeans’ (men and women) and natives—the turban and loose pyjama-like
-clothes of the latter looking strange on the machine. The natives,
-however, everywhere in the towns where the Europeans’ influence comes
-in seem to take to machines. The sewing machine is constantly seen in
-the bazaars, always, however, worked by a man. A certain firm’s poster
-of the eternal woman enclosed in a hideous S (like a modern Eve and the
-industrial serpent) looks particularly incongruous and out of place in
-India, where there seems to be no women working at crafts. The men do
-the washing too, the Dhobee in white with his bundle of linen being a
-frequent and characteristic figure.
-
-No greater contrast could be imagined than that between the English
-quarter and the native city lying within its old walls and great
-gates, with its narrow picturesque streets and—stinks! Open drains
-as at Amritzar run along each side of the streets, close in front of
-the bazaar, where the people sit. The fronts of the houses above the
-open shops are mostly of wood of a dark rich tone, corbelled arcaded
-balconies and windows jutting out over the street at all sorts of
-angles, rich with delicate and varied carvings, as if the builders had
-vied with each other which should make the most interesting front.
-There are charming little covered verandahs and balconies with slender
-columns and ogee arches, and pierced screen-work painted here and
-there, but mostly the deep dusky brown tone of the natural wood, dark
-with age, which forms an effective background to the vivid colours
-and glitter of costumes and draperies of the bazaars. The newly dyed
-long strips of cotton or muslin in orange or pink, green or lemon
-yellow which are hung out to dry, wave like long banners over the busy
-life of the narrow streets, where the turbaned and many coloured,
-swarthy faced crowd, jostle along, or stand in chattering groups about
-the shops, buying and selling. The types, too, are very varied—the
-Hindu, the Mohammedan, the Afghan, the country folk; the Mohammedan
-woman in trousers, the Hindu woman in her graceful Sari, with her
-glittering silver anklets, and bracelets, toe-rings and nose-rings;
-dark eyes and shining whites momentarily seen, and gleaming teeth, the
-mysterious-looking figures covered from head to foot in flowing white
-drapery, pleated into a close fitting cap, with little perforations
-for the eyes, in front, the effect of the whole being ghostly, or
-even ghoulish. The white mystery being only betrayed by a brown foot
-beneath and the gleam of a silver anklet which tells one it is only the
-disguise of a Mohammedan woman.
-
-[Illustration: “THE WOMAN IN WHITE” AT LAHORE (SUGGESTION FOR A
-DISGUISE PARTY)]
-
-Here again it was rather disappointing to see the native bazaars full
-of European goods, and a trivial cheap kind at that. European commerce
-has evidently got its foot in. Blue enamelled basins and cups, tin
-ware, tapes and buttons, braces, socks and ugly woollen scarfs in
-aniline colours are seen everywhere. It is true that one occasionally
-may see a native handicraftsman at work, such as the man who prints
-the ornamental borders on the edges of the muslin veils of the women,
-and picks them out in silver leaf, silver or orange being a favourite
-arrangement. The metal-worker is also frequent, though he often only
-makes zinc stoves. The food shops are the most numerous, set out with
-piles of curious yellow cakes and sweets of all sorts and sizes, the
-cooking stove being often in front of the shop, made of clay or mud
-with a tiny hole in which they produce hot little fires.
-
-Through the bazaars our carriage worked its way as through a labyrinth.
-The mixed throng of buyers and sellers, beggars and brown babies, and
-cheeky little street Arabs, who are inclined to be rude to the stranger
-generally, tongas, buffaloes, herds of goats, stray zebu bulls, and
-fat-tailed sheep.
-
-These latter we first saw at Delhi. They are originally from Tibet. The
-enormous development of the tail, or fleece of the tail, has a very
-extraordinary effect, as if the animal carried a bag of wool behind it,
-both broad and long and nearly touching the ground. Occasionally we saw
-one of these animals (rams) dyed with orange colour, and marked with
-curious patterns all over its fleece.
-
-Passing through the bazaars we arrived at a large open space, and soon
-reached the (Roshanai) gate of the Fort on the other side of it. There
-the English sentry, after saying an order was necessary, called an
-orderly to take us round. Just inside the gate we got a view of the
-old wall of the palace decorated by tiles, the colours being similar
-to those used at Gwalior, at the Man Mandir palace, principally
-turquoise, green, and lemon yellow, the tile-work being arranged in
-bands or friezes of elephants and birds in profile, let into the red
-sandstone.
-
-The very stolid British “Tommy” in khaki conducted us, in slow marching
-order and in solemn silence, up the long sloping road to the square of
-the Fort where he pointed out, without emotion, a colonnaded Hall of
-audience, and then took us through a gateway into the rather spacious
-court of the old palace of Akbar, who also built the Fort. On one side
-of the court was an interesting armoury of Sikh weapons, beginning with
-suits of fine chain mail and Persian-looking steel topis, damasceened
-and bossed circular targes up to flint-locks, and match-locks, and
-blunderbusses.
-
-There was quite a mediæval-looking heavy steel mace, and many sabres,
-and sword sticks, some made with crutch handles terminating in horses’
-heads. There were also a number of steel cuirasses. I believe this
-armoury was arranged by Mr Kipling, the father of Mr Rudyard Kipling,
-who was head of the art school of Lahore for many years, and to whom is
-due the extremely interesting museum.
-
-There were relics of elaborate decoration on the walls and
-vaults of what remained of the palace, and some of the glass
-(convex-mirror-mosaic) work united with gesso-relief ornament, which
-we saw at Udaipur, Amber, Delhi, and other places: but the British
-occupation had tried its best, by introducing hideous chunks of barrack
-buildings, to take the romance and beauty out of the place.
-
-Close to the Fort outside its gate is the Samadh, or burning-place of
-Ranjit Singh. A carved lotus flower, surrounded by eleven smaller ones,
-on a raised platform inside the pavilion-like building, mark the place
-where his body was burned with eleven ladies of his Zenana. Not far
-off rises the dome of the Jama Musjid and its noble minarets of red
-sandstone.
-
-There is a fine park-like country beyond the walls on this side of
-the city with groups of old trees. The minarets and domes of Lahore
-have a striking effect seen from outside the gate. We returned through
-the bazaars a different way, passing the golden domed mosque and also
-the Wazar Khan mosque, the latter a very fine one fronting a small
-square in the middle of the city, and having two large minarets faced
-with enamelled tiles in blue and green and other colours, cobalt
-predominating. The spandrils of the main entrance, and in fact the
-whole of the front, being decorated with tiles in large arabesques and
-borderings, a large Arabic text in blue written boldly over the arch,
-and panels down each flank of smaller scale work. It was the first
-tiled mosque we had seen, and quite characteristic of the art of a
-district which culminates in the renowned tombs at Multan.
-
-At the English club house on the Mall, the pipers of a Highland
-regiment were playing on the lawn in front. The club had well laid out
-and ample lawn tennis courts, large blue durries being hung at each end
-of the courts to stop the balls, and the players had native caddies
-to pick them up. There were zoological gardens near by where we saw
-nylghaus and antelopes and birds of various sorts.
-
-A Victoria memorial on a large scale was in progress at a place where
-branching roads met. The work of the British sculptor in India cannot
-be said to be much more exhilarating than the work of the British
-architect, as a rule, to judge from the specimens we saw, chiefly of
-statues of the late Queen Victoria.
-
-The courts of Justice at Lahore are more successful than most of the
-modern examples in India, perhaps because designed in what might be
-called the local style—the Mogul. Near by in a little garden enclosed
-by clipped hedges was a bronze statue of Lord Laurence offering the
-choice of government by pen or sword to the passer by. It had some
-dramatic expression, though the choice of a momentary attitude in a
-portrait statue is perhaps open to criticism.
-
-We visited the museum, where Mr Percy Brown has succeeded Mr Kipling
-as director. Here is a most interesting collection of typical native
-textiles, including the raised wax designs gilded, silvered, and
-lacquered on grounds of different coloured cloths, an art which is
-still practised in the district with success, traditional designs
-of flowers and birds being repeated in a very skilful and effective
-way, and applied to the adornment of portières, covers, etc. There
-were also good collections of native jewellery and enamels. Champlévé
-enamel, such as is done at Lucknow, was illustrated by specimens in
-different stages from the commencement to the finish, side by side
-with cloissoné (Japanese) illustrated in the same complete way, as
-well as complete models showing native industries and handicrafts in
-operation; interesting old Hindu herbals and manuscripts on vellum with
-characteristic miniatures; drawings of local palaces and gardens in
-plan, elevation and bird’s-eye perspective.
-
-There was a very notable collection of Greco-Buddhist sculptures, which
-were extremely interesting and unusual.
-
-Very little wood-carving, curiously enough, except modern examples
-in screens and furniture, the work of the Art School, exhibited in a
-separate room. The city of Lahore being so rich in carved wood-work
-it was less necessary to have it in the museum, and, of course, much
-better to see it _in situ_. The modern way of selling the spoils of
-old buildings to private collections or to museums is carried on in
-Europe to an alarming extent, so that one begins to fear, in view of
-the rapid destruction of ancient houses now going on, whether there
-will soon be left any genuine bits of antiquity in this commercial
-world. It is better of course that relics of ancient art should find a
-haven in a public museum than that it should perish altogether, but any
-destruction or removal for the express purpose of transportation to a
-museum should be deprecated.
-
-On the whole the Lahore museum was a well-chosen and arranged museum,
-judiciously limited to Indian art, and it was interesting to see the
-groups of natives—men, women, and children—apparently scanning the
-different objects with the greatest interest and with much animated
-conversation among themselves. One afternoon we drove to the Waza Khan
-Mosque, and I made the sketch reproduced here of the entrance to the
-mosque from the carriage. The crowd was curious, but not nearly so
-troublesome as elsewhere, and our conductor, or running footman, kept
-them off pretty well. The square had large pools of mud in it here and
-there after recent rains. Zebus were straying about, or lying down.
-Fruit and good stalls occupied other parts of the ground, and ox-carts
-deposited loads of wood. Men sat in groups in the porch of the mosque,
-or on the steps, from which boys flew their little diamond-shaped paper
-kites. The mysterious-looking white figures of the Mohammedan women
-wandered about like substantial ghosts. We saw a pretty little gazelle
-at one of the stalls, perfectly tame, and a great pet of the native who
-owned it.
-
-The Cashmere travelling merchants, who display their tempting wares
-at all the hotels, spread out their stuffs in profusion—Bokhara
-embroideries, Persian covers, kincobs, turbans, and portières of black,
-red, or green grounds, effectively decorated with designs in the raised
-wax, such as we saw in the museum—and used all their persuasive arts to
-effect sales.
-
-We did not stay long enough in Lahore to see much of the Society there,
-but before leaving we had a visit from the Princess Duleep Singh and
-her sister, who, hearing from friends at Amritzar that we were there,
-came to see us at the hotel. The princess was dressed as a Parsee lady
-in beautiful classical draperies, white with embroidered borders, and
-she drove herself in a dog-cart, but the sister was in European dress.
-The princess recalled the circumstance of my having made a little
-sketch in her brother the prince’s cottage on the Norfolk coast, which
-had been designed for him by Mr Detmar Blow, which we visited when
-staying in the neighbourhood.
-
-[Illustration: THE MERCHANTS OF KASHMIR]
-
-We left Lahore the mid-day Lucknow Mail, after a long wait, the
-platform covered with picturesque groups of squatting natives. We
-eventually shared a compartment, as far as Umballa, with an English
-official, his German wife and a little girl. As far as Umballa on this
-line, coming north, we had already journeyed. The chief incident after
-leaving Lahore was the catching fire of one of the boxes of one of the
-carriages of our train, which caused the passengers hastily to leave
-it, and crowd into other parts of the train, when it was stopped and
-the burning carriage taken off at a small station just before Amritzar.
-
-[Illustration: LAHORE—THE MOSQUE OF WAZA KHAN]
-
-At Umballa, the dining station, which we reached when it was dark, some
-said we had to change, others said not. This was puzzling. One official
-with more authority than the others said emphatically “no,” at last.
-So, having just time, we scurried across the bridge to the refreshment
-room with light hearts and sharp appetites, snatched a hasty meal and
-hurried back to find Moonsawmy, who acted as courier and took charge of
-the tickets, in some difficulty with the officials about the tickets.
-One official (the stationmaster) came up, and then said we ought to
-have changed into the train which was just at that moment steaming out
-of the station, excusing his mistake by saying that he had not till
-then seen our tickets, fussily ordering a humble Hindu clerk to take
-the numbers.
-
-After this we got into our compartment again and settled ourselves for
-a sleep, as we were not due at Lucknow until next morning. During the
-night we were constantly disturbed by people opening the carriage door
-and peering in—no doubt in search of lower berths, which we occupied.
-At one place a Eurasian got in with a quantity of baggage, and got out
-again only a few stations off. On leaving, perceiving he had disturbed
-us he said he was “sorry for the trouble.”
-
-At Barielly another man (English) got in with his traps and rugs and
-settled himself to sleep on the middle berth—which in some carriages
-economises space between the two side ones—though he was at first a
-little taken aback at seeing that one of us was a lady. However, he
-turned out to be a very agreeable companion afterwards, and we got
-quite friendly as the train the next morning approached Lucknow, we
-having previously decided not to stop at Cawnpore.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-LUCKNOW
-
-
-Arriving at Lucknow in due course we parted with our fellow traveller,
-who was met by the military chaplain, and we did not see him again.
-The chaplain kindly gave us some information, and said that the hotel
-we were bound for was reputed to be “the best in India.” This was
-good hearing, and we found it quite borne out by our experience of
-Wurtzler’s, where we presently found ourselves in comfortable rooms,
-bungalow-like, opening on to a verandah. The hotel had formerly been
-a palace, and was rather a handsome building in its way, with a
-round-arched arcaded front, long and low, with a pleasant enclosure of
-trees and flower garden.
-
-[Illustration: IN HOSPITAL, LUCKNOW. THE OPERATING TABLE (PATIENT HAD
-A BIT OF GRIT IN HER EYE AFTER A TRAIN JOURNEY)—SIXTEEN RUPEES WERE
-EXTRACTED!]
-
-There was “a little rift within the lute,” however, which rather
-marred the first moments of our arrival at Lucknow, my wife having
-unfortunately got a little bit of grit in her eye from the engine while
-in the train. There was nothing for it but to drive to the hospital the
-first thing after breakfast. Luckily we caught the chief surgeon (Col.
-Anderson) just as he was attending to some native cases in waiting.
-He at once took us to the “operating room,” which sounded rather
-fearsome, and was indeed a severe place with a polished marble floor,
-a case of surgical instruments and an operating table being the only
-furniture visible. The poor eye-patient had to extend herself on the
-table, while the Colonel very deftly found and quickly removed a tiny
-black speck which had caused all the trouble—working up right under the
-upper lid of the eye. He put some cocaine into the eye first of all,
-and afterwards applied a little lint and lotion. The relief must have
-been worth anything—it might have been described as a lesser Relief of
-Lucknow!
-
-[Illustration: JUGGLERS AT LUCKNOW—THE MANGO TREE TRICK]
-
-The next example of human skill or sleight of hand we witnessed was in
-the juggling, not the surgical, profession. It was a native conjurer
-who, under the arcade of the hotel, showed us the famous mango tree
-trick. As additional attractions, or a sort of side-show, he had
-a large cobra in a round box, which, when the lid was off, reared
-its head all alive and hissing, and ready for a performance with a
-well-to-do mongoose, which was held in readiness by a cord tied tightly
-round its neck, which is apparently the only way in which to secure a
-mongoose.
-
-The man commenced his performance by placing a monkey’s skull on
-the pavement, and sticking a little china doll up in front of it.
-Then he produced a very dry-looking mango seed about the size of a
-small potato, and this he planted carefully in an ordinary earthen
-flower-pot, covering the seed with soil, and then watering it,
-muttering some unknown words over it. He then put it under a cloth
-raised tentwise by a stick, to let it grow, as he said, while he went
-on with a number of small but very skilful conjuring tricks with cards,
-coins, marbles, ring and handkerchief, etc., any of which he offered
-to teach. Presently he lifted the cloth and showed the mango tree
-sending up a shoot of fresh green, and apparently growing vigorously.
-Then he covered it up again and performed some more tricks, after
-which he again uncovered the mango, which now showed a stem and bunch
-of leaves at the top like a miniature tree. Finally, after another
-interval of a few minutes juggling and conjuring, he lifted the cloth
-again, and, holding the pot in one hand, he pulled up the little mango
-tree with the other, showing it had stem, roots, and all. The man had
-an assistant, but he only played a very subordinate part, handing the
-conjurer the various things he wanted from time to time, holding the
-mongoose, but not performing in any way. These wonders were to be seen
-for the fee of three rupees. The conjurer was very proud of his “chits”
-which he showed, and among the signatures were those of “Castlereagh”
-and “Wenlock”; and he asked for a written testimonial in his book.
-
-At Lucknow we had an introduction to the Chief Commissioner, Mr
-Ross Scott, who received us very cordially at his charming house,
-and offered to do anything for us. Among other kindnesses he sent
-my wife (whose health had suffered from the climate everywhere in
-India) a supply of excellent milk from his own cows during her stay,
-which proved of immense benefit. At his house we met Mrs Dowden and
-her daughter, who kindly undertook to show us over the ruins of the
-Residency which were quite close by. The building stands, or what
-remains of it after the bombardment it sustained during the terrible
-days of “the Mutiny,” amid pleasant lawns and fine trees, and creepers
-cover the ruins. In one of the rooms is a good model of the Residency
-as it was in 1857 in the midst of the native city on a rising ground,
-but thickly surrounded by the houses and mosques, from which guns and
-mortars were trained on to it. These were shown planted on flat roofs
-or in courtyards, wherever there was vantage ground. Nothing but a
-few shapeless ruins remain hereabouts now of the old native city,
-which has since been curtailed and cut in two by a broad road for the
-rapid movement of troops. However savage and cruel the sepoys may have
-been, the British reprisals were certainly severe. They seemed to
-have practically “wiped out” old Lucknow afterwards. We were shown a
-building—the Sikander Bagh—a high-walled enclosure, once a fair rose
-garden, which was taken by Colin Campbell, and where 2000 rebels were
-bayoneted without mercy by the British troops. A young English officer,
-speaking professionally, perhaps, we met at a friend’s house, said that
-Sikander Bagh gave him more satisfaction than any other memorial of
-the mutiny. He positively “gloated over it,” and intended to go there
-again and “gloat.” It is said even that British soldiers bayoneted even
-the sick and wounded Hindu soldiers in the hospitals who begged to be
-shot instead!
-
-The whole place is overshadowed by memories of that awful period.
-Nothing can impair the courage and endurance of the heroic defenders of
-the Residency; but it is now, I believe, generally admitted that the
-outbreak was not without its causes, and that the government of the day
-did not act judiciously, to say the least. It is commonly called “The
-Mutiny,” but it was really an insurrection, which must from various
-causes have been smouldering for some time before it burst into flame.
-The “greased cartridges” were only the last straw. There seems to have
-been much discontent. Many sepoys, too, had been disbanded. The British
-annexation, the deposition and deportation of the reigning King of
-Oudh and the confiscation of his revenues, must all be considered as
-provocative causes; and it is a question whether at any time British
-rule has made itself loved in India, or the British residents have ever
-really understood the Indian people. Native feeling must have been
-generally ignored.
-
-It was a formidable revolt, accompanied, no doubt, by explosions of
-race hatred and by terrible cruelties, but there was savagery on both
-sides—a desperate attempt to regain possession of their own country and
-its government on the part of the princes and people.
-
-The question remains, with all the official solicitude of the
-British government for the welfare of the natives, all the railways,
-engineering, and irrigation works, are they really better off than they
-were under native rule?
-
-Are they not, though under British administration, more heavily taxed
-than they were under the native kings? Mr William Digby, C.I.E., who
-had long personal and official experience in India, brings a formidable
-array of facts and statistics (from official sources, too), in his
-“Prosperous British India,” in support of the view that they _are_,
-and, moreover, that the ryot—the tiller of the soil—is gradually
-becoming poorer under our rule.
-
-To a passing observer, the Hindus—nay, the people of India, either
-Hindus or Mohammedans—can never be Europeanised. There is a great
-gulf between the East and the West. After all these years of British
-occupation and administration, the two races live entirely apart and
-separate. In religion, manners, and customs, and sentiment, they are
-fundamentally different, opposed, one might say.
-
-The British remain a transitory garrison of military and civil
-administrative aliens, in the midst of vast populations, rooted in the
-traditions, religious beliefs and observances of untold centuries,
-during which they have carried on the same mode of life, and who seem
-neither to seek or to desire change.
-
-The mere struggle to live must occupy the energies of the vast
-majority, but among the more educated and leisured classes of natives
-there is a growing feeling of what we should call nationalism in
-Europe, though it may be more strictly racial than national. It is
-difficult, however, to see how anything like a universal movement over
-the whole peninsula could arise, considering the differences of caste,
-race and religion, or the wide differences which separate Hindus and
-Mohammedans. Some, however, rather think that political change may be
-forced by bankruptcy, considering the poverty of the people and the
-limits of taxation being reached.
-
-We were shown, at the Residency, the room where Sir Henry Laurence was
-struck with the shell, the holes its explosion made in the wall, his
-grave also, and many other memorials which have a profound interest
-for the English visitors. Old rust-eaten, muzzle-loading muskets,
-sabres, and shot and shell, with which the Residency was peppered, were
-collected in a group in one of the rooms, and the place, as far as
-possible, has been made an historical museum of the period of the siege.
-
-Our friends introduced us at the Chatter Manzel, formerly a palace
-of the kings of Oudh, but now used as an English club. The rooms
-were of spacious and good proportions—long in comparison with their
-width. Proportion, in fact, is the principal notable quality of
-the local architecture at Lucknow, the details being comparatively
-common-place after the beautiful inventive detail and decoration
-of the Mogul architects at Delhi and Agra, the ornamentation being
-mostly mere repetitions. After the marble inlay of the Taj Mahal and
-the Diwan-ud-Daulat, and Sikandra, or the rich arabesques of the
-Zenana rooms at Amber, the white and yellow wash and the rather
-coarse plaster work of the palaces and pavilions of Lucknow look,
-comparatively speaking, cheap. The stuccoed domes of the mosques miss
-the splendour of the gold and ivory-like marble seen elsewhere. Even
-the Jama Musjid, fine in scale as it is, lacks the charm of colour.
-There was a smaller mosque near the old stone bridge, however, which
-stood out against the deep-blue sky in dazzling whiteness, but this
-only showed how beautiful plain whitewash appears illuminated by the
-Indian sun—pearly with delicate reflections and warm shadows.
-
-The Iambara had a beautifully-proportioned court, with steps up to the
-pavilion, the symmetry of the spacing being rather pleasantly broken by
-the mosque on one side being placed at a different angle in order to
-point to the direction of Mecca, as all Mohammedan mosques must do.
-
-Inside the pavilion, under canopies of heavy embroidery in gold and
-silver, supported by chased silver poles, were the tombs of one of
-the kings and his zenana. On the walls were mirrors which reminded us
-of our English empire-period framed mantle-glasses. Some of these had
-curious tempera paintings inserted in their frames of native birds
-and trees, and there were other Indian paintings, one showing General
-or Captain Martin—the French adventurer who founded the Martinière
-at Lucknow in the early nineteenth century—in a blue coat and gold
-lace and white nankeen trousers, like a naval officer of that period,
-conferring with the King of Oudh and his court. An image of a winged
-horse (a Buddhist symbol) strikingly resembled the Assyrian type of
-winged man-headed creatures, the treatment being remarkably similar.
-The crowned head, with long, black, curled locks, and formal, rather
-small, wings, with each feather expressed. There was an umbrella
-attached, which moved to and fro over the head of the figure by
-clock-work.
-
-We were interested to see in the Daulat Khan—a sort of gallery up a
-steep flight of steps—a series of full-length portraits of the kings
-of Oudh in their robes, painted by English artists. Most of these were
-signed by my friend T. Erat Harrison, 1882–4, and I recalled the fact
-of having seen him at work on one of them about that time.
-
-An English lady, Mrs Dowden (wife of Colonel Dowden), was kind enough
-to conduct us through Lucknow and its wonders, and she proved an
-excellent cicerone, and waved off all unnecessary attentions from
-caretakers and their hangers-on with the decisive air of a resident.
-
-We passed a hideous clock tower—one of many in India—put up by some
-modern architect (as a Jubilee memorial, I think). It is astonishing
-what monstrosities in clock towers have been perpetrated by modern
-architects in India.
-
-Finally, we got to the gate of the old city of Lucknow, by which we
-entered the principal street of the bazaar. There were many interesting
-native shops. At one I noticed some blocks of patterns for printing
-by hand on cotton. They were cut in some hard wood. The handicraft,
-too, was still carried on here. There were many pretty bead necklaces,
-tassels, and quaint toys. We visited, up a steep narrow staircase,
-a muslin and jewel merchant’s store. He showed some charming Indian
-muslins spangled with silver spots and patterns. He also had one or two
-pieces of old Lucknow enamel not ordinarily seen in the bazaars now.
-
-[Illustration: BETTER LUCK AT LUCKNOW—THROUGH THE CHOWK ON AN ELEPHANT]
-
-We visited another friend who had been spending the winter at
-Lucknow—Mrs Jopling-Rowe, the well-known artist, whose son is a
-Magistrate here, dining with them at their charming bungalow one
-evening. Mr Commissioner Jopling very courteously placed elephants at
-our disposal on which to ride through the chowk.
-
-An irrigation well near the hotel interested me, and I made a sketch
-of it in a chequered shade. The yoke of oxen and two natives at work
-hauling up the water for the garden in a leather bucket. While thus
-engaged another friend travelling in the East came up, so that as
-regards friends we were quite in luck’s way at Lucknow.
-
-After this it was time to go and meet the elephants our friends had
-ordered at the chowk. Mrs Jopling-Rowe took us in her carriage through
-Wentworth Park, and past the palaces to the gate of the city, where
-we found two fine elephants in waiting. My wife and I mounted one of
-them by the usual ladder, the animal kneeling. A young officer who
-was of the party, however, showed us another way. He got a leg up by
-means of the trunk, and so over the elephant’s head on to his back. We
-then processed through the bazaar (the chowk), preceded by a native
-policeman, in khaki with a scarlet turban, to clear the way, and two
-more behind. The elephants seemed to quite fill up the narrow street,
-so that there was danger of a block when we met an ox-cart. A very
-comprehensive view is to be had from an elephant’s back, as one can see
-not only a long way ahead, but well into the shops where the people are
-at work, and also command the balconies and roofs, where there were
-often interesting groups.
-
-[Illustration: IRRIGATION WELL, LUCKNOW]
-
-We threaded our way through the chowk, passing at its end under one
-of the old arched gateways and along a narrower street, which led
-us out into the broad military road, which the British, after the
-revolt, ruthlessly cut right through the old city, uglifying it, of
-course. There is a wonderful variety and richness, again, here, in the
-old house fronts with arcaded balconies and doorways of carved wood.
-The patterns, chiefly running borders, treated very fancifully and
-delicately. The native houses were not so high as in Lahore, but the
-carving might compare with the same sort of work there in detail.
-
-We lunched at the charming abode of another English official and his
-wife (Mr and Mrs Saunders), who were very pleasant and hospitable. The
-lady had considerable taste in furniture and decoration, and her rooms
-showed the influence of white and green, and looked cool and agreeable
-in a light key.
-
-Afterwards we drove to see the celebrated Martinière, the young officer
-accompanying us. The Martinière is the fantastic palace built by the
-French General or Captain Martin, before mentioned, and is a curious
-conglomerate sort of scenic design of late Italo-French Renaissance
-character, reminding one rather of Isola Bella, semi-classical figures
-being perched on every pinnacle and balustrade, and there were two
-grotesque lions, doing duty as supporters or consoles, with mouths so
-open that the sky could be seen through them. The building towered high
-in several stories in the centre, and spread out wide into two curved
-long and low wings of one story, opening on to broad terraces and steps
-leading to a small lake, from the middle of which rose a fluted column.
-The general’s heart is said to be buried beneath this. The Martinière
-was intended by him to be a college for boys. He founded another at
-Calcutta, and another in his native town—Lyons—in France. Martin
-seems to have had a curious, eventful history, beginning as a French
-prisoner, under the British, afterwards entering the British army and
-becoming a captain, when he took service under the Nawab of Oudh and
-became general of his army, finally accumulating by some means a large
-fortune, which he spent on this building and in founding the schools
-which bear his name.
-
-We passed another house ruined at the time of “the Mutiny,” whence
-the women and children were removed to from the Residency, and where
-Lieutenant Paul is buried.
-
-Mr Ross Scott entertained us with a distinguished company to dinner at
-his hospitable house before we left Lucknow. One English colonel of the
-party with whom I had a conversation had recently returned from Burmah,
-and had brought back some fine silk embroidered robes, some china
-bowls, and caps. The latter were of soft felt, and could be worn either
-with the edge turned down or up, forming a brim.
-
-The colonel had lived some time in Burmah and had seen service there,
-having been through the British campaign against the “Dacoits.” He
-said that the Dacoits were largely composed of men of the disbanded
-native army (for which I suppose our Government were responsible), and
-they roamed about the country preying on the people, plundering and
-sometimes murdering them. The Burmese people, he said, only wanted to
-be left alone in peace (like most people). He had made many friends
-among them, as he knew the language and had lived amongst them at
-that time. On revisiting the country and finding things under British
-control and administration, he found most of his Burmese native friends
-in prison. They were there, he said, merely for breaking some official
-regulation which probably they did not in the least understand. The
-natives complained to him that the English officials lived aloof from
-them, and were not friendly and sympathetic as he (the Colonel) had
-been, and they never got any forwarder.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-BENARES
-
-
-Our next destination was Benares. I had for long had the feeling, from
-the descriptions one had read and the photographs one had seen of this
-wonderful place, that it would sum up and centralise, as it were, to
-the eye the whole life of the Indian people, while it would also be a
-symbol of their faith to the mind.
-
-It was, therefore, with unusual anticipations that we turned our faces
-thither, and on the 21st of January took the early morning train from
-Lucknow to the great focus of Hindu worship on the sacred Ganges. The
-kind commissioner’s native servant, in scarlet, awaited us at the
-station with a parting gift and a note of introduction to the Maharajah
-of Benares.
-
-The train passed through a richer and more fruitful country than usual,
-but level, plain all the way, reaching Benares Cantonment about two
-o’clock. We drove to Clark’s hotel, which has a pretty portico full of
-palms, and a splendid orange creeper, then in full flower, hung over
-the usual bungalow annexe. The house was quiet, and had a semi-private
-aspect, more like a country bungalow.
-
-Finding the Maharajah’s palace was some five or six miles off and on
-the other side of the river, we were advised to leave our letter at
-the Guest House with our cards. The Guest House was quite near by.
-Continuing our drive through the bazaar we thought the main street
-wider than most of the native cities, but the bazaars did not look so
-busy, and many shops were vacant. Balconies, the roofs of which were
-supported on arcades of slender columns with Hindu caps, were of a
-different type to those hitherto seen. In the European quarter there
-were poorly-designed, would-be Gothic British buildings, and mission
-churches of the usual bald type. There was a Queen’s Park with the
-commonplace iron railing and low stone parapet enclosing it, these
-innovations, as usual, quite spoiling the surroundings of a native city.
-
-The next morning we had a visit from the Maharajah’s private secretary,
-who invited us to drive in the afternoon to visit the Buddhist topes
-and sculptures at Sarnath about five miles from Benares. An American
-lady we had previously met was to be of the party, and she was staying
-at the Guest House, and at the appointed hour the Maharajah’s carriage,
-with a coachman in a green and gold turban and scarlet tunic, and two
-active young Hindus, similarly dressed, acted as running footmen to
-clear the way, when not at their posts standing at the back of the
-carriage. We called at the Guest House for our American friend. It
-was a more palatial building than the one at Gwalior, standing in a
-small park with outer gates and a drive. The house was in the classic
-style—a white building with flat roof and columned portico. In the
-large hall on the ground floor there was a small coloured statuette of
-the Maharajah on horseback, photographs and portraits upon the walls,
-including English miniatures of an English officer and his ladies of
-the early nineteenth century, and some engravings of portraits of Queen
-Caroline. A stuffed lioness was lying on a side-board.
-
-[Illustration: THE MAHARAJAH PLACES HIS CARRIAGE AT OUR DISPOSAL]
-
-The road to Sarnath lay through avenues of fine trees a great part of
-the way, chiefly mangoes, banyans, acacias, and tamarinds. The young
-trees planted to fill the gaps were protected by circular fences,
-sometimes topped by prickly pears. Sometimes the circular fence was
-made of bricks, an aperture being left between every alternate brick.
-
-At Sarnath we saw the results of recent excavations. There was a
-wonderful pillar made out of a single piece of marble, but fractured
-in digging it out. One part stood upright in the earth, the other lay
-horizontally. The top or cap was placed under an awning near by. It was
-formed of four lions facing outwards, their heads, chests, and fore
-limbs being alone visible, their claws resting on the rim of a circular
-fillet, on which was sculptured in low relief a horse, an elephant, a
-lion, and a bull, each animal being placed between a wheel of a solar
-character, each wheel having twenty-four spokes. Below this fillet
-was a curved drooping fringe of leaves such as are characteristic in
-Persian columns as well as Hindu. The marble of which the column and
-the sculptures were made was of a peculiar greyish almost of a flesh
-colour, with small spots. Both the column and the sculptures were very
-highly polished, and the treatment of the lions was remarkably Greek in
-character with perhaps a touch of Persian or even Assyrian formalism
-in the treatment of the heads and manes of the lions. The animals in
-relief, between the wheels, too, were remarkably free, spirited, and
-well modelled.
-
-There were the remains of an ancient Buddhist temple near. In what was
-probably the inner shrine was a sculptured standing figure of Buddha,
-about two-thirds life size, in alto relievo. The figure was represented
-in a long robe, the limbs being boldly expressed through the drapery,
-which hung broadly and smoothly over them, without folds, except at the
-sides, which were treated in the rather formal spiral manner of early
-Greek work.
-
-The American lady remarked on seeing this figure that “The gentleman
-seems to have put his legs through his clothes.”
-
-The figure was framed in a border of astralagus, cut in low relief,
-having a running escalloped border outside it and stepped mouldings.
-The doorway to this shrine, too, had a richly carved bordering.
-
-There were many most interesting fragments collected together in and
-around a building near. In the court was a large circular carved stone.
-This was called Buddha’s umbrella, and its original position was over
-the head of a large figure of the saint, sculptured in the round, close
-by. The design of the umbrella, a lotus flower, the flower of life,
-the petals radiating from the centre, and enclosing this were a series
-of concentric rings of pattern; the first consisted of rosettes, or
-smaller lotus flowers, alternating with grotesque lions, winged horses,
-elephants, camels, and bulls; the next showed the anthemion, doubled
-or reversed, alternating with the fylfot or gammadion 卍, and another
-form frequent in early Greek pattern (as well as Chinese) the geometric
-four-petalled flower. There were numerous small figures of Buddha
-here, treated in a similar way to the one first mentioned, as well as
-other sculptures of a Hindu type, resembling those at Ellora.
-
-There we saw the great Tope (called the Dhamek). This stood on rather
-higher ground, and was apparently built of rubble, which was exposed at
-the top, but the sides were covered with fine bands of carved ornament
-in stone, carried to a considerable height, and consisting of a frieze
-of bold scroll work of a Greek character, alternating with bands of
-a kind of Chinese-like diagonal diaper, divided by plain belts of
-stone. At intervals these bands were intersected by flat dome-shaped
-forms slightly projecting beyond the bands, and in these were recesses
-intended, no doubt, originally to contain seated figures of Buddha.
-These flat dome-shaped forms, connected by bands, suggested a palisade,
-which may have been the original way of enclosing and protecting these
-topes or tombs; and they may also have been the early form or prototype
-of the curious clustered dome-shaped pinnacles which are multiplied to
-form the spires of Jain temples so often seen in India.
-
-Sarnath is the place where Buddha began to preach, and the great tope
-is supposed to mark the spot where his first sermon was delivered. The
-excavations of General Cunningham here disclose the fragments of a
-great city which probably stood here about 2000 years ago.
-
-Returning to Benares from this intensely interesting spot, we dined at
-the Guest House with our American friend. The rooms were luxuriously
-upholstered and furnished from Europe, and were occupied by the Prince
-and Princess of Wales when they were here in 1905. The dinner was
-excellently cooked and served by native attendants, with the choicest
-wines and liquors.
-
-There were some lovely old Indian miniatures on vellum framed and
-hanging on the wall of one of the salons, representing various scenes
-in the life of a Maharajah—a cock-fight, polo, reception of a foreign
-embassy (in Dutch seventeenth century costume), and other subjects,
-each full of charming details of architecture, dress and decoration.
-Besides these there were the usual official photographic groups,
-showing English officers, princes, and governor-generals grouped around
-the Maharajah—in one the Czar of Russia appeared. Indian carpets
-were on the floor, and English sporting prints on the walls of the
-dining-room.
-
-The next day, January 23rd, His Highness’s secretary had arranged to
-send a carriage for us quite early (about 7 A.M.), to take us to see
-the ghats. When we reached the river side, which is a considerable
-drive from the Guest House, we found a beautiful state barge awaiting
-us. It was shaped and painted like a peacock, and had a little pavilion
-in the centre. In this lovely vessel we embarked, and glided slowly
-down the river with the stream, guided by the scarlet-jacketed oarsmen,
-with their long bamboo handled oars, and a broad steering paddle at the
-stern.
-
-[Illustration: BENARES: VIEWING THE GHATS FROM THE MAHARAJAH’S PEACOCK
-BOAT]
-
-The spectacle of Benares from a boat on the Ganges is perhaps the most
-extraordinary sight in all India. At every ghat or opening to the
-river, down the great flights of steps, a throng of natives in all the
-colours of the rainbow press to the water’s edge. Some plunge in, some
-approach timidly, and very gradually submerge themselves. Their brown
-skins shining in the water. The men always have some sort of waist
-cloth on, but the women go in in their garments, or, at least, clad to
-their waists. All ages are there—it recalled the mediæval allegories
-of the Fountain of Youth. One does not often see infants dipped, though
-they are, occasionally, by their parents, and object to the water in
-the same natural and vigorous manner as European babies are apt to do
-at their baptism.
-
-Old tottering women and men may be seen, as well as the young, strong
-and vigorous, all earnestly washing, or performing strange genuflexions
-with the most determined devotion. Characteristic features of this
-wonderful scene are the large matting umbrellas of the priests, who sit
-on small platforms of bamboo raised on the steps. These expect fees to
-be paid them by those who come to bathe at the ghats. Rows of snake
-charmers greet the traveller on landing at the ghats, who turn hissing
-cobras out of circular boxes and hold them aloft or twine them round
-their necks, or perhaps, as an extra attraction, empty out a swarm of
-scorpions to catch the eye of the stranger, all eager to perform the
-marvels of their art on the slightest encouragement—and a few rupees.
-Sacred zebu bulls wander about and often lie on the steps.
-
-It seems strange that people should lave and drink of the water, which
-is fouled one would suppose by all sorts of impurities at the margin.
-Washing of clothes goes on everywhere, decayed flowers float along,
-even bodies of drowned dogs are seen occasionally. It must have been
-at Benares that Æsop’s fable of the two pots was born, for there the
-earthen and brazen vessels might quite possibly float down the stream
-together. Pots are scoured on the steps, and at the Burning Ghat they
-pour the ashes of the dead into the river.
-
-[Illustration: WE SEE SNAKES AT BENARES]
-
-At the Burning Ghat they pile up logs of wood to form the pyre, and
-the white turbaned dark figures, with nothing on but waist cloths,
-are kept busy at their ghastly work. Some of the bodies are brought
-down with flowers and chanting: others lie there with no following or
-ceremony: some are swathed in red or white cloth like mummies, others
-as they were born are lifted on to the piles of logs, which being set
-alight, soon reduce all to the same condition. Some of the bodies are
-carefully dipped in the Ganges before being burned, and are often left
-at the water’s edge while the pyre is being prepared. Wood was placed
-over as well as under the bodies, and a torch was put to the mouth.
-Other bodies, again, are taken out in boats unburned and apparently
-dressed and seated in chairs, and suddenly in mid-stream are toppled
-over into the water. We saw an old man disposed of in this way. Our
-boatman pointed him out as a specially holy person, and we did not
-realise he was a corpse. The bodies of infants, swathed in white, are
-also treated in this way.
-
-The Maharajah’s secretary explained that the Ganges water had been
-analysed by European experts and pronounced to be the best water in the
-world, having a peculiar property of destroying the germs of disease.
-It was difficult, however, to see how even “the best water” could
-avoid getting fouled with such operations constantly going on; but of
-course there is a strong stream all the time, so that everything must
-eventually be carried down to the sea.
-
-A continuous many-coloured stream of pilgrims, bearing huge bundles
-of bedding, were constantly moving along behind this busy life of the
-bathing ghats, ascending or descending the great flights of steps
-leading up through the various gates to the city. It seemed to be part
-of that universal exodus we had witnessed at every railway station
-in India. It is said that representatives from every village in the
-peninsula may be found at Benares.
-
-Then, as a no less striking background to these extraordinary human
-groups, rise the domes of temples and minarets of palaces, their golden
-vanes and finials glittering against the deep blue sky. Windows,
-balconies and terraces placed high up, with vast walls below them.
-These great walls, which give so much distinction and breadth to the
-river front of Benares, have a practical reason, inasmuch as it is a
-necessity thus to raise the temple and palace floors, owing to the
-sudden rising of the Ganges in the rainy season, when these walls are
-sometimes hidden in the waters.
-
-The musical accompaniments of the spectacle consist in the weird and
-wandering notes which issue from the temples, produced by a sort
-of hautboy, and the subdued thud of the tom-toms. I saw a dusky
-long-haired fakir stand on the steps at the Mahikarunika ghat and sound
-a long straight brass trumpet.
-
-After voyaging in the peacock boat the whole length of the ghats, we
-returned to our carriage-in-waiting at a convenient point from which
-to approach the Golden Temple. From the main street of the Bazaar we
-were conducted by the secretary down a very narrow passage crowded with
-worshippers, and then up a dark staircase to a terrace from which we
-could see the cluster of gilded copper domes. Afterwards in the sacred
-precincts we saw the “well of knowledge,” but did not drink of it,
-having too much foreknowledge of the condition of its water.
-
-Our next excursion was to pay a visit to the Maharajah at his palace.
-We were conducted by his secretary in the carriage as before, driving
-to the river side opposite the palace some six miles off. On the road
-we stopped to see the famous Monkey Temple—a Hindu Temple in an arcaded
-court of the usual type. This court was full of monkeys—a sandy-brown
-coloured sort with pink faces, probably Macaques—not so handsome as
-the wild silver grey ones we had seen at Ahmedabad. They accepted
-offerings, but not so greedily, as they were evidently well fed, and
-dried peas lay about untouched. They gambolled about the temple at
-their sweet will. These monkeys are sacred to Vishnu, and represent
-Hunuman the monkey god.
-
-There was a fine tank with steps to the water’s edge, close by the
-temple. Just before this we passed the Hindu College which Mrs Annie
-Besant has established for the higher education of native children of
-both sexes—but not a mixed school. This work has been liberally endowed
-by the Maharajah of Benares, who also granted the site. Mrs Besant is
-the principal, but owing to the illness of Colonel Alcott, she was not
-then there, being at Madras nursing the Colonel in what proved to be
-his last illness.
-
-Reaching the river side, a boat was in waiting to take us across to the
-palace, rowed by two Hindu boys—at least they started rowing, but soon
-we got into shallows, where they took to poling, and finally had to get
-out and push the boat along, until getting into deeper water again they
-rowed us to the palace steps.
-
-It was quite a high steep flight, no doubt existing for the same
-river reason as the high walls of Benares—to be out of the reach of
-the floods. There were numbers of natives ascending and descending or
-grouped on the steps.
-
-We climbed up, and entered the palace up more stairs, and were shown
-into a large reception salon, where much of the furniture was “under
-canvas,” but there was one handsome couch displayed, inlaid with
-ivory. Presently H.H. the Maharajah entered, accompanied by his two
-chief officers, who spoke English well, his painter in ordinary, and
-several attendants. Chairs were placed in the centre of the room,
-around a small marble table. The Maharajah seated himself, and we with
-the private secretary grouped ourselves about him. The Maharajah was
-dressed in a small-patterned long tunic of pink brocaded with gold, a
-small round cap on his head, close fitting white trousers and patent
-leather shoes. He seemed quite merry and pleased to see us. I showed
-him my book of sketches, which interested him, as he said he had never
-seen drawings of the kind before. His painter in ordinary, to whom I
-was introduced, was also interested, and asked some questions through
-the secretary, not himself speaking English. He had painted the full
-length portraits of the Maharajahs which hung aloft in this salon.
-The Prince presently rose and invited us to the terrace, to which we
-passed after him, through an arcade, an attendant holding a large silk
-umbrella over him. There was a very fine view from this terrace up
-and down the river. The city of Benares, with its domes and minarets,
-seen far down on the left, and the open plain country opposite. The
-secretary said that when the Ganges rose the city looked as if it was
-floating on the surface of the water.
-
-[Illustration: THE MAHARAJAH’S RECEPTION, DECORATING THE VISITORS]
-
-We then all returned to the salon (or Durbar Hall, as I ought to
-have called it) and took our leave, H.H. presenting us with a book
-of photographs of the ghats, with his own portrait, both of which he
-inscribed. Finally he placed necklaces of some kind of gold or gilt
-tissue around the necks of the ladies, and one of silver-tissue around
-mine, and concluded by putting scent on our handkerchiefs from a
-handsome silver bottle.
-
-Before we left the palace the Maharajah’s jewels were shown to
-us—wonderful strings of rubies and emeralds almost as big as hen’s
-eggs. These were in rather worn and faded cases of velvet, and offered
-up on rusty old tea trays—a strange mixture of splendour and squalor.
-
-The secretary then took us by carriage to see a Hindu Temple, covered
-with sculpture, standing clear on a raised platform ascended by a
-flight of steps, and surrounded by the usual open court. We saw several
-fine elephants waiting at a gateway, and afterwards visited the
-Maharajah’s pleasant flower garden, prettily laid out with long centre
-tanks, and rose trellises, terraces, and pavilions. From here we soon
-reached the river side, and embarking in the boat again, returned in
-the same manner we had come, returning to our quarters in the dusk of
-the evening, the secretary leaving us at his dwelling at Benares.
-
-The Maharajah having placed a boat and a carriage at our disposal, we
-arranged to visit the ghats again the next day, especially as I was
-anxious to obtain a sketch or two of the wonderful scenes by the river.
-So driving to the steps again we embarked, taking Moonsawmy with us
-to interpret. I got the boatmen to stop the boat off the Manikaranika
-Ghat,[B] which is perhaps the most striking of all, with its red
-sandstone pinnacles, immense flights of steps and terraces. Here I
-worked till noon, when one had rather the sensation of everything
-curling up with the heat of the sun, including one’s own frame! The
-next morning we again returned to the river, using the Maharajah’s
-carriage and boat, which latter was not, however, the beautiful
-peacock barge of our first morning, but a very substantial sort of
-house-boat, with plenty of space on the upper deck or flat roof of the
-house, and solid chairs to sit on. This time I chose the Nepal Temple
-for my subject. This temple, with its pagoda-like roof and shining
-golden finial, had a Chinese aspect. The temple itself was of a deep
-rich Indian red, and had a terrace in front on the top of a high wall
-close to the river, on one side being the entrance to the palace with
-two minarets. A mass of dark green foliage partly shaded the Temple on
-the left hand and added to the charm and richness of the subject—the
-throng of figures on the steps, and the boats rocking on the clear
-green water, completing the picture at the river’s edge, alive with
-colour and movement. The procession of pilgrims in an endless line, and
-the whole human drama going on just as before, and as it has been every
-day for ages.
-
- [B] See frontispiece.
-
-The moon was now again bright at nights and it was much warmer. We
-heard the jackals again as at Udaipur.
-
-We met two London friends at the hotel, and made some pleasant
-acquaintances—a young American who had been travelling in China and
-Japan and Java and was going on to Europe; also three young Oxford men,
-connected with the Oxford Mission, I understood—one of them on his way
-to take up some official post in Japan.
-
-The roses at Clark’s Hotel were very profuse, a beautiful silver bowl
-of Benares work full of them each day decorated our table.
-
-It was extremely quiet except for the almost continual cry of a bird
-I could not name, but which at first we thought was a pea-fowl. The
-note, however, was not hoarse or grating but full and bell-like, though
-very monotonous, consisting of two notes. We heard this bird everywhere
-south after Benares.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CALCUTTA—DARJEELING
-
-
-With parting compliments to the Maharajah, whom I ventured to present,
-and his officers, with photographs of some of my pictures, we left
-Benares for Calcutta on January 26th, departing by a mid-day train,
-belated as usual. This took us to Mogul Serai, where we changed into
-the Calcutta mail. At the station it was difficult to find a place for
-the soles of our feet, as the whole of the platform was occupied by
-native infantry, in khaki, who were camping down with their arms piled
-and their baggage around them.
-
-The Calcutta mail was preceded by the limited mail, consisting chiefly
-of post-office vans, but having room for a few passengers. One of our
-friends of the Oxford party who were going on by it very kindly tried
-to get us places also, but there was no room left. However, the other
-mail followed very quickly, in which we found plenty of room, our only
-fellow-traveller being an American.
-
-We had, before reaching Mogul Serai, obtained a farewell glimpse of
-Benares as we crossed the iron bridge over the Ganges, below the city,
-and saw the slender minarets of the Aurangzer Mosque, and the smoke of
-the Burning Ghat. The country for some distance was richer and more
-fruitful than usual, and well clad with trees, among which were many
-fine cocoa palms, their smooth, slender stems having a steely blue
-effect against the deep green foliage of mangoes and acacias.
-
-The scenery grew tamer afterwards, and generally flat, with occasional
-mud-walled and thatch-roofed villages huddled together.
-
-After passing as bad a night as might be expected in the train, we got
-into Calcutta about six in the morning at the Howrah station.
-
-After some difficulty in getting a tickorgary—the Indian equivalent
-for a “four-wheeler”—we had rather a long drive to the Grand Hotel,
-crossing the river by a bridge just outside the station, where there
-was a bathing ghat, gaily populous at that hour, the bathing operations
-being followed by breakfast on the steps or in the pavilions on the
-terrace behind.
-
-The streets of Calcutta looked rather dingy and neglected. The hotel
-was vast but gloomy, and the prices high; but a bath and a rest after
-the long railway journey were very welcome, and we were glad to get our
-letters. We found the temperature much warmer, however, and more like
-Bombay.
-
-The Minto Fête—a sort of bazaar and military tournament
-combined—absorbed a great deal of attention among the residents. This
-occupied a large enclosure on the Esplanade, under canvas. The familiar
-posters used for the Military Tournament in London met the eye on all
-sides, with gay fluttering bunting strung across the streets as it
-appeared the Amir was expected here too, though his visit was to be
-considered “private.”
-
-[Illustration: THE SOOTHSAYER AT CALCUTTA—(OR PALMISTRY UNDER THE
-PALMS)]
-
-One of our introductions here was to Miss Sorabji, a Parsee lady of
-much influence, and a most interesting personality, well known and
-beloved by a large circle of English friends. She had a charming house,
-in a garden of palms, in Carnac Street. We found her entertaining a
-party of fashionable ladies at afternoon tea, on a shady lawn in front
-of her house. In the midst of the group, squatting on the grass, was a
-soothsayer and palmist—a Hindu “wise man,” robed in white, but without
-any turban. He had some oblong-shaped pages out of an ancient book of
-palmistry, and some curious phrenological-looking diagrams lying on
-the grass in front of him, and these he appeared to be consulting from
-time to time, while with great deliberation he examined the hands of
-the ladies, who gazed at him quite anxiously, as if he were really an
-inspired diviner of their lives. This man was supposed to be gifted
-with very special powers, and seemed to be taken quite seriously, but
-as far as we could gather, he was only mentioning the usual range of
-probable or not impossible events which might happen in the course of
-any life, though, no doubt, more or less adapted to the circumstances
-and character of the lady before him, as far as he could guess it,
-and calculated to fit individual cases. He certainly looked wily and
-cunning enough for anything, as he moved his finger mysteriously over
-the charts, or pretended to count or reckon something while keeping the
-lady’s left hand open before him. A curious scene altogether, with the
-afternoon tea-table, and the ordinary chatter going on.
-
-There was an Industrial Exhibition open on some open ground near a
-large, yellow-washed, eighteenth century style of church. It combined
-a switchback railway, and some of the popular attractions of Earl’s
-Court, with an interesting show of hand-weaving in linens, silks, and
-carpets, with dyeing, printing, and other industries, the exhibits
-being those of societies or firms. In some cases the work of various
-schools of Art were shown, as that of the Maharajah’s, at Jaipur,
-chiefly metal work and enamelling. Among the brass work were to be seen
-the spherical brass rolling lamps, pierced with an all-over intricate
-floral design, that left fairly evenly distributed apertures through
-which the rays of light would strike when the lamp was lighted within.
-This, by an ingenious piece of mechanism, always maintained its level
-position, though the sphere might be rolled along the ground like a
-ball. It could be opened by hinges in two equal hemispherical halves.
-These lamps are used at festivals in the temples, and have a beautiful
-effect.
-
-Calcutta is not impressive architecturally, certainly. The modern
-buildings are of the usual commercial type as a rule. Government House
-has a certain stateliness with its white columned porticoes among the
-palms and greenery of other trees; and Carnac Street is a long wide
-street of large detached residences standing in ample gardens. The
-Esplanade is a wide open plain in the midst of the town, with some
-groups of trees upon it, but rather brown and desolate, the turf being
-burned by the sun. The native quarters are very squalid. The bazaars
-and shops were often tumble-down temporary-looking sheds and structures
-of bamboo sticks and straw, old tins being often seen thrown on to
-weight the rotten matting or thatch which formed the roofs, which were
-often, too, patched with corrugated iron. Occasionally there was a
-house-front which had seen better days—a former villa or mansion, with
-a columned portico, but now become a squalid tenement house.
-
-These were at least one’s impressions on a very short visit; but it
-was so oppressive that we were anxious to get away to Darjeeling, and
-so took our departure on January 28th by an afternoon train from the
-Iscaldah station. For about an hour or so after leaving Calcutta, the
-train runs through beautiful groves of palms and mangoes, plantains and
-bamboos, intersected by tanks of water, vegetable gardens, and thatched
-villages among the trees. Later we crossed the great open plains of
-Bengal, cultivated and fertile under irrigation, with but few trees,
-stretching as far as the eye could see under the full moon.
-
-At Sara we changed, having to leave the train to cross the river
-Ganges. The scene was a strange one. The waiting steamer lying ready,
-had to be approached over the wide shallows by two long narrow
-gangways, constructed out of a few planks, suspended from bamboo sticks
-stuck upright in the shallow water, with lights at intervals. A troop
-of European and American travellers wending their way from the train
-along one of the gangways to the white steamer, and a procession of
-natives with their bundles crowding along the other to the same vessel.
-
-Arrived on board we found a table spread ready on the quarter-deck and
-we had an excellent dinner—very superior to those provided by most of
-the hotels. After this meal was over the steamer started on its voyage
-across the wide river, having a strong electric search-light at the
-bows which threw a great shaft of white light to the opposite shore,
-along which it seemed to travel as if finding its way. Moths and
-flying insects fluttering into the beam of light flashed like sparks or
-fire-flies.
-
-We found another train waiting for us at a station on the other bank.
-Here we got into sleeping compartments. I had an American bishop and
-his friend, a young man, as travelling companions. About 6 A.M. the
-next morning we reached the foot of the hills, where another change was
-necessary and where breakfast was to be had at the station, after which
-we packed ourselves and our belongings into the tiny carriages of the
-little narrow gauge, toy-like train which makes the ascent of 7000 feet
-to Darjeeling.
-
-Starting about level, the ascent was quite gradual at first, the line
-winding through bamboo groves and tea plantations, and as it grows
-steeper the track twists up in =S= curves and loops, threading, like
-a steel snake, through umbrageous woodlands, sometimes following the
-road, sometimes crossing it. Among the many beautiful trees there was
-one of frequent occurrence which was new to us. It had something the
-manner of growth of an ash, but having a silvery bark like a birch,
-and clusters of large scarlet buds and flowers, without leaves. Some
-called it the “Forest Flame.” Many of the trees were hung with climbing
-plants, forming lovely tangles and festoons, and through the openings
-in the woods, here and there, we had glimpses of the plains veiled
-in the morning haze. Higher and higher the little train carried us,
-curving so sharply, sometimes, that one could see the little puffing
-engine in front, which had almost the effect, when rounding the sudden
-curves and loops, of some grotesque creature trying to catch its own
-tail, like a playful kitten or puppy!
-
-[Illustration: THE DARJEELING TOY-RAILWAY TRYING TO CATCH ITS OWN TAIL!]
-
-At intervals the various attitudes attained were painted on tablets
-at the side of the rail, or at the little stations. At Siliguri a
-halt was made for tiffin. Here the Mongolian and Bhutian peasants
-came up to the railway carriages and offered us interesting things in
-the way of silver rings, and silver ornaments set with turquoise, and
-large turquoise earrings of a fine bold design. The women all wore
-relic or charm-boxes with lids worked in delicate filigree and set
-with turquoise, and these were suspended by bead necklaces. Silver
-chatelaines and other charming ornaments were shown us, the women
-carrying the stock-in-trade of jewellery upon their persons. The high
-cheekbones and narrow eyes, black hair and long pig-tails of the
-Mongolian were very marked, the men having quite a Chinese look, with
-their soft felt, turned-up inverted cup-and-saucer-shaped hats and
-pig-tails. The women had broad, smiling faces, the effect of which was
-heightened by a kind of bright brown varnish which made their faces
-look as if they had been French polished—perhaps to suit somebody’s
-furniture?—their hair was intensely black, and they wore two long
-plaits or pig-tails.
-
-The huts of the villages were of wood, and the original native roofing
-was of thin wooden shingles, which harmonised perfectly with the
-scenery; but unfortunately corrugated iron was being extensively
-substituted for roofing purposes, and the old thatch or wooden
-shingles were frequently patched with it. At Darjeeling it was almost
-universal, and in consequence the buildings might be described as
-tin and temporary. Here and there was a fantastic, but generally not
-tasteful, touch of Germany, or the Swiss border, in the modern villa.
-Little toy-like dwellings are scattered along the mountain-sides in an
-accidental sort of way, as if they had been upset out of a box, and had
-stuck here and there among the trees in their fall.
-
-English suburban names catch the eye—at Darjeeling—such as “Daisy
-Bank” and “Rose Cottage.” The Europeans come out from Calcutta in
-the hot season to dwell here. The huts of the native people look very
-frail, almost like card-houses, leaning up against each other on the
-edges of cliffs, their roofs of ragged matting, straw thatch, or thin
-wooden shingles, or the corrugated iron aforesaid. Tall, tapering
-bamboo canes are frequently stuck up outside, bearing vertical strips
-of white cotton or linen cloth, like standards, with light tags of the
-same fluttering at intervals from their outer edges. These are said to
-represent prayers, and are supposed to ward off evil influences.
-
-We put up at “Woodlands” hotel, which has a pretty walk up from the
-station, lined with fine old trees of the pine kind, very thick and
-dark, and having a slender cone-like form, reminding one of cypresses.
-These abound all down the mountain-sides, but are now in danger
-of being thinned too freely. The mountain-sides are intersected
-with paths, and terraced bridle roads, along which are perched the
-dwellings, above or below the road. As one rides up one can look almost
-perpendicularly down upon the tin roofs and into the little gardens, as
-these paths almost double back on themselves at different heights, as
-they wind up the hills.
-
-The manager and proprietor of “Woodlands” was an Italian by birth,
-but he spoke English like a native. He was one of an expedition which
-attempted to climb the Kinchin Junga (18,000 feet), a great snow peak
-of the Himalayas, which is conspicuous from Darjeeling when the clouds
-disclose the view of the wonderful snow-clad range.
-
-[Illustration: CHARACTERS IN A TIBETAN MASQUE, DARJEELING]
-
-He occasionally entertained his guests by a lecture in the evenings,
-illustrated by photographic slides taken on the expedition (in 1905)
-in which, however, four of the party lost their lives by losing their
-footing on a snow precipice. Climbing in the Himalayas seems to be
-handicapped by the necessity of taking coolies to carry provisions and
-camp furniture, as the explorer leaves the human world entirely behind
-him in entering these trackless snow-bound solitudes.
-
-One evening, just before daylight had quite faded, we witnessed a very
-curious and remarkable performance in the courtyard of the hotel,
-lighted by a few lanterns, which, however, rather increased the mystery
-of the half-light than really added to the illumination of the scene.
-It was a Tibetan dance or masque. To the sound of tom-toms, which
-marked the time, a dancer in loose white garments appeared—a man; he
-wore a white tunic with a full skirt, and held a sort of white veil
-up over his head as he moved, and he appeared to have on Mongolian
-leggings and boots. He danced like a dervish, whirling rapidly round
-and round, his skirts forming a sort of spiral wheel of drapery about
-him as he moved.
-
-This dancer having finished his _pas de seul_, as a kind of prelude,
-retired, and was immediately succeeded by another—a fantastic-looking
-figure also in white, with the Tibetan conical turban, the details of
-whose costume I could not quite make out, owing to the fitful light,
-but he appeared in the characteristic loose tunic and leggings and
-the Chinese-like shoes. His style of dancing was quite different
-to the dervish, and might be described as a combination of the jig
-and the reel. While he was dancing there entered two very grotesque
-Chinese-looking lions, queer monsters, made up of two people who
-furnished the four legs—probably a man for the fore-quarters and a
-boy for the hindmost. Their heads or masks seemed to be each formed of
-half a tortoise shell, ingeniously enough the openings at the side of
-the shell being utilised as the sockets of large fierce staring eyes,
-a large open red mouth, and gleaming rows of pointed white teeth,
-completing a terrific countenance. Yellow drapery concealed all but
-the feet, which were clad in some kind of tawny soft leather. These
-lions were extremely lively, and frisked about, and lashed their tails
-in a most spirited way, keeping time with the tom-toms through all
-their wild movements; as, together with the second dancer, who was, it
-appeared, the lion-tamer, they went through a very active and energetic
-dance. This over, each lion lay down, one on one side of the ground
-(there being no stage), and one on the other, facing the audience as
-they couched.
-
-Then entered a sort of knight, or warrior, on a red hobby-horse,
-and the dance was continued by his chasing the lion-tamer round and
-round, the latter always eluding his pursuer, and always emphatically
-repeating by the action of his arms the beat of the tom-toms in a
-defiant sort of way.
-
-Six more hobby-horsed riders in different costumes and colours next
-came in, one after the other, and joined in the pursuit of the
-lion-tamer. Presently, however, they changed the figure, the red
-hobby-horse remaining stationary, while the other six formed a sort of
-quadrille, advancing and retiring, and crossing over, as in the opening
-figure of “the Lancers.” I forget exactly how the lion-tamer employed
-himself while this proceeded, but I think he must have temporarily
-subsided, while the hobby-horses kept the attention of the audience.
-Finally they all joined hands and danced in a ring, raising a curious
-kind of chant the while, after which the hobby-horses all marched out
-in single file, still chanting.
-
-Then a peacock (with a skirt) came in, moving in a slow, measured and
-stately fashion, dancing and bowing in a quaint manner, flapping its
-wings occasionally; next it approached one of the couchant lions, who
-all this while had remained passive, and apparently sleeping, and gave
-it a sudden and decisive peck, the action being instantly emphasised by
-the tom-toms. After more genuflexions the peacock finished his dance
-by giving a similar peck to the other lion, each lion at the touch
-starting violently and lashing their tails. Then exit the peacock.
-
-Next appeared, crawling in with a sort of wobble, a turtle, also
-wearing a skirt which concealed its feet. At its entry the lion-tamer
-exhibited all the symptoms of comic fear, trying to hide himself from
-the turtle, and finally as it approached nearer, he threw himself on
-the ground and wriggled and writhed about in an access of ridiculous
-terror. Presently, however, whatever had animated the interior of the
-turtle it vanished unperceived, and the shell lay motionless on the
-ground. The lion-tamer approaching it apprehensively, but eventually
-taking up the shell, he danced up to the lions, who sprang to their
-feet, and then all these whirled about in a wild tempestuous dance to
-double quick time, until the lions, apparently exhausted, both lay down
-again in the same order as before. Again the troops of hobby-horses
-entered, and after another spin with the lion-tamer, all marched out,
-chanting, the beat of the tom-toms gradually growing fainter till they
-ceased as the company disappeared.
-
-We had not yet been favoured with a glimpse of the great snow
-peaks. Kinchin Junga seemed extremely shy, and remained wrapped
-in impenetrable folds of cloud which rolled over the edges of the
-narrow hills, or steamed up from the deep valleys, enacting the
-constant-inconstant drama of cloud and mountain, always a most
-fascinating spectacle. On January 30th, however, in the morning,
-between seven and eight, we were at last rewarded by a beautiful
-glimpse of the snow peaks of the Himalayas, dominated by that of
-Kinchin Junga, clear in the golden light of early morning, piercing
-the turquoise sky, like the vision of some celestial city floating on
-a sea of roseate cloud. The unusual height of the peaks in the sky
-surprised the eye, accustomed to see clouds where now were these vast
-mountains. The delicate modelling of the snow summits clear and sharp
-in the sunlight had the effect of making them look much nearer than the
-intervening valleys and dark pine covered slopes lost in mist and deep
-shadow, and it was strange to think that one gazed at these snow peaks
-across a distance of about 45 miles.
-
-[Illustration: KINCHIN JUNGA FROM DARJEELING]
-
-Human dwellings and structures looked flimsy and trifling, no more than
-the work of ants or spiders, comparatively speaking, but indeed
-Darjeeling has no architecture to boast of. For a region subject
-to earthquakes great allowances must necessarily be made, but the
-corrugated iron style certainly failed to assert the dignity of man in
-such a landscape, and the native hut did not look more permanent or
-substantial than a bird’s nest.
-
-[Illustration: THE SHY PEAK OF KINCHIN JUNGA]
-
-The little town has a central square where there is a native market.
-Little low bazaars line the sides, and the streets, but in the centre
-the vendors spread out their stock-in-trade on the bare ground. There
-may be seen turquoises in great quantity, and unset stones of many
-kinds, and an infinitude of silver rings and ornaments. The best,
-however, were always offered by the country people and the coolies,
-and the Bhutian women, who always seemed able to produce any number,
-and we were followed by quite a little crowd holding out rings and
-silver ornaments to tempt us, when we went through the market. My
-wife discovered a pair of green pigeons in a characteristic Indian
-domed-cage made of canes, hanging outside one of the native huts,
-and sent our bearer to negotiate the purchase, and for six rupees
-they changed hands. The birds travelled with us to Ceylon, and on the
-steamer homewards till we met the cold weather in the Mediterranean,
-when the hen bird died, the cock surviving until we reached Italy. They
-had to be fed upon a sort of meal made from a kind of powdered dried
-peas, not always easily obtainable.
-
-[Illustration: A RIDE AT DARJEELING: “UP HILL SPARE ME”]
-
-There were many interesting walks and rides at Darjeeling. A favourite
-excursion was to Tiger Hill, a distance of six miles, from where Mount
-Everest, the highest mountain of the world, can be seen—in fine clear
-weather, and sunrise is the usual time for it. The modes of progression
-are by jin-rickshaws or ponies. There are excellent ponies to be had at
-Woodlands, and we enjoyed the steepest ride we had ever experienced.
-
-The pig-tailed Mongolian coolies are always on hand in the courtyard of
-the hotel, waiting for custom in either mode of transport. Palanquins
-are also used.
-
-We met here some English friends and fellow-travellers. It was pleasant
-to fall in with my old Bostonian friend, Mr Louis Prang, who, with Mrs
-Prang, were travelling with a party of some twelve Bostonians.
-
-[Illustration: A HAILSTONE CHORUS—DEPARTURE FROM DARJEELING]
-
-The alarming accounts of the prevalence of smallpox at Bhutia deterred
-us from going to see the Buddhist temple at Bhutia Busti, though
-the immediate cause was a thunder-storm, which came on just as the
-rickshaws had been ordered, and stopped our excursion; and being
-advised to abandon the project for the reason above given we made no
-second attempt.
-
-Before leaving Darjeeling we were favoured by another clear vision of
-the snow peaks and Kinchin Junga in all his glory, before breakfast,
-and I was glad to have been able to secure two drawings as a record
-of that wonderful view. We departed on the first of February in
-a hail-storm, walking down to the station in a pelting shower of
-enormous stones, which rattled around us with a thunder and lightning
-accompaniment. The hail-stones are so large sometimes in that district,
-and the storms so violent, that much damage is done. At Woodlands all
-the glass windows here on one occasion were broken, we heard; and also
-that the stones were known to have been occasionally large enough to
-kill deer!
-
-We were soon on our way, joggling down to the plains again in the
-squeezy little train, the hail turning to rain lower down, and we were
-sometimes wrapped in cloud. As we got still lower, however, the sky
-towards the north-west began to clear, and there was a striking effect
-as of a great curtain being lifted up, showing the bright sky beyond
-and the sun shining on the plains. Soon we passed into his light again,
-and enjoyed clear weather to his setting.
-
-Reversing in the course of our journey the changes, we proceeded to
-Sara again, recrossing the Ganges, the search-light producing striking
-effects as it wandered over the shore and the vessels, picking out its
-twin white steamer with startling distinctness. We had the morning
-light over the fruitful plains of Bengal, in which the scarlet
-flowering trees or “forest flame” before spoken of looked more
-wonderful than ever. The thatched huts of the native villages were
-interesting in shape, and differed from any other local variety we had
-seen. They were built of bamboo, with curving roof ridges. Groups of
-these huts were of frequent occurrence; they stood on raised platforms,
-interspersed with plantains, or date or cocoa palms, the window
-openings on the inward side only, and under the deep overhanging eaves.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-MADRAS AND THE SOUTH
-
-
-Availing ourselves of the kind hospitality of our friend in Carnac
-Street, we reposed during the day intending to leave Calcutta again by
-the night train (Madras Mail) for Madras, our next destination. This
-was a considerable journey as a glance at the map will show; in fact it
-was our longest in India, occupying two nights and two days.
-
-After some anxious moments in Carnac Street, through our tickorgary
-not turning up for us at the time ordered, or through some muddling on
-the part of our bearer, we eventually got conveyed to Howrah Station.
-Luckily the train did not start so soon as stated—it never does in
-India—and we were saved.
-
-[Illustration: CALCUTTA TO MADRAS—SECTION OF SLEEPER—OR SOMETHING LIKE
-IT]
-
-The train proved, however, to be very crowded, and we could only secure
-a berth each in separate compartments, though there was a small sliding
-door between the ladies’ and the gentlemen’s sleeping compartment,
-through which communication could be made. Four ladies, a baby, and a
-parrot, and the green pigeons made up the complement in the ladies’
-part. I had two travelling companions only, a river-steamer captain or
-engineer on sick leave, going south with his family, and an English
-officer of the Army Medical Service going to some hill station beyond
-Madras. The former kept himself going with whiskey and soda, of which
-he freely invited his fellow travellers to partake. The latter proved
-to be Capt. J. B. Dalzell Hunter of the 64th pioneers. He was studying
-Persian, and introduced me to a most interesting book, the “IQD-I-GUL,”
-or “The Rose Necklace,” being selections from the Gulistan and
-auwār-i-suhaite translated into literal English with notes by Adālat
-Khan. This was full of delightful stories, and rich with oriental
-imagery and wisdom.
-
-Leaving Calcutta in the darkness of night, of course nothing could
-be seen of the country till next morning when we were approaching
-Cuttack, when we took “Chota Hazri”—or early light breakfast. A little
-south of this hills appeared inland reminding one in character and
-apparent height of our lake country. We passed Poori, the junction
-for Juggernath, where crowds of pilgrims go, especially at the time
-of the great festival of Krishna in March, when the image of the god
-is borne through the town on the famous car, out to a temple in the
-country. The old story we were told in childhood of the dreadful
-heathen custom of the natives on such occasions throwing themselves
-under the wheels of the car of Juggernath has been discredited.
-Krishna, being a god of love and life, not a destroyer, would not be
-pleased with human sacrifices, and they would be quite inappropriate.
-It might be possible, however, that the car, drawn as it is by men
-with great cables, through the press of pilgrims, might accidentally
-crush some one fallen in the crowd, and European missionaries may have
-misunderstood what had really happened, and had misrepresented and
-exaggerated it.
-
-There were many new and different types of natives at the stations.
-We were now on the Bengal-Nagpur Railway, and the native crowds, and
-groups entering or leaving the train all down the line, were most
-interesting in character and colour. Pilgrims from Juggernaut bearing
-small canes back with them as signs of their pilgrimage, Brahmans with
-red marks like seals on their foreheads, and others with the triple
-pronged fork-like mark of Siva in white and red. The men wore their
-hair long like women, sometimes done up in ample knots at the back
-of the head, and sometimes hanging down the back. All wore a sort
-of tight cotton skirt or piece of drapery chequered or patterned in
-colour wrapped round the loins, and depending from the waist to the
-feet; a white loose jacket frequently surmounted this, so that judging
-only from the back view, the stranger with European prepossessions as
-to dress distinctions between the sexes, might have some difficulty
-in saying which was which, or who was who, especially as the native
-women frequently wore similar skirts, white bodices, and their hair in
-knots. It was chiefly the beards that betrayed the gentlemen; otherwise
-the equality of the sexes was fairly well established, as to outward
-appearance at least, in the way that might astonish some of our Western
-reformers. It is true some of the men, like the ancient Egyptians, wore
-nothing above the skirt, except perhaps a white scarf on the shoulders,
-and the field-workers and coolies all down the Coromandel coast wore
-nothing but white turbans and waist cloths.
-
-[Illustration: LADIES OR GENTLEMEN? (FASHIONS IN SOUTHERN INDIA)]
-
-We passed the Silver Lake, really an inlet of the sea nearly surrounded
-by hills, the train startling large flocks of brown geese from the
-margin as it passed. Our old friends the white cranes we saw again
-lower down the line among the marshy pools. Paddy fields in various
-stages, often under water, irrigation wells drawn by oxen, as well as
-another pattern—like the Hungarian or Egyptian, a walking beam weighted
-at one end, the other having a rope attached to the bucket. The
-Southern Indian ones are, however, worked by the natives, generally
-two, working up and down from the centre, from which the beam swings,
-making it dip and rise again with bucket, the men steadying themselves
-by upright bamboos fixed each side, sometimes chanting a song to mark
-the time and enable them to move together.
-
-Groves of palms were passed and pyramidal hills, bringing the same
-suggestion of Egypt we had had before, on the way to Chitorgarh.
-There was no doubt about getting further south as the temperature
-was much higher, the thermometer registering 75° to 80° and this was
-February 4, whereas only two days before we had been shivering over a
-fire at Darjeeling! In the burning sun we could see the dark figures
-in white turbans and waist cloths, coolies on the railway line, and
-ploughmen in the fields toiling in the heat. We stopped for breakfast
-at Berhampore. In the district from here to Vizianagram there was
-formerly a flourishing silk weaving industry among the natives. “All
-gone now,” said a bright-looking European official in white drill and
-topi who entered our compartment. From what he told us further, it
-seems that this industry declined for very obvious causes—because the
-raw silk, the very material upon which it subsisted, was exported and
-consequently the occupation of the native hand-loom weavers was gone.
-
-At Waltair, one passenger left, but our compartment was kept full as
-another immediately succeeded him and all four berths were occupied on
-the second night. One got more or less broken sleep, but perhaps more
-than might be expected.
-
-At Bapatia next morning there was chota hazri, or early tea, ready, and
-it was very welcome. At Bitragunta there was a halt for breakfast. As
-we approached Madras, late in the afternoon, we came by lovely groves
-of palms, quite dark thick forests of them, with pools of water among
-them in which water lilies bloomed. Green parroquets decorated the
-telegraph wires, sitting in rows much as the swallows do in England in
-the autumn. The telegraph wires all over India are however a favourite
-resting perch with a variety of birds, and quick an observer may get a
-good notion of the variety of species in Indian Ornithology by noticing
-the many kinds of birds which may be seen in such positions, clearly
-silhouetted against the sky.
-
-We arrived at the Beach Station, Madras, about five o’clock on February
-4, relieved to have reached the end of our long journey. Hotel touts
-here may be described as active and strong on the wing. We eventually
-squeezed ourselves into a tickagary with our light baggage, and in
-spite of the presence of Moonsawmy—or perhaps in colusion with him—an
-officious native guide mounted the box and offered us information as to
-the public buildings we passed on the way to the hotel. The Prince of
-Wales’s was full, but the proprietor advised us of another not far off,
-known as the Castle, which had formerly been the pavilion or palace of
-a native prince, and was a large two-storied yellow washed building
-with colonnades on the ground floor, and extensive terraces on to
-which the rooms opened out, on the first floor. These terraces were
-protected by a parapet which took the form of low battlements, whence
-possibly the hotel derived its name. There was a pleasant garden shaded
-by trees around the building, walled in from the road, and having
-entrance gates. Here we found agreeable rooms and plenty of space,
-without oppressive luxury or comfort, and as cool as might be expected,
-if it is ever cool anywhere in Madras? The hotel was under English
-management, and photographs of familiar places at Torquay and on the
-Cornish coast hung in our salon. Mosquito curtains told their usual
-tale, being generally a necessity in India, but are more particularly
-so at Madras.
-
-On the drive from the station we passed Fort St George which dates from
-1680, and is the only building of any historic interest. There were
-big Law Courts in a pretentious Italian Gothic style after the manner
-of modern Bombay architecture. The British traders and their stores
-and posters were in evidence, and “summer sales” going strong at the
-drapers, attracting smartly dressed English ladies in their motors
-and dog-carts. The streets were broad, and there was plenty of space
-everywhere. The hotels and bungalows were surrounded by large gardens,
-and abundant trees—palms being very plentiful.
-
-It was pleasant to hear the clear notes of birds in the early morning,
-and of course we had the usual kite and crow chorus. In the evening
-there was a children’s party going on at a pavilion in the garden, and
-popular European waltz tunes came from a piano.
-
-The temperature in our rooms ranged from 75° to 80° and we felt
-anything but energetic. We had, moreover, in the afternoon an
-interesting drive out to the Adyar Library, the headquarters of the
-Theosophical Society built by Colonel Alcott who was now lying ill
-there. Having had a telegram from Mrs Annie Besant in the morning, a
-visit was arranged. She could not leave the Colonel, as he was then
-in a dying state. Our road lay between beautiful groves of palms of
-various kinds, mostly cocoa palms, and native villages, the huts of
-one story, long and low, and roofed with ridge tiles of a delightful
-bronze colour, the tiles, probably sun-baked, being doubled and trebled
-over and under alternately. The roads were covered with a fine dust of
-a rich reddish-brown tint, almost coffee colour, and this tint varied
-with the full red and bright white of the dresses of the natives, and
-their dark skins, and relieved by the clear light green of the paddy
-fields, and the gold and green of the palms, in the warm evening
-sunlight, made a fine harmony.
-
-We passed a Hindu temple and a tank, and crossed a bridge over the
-broad river (Adyar) and on the other side presently drove under an
-ancient fragment of a stone carved gateway, and so through the wooded
-grounds to the Adyar Library, a new building of red brick and red
-sandstone of semi-Hindu type.
-
-A lady clad in white conducted me to a large upper chamber very lofty
-and long in proportion to its width, furnished more or less like a
-European drawing-room, with chairs and couches, but high on the wall
-at intervals were various religious symbols, in white plaster relief,
-among which I noticed the Gammadion and the Serpent and the Tree. There
-was a pretty view over the river from the windows, on the side.
-
-Presently Mrs Besant entered. She was robed in white. It was the
-sari dress of the native women in some fine soft material, with
-embroidered borders also white. Her hair too had whitened since I
-knew her in London many years before. We spoke of the old days—of
-Cunninghame Graham, G. Bernard Shaw, and Sidney Webb. Mrs Besant, once
-an active and ardent socialist, seemed to have quite removed herself
-into another world, strikingly different from the one of strife and
-protest in which she with her wonderful eloquence had been a potent
-influence, and was now devoting her life to inculcating the principles
-of Theosophy and educational work among the young Hindus. Her idea was
-to gather the best elements out of all religions, and to unite them
-in one comprehensive creed, the keynote of which, as I understood, is
-universal brotherhood. In her schools she desired to cultivate the
-higher side of the native Hindu religion, refining and spiritualising,
-though by no means Europeanizing, but preserving all native
-characteristics in dress and courteous manners, and as far as possible
-preventing any Western contamination.
-
-In the great hall on the ground floor the first thing that catches the
-visitor’s eye is the text inscribed aloft on the entablature in large
-carved characters—“There is no religion higher than truth.”
-
-On the walls of this hall, also, are carved in stone another series
-of symbols, treated as a series of panels in relief, and among these
-it was interesting to find Mr Holman Hunt’s well-known picture “The
-Light of the World,” reproduced in relief by a native sculptor. In a
-recess in the opposite wall was a life-size seated portrait of Madame
-Blavatsky in marble. It was intended to place a statue of Colonel
-Alcott standing beside her, Mr Besant told me. His loss will be a
-severe one for the Society.
-
-We drove back by way of the Triplicane or Mohammedan quarter—the native
-bazaar, a brilliant scene of colour and movement. On the way we passed
-several “Toddy Tappers,” as they are called, at work on the palm and
-stems. These are natives who extract a sort of spirit from the palm,
-and who, clad only in white turbans and waist-cloths, climb the tall,
-smooth columnar stems of the cocoa palm, by a curious method—a sort
-of loop of cane which encircles the upper part of the body, and hooks
-round the tree stem. This they shift in jerks as they climb, using
-their legs and feet in the usual way as a grip on the stem. We noticed
-the small, gourd-like bottles attached to some of the trees, which are
-placed so as to catch the juice from incisions made in the bark. The
-spirit made from this juice is sold in the bazaars.
-
-[Illustration: MADRAS—A JIN-RICKSHAW MADE FOR TWO]
-
-The jin-rickshaw is much in use in Madras as a means of locomotion,
-and some of them will even carry two people at once, though this
-seems heavy for one boy. The native boys who draw them are, however,
-active enough and but little encumbered with clothes, and are always
-eager for custom. Mount Road is the main thoroughfare in the European
-quarter, and here all the principal shops and stores are situated.
-These as buildings were mostly pretentious and tasteless. St George’s
-cathedral was a semi-classic church with a pointed spire. The Post
-Office had red-tiled gabled spires of a more or less Swiss type, with
-iron crestings, and arcaded balconies on each story. One sees relics
-of eighteenth century semi-classic taste in some of the older houses
-with plastered walls yellow and white-washed. The vast gardens which
-broke the continuity of the buildings, and often isolated them, and the
-pleasant avenue-like character of the main roads, always lined with
-shady trees, made up for many architectural short-comings, and again
-suggested spacious ideas for a garden city.
-
-At the head of Mount Road was the Munro statue where other roads
-diverged—a bronze statue by Chantry of a gentleman in a cloak
-pointing—probably to indicate his line of policy, though, more
-literally, he might be taken to be showing the stranger what a long
-way he was from Madras. The electric trams are no doubt useful as
-the distances are enormous and dusty, walking being impossible for
-Europeans, as they would soon be covered with a powdering of fine red
-dust.
-
-We paid a visit one evening to the Botanic Gardens where we saw the
-Victoria Regia (which is usually associated with the inside of a
-hothouse at Kew) growing in the open on a lake. There were beautiful
-palms here and many varieties of trees. One we noted was covered with
-white blossoms which looked and smelled like orange or lemon flowers,
-and had green fruit of an egg shape, hanging from its branches.
-
-Madras we found too oppressive and inervating to stay long, and so on
-February 8th we departed for Tanjore, rising at 4.30 A.M. to catch an
-early train, and were only able to snatch a hasty hazri, and get into
-a belated carriage and drive through the gloom of the early morning—or
-rather by the dim light of the waning moon to the station for the 5.45
-train South.
-
-Our compartment was shared at different stages of the journey by
-British officers. A Babu with a quantity of baggage, and three German
-Mission people—a gentleman and two ladies with still more baggage, who
-filled it pretty well up to Tanjore.
-
-The country seemed very productive, and on each side of the line most
-of the way were large crops of paddy, much of it under water. In many
-places, too, the natives were ploughing _in_ the water. The crops in
-some of the fields (or rather pastures separated by low banks of earth)
-were a brilliant light green, in others the grain was ripe, and was
-being reaped with hooks by the natives, while further on they would be
-threshing and stacking the straw. The method of threshing out the grain
-was primitive. A man would hold a loose sheaf in his hand and beat it
-hard, several times in succession, on the ground; this shook out the
-grain, and then he would cast the straw that remained to the men who
-were stacking it near by. They made low wide stacks straight on to the
-bare earth. The women gathered up the paddy as it was reaped.
-
-We passed more fine groves of cocoa palms, distant hills were visible
-inland here and there, and there were generally large sheets of water
-each side of the line, but the rivers which we frequently crossed were
-almost dry.
-
-The crowds of natives at all the stations were again very interesting.
-The men generally wearing their hair long and done up in knots. In fact
-the men had finer and more luxuriant heads of hair than the women,
-whose hair was usually short and fuzzy. Sometimes the men had their
-foreheads and temples shaved, and let their hair grow freely at the
-back. Caste marks were painted very boldly and distinctly on the dark
-foreheads. The sacred mark of Siva occurring most frequently—a red
-vertical stroke in the centre between two white lines radiating from
-the nose.
-
-The men also wore the coloured skirt tightly wrapped about their middle
-and falling to their feet, the upper parts of their bodies being left
-bare, except for a loose white scarf, like a towel, thrown over their
-shoulders. The coolies and agriculturists wore nothing but turbans and
-waist-cloths. The women invariably wore silver nose rings, earings and
-anklets, and the Sari dress. Mahomedans seemed to be very scarce in
-these parts. As to colour, reds and whites prevailed in the dresses.
-Sometimes the vivid crude (magenta) aniline pink which has become
-unfortunately too common in India was to be seen. A favourite blend
-was red and yellow in the women’s Sari dresses, in stripes, or crossed
-tartan-wise.
-
-Light cakes, bananas, and painted toys and other trifles were hawked
-about at the stations, the sellers uttering curious cries and chants.
-Every station had its tap of water, and always a thirsty throng of
-natives from their crowded compartments would be seen clustering around
-it filling their bright brass drinking cups, which they invariably
-carry, quenching their thirst and washing themselves.
-
-Apropos of the refreshment stations, I find a note in my journal as
-to what appears to have been a particularly unsatisfactory Tiffin
-at Villuparam, for which we were induced to pay 1 rupee 8 annas in
-advance, but of which “only a little currie was really eatable.” How
-much more sensible (perchance not so profitable) it would be to give
-travellers the chance of ordering from the carte, and paying according
-to a fixed tariff. Travellers are by no means always able to eat the
-provided meal, and need milk and easily digestible foods, and simple
-cookery. The hard meat, stringy fowl, and messed up dishes usually
-offered are very inappropriate, if not positively injurious food.
-Simply cooked sound fresh food is a great want at hotels and railway
-stations all over India.
-
-We arrived at Tanjore between 6 and 7 in the evening. There were
-sleeping and refreshment rooms at the station. The station-master met
-us and said that a room would be vacant at 9 o’clock, as Lord and Lady
-——? who then occupied them were leaving by the 9 P.M. mail. In the
-meantime we had a ladies’ waiting-room to ourselves and could dine
-during the interval. The sleeping-rooms were across a bridge on the
-other side of the line in a new terraced building, with an English
-housekeeper sort of woman to receive us and our rupees. There was quite
-an up-to-date porcelain bath, but, on examination, one tap was cut
-off, and there was no water in the other! There were spring beds and
-mosquito curtains, and it was a fairly cool room. The system here
-was to charge 1 rupee 8 annas for a room for the first twelve hours,
-and if occupied for longer then the rate was higher.
-
-[Illustration: TANJORE—THE GREAT GATE OF THE TEMPLE]
-
-Hearing there was a good Dak bungalow near by, we decided to take up
-our quarters there the next morning and found it quite nice, cool,
-quiet, old-fashioned and unpretentious, and there being no other
-travellers we had it all to ourselves. From what the native in charge
-said it appeared that the new station rooms rather injured his custom,
-as travellers now mostly stayed there.
-
-Our exploration of Tanjore commenced by driving to the Old Fort
-within which stands the great Hindu Temple dedicated to Siva. The
-great gateway is approached by a bridge over a moat, then dry, which
-surrounds the Fort. The outer gate is plastered and is crowned by a row
-of figures of deities in niches which are brightly coloured. The great
-gateway is of yellow sandstone and is richly carved—a mass of figures
-and detail. The image of the god Siva and his various incarnations
-constantly appears. Various legends connected with these are painted on
-the walls of the court at the back of an arcade, and are exceedingly
-curious.
-
-The great Nandi, or sacred Bull of Siva, a colossal image of a
-recumbent Bull, richly ornamented with chains and bells around his
-neck, is seen on a pedestal approached by steps in the centre of the
-court, under a pillared and decorated canopy. When we saw it first a
-magnificent peacock had perched himself upon the head of the bull, his
-tail drooping over its neck. The bull was carved out of a fine black
-stone, really syenite, but much darkened by libations of oil with
-which the image is constantly anointed. It has all the character of the
-type of zebu in this district. We saw its living prototype in a street
-of Tanjore—a splendid black bull (short-horned) lying down with its
-yoke companion, a white one, equally noble looking.
-
-The pillared front of the small temple close by was richly coloured,
-and on a sort of frieze was a series of portraits of the reigning
-family of Maharajahs.
-
-The Temple guide spoke a little English, but occasionally would stop
-for want of words, but we generally gathered his meaning, and he seemed
-unusually intelligent.
-
-Ganesha, the elephant god (of generation) frequently appeared among
-the others, Siva and Parvati being the chief. One of the scenes
-painted on the wall of the arcade, already spoken of, represented the
-wedding of Siva and Parvati, who stood, hand in hand, with a tree in
-the middle—like Adam and Eve. Among the guests at this wedding were
-represented two giants, one whose appetite seemed to know no limit,
-while the thirst of the other was unquenchable. The first was shown
-devouring all kinds of food, and to express the drinking capacity of
-the other a stream of water full of fish was flowing into the mouth of
-the other. These were very primitive paintings, but expressive. The
-figures were drawn in black outline and filled in with flat tints. At
-the gate of the Temple there were drawings on the white-washed wall in
-thick outline in Indian red, in quite a different style and no doubt of
-a much later date. A large number of Lingams were shown in rows placed
-together in one corner of the court, and there were many Lingam shrines
-in the arcade besides. Here and there was colouring on the carved
-figures, but, as a rule, the elaborately carved pagodas were left in
-yellow sandstone, which had blackened where exposed to the weather, and
-it may have been that colour had been worn off.
-
-The later temple (dating from about the fifteenth century) had
-remarkably delicate carving on its lower courses, the edges being
-frequently pierced. At the steps of the entrance an elephant, carved on
-each side, formed the balustrade, each having two trunks, one curling
-inwards and holding a man in its coil, and the second extended and
-terminating in a volute at the end of the steps on each side.
-
-There was a noticeable point, as giving further evidence of primitive
-wooden construction, in the carved detail under the eaves of the great
-temple where there was a sort of intersected lattice work faithfully
-rendered in stone. It recalled the screens of bamboo and matting,
-commonly used in this district, added on to the edges of the tiled
-roofs in front of the huts and bungalows as extra shields from the sun,
-and this carved stone lattice work may have been derived from the wood
-work and the cane and wicker structure of the primitive buildings which
-preceded the use of stone.
-
-In the court of the great temple, in a shed (roofed with corrugated
-iron I regret to say), we saw the cars used for the procession through
-the city, on the occasion of the great annual festival in March, which
-appears to be similar to the Juggernaut. The high pyramidal canopied
-roof, supported on columns, was carved like the pagoda of a temple,
-which, in fact, it represented. The image of the god being placed
-within. The car would be drawn by a pair of oxen.
-
-We saw afterwards a religious procession of the kind passing down the
-principal street. Two men carried a banner in front, a piece of red
-cloth suspended between two poles. After them came a band playing
-tom-toms and hautboys, such as we heard at Benares. Then came the car
-drawn by two zebus, with its high pagoda, accompanied by priests in
-white robes, with long hair and marks on their foreheads.
-
-It struck me as remarkable how closely the dress of the native men
-here resembles that of the people of ancient Egypt as pictured on the
-monuments. Indeed, the Hindu pantheon itself suggests a certain kinship
-to the symbolic Egyptian religion, embracing, as it appears to do, the
-deification of all natural forces and types of animals and birds. The
-Hindus have their elephant god, their monkey god, and their parrot god,
-for instance, each figured with the animal’s head but otherwise human,
-just as the Egyptians imaged their hawk-headed, cat-headed, and other
-deities. The ox of Osiris, too, seems to present a parallel to the
-sacred bull of Siva.
-
-We next visited the tank in the citadel, noted for the purity of its
-water, but it looked muddy enough we thought, and felt no inclination
-to test the sample offered us by a native in a cup.
-
-Near the tank was a very plain Christian church, dating from about the
-end of the 18th century or the beginning of the 19th, absolutely bare
-of ornament or symbol, with the exception of a small mural monument
-at the west end—a bas-relief in marble by Flaxman, in memory of one
-Schwartz, a British missionary. Not, however, a very good specimen
-of the sculptor’s work, and looking as if it had been rather done
-to order, and though it had Flaxman’s characteristic broad simple
-treatment, was rather over smooth and “goody-goody” in expression—a
-missionary looking benevolent on his death-bed, clerical attendant and
-probable successor at his side, group of good boys in front, and row of
-turbaned Indians, presumably converts, on the other side of the bed.
-
-It was curious to see this bare, gaunt, puritanical-looking church,
-planted almost in the shadow of the great Hindu temple with its frank
-nature worship, pantheism, and riot of symbolism and imagery.
-
-From the citadel and the temples we drove over the bridge across the
-river into the city to see the palace of the Maharajah. Not a very
-beautiful building—a big, rambling, yellow-washed pile, looking rather
-untidy and neglected. In the guardroom at the entrance gate, there was
-a portrait of the father of the present prince. Through a corridor, the
-walls of which were painted with quaint figures, we reached a small
-chamber, open on one side, but painted on the three other walls with
-large equestrian portraits of three Maharajahs—grandfather, father,
-and son. They were in profile, very richly dressed, and on finely
-caparisoned horses, with hunting dogs—the dogs running underneath the
-horses. These mural portraits were painted in tempera, apparently, on
-the white-washed wall, and had flaked off in places, but they were good
-characteristic Indian work, and reminded one a little in treatment of
-European mediæval design, such as may be seen in Burgundian tapestries
-of the end of the fifteenth century.
-
-We next came to a small court where we saw the Durbar Hall, divided
-from the court by an open colonnade. Inside was a miscellaneous
-collection of objects—portraits, rather dreary ones of the Maharajahs
-and favourite hounds, some on very dilapidated canvasses with holes
-through them—old-fashioned French lithographs of the early “fifties,”
-much fly-blown; a handsome palanquin, with dragons’ heads on the ends
-of the poles; another one was carved, and plated with ivory. There
-was also a beautiful ivory fan, of a large size and peculiar shape,
-probably to be used as a punka. Then, too, there was a bronze bust of
-Lord Nelson, presented by some English lady to a former Maharajah, and
-her own work. Then we saw the library, which contained quite a large
-collection of old-fashioned English books—in eighteenth and early
-nineteenth century bindings—such as a set of _The Spectator_, Hayley’s
-Poems, Burns, Scott, etc., and also an extensive library of Hindu and
-Tamil manuscripts. These were peculiar in form, and consisted of long
-oblong sheets of a roughish sort of paper, rather resembling papyrus
-in quality, protected by thin boards on loose covers of thin wood,
-secured round the middle by ties. These covers were sometimes lacquered
-on their outsides in various designs. On one I noticed the typical
-design representing Vishnu, with the lotus flower springing from his
-navel which contains the figure of Buddha, Laksmi looking on in wonder.
-These figures were drawn in black outline on gold, the gold high-toned
-with coloured lacquers. A smell of naphtha or some such moth antidote
-pervaded the place.
-
-We were then shown the armoury, where there were some rather showy
-sporting guns of English make, bearing the name of Mortimer & Co., and
-elaborately chased. There were very vile portraits of King Edward VII.
-and Queen Alexandra.
-
-After this we saw another Durbar Hall—the Maharana’s—adorned with
-more dreary portraits of the family and a few stuffed birds. The most
-curious thing was a real skeleton in a real cupboard, side by side
-with a skeleton beautifully imitated in ivory. There they hung inside
-a plain upright cupboard, looking like a hanging wardrobe—but what a
-wardrobe! What hung there needed no robes!
-
-Down the main street of Tanjore there were placed at intervals very
-curious and richly carved wooden pagodas, apparently very old, upon
-cars with massive wheels of wood, somewhat like rude ox-cart wheels,
-some of them being discs. These were probably used in processions at
-the festivals.
-
-The houses were generally low, and of only one story, with the
-low-pitched ridge-tiled roofs as at Madras, the porches and raised
-terraces on platforms in front forming the shops, being further
-protected from the sun by lean-to extra roofs or screens of matting
-and bamboo, sometimes supported on uprights of cocoa palm stems.
-Occasionally these screens are supported by growing trees which spread
-their foliage above. Pumpkins and gourds are often grown upon the tiled
-roofs, and have a charming effect with their wandering stems, green
-leaves, and golden spheres of fruit scattered over the rich brown tiles.
-
-The roads are deep in red-brown dust as at Madras, and there is a
-continual traffic of little covered tongas drawn by little trotting
-zebus in single harness. We had a broken-down victoria to drive in, and
-a fearful old crock of a horse, given to jibbing and really not fit to
-drive. The carriage seats were sliding ones, too!
-
-Tanjore spreads itself over a large area of open spaces, interspersed
-with trees, gardens, and tanks. The water is abundant, and washing
-operations frequent. There is no coherent plan about the town, the
-streets wandering about into open space, and leaving off in a casual
-sort of way. There was a considerable market going on in provisions,
-and there was a silk-weaving quarter where may be seen the native
-weavers stretching long threads of silk on bamboo frames the whole
-length of the street, and winding it off on to wheels—our carriage
-nearly collided with one in a narrow street. The raw silk is often
-wound round short staves.
-
-We visited a weaver’s shop, and were shown some hand-woven silk saris,
-brocaded with silver thread, the silver being turned into gold by some
-colouring process. A dress of ten yards can be bought of this beautiful
-material for 24 rupees. Red and purple are the principal colours,
-and these, with the gold thread woven in border designs of elephants,
-horses and peacocks, have a very gorgeous effect.
-
-European influence seems to have declined in Tanjore, although there
-are numerous Christian missions about. What strikes the unprejudiced
-spectator is the extreme unsuitability of any modern western type of
-Protestant Christianity, with all that it involves to the native mind,
-to say nothing of climate and habit.
-
-Western influence, it is true, asserts itself to the eye, at least,
-in the form of an ugly clock tower, and we passed “The Tanjore Union
-Club,” where we saw native gentlemen in their cool, white, loose
-clothing playing lawn tennis in a well laid-out court. But the life of
-the mass of the people goes on unchanged as it has done for ages.
-
-In driving through the town we saw many little white-washed temples
-among the native houses, their richly carved pagodas rising above the
-low brown tiled roofs. At the doors are quaint paintings of elephants
-or tigers, and the white walls of the shops and dwellings are
-frequently ornamented in the same way with curious figures, among which
-occurs not unfrequently the English soldier with a dragoon’s helmet
-and jack-boots. Outside a liquor shop I saw, painted rather boldly
-in red outline, a European lady and gentleman refreshing themselves
-with wine-glasses in their hands. The lady’s costume reproduced the
-rather fussy fashion of twenty-five or thirty years ago, the frills and
-furbelows quite carefully worked out with the Indian love of detail,
-but somehow the general effect was rather Elizabethan than Victorian.
-
-In passing along one of the streets we heard a sound of tom-toms, and
-presently saw approaching on a zebu cart a large theatrical poster
-painted on the outer sides of two large boards leaning together,
-tent-wise, on the cart. These bore announcements in Hindustani
-and Arabic, with pictures of exciting scenes—Rajahs flourishing
-scimitars over people, and so forth. Natives walked alongside the cart
-distributing pink bills of the performances printed in Arabic, while
-the tom-toms attracted attention to the forthcoming show.
-
-In the evening we drove to the theatre, accompanied by our bearer. We
-reached an open ground outside the town; it was rather dark, but we saw
-a row of lights in front of us, and heard the sound of tom-toms. The
-old horse jibbed and would not go further, so we left the carriage,
-and Moonsawmy conducted us to some temporary structures of matting
-and bamboo, where tickets were sold. One rupee secured a chair in the
-front row. The theatre was a large, tent-like structure, with plastered
-piers supporting a roof of matting. The floor was of earth, the common
-ground, in fact, upon which the back rows squatted. The stage was also
-of earth, raised about three or four feet, the front being painted in
-broad red and white vertical stripes. The footlights were ordinary oil
-lamps, clustered in groups. The audience was entirely native (besides
-ourselves, who were the only Europeans present). Some sat close up
-alongside the stage on raised steps of earth. Dark draperies hung at
-the sides of the proscenium, and there was a coarsely-painted drop
-scene, of the kind familiar in third-rate provincial theatres and
-music-halls at home.
-
-[Illustration: TANJORE—NATIVE THEATRE—HOUSE FULL. PERFORMANCE FROM 9
-P.M. TILL 2 A.M.—BUT WE DIDN’T STOP TO SEE IT THROUGH]
-
-The first scene apparently represented a suburban street in the
-European quarter of an Indian town; at least there was a square towered
-church in it, ugly enough, although some high-pitched gables rather
-suggested suburban England. A road in very acute perspective ran
-through the centre of the scene, which might, after all, have been
-bought from some European travelling theatre.
-
-The curtain raiser was of a sort of operatic, conventional courtship
-motive, and consisted of a musical dialogue between a young lady and
-gentleman of uncertain country, costume, and period. The girl was badly
-dressed in a white muslin frock, with a little red silk waistband, and
-a tinsel coronet or tiara on her head. She kept her eyes on the ground
-the whole time, and moved stiffly and shyly; her action, as well as
-that of the gentleman, being rather suggestive of marionettes.
-
-The lady began by singing, each strophe or couplet being repeated or
-answered by an antistrophe from a chorus concealed behind the scenes,
-to the accompaniment of tom-toms. The little wooer presently appeared
-(also a girl), dressed in a cap of tinsel, a tunic of black velvet
-trimmed with silver tinsel, and breeches of the same, with brown hose
-or boots. He also began singing strophes, which were responded to or
-repeated by the chorus, and the lady replied in the same way. Whenever
-the lover made any advances the lady repelled them, and, after each of
-her sung speeches, crossed over to the opposite side of the stage, the
-lover doing the same. After a long course of this monotonous question
-and answer, sing-song business, they finally came to terms, and stood
-singing together, the lover with his arm round the lady’s shoulders. A
-harmonium, playing at the wings, assisted the tom-toms.
-
-The _pièce de resistance_ next began. The first scene was a room of
-state in a Rajah’s palace. The Rajah and his grand vizier, and an old
-priest or soothsayer in a turban and Indian dress, were the characters.
-The Rajah was a white man, of a rather Irish cast of countenance. He
-was dressed in black and silver, having wonderful silver spangles
-in circular patches as big as dinner plates down the front of his
-trousers. He wore a sabre at his side, and he was seated on a throne
-mounted on several steps, and each step was decorated by a large globe
-of silvered Bohemian glass. The vizier was attired in a similar way,
-but not quite so gorgeous as the king.
-
-From our bearer’s interpretation it appeared that the Rajah, or king,
-who commenced chanting in a most doleful and monotonous way, was in
-trouble for want of an heir to the throne, and consulted the turbaned
-old gentleman about it, who gave his advice at considerable length.
-
-The next scene showed the interior of a temple; an image of the sacred
-bull was there, and a black man, clad only in a waist cloth, was
-officiating, apparently as priest. He was also evidently regarded as
-a comic actor by the audience, and it was rather curious to observe
-that his obvious burlesque of some native religious observances were
-received with laughter. He seemed to put the Rajah, the vizier, and
-the soothsayer, who now entered, through their religious paces, waving
-a brush over them and putting garlands round their necks, uttering
-curious gibberish the while, with extravagant action, which seemed
-vastly to amuse the audience.
-
-The next scene showed the Rajah seated again in his palace, and to him
-entered a troop of zenanas to announce the joyful news of the birth
-of an heir; but after they had departed with many salaams, something
-seemed to go wrong, and the Rajah began his doleful plaint again. The
-soothsayer and the vizier were again consulted, and both had a good
-deal to say, but matters did not seem to mend much, and the scene
-promising to be interminably long, we felt we had had about as much
-of the drama as we could do with, and hearing, moreover, that the
-performance would continue until 2 A.M., having commenced at nine, we
-left Moonsawmy to sit it out, after he had found us our carriage.
-
-The next day we had another drive through the city and its
-surroundings, reaching a pleasant region of palm-groves, and lakes
-where buffaloes were enjoying a bath. They lie in the water quite
-deeply, with often only their heads out or the ridges of their backs
-showing.
-
-At the bungalow various native pedlars and travelling merchants
-came up with their bundles, and, as we sat under the verandah, they
-would untie these and spread out their wares before us. These were
-generally new silver and copper repoussé dishes and bowls, samples
-of the craft of the Tanjore district, but not good, being vulgar and
-mechanical in workmanship, although repeating traditional patterns and
-representations of the chief deities of the Hindu pantheon. Some of
-these were embossed in silver, or rather were partly silvered over the
-copper, leaving bright copper in parts, but they had rather a flashy
-and tasteless appearance. The best things were the small antique
-bronzes and brass objects—bulls, horses, birds, peacocks, lamps, and
-curious shaped vessels, and many of these were highly interesting. A
-pair of bronze stirrups I acquired were charmingly designed, and showed
-delicate design and workmanship.
-
-In the town they make a kind of brass standard lamp, in various sizes,
-having a moulded stem supporting a shallow vessel for the oil, with
-niches from four inches, the brass image of a cock is usually placed
-at the top as a sort of finial. The parts are made to unscrew like the
-well-known antique Roman lamp which, in general design and structure,
-this Tanjore lamp strongly recalled. Some, indeed, were terminated by
-ring handles just like the Roman ones.
-
-We had been fairly comfortable at the Dak bungalow, and the two
-brothers who kept it were most anxious to please. The cooking was
-unusually good, and the place was certainly very quiet. The windows
-had no glass, but were closed with Venetian shutters (which did not
-always act, however, satisfactorily). The floors were covered with
-India matting, and the beds were furnished with mosquito nets. The
-meals were nicely served, and the table always decked with flowers. The
-thermometer in our rooms registered usually about 75 degrees, whereas
-at Madras it went up to 80 degrees.
-
-Water was not carried here in goat-skins as in Bombay and the
-North-West and Central Provinces, but in large earthen jars. A man
-would carry one in each hand, or slung by strings from a stick over the
-shoulder. There was a fine young native who watered the garden in front
-of our bungalow—he had a splendid figure, and was almost the colour of
-ebony. I tried to get hold of him to get a study from him, but somehow
-he was not to be found when the time came, and another very inferior
-specimen was offered in his stead.
-
-We left Tanjore on the evening of February 11 for Trichinopoly. It
-is only a two hours’ journey by the railway, and we arrived quite
-punctually about 8.30. It was too dark to see much of the country, or
-get anything but a vague idea of the place, especially when under the
-cover of an ox tonga, two of which vehicles conveyed us and our baggage
-to the travellers’ bungalow about a mile off, the little zebus trotting
-along at a brisk pace as fast as ponies, and much better conditioned
-than any tonga ponies we saw in India.
-
-At the bungalow we found an English lady and gentleman, a newly arrived
-official and his wife, who had not yet got a house—who were then dining
-by candle light on the verandah—in possession of the best room, and had
-to make the best of it in a small side room, poorly furnished, and with
-no mosquito nets. We got some soda and milk and turned in, but, alas,
-the beds were hard as nails and the mosquitoes troublesome and strong
-on the wing, while the temperature went up to 80 degrees again!
-
-[Illustration: TRICHINOPOLY—OX TONGA—VITA BREVIS!]
-
-After breakfast the next morning we got a carriage (which was a
-considerable improvement both as to vehicle and horse to the one at
-Tanjore), and drove towards the fort, which stands conspicuously on a
-bold rock rising abruptly from the plain. Passing through the native
-bazaar we crossed over a long bridge, which spanned a very broad river
-thronged with bathers, and people washing clothes, and watering cattle,
-all busy in the stream which was quite shallow, not more than waist
-high. This bridge had been designed and built by an English engineer,
-somewhere in the forties. It was of red sandstone, and our driver
-pointed out a stone in the coping inscribed to certain English officers
-who served under Clive, and helped to lay “the foundations of the
-British Empire in India” in 1750–4.
-
-At about two miles from Trichinopoly we came to the great Temple of
-Seringham. Thatched native huts, forming a sort of bazaar, led up to
-and were clustered about the great gates, which resembled the entrance
-to the Temple of Tanjore. The height of the gateways were very great
-in proportion to their width. The great pagodas piled over them were
-carved with the greatest richness and intricacy of detail, and covered
-with the figures of gods and imagery of all kinds, surmounted by the
-curious rounded long barrel-like cresting, which is so characteristic
-of Hindu temple-architecture. The sculptured or modelled work here was
-all coloured, but many of the figures were said to be in stucco.
-
-I think we passed through three of these gateways before we reached the
-final one leading into the court, with a many columned pavilion in the
-centre, having a painted ceiling in which the Hindu gods figured. The
-great Temple of Seringham is sacred to Vishnu, whose image appears very
-frequently. Opposite to this central pavilion is a colonnade having a
-frieze of carved and coloured figures under a cresting, Vishnu being
-in the centre. This seemed to be the Hindu equivalent for a sculptured
-pediment. The effect of the thickly clustered columns of white-washed
-stone supporting this band of rich carving and colour was very
-striking, the sharp light and shade of noontide throwing the front
-into strong relief, and through the aisles formed by the columns we
-could see another lighted court beyond.
-
-The main passage through was lined by the little stalls of a bazaar,
-grouped at the bases of the columns, where mementoes in the shape of
-small tin pictures heightened with coloured lacquer were stamped in
-relief with representations of Vishnu and his goddess, bead rosaries
-and necklaces, and jewellery were also sold, and little silk bags
-embroidered with portraits of the same deities.
-
-As we stood facing the second court, the sacred elephant of the temple
-came up, his forehead bearing the mark of Vishnu, painted large in red
-and white. It was amusing to see the animal pick up a two-anna piece
-from the ground, and pass it over its head to its keeper and driver
-seated on its neck. Another younger and smaller elephant soon joined
-the other, and this one had beautiful tusks which his larger companion
-was without. This one, too, skilfully picked up the small coins in the
-same way, fumbling with the sensitive finger-like point of his trunk to
-get hold of them in the crannies of the pavement.
-
-[Illustration: THE SACRED ELEPHANTS OF SERINGHAM—SECURING TWO-ANNA
-PIECES!]
-
-We then, passing across this second court, entered the Hall of a
-Thousand Columns—a sort of architectural forest. Before this is
-reached, however, there is a smaller hall which has a very remarkable
-range of carved columns—the most extraordinary carved stone work in
-Southern India. They are strictly speaking rather columnar brackets,
-bracketed columns or corbels resting on bases, and they represent
-warriors on horses spearing lions and tigers. The chief feature in
-each is the rearing horse, which with its rider and lance, and smaller
-figures below, and the attacking tiger, or, sometimes, elephant, form a
-connected group cut out of a single block of stone. These sculptures
-have so barbaric and antique an appearance that it seems surprising
-they should only date from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
-together with the whole of the temple buildings.
-
-A curious effect is given to the interior of some of the temples here
-by the practice of whitewashing the pillars and walls, and leaving the
-carved figures untouched in the stone, which gives them by contrast an
-unusually swarthy appearance.
-
-Returning, we had a view of the Rock of Trichinopoly with the old fort
-and temple on the summit. This syenite rock crops out in various places
-in this district, but not often rising much above the ground, but only
-emerging here and there from the earth in a manner rather suggestive of
-the backs of tortoises.
-
-Saw a mongoose at the roadside which soon crept out of sight and hid
-in the low brushwood at our approach. Trichinopoly is well wooded,
-but is not particularly picturesque, though the scattered tiled or
-thatched bungalows look pretty enough in their gardens, but on the
-whole it gives one the impression of rather a straggling place. There
-was a deserted looking mission church with a few tombstones about it
-quite near our bungalow, trying to look like an English village church,
-but not succeeding. Leipzig Lutherans and Wesleyan Methodists are
-said to have “missions” here, as well as the Church of England. These
-missionaries seem to plant their stations wherever there are important
-Hindu temples. The wonder is that the natives are so tolerant.
-
-Madura was our next destination, and we were not sorry to get away from
-our stifling little barn of a room at the bungalow, leaving in the
-early morning about daybreak for the 5.45 Madras mail.
-
-The country was flat at first, with, again, large sheets of water along
-the sides of the line, but as we passed from the Trichinopoly district
-to the Madura district we entered a mountainous region, thickly wooded.
-I noted many cedar trees, and a kind of cactus growing high with tall
-tree-like stem. It was an interesting and varied country the rest of
-the way. The crops were chiefly paddy and castor oil plant.
-
-One station had the extraordinary name of Ammayanayakanur, and we were
-soon in the tobacco-growing district, passing Dindigul with a rock and
-an old fort upon it, not unlike Trichinopoly in character. Cigars of
-the district were offered at the station, but we saw no tobacco crops
-near the line.
-
-We reached Madura about noon, in time for tiffin, and engaged a room
-at the station, which was a great improvement as to beds and general
-appointments on our recent bungalow experiences. The sleeping-rooms
-were built out on a separate wing which appeared to be new. They opened
-on to a corridor which led to a large open terrace, and were in charge
-of a Eurasian woman. There was also a good dining-room at the station.
-
-It was tremendously hot, however, and we could not very well move out
-until after 4 o’clock, when having engaged a guide we drove out to see
-the great temple. Our bearer objected strongly to the guide and there
-was some friction between them, but as native servants were prohibited
-from entering the temples, and were always stopped at the gates,
-Moonsawmy could not show cause why the guide was not necessary, and
-we found him very intelligent, speaking English well, and having the
-history of the place at his fingers’ ends.
-
-[Illustration: THE RIVALS. OUR MOONSAWMY AND THE MADURA GUIDE]
-
-The Madura temple is so remarkable and is on such a scale that I
-was anxious to get all the information about it I could. Mr Pillai
-(the guide) was very useful and well-informed, and he gave us many
-interesting stories and details about the sculptured figures and
-paintings.
-
-There are four great pagoda-gates, richly carved and painted, of the
-same type but larger than those at Tanjore and Trichinopoly. Evidently
-the Hindus had no scruples about colouring their sculpture, and the
-colouring has been renewed from time to time. The prevailing tints used
-are turquoise blue, vermilion, yellow, white, and green. One of the
-gates the guide pointed out was granite up to the first story, and the
-figures were in stucco above.
-
-The four gates mentioned are connected by a high wall, on the crest
-of which occur at intervals the image of Siva (to whom the temple is
-dedicated) seated between two bulls, the bulls being placed upon the
-top of the wall, and the image of the God in a sort of arched recess,
-sunk into it a little below. The upper part of the wall is uncoloured,
-but a sort of high dado is carried along it below, painted in broad
-vertical stripes of red and white which seems a favourite scheme of
-decoration in Southern India. The wall encloses a broad paved court,
-and inside this is another wall with gates, through which the various
-temples and columned halls are entered.
-
-In the centre of all is the sacred tank, a large pool of water
-surrounded by steps, and an arcade of white columns. As we approached
-this, we saw a crowd of natives, men and women, seated on the paved
-margin of the tank along one side and between the columns listening
-to a priest who was preaching with much earnestness. Our guide said
-he was translating or expounding (one did not know with what gloss)
-passages from the sanskrit text of the sacred books which another
-priest previously read in the original.
-
-The scene was a picturesque one. The various colours of the people’s
-dresses, in which dark red prevailed, showed against the white wall and
-columns, and the brown faces made a harmonious scheme of colour.
-
-The wall along the upper part was painted with a series of histories of
-Siva and his incarnations. These picture-stories were arranged in tiers
-or friezes, about four or five deep, one above the other, and running
-the entire length of the wall behind the colonade, each side the tank.
-These paintings were highly interesting, painted probably with the main
-object of making the stories intelligible to the people, they were
-quite decorative, full of detail, and forming a rather closely filled
-and dark pattern of colour, having the effect of a woven hanging.
-
-One of the painted legends treated of a certain Maharajah who appears
-to have persecuted the early Jain seceders, much as the Roman emperor
-treated the early Christians, with great ferocity, finally impaling
-them on stakes, and thus they were painted all of a row!
-
-The Jain sect was at first apparently regarded as a schism, and the
-Jains as heretics or apostates falling away from the pure Hindu worship
-of Siva.
-
-One seems here, in this great Temple of Madura, to get back to the
-most ancient type of religion, and one which, after all, allowing for
-evolution in our ideas, seems the most lasting—Nature worship. The
-Hindus in their pantheon include and embrace everything, at least in
-their own universe, which is their own country, and to them, truly,
-“nothing is common or unclean.” Their deities incarnate themselves in
-all sorts of forms. Siva, according to one legend, for instance, even
-taking the form of a wild sow, and suckling the young of the mother
-which had been slain by the hunters. The second son of Siva rides upon
-a peacock, the representative bird of India. The Zebu bull is sacred to
-Siva, and in the Lingam is symbolised and revered the male and female
-principle of generation, the root and source of all life on the earth.
-
-In one place in the temple, between two of the columns, was a group of
-the nine planets personified and placed around the sun—a golden sphere
-in the centre. For each of these embodied planets might be found a
-corresponding personality among the deities of the classical world.
-
-Another striking thing about the Madura temple is the force of
-realization and expression in the figure sculpture. Life-sized figures
-of different gods and demons are carved in stone in front of the
-columns in many of the halls of the temple, the columns themselves
-frequently white-washed, while the figures are left in the untouched
-stone and look in contrast like bronze figures, their elaborate detail
-and undercutting emphasizing this suggestion. Indeed, the variety of
-character, invention, as well as the vigour and freedom, governed by
-a certain formalism, of some of this sculpture at its best reminds
-one of European gothic sculpture in the Middle Ages, not only in its
-symbolical and legendary aspect, but also its all embracing character
-and sympathy with the life of the people. The type of the Hindu mother
-appears, for instance, in one of the best of the figures carrying her
-child on her hip, just as the native women do to this day, while a
-suckling infant is suspended at her breast.
-
-Mockery, if not humour, too, seems to come out here and there
-sometimes, as in the dancing figure of a mocking musician playing on
-his pipes.
-
-A frequent subject is Siva presenting his sister in marriage to
-Vishnu, and there are besides a number of curious legends connected
-with the sculptures here, which are very various, and, of course, not
-unfrequently become grotesque or monstrous under the influence of the
-Hindu religious symbolic ideas and the Hindu inventiveness; but one
-feels that here is a genuine piece of ancient life, expressed in the
-forms of Hindu art—frank nature worship in full vigour of life, and a
-dominant influence in the lives of millions of people.
-
-In the sacred tank the people were constantly bathing and washing their
-clothes. The water never seems to be changed and is perfectly green in
-colour. Our guide said it remained pure and ordered a man to show its
-quality by dipping his hands in and holding a small quantity in them,
-cupwise. The water, however, was, even in this small quantity, quite
-green, although a clear green. It must have been full of vegetable
-matter, one would think. It reminded us of what the Maharajah’s
-secretary had said of the Ganges water at Benares.
-
-The colouring of the interior of the Temple in parts recalled the
-mural decoration of ancient Egypt in its use of simple primary
-colours—red, green, white, and yellow prevailing. The lotus flower,
-too, was constantly introduced, treated as a rosette upon the ceilings.
-
-Some of the pillared halls were, however, left in plain stonework, or
-simply whitewashed. One long hall we entered looked very impressive in
-the dim light, a single ray from the sun penetrating, and making a spot
-of intense light upon the floor.
-
-We saw a gilded copper dome, and a golden flag staff, and our guide
-pointed out the great doors behind which the festival cars were kept,
-and we saw, too, wonderfully decorated life-sized images of elephants
-and horses which formed part of the show on great occasions. There
-were two black and two white elephants, standing between the columns,
-under rather tawdry and tinselly canopies, and other furniture of the
-festivals; one large hanging bearing the words of welcome to the Prince
-and Princess of Wales, which must have been used for the occasion of
-their visit.
-
-Various donors of parts of the temple were pointed out, in effigy. The
-Czar of Russia appeared (not however in person) as the donor of certain
-shrines and a brass canopy or arch which held many lamps.
-
-[Illustration: SACRED TANK OF THE GREAT TEMPLE, MADURA]
-
-The practice of drawing the image of the god on festival days through
-the streets on great cars seems general at all the chief temples in
-Southern India, and not confined to Juggernath. At Seringham we saw
-the great car on which the image of Siva was drawn on such occasions,
-and also the thick cables—like ship’s cables—which were used for
-the purpose—multitudes of men hauling the car out of the temple and
-along the streets by these means. Here, too, at Madura the god Siva is
-represented seated upon his car which is treated as a kind of throne,
-the wheels and the horses sculptured at the sides in a symbolic sort of
-way.
-
-In some of the painted histories on the walls, Siva is shown in a
-winged car (suggesting his rapid flight and omnipresence, perhaps) and,
-presumably, his image is drawn out on a car at festivals to keep his
-presence and moving influence vividly in the minds of his worshippers.
-
-It was curious to see the bazaars in the corridors and outer courts of
-the temple. Rows of stalls, where all sorts of miscellaneous things
-were sold—brass ware, pottery, woven stuffs, beads, and all kinds of
-knick-knacks and toys. Some of the sellers squat on the pavement and
-spread out their goods before them. The temple and its courts is a
-great resort of the people, in fact. Pilgrims lie down and sleep near
-its shrines, and the children play freely between its pillars. Bats
-flutter in and out of the crevices of the ceilings, or hang in little
-black clusters up aloft in their recesses.
-
-In sketching at the sacred tank a very large crowd of natives gradually
-collected behind me, and on each side, and it was as much as the guide
-could do to keep them from closing in, and completely surrounding me.
-Some American visitors to the temple whom we met afterwards in Ceylon
-said that, seeing this vast concourse pressing round the tank, they
-thought it was a suicide! Travellers usually take snap-shots with hand
-cameras, and I imagine that a sketcher in colours is comparatively
-rare. The crowd, however, were quite quiet. The guide was encouraging,
-and remarked when I had finished that it was “better than a photograph.”
-
-Another afternoon we drove out through the city and some three miles
-beyond to see the “Teppa Tank”—a large sheet of water, enclosed by a
-low wall painted in red and white stripes, with steps to the water and
-carved bulls decorating the balustrades. On an island in the centre of
-the tank rose the pagoda of a temple, in stucco, and four small pagodas
-at the four corners of the garden-island—a mass of foliage amid which
-the pagodas shone, ivory-white in the sunshine.
-
-Near this tank on the roadside was another temple sacred to a goddess
-who was the object of solicitude in the case of people desiring
-offspring, and to whom votive offerings of cradles were made by the
-devotees, as well as doll-like images of children made of baked clay
-and painted. The flat roof of this temple was peopled with a crowd of
-these grotesque images, and the carriage boy was sent to fetch one for
-our inspection.
-
-Then we drove on to where grew a gigantic Banyan tree—eighty feet in
-girth, and having quite a small forest around its central vast trunk
-of offshoots—new trees which had rooted themselves in the earth from
-the parent branches. It was rather suggestive of a many pillared sylvan
-temple.
-
-After this we reached the Palace of Tiramala, which stood at the head
-of a large village—an imposing structure in stucco, mostly yellow
-washed. The enormous columns of the court looked out of proportion to
-the arches they supported, which were of a rather debased Mogul type,
-heavy with very elaborate grotesque ornamentation in stucco in the
-spandrils and on the ceilings, many of which had as a central device a
-large lotus flower formally treated as a rosette, and in some instances
-elaborately painted. The effect of the whole building was rather weird,
-and suggested a rather queer architectural nightmare, in which massive
-Norman cathedral piers had swallowed Roman Doric ones, or vice versa,
-and a Hindu modeller had broken up some Mogul arches, and fastened them
-together again with grotesque elephants and dragons’ teeth.
-
-The palace was now used as law courts, and it was curious to see two
-modern oil portraits of two neat English lawyers hanging on the walls
-of these vast columned halls.
-
-We next visited a native shop in the village bazaar where the fine
-muslins and silks of the district were made and sold. We were duly
-seated in chairs and fanned by boys, while an active brown member of
-the firm unfolded tempting saris, pugarees, and silk stuffs, some
-beautifully brocaded with gold thread, and of course we possessed
-ourselves of a few specimens.
-
-In this district there is a thriving native silk industry,
-hand-weaving, also dyeing, and the ingenious native craft of making
-patterns on cottons and muslins by tying and dipping. Hanks of cotton
-and silk may be seen hung out over bamboo poles placed horizontally,
-and ox-carts roll by filled with the dyed skeins. There is a fine dark
-rich red, frequently seen in the sari dress of the women, also a dark
-purple. The women here generally wear the dark red sari with a narrow
-border of black; in some cases the sari is black with a red border.
-
-In the village street we saw a little native bride drawn in a carriage.
-
-Returning to the city in the cool of the evening we stopped at the
-temple bazaar and bought some zebu bells—curious little pear-shaped
-brass bells, each with a different tone, which are hung round the
-animals’ necks. Their foreheads, too, are frequently bound with strings
-of beads, or shells fixed on leather bands, and their horns are painted
-green or red.
-
-There is a method of decorating the centres of the dining tables
-in Southern India which, I think, we first noticed at the hotel at
-Madras, or at one of the refreshment stations on the Coromandel coast.
-It consists in arranging dyed sago seeds in patterns forming a table
-centre on the white cloth. At the station refreshment room at Madura
-there was a more elaborate example done by means of stencils—a border
-of yellow enclosed a lightly powdered filling, and an effective outer
-border was produced by a repeated sprig of a red rose with green
-leaves. The general effect was that of an embroidered pattern, but of
-course it was liable to slight displacements, and was constantly done
-afresh, one of the waiters being the special artist.
-
-We left Madura on the 15th of February for Tuticorin.
-
-[Illustration: TUTICORIN. DEPARTURE FOR COLOMBO. THE LAST OF THE KITES
-AND CROWS.]
-
-The country traversed was flat and plain for the most part, with
-cultivated crops of castor oil plants, paddy, and corn, alternating
-with jungle of brushwood, but no fine trees. Hills were seen in the
-distance on the right, and we made several stoppages at short places
-with very long names.
-
-Arriving at Tuticorin about four in the afternoon, we went on to
-the beach station, and got on board a small steam launch or tug in
-waiting at the jetty, then we saw the last quarter, as it were, of our
-Moonsawmy, and took our leave of him, after he had had his usual fierce
-dispute with the coolies, who certainly never received trade union
-wages from _him_. On the whole we were not sorry to get away from the
-rupee-hunting throng which usually hang about stations and wharves—the
-kites and crows in pursuit of the traveller, their prey, who for the
-time being, at least, now escaped their clutches.
-
-Tuticorin presented no obvious attractions except the sea, which we
-were quite glad to meet again. The launch seemed just large enough
-to hold the train-load of passengers—Americans, Germans, and English
-with their baggage, and after about half-an-hour’s steam across the
-harbour we reached the steamer (the “Pandua” of Glasgow) and climbed
-up the gangway to the saloon deck. We secured a rather small but
-well-appointed berth opening off the saloon, and were able to enjoy a
-well-served dinner—food seems generally better on ship-board than on
-land—at least Indian land. Cargo boats were clinging to the steamer’s
-side, and, at sunset, one by one cast off and hoisted their lateen
-sails (like those of an Arab dhow) each boat having one about the
-length of the vessel. The sailors in hoisting up the sail climbed
-and clung to the rope, to bring it up with their weight. Chanting a
-curious sort of song the while, our steamer weighed anchor and started,
-and we looked astern and saw the last of India fading from view behind
-the shining wake of the steamer, and lost in the glow of an orange
-sunset.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-NOTES OF CEYLON
-
-
-The voyage across the straits to Colombo proved to be wonderfully calm,
-which was rather unusual as we understood it was as a rule tempestuous,
-and we did not find our cabin nearly so hot as our room at Madura.
-We sighted the coast of Ceylon early in the morning of February 16,
-and got into harbour at Colombo about 8 A.M. A fleet of fishing boats
-had previously passed us, of the curious native rig—a square sail
-apparently arranged to sail before the wind only. Our steamer was soon
-surrounded by a little fleet of odd shaped outrigger canoes, some of
-them mere planks, paddled by active little darkie boys, who dived for
-small silver coins if they could induce the passengers to throw them.
-These little amphibians seemed as much at home in the water as in their
-canoes, and they swam like fishes.
-
-Our good friend Mr Bois sent a messenger on board to meet us and help
-us through the customs, having secured us rooms at the Galle Face. Most
-things are chargeable under the tariff, but the traveller pays duty on
-his own valuation.
-
-The steamer did not land its passengers at the quay, but anchored in
-the harbour, and everyone landed in boats. The Hotel boats, manned by
-native oarsmen, row swiftly to the Custom House, and often race each
-other. After passing the customs we got into a little Victoria and
-drove straight to the Galle Face.
-
-[Illustration: LANDING AT COLOMBO]
-
-Not much can be said for the architectural beauty of Colombo, the
-buildings being, generally speaking, of ordinary commercial type. The
-Grand Oriental Hotel, or G.O.H. as it is commonly called, is a big pile
-near the harbour, and has an arcade surrounding the ground story, like
-most of the stores, and continuous balconies above, partitioned off
-according to the rooms which open on to them. Here and there there is
-a relic of the Dutch occupation in some of the frontages with round
-recessed arches and pilasters.
-
-The Governor’s house, as usual, is the most attractive looking
-building, half hidden amidst masses of palms and other trees. A rather
-bold clock tower faces a long esplanade, which extends for nearly half
-a mile along the sea front, at the end of which is situated the Galle
-Face Hotel, with its cluster of slender-stemmed cocoa palms leaning
-over the sea. Here, the long ocean breakers rolling in, the turquoise
-waves melting into dazzling foam, seen through the palm trees has
-an enchanting effect, both in the sunlight and the moonlight. There
-was a young crescent at night—seen, as only seen in the East, on its
-back—floating like a fairy boat, and casting a mysterious light over
-the dark ocean, the waving palms overhead and the sound of the breaking
-waves adding to the wonderful charm of the scene.
-
-Jin-rickshaws were in great request, but the supply seemed fully equal
-to the demand, and the esplanade was always full of the trotting boys
-drawing white clad Europeans in topis up and down the terra-cotta
-coloured road. There was a wide, green strip extending along the drive,
-and on the other side of the suburbs of Colombo extended northwards,
-chiefly native houses, and bungalows of European residents often
-enclosed in gardens and hidden in ample foliage of trees.
-
-[Illustration: UNDER THE PALMS AT THE GALLE FACE, CEYLON]
-
-The hotel was served by an army of Cingalese waiters who wore their
-hair much like the southern Indians—long, like a woman’s, and done up
-in a knot at the back, their peculiar distinction, however, being a
-semicircular comb of tortoise-shell worn like a coronet on the top of
-the head, but with the open points in front. Otherwise their costume
-consisted of a close white skirt, and a neat white jacket with green
-facings. Their feet were always bare, like the Indian boys.
-
-[Illustration: COMMON OBJECTS OF COLOMBO. (JIN-RICKSHAWUS BIPEDES)]
-
-There was a band at dinner, served in a vast white hall, and after, on
-the terrace, when the guests would sit out among the palms lighted up
-by jewels of electric light. The white breakers foaming under the moon,
-the shadowy waving palms, the sky flashing with sheet lightning, the
-brilliantly lighted hotel, and the white figures flitting about “among
-the guests star-scattered on the grass,” all contributed to a striking
-stage effect.
-
-[Illustration: A CINGALESE WAITER]
-
-The hotel was certainly spacious and well appointed, having large cool
-corridors and rooms to sit in—comparatively cool that is to say, and
-without the gloom of so many of the Indian hotels. In the matter of
-food, cookery, and the service too, it was a great improvement on the
-Peninsula. There were electric fans everywhere in motion, and we could
-always turn one on in our room—which was normally an oven. The draft
-from these fans, however, are said to be apt to give people chills, and
-some caution in their use in bedrooms is necessary.
-
-We visited our friends in their charming house—one of the older style
-of Colombo dwellings, in a delightful garden where afternoon tea
-was served on a pleasant lawn shaded by fine trees, among which we
-recognised the forest flame, which with its wonderful scarlet blossoms
-had struck us on the way to Darjeeling, though not then in flower here.
-
-Another day Mr Bois took us out for a drive in his motor all around
-Colombo and its neighbourhood. We went through the town and along by
-the dry dock, and through the native quarter (Zeppa or Teppa) and away
-through narrow lanes shaded by cocoa palms, plantains, banyans, mangoes
-and other trees growing with tropical luxuriance each side the way, in
-plantations, and around the bungalows.
-
-The motor seemed a strange vehicle in the midst of the primitive life
-of the Cingalese; and it is said that extremes meet, and certainly a
-motor and a primitive ox-wagon represent about the greatest contrast
-in means of locomotion and transport that one can well imagine. It
-was rather wonderful that we escaped a collision sometimes meeting
-such vehicles in the narrow lanes, or that we avoided running over
-stray chickens or dogs—the latter kind always resenting the motor and
-imperilling their lives by running and barking in close proximity with
-the enemy. The natives we met walking, too, were by no means alert in
-getting out of the way, and did not seem to realise the danger.
-
-[Illustration: IN CEYLON—EXTREMES MEET—THE MOTOR AND THE OX-CART]
-
-We passed mission houses and churches of all sorts, and of every
-shade of theological colour—Wesleyans, Roman Catholics, and Salvation
-Army—all the plagues of sectarian Christianity which afflict humanity
-in Europe, alas!
-
-Our friend said, à propos of some remarks of mine about the ignorance
-and indifference of missionaries as to native religions and their
-natural suitability to the races, and their habits of life and the
-climates where they are found, that he had cautioned missionaries
-against running down the native religion. This in Ceylon, is mainly
-Buddhist (and Buddha surely discovered something analogous to Christian
-ethics, if not superior, long before Christ). The Tamils are Buddhists,
-but there are some Hindus and Mohammedans in Ceylon, and even pure
-Buddhism is mingled in some curious way with a primitive devil-worship.
-
-We saw the golf links and a golf club house—quite _à la Anglaise_—on a
-rising ground and bare of trees, for a wonder in Ceylon. It appeared
-that these links occupied the site of a farm which did not succeed.
-Then we saw the river, where an engineer’s iron bridge had taken the
-place of a former bridge of boats. Colombo must have largely lost
-its primitive and Dutch character when the old Fort was destroyed.
-This has been replaced by terribly ugly Barrack buildings, and the
-town is rapidly becoming a modern commercial centre, big warehouses
-and universal provider’s stores are rising up after the European or
-American type. The native character, however, manifests itself still,
-peeping out here and there, especially in the older shops, and there
-is more native costume to be seen than one had imagined. The country
-ox-cart is a striking object with its huge tilt of matting projecting
-forward and backward like a hood, the single zebu by which it is
-usually drawn appearing small for the size of the vehicle.
-
-We did not see many native women about, but those we did see wore the
-native dress, consisting of a white bodice, cut round and rather low in
-the neck, with a lace edging; a necklace and earrings, and the narrow
-skirt wrapped about the lower half of the figure to the feet generally
-printed with a pattern, or chequered, similar to that worn by the men.
-
-We drove round by the Cinnamon gardens, and rested at a club house—a
-mixed European Club—a pleasant house with a large and well-kept croquet
-lawn in front where ladies were playing. We sat a while, after being
-refreshed and making some new acquaintances, we returned in the motor
-to our hotel.
-
-We had thunder and lightning at night. The lightning flashing almost
-incessantly all over the heavens, but mostly from great clouds rolling
-up from the north and east.
-
-While sitting at tea in the hall of the Galle Face one afternoon we met
-an old friend in the person of Mr Cyril Holman Hunt, the son of the
-famous pre-Raphaelite painter, who had been a planter for some years,
-first in Ceylon and afterwards in the Straits, from which he had just
-arrived. So that it was quite a chance our meeting, as he was not even
-staying at the same hotel.
-
-The same evening the officers of the Italian warship _Marco Polo_
-were entertained at dinner at the Galle Face, and their band played
-selections afterwards.
-
-The scene in the hall of a Colombo hotel is always busy, but in a
-different way to a European hostelry—one might almost say it was
-feverish haste in the midst of languid indolence—a ballet of energetic
-action before a crowd of unconcerned spectators. While some are in
-the fuss of departure or arrival, rows of enervated travellers lounge
-in wicker chairs, reading, chatting, smoking, or engaged with tea
-or cooling drinks, mostly attired in white; many of the ladies in
-delicate summer dresses, the men in white drill or tussore suits. All
-nationalities are represented, the majority American, and mostly people
-waiting for their steamers outward or homeward.
-
-Most visitors to Ceylon make a trip to Kandy, and one morning early saw
-us on our way thither. The railway carriages are good and comfortable,
-but they do not allow the stacking of hand luggage in them as they do
-to such an extent on the Indian railways. The train passed through
-a very rich and fruitful-looking country, where the paddy crops in
-different stages—under water, green and ripe or being reaped and
-thrashed—reminded us of India. The fields were generally surrounded by
-groves of plantains and palms.
-
-The vegetation being most luxuriant everywhere: banyans, mangoes, and
-flowering trees of different kinds including spireas and the “forest
-flame” we saw at Darjeeling; tangled masses of creepers hanging from
-the boughs, and often covering the whole tree. Several rivers were
-crossed the red earth showing on their banks, and the water generally
-tinged with the same.
-
-We reached Kandy about 11.15, the train ascending to this place about
-4400 feet. The line curving up the slopes so that we could frequently
-see the engine and forepart of the train rounding the loop in front
-of us. We could only secure a room for one night at the hotel (the
-Queen’s), so that we had to make the most of our time. Accordingly,
-after tiffin, we started in a carriage for what the hotel people
-prosaically called “No. 2. drive” (!).
-
-Skirting the large tank or lake in front of the hotel, which has a
-solid stone palisading around it cut into points and pierced, we
-ascended a steep road, winding up the hills through lovely woodlands,
-at every turn presenting fine mountainous and panoramic views of
-the country. Beautiful clusters of bamboo of enormous size occurred
-frequently, the stems very thick and of an oxidized bronze colour,
-varying from dark to light. Another kind had bright golden coloured
-stems, and a lighter, more feathery foliage. Cocoa palms, plantains,
-and mangoes were abundant, also cinnamon plants. A native boy offered
-us a cocoa bean pod, and a spray of cinnamon—a pretty tree with a
-tassel-like flower. There were also large trees bearing massive
-pendulous fruits, which grow directly out of the trunk suspended on
-very short stalks in clusters of two and three. This fruit was called
-“Jack fruit.” It looked like a sort of gigantic walnut, and was
-covered with a soft green velvety kind of rind. The leaves of this tree
-was small and poplar-like in shape. The brilliant scarlet lily-like
-bloom of a dark leaved shrub was often seen, the flower having long
-stamens hanging out like a tassel.
-
-The various drives which had been made over the hills and through these
-great woods were apparently named after different governors’ wives.
-There was Lady Longden’s drive, Lady Macarthy’s, Lady Horton’s, and
-so on. We sometimes had the impression, as the carriage followed the
-gravelled curves of these drives, that we were approaching some country
-seat among the hills. The drives, though well planned for points of
-view, and well kept, were, perhaps, a little too suggestive of the
-landscape gardener, a little too conscious and laid out to order, to
-be thoroughly enjoyable. We should have preferred to see the untouched
-work of the original designer of Ceylon scenery. The natural wild
-country unanglicised—though I know I should be told that without such
-roads and clearings one would not be able to see the country at all.
-
-We British, somehow, always seem to carry suburban ideas with us
-everywhere, and English trimness and neatness even out into the
-tropical wilderness. We passed neat homes surrounded by smooth tennis
-and croquet lawns, as if bits of Chiselhurst or Surbiton had been
-suddenly dumped down in the midst of all this wonderful world of
-luxuriant growth and unfamiliar trees, and close to native huts of the
-most primitive kind.
-
-The native roof here, as at Darjeeling, appeared to be either thatch
-or wooden shingles, and here, again, we were sorry to see corrugated
-iron creep into use everywhere.
-
-The most primæval sight we had was perhaps that of the elephants
-bathing in the river. This was at a spot close to a native village,
-where we left our carriage and, walking through a grove, came out on
-the river shore where five or six black elephants—one a large one with
-fine tusks—were disporting themselves in the water, in charge of native
-attendants, rolling over on their sides and squirting the water over
-themselves by means of their trunks with the greatest enjoyment. The
-water was rather thick and reddish in colour from the clay of the banks.
-
-On the way back to the hotel we passed the famous Buddhist Temple of
-the Tooth with its pagoda-like roof, but it looks but an insignificant
-building to be the centre of Buddhistic reverence and tribute.
-
-This was a lovely moonlight night, and the walk by the lake would have
-been perfect but for the touts and vendors of all sorts of things that
-you do not want.
-
-We left Kandy the next morning for Nuwara-Eliya; our travelling
-companions were two Germans from Berlin, father and son. The train
-continued to climb, the line curving more sharply than before. We saw
-some fine mountain distances and Adam’s Peak rising up afar, and soon
-entered a vast tea-planted district, the tea plants often bordering the
-railway line, and covering the slopes of the hills which seemed covered
-with a more or less regular green pattern, the dark velvety green
-of the tea plants intersected by the light feathery foliage of young
-rubber-trees, planted in regular rows at intervals in some places. The
-landscape was very clear and every detail sharply defined in the bright
-sunlight, with very little suggestion of atmosphere, except for the
-mountain distances which were deep blue.
-
-[Illustration: TEA PLANTATION, CEYLON
-
- “She liked coffee, and I liked tea,
- And that is the reason we always agree!”
-]
-
-In the afternoon about four or five o’clock we reached Nunnoya station,
-where we had to change into a narrow-gauge train to finish the last
-part of the journey to Nuwara-Eliya. We continued to climb in shorter
-and more loop-like curves, being able often to gaze down on the line
-we had just traversed winding below like a glittering serpent among
-the wooded hills and tea plantations. Tea everywhere, and not a drop
-to drink—yet suggesting potentially more than the whole world could
-consume.
-
-Something after five found us at Nuwara-Eliya where we got into a
-wagonette, and a good pair of greys brought us through the village to
-the St Andrews Hotel, a very pleasant homelike place in a nice garden
-and backed by beautiful woods. The original house looked as if it might
-have been a private residence, and there was just a touch of Rydal
-Mount about it and its situation, at the first glance, but a new wing
-had been added with a tin-roof, and there was a golf course in the
-valley just below.
-
-The valley is very beautiful, with its richly wooded hills and a lake
-with blue mountainous distance. Delicate feathery, aspen-like trees
-wave in the soft air, and there are numbers of firs and cypresses which
-give an Italian touch to the landscape, but no palms. In fact, the
-whole character of the country is totally different from Colombo and
-Kandy. The climate, too, is much cooler, the thermometer falling to 40
-degrees at night, or even to frost, though the sun is hot enough in the
-middle of the day.
-
-There is a native bazaar, and an English quarter with a red club
-house, tennis courts, and a race-course—of course. St Andrews,
-however, where we were quartered, was quite away by itself, and was
-altogether perhaps the pleasantest place we had stayed at either in
-India or Ceylon. It was possible, for one thing, to walk out without
-being worried by guides and touts, or to buy things. The climate was
-delightful after the enervating heat of Colombo, and there being hardly
-any other guests the quiet of the place was a great relief and very
-restful.
-
-One afternoon we had a walk up the opposite hills, the track being
-mostly through tea-plantations, with forest bits occasionally. The
-tea tree left to itself apparently grows high on a stem, having a
-very striking character and shape, suggesting almost the stone-pine.
-The small, thick-stemmed, closely-trimmed, flat-headed dwarf bushes
-which are its characteristic forms in the tea plantations also have an
-interesting effect in some situations on the hill-sides, intersected
-by wandering paths whereon the dark natives move up and down. The
-tea-plant has a leaf somewhat of the character of a laurel or orange
-tree, and its flower recalls that of the orange. Ceylon tea when made
-is of a beautiful clear orange colour—I mean when poured from the pot.
-
-The Hagdalla gardens, founded by the government in 1861, well repay a
-visit, and are deeply interesting to anyone interested in the flora of
-Ceylon. It is a drive of about six miles; passing through the native
-village, and by the English Club and race-course, the lake is skirted,
-and after that the road takes the character rather of a mountain pass,
-and runs along the edge of a deep wooded ravine down which a rocky
-stream tumbles into falls over boulders. There was just a touch of a
-sort of Borrowdale, translated into Cingalee, about this part of the
-drive. The wild forest which clad the hills each side of the valley was
-very different in character and colour to anything seen in Europe, the
-trees showed the most lovely tints of varied bronze, from pale green to
-copper red. The tea tree was abundant, and the rhododendron, which here
-is totally different in character and general shape to the cultivated
-shrub-like bushes in English gardens. Here it is a thick-stemmed tree,
-with a rugged bark, and a bold irregular outline with rather sparse
-leavage and deep crimson flowers which glow splendidly among the dark
-metallic green of the leaves. There is a sort of formal grotesqueness
-about the tree, too, which is rather Chinese.
-
-On the way through the ravine, at a solitary spot below the road, we
-saw a Buddhist shrine. On a little platform surrounded by a rough fence
-of loose stones, and facing the road, was a row of carved images, in
-some dark wood, standing figures of Buddha. In front of this rude
-structure we saw a native worshipper prostrating himself on the edge of
-the road, and bowing and bending towards the shrine.
-
-The Magdalla gardens are botanic and horticultural gardens laid out
-with great care and skill on the slope of a mountain. They apparently
-contain all the varieties of trees and plants indigenous to Ceylon.
-Tree ferns are there in abundance, flowering trees of many kinds,
-and parasitic plants, and orchids in great variety, growing in their
-natural manner. As one threads the narrow wandering paths it is as if
-one passed through a thick jungle or tropical forest, only that the
-walking is made easy, and botanical labels here and there, and signs of
-gardener’s care and labour, remind one it is a garden.
-
-There is a keeper’s lodge, in this Cingalese paradise, covered with
-creepers, and a formal level parterre in front, one mass of brilliant
-floral colour—African marigolds, fuchsias, poppies, _blue_ centred
-daisies, sunflowers, blue convolvulus, Amaryllis, and white eucharis
-lilies, canaryensis, polyanthus and many more; some that might be found
-in English gardens and hot-houses, with other tropical wonders only
-seen at Kew.
-
-After a ramble here we returned to the carriage, and drove back through
-the now burning sun.
-
-Gorse grows about the links and open common-like ground in the valley
-at Nuwara-Eliya, though the bushes seem to grow rather taller and
-straighter than they do in England. Instead of our lords and ladies,
-arum lilies grow wild. Great clusters of them may be seen by the sides
-of streams or in marshy places. The woods were delightful to wander in,
-and altogether Nuwara-Eliya might make good claims to be an earthly
-paradise, other things being equal.
-
-We had taken our passage, however, from Colombo, and were due to sail
-for home on the 2nd of March. It was now the 28th of February, and
-we had to make our way back again, descending from Il Paradiso to
-a certainly hotter region. The descent by the narrow gauge railway
-was even more striking than the ascent, the train passing through
-luxuriant growths of forest in which tree-ferns, rhododendrons, the tea
-tree, and what looked like a sort of box tree were abundant.
-
-The rubber-trade in Ceylon is now being added to the tree-trade,
-which, according to our competitive wasteful individualistic system,
-has somewhat outgrown its profitable market. One effect of this new
-development upon the landscape is devastation, as large tracts of wild
-forest on the mountain sides are being cleared by burning the natural
-growth in the first place, and then removing the stones and boulders
-which cumber the ground. This process does not add to the beauty of the
-scenery, nor can we expect that monotonous plantations will be good
-substitutes to the eye for the wild beauty and varied and luxuriant
-vegetation they displace.
-
-The Englishman in Ceylon seems to think of nothing but profit-making,
-however, like many of his race elsewhere; and is probably often even
-unaware of the beauty he destroys for commercial reasons, and he is
-always able to import cheap coolie labour from India to carry out his
-schemes.
-
-The Cingalese native it seems is unwilling to work, or probably has not
-the physique for heavy field labour, so he prefers to live the natural
-life of his country so far as he is allowed by his new masters, and of
-course is denounced as a lazy dog.
-
-Ceylon, indeed, one cannot help reflecting must have been a delightful
-paradise, if somewhat warm in parts, for its own people, before
-they were interfered with by western civilisation, with its pushful
-commerce, and missions, bringing in their train poverty and disease,
-and the struggle for existence, in a land naturally fruitful and
-bountiful, and able to support its inhabitants without any special
-efforts on their part.
-
-[Illustration: TEA AND RUBBER IN CEYLON—A RISING INDUSTRY]
-
-The planters are now clamouring for railway extension. In an interview
-which the Editor of _The Ceylon Times_ sought with me I gathered that
-there was considerable discontent with the Home Government, who, he
-asserted, had derived greatly increased revenues from the extension of
-rubber planting and the new development of the industry, but who would
-not grant money for the desired extensions, the advice given by the
-present secretary for the colonies being to the effect that the Ceylon
-people should save their money, or “put by for a rainy day.”
-
-Of course the Editor’s point of view was that of the capitalist, and
-that the more the country was opened up the better, and he did not care
-to consider the effects of the ultimate outcome of the monopoly which
-absorbs the results of and succeeds commercial competition.
-
-He spoke, however, incidentally of the increase of poverty—poverty
-in such a land!—and that there was no poor law _yet_. He said the
-Cingalese would not work, and had even neglected the irrigation
-machinery which had been set up by the planters for their benefit, _in
-obedience to the requirements of the home government_.
-
-This would seem to show the difficulty of introducing ostensible
-benefits in a primitive country which has not reached the necessary
-stage of development to be able to take advantage of, or really to
-utilise, modern methods. From the point of view of the simple native
-no doubt there does not appear to be any reason why he should change
-the habits and customs of his race simply for the benefit of foreign
-settlers whose chief object is to exploit him.
-
-Changing trains at Nunnoya we were again greatly impressed by the
-splendour of the scenery traversed. For a great part of the distance
-towards Kandy and Colombo, the line passes through a mountainous
-district, at a high altitude, gradually descending, the line following
-the contours of the hill-sides for the most part, though tunnelled
-occasionally. One looks across a wide valley with distant mountain
-ranges, ridge beyond ridge, in marked and emphatic outlines, and
-occasionally abrupt precipices—the sharp conical summit of Adam’s
-Peak conspicuous among them. The hill-sides are largely covered with
-tea-plantations, but the railway also passes through wild bush and
-forest, and high above one may see great towering crags of limestone
-and gritstone. Mountain streams are frequently crossed, and these break
-into cascades and falls among tumbled black rocks; great boulders
-frequently strew the mountain slopes as if tumbled by Titans among the
-foliage. There is occasionally a suggestion of Derbyshire scenery here
-and there, but on a grander scale.
-
-After Kandy the line descends still more till we reach the palm groves
-again, the river, and the lakes, and the heat of Colombo again. This
-time on returning we put up at the G.O.H., which is conveniently near
-the pier or departure stage for the steamers.
-
-Here we met Mr Cyril Holman Hunt again, and were introduced to several
-of his planter friends, who were very agreeable. There is a delightful
-garden of palms and tropical plants here, which is a pleasant resort in
-the cool of the evenings. With Mr Hunt we visited the Colombo Museum,
-which was courteously opened specially for us, it not being a public
-day. Here in a glass case and alive some extraordinary leaf-insects
-arrested our attention. They were feeding on green leaves, which they
-exactly resembled in colour, form, and texture, so that it would be
-most difficult to tell which was leaf and which was insect without
-closely watching them. The young ones were like the red shoots of a
-plant, but the mature insects were quite green and quite flat like
-a leaf while showing the ribs and veinings. One could hardly have
-believed that nature, deceptive and imitative as she is, could have
-been capable of such a trick. I remember that a native at Kandy had
-shown me one of the green leaf insects in a box, but I thought it was
-an artificial thing, which indeed it looks.
-
-On the staircase were some copies of exceedingly interesting ancient
-Cingalese fresco-paintings from caves, resembling ancient Indian work
-in style, but in some instances showing a certain freedom in handling,
-the brush outline recalling later Greek vase-painting.
-
-There were excellent collections of native Cingalese decorative art
-in jewellery, silver work, and ivory-carving, of which latter craft
-some combs were the most delicate and interesting. There were also
-block-printed stuffs similar to the Indian hand-printed cottons.
-Among the jewellery, the necklaces of garnets and other stones set
-in filagree gold were characteristic. There were models of native
-boats of which there are several interesting varieties, and these
-were exceptionally good life-sized models of types of the aboriginal
-inhabitants (the Veddas)—the wild bush-tribes of Ceylon.
-
-The natural history department was very complete, and the whole museum
-judiciously comprehended the history, natural and archæological, of
-the island, and included some highly interesting Greco-Buddhistic
-sculptured remains, not so fine in style as those we had seen at
-Sarnath, but there was the same type of standing figure in drapery
-expressing the lines of the figure, and also portions of an “umbrella,”
-showing a similar arrangement to the one at Sarnath, with the lotus
-flower centre, and the series of concentric rings of ornament
-containing the images of the lion, the horse, the ox, and the elephant
-in sunk relief. There was also a zoological collection attached to the
-museum in sheds and aviaries outside the main building—live animals and
-birds, including leopards, jackals, monkeys, flamingoes, pelicans, and
-a collection of small birds, minas, doves, etc.
-
-The time, however, for our departure from Colombo drew near. Our
-steamer the _Tourane_ of the Messageries Maritime line arrived
-punctually on March the 2nd, calling at Colombo on her homeward voyage
-from China, and the same evening saw us aboard.
-
-We made our adieus, and our steamer cast off, or rather weighed anchor,
-about sunset, and we were soon under way. The dinner-bell rang at 6.30,
-and going on deck afterwards we saw the last of Colombo—a mere thread
-of glittering beads of light on the horizon, and soon lost in the
-darkness of night.
-
-There was a large proportion of French people among the passengers, and
-they were chiefly officials and their families returning on leave from
-Chinese stations. They were exceedingly gay and lively, and always had
-plenty of conversation. It was like a continual comedy going on with
-much variety of character.
-
-On the 7th day, after a voyage of undisturbed serenity over the Indian
-ocean, the blueness of the sea varied only by the steamer’s track, and
-the foam dancing into rainbows, with flying fish, or an occasional
-turtle, or an albatross or two, which flapped heavily after us, we
-sighted Aden, and rounded the striking rocky coast to cast anchor off
-the port. Here the tugs brought up the coal lighters, and the cargo
-boats, and the swarm of Soumalis, as before, and the usual bazaar
-on deck took place, and the hauling of the coal and cargo went on
-all through the night—the clamours of the coolies being occasionally
-fiendish, and the din was often punctuated by bangs on an iron bar,
-which sent a shiver through the ship. This was the method of giving
-warning to the man engaged in the loading operations in the hold.
-We afterwards learned that two poor coolies had lost their lives by
-venturing into the hold before it had been ventilated, and the air was
-so foul as to suffocate them, and a ship’s officer who went to their
-rescue also became insensible for a time. It seemed much hotter, too,
-now the ship was stationary.
-
-Artillery practice was going on from the fort the next morning, and
-we could see the shots strike the water. We did not get clear of Aden
-till about 10 A.M., but at last the swarm of boats and swarthy Soumalis
-left us, and the _Tourane_ entered on her course through the Red Sea,
-and in due time passed Mocha (to starboard) and Perim (to port) and
-the Arabian coast, the sea churned into foam by the steamer flashed
-with phosphorescence at night,—the effect in the wake of the vessel
-being very beautiful, green sparks appearing and floating on the
-surface, and globes of subdued light glowed under the fleeting foam,
-rapidly swept along and lost in the darkness of the night lit only by
-stars—among which the Great Bear showed how much we had altered our
-latitude.
-
-The heat continued very great for three days after leaving Aden,
-when it rather suddenly grew cooler, and by the time we passed “the
-Brothers” towards evening on the 12th of March, the weather grew quite
-grey and cloudy with a cold wind.
-
-We reached Suez early on the morning of the 13th, and here it was fine
-and bright again, though the air felt thin and cool. The colour of the
-water had changed, too, and was now a fine clear turquoise—precisely
-the colour of the Egyptian glass bracelets, but dark blue on the
-horizon and against the land, which looked pink.
-
-The drama of the official tug and the cargo boats was again performed,
-and there was much hoisting of coffee-bags, in and out, and a taking of
-fresh provisions on board. The Traders came aboard, too, with Fez caps,
-bead and shell necklaces, post-cards, and other trifles. It was amusing
-to see our French friends buying the Fez freely, and not only wearing
-them themselves but putting them on the heads of their children. There
-had already been some astonishing transformations in costume on board
-since the cooler weather set in, topis and white drill being exchanged
-for tweed suits and caps or felt hats, and, in some cases, smart
-official uniforms with shakos.
-
-We left Suez about the middle of the day and entered the canal, the
-water still such a brilliant turquoise colour that the reflection in
-the strong sunlight caused the white breasts of the sea-gulls, which
-now followed our ship, to appear green.
-
-[Illustration: A FEW TRIFLES THE WIFE WISHED TO BRING HOME FROM INDIA]
-
-We made some very agreeable acquaintances on board, which made the time
-pass more quickly, and we arrived at Port Said early on Friday the 14th
-of March. The coaling _this_ time was a comparatively clean process,
-the wind not being ahead as before. Some few of the passengers got off
-for Egypt here, but we were soon under way again; and M. de Lèsseps’
-large effigy, the green dome of the Custom House, the steamers, the
-wharves, and the posters of Port Said soon all faded from view as we
-bade farewell to the East and entered the Mediterranean on our way to
-Marseilles, the last stage of our long voyage, where after some tossing
-we had a passing vision of snow-capped Sicily, and the Lipari Islands,
-with Stromboli still smoking away; and so, in due course, through
-the straits of Bonifazio, with no further sea troubles, landed at
-Marseilles on March 19, safe and sound.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abu, Mount, 62
-
- Adam’s Peak, 302, 311
-
- Aden, outward and homeward call at, 12–15, 314
-
- Adinath, Jain, pontiff, 131
-
- Adyar Library, 247
-
- Afghanistan, Amir of, preparations for reception of—
- At Agra, 113–114, 122;
- at Gwalior, 135–136
-
- Aga Khan, 29
-
- Agra—
- Journey to, from Jaipur, 112;
- arrival—the hotel, 112–113;
- Pearl mosque, 113;
- drive to the Fort—Akbar’s great gate, 113–114;
- the Taj Mahal, 114–118—
- its garden, 118–119;
- the Jama Musjid mosque, 119–120, 123;
- drive to the mausoleum of Itmad-ud-Daulat, 120;
- churches, 121;
- bazaars, 122;
- excursion to Sikandra—tomb of Akbar, 122–125;
- otherwise mentioned, 97, 144, 145
-
- Ahmed Khan, 50, 51, 151
-
- Ahmedabad—
- Journey to, from Bombay, 48–49;
- drive through the city, 49 _et seq._;
- mosques, 49–53;
- cotton factories, 55;
- bazaar and street life, 55–58;
- native pottery, 58;
- railway station, 62
-
- Ajmir—
- Journey to, from Ahmedabad, 62–63;
- Akbar Fort, 64–65;
- bazaars, 65–66, 70;
- the Dargah, 66–68;
- fort of Targarh, 67;
- mosque of Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra, 68;
- Daulat Bagh, 68–69;
- cantonments outside the native city, 69–70;
- custom of nailing horse-shoes on the doors, 80
-
- Akbar, Emperor, 64, 131, 155, 177;
- tomb of, at Sikandra, 156
-
- Alviella, Count Goblet d’, 41
-
- Alcott, Colonel, 212, 247, 249
-
- Alexandra, Queen, 13, 261
-
- Altamash, 68
-
- Altamsh, 157
-
- Alu-ud-din, 80
-
- Amber, deserted city and palace, 106–7
-
- American tourists, 76, 84, 96–97, 134
-
- Ammayanayakanur, 276
-
- Amritzar—
- Journey to, from Delhi, 161–162;
- hotel touts, 162–163;
- the hotel, 163–164;
- drive through the—its open drains, 164;
- the Golden Temple, 165–166;
- carpet manufactory, 166–167;
- interview with a native pedlar, 167–169;
- the Atal tower, 169;
- public gardens, 169;
- departure for Lahore, 170
-
- Anderson, Colonel, 185
-
- Arab dhow, 15
-
- Arabian coast, 12, 314
-
- Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra, mosque of, 68
-
- Arjamand Bann, 117
-
- Arnold, Sir Edwin, 118
-
-
- Baker, Sir Samuel, 33
-
- Bandakin, 112
-
- Bapatia, 245
-
- Bareilly, 45
-
- Barielly, 184
-
- Bearer, native, engagement of, 30–33
-
- Bedding, need for travellers to supply their own, 35, 77
-
- Begara, 59, 60
-
- Benares—
- Arrival at—Clark’s Hotel, 200, 216–217;
- first impressions, 201;
- the Guest house, 201–202, 205–206;
- expedition to see the Buddhist remains at Sarnath, 201–205;
- viewing the Ghats from the Maharajah’s peacock boat, 206–211;
- the Burning Ghat, 209–210;
- the Manikaranika Ghat and the Nepal Temple, 215–216;
- pilgrims, 210;
- the Golden Temple, 211;
- Hindu College, 212;
- the Monkey Temple, 212;
- visit to the Maharajah in his palace, 213–215;
- farewell glimpse of, 218
-
- Bengal-Nagpur Railway, 241
-
- Berhampore, 244
-
- Besant, Mrs Annie, 212;
- visit to, at Madras, 247–249
-
- Bhutian peasants, 225–226, 235
-
- Birdwood, Sir George, 29
-
- Bitragunta, 245
-
- Blavatsky, Madame, 249
-
- Blow, Mr Detmar, 182
-
- Bois, Mr, 290, 295
-
- Bombay—
- Impressions of, from the sea, 21;
- the landing at, 21–23;
- Malabar Hill, 21, 29–30;
- street scenes, 24–25;
- modern British buildings, 25–26;
- Crawford market, 26;
- bazaar, 26–28;
- native wedding processions, 27–28;
- Victoria Gardens, 28–29;
- Victoria and Albert Museum, 29;
- engagement of a native servant, 30–33;
- oppressive heat, 46;
- welcome of M. Dadabhai Naoroji to, 46–47;
- cotton factories, 55
-
- Bonifazio, straits of, 4, 317
-
- Brahmans, 242
-
- British administration, benefits of, discussed—causes of unrest,
- 141–143, 190–192, 199, 309–310
-
- “Brothers, The,” lightship, 11, 315
-
- Brown, Mr Percy, 179
-
- Buddhism—
- In Ceylon, 297;
- remains of, at Sarnath, 201, 203–205—
- the Great Tope, 205;
- Temple of the Tooth, 302
-
- Buffalo cow, 36
-
- Burmese people, discontent of, under British rule, 199
-
-
- Cactus plant, 75
-
- Caine, Mr W. S., _cited_, 55, 109, 118, 131, 151
-
- Calabrian coast, 4
-
- Calcutta—
- Races at, 29;
- National Congress at, 46;
- journey to, from Benares, 218–219;
- impressions, 219;
- the Minto Fête, 219–220;
- a Hindu soothsayer at, 220–221;
- industrial exhibition, 221–222;
- general impressions, 222;
- otherwise mentioned, 198
-
- Campbell, Colin, 189
-
- Candia, 5
-
- Caroline, Queen, 202
-
- Carpet manufactory at Amritzar, 166–167
-
- Carts, native, 22–23, 55, 104–105
-
- Cashmere travelling merchants, 181
-
- Ceylon—
- Notes of, 290 _et seq._;
- decorative art of, 312;
- native costumes in, 292–293, 298;
- religion of, 297;
- rubber trade in, 308–310;
- tea-plantations of, 302–303, 305;
- vegetation, luxuriant, and scenery, 299–301, 304–307, 310–311;
- Western civilisation—its questionable benefits, 297, 301, 308–310
-
- _Ceylon Times, The_, interview with editor of, 309–310
-
- Charybdis, 4
-
- Chitor, city of, 77–79
-
- Chitorgarh—
- Journey to, from Ajmir, 74–75;
- night spent at, 75–77;
- visit to the ruined fortress, 77, 79–81;
- Tower of Victory, 81;
- otherwise mentioned, 95, 108
-
- Cinnamon tree, 300
-
- _Clan Campbell_, s.s., 9
-
- Clock towers, modern, in India, 194
-
- Colombo—
- Arrival at, 290–291;
- general description of, 291–299;
- garden of palms, 311;
- museum, 311–313
-
- Coromandel Coast, native costumes on, 242
-
- Corsica, 4
-
- Costumes, native, 56, 72;
- in Southern India, 241–242, 252–253
-
- Cotton factories, 55
-
- Cotton yarn, preparation of, for hand weaving, 81
-
- Cranes, white, 54
-
- Crete, 5
-
- Crows, Indian, 23
-
- Cultivated Crops, 75
-
- Cunningham, General, 205
-
- Curzon, Lord, 119, 120, 122, 150
-
- Cuttack, 241
-
-
- Dacoits, 198–199
-
- Daulatabad, 34, 36–37, 44–45
-
- Dargah of Ajmir, 66–68
-
- Darjeeling—
- Journey to, from Calcutta, 223–226;
- toy railway, 224–225;
- general description, 226–227;
- Woodlands’ hotel and its entertainments—the Tibetan masque, 227–232;
- the town, 233–234;
- walks and rides round, 235
-
- Dauvergne, M., 33, 44, 45
-
- Delhi—
- Journey to, from Agra, 146–147;
- arrival—British residential quarter—Kashmir Gate, 148–149;
- Mutiny memorial, 149;
- the palace—peacock throne, etc., 149–151;
- Moti Musjid (Pearl mosque), 151;
- Jama Musjid mosque, 151–152;
- Jain temple, 152;
- the Chandni Chouk, 152–154;
- excursion to the Kutab Minar, 154–158;
- mosque of Shin Shah, 155;
- Old Delhi, 155;
- ancient city of Indrapat, 155;
- tomb of Humayun, 155–156;
- cemetery of Nizam-ud-din, 156–157;
- driving experiences, 159–160;
- departure, 161;
- otherwise mentioned, 99
-
- Delwara, 62
-
- Digby, Mr William, 141, 191
-
- Dindigul, 276
-
- Dinghra, Dr, 166
-
- Dowden, Mrs, 189, 194
-
- Driving in India, risks of, 159
-
- Dutt, Mr Romesh, 1
-
- Dyeing, native methods of, 57, 104
-
-
- East India Company, 131
-
- Eastern life, influence of Western ideas on, 56, 94, 141–143, 190–192,
- 199, 309–310
-
- Edward VII., 47, 261
-
- Egyptian religion, parallelism between the Hindu religion and, 258
-
- Elephants—
- Excursions on, 77–78, 82, 107;
- bathing of, at Kandy, 302
-
- Ellora, caves of—
- Journey to, from Bombay, 33–38—and back again, 44–46;
- temple of Kylas, 38–43;
- Buddhist temples, 43;
- village of Ellora, 44
-
- Enamel, Champlévé, 179–180
-
- Etna, Mount, 4
-
- Everest, Mount, 235
-
-
- Famines, native, 141
-
- Flaxman, 259
-
- Flying fish, 15–16
-
- Food at refreshment stations, unsatisfactoriness of, 254
-
- “Forest flame,” 224
-
- French tourists, 96
-
- Fruit-bats, 61
-
- Funeral, native, 93–94
-
-
- Ganesha, the elephant god, 41, 81, 256
-
- Ganges, scenes at the Ghats at Benares, 206–211;
- the Burning Ghat, 209–210
-
- Gardens, Eastern type of, 100–101
-
- Girgenti, 40
-
- Glass, convex-mirror-mosaic work, 87, 177
-
- Gohad, Rana of, 131
-
- Grace, A. F., 132
-
- Graham, Cunninghame, 248
-
- Gramophones in India, 99
-
- Green ray, phenomenon of, 16
-
- Gunj Baksh, mosque and tomb of, 59–60
-
- Gwalior—
- Arrival at—the Guest house, 127–128, 134, 136–137;
- tomb of Mohammed Ghaus, 128;
- drive to the Fort, 128–132;
- palace of the Man Mandir, 129, 138;
- Jain Temples, 130;
- new town (Lashkar), 131, 134–135;
- visit to Maharajah’s palace, 132–133;
- sunsets over the Rock, 137–138;
- description of the old town, 138–140;
- departure—scene at the railway station, 144
-
-
- Hail and thunder storms combined, 237
-
- Hardy, Miss, 1
-
- Harrison, T. Erat, 194
-
- Hathi Sing, shrine of, 58
-
- _Herefordshire_, s.s., 9
-
- Himalayas—
- Climbing in the, 227–229;
- snow peaks of, 232–233, 237
-
- Hindu and Tamil MSS., library of, 260
-
- Hindus—
- Educated, debarred from high administrative posts, 142
- Religion of—nature worship in, 41, 279–280;
- parallelism between the Egyptian religion and, 258
- Temples of—at Madura, 277–283;
- at Seringham, 272–275;
- at Tanjore, 255
- Weddings of, 27–28
- Women, 33, 45, 104, 174
-
- Hiroshigi, 20
-
- Horton, Lady, 301
-
- Hotel life, picturesque feature of, 84–85
-
- Humayun, Tomb of, 155
-
- Hunt, Holman, 249
-
- Hunt, Mr Cyril Holman, 298, 311
-
- Hunter, Capt. J. B. Dalzell, 240
-
- Hunuman, Hindu god, 41
-
- Hunuman, the monkey god, temple of, at Benares, 212
-
- Hyndman, Mr H. M., 142
-
-
- India Office, policy of, 141–143, 190–192, 199, 309–310
-
- Indian Ocean, incidents on voyage in, 17
-
- Iqd-i-gul, or _The Rose Necklace_, 240–241
-
- Irrigation wells, 170–171, 196;
- of Southern India, 243–244
-
- Ismailia, 9
-
- Israelites, passage of, through the Red Sea, 11
-
- Ivory carver’s workshop at Delhi, 153–154
-
-
- Jack fruit, 300–301
-
- Jagmandir, palace of, 88–91
-
- Jahanara Begum, 156
-
- Jahangir, 89
-
- Jain pontiffs, sandstone carvings of, 131
-
- Jain sect, persecution of, 279
-
- Jain temples at—Ajmir, 68;
- Chitorgarh, 81;
- Delhi, 152;
- Gwalior, 130;
- Udaipur, 86–87
-
- Jaipur—
- Journey to, from Ajmir, 97;
- first impressions, 97–99;
- the city, “the rose-coloured city,” 99–100, 116;
- bazaars, 101–102, 104–105, 110;
- enamelled jewellery of, 101, 102;
- spherical rolling lamps of, 102;
- the Maharajah’s state elephant, 102–103;
- the Maharajah’s palace, 103–104, 118;
- street scenes, 105–106;
- the Maharajah’s horses, 110–111
-
- Jehan, Shah, 69, 89, 113, 114, 119, 150
-
- Jhansi, 145
-
- Jijibhai, Sir Jamsetji, 29
-
- Jopling-Rowe, Mrs, 196
-
- Jubbelteer, Island of, 12
-
- Jugglers, native—the mango-tree trick, 187–188
-
- Juggernath—
- Temple of, 86–87;
- festival of the Krishna at, 241
-
- Juggernaut, pilgrims from, 242
-
- Jullumpore, 161
-
-
- Kali, goddess, 109
-
- Kandy, visit to—its scenery and foliage, 299–302
-
- Khusru, 156
-
- Kinchin Junga, view of, 227, 232–233, 237
-
- Kipling, Mr, 177, 179
-
- Kites, Indian, 23–24, 110
-
- Koh-i-noor diamond, the, 125
-
- Krishna, festival of, 241
-
- Kunja Sahib, shrine of, 66
-
- Kutab Minar, 157–158
-
- Kutab-ud-din, 157
-
-
- _La Nera_, s.s., 2
-
- Lahore—
- Journey to, from Amritzar, 170–171;
- the Charing Cross hotel, 171;
- British residential and business quarter, 171–173, 178–179;
- native quarter, 173–175;
- bazaars, 175–176;
- the Fort, 176–177;
- the Samadh, 178;
- Jama Musjid, 178;
- Wazar Khan tiled mosque, 178, 181;
- Courts of Justice, 179;
- Museum, 179–180;
- street scenes in, 181;
- visit from the Princess Duleep Singh, 182;
- departure for Lucknow, 182–183
-
- Lamps, spherical rolling, 102, 222
-
- Lashkar, 131, 134–135
-
- Laurence, Lord, statue of, 179
-
- Laurence, Sir Henry, 192
-
- Leaf insects, 311–312
-
- Lèsseps, M. de, 317
-
- “Light of the World, The,” 249
-
- Lipari Islands, 317
-
- Longden, Lady, 301
-
- Lucknow—
- Journey to, from Lahore, 183–184;
- Wurtzler’s hotel, 185;
- in hospital, 185–186;
- native jugglers—the mango-tree trick, 187–188;
- ruins of the Residency, 189–190, 192;
- the Sikander Bagh, 189–190;
- Chatter Manzel, 192;
- architecture of, 192–193;
- Jama Musjid, 193;
- the Iambara, 193–195;
- bazaar of the old city, 194–195;
- through the bazaar on elephants, 196–197;
- the Martinière, 197–198
-
- Lyons, 198
-
-
- Macarthy, Lady, 301
-
- Madura—
- Scenery near, 276;
- visit to the Great Temple, 276–283;
- the Temple Courts, 283;
- Teppa Tank, 284;
- gigantic Banyan tree, 284;
- palace of Tiramala, 284–285;
- silk industry, 285–286;
- table decorations at, 286
-
- Madras—
- Journey to, from Calcutta, 239–245;
- arrival—the Castle Hotel, 245–246;
- public buildings and street scenes, 246–247, 249–251;
- temperature at, 247;
- visit to the Adyar library, 247–249;
- Toddy Tappus, 249;
- jin-rickshaws, 249–250;
- Botanic Gardens, 251
-
- Mahmudshah, 59
-
- Malabar Hill, 21, 29–30
-
- Mandal, 75
-
- Maratha chiefs, 151
-
- Marble—
- Piercing patterns in, 64–65;
- suitability of Indian climate for preserving, 69
-
- Marseilles, 2, 317
-
- Martin, General or Captain—
- Painting of, 193;
- schools founded by, 197–198
-
- Mayo, Lord, 100
-
- Mecca, sign of having visited, on house walls, 8
-
- Messina, 4
-
- _Migration of Symbols_ (d’Alviella), cited, 41–42
-
- Mirza Jahangir, tomb of, 156
-
- Missionaries, indifference of, to native religions, 275, 297
-
- Mocha, 12, 314
-
- Mogul Emperors, private chapel of, 113
-
- Mogul Serai, 218
-
- Mohammedans—
- Educated, debarred from high administrative posts, 142;
- Tombs of, 8, 59–60;
- Weddings among the, 27;
- Women, 104, 174–175
-
- Mongolian peasants, 225–226
-
- Monkeys, silver grey, 53, 59
-
- Moonsawmy, 33, 125–126, 183
-
- Mori, 63
-
- Morley, Mr John, 142
-
- Moses, well of, 11
-
- Moti Musjid, 113
-
- Mulich, Dr, 1
-
- Munmad, a night at, 34–36, 45
-
- Muslin, native method of printing on, 70
-
- Mussulman mosque of Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra, 68
-
- Mutiny, memorials of, 189–190;
- provocative causes of, 190
-
-
- Nadir Shah, 151
-
- Naoroji, M. Dadabhi, welcome of, to Bombay, 46–47
-
- Naisirabad, 74
-
- Nelson, Lord, bust of, 260
-
- Nemnath, Jain pontiff, 131
-
- Nizam of Hyderabad, 36, 38
-
- Nizam-ud-din, cemetery of, 156–157
-
- Nunnoya, 303, 310
-
- Nuwara-Eliya, 302;
- scenery at, 304–305;
- the Magdala Gardens, 305–307
-
-
- Parsees—
- Burial place of, 30;
- Merchant, description of, 24;
- Weddings among, 28
-
- Parvati, goddess, 41, 109, 256
-
- Paul, Lieutenant, 198
-
- Perrim, 12, 314
-
- _Picturesque India_ (W. S. Caine), quoted, 151
-
- Pillai, Mr, 277–278
-
- Pillour, 161
-
- Plague, bubonic, 141
-
- Ploughs, native, 74–75, 140
-
- Ploughman, native, earnings of, 140
-
- Poori, 241
-
- Port Said, 316
-
- Poverty of natives, 140–141, 143
-
- Prang, Mr Louis, and Mrs Prang, 235–236
-
- _Prosperous British India_ (Digby), cited, 141, 191
-
-
- Rai, Mr Laipat, 142
-
- Railway travelling in India—
- Facilities for, 48–49;
- native travellers, 70–72
-
- Rajpootana, 63, 77, 79
-
- _Ramayana_, 1
-
- Rani Sipri, mosque of, 51
-
- Readymoney, Sir Cowasji Jehangir, 29
-
- Red Sea, passage of, 11–12, 314
-
- _Rena_, s.s., 10
-
- Rhododendron, Cingalese, 306
-
- Rozah—
- Drive to, from Daulatabad, 36–37;
- description of a night at, 37–38
-
- Rubber trade of Ceylon, 308–310
-
- Russia, Czar of, 206, 282
-
- Ryot, Indian, average earnings of, 141
-
-
- Said, Port, visit to, 5–9
-
- Salaams, custom as to, 73
-
- Sara, crossing the Ganges at, 223–224, 237
-
- Sarbarmati River, scenes on, 53–54, 58–59
-
- Sardinia, 4
-
- Sarkhai, excursion to, 58–61
-
- Saunders, Mr and Mrs, 197
-
- Scott, Mr Ross, 188, 198
-
- Schwartz, 259
-
- Scylla, 4
-
- Seringham—
- Religious procession at, 282;
- Temple of, 272–275
-
- Shaw, G. Bernard, 248
-
- Sheep, fat-tailed, 176
-
- Sicily, 4, 317
-
- Sidi Sayyids’ Mosque, 51–52
-
- Sikandra, excursion to—tomb of Akbar, 122–125
-
- Sikhs, religious centre of, 166
-
- Silignis, 225–226
-
- Silk-weaving at—
- Ahmedabad, 55, 56;
- Vizianagram, 244;
- Tanjore, 262;
- Madura, 285–286
-
- Silver Lake, 242
-
- Sinai, Mount, 11
-
- Sindhia, 131
-
- Singh, Princess Duleep, 181–182
-
- Siva, god—
- Representations of, at Madura, 278, 279, 280, 281, 283;
- sacred bull of, 255–256;
- sacred mark of, 242, 253;
- otherwise mentioned, 41, 109, 256
-
- Sketching, native interest in, 283–284
-
- Sorabji, Miss, 220
-
- Soumalis at Aden, 13–15
-
- South Kensington, Indian museum at, 52
-
- Spartivento, Cape, 4
-
- Squirrels, palm, 36, 59, 136
-
- Stromboli, 317
-
- Suez, call at, 10, 315
-
- Suez Canal, passage through 9–10, 315–316
-
- Sun, eclipse of, 167
-
-
- Table decorations of Southern India, 286
-
- Taj Mahal—
- Visit to, and account of, 114–118;
- gardens of, 118–119;
- compared with the Itmad-ud-Daulat, 120;
- moonlight visit to, 120–121;
- sketches of, 121
-
- Tamils, 297
-
- Tanjore—
- Journey to, from Madras, 251–254;
- accommodation at, 254–255, 269;
- the old fort and Hindu Temple, 255–258;
- religious procession at, 258;
- Christian church at, 258–259;
- palace of the Maharajah, 259–261;
- description of—street scenes, etc., 261–264;
- decline of Western influence at, 263;
- native theatre, 264–268;
- native pedlars—Tanjore craftsmanship, 268–269;
- water carrying, 270
-
- Taormina, 4
-
- Taragarh, Fort of, 67
-
- Tea, Ceylon, colour of beverage, 305
-
- Tea plantations of Ceylon, 302–305
-
- Theatre, native, at Tanjore, 264–268
-
- Theosophical Society, headquarters, 247
-
- Threshing of grain, native methods, 252
-
- Thull Ghat, 34
-
- Tibetan fat-tailed sheep, 176
-
- Tibetan masque at Darjeeling, 229–232
-
- Tiled mosques, 178
-
- _Tourane_, s.s., 313
-
- Trinchinopoly—
- Arrival at—general impressions, 270–272, 275;
- visit to the temple of Seringham, 272–275;
- the Rock of Trinchinopoly, 275
-
- Tuticorin, 287–289
-
- “Twelve Apostles, The,” 12
-
-
- Udaipur—
- Native group from, 76;
- journey to, from Chitorgarh, 82–83;
- hotel experiences, 83–84;
- place of tombs, 85–86;
- palace of the Maharajah, 87–88;
- excursion to the palace of Jagmandin, 88–91;
- feeding of the Maharajah’s wild pigs, 91–92;
- the Maharajah’s gardens, 93;
- Victoria Institute, 93;
- departure from—the station, 94–95
-
- Umballa, 161, 183
-
-
- Villuparam, 254
-
- Vishnu, 86, 272, 273
-
- Vizianagram, 244
-
- Voyages out and home, descriptions of, 1–20, 313–317
-
-
- Wales, Prince and Princess, 167, 206, 282
-
- Waltair, 244
-
- Water filter and water bearers at railway stations, 75
-
- Watts, G. F., 76
-
- Wax, raised designs of, on textiles, 179
-
- Webb, Sidney, 248
-
- Wedding processions in Bombay, 27–28
-
- Western civilisation, questionable value of, 94, 308–310
-
- Women, native, costumes of, 105, 174–175
-
-
- Zebu bulls, 256, 280
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED BY
- TURNBULL AND SPEARS,
- EDINBURGH
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of India Impressions, by Walter Crane
-
-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: India Impressions
- With some notes of Ceylon during a winter tour, 1906-7.
-
-Author: Walter Crane
-
-Release Date: May 14, 2017 [EBook #54718]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDIA IMPRESSIONS ***
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-
-
-<h1>INDIA IMPRESSIONS</h1>
-
-<div id="i_frontis" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_000.jpg" width="430" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MANIKARNIKÁ GHÁT BENARES</div></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center larger vspace wspace">
-<span class="xlarge bold">INDIA IMPRESSIONS</span><br />
-<span class="gesperrt1">WITH SOME NOTES OF CEYLON</span><br />
-<span class="gesperrt2">DURING A WINTER TOUR, 1906–7</span><br />
-<span class="gesperrt3">BY WALTER CRANE, R.W.S. WITH</span><br />
-<span class="gesperrt4">A FRONTISPIECE IN COLOUR AND</span><br />
-NUMEROUS OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS<br />
-FROM SKETCHES BY THE AUTHOR</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter nopad" style="max-width: 1.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_001.jpg" width="28" height="40" class="nopad" alt="decoration" /></div>
-
-<p class="p2 center larger vspace wspace">NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="bold">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
-1907
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace">
-TO MY WIFE<br />
-<span class="gesperrt4">MY TRAVELLING COMPANION</span><br />
-ON THIS TOUR, AND TO WHOM<br />
-<span class="gesperrt5">THE PROJECT WAS DUE, I</span><br />
-<span class="gesperrt1">NOW INSCRIBE ITS RECORD</span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter nopad" style="max-width: 1.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_001.jpg" width="28" height="40" class="nopad" alt="decoration" /></div>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii">vii</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Although</span> many books descriptive of India
-and Indian life have recently appeared, even
-a short visit to that wonderful country presents so
-extraordinary a series of spectacles to the European,
-especially to one seeing the East for the first time,
-that it occurred to me that a few notes and fresh
-impressions from an artist’s point of view, accompanied
-by sketches made on the spot, as well as
-illustrations of the lighter side of travel, might not
-be without interest to the public.</p>
-
-<p>Even apart from the enormous artistic interest
-and architectural splendours of India, which are so
-rich and abundant that one feels that hundreds of
-drawings would be necessary to give any adequate
-idea of their beauty, there is the human interest
-of these vast populations, among whom so many
-streams of race, language and religion are found,
-not to speak of the problems of government and
-administration they present.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot claim to have had any special facilities
-in seeing the country—no more at least than might
-be at the command of an ordinary English tourist,
-and have trusted chiefly to what powers of observation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii">viii</a></span>
-I may possess in describing the various cities
-visited, and the districts traversed, and I offer these
-notes strictly as personal impressions.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to ever increasing facilities of travel, the
-East is, in a sense, drawn nearer to the West, or,
-rather the West to the East, but nothing strikes the
-traveller so much as the apparently vast gulf
-dividing the dark-skinned races from the white—a
-gulf deeper and wider than the oceans.</p>
-
-<p>I mean the profound differences in ideas, in
-religion, in sentiment, in life, habit and custom.
-Western influence where even it has had any
-apparent effect—apart from commercial enterprise—seems
-to be but a thin veneer, and it is a constant
-wonder how the British should have been able to
-acquire and maintain their grasp over this vast
-peninsular, and to hold the balance between
-antagonistic races and creeds so long.</p>
-
-<p>But it is not a comfortable thought for an
-Englishman, loving freedom, and accustomed to the
-principles of popular and representative government
-at home, to realise that this vast empire is held
-under the strictest autocratic system; and that the
-national aspirations that are now beginning to
-make themselves heard and felt should be entirely
-ignored, and the voice of native feeling sternly
-suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>One can only hope that the great British people
-will take more trouble to study and understand
-their great Dependency, and not be prevented by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix">ix</a></span>
-official explanations from making independent
-inquiries and observations for themselves, and
-finally to “be just and fear not.”</p>
-
-<p>If, however, in any way and from any point of
-view, these impressions may serve, in however
-slight a degree, to increase the interest of my own
-countrymen and women in India, I shall be very
-glad.</p>
-
-<p class="sigright">
-WALTER CRANE
-</p>
-
-<p class="sigleft">
-<span class="smcap">Kensington</span>, <i>July 1907</i>
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi">xi</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr class="small">
- <td class="tdr nopad">CHAPTER</td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr nopad">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#PREFACE">vii</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Voyage</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Bombay and the Caves of Ellora</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">21</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ahmedabad</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">48</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ahmedabad to Ajmir</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">62</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Chitorgarh and Udaipur</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">74</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jaipur</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">96</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Agra</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">112</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Gwalior</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">127</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Delhi</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">144</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Amritzar and Lahore</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">161</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lucknow</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">185</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Benares</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">200</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Calcutta—Darjeeling</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">218</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Madras and the South</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">239</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Notes of Ceylon</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">290</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#INDEX">319</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii">xii</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS IN
-THE TEXT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of Illustrations">
- <tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr nopad">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Rough Sketch Map of India</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_xvi">xvi</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">London to Port Said, a Hieroglyphic of our Voyage</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_3">3</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Coaling at Port Said—and after!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_6">6</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Spoiling the Egyptians? or being Despoiled by Them!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_7">7</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sensation in Solar Topis</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_7">7</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Suez Canal</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_9">9</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Passage of the Red Sea (Therm: 88° or so!)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_12">12</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In the same Boat—a Contrast at Aden</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_14">14</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Some Types among our Fellow Passengers</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_17">17</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Landing at Bombay</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_22">22</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Awaiting the Customs—Bombay</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_23">23</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Street Performers—Bombay</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_24">24</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Interview with Candidates for the Post of Bearer—mostly unbearable!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_31">31</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Bed at the Dak Bungalow! Munmad (keep it Da(r)k)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_35">35</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">We are introduced to the Caves of Ellora</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_39">39</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">And its Wasps</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_42">42</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Feet of Pilgrims (at Mohammedan Mosques)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_50">50</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Poor Relations</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_52">52</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Family Party—Cranes on a Mango Tree (Sarbarmati River)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_54">54</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Street Scene, Ahmedabad. English Travellers sketching and making Purchases</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_57">57</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii">xiii</a></span><span class="smcap">The Camel’s Crinoline (Sugar Cane) Ajmir</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_71">71</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">First Elephant Ride. (Chitorgarh)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_78">78</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Rajputs and their Rarities. (Udaipur)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_85">85</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Hotel Accommodation (Jaipur), “for your Ease and Comfort” (or rather for the Easing of your Rupees?)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_98">98</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">To Amber on an Elephant</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_106">106</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Shopping in Jaipur</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_109">109</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Aggravating Agra</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_115">115</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Mainstay of India. Aquarius—the Water-bearer</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_119">119</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">To Gwalior Fort by Palanquin</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_129">129</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Callers at the Guest House, Gwalior</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_137">137</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Dash for the Dining-car at Agra Road</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_146">146</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Delhi Driving. Wanted—a Rule of the Road</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_159">159</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">She won’t be Happy till She gets Everything packed up</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_162">162</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Demon Hotel Touts at Amritzar fighting for their Prey</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_163">163</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Through Amritzar—sit tight and hold a Smelling Bottle!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_165">165</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Indian Autolycus</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_168">168</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Enjoying a Log Fire at Lahore</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_172">172</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">“The Woman in White” at Lahore (Suggestion for a Disguise Party)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_175">175</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Merchants of Kashmir</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_182">182</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In Hospital, Lucknow. The Operating Table (Patient had a Bit of Grit in her Eye after a Train Journey)—Sixteen Rupees were extracted!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_186">186</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jugglers at Lucknow—the Mango Tree Trick</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_187">187</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Better Luck at Lucknow—through the Chowk on an Elephant</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_195">195</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Maharajah places his Carriage at our <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv">xiv</a></span>Disposal</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_202">202</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Benares: viewing the Ghats from the Maharajah’s Peacock Boat</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_207">207</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">We see Snakes at Benares</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_209">209</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Maharajah’s Reception, decorating the Visitors</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_214">214</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Soothsayer at Calcutta—(or Palmistry under the Palms)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_220">220</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Darjeeling Toy-Railway trying to catch its own Tail!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_225">225</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Characters in a Tibetan Masque, Darjeeling</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_228">228</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The shy Peak of Kinchin Junga</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_233">233</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Ride at Darjeeling: “up Hill spare Me”</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_234">234</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Hailstone Chorus—Departure from Darjeeling</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_236">236</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Calcutta to Madras—Section of Sleeper—or Something like It</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_240">240</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ladies or Gentlemen? (Fashions in Southern India)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_243">243</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Madras—a Jin-rickshaw made for Two</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_250">250</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tanjore—Native Theatre—House full. Performance from 9 p.m. till 2 a.m.—but We didn’t stop to see It through</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_265">265</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Trichinopoly—Ox Tonga—Vita Brevis!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_271">271</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sacred Elephants of Seringham—securing Two-Anna Pieces</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_274">274</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Rivals. Our Moonsawmy and the Madura Guide</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_277">277</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tuticorin. Departure for Colombo. The Last of the Kites and Crows</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_287">287</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Landing at Colombo</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_291">291</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Common Objects of Colombo. (Jin-rickshawus Bipedes)</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_293">293</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Cingalese Waiter</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_294">294</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In Ceylon—Extremes meet—the Motor and the <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xv">xv</a></span>Ox-cart</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_296">296</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tea Plantation, Ceylon</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_303">303</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tea and Rubber in Ceylon—a rising Industry</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_309">309</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A few Trifles the Wife wished to bring Home from India</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_316">316</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>LIST OF PLATES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of Plates">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Manikarniká Ghat, Benares</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
- <tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr nopad">TO FACE PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Kylas, Caves of Ellora</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_38">38</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Arrival of Mr Dadabhai Naoroji at Bombay, December 14, 1906</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_46">46</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tomb of Gunj Baksh, Sarkhei</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_58">58</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Shrine of the Kwaja, Ajmir</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_66">66</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Maharajah’s Palace at Udaipur, from the Jagmandir Pavilion</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_88">88</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Maharajah’s State Elephant, Jaipur</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_102">102</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Taj Mahal, from the Gateway</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_116">116</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In the Bazaar, Gwalior</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_134">134</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Approach to the Palace of Man Mandir, Gwalior</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_138">138</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Jama Musjid Mosque, Delhi</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_152">152</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lahore—The Mosque of Waza Khan</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_182">182</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Irrigation Well, Lucknow</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_196">196</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Kinchin Junga from Darjeeling</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_232">232</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tanjore—The Great Gate of the Temple</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_254">254</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sacred Tank of the Great Temple, Madura</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_282">282</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Under the Palms at the Galle Face, Ceylon</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_292">292</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvi">xvi</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_xvi" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_002.jpg" width="600" height="722" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">ROUGH-SKETCH SKELETON-MAP OF <b>INDIA</b>
- TO SHOW OUR RAILWAY ROUTE &amp; POSITION OF THE PLACES VISITED</div></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="INDIA_IMPRESSIONS" class="larger"></a>INDIA IMPRESSIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE VOYAGE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A visit</span> to India and the East had long been
-a cherished but somewhat vague dream with
-us. It seemed a far cry, and to make a break
-of a few months in the midst of the occupations
-of a busy life is always a difficult matter. The
-impossible, however, became in course of time
-possible, and even practicable. Inquiries as to
-ways and means had the effect of clearing our
-path; and having the <em>will</em>, the <em>way</em> was soon
-discovered.</p>
-
-<p>“Only sixteen days to Bombay!” our Indian
-friends in London told us, and they were always
-urging us to go and see their wonderful country
-for ourselves. Mr Romesh Dutt and Dr Mulich
-had been visitors at our house. The former
-had presented his interesting translation of the
-“Ramayana,” illustrated by Miss Hardy, to my
-wife. Besides these we had from time to time
-made the acquaintance of several native gentlemen
-in London who were reading for the Indian
-Bar. They came and went, but all were earnest
-in their hope that we should visit India, and I
-think that they had discovered our sympathies were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-with those of their countrymen in their aspirations to
-participate in the administration of the affairs of
-their own country.</p>
-
-<p>The decisive step of booking our passage was
-at last taken in the summer of 1906, and the 19th
-day of November following saw us <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en route</i> for
-Marseilles, where we committed ourselves to the
-care of the Messageries Maritime, and embarked
-on the S.S. “La Nera” in due course, putting to
-sea on Wednesday, the 21st November.</p>
-
-<p>It was a lovely bright afternoon as we left the
-port, the southern sunshine flooding everything in
-golden light. It is a wonderful moment when the
-ship casts off. The great liner, which had seemed
-a part of the land itself while the stream of
-passengers passed up the gangways, and their
-baggage after them, begins to throb with life and
-movement—to tremble, as it were, with expectation
-of departure. As a swimmer about to take the
-water casts off all impedimenta, so the ship casts off
-her cables and all that links her to the shore, and
-glides off into the great blue deep, breasting the
-waves of the vast open sea. Incredibly fast as the
-engines beat the solid land fades away. The domes
-and towers and chimneys silhouetted against the
-bright sky, the people on the quays, the ships
-riding at anchor, the tossing harbour buoys, the
-small sailing craft flitting about, all are rolled by as
-on the canvas of a moving diorama, as the steamer
-clears the port, and all detail becomes merged and
-lost under the bold main outlines of the rocky
-coast, or the dim shapes of the distant mountains.</p>
-
-<p>As the long shining wake increases astern and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-the coast recedes, those nautical camp-followers
-the gulls, which have pursued the ship from the
-harbour, begin to diminish their numbers, though
-they wing a long way out to sea, attracted by the
-crumbs which occasionally fall from the region of
-the cook’s galley.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_3" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 19.625em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.jpg" width="314" height="568" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">LONDON TO PORT SAID, A HIEROGLYPHIC OF OUR VOYAGE</div></div>
-
-<p>A glorious sunset inaugurated our first night at
-sea—of the order of the Golden Fleece, as it might<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-be called—a distinct type, when in a windless sky a
-large field of delicate fleecy cirrus cloud spreads in
-a level field from west to east, and as the sun sinks its
-under edges are lighted up by golden light, changing
-to orange, scarlet, and crimson, when he disappears
-beneath the horizon. So our voyage began propitiously,
-and with a smooth sea. Early the next
-morning we passed through the Straits of Bonifazio,
-between Corsica and Sardinia, the coasts of which
-we had a glimpse of through our port-hole, and
-on the morning of the third day, after a little
-tossing, we sighted Sicily, passing Scylla and
-Charybdis at the entrance of the straits, and close
-to Messina. Etna soon came into view, its summit
-covered with a crown of snow (as we had seen it
-on our visit to Taormina in 1904).</p>
-
-<p>The Calabrian coast, too, was very interesting,
-the mountains of striking form, and the lines very
-varied all along to Cape Spartivento—the toe of the
-boot-shaped continent of Italy. We could see the
-little white towns along the coast and among the
-hills, and the monasteries perched high upon crags.
-Etna gradually faded away, like a vision, beyond
-the dark blue edge of the sea, and almost immediately
-after passing the cape we encountered
-a strong easterly wind from the Adriatic, which
-met the Mediterranean here.</p>
-
-<p>At sunset there were huge banks of grey
-clouds of fantastic shapes rising like high wooded
-islands, but we had moonlight on the waters every
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Those grey banks of cloud, however, were
-ominous, and by November the 24th the weather<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-grew so rough that the “fiddle-strings” became
-necessary on the tables in the dining-saloon,
-where the attendance, too, grew distinctly thinner.
-Towards evening we sighted the cliffs of Crete
-(Candia), the fissured, mountainous, and dangerous-looking
-coast plainly visible in the sunlight,
-though a bank of cloud covered the summits of
-the island.</p>
-
-<p>After much tossing and rolling through another
-day and night the lights of Port Said were sighted
-about four o’clock on the morning of November 26.
-There was a powerful search-light from the lighthouse.
-We got into harbour about 5.30, and the
-coaling began. It was a weird scene. Six black
-lighters were hauled alongside our steamer, three
-on the port bow and three on the starboard, and
-boats crowded to the water’s edge with coolies
-in long ragged garments and turbans, mostly of
-a dusky red and blue, the colours shining through
-the coal dust which darkened their naturally
-swarthy visages and forms. As these crowded
-boats approached with their weird passengers, one
-had an irresistible suggestion of Charon ferrying
-lost souls across the Styx—there was generally
-only one pair of oars, as the distance to the steamer
-from the wharf was very short. Well, these were
-our coal-slaves, upon whose cheap labour the speed
-of our steamers depends quite as much as on their
-own engines, one felt. From the boats they
-scrambled into the lighters—some shovelled up the
-coal into hand baskets of matting which others
-lifted on to their shoulders and carried across a
-narrow plank into the ship, forming a weird line of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-black figures silhouetted against the shining water.
-The coolies worked hard and fast in a black mist
-of coal dust and kept up a continual hubbub of
-cries in Arabic and other strange tongues which
-added to the weirdness of the scene.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_6" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.4375em;">
- <img src="images/i_006.jpg" width="327" height="424" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">COALING AT PORT SAID—AND AFTER!</div></div>
-
-<p>Port Said looked very new and flimsy, and was
-hopelessly vulgarised by flaming posters and advertisements
-of Western origin both in French and
-English. Boats swarmed round the ship’s side, and
-swarthy eager-eyed hotel touts came aboard in Fez
-caps, as well as a motley crowd of traders, Egyptian
-conjurers, and European musicians who played the
-latest popular waltzes. We were glad to escape
-the coal dust and go ashore, where an intelligent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-but probably not too scrupulous Egyptian guide
-undertook to show us everything, and we went
-with him round the town, passing through the
-market crowded with the picturesque life of the
-East, which indeed showed itself everywhere
-through the thin veneer of modern European
-commercialism. A venerable-looking prophet
-swept the streets, and, of course, there were plenty
-of street arabs ready to turn “cart-wheels” or
-anything that would turn a more or less honest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-penny in their direction, and the cry of “Backsheesh”
-was raised on the slightest provocation. Our guide
-took us into a small Mohammedan mosque, modern,
-but, of course, strictly according to the traditional
-plan and oriented towards Mecca. We had to put
-on loose canvas shoes over our own shoes to enter
-the sacred precincts, and our guide gave us a long
-exposition of the necessary ablutions to be performed
-by the faithful before and after prayers, and showed
-us the water tank fitted with taps, at one of which
-a devotee was busy having his wash.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_7" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.375em;">
- <img src="images/i_007.jpg" width="374" height="236" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SPOILING THE EGYPTIANS? OR BEING DESPOILED BY THEM!</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_7b" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 21.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_007b.jpg" width="349" height="247" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SENSATION IN SOLAR TOPIS</div></div>
-
-<p>The bazaar bristled with European goods, and
-topis and cigarettes were much in evidence, though
-there were some charming Egyptian fabrics in the
-form of scarves brocaded with patterns in gold or
-silver thread or black on white fine linen.</p>
-
-<p>On the whitewashed walls of some of the houses
-I noticed some primitive paintings in distemper,
-apparently representing camels, travellers, and
-palm-trees, done in profile. They were carried
-horizontally across the front of the houses as a sort
-of frieze, and were curiously suggestive in a childlike
-way of a survival of the ancient Egyptian
-method of decorating. Our guide said that they
-indicated that the dweller in the house had visited
-Mecca. Returning to “La Nera” we found her
-indeed blacker than she was painted, as everything
-on board was covered with a fine coal dust, which the
-energy of the crew with copious hose-pipes eventually
-got rid of. The harbour of Port Said is always
-busy, many liners and transports coming and
-going, war vessels of various nationalities lying
-at anchor, boats plying to and fro, and young, lithe,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-brown-skinned natives on the quays, ready to dive
-for silver pieces, crouching shivering on the edge of
-the wharf, or in a boat, and crying in an almost continuous
-monotone, “à la mer,” “à la mer,” “à la
-mer,” until the hoped-for small coin is thrown
-into the water, when they adroitly dive and intercept
-it as it falls turning and glittering in the water, and
-reappear with it in their mouths, which soon open
-for more.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_9" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_009.jpg" width="355" height="161" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE SUEZ CANAL</div></div>
-
-<p>We started again at 12.30 for Suez, entering the
-canal. Our steamer was stopped at the first village
-to allow two steamers to pass—the “Clan Campbell”
-of Glasgow and the “Herefordshire” of Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>The weather was quite cool and cloudy and it
-turned out a showery afternoon. Flocks of pelicans
-were seen on the waters of the wide shallow lakes
-we passed. There was a stormy sunset, and there
-was lightning after nightfall, but later the moon
-shone brightly, falling on the wan sand of the banks,
-which had quite the effect of snow under its clear
-cold light.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer moved slowly through the canal at
-about the rate of five knots. A passenger was
-landed at Ismailia, after which we entered the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-bitter lakes, and next morning we were within
-fifteen miles from Suez, but our steamer had to stop
-owing to a transport ship having got aground ahead
-of us. A German steamer was close behind us,
-and while waiting many of the passengers landed
-and roamed about on the desert sand. It was not
-long, however, before the transport was got off, and
-she presently passed us, a huge white steamer
-named the “Rena,” crowded with English
-“Tommies” homeward bound.</p>
-
-<p>The passage of the Suez Canal is very interesting
-and comes as a welcome relief after tossing on the
-open sea out of sight of land. The long level lines
-of the sandy desert have a reposeful effect, but fine
-ranges of mountains are often seen beyond, and the
-desert is frequently varied with the</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“strip of herbage strown”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">embroidered with palm-trees, and these elements of
-Egyptian landscape steeped in the translucent
-atmosphere are relieved by striking bronze-coloured
-figures in blue robes and swarthy Arabs in white in
-the foreground on the sand-banks, or an occasional
-string of camels.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Suez about midday and anchored
-off the town. The Consul’s tug paid us a visit,
-and our vessel was soon surrounded by a small
-fleet of picturesque craft with lateen sails, and
-gunwales painted with eyes, and in the semblance
-of quaint fish in bands of green and white, manned
-by swarthy Arabs and Egyptians. These brought
-cargo and provisions to be hoisted on board, and
-the process took an hour or two, but in the afternoon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-we steamed away again and entered the Red
-Sea.</p>
-
-<p>The weather grew perceptibly warmer, but was
-still not oppressive, and there was a cool breeze in
-the evening. There was a beautiful roseate light
-at afterglow on the eastern shore, where Mount
-Sinai was pointed out, and the well of Moses, and
-the traditional place of the Israelites’ passage of the
-Red Sea. The sun set in gold and purple behind a
-bold range of craggy mountains on our starboard
-side, and a splendid moonlight night succeeded, the
-moon nearly at full.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 28th November we passed
-“The Brothers” lightships to starboard, and the
-next day we were out of sight of land, with a
-pleasant breeze under the double awnings of the
-upper deck, enjoying the best summer weather,
-which we should think ourselves lucky to have in
-England. The Red Sea was really as blue as the
-Mediterranean, though of course subject to changes
-according to the sky, which turned to a wonderful
-clear greenish gold after sunset, powdered with
-small dark clouds which floated across it; a violet
-flush above the gold blending it into the deep
-blue of the upper sky, the small floating clouds
-against it showing ashy grey, while against the
-gold of the afterglow they looked nearly black, the
-sea being of a rather cold metallic blue. The
-serene weather and the splendour of the moonlit
-nights continued, but the temperature rose
-considerably, reaching 88° Fahr. in our cabin,
-which was on the starboard side of the ship. It is
-as well to remember that port side cabins are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-cooler for the outward voyage, and those on the
-starboard side for the homeward voyage, as going
-eastwards the heat of the sun falls on the starboard
-side necessarily for the greater part of the day,
-while going westwards of course the reverse is the
-case. This applies more particularly to the Red
-Sea.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_12" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 21.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_012.jpg" width="341" height="213" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>THE PASSAGE OF THE RED SEA<br />
- (Therm: 88° or so!)</p></div></div>
-
-<p>On November 30th we passed the island of
-Jubbelteer, on which was a lighthouse, and later,
-“The Twelve Apostles,” a series of rocky volcanic-looking
-islands of bold and angular outline, and
-apparently barren. Sea-birds, however, were seen
-with black and white bodies and brown wings flying
-close to the water.</p>
-
-<p>On December the 1st we passed Mocha, of
-coffee celebrity, and the island of Perrim, where
-there are lighthouses and signal stations, but, like
-the other islands we had seen, otherwise desolate
-in the extreme. Later the Arabian coast came
-into view and the sea was dotted with the sails of
-Arab dhows. The coast as we approached Aden
-showed volcanic-looking mountains, striking in form<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-and bold in outline, with stretches of sand and rock
-between. Aden was reached about 2 <span class="smcap smaller">P.M.</span>, a school
-of dolphins playing about the ship as if to welcome
-our arrival.</p>
-
-<p>Aden looked a queer uninviting place, baked dry
-by the sun—a cluster of temporary and barrack-like
-buildings huddled together anyhow along the rocky
-coast, with never a tree to be seen; the ragged,
-precipitous, barren edges of extinct volcanoes forming
-a background to the red-roofed barracks and
-bungalows.</p>
-
-<p>Several large white warships lay at anchor in the
-harbour, and lent a touch of gay colour by being
-decked with strings of bunting from stem to stern
-in honour of our Queen Alexandra’s birthday. A
-German liner got in just before us and we saw the
-coal lighters being rowed up to her. “La Nera”
-coaled here also, but it was a less grimy proceeding
-than at Port Said, as the coal was in sacks. The
-type of coolies, too, was very different, and there
-were many African negroes (Soumalis) among
-them, whose skins could hardly be made blacker
-than they were by nature. In addition to its
-cluster of coaling lighters, our vessel, now at anchor,
-was soon surrounded by boats filled with natives
-who swarmed round the gangways, and soon
-invaded the ship—a crowd of Soumali traders
-offering ostrich feathers and feather fans (of a
-European look), ostrich eggs, wicker bottle-shaped
-baskets, shell necklaces, and amber beads, who
-drove their trade amongst the passengers on deck,
-whilst others endeavoured to catch their eyes from
-the boats. Thin, lithe young natives with fuzzy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-hair were very numerous, and some had dyed their
-hair red, which had a grotesque effect with the
-black skin. I noted a strange contrast in the same
-boat, too, which contained two natives, one of whom
-wore a sort of large-checked suit of pyjamas with his
-mop of red-dyed hair, while his companion had his
-head clean shaved with “nodings on”! Some
-natives seemed to have used face powder—at
-any rate had smeared some kind of whitening
-over their countenances with ghastly effect.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_14" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_014.jpg" width="355" height="232" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">IN THE SAME BOAT—A CONTRAST AT ADEN</div></div>
-
-<p>The scene was a strange one altogether. The
-crowd of Europeans on deck, in which nearly every
-nationality was represented, mostly clad in topis
-and white garments, the black traders moving
-about them; the swarm of boats at the sides of the
-vessel full of bright spots of colour—scarlet turbans,
-white, orange, yellow, and purple in the costumes—swaying
-on the turquoise-coloured sea; brown-backed
-gulls flapping over the water and kites hovering
-over the harbour; and all steeped in the bright
-sunshine of the East. Many of the passengers went<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-ashore in the native boats, but the scene seemed more
-amusing from the ship and we remained on deck.</p>
-
-<p>Aden itself looked more interesting at night, with
-bright lights here and there on the shore and on
-the ships, and the rising moon translated everything
-into terms of mystery and romance.</p>
-
-<p>I watched an Arab dhow set sail. It is one of
-the most beautiful of sailing vessels, and has a
-high old-fashioned poop—the line of the gunwale
-making a fine curve from stem to stern—a mainmast
-with a big lateen sail, two jibs on a short
-bowsprit, and a secondary smaller mast astern.
-The sun set behind the Arabian coast, the jagged
-peaks of which we had previously passed. The
-coaling did not finish till nightfall. The coolies
-seemed to undertake all the mechanical arrangements
-for the work, fixing the hauling gear and the
-necessary ropes and planks, and often in the process
-seeming to hang on to the ship with little more
-than their eyelids. When they pulled a rope
-together the cry to keep time sounded like
-“Leesah!” or “Leeshah!” with emphasis on the
-first syllable.</p>
-
-<p>The coaling finished, and the curious swarm of
-native life that had surrounded us departed, “La
-Nera” weighed anchor and pursued her course
-eastwards, skirting the rocky coast bathed in the
-moonlight as she made for the open Arabian
-Sea.</p>
-
-<p>The next day in the early morning we had sight
-of some flying-fish. They have almost the appearance
-of swallows at a distance, especially when seen
-against the light, but, glancing, as they leap out of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-the water, to disappear into it again very quickly,
-they flash in the sun like silver.</p>
-
-<p>The Arabian coast was still faintly visible
-towards the north, but gradually faded from view.
-The pleasant light breeze continued and it was not
-nearly so hot as in the Red Sea, in fact quite
-pleasant either on deck or below—especially with
-a “windle” fixed to the cabin port.</p>
-
-<p>We had made an interesting acquaintance on
-board, a French gentleman who knew India well
-and who was on his way to revisit that country,
-intending to join an English friend there on a
-shooting expedition. He was an old sportsman and
-had shot big game in Tibet. He united the keenness
-and experience of a sportsman with literary
-tastes and a love of history and archæology. This
-gentleman introduced us to “the green ray,” a
-phenomenon peculiar to the Eastern seas, I believe.
-Just at the moment when the sun disappears beneath
-the horizon there is the appearance of a vivid green
-spark flashing like a gem which seems to detach
-itself from the glowing orb and fly upward, instantly
-disappearing in the reddening haze. We witnessed
-this on several occasions, but in order to see it a
-clear sunset is absolutely necessary—that is to say
-that one must be able to see the sun sink below
-the horizon clear of cloud. The lovely moonlight
-nights continued, the moon being now ahead, and
-the apparent goal of the vessel’s course. One night,
-however, was disturbed by the steamer stopping in
-mid-ocean. One gets so accustomed to the throb
-of the engines on board a steamer that its sudden
-cessation is quite startling. Passengers clustered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-near the engine-room to learn the cause, which
-turned out to be something wrong with “a
-washer” which affected the movement of the shaft.
-After about three hours this was repaired and the
-“Nera” continued her course. She generally made
-about 300 miles in the twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p>Incidents in the Indian Ocean were few and far
-between. Flying-fish were to be seen, but only in
-the early morning as a rule; a whale was noticed
-spouting, and two sharks were sighted. I saw, too,
-a large turtle turn over close to the ship’s side, but
-such sights very occasionally varied the wide seascape,
-and many were glad to turn to deck games
-or bridge for diversion, if they could not find it in
-books, or in observing their fellow passengers.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_17" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_017.jpg" width="332" height="286" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SOME TYPES AMONG OUR FELLOW PASSENGERS</div></div>
-
-<p>Certainly amongst these latter there was no want
-of interest or variety; they were quite an international
-group, and included English and Anglo-Indians
-returning after leave of absence in Europe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-to take up their official duties, civil or military, on
-new appointments with their wives and families;
-a large proportion of French (it being a French
-steamer); then there were Portuguese and Dutch
-(going out to Australia), Germans and Canadians,
-Armenians from Rangoon, and Indians from
-Bombay; several Armenian priests also, probably
-missionaries; there were negroes and Arabs in the
-fo’castle, and among the second-class passengers
-a characteristic group of English workmen—foremen
-engineers and navvies. They were bound
-for Bombay, having been engaged to direct coolie
-labour on new and extensive docks at that port,
-their contract being for three years, and their
-passage paid. I think they got very tired of doing
-nothing and did not feel quite happy with the French
-dinners, although the heaviest man of the party
-made it a rule to devour everything that was set
-before him, taking Saint Paul’s advice, and “asking
-no questions.” I think all the ages of man—and
-woman—were represented on board, including
-more than one infant “mewling and puling in its
-nurse’s arms.” A little sample of the big world
-chipped off and sent adrift on the ocean—a ship
-of life, not without its enigmas, its little ironies and
-uncertainties, tossed upon the very type of uncertainty—the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>A ship, however, is a castle of indolence as far
-as the passengers are concerned, though the crew,
-I suspect, would tell a very different story, as, apart
-from the severe work of the engineers and stokers,
-their work never seems at an end, and it is only
-by constant washing, scrubbing, and sweeping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-that a steamer can be kept decently clean and
-habitable.</p>
-
-<p>To break the monotony of the five days’ voyage
-on the Indian Ocean a concert was got up by an
-energetic young lady and her friends. They went
-round the ship to discover what hidden musical
-or histrionic talent might be concealed under the
-more or less disguised personalities of the passengers,
-and they succeeded in drawing out enough
-for an evening’s entertainment on the saloon deck,
-which was picturesquely draped with bunting for
-the occasion, and a piano was wheeled into position.
-Various songs were given, and a French princess,
-who was among the passengers, recited. The
-young lady who had been the leading spirit in
-organising the concert herself gave some charming
-songs which she accompanied on a guitar, and a
-pretty song in Japanese costume and umbrella from
-“The Geisha,” I think, with much spirit. The proceeds
-went to the benefit of the orphans of the
-Messageries Maritimes sailors.</p>
-
-<p>After this violent excitement the days passed as
-days do at sea, the fine weather continuing with
-delightful monotony. The fresh easterly breeze was
-strong enough to fleck the blue plain with “white
-horses,” yet not cause any trying movement of the
-vessel, which ploughed steadily through the waves,
-driving the spray from its bows, and causing dancing
-rainbows on the foamy crests as they rebounded
-from the ship’s side. The sun rising in clear glory
-from the sea, disappeared each evening in tranquil
-splendour, showing the green ray, and the deep red
-along the horizon in the west afterwards, over the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-dark blue sea. The dark blue above and the illuminated
-sky between, recalled the favourite effect in
-Japanese prints by Hiroshigi, and at the same time
-testified to its truth.</p>
-
-<p>But all things have an end, even ocean voyages,
-and about four o’clock on the morning of Friday,
-December the 7th, our steamer slowed down and
-took on board the pilot, and we, cautiously steering
-past mysterious islands under the dawn, finally cast
-anchor in Bombay harbour.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">21</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">BOMBAY AND THE CAVES OF ELLORA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> first impression of Bombay from the sea is
-perhaps a little disappointing from the
-pictorial point of view. The town spreads along
-the low flat coast, lined with long quays without any
-great domes or conspicuous noble buildings. One
-is aware of wharves and factory chimneys, and even
-the palms and gardens of Malabar Hill, and blue
-mountains inland do not altogether mitigate the
-commercial and industrial aspects of the place; but
-the light and colour of the East fuse all sorts of
-incongruities, and the feeling of touching a strange
-land and of setting foot for the first time in India
-is sufficiently exciting to throw a sort of glamour
-over everything.</p>
-
-<p>The steamers cannot disembark their passengers
-at the quays, so they have to be landed in boats
-which cluster about the sides of the big liner. The
-official tug comes alongside first, and the official
-visit is paid. We were due the evening before, and
-inquiries as to the why and wherefore of the delay
-had to be satisfied. Busy agents and eager hotel
-touts come on board, and all is bustle and preparation
-for landing.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_22" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_022.jpg" width="367" height="313" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">LANDING AT BOMBAY</div></div>
-
-<p>Our Indian friend had been unexpectedly called
-away and was unable to meet us, but he committed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-us to the care of other friends at Bombay. We
-landed, however, with our friend the French
-explorer, with all our baggage, in a native boat, and
-by dint of a ragged lateen sail and oars plied by
-a swarthy, wild-looking crew, soon reached the quay,
-where a crowd of coolies waited to spring upon our
-belongings.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_23" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 18.0625em;">
- <img src="images/i_023.jpg" width="289" height="258" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">AWAITING THE CUSTOMS—BOMBAY</div></div>
-
-<p>Our French friend spoke Hindustanee fluently,
-fortunately for us; and amid the clamour of tongues
-which surrounded us, was able to arrange for an
-ox-cart to take our united baggage to the Custom-House,
-where, after an interview with some languid
-English officials clad in white drill and topis, having
-nothing contraband, we were duly passed, though
-our friend, possessing firearms, was delayed longer,
-and of course had to pay. The Bombay ox-carts
-are two-wheeled with high sides of timber, forming
-a square open lattice, and drawn by a pair of oxen.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-Committing our worldly goods to this delightful
-prehistoric vehicle, we took a carriage—a little, one-horse,
-open victoria, which is the street cab of
-Bombay, and similar to those in use in the towns of
-Italy—and drove to the Taj Mahal Hotel, a vast,
-new, modern caravanserai—which, however, was
-quite full, so we went on to the old-established
-“Watson’s” on the Esplanade, where we got a good
-room with a balcony and a view. There was also
-a pleasant covered terrace, or verandah, extending
-the whole length of the building, which on the north
-side, always in shade, faced a garden green with
-well-watered lawns and thickly planted with umbrageous
-mango and banyan trees, amid which
-the ubiquitous crows of India (resembling our
-hooded crow) kept up a continual cawing chorus
-as they flitted about, now swooping down on some
-ill-considered trifle in the street, or perching
-expectantly about the hotel precincts, on the lookout
-for scattered crumbs. Great brown kites<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-hovered in the air, forming a second line of watchful
-but silent scavengers. The terrace also
-commanded a view of the street with all its varied
-types in costume, race, and colour and character.
-The prosperous, sleek Parsee merchant in his
-curious shiny, sloping high hat, long black alpaca
-or white tunic, and loose white nether garments and
-umbrella; Europeans in white drill and grey or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-white pith helmets, which gave a superficial family
-likeness to all who wore them; native servants,
-Hindu, Portuguese, and half-caste, in every variety
-of turban and costume, sitting or standing about in
-groups, waiting to be hired; wandering minstrels,
-dancing women, and jugglers and tumblers trying to
-catch the eye—and the small change—of the traveller;
-men with tom-toms and performing monkeys,
-water-carriers with their dripping goat-skin slung
-at their side, coolies and coolie women constantly
-passing to and fro from the quays, bearing their
-burdens on their heads; the bearer and the ayah
-in charge of faired-haired English children, passing
-in and out of the gardens; the British soldier in
-khaki, and the native policeman in blue with a flat
-yellow cap. These and such as these were the
-prevailing types in the scene from the hotel balcony,
-from whence, also, we could see the tram-cars,
-drawn by horses in big white topis, trailing up and
-down the Esplanade, while motors flashed by, and
-smart European ladies drove in their dog-carts.
-Beyond the trees of the garden rose a modern
-clock tower which told the burning hours in the
-familiar Westminster chimes.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_24" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_024.jpg" width="392" height="563" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">STREET PERFORMERS—BOMBAY</div></div>
-
-<p>The modern British buildings of Bombay would probably
-in newspaper language be described as “handsome.”
-There were many showy and pretentious
-structures in a sort of Italian Gothic style, but they
-looked imported, and were decidedly out of place in a
-country which possesses such magnificent specimens
-of architecture of its own growth—as one might say.
-The many balconied and shuttered fronts, with
-projecting stories, the ridge-tiled roofs and plastered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-walls that we saw in the older quarters of the town
-seemed, as types of dwelling-houses at least, much
-more suitable and characteristic, and such types would
-surely be capable of adaptation to modern requirements.
-The Crawford Market is one of the sights
-of Bombay. Outside, with its steep roofs, belfry, and
-projecting eaves it has a rather English Gothic look,
-but inside the scene is entirely oriental, crowded
-with natives in all sorts of colours, moving among
-fish, fruit, grain, and provisions of all kinds, buying
-and selling amid a clamour of tongues—a busy
-scene of colour and variety, in a symphony of
-smells, dominated by that of the smoke of joss-sticks
-kept burning at some of the stalls as well as a
-suspicion of opium, which pervades all the native
-quarters in Indian cities. There is a sort of court or
-garden enclosed by the buildings, and here the live
-stock is kept—all sorts of birds and animals.</p>
-
-<p>A drive through the native bazaar of Bombay is
-a revelation. The carriage works its way with
-difficulty through the narrow, irregular street, crowded
-with natives in every variety of costume (or next to
-no costume), forming a wonderful moving pattern
-of brilliant colour, punctuated by swarthy faces,
-gleaming eyes, and white teeth. Shops of every
-kind line each side of the way, and these are rather
-dark and cavernous openings, shaded by awnings
-and divided by posts or carved pillars on the
-lowest story, but raised from the level of the streets
-by low platforms which serve the purposes of
-counter and working bench to the native merchant
-or craftsman who squats upon it, and often unites
-the two functions in his own person. He generally<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-carries on his work in the presence of his whole
-family, apparently. All ages and sexes crowd in
-and about the shops, carrying on a perpetual conversazione,
-and the bazaar literally swarms with
-dusky, turbaned faces, varied by the deep red sari
-of the Hindu women, with their glittering armlets
-and anklets, or the veiled Mohammedan in her—well,
-pyjamas!</p>
-
-<p>The older house fronts above the shops were
-often rich with carving and colour, the upper stories
-being generally supported over the open shop by
-four columns. It reminded one of the arrangement
-of a mediæval street, as also in its general aspect,
-the shops being mostly workshops; and, as in the
-old days in Europe, could be seen different crafts
-in full operation, while the finished products of
-each were displayed for sale. There were tailors
-stitching away at garments, coppersmiths hammering
-their metal into shape, leather workers, jewellers, cook-shops,
-and many more, the little dark shops in most
-cases being crowded with other figures besides those
-of the workers—each like a miniature stage of life
-with an abundance of drama going on in all. The
-whole bazaar, too, was gay with colour—white,
-green, red, orange, yellow, and purple, of all sorts
-of shades and tones, in turban or robe—a perfect
-feast for the eye.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of our drive through the bazaar
-we met no less than three wedding processions,
-though rather broken and interrupted by the traffic.
-In one the bridegroom (who, with the Hindus and
-Mohammedans, is considered the most important
-personage in the ceremony as well as the spectacle)<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-was in a carriage, on his way to fetch the bride, in
-gorgeous raiment and with a crown upon his head.
-He was followed by people bearing floral trophies,
-perhaps intended for decoration afterwards. These
-consisted of gilt vases with artificial flowers in
-them, arranged in rows close together, and carried
-in convenient lengths on a plank or shelf by young
-men bearers.</p>
-
-<p>Another of the bridegrooms was mounted on a
-horse, crowned and robed like a Byzantine emperor
-with glittering caparisons and housings, a tiny
-little dusky girl sitting behind him and holding
-on, who was said to be his little sister.</p>
-
-<p>The third bridegroom we saw was veiled, in
-addition to the bravery of his glittering attire.
-Flowers were strewn by boys accompanying him,
-and a little bunch fell into our carriage as we
-waited for the procession to go by, in which, of
-course, the musicians went before. We afterwards
-passed the house where the wedding was being
-celebrated, the guests assembling in great numbers
-to the feast, a tremendous noise going on, drums
-beating and trumpets blowing. In one of the
-processions very antique-looking trumpets or horns
-were carried of a large size, much resembling the
-military horns of ancient Roman times. These
-were Hindu weddings.</p>
-
-<p>We also had a glimpse of a Parsee wedding.
-This was in the open court of a large house arcaded
-from the street, brilliantly illuminated, where
-sat a great crowd of guests all attired in white.</p>
-
-<p>Working right through the native bazaar we
-reached the Victoria Gardens, a sort of Kew and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-Zoological rolled into one, being well stocked with
-fine palms and many varieties of tropical trees, as
-well as birds and animals, and all looking in good
-condition and well kept. Many Eurasians were
-here walking about, looking very weird in European
-dress. In these gardens are situated the Victoria
-and Albert Museum of Bombay.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George Birdwood had given me an introduction
-to H.H. the Aga Khan and we drove out to
-his abode, only to find, however, that His Highness
-had gone to Calcutta on his way to Japan. I was
-not much more fortunate with my other introductions
-to the eminent Parsee Sir Jamsetji
-Jijibhai, and Sir Cowasji Jehangir Readymoney.
-Although the son of the latter magnate did call
-upon us and brought us an invitation from Lady
-Jehangir, we were unable to accept it owing to the
-shortness of our stay in Bombay. I understood
-that the Calcutta Races in December attracted a
-great many of the rich Bombay residents, and
-this accounted for the absence from their homes
-of many at that time.</p>
-
-<p>We had a glimpse of some of the palaces on
-Malabar Hill, seeing the latter first against a
-glowing sunset. Fringed with palms and plantains,
-with its fantastic buildings silhouetted on the sky,
-it recalled the banks of storm cloud I had seen
-on the voyage, with their vaporous trees and
-aerial hanging gardens.</p>
-
-<p>A closer acquaintance did not impress us with
-any conviction of the healthiness of Malabar
-Hill, though of the sumptuousness of its houses,
-and often their fantastic character, and the luxuriance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-of its palms and gardens, there could be no
-doubt. We passed the grey wall of the Tower of
-Silence, the burial (?) place of the Parsees, where the
-crows, the kites, and the vultures were gathered
-together, but did not linger there. From the hill
-there is certainly a magnificent view of the city of
-Bombay: especially if seen just before sundown,
-when a golden glow seems to transfigure the scene;
-and later, looking down on the vast plain, the
-white houses partly hid in trees scattered along
-the shore, the quays, and the ships at anchor in
-the bay, all seem to sink like a dream into the
-roseate atmosphere of sunset. But even that
-lovely light is darkened by a heavy smoke cloud
-drifting on the city from the forest of gaunt factory
-chimneys rising in the East like the shadow of
-poverty which is always cast by the riches of
-the West.</p>
-
-<p>One rather wondered that Bombay was content
-to allow its best drive to be disfigured by a continuous
-succession of hideous commercial posters
-painted along the walls of one of its sides, the
-other being lined with palms and open towards the
-sea. This is, however, not worse indifference—in
-fact not so bad—as ours at home in allowing the
-posters along the railway lines to disfigure the
-charming and varied landscape of our own country.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_31" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_031.jpg" width="380" height="538" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">INTERVIEW WITH CANDIDATES FOR THE POST OF BEARER—MOSTLY
- UNBEARABLE!</div></div>
-
-<p>One of the first necessities to the traveller in
-India, especially if he be ignorant of Hindustanee, is
-the engaging of a native bearer or servant. There
-is always a large class of these seeking engagements.
-They may be seen hanging about Messrs
-Cook’s Tourist Offices in groups. They usually<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-wear white clothes and turbans, but the half-caste
-Portuguese are dressed in semi-European fashion
-with their cloth suits and small, flat, round caps of
-the sort which used to be termed “pork pie” in
-England, only lower. These are embroidered
-round the rim, and a similar sort of head covering
-is also worn by superior caste Hindus. For the
-post of bearer the traveller will find plenty of
-applicants when he makes his requirements known,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-in fact their number is rather embarrassing, and
-they all produce “chits” or letters of recommendation
-from former employers. These, indeed, are
-the only references to go upon, unless one happens
-to come with the personal testimony of a friend.
-The bearers mostly register their names at Cook’s
-offices, but they do not take any responsibility
-there for them in any way. These native servants
-expect 35 rupees (and upwards) a month, with an
-allowance for clothes, but out of this pay they
-find their own food. If, however, their food is
-provided, they take less pay—about 25 rupees—but
-prices generally have an upward tendency.
-The engagement may probably be for three or
-four months, which gives the ordinary European
-tourist time to get round India, visiting the
-principal places of interest <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en route</i>. A rupee
-in India is now only worth one shilling and four-pence,
-and fifteen rupees are the equivalent of a
-sovereign, it should be remembered.</p>
-
-<p>Of course the bearer’s travelling expenses and
-washing are paid as long as he is with his master,
-and his fare home when his engagement comes to
-an end, and then, too, probably he would get a
-present if his conduct has been satisfactory. One
-does not generally expect mirrors of virtue and
-trustiness on such terms. No doubt native bearers
-vary considerably in capacity and experience as
-well as in appearance, to say nothing of honesty
-and fidelity, and some are better as couriers than as
-body or camp servants, or vice versa. Some claim
-to be efficient <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">valets des places</i> in addition to
-ordinary services, but it should be remembered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-that the bearer caste are not allowed to enter the
-sacred precincts of the great temples in India. Our
-choice, influenced mainly by a personal recommendation,
-fell on one Moonsawmy—a not unusual
-Hindu name. He had been in the service of Sir
-Samuel Baker and had had some experience in
-tiger-shooting, or at any rate had been out on such
-expeditions and in camp with the famous traveller
-and sportsman, but he had also acted as courier to
-English parties travelling in India, and professed
-to know the country well. We had planned an
-excursion to the caves of Ellora from Bombay with
-our friend M. Dauvergne, who had never seen them
-and was anxious to do so. Having mapped out our
-route we started on our expedition on December the
-10th. Leaving Victoria Station, Bombay, at noon,
-we travelled by the G. I. P. (Great Indian Peninsular
-Railway), making our first train journey in
-India. The line crossed a cultivated plain at first,
-getting clear of Bombay; groups of date palms here
-and there were suggestive of Egypt. We passed
-native villages of different types, some with thatched
-roofs and some with tile—brown ridge tiles not unlike
-what one sees in Italy, and even corrugated iron
-was visible (alas!) here and there. The low huts
-built of sun-dried bricks or mud with flat roofs were
-the strangest and most eastern-looking. One could
-get glimpses, too, of the inhabitants, the Hindu
-women in saris, often of red or purple or blue,
-bearing on their heads water jars or bright brass or
-copper vessels, with much natural grace, some also
-carrying little brown babies supported by one arm
-on their hip.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">34</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_35" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.5625em;">
- <img src="images/i_035.jpg" width="377" height="414" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A BED AT THE DAK BUNGALOW! MUNMAD (KEEP IT DA(R)K)</div></div>
-
-<p>Leaving the plains we entered a very interesting
-hill country covered with jungle and forests where
-we saw many teak trees and banyans, besides
-many varieties of acacia. Mountains of striking form
-came into view, suggestive of castled crags. We
-soon afterwards passed the Thull Ghat, where the
-line rises as much as 1050 feet in a distance of
-about ten miles—which means a steep gradient. We
-passed rice fields, also sugar canes, and a kind of
-Indian corn, but not maize, and castor-oil plants
-which are cultivated extensively. There were
-interesting and picturesque groups of natives at all
-the stations. Finally Munmad was reached towards
-six o’clock in the evening. This was our first stage,
-and the junction for Daulatabad our next, in the
-territory of the Nizam of Hyderabad. We, however,
-decided to stay the night at Munmad and go
-on the next morning—in fact, if I remember right,
-it was a case of necessity, as there was no train on
-that evening. So we were conducted to the Dak
-Bungalow, some little walk from the station, through
-a native village, with our baggage carried on the
-heads of women coolies. We found the bungalow
-a most inhospitable place of incredible bareness,
-and nothing to sleep on but narrow wooden framed
-couches, having a sort of stringy webbing full of
-holes. The gaunt draughty rooms were almost
-destitute of other furniture and had no conveniences
-of any kind. The native keeper of the place seemed
-helpless. There was no food to be had, and he
-could not have cooked it if there had been, so we
-had to make shift as best we could with what we
-had in our tea baskets. I should not advise any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-one to travel in India, at least at all off the track
-of hotels, without provisions and bedding. There
-was not much sleep to be had that night. The
-beds were frightfully uncomfortable and the room
-was cold. An Anglo-Indian official on the forest
-service occupied the best room, we afterwards
-discovered, but he, as is usual, travelled with his
-horses and several servants, including a cook, and
-a supply of necessaries of all sorts. We left the
-inhospitable bungalow early the next morning,
-processing through the village in the same way
-as that in which we had come, with our baggage on
-the heads of the coolie women. We made the acquaintance
-at Munmad of the charming, frisky little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-palm squirrels which abound everywhere in India—delightful
-little greenish-grey creatures with dark
-longitudinal stripes extending from their noses to
-their tails. They play about the dwellings quite
-familiarly, but are off like a shot up a tree and out
-of sight at the smallest alarm. Scaling the trunk
-of a tree spirally, they have almost the appearance
-of lizards, and they are certainly as nimble.</p>
-
-<p>The buffalo cow, too, is seen in every Indian
-village, a strange, dusky, rough-coated beast, with a
-weird, half-human, but rather sinister expression in
-its dark eyes, with long horns turned back upon
-their necks. They walk scornfully along to be
-milked, with an air which seems to say they
-thought the world but a poor place.</p>
-
-<p>We took train to Daulatabad and entered the
-Nizam’s territory. A police officer in his service
-was in the train, and was very intelligent and gave
-us much useful information. We now passed
-through a more arid-looking country than before,
-where cactuses and low trees grew sparsely on
-burnt yellow slopes and rocky hills, often of strange
-form, the country showing signs of a great upheaval
-from the sea.</p>
-
-<p>At Daulatabad, a small road station, a tonga
-was waiting for us, drawn by two poor broken-down
-ponies and a rather ragged red-turbaned driver.
-Our destination was the town of Rozah, a drive of
-some ten miles and mostly uphill, on a loose, rough
-road.</p>
-
-<p>A conspicuous object in the landscape at Daulatabad
-is the ancient fortress upon a steep hill rising
-abruptly from the plain. It was a famous stronghold,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-but was conquered by the Mohammedans in
-the thirteenth century. There are the ruins of the
-ancient city which it once protected, and within the
-citadel are remains of Hindu temples, one transformed
-into a mosque by the Moslems. Our road
-lay through the shattered gates which still marked
-the extent of the city with fragments of the outer
-walls, the whole area overgrown with trees and
-herbage, and clusters of native huts here and there.
-The road to Rozah is an almost continuous ascent,
-and in some places very steep, which made it very
-hard work for the wretched ponies which dragged
-our tonga, though, of course, we relieved it of our
-weight by walking up the worst hills. The sun
-was blazing, but there was a little shade to be had
-occasionally under the fine banyan trees which
-skirted the roadside.</p>
-
-<p>Towards evening we saw the domes of Rozah
-on a high plateau in front of us, and presently
-entered the town through a battlemented gate. It
-was a Mohammedan town with many important
-domed tombs, but it had a neglected and sparsely
-peopled aspect and a look of departed splendour.
-We made our way along a straggling street, and,
-passing through another gate, came out upon the
-other end of the plateau, from which we saw, opening
-before us as far as the eye could reach towards
-the west, the vast, green, fruitful plains of the Deccan.
-In command of this view we found our quarters
-for the night—the Travellers’ Bungalow—but this,
-the Nizam’s bungalow, was a great contrast to the
-one at Munmad, being clean and comfortable, with
-good beds and sufficient furniture and rugs, and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-bath-room. The native in charge was able to provide
-food, too, and to cook a dinner, which, if not
-exactly Parisian, was, at all events, a vast improvement
-upon our last one. The sun set without a
-cloud, the last golden light lingering upon the white
-and black domes of the tombs around us. Then
-followed the afterglow, and then the darkness fell
-like a curtain, but the stars were intensely bright in
-the clear sky. The air was very pure and the
-silence of the place was profound. We were glad
-to rest after our long, hot, dusty journey, but I
-managed to get a sketch done before the light went.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast the next morning (December 12)
-we started to walk to the caves at Ellora, which we
-found were only a short distance down the hill.
-A winding road led us past another of the Nizam’s
-bungalows to a sort of terrace in front of the first
-great cave, or, more properly, rock-cut temple,
-the Kylas, which, coming down the hill from above,
-one does not see until close upon it, and it is only
-on entering the court through the great gateway
-that one slowly realises the wonder of it. A huge
-temple of symmetric ground plan cut clean out of
-the great cliff, the straight sides of which are seen
-rising like a vast wall above it. A mass of intricate
-and richly carved detail, a veritable incrustation of
-carving of extraordinary richness rises before one.
-Standing clear in a spacious court, enclosed on three
-sides by a deep arcade cut in the sheer sides of the
-cliff (which shows the tool marks), having an outer
-row of massive detached columns and an inner row
-of engaged columns, and deep recessed chambers.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_38" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.375em;">
- <img src="images/i_038.jpg" width="422" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE KYLAS, CAVES OF ELLORA</div></div>
-
-<p>On each side of the entrance to the temple in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-the court stand two isolated columns or pylons, and
-near these two great stone elephants. These
-columns and elephants really flank a big pedestal
-of stone with steps cut in it which lead up to a
-huge image of a Sacred Bull within a square
-chamber, from which a bridge is crossed and the
-portico of the temple is reached. Through this the
-great central hall, or nave, of the temple is entered,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-divided into four parts by groups of pillars, leaving
-an open passage up the middle and across to a
-portico on each side. From this chamber a few
-steps lead to the shrine of the Lingam, through a
-doorway. There are steps and doorways to each
-side of the shrine which lead on to open platforms,
-where are five recesses richly covered with
-sculptures of the Hindu mythology, as indeed is
-the whole temple, both within and without. The
-carved treatment and the whole idea of the scheme
-suggests that the original prototypes of such
-temples must have been structures of wood, and the
-elaborate treatment and small scale of some of the
-ornamental work seems reminiscent of wood-carving.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_39" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_039.jpg" width="334" height="584" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">WE ARE INTRODUCED TO THE CAVES OF ELLORA</div></div>
-
-<p>The carved work may be said to be of two kinds.
-There was a sort of architectural or formal ornament
-in low relief resembling in style and treatment
-Assyrian work, in which the lotus frequently
-appeared treated as a flat rosette and used as
-pateræ, arranged in rows with intervals; and there
-was a high relief treatment of figure sculpture.
-Among the horizontal courses of carved decoration
-I noted a treatment of the garland or swag, the
-ends being twisted through rings from which they
-were represented as depending. These might have
-been of a Greek or Roman pattern.</p>
-
-<p>The exterior carving of the temple in the parts
-sheltered under eaves and by doorways showed
-traces of painting—the colours being red and green
-on white. The whole of the surfaces appear to
-have been coated with plaster to receive colour,
-in the same way as may be seen at the temple of
-Castor and Pollux at Girgenti.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-The stone when exposed to the weather was
-very much blackened and resembled the gritstone
-of Derbyshire in colour and texture.</p>
-
-<p>The Temple was dedicated to Siva, but the
-whole Hindu pantheon of the Vedic gods appeared
-to be sculptured in this marvellous place, as well as
-the different avators of Siva.</p>
-
-<p>The Hindu religion is really a great system of
-nature worship, all the powers, forces, and influences
-being personified and symbolised, nothing being
-accounted “common or unclean”—the elephant-headed
-Ganesha and the monkey god Hunuman
-taking their place as “eligible deities”—the whole
-scheme resting on the acknowledgment of the
-sexual origin of life. The generative organs themselves
-being revered as sacred, and symbolised in
-the mysterious Lingam which is enshrined in all
-the Hindu temples, and the object of special
-devotion.</p>
-
-<p>The god Siva and Parvati his spouse form the
-principal subject among the sculptures of the Kylas.
-A striking design rather Egyptian in feeling was
-to be seen in a large carved panel of Parvati
-represented as seated on the water, or rather on a
-mass of lotus leaves and flowers—the flower of life—with
-attendant elephants symmetrically arranged
-on each side, showering water upon the goddess
-from their trunks. In all countries religious
-symbols are taken from familiar and characteristic
-objects common to each, although, as Count Goblet
-d’Albiella points out in his most interesting and
-learned work on the “Migration of Symbols,”
-there is also a process of exchange and adaptation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-in ideas between different peoples and countries by
-means of which we get imported types, which, however,
-become naturalised and reappear in the form or
-convention peculiar to the country of their adoption.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_42" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_042.jpg" width="334" height="498" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">AND ITS WASPS!</div></div>
-
-<p>As we gazed up at the cliffs from which this
-wonderful structure had been hewn, we noticed a
-number of green parrots fluttering about or clinging
-to the sheer walls of rock—like vivid green flashes
-of light upon the cold stone. Down in the court a
-number of extraordinarily large-sized wasps came
-buzzing about us. They looked formidable enough<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-but did not do any damage, though their obtrusion
-did not facilitate the process of a sketching against
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the Kylas, which is said to date from
-about 750–850 <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span>, there were a number of other
-and smaller temples, cut in the face of the cliff at
-intervals extending along the hill on each side of
-the Kylas. The most ancient is supposed to date
-from 200 <span class="smcap smaller">B.C.</span> and the latest from the thirteenth
-century <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span> A guide on the spot showed us several
-Buddhist temples and these were much more cave-like
-in character. One had very fine massive
-carved and fluted columns.</p>
-
-<p>The second temple we saw suggested in its plan
-and form an apsidal basilica, and in detail wooden
-structure, the roof being carved in close ribs, curved
-to the form of a pointed arch, supported by a
-horizontal cornice and columns set very close
-together. A colossal figure of the seated Buddha
-filled the view at the end of the nave, but there
-was an ambulatory behind it. The figure was
-painted a dark red with white drapery and black
-hair, the eyes, with strongly marked white and
-black pupils, had a fixed stare which carried the
-whole length of the Temple.</p>
-
-<p>The next temple visited, also Buddhistic, was
-much plainer, and was being supported by new
-buttresses of masonry to prevent the cliff from
-falling. The third was larger but also quite
-plain and square cut, the structure of the pillars
-and cornice being again on timber principles;
-but none approached the Kylas in beauty and
-interest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-The village of Ellora lay on the plain among trees
-about a mile and a half away from the foot of the
-cliff. Our guide pointed out some Jain temples
-there half hidden in masses of foliage and suggested
-a walk there, but by this time, between 10 and 11
-o’clock in the morning, the sun was very powerful
-and the heat great, and as there was no shade till
-the village was reached and we had to get back to
-our bungalow, we gave it up and climbed the hill
-again. As we left the Kylas a large and most
-picturesque group of natives were squatted outside
-the gateway having a sort of picnic, a day out with
-their wives and numerous children, and they were
-wandering all over the temple chattering and laughing
-as they examined the sculptures and seemingly enjoying
-themselves much. They gazed at us curiously
-as we passed, as at some strange animals from an
-unknown country.</p>
-
-<p>M. Dauvergne took some photographs of the
-caves, while I managed to get a coloured sketch of
-the Kylas, and a few notes.</p>
-
-<p>We found the return journey to Daulatabad rather
-easier, being mostly downhill, though it was so
-precipitous in places that it was a marvel our poor
-ponies kept on their legs. We met many natives
-on the road, both Mohammedans and Hindus, as
-well as herds of goats, and asses with sacks of
-grain slung across their backs, black sheep and
-zebu carts.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Daulatabad station about the
-middle of the day, or early afternoon, and were
-fortunate enough (owing to the language at the
-command of our friend who explained our wants)<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-to get quite an excellently cooked and nicely served
-tiffin in the waiting-room.</p>
-
-<p>There were interesting native figures about the
-station, and a group of figures at the village
-well not far off, where I got a sketch of a
-Hindu girl in a blue sari with a water jar on her
-head. She had a little round mark (Buddhist)
-like a red seal on her forehead, and her name
-was Hashuma.</p>
-
-<p>We got a train about 5.30 back to Munmad
-arriving there soon after 9 at night. After dining
-at the station we bade farewell to our friend M.
-Dauvergne, who was travelling on to Bareilly, far
-up in the north-western provinces to join his shooting
-companion. Our train from Bombay did not leave
-until 3 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span>, but sleep was impossible owing to the
-noise, although we had a waiting-room to ourselves.
-It was only the usual conversazione which is carried
-on at every Indian station by the natives who
-throng the platforms, often waiting all night for a
-train, squatting in groups and keeping up a continual
-stream of talk. We were relieved when a
-faithful coolie announced the arrival of our train
-and carried in our bags. We had a compartment
-to ourselves for the most part until nearing Bombay,
-our only fellow-passengers being at different
-times a very quiet Hindu, and a British officer of
-the Royal Scots who did not travel far. But,
-before we got in, the carriage became crowded
-with every variety of costume, Parsee and Hindu
-merchants getting in for Bombay, until we were
-quite full up and—oh! so hot. Glad we were
-to get in at last, but not till noon—the hottest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-time of day—feeling rather fagged after our
-long journey. The heat in Bombay is very
-oppressive even in the so-called cool season.
-We generally lived in a temperature of about
-88°, this in the dining-room being mitigated
-by electric fans; but it is always a relief when
-the sun declines, and a drive in the cool of
-the evening is delightful.</p>
-
-<p>We planned a rather extensive tour, and with the
-assistance of Messrs Cook, worked out a complete
-itinerary through India, ending at Ceylon, from
-whence we purposed to return in the following
-March.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_46" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_046.jpg" width="600" height="413" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">ARRIVAL OF MR. DADABHAI NAOROJI AT BOMBAY, DEC. 14, 1906</div></div>
-
-<p>On December 14 M. Dadabhai Naoroji arrived by
-the <i>Arcadia</i> at Bombay on his way to the National
-Congress at Calcutta of which he had been elected
-President. He had a great welcome. Flags and
-triumphal arches were put up along the esplanade,
-and he was brought from the Taj Mahal Hotel in
-a motor car decorated with flowers. An enormous
-crowd turned out to welcome him, chiefly of the
-Parsee community, and Parsees were conspicuous
-in the balconies of the houses and hotels along the
-route of the procession and parsee inscriptions of
-welcome hung across the streets. It was a striking
-scene from our balcony altogether. The last golden
-rays of the sun were slanting across the open
-esplanade alternating with broad luminous shadows
-and along the front streamed a vast white clad
-crowd—so different to the black crowds we are
-accustomed to in Europe—a white crowd varied
-with notes of bright colour and black here and
-there, and the red bunting floating around the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-bronze equestrian statue of King Edward VII. in
-the foreground: while the balconies were gay with
-Parsee ladies in their delicate embroidered silks,
-canary coloured, pink, blue, green, violet and
-scarlet.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">48</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AHMEDABAD</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> left Bombay for Ahmedabad on December
-the 15th. Finding that the best train was
-a night one, and as it was a journey of some three
-hundred miles or more, and time was an object, we
-made up our minds, though not given to night
-travelling, to make an exception to our usual
-practice, although we should lose the sight of the
-country by the way. Railway travelling in India is
-quite as comfortable as one might expect. The
-carriages, it is true, vary on different lines and
-according to age, but, as a rule, the trains have
-separate carriages for Europeans and for different
-classes of natives, and it is often quite possible to
-have an entire compartment even for a long
-distance. On some lines the first-class carriages
-are scarcely better than the second, but the fare is
-double. The best carriages have compartments
-containing two long leather-covered seats, each side
-under the windows, which can be turned into
-sleeping couches at night. There is a good space
-between them and also at the end between the
-doors, and a lavatory is always attached. Above
-the seats are slung two upper berths, so that the
-compartment <em>could</em> be arranged for four sleepers.
-Any amount of light luggage can be taken into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-compartments by passengers, but the heavy must
-be registered. The windows are protected from
-the sun by Venetian shutters, which can be let up
-or down, as well as glass, clear or toned, and sometimes
-fine wire screens. Outside there is a sort of
-hood, between which and the tops of the windows
-is a space for air, so that the fierce heat of the sun
-is tempered, and the carriage shielded to a certain
-extent from its rays.</p>
-
-<p>We found very well-appointed sleeping-cars to
-Ahmedabad, but divided into ladies’ and gentlemen’s
-compartments. As it happened, another couple
-were the only others travelling by the first-class
-sleeping-car besides ourselves, so that we were able
-to arrange between ourselves that husbands and
-wives were not divided, each pair having a compartment
-to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Ahmedabad was reached about half-past seven in
-the morning. A crowd of coolies usually rush to
-seize your baggage on the arrival of a train, and
-our bearer was useful in keeping them at bay a bit.
-There was a Dak bungalow at Ahmedabad, but
-we did not feel any decided leaning towards it, and,
-finding there were quite decent bedrooms to be
-had at the station and that we could feed in the
-refreshment-room, we decided to stay there.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_50" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_050.jpg" width="372" height="515" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE FEET OF PILGRIMS (AT MOHAMMEDAN MOSQUES)</div></div>
-
-<p>Carriages were to be had at from six to eight
-rupees a day, and we engaged one and had a drive
-through the town, stopping to see the mosques for
-which it is so famed. The Jama Musjid had a
-splendid, spacious court in front of it, walled around,
-the entrance being through a rather small door,
-where it is necessary for the visitors either to put<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-off their shoes or to consent to have enormous
-loose ones of grass or matting tied on over their
-own, which seems to prevent desecration quite as
-efficiently. The mosque had fifteen domes, and
-inside was a forest of white pillars (260), and a
-large gallery for the women, screened with pierced
-stone-work in lovely patterns. There were the
-marble tombs of Ahmad Shah—the builder of the
-mosque—and his son and grandson, richly carved
-in delicate relief, the sides being arcaded, and under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-each arch the representation of a hanging lamp, or
-censer, some of the latter showing an ornamental
-treatment of smoke ascending from them.</p>
-
-<p>The marble pavements had a peculiar fine dull
-polish, noticeable in mosque pavements throughout
-India, which is the result of the constant movement
-of the bare feet of the natives passing over their
-surface. The tombs of the queens of Ahmad Shah
-were carved with remarkable fineness. One, inlaid
-with delicate trees in white marble or black, was
-as fine as any Persian cabinet work in ivory.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen’s Mosque, with three domes, contains
-charming carving and pierced screen-work.</p>
-
-<p>The mosque of Rani Sipri and her tomb are
-marvellously rich in fine carving in red sandstone
-and screen-work, and suggest in some of their
-forms and the rich incrustation of their ornament
-the influence of Hindu work, which, indeed, is a
-characteristic of many here. Beautiful pierced
-screens of stone-work, divided into panels by the
-supporting columns, enclose the tomb.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_52" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.4375em;">
- <img src="images/i_052.jpg" width="375" height="489" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">POOR RELATIONS</div></div>
-
-<p>For the loveliest designs, however, in pierced
-screen-work, one still turns to those of the windows
-of the Sidi Sayyids’ Mosque, especially to the two
-wherein palms and rose-trees are combined in a
-sort of natural formation to form a lovely mesh of
-intricate, yet perfectly coherent and balanced
-pattern, which fills the tympanum shape of low-arched
-windows; a design in light on dark seen
-from the outside, and in dark against light seen
-from within, when it fulfils its purpose of breaking
-up the light of the sun, and producing that enchanting
-luminous twilight so characteristic of Eastern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-interiors. There are reproductions of two of these
-windows at our Indian Museum at South Kensington,
-but I had long desired to see the originals, and
-I was not disappointed. The warm light of the
-late afternoon sun lingered in their interstices, and,
-seen from below, the under sides of the marble fret
-took rich golden reflections, which gave the designs
-quite a new aspect, and filled them with life and
-colour, giving the effect almost of sunlit foliage.
-We drove to see Shah Alam’s Mosque, built about
-1420, which was reached in about half an hour<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-beyond the city gates, along a cool avenue of
-acacias. The mosque has a fine court and minarets,
-and a splendid canopied tomb, with pillars inlaid
-with mother-o’-pearl; beautiful metal-work in
-pierced brass gates and screens.</p>
-
-<p>On returning from this drive we stopped near
-the river Sarbarmati in a grove of trees, chiefly
-banyan, mango, and acacia. Here a native boy
-set up a peculiar hooting sort of call, and presently
-we saw troops of silver grey monkeys dropping
-from the trees and gambolling along towards us
-between the stems—hundreds of them apparently—hurrying
-up to feed on the dried peas we scattered
-for them. They came crowding around us, but
-were quite friendly, and many would feed out of
-our hands. They varied much in size, but were
-mostly large, and carried their tails high in the air
-and curled over their backs in spirited curves when
-walking on all-fours. Many of the female monkeys
-carried their young ones with them. All looked
-beautifully clean and healthy, and were full of play—in
-fact as different as possible in their freedom
-from the poor captives in cages at zoological gardens.
-It was amusing to watch their pranks and
-to note the ease with which they would climb up
-into the trees, some of which were as full of monkeys
-almost as branches.</p>
-
-<p>As we left the monkeys we had another unusual
-sight. We saw a large and leafy mango tree leaning
-over the river, which seemed to have suddenly
-burst into white blossoms; but we soon perceived
-these supposed flowers begin to flutter, and winged
-ones detached themselves from the mass of white,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-which we then discovered were white cranes. They
-would rise in a cloud and settle again ever and anon
-among the green foliage. They were a small kind,
-not larger than a heron, and are common all over
-India. We often saw them afterwards rising by
-the side of the pools by the railway track, or fishing,
-or flying over the submerged paddy fields, but in
-smaller numbers, and never so beautifully.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_54" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 21.4375em;">
- <img src="images/i_054.jpg" width="343" height="567" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A FAMILY PARTY—CRANES ON A MANGO TREE (SARBARMATI RIVER)</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-On the white and dusty road to Ahmedabad we
-met numbers of wagons loaded with cotton bales
-and drawn by large white oxen. The country carts
-had wicker bodies, somewhat like those I have seen
-in Germany, and primitive massive wheels with
-eight spokes in a double cross. Camels were
-occasionally seen ridden by natives. As at Bombay,
-there were extensive cotton factories here,
-and cotton was very largely grown in the country
-around.</p>
-
-<p>The bazaars and the street life in Ahmedabad
-are most various and interesting, all sorts of trades
-and crafts being carried on. There is still a great
-quantity of silk-weaving done, and brocades wrought
-with gold thread. A proverb of the place quoted
-by Mr W. S. Caine has it that the prosperity of
-Ahmedabad hangs on three threads—“gold, silk,
-and cotton”; and these three threads still symbolise
-the main industries of the city. A picturesque
-incident in the streets is the silk-winder—in some
-open space in front of the shops you may sometimes
-see a native woman standing (like Mr Holman
-Hunt’s “Lady of Shalott”) within a low square
-enclosure formed of bamboo sticks wound with
-long strands of silk thread. She holds a sort of
-spindle in her left hand, and a long tapering wand
-in her right, by means of which she divides or
-regulates the thread as she winds it off on to the
-bamboo sticks, rapidly twirling the spindle as she
-does so. It is an extremely pretty and picturesque
-sight. The old methods of hand-weaving are
-practised, and for weaving the brocades or “kincobs”
-the treadles in the loom are lifted from above by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-a boy, who draws up the cords attached to the
-threads of the warp according to the pattern the
-weaver is working. It is said that the native trade
-in the finer brocaded silks has been injured owing
-to the richer natives following the European fashion
-of dressing plainly, the rich silk woven with gold
-thread being only worn on state occasions, another
-instance of the depressing influence of Western ideas
-and habits upon the East. The rich merchants, and
-the Maharajahs and their court officials no doubt
-believe they are improving their style in adopting
-fashions from Europe, but the effect is practically
-only to vulgarise the native taste. The native
-princes and the well-to-do merchants now dash
-about in imported motor cars in raiment of dingy
-tints, instead of proudly prancing upon stately
-elephants and clothed in splendour and colour.
-Eastern life is made less joyous in its aspects by
-such changes. The mass of the people do not
-change, however, and seem to have no desire to,
-and they are the common people everywhere who
-give the characteristic life and colour. Though
-they only wear cotton or muslin, the beauty
-and variety of the tints are wonderful, and fill
-the bazaars with a stream of ever-changing
-hues in the most unexpected combinations and
-harmonies.</p>
-
-<p>Driving through the bazaars at Ahmedabad, we
-came to a sort of open space from which several
-streets diverged, and here was being held a sort of
-open market of cloth—chiefly muslins and cottons
-of every variety of colour and pattern. These
-were laid out in piles on the ground, the merchants<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-squatting by their goods or spreading them out to
-show their customers.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_57" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 19.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_057.jpg" width="312" height="396" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">STREET SCENE, AHMEDABAD<br />
-ENGLISH TRAVELLERS SKETCHING AND MAKING PURCHASES</div></div>
-
-<p>We stopped our carriage, and got our bearer to
-bring us some of the stuffs to look at and to inquire
-the prices, and we were soon surrounded by an
-eager crowd of dark faces and turbaned heads, and
-were nearly buried in a rainbow-tinted cloud of
-muslin and cotton cloth, amid which deliberate
-selection became difficult. I noted, however, many
-examples of the native method of dyeing cloths in
-patterns by the tying and dipping methods which
-often produce most delightful results, the pattern
-having a softer and more blended effect than the
-ordinary block printing. Although Manchester<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-cottons were in evidence, it was pleasant to see
-that native methods were not forgotten, and were
-still in demand.</p>
-
-<p>The native pottery, too, at Ahmedabad is extremely
-interesting, the common forms are always
-good, as indeed they are throughout India. Enormous
-earthen jars are made here to hold grain, or
-for carrying water from the river on ox-carts. The
-ordinary earthen water-jar, which the Hindu women
-carry on their heads, resembles the ancient Greek
-Hydria in form, and is so beautiful that it is distressing
-to see it occasionally substituted by the
-hideous tin kerosine can—another European innovation—much
-more difficult to balance one would
-think. In the streets of Ahmedabad occasional
-features are small, richly carved octagonal minarets
-supported on posts, and looking like glorified
-pigeon houses. There is a big Hindu temple—a
-Jain temple of no antiquity, only about thirty or
-forty years old. The shrine of Hathi Sing. It
-has the characteristic pagoda domes, and is elaborately
-painted and decorated, though rather coarsely.
-The finest features were the marble pavements
-where, again, one noticed the peculiar soft polish
-given by bare feet.</p>
-
-<p>A very interesting excursion is that to Sarkhei,
-a drive of about seven miles outside the city gates.
-The road crosses the wide river Sarbarmati—or
-rather its bed, as the water shrinks into a rather
-narrow stream, and is almost lost sometimes among
-great stretches and banks of sand. At the water’s
-edge, as we passed, we saw the people busy washing
-clothes (which made a pretty coloured pattern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-when spread on the sands to dry) or themselves, or
-watering horses and bullocks, or refreshing their
-baskets of vegetables they had borne along the
-dusty ways by dipping them in the stream.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_58" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_058.jpg" width="600" height="423" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TOMB OF GUNJ BAKSH, SARKHEI</div></div>
-
-<p>Our road was deep in dust, but generally pleasantly
-shaded by fine old trees, chiefly banyan, teak
-trees, and acacias. The little striped squirrels
-were very numerous and active, frisking up and
-down and around the tree stems. Monkeys were
-occasionally seen—of the same silver grey sort we
-had seen on our visit to the Mosque of Shah Alam—in
-the jungles at the side of the road, or in the trees.
-A bird rather like a large bullfinch was common,
-and we saw many peacocks wandering about, and,
-of course, kites and crows everywhere. On the
-road we passed many a heavy-laden ox-cart, piled
-with bales of cotton, making their way to Ahmedabad,
-as well as droves of white asses, and many
-groups of natives. About two miles out we saw at
-the side of the road a large brick-built Mohammedan
-Tomb, said to be the tomb of the architect
-of Sarkhei, who was a Persian.</p>
-
-<p>Further on our carriage turned out of the main
-road down a narrow lane to the right and up a
-steep bit of hill, flagged with flat stones. Presently
-we arrived in front of a fine gateway of Moslem
-architecture, which formed the entrance to a large
-quadrangle, shaded by a very old acacia tree. We
-had to put on the usual clumsy canvas shoes before
-entering this court, which enclosed the splendid
-mosque and tomb of Gunj Baksh (begun by Mahmudshah
-in 1445 and finished by Begara in 1451),
-with a low, flat cupola, and many pilastered front,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-the structures of the caps showing Hindu influence.
-There is a finely worked lattice screen of brass surrounding
-the octagonal shrine within, containing the
-tomb. The floor is inlaid with coloured marbles,
-and the roof is rich with gilding. An open pavilion
-stood in the court in front of the shrine, raised upon
-a platform, with steps supported by sixteen carved
-marble pillars. Opposite to this is a charming
-portico, through which one can get a glimpse of the
-great tank, though it was almost dried up when we
-saw it, the water hardly enough to conceal an alligator,
-though white cranes were standing in the
-pool in the forlorn hope of catching fish, and
-monkeys gambolled about the steps. On the side
-of the court near the entrance are the tombs of
-Mahmud Begara and his two sons—of the usual
-Mohammedan type, an arcaded pattern in low relief
-along the sides; with censers hanging between the
-arches of similar type to those at Ahmedabad.</p>
-
-<p>There is a pathetic feeling of departed or half
-decayed splendour about Sarkhei, as well as a sense
-of romance and mystery, and one leaves it impressed
-with the idea of the refinement, sense of
-beauty, and spaciousness of the departed princely
-builders who lie buried within their own architectural
-dream.</p>
-
-<p>There are always a number of hangers on about
-Indian tombs and temples, self-constituted guides,
-and persons of indefinite status and occupation who
-cluster around the arriving and departing stranger,
-who has to smooth his path with backsheesh, and
-Sarkhei is no exception. We had a hot drive
-along the dusky highway back to Ahmedabad in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-the middle of the day, the sun blazing down very
-fiercely, and we were glad of the protection of the
-carriage hood.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of one of our evening drives about
-the town, our Moonsawmy pointed out an acacia
-tree we passed by the roadside which appeared to
-be full of what looked like large pendant pear-shaped
-fruit of black and golden brown colour.
-These, however, were really clusters of fruit-bats
-hanging in the tree until nightfall. Some of them,
-as we looked, were already moving and stretching
-out their wings in the last rays of the evening sun.</p>
-
-<p>We passed through the triple arched ancient
-gateway which stands at the head of the main
-street. The bazaars were crowded with buyers
-and sellers, chiefly of cotton and other stuffs. The
-people themselves in every variety of costume
-formed a wonderful scheme of colour, varied by
-the brownskins of babies and little children playing
-about quite naked, and the brown backs of the
-workers bending over their crafts. The whole
-scene fused in the light of afterglow and rich in
-tone and chiaroscuro.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">62</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AHMEDABAD TO AJMIR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> railway station at Ahmedabad has the
-unusual distinction of two striking minarets
-of brick-work, richly cut and moulded in successive
-circular tiers, which rise to a considerable
-height from amid the palms and plantains of a
-small well-watered Eastern garden, with many
-straight-cut paths between the thickly planted
-trees. These are the remains of a Mohammedan
-mosque which once stood there. It is an unusually
-interesting and pleasant place to wander in while
-waiting for a train.</p>
-
-<p>Our bearer secured a comfortable coupé for our
-journey to Ajmir, which was to be our next halting-place.
-We had originally intended to visit Mount
-Abu to see the wonderful Jain temples of Delwara,
-but before we reached the Abu road heavy rain came
-on, and as it would have meant a pony ride of
-sixteen miles from the station to Mount Abu, we
-decided to go on to Ajmir without a break.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Ahmedabad at 8.15 we breakfasted in
-the train, there being a restaurant car put on. The
-trains not being corridor trains it is necessary to
-get out at the stopping stations and find one’s way to
-the car and back to one’s carriage again.</p>
-
-<p>The country at first was very flat and generally<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-cultivated, but with occasional belts of jungle, where
-monkeys and peacocks were seen. Fine banyan
-and acacia trees here and there. Ploughing with
-oxen was going on, and the yoke of oxen drawing
-at the irrigation wells was a frequent sight.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of the day dark clouds rolled
-up and we had a heavy shower with promise of
-more to come. Mountains came into view at the
-same time as the change in the weather, and it was
-not long before we reached Abu Road Station.
-The fine mountain range on the left of the line
-amid which Mount Abu was situated was veiled
-in cloud and rain, but as we left the mountains the
-sky cleared again, and we entered a flat, desert-like
-region covered with stunted trees or dry scrub
-bush, stretching for miles. A strange-looking
-country was afterwards traversed, where huge
-granite boulders lay on the earth like mounds and
-partly overgrown, others might have been imagined
-to be the shells of gigantic tortoises. At a station
-called Mori this characteristic was the most striking.
-The stations on this line through Rajpootana were
-built after the Moslem fashion and had a superficial
-resemblance to mosques, being domed, the smaller
-buildings and wayside signal huts being treated in
-the same manner.</p>
-
-<p>After a rainy sunset of orange and grey, darkness
-soon fell, and it was not long before we
-reached Ajmir after about twelve hours’ travel—a
-distance of over three hundred miles. We found
-fairly comfortable quarters at the station refreshment-rooms,
-the bedrooms being above and
-opening on to spacious terraces from which interesting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-views of the town and country could be
-had. The only drawbacks were the noises. What
-with the shrieks of the engines, and the perpetual
-conversazione carried on on the platforms, which
-were generally thronged with most picturesque
-crowds of natives, sleep was very broken.</p>
-
-<p>Ajmir is very beautifully situated, with a fine
-background of hills, the town itself being on a slope
-with an old fort crowning a height immediately
-above it. There is a large military station, the
-cantonments with the residency and the English
-bungalows lying on a plain quite away from the
-native town.</p>
-
-<p>We hired a carriage and drove around the town
-the morning after our arrival, visiting the old palace
-and massive fortress built by the Emperor Akbar,
-who has left so many noble buildings in the north-west
-of India to testify to his power and influence
-in the past. We entered through a noble gateway
-into a large quadrangle surrounded by tremendously
-high, thick walls and having octagonal bastions at
-four corners. A pavilion rose in the centre of the
-court, raised upon a platform led up to by steps of
-marble. Extensive restorations were being carried
-on under the Indian Government, so much so that one
-had fears they were in danger of going too far in
-the direction of renewal, and did not draw the line
-with sufficient decision at the limits of preservation
-and repair. Certainly new work was being put in
-freely. It was interesting, however, to see that
-most beautiful and characteristic Indian craft of
-piercing patterns in marble being carried on. The
-native carver, turbaned and grey-bearded, was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-squatting on the ground busy with a small marble
-grill or screen. He was drilling a geometric diaper
-pattern through a panel of marble which had a
-worked moulding for frame. The slab was bedded
-in clay to keep it from under the worker’s hands,
-and to prevent splitting. When the holes were
-drilled he finished the work with chisels and mallet,
-working out the different bevels and facets of the
-quatre-foils, and putting in the work that which gave
-all the richness and the effect of the pattern. He
-seemed pleased to have his work noticed, and
-anxious that we should see it in its finished state
-he went to where a group of native women were at
-work on other similar grills which had left the
-carver’s hands, cleaning the pierced patterns from
-the clay, and showed the completed panels clear
-cut in the white marble. It was noticeable that the
-women only did the cleaning and polishing up, but
-not the carving.</p>
-
-<p>We had a fine view from the ramparts and
-minarets of the pavilion.</p>
-
-<p>From the fort we went on driving through the
-bazaars of Ajmir, which were highly interesting but
-less busy and crowded, perhaps, than at Ahmedabad.
-Gay coloured cottons and muslins, embroidered
-slippers, pottery, and grain of all kinds were mostly
-in evidence, the latter arranged in heaps on cloths
-spread on the ground in front of the shops, and
-measured out by the traders squatting by their
-merchandise. The fronts of the native houses
-here were mostly in white plaster, often painted
-with designs in blue and yellow of formal flowers
-in vases, or quaint animals and figures in profile.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-There was much fancy and variety in the design
-of the little arcaded projecting balconies corbelled
-out from the wall, and ogee arched windows, and
-moulded plaster and painted ornament.</p>
-
-<p>We presently, at the end of the principal street,
-approached the magnificent double gateway of the
-famous Dargah—named the Dilkasha (or “heart-expanding”)
-gate. From the street one really sees
-three ogee arches of different heights in succession,
-one beyond the other, the highest being flanked
-by towering minarets crowned with cupolas. The
-whole gateway in the bright morning sunlight looked
-a fairy-like aerial structure, fair and white, and
-glittering here and there with gold, and tile patterns
-in blue and yellow.</p>
-
-<p>The Dargah of Ajmir is revered as the burial-place
-of one Kwaja Sahib, a saint of the thirteenth
-century. His beautiful white and gold domed
-shrine enclosing his silver tomb occupies the centre
-of the inner court, and is visited by troops of pilgrims.
-A great festival is held in honour of the saint every
-year, when Ajmir is thronged with pilgrims. Two
-enormous iron pots are shown, standing each side
-the entrance to the Dargah, in which at the festival
-are cooked tons of food freely given to the pilgrims.
-The biggest pot is reputed to hold no less than
-10,000 lbs. of food. The food consists of mess of
-rice, oil, sugar, raisins, and almonds, which is rather
-suggestive of a sort of plum pudding, and on this
-scale costs about £100.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_66" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 27.5625em;">
- <img src="images/i_066.jpg" width="441" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SHRINE OF THE KWAJA, AJMIR</div></div>
-
-<p>On first entering the Dargah through the great
-gateway one sees a large paved court with several
-domed tombs and a mosque, and rising high the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-old fort of Tarrgarh, white-walled on the brown
-hill, is seen above. I noted a very fine bronze many-branched
-candelabra on one of the domed tombs.
-Passing through this court the second court is
-entered where stands the shrine. It is surrounded
-by a low marble balustrade, and is picturesquely
-overshadowed by a large ancient ilex tree, through
-the spreading branches of which with their masses
-of rich dark foliage glows the colour and gold of
-the richly decorated shrine. Through the open doors
-gleam the silver of the tomb, and the ivory-like dome
-fretted and crested with gold sparkling in the full
-light of the sun pierces the deep blue sky. Curious
-low tapering pedestals with small cupolas at the
-top are placed about the courts and around the
-shrine at intervals. These are pierced with small
-recesses, in which, on festival occasions, small lamps
-are placed. Beyond the shrine we come out upon
-a high-walled terrace which extends with a succession
-of bays along the sides of a deep narrow tank,
-flights of steps leading down to the water’s edge at
-different points.</p>
-
-<p>It is the custom when visitors leave the Dargah for
-the attendants to hang garlands of flowers about
-their necks, and in return for this graceful attention
-an offering to the shrine—or to its hangers on—is
-expected.</p>
-
-<p>The visitor is, however, rather carefully watched
-inside the Dargah. The shrine itself is not allowed
-to be entered. Shoes must be removed on entering
-the court, or the big canvas shoes put on over
-them. On sketching intent I was not allowed to
-pitch a camp stool near the shrine or in the sacred<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-precincts, and even open umbrellas, for shade, were
-objected to by these jealous watchful devotees.</p>
-
-<p>From the Dargah we went to see the roofless
-mosque of “Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra,” which being
-interpreted signifies “The house of two and a half
-days.” It is on the hill opposite the fort, but on the
-lower slope, and is approached through narrow streets,
-and finally reached by a steep flight of steps which
-lead to the gateway of the court of the mosque.
-It is now little more than a beautiful red sandstone
-carved screen of open pointed arches, but the detail
-is exceedingly rich and happy in scale, and largely
-consists of bordering inscriptions outlining the
-arches and their rectangular framings, the texts
-being in both Cufic and Togra characters, and
-both these and the surface decoration generally are
-delicately but sharply cut in sunk carving, which
-preserves a certain unity of ornamental effect.
-Arranged along the side of the court are many
-carved fragments which are the remains of the Jain
-Temple, transformed into the Mussulman Mosque
-in the year 1236 by Altamash, who conquered the
-city, and was said to have effected the transformation
-in two and a half days.</p>
-
-<p>The mosque was not used for worship. In the
-court a rope or cord maker was at work. The
-white strands stretched over canes from the man
-working at one end of the walk to where at the
-other end his assistant sat at a sort of wheel by
-means of which the strands were twisted into a
-cord of the required thickness.</p>
-
-<p>After this we drove to the Daulat Bagh
-(Garden of splendour)—then passing through a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-beautiful park full of pine-trees we came to the
-white marble pavilion built by Shah Jehan, standing
-on a marble balustraded terrace, and overlooking
-a lovely lake, bounded by mountains—a lovely
-spot. The pavilion has been restored by the
-Indian government, and looks quite new. Marble,
-however, does not seem to weather or discolour in the
-Indian climate, and the difference between new and
-old is not nearly so marked as in European countries,
-while the imitative faculty of the Hindu workman
-and the traditions of craftsmanship under which he
-still works help to complete the illusion when
-restoration is done. New or old, it was an enchanting
-place, especially when the evening sun floods the
-whole scene with golden light, streaming through the
-trees, and filling the marble porticoes with warm
-colour. The lake still as a mirror, reflecting the
-fairy palace and the dreamy distance in its glassy
-surface. The chief commissioner should be happy
-to have his residence in the midst of this lovely
-garden. The lake is as useful too as it is beautiful,
-as from it is obtained the water supply of Ajmir.</p>
-
-<p>Another of our evening drives was through the
-cantonments outside the native city. We passed
-through the English military quarters, and saw the
-long low barrack-like bungalows of the soldiers, clean
-and neat, but bare and ugly. There were more
-comfortable bungalows of the officers and other
-English residents in gardens and amid trees, with
-entrance gates and drives, almost suburban, allowing
-for little differences in detail. The names of
-the residents, for instance, were painted in white
-block-letters on ugly black boards placed outside<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-the gates of the gardens. There was the usual
-club house in a landscape garden, and here a
-military band of native infantry was playing, conducted
-by a man in a straw hat. English ladies,
-and children with their native aejahs and bearers
-scattered about the lawns.</p>
-
-<p>On the road a little distance from the town a
-large number of natives were busy making up the
-road over a new bridge across the railway. Many
-of these coolies were very attenuated, and might
-have come from the famine districts.</p>
-
-<p>Passing through the bazaar on my return from
-sketching in the Dargah, I noticed among the stalls
-of a crowded and picturesque native street a craftsman
-at work putting a border pattern upon the
-edge of a piece of orange-coloured muslin. He
-first printed or stamped the border, a small leaf and
-flower pattern, from a wood block with some sort of
-size of a brown colour, and when this was sufficiently
-“tacky” he laid on silver leaf over the pattern
-thus defined by the block in size, and finished by
-brushing away the superfluous leaf with a soft
-brush, much as our gilders do.</p>
-
-<p>A quaint effect was produced by the camels here,
-laden with great sheafs of sugar-cane, which trailed
-behind, spreading out over their hind quarters in a
-way that suggested skirts or a crinoline—viewed
-from behind.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_71" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_071.jpg" width="376" height="484" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE CAMEL’S CRINOLINE (SUGAR CANE) AJMIR</div></div>
-
-<p>From our terrace over the railway station we
-could observe the varied groups of natives which
-continually thronged the platforms and the yards
-outside. Certainly the native in India makes
-constant use of the railways, although the railways<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-do not take any trouble to make them comfortable.
-The native carriages seem always in an overcrowded
-state, and many of them are rather
-suggestive of cattle trucks with rough wooden
-partitions. Troups of natives will come to a
-railway station and camp all night waiting for some
-train in the morning. On inquiring what classes or
-manner of people these poor travellers mostly were,
-I was told that they comprised chiefly pilgrims to
-various shrines and festivals in different parts of the
-country, and small traders. The Ryot, or agriculturist,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-did not travel much, as might be supposed.
-The people usually bore great bundles with them,
-bedding presumably, and other necessaries for long
-journeys. These the women carried upon their
-heads. In the evenings groups of natives would
-be seen gathered round fires made on the ground.
-These were often mere flares of straw, and did not
-last very long, though they may have served to
-mitigate the chill of the nightfall, which is always
-so sudden in India.</p>
-
-<p>As evidence of the extraordinary variety of
-colour arrangements in the costume of the natives
-in the bazaars, here are a few notes made of the
-colours worn by passers-by, both men and women,
-at Ajmir observed in the course of a few minutes.</p>
-
-<p>1. Citron tunic, emerald green turban, white
-trousers.</p>
-
-<p>2. Buff turban black tunic, white trousers.</p>
-
-<p>3. (Woman.) Large vermilion cloak, pink skirt.</p>
-
-<p>4. Pea green turban, crimson velvet tunic, white
-trousers.</p>
-
-<p>5. Orange turban, black tunic, white trousers.</p>
-
-<p>6. White turban, wound round a red fez, deep
-brown orange cloak thrown over brown jacket and
-white breeches.</p>
-
-<p>7. Orange muslin simply covering head and body,
-scarlet trousers. (Mohammedan woman.)</p>
-
-<p>8. Turquoise turban, golden orange tunic (long)
-lined with pale yellow.</p>
-
-<p>The agricultural country folks generally wore
-white, though it was rather a dusky white. Groups
-of herdsmen were occasionally seen with long
-straight wands, their dark faces and bare limbs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-emerging from white cotton turbans, tunics and
-cloaks.</p>
-
-<p>Travellers in India as well as English residents
-are often greeted with salaams in the native bazaars
-and passers-by on the road. The word “salaam”
-is pronounced by natives sometimes in a tone almost
-of command, but as far as I could understand it was
-intended to suggest a mutual exchange of salutations,
-or even the word alone might be taken as a
-salutation sometimes; but it is always expected that
-an answering salute of some kind will be given, but
-it is said that one should never salute with the left
-hand if it is wished to avoid offence. The ordinary
-mode of salutation in any country should be carefully
-observed, as in no way can offence be more
-easily given, however inadvertently, by any
-apparent neglect of what are considered the
-ordinary courtesies of life sanctioned by the
-customs of a country.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that the native children seemed sometimes
-inclined to mock at a stranger, in a spirit of
-monkey mischief, perhaps, but there are little street
-gamins in any city, and the latest product of our
-civilisation, the London street arab, would be difficult
-to beat anywhere, East or West.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">74</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">CHITORGARH AND UDAIPUR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">From</span> Ajmir there is a branch line to Chitorgarh
-and Udaipur, and no traveller in India
-should miss the opportunity of visiting both these
-highly interesting places. Leaving Ajmir, the
-railway runs south through a rather flat country,
-passing Naisirabad, an important British military
-station. The English “Tommy” in khaki, and
-white helmet and putties, or the sun-burned, brown-booted
-and spurred British cavalry officer, were in
-evidence at the railway station. Among the native
-crowd here we saw a turbaned man in pink carrying
-a very thin, aged woman, probably his mother,
-pick-a-back fashion.</p>
-
-<p>A very dry and almost desert tract of country is
-traversed after this, though occasionally varied by
-irrigated fields and green crops. The irrigation
-wells, worked by oxen as before, and the native
-ploughing, were the chief incidents in the landscape.
-The plough is a very primitive-looking
-implement with a single shaft, with a cross handle
-fixed at right angles to the shaft, which consists of
-a sharpened piece of wood, tipped with iron. The
-plough is drawn by a pair of zebus, and is light
-enough for the man to lift up and turn at the end
-of the furrow, or even to be carried home on his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-shoulder at the end of the day. There were thick
-hedges of spikey sort of cactus, branching out from
-a main stem, something like candelabra, the fronds
-growing in a longitudinal, rigid form. These
-hedges fenced the railway line from the fields on
-the desert. Another plant of common occurrence,
-both here and all over India, was a broad-leaved
-shrub of symmetric order, having small, pale, lilac
-flowers, the stems rather a yellow, and the leaves
-a lightish blue green. We noted also a sort of wild
-laburnam. The prickly pear was common, and a
-sort of prickly acacia-like shrub much liked by
-camels. The trees were mostly various acacias, the
-banyan tree (Ficus), and the teak. In places we
-saw both date and cocoa palms. At one station
-(Mandal) the level plains, with pyramidal hills in
-the distance and a grove of palms and camels in
-the foreground, again recalled Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>The cultivated crops we passed were cotton,
-tobacco, rice, wheat, and sugar cane.</p>
-
-<p>At every station may be seen the water filter, a
-wooden tripod stand, holding three red earthen
-water-jars, one above the other. The natives
-drink quantities of water, and always carry a small
-drinking-vessel of bright brass, which they take
-every opportunity of filling. The water-bearer is a
-characteristic figure everywhere, and comes up to
-the train with his cry, “Panee! panee!” which
-(with an Italian prepossessed ear) is more suggestive
-of another, and solid, necessary of life. Bread,
-however, in Hindustanee, happens to be “roti.”</p>
-
-<p>Having left Ajmir by the 9.20 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span> train, we
-arrived at Chitorgarh about five in the evening, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-put up at the station rooms for the night. There
-was a considerable crowd on the long, open,
-gravelled platform, mainly natives, with a small
-contingent of English and American tourists.
-European tourists in India, however, were generally
-few and far between, the United States being much
-more numerously represented. A picturesque group
-was formed by a native resident from Udaipur,
-with his retinue, waiting for their train on. The
-chief was a venerable and a kindly-looking man, with
-white hair and beard, reminding one rather of the
-late G. F. Watts. He was gaily dressed in a pink
-turban and a lilac silk coat, and was seated on a
-chair on the platform, surrounded by his attendants
-in scarlet; among these was his trumpeter, with a
-bugle slung around him, and a quad of four
-soldiers in khaki and turbans.</p>
-
-<p>We found the Traveller’s Bungalow was about
-three-quarters of a mile or so away from the
-station. The bedrooms were all taken by the
-English and American parties, but we could feed
-there, so, retaining our quarters at the station, we
-walked to the Bungalow for our dinner. It was a
-lovely moonlight night, with bright stars, but there
-was a cold north wind as we were guided by our
-bearer with a lantern along a rather rough track,
-and crossed the railway to the Bungalow, a new
-stone building, bare and cheerless as they make
-them, standing all by itself in a stoney yard without
-a tree near it. The dinner, or supper, was not
-very rewarding, and we trudged back again to the
-station in the cold moonlight. The station we
-found quieter than usual. The servants of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-resident had encamped upon the platform, and
-formed picturesque groups around fires, cooking
-and gossiping; their master sleeping in the train,
-which was drawn up ready to start for Udaipur
-early the next morning.</p>
-
-<p>It seems highly necessary for travellers in India
-anywhere off the track of hotels to provide themselves
-with bedding of some sort, at least quilts,
-rugs, sheets, and pillows. The nights at this time
-of year in Rajpootana are quite cold, and warm
-wraps are welcome.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we engaged a large elephant—which
-waited at the station to take travellers to
-Chitorgarh—to carry us to the fort and deserted
-city on the height we could see from the station.
-This was a distance of some seven miles there and
-back, it was said.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_78" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_078.jpg" width="388" height="491" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">FIRST ELEPHANT RIDE. (CHITORGARH)</div></div>
-
-<p>The elephant was made by the driver to kneel
-while we mounted, by means of a ladder of bamboo,
-and seated ourselves on the flat, cushioned seat,
-having a low hand-rail and a foot board, slung by
-ropes. The elephant moved with a peculiar swaying,
-swinging movement, not unlike that of a ship,
-though regular. We started over a stretch of
-rough, common-like ground, broken into hillocks
-and hollows, overgrown with scrub bush, the track
-not being very definite. The elephant picked its
-way most carefully over the rough parts, especially
-when descending a hollow. We reached a roadway
-which led over a bridge across a river, and
-brought us up to the city of Chitor at the foot of
-the hill, and extending upon its lower slopes. We
-entered the city through a Moslem arched gateway,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-and threaded our way through the narrow streets,
-our elephant filling the whole of the roadway.
-Pottery, beads, glass bracelets, cheap lacquered
-ornaments, and small merchandise of various kinds
-were spread out on the ground, their proprietors
-squatting by their stock in trade. The native
-houses were small and low, for the most part hardly
-more than huts of mud, roofed with sun-baked
-tiles, laid scalewise over a trellis of bamboo, often
-very dilapidated. There were remains of better
-houses and older, with arcaded balconies, and here<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-and there we passed a small white-washed temple,
-with quaint elephants with gay housings painted
-in profile on the white walls each side the entrance.
-These elephants are drawn in a very spirited
-manner, and are generally represented going at a
-trot, and full of action with trunk and tail in the
-air, decorated with bells on his feet and gorgeous
-red and yellow housings and domed howdah, set
-off by the solid black of the elephant and his ivory
-tusks, the turbaned driver flourishing his goad.
-From our commanding eminence, the elephant’s
-back, we could take a comprehensive survey of the
-life of the city, and see the people at work at various
-trades. The inhabitants did not take much
-notice of us; some would stare and others would
-salaam as we passed. I imagine the elephant with
-European travellers on its back not infrequently
-passed through Chitor, although we managed to
-startle a tethered camel in one of the streets considerably,
-and the animal tugged at its rope and
-plunged alarmingly at the sight of our elephant.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the city of Chitor, which seemed very
-poverty-stricken, we reached the first gate of the
-fortress, and began the ascent of some 200 or 300
-feet. The road zigzags up the side of the rocky
-plateau, upon the summit of which the fort and
-ancient city were built, the ancient capital of
-Rajpootana. Massive walls protect this road on
-the outer side, and a continuous warder’s walk runs
-along it, with flights of stone steps to the roadway
-at intervals. We passed through five gateways on
-the way up, generally enriched with sculptured
-ornament—the last one, Ram Pol, being the richest,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-and this was finely carved with Hindu detail
-and symbols, having friezes of elephants. There
-have been extensive restorations at Chitorgarh.
-The whole length of the wall seems to have been
-gone over, and replastered, and in many places
-rebuilt with new stone. The tops of the gates
-were crenellated in a fashion which suggested a
-perpetuation in stone of an earlier type of wooden
-palisading, a horizontal band connecting the rounded
-or pointed stone heads, the divisions between each
-being continued below it. In many cases the old
-massive wooden gates were left under the archways,
-bound with old iron bands. By the way, at
-Ajmir we noted that the wooden doors of the
-gateways to the courts were covered with old
-horse-shoes nailed on, close together, in some
-instances actually over the old rich carved work,
-and apparently with the same idea of good
-omen as is associated with the same emblem in
-our country.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived at the summit there were wonderful
-ruins to be seen. Scattered over the plateau, half
-overgrown, amid heaps of shattered stones and
-carved fragments, there were the remains of
-Mohammedan palaces and Hindu or Jain Temples,
-rich within and without with intricate carving.</p>
-
-<p>The guides showed us where the Hindu Queen and
-the women of the city, all suffocated themselves in a
-subterranean chamber to escape their fate had they
-fallen into the hands of the Mohammedan conquerors,
-when Ala-ud-din took Chitor by storm in
-1290.</p>
-
-<p>The hand of the restorer was seen here again<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-and had been in some parts rather too thorough.
-I noticed an arcade over the gateway of the Moslem
-Palace, which seemed to have been entirely
-rebuilt in a kind of pale green marble, almost the
-colour of jade, quite sharply cut and new, and out
-of keeping with the old work more or less battered
-and ruined around it. The famous Tower of Victory
-had been extensively restored, even the carving in
-parts recut. This is going too far, as it is impossible
-to unite modern workmanship with old, even
-in India. Watchful and careful, timely repair is
-the only way to preserve ancient buildings, but
-there should be no attempt made to replace lost
-carving and decoration by modern imitation.</p>
-
-<p>We entered over broken steps a wonderful Jain
-temple, very richly carved, with a remarkable
-domed ceiling over the central chamber, arranged
-in a series of concentric circles, intersected by
-figures of dancing girls, with emblems radiating
-from the centre. Another Jain temple formed a
-most picturesque pile, and a delightful mass of
-light and shade filled in with intricate detail, in the
-full sunlight. In these temples a favourite deity is
-Ganesha, the elephant-headed god, whose carved
-image constantly appears.</p>
-
-<p>In one part of the ancient city we came upon
-some natives preparing cotton yarn for hand-weaving.
-The yarn was stretched in long lengths across
-horizontal canes supported by vertical ones. They
-seemed to be cleaning the threads with combs and
-brushes. The little black-bristled hand-brushes
-placed on the top of the turbaned heads when not
-in use had a very quaint effect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-Having explored the ruins of Chitorgarh, we remounted
-our good elephant, which waited for us,
-and descended, moving rather joltingly down the
-long hill, and frightening a pony and a camel
-tethered in the main street of Chitor. The sun
-was now blazing, it being noontide, though tempered
-by the still cool wind from the north, which we had
-found really cold in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>Returning the way we had come to our quarters at
-the station, after taking tiffin at the bungalow we
-arranged to go on to Udaipur in the morning, and
-were advised to sleep in the train, which waited in
-the station all night, and left at 6.20 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span> for
-Udaipur. So we packed up and went on board
-and took our berths, which were on the whole more
-comfortable than the station beds.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning our compartment was invaded
-by a young Indian who wanted a seat, but we had
-kept it to ourselves during the night, which was
-cold enough, and we were glad of all our wraps.
-The young Indian was a pleasant, bright, and intelligent
-young fellow who spoke English well, well
-clad in the style of a native gentleman, with plenty
-of wraps and overcoats. He was obviously curious
-about us, and wanted to know all we would tell him.
-He seemed to have a great wish to see London,
-and asked us about the cost of living there, and
-whether a Hindu could live there according to his
-religion without meat. He described India as “a
-poor country,” and wondered that we should journey
-so far to see it. He was bound for some town
-where his father lived, sixty miles by tonga from
-Udaipur, being under orders not to stop at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-latter place, as his father had told him there was
-plague there, and wished him to come on.</p>
-
-<p>The train passed through a very flat and rather
-cheerless country, exceedingly dry, and for the most
-part covered with long jungle grass, but varied here
-and there by green crops under irrigation.</p>
-
-<p>Camels were occasionally seen, generally ridden
-by two men; also there were many herds of oxen
-and buffaloes. As usual, there were many interesting
-types and groups to be observed at the stations.</p>
-
-<p>Approaching Udaipur, the country broke into
-hills and became more interesting. We reached
-Udaipur Station about 11.30, and bidding good-bye
-and exchanging cards with the young Hindu, we
-parted with our baggage into a little open cart
-called a “tum-tum,” and were driven some distance,
-along a dusty road, to the Udaipur Hotel, which
-looked like an expanded bungalow with a second
-storey added on. Here we found pleasant quarters
-and decent beds.</p>
-
-<p>At the table-d’hôte there was a rather frigid
-Anglo-Indian family, a colonel on a tour of official
-inspection and his secretary and their ladies; also
-a voluble American lady, whom we had seen at
-Ajmir, and a rather lofty and superior English
-military man and his wife, who, we were afterwards
-informed, were the guests of the Maharajah.</p>
-
-<p>In meeting one’s compatriots aboard or indeed
-anywhere without an introduction one is reminded
-by their manner strongly of the Oxford Don who
-could not do anything to save an unfortunate
-undergraduate from drowning because “he had not
-been introduced.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-Here, in a remote part of India, chance had
-thrown half-a-dozen English people together at the
-same table, and yet they would hardly speak to
-each other, that is to say to any new-comer
-outside their own party. Nothing, however, daunts
-the American traveller, especially the American
-lady. She ignores the social ice, or if she perceives
-it she boldly breaks it with a hatchet, as it
-were, rushing in under the guns of the most frigid
-and unapproachable personalities with a cheerful
-and persistent fire of conversation, popping in leading
-questions with the most artless and childlike confidence.
-This mode of attack generally succeeds,
-too, apparently. I have seen severe English
-official and military-looking men, after some show
-of resistance, unconditionally surrender, and presently
-empty their intellectual pockets on the demand
-of these light-hearted, table-d’hôte, globe-trotting
-inquisitors.</p>
-
-<p>A picturesque feature of hotel life in India is the
-impromptu bazaar formed under the arcade, which
-always shades the rooms on the ground floor, by the
-travelling merchants, who spread out their wares to
-tempt the traveller.</p>
-
-<p>In Rajpootana, the land of warriors, collections of
-arms, swords, sword-sticks, knives and daggers, and
-fearsome and wonderful blades of all sorts form a
-conspicuous part of the stock-in-trade of these
-native merchants, the glittering steel making a
-brave show with the bright-coloured stuffs, jewellery,
-and embroideries. At Udaipur they offered also
-native pictures, painted in tempera, somewhat crude
-but distinctly decorative, and complete with painted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-borders or frames. They represented elephants,
-tigers, maharajahs sabring wild swine, and such-like,
-painted in profile in frank flat colours, the
-animals singularly faithful in silhouette to nature.
-In dealing with these travelling traders, bargaining
-is, of course, expected, and usually they are willing
-to accept about half the price originally asked.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_85" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_085.jpg" width="383" height="454" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">RAJPUTS AND THEIR RARITIES. (UDAIPUR)</div></div>
-
-<p>An impressive sight at Udaipur is the place of
-tombs, or the burning-place, which is a beautiful
-garden surrounded by a high wall, full of magnificent
-domed tombs and cenotaphs. This is the place
-where the Kings of Udaipur, since it became the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-capital of Rajpootana, have been buried, or rather
-cremated, with their wives. The city of Udaipur—a
-glimpse of which, with its crenellated walls and
-the huge pile of the Maharajah’s palace rising above
-the trees, is seen from the hotel—is entered, after a
-short drive through a fine double gateway. A huge
-old mango tree grows over the street just inside.
-Udaipur is a white town; the streets are very
-picturesque, having arcaded bazaars and pretty
-fantastic balconies here and there, and the native
-life is of course very varied and full of colour.
-The main street rises up to the eminence on which
-the palace stands. At an angle before this is
-reached, a steep flight of white steps leads up to the
-gate of the court of the great temple of Juggernath—a
-Jain temple dedicated to Vishnu—the second
-person in the Hindu Trinity. It was the finest of
-its kind we have yet seen. We were allowed to
-walk around the court and examine the carvings,
-but not inside the temple. Two great stone
-elephants stand facing one another at the entrance
-to the court—a similar arrangement to that noted
-at Ellora. There is an elaborate shrine over the
-gateway in which is a seated bronze or brass figure of
-Vishnu with his lotus flower, snakes, and other
-emblems. The exterior of the temple is a
-wonderful mass of carving. On the plinth was a
-continuous narrow frieze of elephants on a small
-scale, having the effect of a richly carved moulding;
-above this was a line of horses, all saddled and
-bridled but without riders; above this again was a
-band of human figures. Over these were carved
-on a larger scale a series of figures of dancing-girls<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-in different attitudes. These dancers always form
-an important element in the carved decoration of
-Jain temples.</p>
-
-<p>We next visited the palace of the Maharajah,
-which occupies the highest ground in the city of
-Udaipur. It is a vast, romantic-looking pile. The
-steep street leads the traveller up to a great arched
-gateway, and through this is entered a large oblong
-court. On the right, the vast white palace walls
-rise to a great height, with hardly any windows,
-but high up are seen fairy-like arcades, balconies, and
-domed minarets, glittering with blue tile-work and
-gold.</p>
-
-<p>A native custodian conducted us over the Palace.
-Entering an inner court, we ascended a steep stone
-staircase at an angle, the treads rising about nine or
-twelve inches high. There were native paintings on
-the walls of richly caparisoned state elephants bearing
-maharajahs, tigers, and other figures. We passed
-through a succession of rooms and courts at
-different levels, the walls of white marble inlaid
-with a very fine sort of glass mosaic, not tessellated
-but let in in pieces cut large or small according to
-the forms to be expressed. These were generally
-figures always in severe profile, in elaborate costume,
-and jewels the details of which were carefully and
-richly rendered. Flowers and delicate palm trees
-varied the designs, done in the same way, the leaves
-and small component parts being cut complete in
-the glass. There were also formal floral borders
-outlining the arches of the arcades, and forming
-ceiling patterns in some of the rooms, and on the
-walls were hung in frames delicate paintings on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-vellum, heightened with gold, such as one sees in old
-Indian illuminated MSS. In some of the corridors
-it was rather a shock to see inserted in the windows
-pieces of crudely stained European glass, such as
-were in vogue in conservatories here in the
-“forties.” One room was entirely decorated with
-coloured glass, the walls being veneered with a
-zigzag pattern in red and white glass.</p>
-
-<p>Other and smaller rooms in the Zenana quarters,
-which we had now reached, and all at the top storey
-of the Palace, were lined with old Dutch tiles,
-others again with Chinese blue and white tiles.
-These rooms had graceful, arcaded balconies which
-commanded extensive views. We had a bird’s-eye
-view of the palace courts and the stable yards,
-where elephants were tethered in long rows, the
-busy natives moving about with horses and oxen.
-Beyond were seen the clustering, small white houses
-with flat roofs, broken by domes here and there,
-the green wooded country and the hills far away,
-while on the other side of the palace the lake with
-its pavilioned islands mirrored the sunset framed in
-the blue mountains.</p>
-
-<p>At night we frequently heard the weird cries of
-the jackals which prowl around most places in
-India after dark, and when all is quiet in human
-habitations. It is a very wild, shrill sound, rising
-almost to a shriek at times. We also thought we
-caught another note—the laughter of the hyena.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_88" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_088.jpg" width="600" height="422" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MAHARAJAH’S PALACE AT UDAIPUR. FROM THE JAGMANDIR PAVILION</div></div>
-
-<p>A charming excursion by boat may be made
-to the palace of Jagmandir, which occupies the
-whole of an island on the lake, a fairy-like pavilion
-enclosing luxuriant palms and fruit trees within its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-courts and gardens in which one realised the
-architecture and scenery of the Arabian Nights.</p>
-
-<p>We reached the lakeside through a fine triple-arched
-gate which led to a flight of steps descending
-into the water. Here a striking scene burst
-upon us. A crowd of dark Hindu women thronged
-the steps, clad for the most part in rich red saris
-of different tones, varied by orange and purple
-drapery and the glitter of their silver bangles
-and anklets. They were busy cleaning their brass
-water jars, scrubbing and polishing them on the
-steps at different levels; some standing in the
-water, whilst others, filling their vessels and poising
-them on their heads, would move away stately and
-erect, like walking caryatids.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a rather heavy boat with two native
-oarsmen, which had been summoned by our guide
-moved from the palace to the steps and we, with
-our bearer, embarked, and were rowed over to the
-enchanting island and the fairy-like palace of
-Jagmandir where Shah Jehan lived when in revolt
-against his father, Jahangir. On the way we
-rowed around another island showing white arcades
-and domes emerging from green bowery foliage
-of mangoes and palms.</p>
-
-<p>Landing at the steps we found the Jagmandir a
-most lovely place, full of arcaded courts, and marble
-pavements, pointed windows and balconies and
-marble walls enclosing green gardens full of roses,
-and palms, and plantains, a kingly pavilion,
-displaying all the invention and refinement of
-Mogul art. Inside, too, the palace was full of
-interest. There was a charming little painted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-chamber, the walls treated in a sort of tapestry
-manner with Indian scenes and decorative landscapes
-rich with trees and varied with all the
-characteristic birds and animals (the white cranes
-on the mango tree which we had seen in reality
-at Ahmedabad were there) kites and crows, and
-antelopes, and the Maharajah and his horsemen
-hunting the tiger amid these painted forests and
-jungles. On one wall the Maharajah himself was
-painted at full length in profile in a white turban
-and dress also white embroidered with gold, with
-a gold nimbus about his head as he is supposed to
-be descended from Rama, and is considered a sacred
-person connected with the sun—a large sun face
-modelled and gilded appears on the palace
-wall.</p>
-
-<p>Another room was said to have been painted by
-a French artist. He had taken the lotus as a
-motive and had tuned it into a formal scroll
-pattern in the frieze, but it was not a success, and
-had not the interest or the spirit or decorative
-instinct of the native artist.</p>
-
-<p>The chief salon had Parisian carpets on the floor,
-and a dreadful blue glass chandelier, and other
-horrors in glass and furniture of Western origin.
-Opening out of this salon was a bedroom raised a
-step or two on a higher level and the principal
-feature here was a large bedstead in glass and
-silver! On the walls of one of the courts was a
-decoration in gesso inlaid with glass, which was
-both delicate and effective. There were figures
-decoratively treated in severe profile, combined
-with trees and flowers somewhat Persian in feeling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-and similar in style to some we had seen in the
-Maharajah’s palace.</p>
-
-<p>From the landing-place I made a sketch of that
-palace in the sunlight reflected in the calm waters
-of the lake. Then, at noon we rowed back to the
-town and returned in our tonga to the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>Another of the sights of Udaipur is to see the
-Maharajah’s wild pigs fed. He has an arena near
-the town for the cruel sport of pig-sticking, but
-keeps vast herds of pigs upon the mountain sides
-at the head of the lake. It is a beautiful drive to
-the spot through the city and out at a further gate,
-and through groves and along a terrace-like road
-by the lakeside, to a white building on a high
-ground overlooking the wooded and rocky mountain
-side, partially covered with low forest; there
-from a terrace we could see many swine feeding.
-They are like a small kind of wild boar, but
-differing in size, and very fierce, bristling their
-backs and charging one another over the food,
-which was Indian corn, scattered broadcast among
-them by two natives, one carrying the sack of
-grain and the other distributing it from a sort
-trencher. There was a sort of Brobdingnagian
-mouse-trap on the ground, presumably to catch
-the boars in, when wanted for the arena. There
-were but few boars at first to be seen, but they
-seemed to know the feeding time, and gradually
-gathered in large numbers, and when the grain was
-scattered, by their constant rushes after it and
-violent charges with each others soon raised such a
-thick cloud of dust that they became lost to view
-as in a thick mist, and could only hear their hoofs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-scraping over the rocky ground, and their savage
-grunts and squeaks. A number of peacocks
-hovered on the outskirts on the look out for stray
-grain as well as blue rocks and crows which often
-perched on the hogs’ backs! The terrace from which
-we surveyed this strange scene was really the parapeted
-flat roof of the keeper’s dwelling. A
-flight of steps led up to a higher terrace which
-surrounded a deep sort of bear-pit, where a select
-family of hogs seemed to be treated with peculiar
-distinction. Not for these the fierce struggle for
-grain upon the mountain side, when the battle was
-to the strong; no, these were fed upon a special
-food—a sort of large brown rissole composed of
-buttermilk and sugar-cane; but the hogs were fat
-and did not devour these attractive morsels, even
-with half the zest which their less favoured relatives
-outside ate up the scattered maize. The reason of
-the comparative luxury in which these selected
-hogs lived, we learned, was that they had fought
-with tigers, and thus were treated as superior
-beings, by order of the Maharajah.</p>
-
-<p>The wooded shores of the lake and the mountains
-beyond were very beautiful in the still
-evening atmosphere, as we drove back to Udaipur,
-the road by the lake being so narrow that two
-carriages could not pass, and, meeting the Resident,
-we had to pull in to one side to let his carriage
-get by.</p>
-
-<p>There was a charming view of Udaipur from
-our hotel seen through the trees, the massive
-Maharajah’s palace dominating the city, and bathed
-in the roseate early morning sunlight it looked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-particularly lovely. I worked at a sketch of this on
-Christmas morning; I remember, having to be up
-at seven o’clock in order to catch the effect, which
-soon changed. We had the most brilliant moonlight
-nights here, too.</p>
-
-<p>We visited the Maharajah’s gardens where was
-a sort of Zoo. There were some handsome tigers
-in rather small cages, hogs, leopards, one lion,
-deer, guinea-pigs, geese, cockatoos, and other
-birds and beasts, including some melancholy dogs
-of various breeds, chained at intervals around a
-courtyard. These were supposed to be in hospital.</p>
-
-<p>From the Zoo we drove through a fine wooded
-park to the Museum called the Victoria Institute,
-where a native curator showed us round. It was a
-white building in the Moslem style but quite new.
-It included a library in which was placed a bad
-statue of our late Queen. There were modelled
-heads in coloured plaster, ranged in cases numbered
-and ticketed, of all the Hindu castes, each with
-their proper caste mark upon their foreheads.
-There was a miscellaneous collection otherwise,
-native arts and industries and antiquities, as well
-as European, being represented very sparsely.
-The whole thing had a sort of forced and artificial
-character in such surroundings and was quite empty
-of visitors. We were, however, early there.</p>
-
-<p>In driving through the gate of the city, a funeral
-passed us—a band of young men bearing on a
-stretcher the corpse which was swathed in red
-cotton and tightly bound up like a mummy. The
-bearers moved at a quick, almost jaunty pace,
-approaching a trot, and with them were other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-natives who chanted a sort of song. If it was an
-equivalent for a dirge it was quite a cheerful one—but
-then the Hindus, as well as the Mohammedans
-and Indians, look upon death as a happy
-translation to another existence, and the accompaniments
-of gloom to which we are accustomed in
-Christian countries have no existence here.</p>
-
-<p>We departed, on Christmas Day in the morning,
-from Chitor and Ajmir again, returning by the way
-we came. Udaipur is at the end of the branch line
-from Ajmir which has not I believe been in existence
-many years.</p>
-
-<p>On the way to the station I noticed some very
-primitive huts clustered in a group on a rising
-ground above the road. They almost exactly
-resembled the huts of the early Britons and Gauls
-as they appear on Trajan’s column, being circular
-in form, built of mud or sun-baked bricks and roofed
-with a sort of rude thatch laid over a bamboo
-trellis. In this land of wonders and contrasts truly,
-one sees everything both in customs and dwellings
-from the most primitive to the most elaborate and
-luxurious, from the most ancient to the most
-modern forms of life. It is sad to note, however,
-that at least as far as the outward aspects of life
-are concerned, all that Western contact seems to
-have done for the people of India is to introduce
-corrugated iron, Manchester cotton, and the
-kerosene can—with petrol and its smell!</p>
-
-<p>At Udaipur station there was a great native
-crowd of every variety of type, wonderful in colour
-and costume. Many of the men carried sabres as
-well as walking-sticks which seem to be the marks<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-of superior caste in Rajputana. There were, too,
-the usual crowd of poorer travellers with their
-extraordinary bundles and brown babies. A native
-woman stood on the platform with a huge sheaf of
-sugar-cane which she sold in pieces to the travellers,
-and, of course, there were the sweet stuff sellers,
-and the inevitable betel-nut.</p>
-
-<p>Reaching Chitorgarh in the late afternoon the
-old fort with its zigzag walled road looked quite
-familiar, and at the station our elephant was in
-waiting again.</p>
-
-<p>We could not get on to Ajmir until night, and
-so did not arrive there until about 5.30 in the
-morning. Coming from a plague-stricken district
-passengers were not allowed to leave the train
-until a medical inspection had taken place. An
-English doctor with a native attendant bearing a
-lantern came round and went through the farce
-of feeling everybody’s pulse before anybody was
-allowed to leave the station. We only stopped,
-however, to get some tea and await a train for
-Jaipur, our next destination.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">96</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">JAIPUR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> our travels through India we met comparatively
-few of our own countrymen and women.
-The English (or the British) have not as yet taken
-much to touring in the Empire of which such a
-proud boast is constantly made. The English in
-India are usually residents connected with civil or
-military posts. They go out to take up their official
-duties, and directly they get leave they rush “home”—England
-is always spoken of as “home,” even
-by residents in India of long standing. It generally
-happens that the officials and their families are
-quartered at some particular station in a particular
-district, and may remain there all their time, so
-that the English resident in India generally does
-not see any other parts of the great peninsular, and
-is not acquainted with the country beyond his own
-district. A tourist, therefore, in a few months may
-have a more complete general or even particular
-acquaintance with India at large, as regards its
-great cities and famous monuments, than many a
-resident who has spent the best part of his life in
-one station, and who always takes his leave at
-“home.”</p>
-
-<p>French tourists are occasionally met with, but
-Americans are the most numerous, and they are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-met with everywhere. The early morning train
-we had taken from Ajmir to Jaipur was invaded
-by a party of no less than forty of our Transatlantic
-cousins, who overflowed it and filled our compartment
-with an incredible amount of hand baggage.
-They seemed to be, as far as one could make out,
-connected with some mission. They reminded me
-rather of a gathering in one of the cities of the
-United States at which I was present (Philadelphia,
-I think), where one of my American friends remarked,
-“Now, all these you see here are types,
-but none of them are worth studying”!</p>
-
-<p>The country traversed between Ajmir and Jaipur
-is mostly plain, and very desert-like in places, with
-distant mountain ranges beyond, not unlike Arizona
-in general character. Green crops under irrigation
-are, however, occasionally seen, and among them
-not unfrequently may be noticed a pair of large,
-grey-plumaged cranes, feeding in the young corn,
-which do not take to flight at the approach of the
-train. We reached Jaipur about noon and put up at
-Rustom’s Hotel, a comparatively short drive from
-the station. The hotel stands in the middle of a
-large enclosure divided by a low wall from the high
-road. Tents are pitched along one side of the building
-to afford extra sleeping accommodation, and a
-sort of bungalow annexe is prepared to take overflow
-guests. From pleasant rooms on the terrace we
-had a view of the Tiger Fort and the road with its
-constant procession of natives, ox-carts, and camels
-and horsemen trooping into the city about a mile
-off. A row of tall acacia trees screened the late
-afternoon sun, and barred-like fretwork the golden<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-light of afterglow, and we often watched the peacocks
-flying up to roost among the branches, their
-beautiful forms silhouetted against the orange sky
-between the interstices of the leaves.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_98" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.625em;">
- <img src="images/i_098.jpg" width="362" height="347" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">HOTEL ACCOMMODATION (JAIPUR), “FOR YOUR EASE AND
-COMFORT” (OR RATHER FOR THE EASING OF YOUR RUPEES?)</div></div>
-
-<p>The native proprietor, or manager, during the
-preliminary ceremony of taking our names, and in
-getting a form of application to the Resident filled
-up for permission to visit the Maharajah’s palace
-and the palace at Amber, made polite speeches,
-expressing himself only anxious for “our ease and
-comfort”—of course without any thought of prospective
-rupees. Clusters of native huts built of
-mud with thatched roofs occur at frequent intervals
-around Jaipur outside the city walls; from our
-terrace at the hotel we could see several. There
-was apparently a small village within a stone’s-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">99</a></span>throw.
-One evening the strains of what sounded
-like a native chant or song in chorus were wafted to
-us from this village, and we heard that a native
-wedding was going on there; but the illusion was
-somewhat destroyed when we learned that the
-supposed native music proceeded from the mouth
-of a gramophone! It is said that special ones are
-now prepared for the Indian market with popular
-native songs and music—another boon from the
-West.</p>
-
-<p>Jaipur is a city within high crenellated walls,
-built of rubble and plastered with cement. The
-same form of palisade-like battlement crested the
-walls here as at Chitorgarh, and is the common
-form in Mogul defensive buildings. Among the
-native huts which cluster outside the walls, I
-noticed some of wicker; many of the huts, too,
-had wicker screens—a sort of lattice-work made of
-bamboo—covering the otherwise open fronts.</p>
-
-<p id="paintred">Jaipur is known as the rose-coloured city. The
-Maharajah must be very fond of pink, in fact
-he may be said to have “painted the town red.”
-The whole of the main fronts of the houses facing
-the streets are distempered in a kind of darkish
-rose pink—really red—the rosy hue being largely
-due to the luminous atmosphere in the full sunlight,
-and it becomes still rosier in the flush of evening.
-It is dark enough at anyrate to show a decoration
-of lines of floral devices and patterns painted in
-white upon the red walls. The whole scheme, no
-doubt, was suggested by the red sandstone buildings
-inlaid with white marble which are the glory
-of Delhi and Agra. It is not a sort of imitation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-calculated to deceive any one, however, but clearly
-a scheme of painted decoration emulating the effect of
-the solid materials mentioned. The city has, owing
-to this treatment, a very distinctive scenic aspect of
-its own, and is very striking, the brilliant and varied
-pattern of vivid colour in the costume of the
-natives in the bazaars, with this roseate background,
-producing quite a unique effect. One has, however,
-after a time an impression of unreality and unsubstantiality,
-as of stage scenery which will presently
-be shifted. The Maharajah of Jaipur has the
-reputation of being very advanced and modern in
-his ideas. He has at anyrate set up gasworks in
-his city, which also possesses a large public garden
-laid out in the European manner, and is both horticultural
-and zoological, and contains a museum and
-a bronze statue of Lord Mayo.</p>
-
-<p>It seems rather a mistake, in a climate like that
-of India, to lay out grounds with broad serpentine
-paths and drives unshaded by trees, and vast lawns
-which can only be kept up with a pretence of
-greenness by constant and laborious watering. It
-is another of the mistaken foreign importations.
-The Eastern type of garden, on the other hand, is
-quite appropriate and adapted to the necessities of
-the climate. Its characteristics are narrow, straight
-paths between closely planted groves of trees,
-acacias, plantains, palms, and fruit trees, and varied
-with tanks and fountains, and cool marble pavilions,
-the whole enclosed in a protecting wall like an
-earthly paradise.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_102" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_102.jpg" width="600" height="520" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MAHARAJAH’S STATE ELEPHANT, JAIPUR</div></div>
-
-<p>It does not cheer the English traveller in the
-East—at least I never heard that it did—to see a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-low wall surmounted by a cast-iron railing and
-common-place but pretentious gates, enclosing a
-joyless “public garden” of a British vestry type.</p>
-
-<p>The proprietors of the art depots in the bazaars
-of Jaipur are very enterprising, and resort to all
-kinds of allurements to induce the traveller to enter
-and purchase. To begin with, the tourist in his
-carriage is peppered with a perfect hail of white
-business cards flung at him by active touts, who are
-always on the alert for the passing stranger in the
-bazaars, who receives such seductive invitations as
-“See my shop?”—“Very nice things”—“Don’t
-want you to buy—only to look!”</p>
-
-<p>We visited a large art-dealer’s store. It was
-prettily arranged around a small covered court,
-lighted from the top. An arcade divided a series of
-rooms along each side, both on the ground and on
-a second floor. This court was richly carpeted and
-furnished with seats, coffee tables, and divans.
-One device of the proprietor or manager was to
-invite prospective customers to witness a dance of
-nautch girls in this court, presumably to conduce
-to a favourable mood for extensive purchases.</p>
-
-<p>At this place was a great display of Jaipur
-enamels, applied in a variety of ways from small
-jewellery to large, chased, brass dishes and trays.
-I saw a large dish prepared by the native craftsman
-(who was sitting at work at the entrance) for champlévé
-enamel, very deftly chased, though the modern
-reproductions of the traditional Indian patterns
-strike one as rather mechanical. The skill of the
-craftsman is there, but the feeling and initiative of
-the artist is too often wanting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-Rajput arms and armour hung on the white walls
-of the court, and there was an immense stock of all
-sorts of metal-work and jewellery, mostly modern,
-and numbers of small portable articles in brass,
-evidently meant for the eye and the pocket of the
-tourist; amongst these were quantities of small
-pierced brass boxes in the form of cushions. I saw
-some interesting old Indian miniature pictures from
-MSS.—one of a rajah shooting a bow: he was
-standing upon a globe which rested on the back of
-an ox, which again stood upon the back of a fish.</p>
-
-<p>There were some suits of chain mail of extraordinary
-fineness, and wonderful engraved blades
-of many kinds. Besides the well-known Jaipur
-enamelled jewellery there was a quantity of precious
-stones—garnets, amethysts, sardonyx, onyx, and jade.
-Another speciality of Jaipur work are the charming
-spherical rolling lamps. These are spheres of
-brass chased and pierced all over with floral pattern,
-and made to open. Inside, by a very ingenious bit
-of mechanism, a small lamp is so suspended that it
-always maintains a horizontal position, and though
-the sphere may be rolled along the ground it never
-upsets the lamp within. They are used in the
-temples at festival times. These lamps are made
-at the Art School at Jaipur, where many native
-handicrafts are practised.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing our drive about the city we were
-introduced to the Maharajah’s state elephant. He
-was a fine beast, and occupied a low walled court,
-all to himself and his keeper. His forehead, trunk,
-and ears were decorated with an elaborate painted
-arabesque—a pattern in which vermilion, yellow,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-and turquoise predominated. His enormous tusks
-had had their points truncated, and these were
-tipped and bound with moulded bands of brass.
-The animal was tethered by one of his hind feet
-to a post, and stood in the shade of the high
-palace wall, tranquilly munching stalks of some
-kind of corn. I reproduce the sketch I made
-at the time of the elephant and the old man,
-his keeper.</p>
-
-<p>After tiffin we visited the palace. One could
-not say much for the taste of some of the decorations.
-We were shown several large durbar halls
-with open colonnades, which, however, were closed
-by hangings, which our guide—a tall, grey-whiskered
-Rajput—lifted up to show the interiors. The
-vaulted ceilings were painted with patterns on
-rather a large scale and in crude reds and blues,
-rather open and spread out over the white plaster,
-and somewhat coarse in form. We were then led
-through the gardens, which were laid out with long
-tanks with flagged walks each side, lined with gas
-lamps, but there was no water in the tanks.
-Farther on we passed through a gateway at the top
-of a flight of steps to the alligator tank. Here a
-native attendant having tied a piece of meat to the
-end of a string, another set up a curious weird call,
-while yet another ran on to the shore of the lake
-or tank, and did his best to wake up one or two
-very torpid alligators which lay in the sunshine by
-seizing hold of their tails and making them take to
-the water. Finally, after much persuasion, two
-alligators were induced to come up for the food.
-One of these—an old one with no teeth (none of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-them have tongues)—opened its horrid white mouth
-and snapped at the piece of meat which the man
-dangled at the end of the string. Meanwhile big
-yellow turtles swam up to join in the game, at
-which they were much quicker than the alligators.
-Large brown kites, too, seeing what was going on,
-hovered about expectantly, and dexterously caught
-fragments thrown to them in mid air. The
-ubiquitous crow was there also, ready for any
-unconsidered trifles.</p>
-
-<p>The life of the bazaars at Jaipur is singularly
-varied and interesting. The streets are unusually
-wide as native streets go in India. They find room
-to shake out long strips of newly dyed cotton to
-dry—a man holding the cloth at each end
-and waving it wildly about to dry, so that great
-plashes of yellow or orange and pink are apt to
-illuminate the streets here and there, as this process
-is a frequent incident. The brightest red, yellow,
-green, and blue and pink are also seen in the
-costumes or rather draperies of the people—the
-Hindu women in their graceful saris, generally in
-different shades of red; the Mohammedan women
-veiling their heads and shoulders in some vivid-coloured
-muslin—so that one had a general impression
-of people walking about attired in rainbows.
-Quaint, two-wheeled vehicles were numerous,
-often elaborately painted and decorated, called
-recklas, having awnings over them, and were driven
-by a superior caste of natives—possibly they might
-be a sort of equivalent for the gig of respectability
-which Carlyle writes of. Then there were the
-heavier ox-carts of the peasant, some of them with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-a domed cover draped in red within which hidden
-from view sat the women and children. Another
-kind of cart was built of bamboo, a curious lattice
-of the same forming the pole and yoke for a pair of
-oxen.</p>
-
-<p>Shaving, massage, cleaning teeth, washing, and
-all the necessary operations, which in the west are
-generally performed in private, are in Indian native
-quarters carried on in the open. The natives do
-not seem to know what privacy is or to feel the
-need of it. The little naked brown babies everywhere
-playing freely about are delightful.</p>
-
-<p>Great flocks of pigeons (blue rocks) are always
-flying about or swooping down to be fed with grain
-in the open spaces by women; but they are driven
-away from the heaps of grain for sale in the
-bazaars.</p>
-
-<p>The women carry everything upon their heads,
-and seem to do most of the porterage—bearing
-endless baskets of brown fuel made in rough flat
-cakes, bundles of wood, straw, sugar-cane, green
-stuff, bedding, and water jars. In Rajputana the
-women wear a rather full skirt under the sari, in
-many pleats rather after the style of an Albanian
-fustanelle. Masses of bracelets, sometimes
-completely covering their brown arms, are worn,
-either of coloured glass, or lacquered metal, or
-silver, and silver anklets as a rule with little
-bells attached.</p>
-
-<p>Armed horsemen are frequently seen riding in
-from or out into the country. Elephants, camels,
-and flocks of goats vary the street scenes,
-and residents’ carriages with outriders; camels<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-are also sometimes used to draw vehicles, driven
-in pairs.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_106" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_106.jpg" width="364" height="498" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TO AMBER ON AN ELEPHANT</div></div>
-
-<p>Musicians, with the peculiar long handled Indian
-guitar, jugglers, conjurers, snake charmers, vendors
-of stuffs and embroideries, and photograph sellers
-haunt the open arcades of the hotels and use every
-device to attract the attention of travellers.</p>
-
-<p>A visit to the deserted city of Amber and its
-palace is one of the principal excursions outside
-Jaipur. It is best to start early in the morning, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-there is a four to six miles drive by carriage to reach
-the place whence the ascent to Amber on elephants’
-backs is made. The road thither takes the visitor
-through a section of the city of Jaipur, and passes
-out on the other side into a road skirted with trees
-and gardens, from amidst which rise the domes of
-the pavilions of wealthy Rajputs. The Alligator
-lake is again passed, and some distance beyond this
-the foot of the hill is reached, when the traveller is
-expected to leave his carriage and mount one of
-the elephants in waiting there to take him up to
-Amber—another two miles.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to be furnished with a formal
-permission from the Resident to visit Amber.
-Formerly elephants were placed at the disposal of
-visitors by the Maharajah, but since tourists became
-numerous elephants must be hired by them. They
-are by no means richly caparisoned elephants.
-The housings leave much to be desired, and the
-seats are much out of repair, and one is lucky to
-find the foot-board slung at a usable level and
-fairly horizontal, and if the protecting rail of the
-seat does not slip out.</p>
-
-<p>For those who are willing to sacrifice processional
-dignity and spectacular effect, however, as well as
-a slow shaking, it is quite possible to walk—for the
-able bodied, and before the sun is high.</p>
-
-<p>After a steepish hill at first the road descends
-again, and passing along the border of a small lake,
-turns round at its head and again ascends to the
-palace on a considerable height, of which a distant
-view is obtained, as one approaches it, from the
-road. It is a striking pile of Mohammedan architecture.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-Three great gateways are passed on the
-steep approach up the rocky sides of the hill, and the
-road is protected by a wall, as at Chitorgarh.
-Finally the great gateway leading into the courtyard
-of the palace is reached, and we dismount from the
-elephant and are surrounded by a number of
-hangers-on, one of which comes forward to act
-as guide over the palace, which showed traces of
-considerable restoration. The great doors of solid
-brass were exceedingly fine (both here and at the
-Maharajah’s palace in Jaipur—really the best things
-there). There were also doors beautifully inlaid
-with ivory and ebony to some of the zenana rooms,
-all the doors being interesting for their woods and
-joinery. There were some delicate pierced marble
-screens over the gateway of the inner court which
-had a most lovely effect seen against the sky. The
-rooms were very elaborately decorated with a sort
-of veneer of small pieces of looking-glass arranged
-in arabesque, and united by cloisonné of gesso forming
-the lines of divisions of the pattern, similar to that
-we had seen at Udaipur. This decoration, carried
-all over a vaulted ceiling, in the sunlight reflected
-from the floor, glittered like beaten silver. On the
-lower halls were delicate marble panels of floral
-designs in relief.</p>
-
-<p>The palace as a whole did not strike us as so
-beautiful as that at Udaipur, although vastly more
-so than the Maharajah’s at Jaipur.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_109" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_109.jpg" width="388" height="488" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SHOPPING IN JAIPUR</div></div>
-
-<p>From the roof and terraces we looked down on
-gardens and pavilions and on the lake below, then
-partially dry, and wondered how this vast palace
-with all its luxurious decoration came to be deserted.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-A temple at the main entrance, however, is still
-maintained for worship, which is that of Kali—one
-of the aspects or secondary characters of Parvati,
-the wife of Siva—a savage, blood-thirsty goddess
-only propitiated by animal sacrifices. A goat or a
-kid is still sacrificed daily here. It was pathetic
-enough to see the innocent, unconscious intended
-victim—a poor little kid tied at the corner of the
-platform of the temple by a little heap of sand. Mr
-W. S. Caine gives a graphic account of how the
-head of the victim is instantaneously cut off by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-officiating priest, an act he witnessed, but we felt
-no desire to see this execution.</p>
-
-<p>On our way back I saw a curious instance of
-the boldness of a kite and the unerring way in
-which they swoop at their prey. A native was
-walking down the hill in front of us carrying a piece
-of bread in his hand, from which he ate, swinging it
-at his side between whiles. A kite hovering above
-made a sudden swoop at the bread, which he struck
-with his beak, scattering the crumbs, though he
-did not succeed in knocking it quite out of the
-man’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>Driving in the evening through the bazaars at
-Jaipur we stopped the carriage to purchase some
-native cottons and muslins, and were immediately
-surrounded by a noisy, struggling crowd of rival
-traders who filled the carriage with their gay
-coloured stuffs, and literally covered us up with
-them. Our bearer negotiated the bargains, and in
-the end we carried off some characteristic textile
-souvenirs. On the way back to our hotel we
-stopped to see the Maharajah’s horses, passing
-through a gateway into a large exercise ground,
-down the sides of which ran a long open shed,
-with horses tethered in a line, each horse being
-secured by long ropes from each hind fetlock
-fastened to pegs on iron rings fixed in the ground,
-which sloped down to the open court. In addition
-to these each horse was tied by a halter, with a rope
-each side to rings in the manger, and all, of course,
-had cloths on. There were no partitions between
-the animals, which I suppose was the reason
-of their being so carefully secured. There were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-some very fine animals among them, and the
-native grooms were very willing to show them
-off—for a little backsheesh. There were white
-Arabs, Walers, English hunters, and a tiny Burmese
-pony.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">112</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AGRA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> left Jaipur for Agra on the 29th of
-December, finding the usual excited crowd
-at the station. The train passed through a rather
-dry, plain country, though varied by crops under
-irrigation. We changed at a junction named
-Bandakni, the train we were in going on to Delhi.
-It was a refreshment station. Here a good tiffin was
-procurable. Going on about 4.30 in the afternoon,
-we entered a more fertile and interesting country,
-the crops being more abundant, and the wells also.
-There were some fine groves of trees, and distant
-ranges of hills to be seen. Curious mounds and
-tumbled boulders varied the plains here and there
-in places. Peacocks were plentiful, and they even
-occasionally strayed on to the railway metals at the
-stations. Antelopes were also to be seen, and once
-an animal resembling a wolf was seen in the jungle.
-A jungle, by the way, is not necessarily a slice of
-tropical forest, full of long grass, tangled creepers,
-and tigers, but may be any bit of uncultivated
-country.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Agra about 9 <span class="smcap smaller">P.M.</span> after a comfortable
-journey. We put up at the Metropole Hotel—a kind
-of extended bungalow, with a two-storied centre and
-two long, low wings of rooms under the usual arcaded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-arrangement, with a garden in the middle. The
-rooms were spacious and lofty, but bare, cheerless
-and cold. The traveller of course must not
-expect any old-fashioned welcome or personal
-interest in his comfort or welfare in any country at
-any modern hostelry in these days. He writes or
-wires for his room, and he may be thankful if it is
-ready for him when he arrives. He must be
-content to be merely No. So-and-so, and may not
-even see the host or manager at all. There was,
-naturally, more or less of a rush on Agra about this
-time, as the preparations for the reception of the
-Amir of Afghanistan were far advanced, and distinguished
-visitors were beginning to arrive. The
-English tourist who had not furnished himself with
-introductions in such a place was apparently regarded
-as a mere worm by the superior military
-and official British circles.</p>
-
-<p>Driving to the fort next morning we were
-stopped by an English sentry, who produced a
-written card of Regulations forbidding the entrance
-of carriages, so we got out and walked through the
-Emperor Akbar’s great Delhi gate (1566), which
-is on a fine scale, and passed on to the Pearl
-Mosque, the Moti Musjid, built by Shah Jehan in
-1654—the private chapel of the court of the Mogul
-Emperors—a beautiful white marble building in a
-fair court. An Arabic inscription records when it
-was built and why.</p>
-
-<p>We passed on to the great square of the fort
-which was busily preparing for the reception of
-the Amir, who was expected to arrive on the 9th
-of January. They were actually building out an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-extra portico in solid masonry adding it on to the
-existing Durbas Hall (Diwan-i-Khas), which was so
-blocked with workmen and materials it was not
-possible to see much inside, and our bearer, who
-was by way of acting as guide when he could, was
-roughly turned back by an English official. We
-made the round of the great Akbar’s Fort, which
-is certainly on a noble scale, and returning to the
-Delhi gate by ugly and mean British barrack
-buildings, which have been put up within its massive
-walls, we could not but be struck with the contrast
-between the work of one Empire and that of
-another. Over Akbar’s great gate, however,
-floated our Union Flag.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_115" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_115.jpg" width="387" height="527" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">AGGRAVATING AGRA</div></div>
-
-<p>Our next expedition was to the renowned
-Taj Mahal, the beautiful marble tomb erected
-by Shah Jehan in memory of his favourite wife,
-and which was to be his own monument also.
-The way thither lies through the cantonments and
-the government gardens. We passed through
-great encampments, then in a state of busy preparation.
-On the road was being erected a large
-triumphal arch in the Moslem style, upon which
-native workmen were engaged painting and
-decorating. Native police in khaki and red
-turbans lined the route at intervals, and saluted
-as we drove past. The Viceroy’s camp was
-beautifully laid out and arranged with turf, walks,
-and flowers. We saw a procession of native women
-carrying palms and plants in pots on their heads,
-from ox-carts unloading them, for the camp.
-Camping in India, indeed, seems to be a fine art,
-and is carried out in every detail with the utmost<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-completeness. In the government gardens the
-ideas of the English landscape gardener were in
-evidence. They were laid out with serpentine
-walks and drives in the modern public parks style,
-the large shadeless stretches of would-be turf
-struggling to show a little green under repeated
-waterings, with groups of young trees here and
-there. A big statue of Queen Victoria was placed
-conspicuously on the high ground in the centre of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-one of these desert-like lawns. A little beyond we
-came to the magnificent gate of the Taj, a noble
-structure of red sandstone and white marble,
-approached by steps. Passing through its deep
-shadow under the great arch the wonderful tomb
-in all its pearly whiteness, with its graceful dome
-and slender minarets, rising sparkling in the full
-sunlight above a green bower of trees against the
-deep blue of the sky, and reflected in the still water
-of the long tank, breaks upon the sight like a
-fairy vision. The tank with terraced walks,
-flagged with stone, extends from the steps of the
-entrance gateway to the front of the Taj itself,
-its long line only broken by a raised marble terrace
-with seats about half way. Rows of slender
-cypresses enforce the long perspective which leads
-the eye up to the shrine. The Moslems certainly
-felt the importance of spacing and proportion, and
-the art of leading the eye and preparing the mind
-for the appreciation of beautiful art and architecture
-by careful planning of the setting and
-surroundings of their great temples and tombs.
-Space is as important an element in their design
-as the exquisite handicraft which produced their
-unrivalled detail. The Taj itself is on a raised
-platform of stone, and is flanked on each side by
-two noble mosques of red sandstone splendidly
-inlaid with white marble. It was the rich
-decorative effect of such materials no doubt which
-suggested to the Maharajah of Jaipur the painting
-of his town red, which I refer to in <a href="#paintred">a previous
-chapter</a>, but the reality compared with the imitation
-is as wine to water.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_116" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.4375em;">
- <img src="images/i_116.jpg" width="599" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE TAJ MAHAL, FROM THE GATEWAY</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-The Taj first impresses one by its beautiful
-proportion, and the completeness of its ensemble.
-It is like a fair woman whose general carriage and
-aspect charms the eye before we are near enough
-to appreciate the full beauty of her face and
-form, or to note the exquisite taste of her delicate
-attire.</p>
-
-<p>As one approaches this wonderful shrine which,
-although so ornate, possesses a fine breadth in
-general effect, the beauty and finish of its
-decorative detail excites a new admiration. There
-are delicate designs of lilies and tulips and crown
-imperials cut in marble in low relief, forming the
-panelling of the lower walls. These are framed in
-small-scale, formal floral designs, inlaid with precious
-stones, such as jasper, coral, bloodstone, sardonyx,
-lapis-lazuli, onyx, turquoise, and other kinds done in
-a manner associated with Florentine work, and it is
-said Italian workmen were employed here. Then
-we have the crowning beauty of the pierced work
-in the marble screens which enclose the tombs, and
-break the brilliant light at the apertures under the
-dome. These are the jewellery and lace of this
-architectural personality. There is something of
-the fine lady about her—if one may use the personal
-pronoun, but one cannot forget the twenty thousand
-workmen whose twenty-two years’ toil contributed
-to her splendour; and it is recorded, too, that their
-work was done under conditions of semi-starvation,
-and at the price of many lives, over and above the
-four millions of money at which the cost is usually
-estimated. Well, it remains <em>their</em> monument as
-well as that of Shah Jehan and his wife Arjamand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-Banu: 1648 is the date of the completion of the
-Taj.</p>
-
-<p>I was somewhat disappointed not to find the
-eastern garden described by Edwin Arnold, and
-which was seen here by Mr W. S. Caine—a bowery,
-romantic garden full of fruit trees—“orange and
-lemon, pomeloes, pomegranates, palms, flowering
-shrubs and trees, with marble fish-ponds and
-fountains, speaking of the East in every whisper
-of their leaves and plash of their waters.” There
-is still a charming garden, but an Anglicised one,
-with open lawns, broken by masses of beautiful and
-varied but rather consciously and professionally
-arranged trees and shrubs and palms. The hand
-and taste of the modern gardener is a little
-too evident. It looks as if the original somewhat
-wild and characteristic Eastern garden had
-been taken in hand by an expert from Kew, and
-it had been tamed, its wild locks cut off, and the
-remainder combed and brushed.</p>
-
-<p>There is an English country-seat or even
-suburban suggestion about it in parts. I cannot
-but think that it was a pity not to maintain
-the garden in its Eastern character, considering
-the monument it encloses. However, it would
-take even more professional treatment to
-prevent beautiful trees and flowers from being
-delightful.</p>
-
-<p>The garden is still a pleasant place to wander
-in, and interesting views of the white domes and
-minarets, rising above masses of foliage, can be had
-everywhere in it. Here, at the end of December,
-one enjoyed the temperature, and the sunshine,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-tempered by the shade of trees, of a normal June
-day in England.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_119" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 21.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_119.jpg" width="340" height="412" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MAINSTAY OF INDIA. AQUARIUS—THE WATER-BEARER</div></div>
-
-<p>As regards the garden, I was told that when it
-was in its original state as a fruit garden a certain
-amount of revenue was realised by the sale of the
-produce. When Lord Curzon heard of this he
-considered it not fitting, and I understood that he
-was responsible for the alteration in the character
-of the garden, which requires the constant attention
-of the water-bearer with his goatskin.</p>
-
-<p>Agra possesses a fine mosque in the Jama Musjid,
-built by Shah Jehan in 1644. It is a building of
-red sandstone and white marble. The big dome
-is inlaid in zigzags of white marble and red sandstone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-alternately, the whole surface being covered
-in this way with striking effect.</p>
-
-<p>It is an interesting drive through the bazaars and
-over the bridge of boats across the river Jumna, and
-through a native village, to the mausoleum of Itmad-ud-Daulat.
-In this beautiful building, which is
-approached through a massive arched gateway of
-red sandstone and across a walled garden, one sees
-a prototype of the Taj Mahal. In this case there
-is a central dome and four minarets, only the cupola
-is lower and of a flatter curve, and the minarets are
-not detached from the body of the building which
-is much lower than the Taj. In the design and
-execution of its decorative detail, however, it
-surpasses the Taj in inventiveness, and variety
-and richness, both in pierced and carved work and
-its <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">pietra dura</i>. The detail of the Taj, beautiful and
-finely finished as it is, has in comparison, perhaps,
-rather the look of having been done to order,
-whereas in buildings of earlier date like this one we
-seem to see the more spontaneous invention of the
-craftsman. The restoring hand of Lord Curzon,
-however, has touched this monument also, and a
-new marble balustrade around the flat roof has
-been added under his orders. There are lovely
-views from the minarets.</p>
-
-<p>We visited the Taj Mahal again by moonlight.
-It was the 30th of December and the moon was
-full, but it was chilly driving out after dinner and
-wraps were necessary. There was a light mist
-from the river which hung over the garden, and
-slightly veiled the lower part of the building as we
-approached it down one of the long paths chequered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-by the shadows of the trees. The front was in
-shadow and looked mysterious in the mist, but the
-dome seemed made of pearl rounded in the full
-moonlight in splendid relief against the dark deep
-blue of the night powdered with brilliant stars,
-while the four minarets were like helmeted sentinels
-in shining armour, guarding the sacred shrine.</p>
-
-<p>The moonlight was bright enough for me to
-make a sketch by. I also made two coloured
-drawings of the Taj by daylight, one of which—“the
-Taj Mahal from the rose garden” was afterwards
-purchased by H.M. The Queen, and the
-other, from the gate, is reproduced here. Agra
-was full of British and native soldiers, and more
-were continually arriving. We passed trains of
-field artillery marching through the government
-gardens, and bell tents covered the ground like
-mushrooms. In many places earth banks had
-been cut in tiers for seats, and strings of small flags
-fluttered across many of the streets, and there were
-also seats and stands of timber being erected.
-Agra could think of nothing but the Amir.</p>
-
-<p>The English and other churches are not admirable
-examples of modern architecture, and never
-seem to look at home in India. There was a
-Roman Catholic Church here after the manner of an
-eighteenth century one, but any merit it might have
-had was obscured by its colour. It had been, so to
-speak, put into a grey uniform with buff facings.
-The English Church was treated in the same way.
-This must be military influence. My impression
-certainly was that civilians did not count for much
-at Agra.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-In the bazaars we found we were able to make
-purchases with rather less accompaniment of drama
-than at Jaipur. European goods were much in
-evidence, of the cheap and nasty sort as a rule, ugly
-socks and scarves and cottons, and tin ware. I saw
-a crowd of natives clustering round the trumpet
-mouth of a gramophone—an instrument which
-seems to have considerable charms for them.</p>
-
-<p>It was chilly enough in the early mornings and in
-the evenings at Agra, and our ground-floor rooms
-were none of the warmest, although, of course, the sun
-was very powerful in the middle of the day. The
-Hotel proprietors were looking forward to full
-houses and high prices during the Amir’s visit, and
-enormous sums were mentioned as probable charges
-for rooms, but we had no intention of staying
-through the festivities.</p>
-
-<p>Our last excursion from Agra was to Sikandra—five
-miles away to the North West—where we
-drove to see the tomb of Akbar. The road was a
-dusty one, but through pleasant acacia avenues.
-We passed through several mud-built villages, and
-presently saw white minarets rising above a belt of
-trees in the distance. At one part of the road
-where the square tower of an English Mission
-Church was seen among trees we were reminded
-for a moment of a bit of Norfolk, but only for a
-moment. Soon we reached the great red-stone
-gateway which was on a splendid scale, and
-elaborately inlaid with marble, exceedingly fine in
-style, parts had been restored, and all the four
-white marble minarets were said to be new and
-placed there by Lord Curzon, not I presume without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-good evidence of the former existence of such
-minarets, but such renewals cannot possess any
-historic interest and are in doubtful taste. The
-gate was adorned with Togra and Arabic inscriptions,
-which, cut in sunk relief in white marble,
-formed a frame work enclosing panels of larger
-pattern in marble inlay. Pilasters of red sandstone
-on the front were in zigzag courses, alternately
-white and red, like the work on the dome of the
-Jama Musjid at Agra.</p>
-
-<p>From the gateway a long and broad flagged way,
-intersected by tanks, led us up to the tomb, across a
-wide park full of fine trees, tamarinds and mangoes
-chiefly. Arrived at the great tomb, the cupolas of
-which we had seen in front of us as we walked, we
-first entered a sort of hall or atrium with richly
-decorated roof and walls in coloured plaster,
-heightened with gold, and with an Arabic text in
-gold running round the frieze. There were
-beautiful designs of trees and vines in panels. Parts
-had been picked out in new gold and colour, at
-somebody’s expense, to bring out the pattern, but
-the new work looked hard and mechanical though
-on good lines, and the new gold was staring; the
-effect of this partial restoration being of course
-patchy. Still, if such restorations are allowable
-at all, it is better that they should be frank and
-make no pretence at being really a part of the
-original work. It would, however, in this case have
-been far better to have left it alone, as the old gold
-and colour still remaining on the walls and vault
-was rich and deep in tone.</p>
-
-<p>From this hall we entered a small corridor, two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-native attendants going before us with lanterns to
-guide our steps. This passage led into a vast dark
-domed chamber, in the midst of which was the
-plain marble tomb of the great Akbar. It was impressive
-in its simplicity, without any inscription or
-ornament, the usual narrow parallelogram with a
-moulded base. One of the men uttered a deep
-prolonged note like the exclamation Ah! but sustained
-and dwelling on the A. This was answered
-by a profound and long-continued echo or reverberation,
-dying gradually away, caused I suppose by
-the height and shape of the dome. One might
-imagine it was the voice of the dead Emperor.
-After seeing three more tombs, one of which was
-richly and delicately carved (a lady’s), we ascended
-to the terraced roof, and from there to a second
-arcaded terrace, from which still a third was reached
-up steps of ever increasing height in the treads,
-and finally to a top story, emerging upon a beautiful
-spacious arcaded court of white marble, but with
-warm tints in it which made it very much the tone
-of ivory. There were delicate, pierced, marble
-screens on each side, through which the evening
-sun sparkled like gold. In the centre of the court
-on a raised dais was the second tomb of Akbar,
-according to the usual Mohammedan custom of
-placing an upper tombstone to indicate the position
-of the actual tomb in the vault below. This tomb
-was most elaborately and delicately carved in white
-marble, with beautifully designed floral patterns
-and Arabic texts and borders of scroll work, which
-were like reproductions in marble relief of the
-designs in the best type of Persian carpets. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-aged native custodians told us that the famous koh-i-noor
-diamond was once here on Akbar’s tomb.
-It might be interesting to trace its history to its
-present position.</p>
-
-<p>The foliated cresting of the parapet of this
-marble court was also delicately carved. Altogether
-the building was one of the finest things of its type
-we had yet seen in India. The blend of Hindu
-construction with Mogul work in the corbelled
-supports of the minarets was noticeable. These
-corbels were trebled at the angles, and like most
-of the building were of red sandstone.</p>
-
-<p>There was a fine view of the country from this
-highest story of the tomb, and we could even see the
-white dome of the Taj Mahal five or six miles
-away. The drive from Agra took about an hour, and
-the sun had set before we returned.</p>
-
-<p>This being New Year’s day Moonsawmy our
-bearer smilingly came up with an offering—a plum
-cake with a pink sugared top and “A Happy New
-Year” on it, as if it had come out of an English
-confectioner’s—and this, too, was accompanied by a
-garland of yellow and white flowers after the native
-manner—one for each of us. He said this was
-customary, and with his good wishes he managed
-to convey a gentle hint that his “jentilmens”
-usually made him a little present in return. This
-rather rubbed a little of the sugar off, but, of course,
-we did not forget him. He was not a bad servant
-on the whole, though rather too old and cunning a
-bird in some ways. He had rather extravagant
-ideas in ordering carriages, which we afterwards
-discovered were not totally unconnected with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-certain commissions extracted from the carriage
-proprietors. No doubt, however, native bearers
-regard the European tourist as fair game—it is not
-unheard of in Europe—and they, like other classes
-after their manner, lose no opportunity of making
-the most of the chances of their rather uncertain
-profession.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">127</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">GWALIOR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> left Agra for Gwalior on the 2nd of
-January. Departing from Agra Road
-about 11 in the morning we arrived at Gwalior
-between 3 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon. We
-hoped to meet an Indian friend here, who was a
-doctor in the suite of the Maharajah, and whom we
-had known in London when he was studying for
-his degree. He was, however, absent at Calcutta,
-so we had to shift for ourselves. There was, however,
-an excellent guest-house built by the Maharajah
-for the use of visitors to Gwalior, not far from the
-station, where we found comfortable quarters, very
-superior to most of the hotels we had had experience
-of. The building itself was a charming
-pavilion in the Mogul style, with domes, arcades,
-and pierced stone work balconies, and elaborately
-carved doorways, the material of which it was built
-being a sort of yellow sandstone. We were allotted
-a spacious room opening on to a pleasant terrace
-and connected with balconies which extended
-entirely around the house, and from here we could
-see the famous Rock of Gwalior with its fort and
-Temples and the old palace of Man Mandir conspicuous
-at its further end. There was a large
-central hall or living room, and in this was a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-blazing fire which shed its cheery light and welcome
-warmth. There was a good piano and English
-furniture. There was a sort of clerestory high in
-the lofty wall, but no direct light, so that in the
-daytime this room was in comparative gloom, by
-no means ungrateful after the glare of the sun.
-The dining-room was fully lighted and opened on
-to a portico. In front of the building was a garden
-with a rather burnt up piece of lawn encircled by a
-carriage drive.</p>
-
-<p>We found a singular silent and reserved company
-of Anglo-Indians at dinner—a lady and three
-gentleman—only one of the latter manifesting the
-slightest interest in us. No one appeared at
-breakfast the following morning but an English
-governess and a child she was in charge of.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_129" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_129.jpg" width="333" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TO GWALIOR FORT BY PALANQUIN</div></div>
-
-<p>We started in a carriage to drive to the fort,
-stopping on the way to see the tomb of Mohammed
-Ghaus, the dome of which is visible from the guest-house.
-It is a noble tomb of yellow sandstone,
-with fine screen-work. It dates from the early
-part of Akbar’s reign. We crossed a river by a
-bridge and entered a decayed-looking native town,
-passing up a straggling street of low houses to the
-first gate of the fortress. There we might have
-hired an elephant to take us up the steep road to the
-fort, but the elephant had been already bespoke by
-a party of British officers. A palanquin (or
-jhampan) was produced, however, in which my
-wife seated herself and was carried up the hill by
-four bearers, four more accompanying them as
-relays. As for me I preferred to walk up, and our
-Moonsawmy went with us. We passed through<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-several gateways. The Hindu carvings of one
-called the Ganesha Gate had been defaced by the
-Mohammedans. Soon the towers of the old palace
-of Man Mandir rose in view near the summit, each
-crowned with a circular cupola. It is a striking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-building of remarkable character in reddish-yellow
-sandstone, faced in parts by turquoise blue and
-yellow tiles, courses of these tiles running across
-the façade. The angle tower and some of the tile-work
-at the top had been restored. There was a
-frieze of geese in yellow on a turquoise-blue ground,
-the birds in profile, each showing an expanded wing
-and set close together. The design resembled the
-carved figures of birds often seen on the Jain temples.
-The architecture here being Hindu, was much more
-massive than the Mogul work hitherto seen, and
-showed much variety and invention in the carved
-corbels and brackets in the interior. I made a note
-of a peacock bracket in which the tail is effectively
-treated, the bird being considerably formalised in
-adapting it to its architectural purpose. There was
-another of a fantastic elephant. Elephant heads
-with their uplifted trunks, by the way, were carved
-as brackets to support the balconies at the Guest
-House, where also I noted that the detail of some
-of the carved work of the door heads at the old
-palace had been reproduced. The doorways were
-rather low and small, and the whole building had
-more the character of a castle than a palace. On
-the flat table land on the summit of the rock there
-were several Jain temples, masses of carving within
-and without. The Sas Bahu is the principal Jain
-temple, and there is also a Hindu temple on the
-rock—near the farther end from Man Mandir—the
-Teli-ka Mandir. This stands in a graveyard,
-full of carved fragments and upright stones. The
-elephant bearing the party of British officers passed
-us as we were exploring the temples. There are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-some ugly barracks, which are very much out of
-keeping with the historic architecture of the Rock.
-The old fort has stood many a siege. Caine calls
-it “the cockpit of Central India,” and “it has
-been stormed or starved into submission a dozen
-times at least.” It seems to have been originally
-fortified in 773 <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span>, and at various periods since
-to have alternately fallen into the hands of Hindu or
-Mussulman, as now one and now the other prevailed.
-Akbar the Great took it in 1556, and we find the East
-India Company in possession in 1780, who took it
-from Sindhia and gave it to the Rana of Gohad.
-Then Sindhia retook it, and so it has remained with
-the Sindhias (to which family the present Maharajah
-belongs) practically ever since. The Rock has always
-been well supplied with water and has many tanks.</p>
-
-<p>We had a commanding prospect of the country,
-stretching in a vast plain for miles around. We could
-see the Maharajah’s palace amidst its parks and
-gardens—a white building among the green foliage,
-and nearer the foot of the Rock the new town of
-Gwalior, called Lashkar. We descended on the
-farther (northern) side of the rock by a winding
-road, and from here we saw some huge carved
-figures cut in the face of the sandstone cliffs in bold
-relief. Most of these are said to represent Adinath,
-the first Jain pontiff, but there is a seated figure of
-Nemnath, the twenty-second pontiff. Each bear
-their symbols, that of the first being a bull and of
-the second a shell. There are life-size as well as
-small figures cut on the lower parts of the cliff.
-The effect of these strange carvings is very weird.
-They have an impersonal and unrelated look, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-give one the impression of being more ancient than
-they really are; but they only date from <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span> 1441
-to 1474.</p>
-
-<p>We found our carriage waiting for us at the foot
-of the hill, having driven round the Rock from the
-old town, and we got back to the Guest House
-about noon.</p>
-
-<p>In the late afternoon we drove to the Maharajah’s
-palace, and presenting our cards, were shown over
-the rooms by a very polite English officer. The
-building is in a sort of late Italian Renaissance style,
-all white outside, with a great display of pilasters
-and columned porticoes. We entered a vast durbar
-hall in white and gold, with modern French-looking
-furniture with curly legs upholstered in green.
-There were many photographs of recent English
-Governor-Generals on the walls, as well as indifferent
-full-length, life-sized portraits in oil of the late
-Maharajah. The best of these was said to have
-been painted by one Scott—a landscape painter (!).
-In one of the smaller rooms there was an English
-water-colour drawing of Sussex Downs by A. F.
-Grace (whom I remember at Heatherly’s in
-student days), and several photographic official
-groups of the usual type, in which the Maharajah
-is seated by the Prince of Wales, surrounded
-by rows of officials and notabilities, all with
-“eyes front.” We wrote our names in the
-visitors’ book, and then drove through the grounds,
-which are very extensive. In one part lions are
-kept—apparently in a most insecure way, as they
-not unfrequently escape and ravage the country
-round. In fact, this had quite recently happened,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-and natives had been killed by them. A very
-taciturn gentleman at the Guest House had been
-pointed out to us by the more genial of our fellow-countrymen
-there as the official who had been sent
-by the Maharajah to fetch the wandering lions back,
-and he had been over a distance of about three
-hundred miles before he succeeded in “rounding
-them up.” He did not tell us, however, how it was
-done, though he had a look as of one who “could a
-tale unfold”—not to speak of a lion’s tail! When
-we saw the place where these lions were kept we were
-not surprised that they should have been able to
-escape if they had a mind to. We looked down on
-them as they were gnawing some bones. They
-were loose in a sort of open court, overgrown with
-grass, and enclosed within four plastered walls
-which any cat could have scaled, no palisading
-or iron railing at the top. There were five lions
-and one lioness visible. The remains of their
-repast of meat was pounced on by kites and
-crows with much clamour.</p>
-
-<p>We next saw the Maharajah’s elephants, and
-passed down a long line of them, chained by the
-fore-legs, down one side of an open courtyard,
-all eating what looked like the stalks of Indian
-corn. There were about thirty elephants here.
-One of them was handsomely painted on the forehead
-in a similar way to the state elephant we saw at
-Jaipur, but none of them had quite such big tusks.
-Returning through the gardens, we passed the older
-palace; also a white building, but in the Mogul style,
-with many domes and minarets, and facing a large
-tank with marble steps.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-Our party at the Guest House was increased at
-dinner by two very pleasant American ladies, who,
-owing to their powers of conversation, caused the
-very reserved Anglo-Indians to melt a little and show
-some signs of human interest, especially when one
-of the ladies related her thrilling experiences during
-the San Francisco earthquake.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we visited the newer city of
-Gwalior, which we had seen from the fort. The
-streets were fairly wide, and some had varied and
-picturesque fronts in plaster-work. We were
-driven to the gate of a big and rather new Hindu
-temple, spoiled by the insertion of crude pieces of
-coloured glass, of the commonest European make,
-in the fan-lights of the doors on each side. A
-sacred bull of black marble and a snake fetish were
-the most interesting things there.</p>
-
-<p>In the same court was an older temple raised
-on a flight of steps. To approach this, one’s shoes
-had to be taken off, and from the door only a peep
-was allowed into the dark interior, which, as far as
-I could see was painted all over with figures of
-deities and emblems in a barbaric way in coarse
-and crude colours. The thing to look at, it appeared,
-was a portrait of the late Maharajah in his jewels,
-on what we should call the high altar, which was
-suddenly illuminated by artificial light by one of
-the native attendants.</p>
-
-<p>Zebu cows were wandering freely about in the
-court of the temple, and here for a wonder no fees
-were taken.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_134" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 28.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_134.jpg" width="460" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">IN THE BAZAAR, GWALIOR</div></div>
-
-<p>We went into the new market, which had been
-opened by the Prince of Wales on his visit the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-previous year. It was not, however, very busy,
-and many of the stalls were empty. It seemed of
-doubtful advantage to the natives, who preferred to
-do business in the bazaars. There appeared to be
-a good supply of fresh vegetables, but very few
-buyers. The most interesting stalls were those of
-the bead sellers. There were beads of every
-variety of colour and size. The stalls were about
-the height of ordinary shop-counters, and on these
-platforms, which extended without divisions along
-the centre and sides of the market hall, the native
-traders squatted with their wares in front of them,
-women as well as men. Some of them were engaged
-in stringing the beads, and one man was
-plaiting a cord, the strands of which were fixed to a
-hook fixed on an upright stick supported on a
-stand. He used his toes like fingers to hold out
-and divide the strands as he worked. With the
-assistance of our bearer we made some purchases,
-and again later in the bazaar, when, as the
-carriage was stopped, I made a sketch of the scene
-in front of us, but under difficulties, as we were
-immediately surrounded on all sides by an eager
-concourse of swarthy, interested spectators, who
-refused to budge in spite of the rather mild remonstrances
-or commands of a native policeman, who,
-I imagine, used the Hindu equivalent for “Pass
-along” or “Move on,” but they didn’t. Under this
-“crowd of witnesses” I endeavoured to complete
-my sketch, and then we moved on.</p>
-
-<p>Extending our drive on the Morar Road, we
-passed the camp of the Maharajah’s soldiers in
-waiting for the Amir’s coming, as after the Agra<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-reception was over he was to pay a visit to the
-palace at Gwalior for tiger-shooting. We enjoyed
-a quiet life at Gwalior, and I was able to make
-several drawings unhindered by too curious crowds.
-The Guest House was one of the quietest places
-imaginable, although visitors came and went and
-even motor-cars were seen. There was something
-almost mysterious in the way guests would appear
-and disappear—at table one day and vanished the
-next; covers would be laid too for guests who
-never appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Tents which were pitched on the ground outside
-the Guest House for other unseen visitors would
-be clean gone as we looked out in the morning.
-Everything seemed so transitory; even a native
-boy, when I wanted to make a drawing of him,
-was nowhere to be found, and I had to make the
-best of it with an unwilling and quite inferior substitute,
-who had no idea of keeping still, and even
-ended the seance by squatting on the ground with
-his back to one!</p>
-
-<p>It struck me that the natives do not like being
-drawn or painted, as a rule, to judge by the various
-attempts one made to secure models. The one
-wanted always disappeared when the time came,
-and another, but not a better and without the same
-characteristics, offered.</p>
-
-<p>The little palm squirrels were very numerous
-here, and would scamper about the terraces and
-balconies of the Guest House, and even chase each
-other into our rooms, or come up for the crumbs
-we scattered, sitting up on their haunches to nibble
-at them, held in their fore-paws in true squirrel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-fashion. Equally familiar were the sparrows which
-flew in and out, unmolested and fearless, even
-perching sometimes on the breakfast table. The
-crows too would congregate on the balcony rails if
-any feeding was going on, frequently joining us at
-afternoon tea, at a respectful distance, though
-within short range of the scattered crumbs.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_137" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.5625em;">
- <img src="images/i_137.jpg" width="393" height="473" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">CALLERS AT THE GUEST HOUSE, GWALIOR</div></div>
-
-<p>We witnessed several very lovely sunsets over
-the Rock of Gwalior, a type of frequent occurrence
-being an arrangement of long, low stratus clouds,
-brilliantly illuminated on their under edges as
-the sun sank below the horizon, the light deepening<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-from orange into crimson. Another type
-consisted of golden fleeces of high cirrus clouds,
-rippling out over spaces of turquoise.</p>
-
-<p>We paid another visit to the old town of Gwalior
-and climbed the hill as far as the third gate, where
-I made a sketch showing the towers of the Man
-Mandir Palace through the arch.</p>
-
-<p>From a terrace extending along the hill near this
-gate there is a fine panoramic view, the old town
-lying below, partly ruined and deserted, a mass of
-crumbling walls and complicated roof plans mingled
-with trees and gardens.</p>
-
-<p>The first gate at the foot of the hill, where is the
-guard-house, is interesting as showing the inlaid
-enamelled tile-work which decorates it partially.
-Deep turquoise is the prevailing colour, and it is
-used for the field or background of the designs, and
-is inlaid in pieces cut to fit the interstices of the
-pattern in the yellow sandstone. In a frieze of
-geese in close formal procession, the birds were cut in
-sunk relief, and the spaces between were filled with
-turquoise pieces. The tile decoration on the Man
-Mandir Palace has been done in the same way,
-yellow and green tiles being also used.</p>
-
-<p>We drove through the bazaar of the old town, a
-queer, half-ruined, and ragged place, but exceedingly
-picturesque, the natives squatting on their stalls,
-presiding over curious preparations of food and
-other wares, with chatting, many-coloured groups
-crowding around. Some of the people would look
-curiously at us, some would salaam, some were
-indifferent, others were derisive or sullen.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_138" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_138.jpg" width="430" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">APPROACH TO THE PALACE OF MAN MANDIR, GWALIOR</div></div>
-
-<p>There was rather an important-looking mosque<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-with minarets in the town, but many of the houses
-were roofless and deserted.</p>
-
-<p>In crossing the bridge over the river we noted
-the people washing clothes, and a pretty pattern of
-colour was formed when the stuffs were spread out
-over the sandbanks to dry. Here, in central
-India, we were able to see more of the everyday
-life of the people, and had more opportunities of
-quiet observation of country life than usual. The
-peasants did not seem to have the curiosity of the
-natives in the towns, when one sat down to make
-a drawing, but they went on their way, bearing
-their burdens, or driving ox-carts, or herds of
-goats, or buffalo cows, or asses.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite a change to get a grey cloudy effect
-which occurred one morning when I had found an
-interesting subject by the river side. On the way
-thither we passed a village burning-place, strewn
-with heaps of ashes where the dead had been
-burned. The river had shrunk to a small, shallow
-stream, and at the spot where I sat was crossed by
-stepping-stones, over which groups of natives constantly
-passed to and fro. Cattle and ox-carts
-splashed through a shallow ford at intervals, and
-higher up natives bathed their brown bodies in the
-water. We were on the outskirts of the old town
-of Gwalior, and could see above on the rock the
-dark shapes of the Jain temples looming up
-against the sky, while around us were domes of
-cenotaphs, fragments of tombs, and broken walls,
-overshadowed by groups of fine banyan trees and
-mangoes. At an old draw-well near by groups of
-native women were continually coming and going,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-bearing their water-jars on their heads, their
-draperies forming delightful schemes of colour.</p>
-
-<p>A dark thin Hindu in a white turban and waist-cloth
-was ploughing up his small patch of land near
-the river for potatoes, which members of his family
-working with him were preparing to sow. There
-were several sons—youths—two women, and some
-small children, all working on the land.</p>
-
-<p>I made a note of the plough, a very primitive
-implement, having a single shaft fixed at a right
-angle to the share, with a cross-handle at the top.
-This the ploughman held with one hand—his left—guiding
-the plough, while with his right he drove
-a small pair of zebus under a yoke, who dragged it
-along. The share was a wedge-shaped piece of
-wood, tipped with iron at the point and along its
-edge.</p>
-
-<p>Moonsawmy talked to the man while I made my
-notes, and he told me afterwards that the ploughman
-never managed to earn as much as 200 rupees
-in the year, though he and his family—I suppose
-about ten or a dozen all told—were constantly at
-work. His patch of land being near the river, one
-would have thought favourable for raising crops; but
-it appeared the river not infrequently was completely
-dry, and they were hard put to it for water
-for the soil. The income of the whole family
-worked out at about thirteen pounds a year at the
-most, which, taking into consideration that it had to
-be the support of about a dozen people, seemed
-narrow enough, and one could easily understand
-that the slightest failure of the crops would mean
-something like famine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-This state of things bears out the estimates of
-the average income of the Indian ryot, calculated
-by the late William Digby, C.I.E., after long
-residence and experience in India, the results
-of whose study of the question are given in detail,
-from undisputed authorities, in his striking work,
-“Prosperous British India,” in which is accumulated
-an appalling mass of evidence, all pointing to the
-conclusion that for famine should very largely be
-read <em>poverty</em>, which is also the root cause of
-bubonic plague. The railways, of course, might
-convey corn to the starving districts, but where the
-people have no money to pay for it they must
-starve all the same, Government relief-works
-being the only alternative; but this sort of relief
-must often be too late for poor creatures reduced
-by hunger and too weak to work.</p>
-
-<p>The ordinary unprejudiced observer is naturally
-inclined to ask, Why this desperate poverty in
-an industrious population, supposed to be under
-beneficent British rule and administration? The
-answer must be sought in the fact that thirty millions
-and upwards are annually extracted from the
-country without any equivalent return, and this
-must necessarily mean a heavy burden of taxation
-on the chief sources of wealth, land and
-labour.</p>
-
-<p>One of the greatest principles of our Constitution
-of which our public men are never tired of boasting
-is, “No taxation without representation,” or, “Taxation
-and representation must go hand in hand.”
-This principle is, however, entirely ignored in
-India, where British rule is as autocratic as that of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-Russia. Is it surprising in these circumstances
-that there should be “unrest”?</p>
-
-<p>The educated Hindu or Mohammedan—the
-many who come to England and are trained in
-English Universities, or read for the Bar, or study
-for their degrees in medicine, feel that there is no
-part or lot for them in the administration of the
-affairs of their own country except in a very
-subordinate way. I understand that the highest
-Government post a native can attain to is the
-office of assistant-commissioner.</p>
-
-<p>Time was when, after the great upheaval of the
-Mutiny—which was really an attempt to regain
-possession of the reins of government by the native
-princes of Oude, the principle of native representation
-under British administration was advocated
-by leading English politicians. Nothing,
-however, came of it, and the policy of the India
-Office has remained unchanged through all the
-changes of party government, there being no
-difference in this matter between Liberals and
-Conservatives. A Liberal like Mr John Morley,
-when in office as Indian Secretary, promptly orders
-the arrest and deportation without trial of Indian
-agitators under an old law of the East India
-Company which has never been ratified by the
-English Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Laipat Rai, however, appears to be a self-sacrificing
-and devoted advocate of the cause of his
-people, and as editor certainly cannot have written
-so strongly against the English Government as Mr
-H. M. Hyndman, who has for years past denounced the
-conduct of the India Office, while challenging<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-attention to and redress of the system under which
-the people of India are impoverished.</p>
-
-<p>The attenuated ploughman who has been the
-occasion of these remarks was a typical figure.
-Looking on such figures, able only to secure a
-bare subsistence, so common throughout India, one
-cannot but feel that all the magnificence and luxury
-of the Maharajahs, as well as the heavy burden of
-the cost of the British Government, is maintained by
-the sweat of the brows and the ceaseless toil of such
-as these.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">144</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DELHI</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">After</span> a stay of about a week at the Guest House
-at Gwalior we took the road again, or rather the
-railroad, Delhi being the next place on our itinerary.
-We thought, however, to break the journey for a
-few hours at Agra, and get a view of the entry of
-the Amir, which was fixed for the 9th of January.</p>
-
-<p>It was a lowering, cloudy morning when we left
-our quarters and made for the railway station,
-where we had a long wait in the darkness. An
-enormous throng of natives filled the platform,
-squatting on the ground or standing about in
-groups, talking or sleeping under covers which hid
-them from head to foot. Most were closely
-wrapped up about the shoulders, cloths being
-wound over the turban, even so that they had
-generally a top-heavy look with bare legs. Their
-wraps were only of cotton though, as a rule, and did
-not seem adequate against the chill of the morning.
-One little swarthy man was busy writing, making
-entries on sheets of paper or perhaps bills of lading.
-He squatted on the platform against one of the
-piers of the arcade, writing by the aid of a lantern’s
-light. I noticed only one European besides ourselves
-in the throng, and he appeared to be an
-English official and wore a pith helmet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-At last up came the train from Jhansi, and we
-got in, a slumbering English officer occupying one
-of the berths. The sky, which was the only gloomy
-and threatening one we had experienced in India,
-and certainly looked leaden and hopeless enough,
-soon turned to rain, and under such an aspect the
-country looked desolate in the extreme. The
-tawny earth and fuzzy, dry grass, sparse trees of
-prickly acacia and scrub bushes, the broken hillocks
-and mounds of clay, looked more fruitless and
-forlorn under the steady, soaking rain; groups of
-poor country folk in their thin cotton clothing
-huddled together, waiting at the stations we passed,
-or could be seen splashing through the muddy
-pools to catch the train.</p>
-
-<p>Nearing Agra, we saw heavy artillery trains with
-field guns trailing along the wet roads. Troops
-had been pouring into Agra for some time, and
-while at Gwalior a native regiment of cavalry
-(lancers) rode by the Guest House, preceded by
-their baggage on mules and camels.</p>
-
-<p>At Agra Road Station the rain was pouring in
-torrents. There is an immense, long, exposed
-platform, along which we made our way to cover
-under the station shed, which was already crammed
-with people, mostly English and American visitors,
-army officers, and officials.</p>
-
-<p>The weather being quite hopeless, we gave up
-the idea of seeing anything of the procession, which
-of course was a military one, and then finding there
-was a dining-car in waiting, we had a scamper
-through the rain again down the platform to
-reach it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">146</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_146" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.0625em;">
- <img src="images/i_146.jpg" width="353" height="558" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A DASH FOR THE DINING-CAR AT AGRA ROAD</div></div>
-
-<p>After tiffin we were just in time to catch a train
-on to Delhi—in fact it had actually started, but the
-courteous station-master sent an official to stop it
-for us, and to see us safely in with our baggage.
-It was now nearly noon, but our train, a slow
-passenger one, was not due at Delhi until 5.30.
-The rain continued steadily, and damp groups of
-natives were gathered at the different stopping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-stations in various stages of discomfort. They did
-not, however, appear to mind the wet so much as
-one would have expected, but swathed themselves
-in all sorts of curious wraps up to the eyes, leaving
-the legs and feet bare, and some even squatted on
-the wet ground.</p>
-
-<p>The country was again a plain for the most part,
-and extensively cultivated under irrigation, several
-irrigation canals being crossed by the railway.
-Green crops of young corn seemed almost hidden
-by charlock, the yellow fields having almost the
-effect of our buttercup meadows in May. Flocks
-of black and white cranes were seen, as well as a
-large, blue, grey-plumaged kind, which are usually
-seen in pairs in the green corn. Three superior-caste
-Hindus got into our compartment and
-occupied the cross-bench at one end. One had a
-bad cough, but they kept their windows open and
-did not seem to mind draughts. Coughs and
-throat troubles seemed, indeed, too common in
-India, and we often heard distressing coughs in the
-hotels at night.</p>
-
-<p>The sky towards evening began to clear in the
-west, the whole solid field of rain cloud gradually
-lifting like a curtain, and the sun shining out while
-the rain continued, a brilliant rainbow appeared as
-if painted on the black wall of cloud to the eastward.</p>
-
-<p>The line passes through a part of old Delhi, a
-vast region of broken tombs and ruined walls lying
-outside the walls of the present city, and afar off we
-could see the domes and minarets of the Great
-Jama Musjid Mosque.</p>
-
-<p>We got in in good time, and collecting our heavy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-baggage sent on from Gwalior, drove to Maiden’s
-Hotel, through streets dark with rain and standing
-in pools of water, a stormy orange sunset casting a
-warm glow over everything. The hotel was on
-the usual Indian plan, with a centre and two arcaded
-wings enclosing a court, along which a series of
-ground-floor, bungalow-like bed- and bath-rooms
-extended, chilly enough at this time of year in the
-mornings and evenings, especially in wet weather.
-The hotel itself was under English management,
-and there were large open fires in the dining-room
-and salon, which looked comfortable, and the
-cookery was superior to most of the others we had
-experienced. Letters from England awaited us,
-and added to our satisfaction. No doubt the mails
-are delivered with wonderful regularity, and so
-long as the traveller can arrange his tour in order
-that his letters shall meet him at certain places,
-and does not leave before the mail arrives, no
-complications occur. It is only when letters follow
-one about instead of preceding one that delay and
-difficulties occur.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning (January 10) was grey, chill,
-and damp, when we started after breakfast to see
-Delhi. The hotels and the British residential quarter
-lie quite outside the native town, as is usually the case,
-amid spacious, park-like grounds, here pleasantly
-undulating, and varied with gardens and fine groups
-of trees. The town is walled, and has a broad dry
-ditch as a farther defence. We drove through the
-famous Kashmir Gate, renowned for the British
-assault at the time of the Mutiny, which remains in
-the battered condition in which it was left after the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-siege, with great shot-holes in its masonry, as well
-as in the walls each side. A tablet records the
-circumstances of the siege, and the names of the
-officers and soldiers who distinguished themselves
-at that terrific time.</p>
-
-<p>The gate has two ogee-pointed arches, enclosed
-in rectangular mouldings in the usual Mogul fashion.
-As one enters the city, inscribed tablets recording
-incidents of the siege are numerous, and the British
-authorities have certainly been most careful to preserve
-the memory of their side of the fight along
-with the names of their military heroes, and every
-noteworthy spot in the struggle is commemorated
-in this way. In addition to such incidental monuments
-there is the Mutiny Memorial, an important
-red-sandstone erection (110 feet high) outside the
-gates, upon a rising ground, and so placed that a
-complete view can be obtained from its summit of
-the lines of the siege.</p>
-
-<p>At the fort, which was formerly the Imperial
-Palace of the Moguls (built in <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span> 1628–58 by
-Shah Jehan), it is distressing to see the ruthless
-destruction of superb buildings for which the British
-have been responsible, and the barbarous way in
-which hideous barrack structures have been substituted.
-The fort, or palace, is entered through
-a noble, deep-red sandstone gate. The Lahore, or,
-as it is now called, the Victoria Gate, and the fine
-court, is marred by these ugly modern military
-barracks for which so much beauty was sacrificed.
-We were shown two splendid halls, the Diwan-i-am,
-or public hall of audience, and the Diwan-i-khas,
-or private hall of audience. This is of white<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-marble with beautiful inlays of precious stones, with
-a richly decorated ceiling in colour and gold. A
-marble pedestal is pointed out as the place
-whereon the wonderful peacock throne stood.
-This must indeed have been gorgeous, the seat
-between two peacocks with spread tails, and these
-encrusted with sapphires, diamonds, rubies, and
-emeralds, representing the natural colours of the
-plumage, a true emblem of oriental magnificence.
-Over the arches of the arcade in this hall is a
-Persian inscription in raised and gilt characters,
-which reads, “If there is a paradise on earth, it is this,
-it is this, it is this.” This costly “paradise,” again,
-was built by the builder of the Taj Mahal, Shah
-Jehan, who seems to have outshone all the Mogul
-emperors by the splendour of his buildings. Of
-course there are no diamonds, or rubies, or emeralds
-left, and even the small stones used in the decorative
-floral inlays have in many cases been picked out. It
-is said that Lord Curzon employed Florentine workmen
-to replace some of this work at his own expense.</p>
-
-<p>The decoration of the walls and ceilings in the
-zenana rooms, consisting of painted and gilded
-arabesques, was very lovely, and the marble Akab
-Baths exquisite. The river (Jumna) formerly flowed
-up to the walls of the palace on that side, and from
-a beautiful minaret we could see the river beyond a
-belt of green foliage, and get a fine perspective
-view up and down of the palace wall and buildings.</p>
-
-<p>Near by, on the other side of the court, is the
-Rung Mahal, which is distinguished by particularly
-fine pierced screen-work. The vaulted rooms
-connected with this building were till recently<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-used as officers’ mess-rooms, when all their beautiful
-decoration were obliterated with whitewash.</p>
-
-<p>Opposite to the Akab Baths is the Moti Musjid,
-called the Pearl Mosque, a most exquisite little
-building of white marble, a cluster of three domes
-and many slender pinnacles terminated by lotus
-flowers. It has many-cusped arches of Saracenic
-character, and a fine bronze door.</p>
-
-<p>It is sad to think that these lovely buildings are
-after all only remnants of what were once on this
-spot when this Imperial Palace was complete in all
-its splendour. The Burj-i-Shameli, the great marble
-bath-room; the Metiaz-Mehal, a huge quadrangle of
-palaces enclosing a garden 300 feet square; the
-Nobatkhama or music gate, the Golden Mosque,
-the hareem courts, and fifty other lovely pavilions,
-fountains, and gardens—think of it! The late W. S.
-Caine, writing in his “Picturesque India,” adds the
-following passage: “These and other glories of the
-palace have all been swept away by successive
-barbarians. Nadir Shah, Ahmed Khan, and the
-Maratha chiefs were content to strip the buildings
-of their precious metals and jewelled thrones: to
-the government of the Empress of India was left
-the last dregs of vandalism, which, after the
-Mutiny, pulled down these perfect monuments of
-Mughal art, to make room for the ugliest brick
-buildings from Simla to Ceylon.”</p>
-
-<p>The Jama Musjid at Delhi is on a splendid
-scale, a mosque of red sandstone inlaid with white
-marble. There are four great gateways, approached
-by long flights of steps, through which the great
-arcaded square court, in which the mosque stands,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-is entered. Reputed relics of Buddha are shown
-to visitors at a shrine at one corner of the court.
-On the eastern side the mosque faces an open
-plain from which a large slice of the native city,
-which once surrounded the mosque, had been cleared
-by the Government. This gives a clear view of the
-noble building on this side, but must have been
-rather distinctive of the character of the place, and
-one would have thought the mosque, standing so
-high as it does, would have easily dominated the
-native houses. In fact, if it had been designed for
-a site on an open plain, there would have been no
-necessity to raise it on such a lofty platform.
-Modern improvers are apt to forget the logic of art.</p>
-
-<p>We went up a side street in the native town on
-the other side of the mosque to see the Jain
-temple, which is an interesting and richly decorated
-small building in the Mogul style of architecture,
-approached by a doorway in the street and reached
-by a flight of steps. It is extremely beautiful in
-detail. In the curious street there were many
-interesting Mogul doorways. We stopped at a
-stall to buy some specimens of the glass and
-lacquered bracelets commonly worn by the native
-women which only cost a few annas.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_152" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_152.jpg" width="600" height="358" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE JAMA MUSJID MOSQUE, DELHI</div></div>
-
-<p>The Chandni Chowk (or silver street) is the
-main business street or bazaar of Delhi. It is very
-wide, and has a sort of long island down the middle
-planted with trees. This was said to have been
-originally an aqueduct. It runs east and west, and
-we saw a striking effect one evening—the glowing
-sunset behind the dark masses of the trees, the end
-of the vista lost in mysterious gloom; twinkling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-lights, here and there, about the white awnings of
-the stalls under the trees; white turbaned figures of
-natives moving noiselessly up and down, ox-carts
-and pony tongas, wandering sacred zebus, and all the
-mixed and varied character of an Indian bazaar
-form a wonderful and picturesque ensemble.</p>
-
-<p>Individualistic commercial competition is well
-illustrated in the Chandni Chowk. The traveller
-is besieged by touts thrusting their cards into his
-hand, or throwing them into his carriage, or
-surrounding it with the most importunate solicitations
-to see their shops.</p>
-
-<p>We visited an ivory carver’s workshop in a street
-leading out of the Chowk. My impression was
-about this, as in regard to other native handicrafts,
-that it was now a craft as distinct from an art.
-We saw the carvers at work, quite a number. It
-was a species of factory. There were draughtsmen
-and designers, and miniature painters and inlayers,
-quite distinct from the carvers. The former draw
-the patterns on the ivory with a pencil. There
-were some young boys learning to draw from the
-craft; one was drawing a bird on a slate. The skill
-of the ivory-carvers was very wonderful: they could
-carve a figure inside an open scroll-work and leave
-it distinct, and there were feats of this kind of which
-they seemed to be most proud; but these craftsmen
-seemed to work almost mechanically, no doubt
-entirely to order, and without any initiative of their
-own in the way of design. They sat cross-legged
-on the floor, and more in one room than our factory
-inspectors would probably approve. The works
-here were mostly produced for ready sale to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-tourist. Elephants and paper knives were—I was
-going to say, walking hand in hand—all over the
-shop, and small models of the Taj Mahal ran them
-close, models of native ox-carts, tongas, and palkis,
-the native ploughman and his yoke of oxen, and
-such-like images of familiar things of Indian life;
-elaborate chess-men, and inlaid caskets with little
-miniatures of the Taj Mahal and the Jama Musjid
-inserted, in fact all sorts of ivory toys were there,
-consciously prepared for the Western eye, and too
-often the Western want of taste. A loquacious
-Parsee-looking proprietor or manager showed us
-over this establishment. He had the air of a
-general director of the works, etc. While not at all
-pressing, he took care to show all his attractive
-things, beginning at the most elaborate and costly
-articles, and skilfully grading downwards, until in
-price they were within measurable distance of the
-visitor’s purse.</p>
-
-<p>My wife found that native home-spun linen
-and silks for embroidery were difficult to find in
-the Chandni Chowk, where there were plenty of
-European goods.</p>
-
-<p>On January 11th there was a slight frost. The
-early morning was quite misty, too, but the sun
-came out later, and there was a strong cold wind
-from the east in spite of the clear, bright, blue sky
-and the brilliant sunshine. It suited Delhi far
-better than the grey sky under which we had seen
-it the first morning of our visit, and was favourable
-for our excursion to the Kutab Minar, eleven miles
-out. Driving through the Delhi and Kashmir Gates
-again, and along the road past the Jama Musjid,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-and out again at a farther gate to the south-east,
-we traversed the region known as Old Delhi, a
-wonderful tract of ruined cities, shattered buildings,
-mingled with noble tombs, mosques, and minarets,
-extending for many miles outside the present city.
-Domes of tombs were seen on all sides, and broken
-walls, and the ground was strewn with bricks and
-stones. Trees (acacias and tamarinds mostly)
-bordered the road. Our native coachman (a good
-guide) spoke of No. 8 city, and pointed out its
-ruined gate, under which we passed. Farther on
-we took a branch road and stopped before the noble
-gate of the ancient city of Indrapat with its strong
-walls and bastions. Leaving our carriage, we
-passed through the gate and on past a squalid
-group of wretched huts, where poverty-stricken
-natives huddled together about their tumble-down
-dwellings, and where native children were inclined
-to be rude. Farther along the broken path we
-reached a spacious octagonal mosque of red
-sandstone on a marble platform. This was the
-mosque of Shir Shah (<span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span> 1541). The contrast
-between the dignity of this building and the
-squalor of the village was striking and saddening.</p>
-
-<p>Resuming our road, we next reached the splendid
-tomb of Humayun (built by Akbar the Great about
-1560 <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span>, in memory of his father the Emperor
-Humayun). An important gateway led into a
-garden with long tanks and flagged pathways,
-bordered by formal green hedges, which led up
-to a spacious platform upon which the noble tomb
-was built. In the central chamber under the tomb
-the actual tombstone was screened by pierced<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-marble. There was also a smaller chamber of
-tombs, each side the central one. The building
-was of red sandstone, inlaid with white marble with
-a central dome and four minarets. It seemed to
-be a prototype of the great Akbar’s own tomb we
-had seen at Sikandra.</p>
-
-<p>Then on again we went, making another short
-detour from the main road to the cemetery of
-Nizam-ud-din. Entering through the gateway, we
-came upon a deep tank, surrounded with buildings.
-On the flattened dome of one—the Nizam’s well-house—sat
-a group of brown-skinned youths, ready
-to dive into the water, a dive of about seventy feet,
-for backsheesh, and the entertainment of the visitor.
-A passage from this led into a marble court, in
-the centre of which was the white, marble-domed
-tomb of the Nizam, brilliantly decorated with
-arabesques in colour. It reminded one of the
-shrine of the Kwaja in the Dargarh at Ajmir.
-There were also other tombs in the court, one to
-the poet Khusru, whose songs are said to be still
-popular in India. An interesting one is that of
-Jahanara Begum, daughter of the Emperor Shah
-Jehan, on which is an inscription to the effect that
-she begs that nothing but grass may cover her.
-Certainly her wishes are fulfilled, as the grass grows
-freely in the marble-sided tomb which has no cover.
-Up some steps was the modern tomb of Mirza
-Jahangir, but a beautiful marble one.</p>
-
-<p>The carving in marble and ornaments of all these
-tombs were exceedingly delicate and beautiful, and
-would compare well with the work on the Taj Mahal.</p>
-
-<p>The visitor on leaving is embarrassed by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">157</a></span>
-number of claimants of fees. There seemed to be
-a different custode for every tomb in the place, and
-the crowd of hangers-on, hungry for backsheesh,
-rather spoils the pleasure which the sight of so
-much beautiful work gives.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the road again and continuing our
-drive, it was not long before we descried the
-great Kutab Minar rising up above the trees
-in front of us. We had indeed caught a glimpse
-of it miles away, when the tower was almost lost
-in the haze. There is a good little bungalow close
-by where the traveller can get tiffin, or put up for
-the night if so minded.</p>
-
-<p>The Minar, tapering upwards to an astonishing
-height (238 feet), piercing the clear blue sky, is
-of red sandstone with a white marble top story.
-There are five stories, and the summit was formerly
-crowned by a small cupola and open arcade, which
-was destroyed by a storm, and a model of it has
-been placed near by. Successive bands of small
-carving are carried across the deep flutings, both
-semicircular and rectangular alternately on the
-lower storey, semicircular in the second, rectangular
-in the third, a plain cylinder forming the fourth,
-while the fifth and last is partly fluted and partly
-plain. These bands are composed of texts from
-the Koran, the Arabic characters having a rich
-ornamental effect, the carving being wonderfully
-sharp and unimpaired, although it dates from the
-twelfth and the latter part of the thirteenth
-century (<span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span> 1210–20), having been built as a tower
-of Victory, commenced by Kutab-ud-din, and completed
-by his successor, Altamsh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-The tower was built in the centre of the old
-Hindu fortress of Lalkot (<span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span> 1060). At its foot
-are various ruins, the most extensive being
-those of a fine Mohammedan mosque, constructed
-out of the materials of, and incorporated with an
-ancient Hindu temple, the original columns of the
-latter remaining to form the colonnade of the court.</p>
-
-<p>The images of the Hindu gods have been mostly
-defaced when they occurred in the carving.</p>
-
-<p>There is a fine Mogul arch of red sandstone,
-similar in treatment and style to “the mosque of
-two and a half days” at Ajmir. In front of this, in
-the centre of the court, stands a remarkable pillar
-of solid wrought iron, supposed to date from <span class="smcap smaller">A.D.</span>
-300 to 400. It is dedicated to Vishnu, and there
-are lines in Sanscrit inscribed around it. The
-wonder is that such a massive thing in iron could
-have been forged at that early period.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to Delhi by a different road we passed
-another important-looking tomb, also near the outskirts
-of the present city, the ruins of the Observatories
-built by different rajahs in the eighteenth
-century, which impress one as weighty evidences
-of the philosophical knowledge and culture of these
-native princes. A moon observatory was pointed
-out to us, and a vast circular building. The groups
-of ruined buildings hereabout recalled to us the
-Roman Campagna and its fragments.</p>
-
-<p>Our coachman (who was perhaps more careful
-as a guide than as a Jehu) collided rather violently
-with a tonga just outside the city, and the consequences
-might have been serious, but the wheels
-were the chief sufferers, and the tonga must have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-got the worst of the jolt, one of the native
-passengers being thrown out. No bones were
-broken, and the incident did not seem to be
-regarded as at all an unusual occurrence. There
-seems no rule of the road in India, and so risks are
-constantly run. In the crowded streets the drivers
-rely on the power of their lungs to shout out
-warnings of their approach, and it is a marvel
-people escape being run over, and that collisions
-are not more frequent and worse than they are.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_159" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_159.jpg" width="419" height="471" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">DELHI DRIVING. WANTED—A RULE OF THE ROAD</div></div>
-
-<p>At the hotel, where the custom of small, separate,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-circular dining-tables obtained, we happened to
-meet a very agreeable Anglo-American family from
-Ceylon, who were travelling in India, and were
-returning to their home at Colombo, before visiting
-Japan and Europe. We discovered we had several
-friends in common, and promised to visit them when
-we came to Ceylon.</p>
-
-<p>I got a coloured drawing of the Jama Musjid from
-the plain before mentioned, where a few trees
-afforded a little shade, the sun being very strong,
-although a cool wind was still blowing from the
-east. The light was particularly clear and the
-shadows sharp, so that the architecture looked remarkably
-distinct, the effect being almost hard.</p>
-
-<p>We had a stroll in the park-like grounds near
-the Club. There was an old and much overgrown
-Mogul archway here, which had been considerably
-battered in the siege. There were fine cypresses and
-other trees, and among them little flights of green
-parroquets flew with their shrill scream—their
-flight and their notes reminding one of our swifts.
-Toucans were also to be seen, and of course the
-palm squirrels. We watched a whole colony of
-them sleeping in the hollow of a fine old banyan
-tree.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">161</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AMRITZAR AND LAHORE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> left Delhi by a night train—the Punjab
-Mail—for Amritzar, but we had a long
-wait at the station, as the train was two hours late.
-The station was thronged with natives bound for
-some religious festival connected with the approaching
-eclipse of the sun. There was a seething mass
-of dark humanity at the entrance, through which we
-had almost to fight our way to the platform.</p>
-
-<p>Our route was by way of Umballa, which we
-reached in the early morning. The country was
-wrapped in a thick white mist before the sun
-rose, when it gradually cleared. Beyond Umballa
-the country was very flat, the dry lands varied with
-green crops and yellow with charlock, as before,
-and dotted with acacia trees. Occasionally we
-crossed wide rivers, or river beds, and the usual
-flocks of white cranes and brown kites were seen.
-Jullumpore was another junction where our train
-stopped. It looked an interesting place from the
-railway, a walled town with towers and ancient
-mosques. After leaving Pillour (the refreshment
-station) a very broad river was crossed, and on the
-wide sands of the dry part of its bed, almost like a
-desert, we saw a train of thirty camels moving
-slowly in single file.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-We did not reach Amritzar until about 1 <span class="smcap smaller">P.M.</span>,
-more than three hours after time! On emerging
-from the station, despite our bearer, we were nearly
-torn to pieces by hotel touts.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_162" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_162.jpg" width="428" height="449" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SHE WON’T BE HAPPY TILL SHE GETS EVERYTHING PACKED UP</div></div>
-
-<p>The Alexandra hotel had been named to us and
-we asked for its representative, but it appeared there
-was no such hotel at Amritzar. Each rival tout
-clamoured for our custom, declaring that the hotel
-he represented was the true and only successor to
-the mythical Alexandra.<a id="FNanchor_A" href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">A</a> One went so far as to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-say he had received a post-card from us, but when
-asked to produce it only showed a letter from
-some one else! Finally we got into a carriage,
-which was immediately stormed by the irrepressible
-touts, one seating himself on the box, one on
-the step each side, and I don’t know how many
-hanging on behind. Not liking the look of the first
-hotel they took us to, we tried a second and decided
-to put up there, and so gradually shook off the touts.
-There was more of an Eastern character about our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-quarters here than we had hitherto experienced.
-The hotel was quite an Oriental serai in an Eastern
-garden, our rooms being in a sort of Indian villa,
-opening on to a terrace with steps down into the
-garden, with its narrow straight paths between
-fruit trees, and our room was rather like a small
-temple or chapel with recessed walls and ogee
-arched doorways, a raftered ceiling, and clerestory
-windows. Built for coolness, no doubt, we now
-found it positively cold in the mornings and evenings,
-and although there was a fireplace the lighting of
-a wood fire made matters worse, for we were nearly
-smoked out.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_A" href="#FNanchor_A" class="fnanchor">A</a> We learned afterwards that it was the custom to change the names of
-hotels every six months or so.</p></div>
-
-<div id="ip_163" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 21.625em;">
- <img src="images/i_163.jpg" width="346" height="497" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">DEMON HOTEL TOUTS AT AMRITZAR FIGHTING FOR THEIR PREY</div></div>
-
-<p>There were several English or Anglo-English at
-table preserving their characteristic frigidity in the
-presence of strangers. A gentleman from Manchester
-was the only one who showed a friendly
-disposition and who had any conversation.</p>
-
-<p>Driving through the city we had recourse to
-smelling-bottles, as owing to the open drains each
-side the streets the odours which saluted our nostrils
-were rather trying. I had noticed these open
-gulleys at Delhi and in the native quarters in other
-towns. They run close in front of the houses and
-open shops of the bazaars, and are crossed by slabs
-of stone placed across them at intervals to give
-access to the houses, and as all sorts of refuse finds
-its way into them it is not surprising they should be
-offensive sometimes, though it had not been nearly
-so noticeable elsewhere. Amritzar is said to have
-the benefit of the advice of an English sanitary
-engineer.</p>
-
-<p>The street did not strike us as so varied and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-interesting as other cities we had seen, and the
-house fronts seemed plainer and more modern, as
-a rule, though the streets were narrow enough.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_165" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_165.jpg" width="365" height="369" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THROUGH AMRITZAR—SIT TIGHT AND HOLD A SMELLING BOTTLE!</div></div>
-
-<p>From a sort of terrace we got our first view of
-the Golden Temple, which is built in the centre of
-the large tank or lake in the centre of the city. A
-broad paved causeway connects with the paved
-walk along two sides of the lake. After the magnificent
-and beautifully proportioned Mogul architecture
-of Agra and Delhi, the Golden Temple,
-built at the beginning of the nineteenth century
-is rather disappointing, despite its gilded domes,
-the building looking rather squat, though the gold
-reflected in the rippling water has a charming effect.
-The gilded dome of the Atal tower also shows over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-the buildings behind the temple seen from the terrace.
-Leaving our carriage at this spot we were surrounded
-and eyed by a curious crowd. Rival
-guides apparently contended for us, and there was
-a sudden quarrel, ending in a free fight, between
-two of them, the end of which we did not remain
-to see. The temple and its precincts is held most
-sacred by the Sikhs, Amritzar being their religious
-centre, the place is most jealously watched. It
-seemed impossible to get away from the crowd,
-who appeared to be none too friendly to strangers,
-and sketching was out of the question without a
-bodyguard.</p>
-
-<p>We had a very courteous and kind reception from
-Dr Dinghra, three of whose sons we had known in
-London. One son and his wife were staying with
-him, and we spent a pleasant hour under his
-hospitable roof, and he presented us with handsome
-saddle bags, made of the local carpet, on leaving.
-He also introduced us to one of the leading citizens,
-a magistrate, who had an extensive pile carpet
-manufactory, and he showed us over the works.
-These were long sheds, having round arched
-arcades opening on to a court, and in these were a
-series of high-warp hand-looms with rows of shuttles
-filled with the different coloured wools hanging
-from the top. The weavers sat, or rather squatted,
-in a row on the ground in front of the warp and
-worked in the pattern. They were young boys
-and youths trained to the work early. They
-used a small curved knife like a small sickle
-to shear off the ends of their threads and press
-them home when a particular bit of coloured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-pattern was finished. Little oblong labels written
-in Arabic were placed on the warp in front of each
-weaver, which gave the written directions for the
-colours to be used in the work. No individual
-judgment or choice appeared to be exercised by
-the weavers.</p>
-
-<p>There was a design room also open to the court
-under an arcade, here some quite aged natives were
-preparing designs, sketching them out in pencil or
-charcoal on squared paper, quite in the European
-method, and in some cases working from photographs
-of special carpets.</p>
-
-<p>I learned from the manager that the working
-hours in this factory were from 8 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span> till dark.
-The boy weavers only got one and a half annas a
-day! We finally were shown the finished product—a
-whole series of large handsome carpets being
-rolled out for us to see. One of these, of a Persian
-kind of design, would be priced at 200 rupees, the
-manager said. Before leaving we were requested
-to write our names, and any remarks on our visit,
-in a visitor’s book, where the list had been headed
-by the Prince and Princess of Wales, who visited
-these works on their tour in India in 1905.</p>
-
-<p>In the forenoon of January 14th we saw the
-eclipse of the sun from our terrace. It rather took
-us by surprise—the light quickly becoming curiously
-pale like moonlight and the air unusually chilly.
-We could see the sun turned into a crescent quite
-distinctly, and pass through various phases like a
-moon, till it gradually regained its normal shape
-and power shortly after noon.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_168" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_168.jpg" width="414" height="491" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">AN INDIAN AUTOLYCUS</div></div>
-
-<p>As we sat on the terrace a native pedlar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-approached with two portentous bundles. He
-salaamed, and proceeded to unload his wares in front
-of us. His stock, however, consisted entirely of
-European goods—small wares such as tapes and
-buttons, studs, soaps and perfumes, patent medicines,
-and such articles as are supposed to meet the wants
-of travellers. This Indian Autolycus addressed us
-as “Father” and “Mother,” and like the “Mad
-Hatter” commenced his speeches by saying “me
-very poor man,” following this announcement by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-urgent appeals to us to buy, after each purchase,
-beginning all over again afresh. Probably he felt
-he had to make the most of his English, as well as
-of his stock and his opportunities.</p>
-
-<p>After another look at the Golden Temple, which
-it was impossible to approach without a crowd and
-without clumsy canvas shoes over our own, we
-made our way round to the Atal tower. Here,
-again, before entering the anything but clean marble
-court shoes had to be put off. It is an octagonal
-shrine, or tomb, having curious beaten metal plates,
-gilded figure designs in repoussé over the doors,
-but the decorative art here was much inferior in
-design and detail to what we had seen further
-south.</p>
-
-<p>We then drove to the public gardens in which
-stands the pavilion of Ranji Singh. The gardens
-are full of beautiful palms and trees of many
-different kinds, including fine cypresses and splendid
-clumps of bamboos. The roads around Amritzar
-are lined with trees, and one sees enormous banyans
-spreading their great branches and masses of dark
-green foliage and casting deep shadows on the long
-avenues. Large plantations and fruit gardens, too,
-surround the city, so that it has a very attractive
-look although on a dead level.</p>
-
-<p>Oranges of a large rough-skinned kind are grown
-here. They are deep-coloured, and more like
-lemons in shape. There was also a very small
-circular orange about the size of a large cherry in
-the hotel garden, where roses, pansies, and violets
-were blooming freely. The native gardener was
-generally to the fore in offering us small posies or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-buttonholes whenever he had an opportunity and
-for a consideration.</p>
-
-<p>We left Amritzar for Lahore on January the 15th,
-having another long wait for the Punjab mail, this
-time three hours behind time. However, about
-noon another train came up and we were advised
-by the stationmaster to go on by that in preference
-to waiting longer for the mail. This train, he said,
-would take us to Lahore more quickly than the
-quick train, which sounds like a contradiction in
-terms. It is only about an hour’s journey.</p>
-
-<p>The country between Amritzar and Lahore is,
-again, flat and has no striking features. Fields
-under irrigation green with young crops of corn,
-often smothered in charlock, alternated with dry
-fields or the standing canes of ripe crops, and
-stubbles of some newly reaped. The wells were
-plentiful. Some of the irrigation wells in this
-district are of a different pattern and mechanism to
-the simple draw-well seen generally. A pair of
-oxen turn a horizontal heavy wooden wheel which
-has slots at regular intervals around the outside of
-its rim. These slots catch the projecting spokes
-or straight cogs of another wheel, also horizontally
-placed and smaller in size, and this in turn by means
-of the cogs moves a large water wheel arranged in a
-vertical position, the projecting cogs catching the
-spokes of this wheel, which has a series of leather
-buckets or water pots attached to its broad rim, on
-the same principle as we see in dredging machines.
-As the wheel turns the buckets are dipped one after
-the other into the well, and as they rise again full
-empty their contents into a trough immediately in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-front of the wheel, which communicates with another
-trough connected with the irrigating trenches, which
-are thus supplied with water.</p>
-
-<p>The station at Lahore was comparatively quiet
-and was a pleasing contrast to the turbulent crowd
-at Amritzar. The Charing Cross hotel received us,
-but anything less suggestive of the associations its
-name recalled it would be difficult to imagine. It
-was of the usual extended bungalow type, with long
-arcades in front of ranges of ground floor rooms,
-spacious and lofty and reminding rather of the vast
-rooms one sees on the stage with raftered ceilings
-and whitewashed walls. The lower wall of our
-sitting-room, however, was hung with very interesting
-Indian hand-painted cotton hangings, which gave it
-rather a distinguished appearance. There was a
-bedroom, something between a prison and a chapel,
-and dressing and the usual bath rooms, with zinc
-tubs, opening out beyond. There were large
-sitting and dining rooms, the latter an enormous
-one, like the nave of a church, lighted by a clerestory
-only, and cold enough, where people dined rather
-frigidly, each group at a safe distance at separate
-little round tables. We were glad of a log-fire in
-the evenings, though the sun was powerful enough
-during the day. “The Charing Cross post office”
-was close by, which had one pigeon hole, and where
-the stamps were sold outside under the verandah,
-by a native squatting on the ground.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_172" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_172.jpg" width="356" height="435" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">ENJOYING A LOG FIRE AT LAHORE</div></div>
-
-<p>A fine broad avenue through the English quarter
-is called “The Mall,” and here the principal
-government buildings are situated, the Law courts
-and the Museum, and the principal stores and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-bungalows. This British residential and business
-quarter is quite distinct and lies quite clear outside
-the walls of the native city of Lahore. It is laid
-out in broad drives with tan rides at the side,
-and bordered with trees. Bungalows and shops
-and stores in the shape of bungalows standing
-detached in gardens are arranged pleasantly from
-the modern residential point of view, and forms
-quite a “garden city,” only marred by the atrocious
-way in which the traders announce their names and
-business in staring white block-letters on black
-boards. One piano warehouse, I noticed, had
-even a sky sign. Even the private residences are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-often disfigured in the same way by black boards
-with the name of the occupier in the ugliest block-letters.</p>
-
-<p>The gardens and hedges, often of roses trained
-on trellises of bamboo, are kept very trim up and
-down the Mall.</p>
-
-<p>Smart English ladies and officers ride or drive about
-in their dog-carts with native tigers behind. We
-met a very imposing and original turn out—a fine
-pair of brown camels, well matched, were harnessed
-to a sort of barouche, each ridden, postilion-wise,
-by native servants in scarlet, one in the same colour
-behind the carriage, which contained two English
-ladies. This was probably the Lieutenant-Governor’s
-carriage. Bicycles were much in use both by
-Europeans’ (men and women) and natives—the
-turban and loose pyjama-like clothes of the latter
-looking strange on the machine. The natives,
-however, everywhere in the towns where the
-Europeans’ influence comes in seem to take to
-machines. The sewing machine is constantly seen
-in the bazaars, always, however, worked by a man.
-A certain firm’s poster of the eternal woman enclosed
-in a hideous S (like a modern Eve and the
-industrial serpent) looks particularly incongruous
-and out of place in India, where there seems to be
-no women working at crafts. The men do the
-washing too, the Dhobee in white with his
-bundle of linen being a frequent and characteristic
-figure.</p>
-
-<p>No greater contrast could be imagined than that
-between the English quarter and the native city
-lying within its old walls and great gates, with its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-narrow picturesque streets and—stinks! Open drains
-as at Amritzar run along each side of the streets,
-close in front of the bazaar, where the people sit.
-The fronts of the houses above the open shops are
-mostly of wood of a dark rich tone, corbelled
-arcaded balconies and windows jutting out over the
-street at all sorts of angles, rich with delicate and
-varied carvings, as if the builders had vied with each
-other which should make the most interesting front.
-There are charming little covered verandahs and
-balconies with slender columns and ogee arches,
-and pierced screen-work painted here and there,
-but mostly the deep dusky brown tone of the
-natural wood, dark with age, which forms an effective
-background to the vivid colours and glitter of
-costumes and draperies of the bazaars. The newly
-dyed long strips of cotton or muslin in orange or
-pink, green or lemon yellow which are hung out to
-dry, wave like long banners over the busy life of
-the narrow streets, where the turbaned and many
-coloured, swarthy faced crowd, jostle along, or
-stand in chattering groups about the shops, buying
-and selling. The types, too, are very varied—the
-Hindu, the Mohammedan, the Afghan, the country
-folk; the Mohammedan woman in trousers, the
-Hindu woman in her graceful Sari, with her glittering
-silver anklets, and bracelets, toe-rings and nose-rings;
-dark eyes and shining whites momentarily
-seen, and gleaming teeth, the mysterious-looking
-figures covered from head to foot in flowing white
-drapery, pleated into a close fitting cap, with little
-perforations for the eyes, in front, the effect of the
-whole being ghostly, or even ghoulish. The white<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-mystery being only betrayed by a brown foot
-beneath and the gleam of a silver anklet which tells
-one it is only the disguise of a Mohammedan woman.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_175" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 18.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_175.jpg" width="301" height="490" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">“THE WOMAN IN WHITE” AT LAHORE (SUGGESTION
-FOR A DISGUISE PARTY)</div></div>
-
-<p>Here again it was rather disappointing to see
-the native bazaars full of European goods, and a
-trivial cheap kind at that. European commerce has
-evidently got its foot in. Blue enamelled basins
-and cups, tin ware, tapes and buttons, braces, socks
-and ugly woollen scarfs in aniline colours are seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-everywhere. It is true that one occasionally may
-see a native handicraftsman at work, such as the
-man who prints the ornamental borders on the
-edges of the muslin veils of the women, and picks
-them out in silver leaf, silver or orange being a
-favourite arrangement. The metal-worker is also
-frequent, though he often only makes zinc stoves.
-The food shops are the most numerous, set out
-with piles of curious yellow cakes and sweets of all
-sorts and sizes, the cooking stove being often in
-front of the shop, made of clay or mud with a tiny
-hole in which they produce hot little fires.</p>
-
-<p>Through the bazaars our carriage worked its way
-as through a labyrinth. The mixed throng of
-buyers and sellers, beggars and brown babies, and
-cheeky little street Arabs, who are inclined to be
-rude to the stranger generally, tongas, buffaloes,
-herds of goats, stray zebu bulls, and fat-tailed sheep.</p>
-
-<p>These latter we first saw at Delhi. They are
-originally from Tibet. The enormous development
-of the tail, or fleece of the tail, has a very
-extraordinary effect, as if the animal carried a bag
-of wool behind it, both broad and long and nearly
-touching the ground. Occasionally we saw one of
-these animals (rams) dyed with orange colour, and
-marked with curious patterns all over its fleece.</p>
-
-<p>Passing through the bazaars we arrived at a
-large open space, and soon reached the (Roshanai)
-gate of the Fort on the other side of it. There the
-English sentry, after saying an order was necessary,
-called an orderly to take us round. Just inside the
-gate we got a view of the old wall of the palace
-decorated by tiles, the colours being similar to those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-used at Gwalior, at the Man Mandir palace,
-principally turquoise, green, and lemon yellow,
-the tile-work being arranged in bands or friezes
-of elephants and birds in profile, let into the red
-sandstone.</p>
-
-<p>The very stolid British “Tommy” in khaki conducted
-us, in slow marching order and in solemn
-silence, up the long sloping road to the square of
-the Fort where he pointed out, without emotion, a
-colonnaded Hall of audience, and then took us
-through a gateway into the rather spacious court
-of the old palace of Akbar, who also built the Fort.
-On one side of the court was an interesting armoury
-of Sikh weapons, beginning with suits of fine chain
-mail and Persian-looking steel topis, damasceened
-and bossed circular targes up to flint-locks, and
-match-locks, and blunderbusses.</p>
-
-<p>There was quite a mediæval-looking heavy steel
-mace, and many sabres, and sword sticks, some
-made with crutch handles terminating in horses’
-heads. There were also a number of steel cuirasses.
-I believe this armoury was arranged by Mr
-Kipling, the father of Mr Rudyard Kipling, who
-was head of the art school of Lahore for many years,
-and to whom is due the extremely interesting
-museum.</p>
-
-<p>There were relics of elaborate decoration on the
-walls and vaults of what remained of the palace,
-and some of the glass (convex-mirror-mosaic) work
-united with gesso-relief ornament, which we saw
-at Udaipur, Amber, Delhi, and other places: but
-the British occupation had tried its best, by
-introducing hideous chunks of barrack buildings,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-to take the romance and beauty out of the
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Close to the Fort outside its gate is the Samadh,
-or burning-place of Ranjit Singh. A carved lotus
-flower, surrounded by eleven smaller ones, on a
-raised platform inside the pavilion-like building,
-mark the place where his body was burned with
-eleven ladies of his Zenana. Not far off rises the
-dome of the Jama Musjid and its noble minarets
-of red sandstone.</p>
-
-<p>There is a fine park-like country beyond the walls
-on this side of the city with groups of old trees.
-The minarets and domes of Lahore have a striking
-effect seen from outside the gate. We returned
-through the bazaars a different way, passing the
-golden domed mosque and also the Wazar Khan
-mosque, the latter a very fine one fronting a small
-square in the middle of the city, and having two
-large minarets faced with enamelled tiles in blue
-and green and other colours, cobalt predominating.
-The spandrils of the main entrance, and in fact the
-whole of the front, being decorated with tiles in
-large arabesques and borderings, a large Arabic
-text in blue written boldly over the arch, and panels
-down each flank of smaller scale work. It was the
-first tiled mosque we had seen, and quite characteristic
-of the art of a district which culminates in the
-renowned tombs at Multan.</p>
-
-<p>At the English club house on the Mall, the
-pipers of a Highland regiment were playing on
-the lawn in front. The club had well laid out and
-ample lawn tennis courts, large blue durries being
-hung at each end of the courts to stop the balls,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-and the players had native caddies to pick them up.
-There were zoological gardens near by where we
-saw nylghaus and antelopes and birds of various
-sorts.</p>
-
-<p>A Victoria memorial on a large scale was in
-progress at a place where branching roads met.
-The work of the British sculptor in India cannot
-be said to be much more exhilarating than the work
-of the British architect, as a rule, to judge from the
-specimens we saw, chiefly of statues of the late
-Queen Victoria.</p>
-
-<p>The courts of Justice at Lahore are more successful
-than most of the modern examples in India,
-perhaps because designed in what might be called
-the local style—the Mogul. Near by in a little
-garden enclosed by clipped hedges was a bronze
-statue of Lord Laurence offering the choice of
-government by pen or sword to the passer by.
-It had some dramatic expression, though the choice
-of a momentary attitude in a portrait statue is
-perhaps open to criticism.</p>
-
-<p>We visited the museum, where Mr Percy Brown
-has succeeded Mr Kipling as director. Here is a
-most interesting collection of typical native textiles,
-including the raised wax designs gilded, silvered,
-and lacquered on grounds of different coloured
-cloths, an art which is still practised in the district
-with success, traditional designs of flowers and birds
-being repeated in a very skilful and effective way,
-and applied to the adornment of portières, covers,
-etc. There were also good collections of native
-jewellery and enamels. Champlévé enamel, such
-as is done at Lucknow, was illustrated by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-specimens in different stages from the commencement
-to the finish, side by side with cloissoné
-(Japanese) illustrated in the same complete way,
-as well as complete models showing native industries
-and handicrafts in operation; interesting
-old Hindu herbals and manuscripts on vellum
-with characteristic miniatures; drawings of local
-palaces and gardens in plan, elevation and bird’s-eye
-perspective.</p>
-
-<p>There was a very notable collection of Greco-Buddhist
-sculptures, which were extremely interesting
-and unusual.</p>
-
-<p>Very little wood-carving, curiously enough,
-except modern examples in screens and furniture,
-the work of the Art School, exhibited in a separate
-room. The city of Lahore being so rich in
-carved wood-work it was less necessary to have it
-in the museum, and, of course, much better to see
-it <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">in situ</i>. The modern way of selling the spoils
-of old buildings to private collections or to museums
-is carried on in Europe to an alarming extent, so
-that one begins to fear, in view of the rapid destruction
-of ancient houses now going on, whether there
-will soon be left any genuine bits of antiquity in
-this commercial world. It is better of course that
-relics of ancient art should find a haven in a public
-museum than that it should perish altogether, but
-any destruction or removal for the express purpose
-of transportation to a museum should be deprecated.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole the Lahore museum was a well-chosen
-and arranged museum, judiciously limited
-to Indian art, and it was interesting to see the
-groups of natives—men, women, and children—<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">181</a></span>apparently
-scanning the different objects with the
-greatest interest and with much animated conversation
-among themselves. One afternoon we drove
-to the Waza Khan Mosque, and I made the sketch
-reproduced <a href="#ip_182b">here</a> of the entrance to the mosque
-from the carriage. The crowd was curious, but
-not nearly so troublesome as elsewhere, and our
-conductor, or running footman, kept them off
-pretty well. The square had large pools of mud
-in it here and there after recent rains. Zebus
-were straying about, or lying down. Fruit and
-good stalls occupied other parts of the ground,
-and ox-carts deposited loads of wood. Men sat in
-groups in the porch of the mosque, or on the
-steps, from which boys flew their little diamond-shaped
-paper kites. The mysterious-looking
-white figures of the Mohammedan women wandered
-about like substantial ghosts. We saw a pretty
-little gazelle at one of the stalls, perfectly tame, and
-a great pet of the native who owned it.</p>
-
-<p>The Cashmere travelling merchants, who
-display their tempting wares at all the hotels,
-spread out their stuffs in profusion—Bokhara
-embroideries, Persian covers, kincobs, turbans,
-and portières of black, red, or green grounds,
-effectively decorated with designs in the raised
-wax, such as we saw in the museum—and used all
-their persuasive arts to effect sales.</p>
-
-<p>We did not stay long enough in Lahore to see
-much of the Society there, but before leaving we
-had a visit from the Princess Duleep Singh and
-her sister, who, hearing from friends at Amritzar
-that we were there, came to see us at the hotel.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-The princess was dressed as a Parsee lady in
-beautiful classical draperies, white with embroidered
-borders, and she drove herself in a dog-cart, but
-the sister was in European dress. The princess
-recalled the circumstance of my having made a
-little sketch in her brother the prince’s cottage on
-the Norfolk coast, which had been designed for him
-by Mr Detmar Blow, which we visited when staying
-in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_182" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
- <img src="images/i_182.jpg" width="384" height="454" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MERCHANTS OF KASHMIR</div></div>
-
-<p>We left Lahore the mid-day Lucknow Mail,
-after a long wait, the platform covered with
-picturesque groups of squatting natives. We<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-eventually shared a compartment, as far as
-Umballa, with an English official, his German
-wife and a little girl. As far as Umballa on
-this line, coming north, we had already journeyed.
-The chief incident after leaving Lahore was the
-catching fire of one of the boxes of one of the
-carriages of our train, which caused the passengers
-hastily to leave it, and crowd into other parts of the
-train, when it was stopped and the burning carriage
-taken off at a small station just before Amritzar.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_182b" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 27em;">
- <img src="images/i_182b.jpg" width="432" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">LAHORE—THE MOSQUE OF WAZA KHAN</div></div>
-
-<p>At Umballa, the dining station, which we reached
-when it was dark, some said we had to change,
-others said not. This was puzzling. One official
-with more authority than the others said emphatically
-“no,” at last. So, having just time, we
-scurried across the bridge to the refreshment room
-with light hearts and sharp appetites, snatched a
-hasty meal and hurried back to find Moonsawmy,
-who acted as courier and took charge of the tickets,
-in some difficulty with the officials about the tickets.
-One official (the stationmaster) came up, and then
-said we ought to have changed into the train which
-was just at that moment steaming out of the
-station, excusing his mistake by saying that he had
-not till then seen our tickets, fussily ordering a
-humble Hindu clerk to take the numbers.</p>
-
-<p>After this we got into our compartment again
-and settled ourselves for a sleep, as we were
-not due at Lucknow until next morning. During
-the night we were constantly disturbed by
-people opening the carriage door and peering
-in—no doubt in search of lower berths, which
-we occupied. At one place a Eurasian got in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-with a quantity of baggage, and got out again
-only a few stations off. On leaving, perceiving he
-had disturbed us he said he was “sorry for the
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>At Barielly another man (English) got in with
-his traps and rugs and settled himself to sleep
-on the middle berth—which in some carriages
-economises space between the two side ones—though
-he was at first a little taken aback at seeing
-that one of us was a lady. However, he turned
-out to be a very agreeable companion afterwards,
-and we got quite friendly as the train the next morning
-approached Lucknow, we having previously
-decided not to stop at Cawnpore.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">185</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">LUCKNOW</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">Arriving</span> at Lucknow in due course we
-parted with our fellow traveller, who was
-met by the military chaplain, and we did not see
-him again. The chaplain kindly gave us some
-information, and said that the hotel we were bound
-for was reputed to be “the best in India.” This was
-good hearing, and we found it quite borne out by
-our experience of Wurtzler’s, where we presently
-found ourselves in comfortable rooms, bungalow-like,
-opening on to a verandah. The hotel had
-formerly been a palace, and was rather a handsome
-building in its way, with a round-arched arcaded
-front, long and low, with a pleasant enclosure of
-trees and flower garden.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_186" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_186.jpg" width="373" height="491" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">IN HOSPITAL, LUCKNOW. THE OPERATING TABLE (PATIENT
-HAD A BIT OF GRIT IN HER EYE AFTER A TRAIN JOURNEY)—SIXTEEN
-RUPEES WERE EXTRACTED!</div></div>
-
-<p>There was “a little rift within the lute,” however,
-which rather marred the first moments of our
-arrival at Lucknow, my wife having unfortunately
-got a little bit of grit in her eye from the engine
-while in the train. There was nothing for it but
-to drive to the hospital the first thing after breakfast.
-Luckily we caught the chief surgeon (Col.
-Anderson) just as he was attending to some native
-cases in waiting. He at once took us to the
-“operating room,” which sounded rather fearsome,
-and was indeed a severe place with a polished<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-marble floor, a case of surgical instruments and an
-operating table being the only furniture visible.
-The poor eye-patient had to extend herself on the
-table, while the Colonel very deftly found and quickly
-removed a tiny black speck which had caused all
-the trouble—working up right under the upper lid
-of the eye. He put some cocaine into the eye first
-of all, and afterwards applied a little lint and lotion.
-The relief must have been worth anything—it might
-have been described as a lesser Relief of Lucknow!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">187</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_187" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
- <img src="images/i_187.jpg" width="384" height="396" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">JUGGLERS AT LUCKNOW—THE MANGO TREE TRICK</div></div>
-
-<p>The next example of human skill or sleight of
-hand we witnessed was in the juggling, not the
-surgical, profession. It was a native conjurer who,
-under the arcade of the hotel, showed us the famous
-mango tree trick. As additional attractions, or a
-sort of side-show, he had a large cobra in a round
-box, which, when the lid was off, reared its head
-all alive and hissing, and ready for a performance
-with a well-to-do mongoose, which was held in
-readiness by a cord tied tightly round its neck,
-which is apparently the only way in which to secure
-a mongoose.</p>
-
-<p>The man commenced his performance by placing
-a monkey’s skull on the pavement, and sticking a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-little china doll up in front of it. Then he produced
-a very dry-looking mango seed about the size of a
-small potato, and this he planted carefully in an
-ordinary earthen flower-pot, covering the seed with
-soil, and then watering it, muttering some unknown
-words over it. He then put it under a cloth raised
-tentwise by a stick, to let it grow, as he said, while
-he went on with a number of small but very skilful
-conjuring tricks with cards, coins, marbles, ring
-and handkerchief, etc., any of which he offered to
-teach. Presently he lifted the cloth and showed
-the mango tree sending up a shoot of fresh green,
-and apparently growing vigorously. Then he
-covered it up again and performed some more
-tricks, after which he again uncovered the mango,
-which now showed a stem and bunch of leaves at
-the top like a miniature tree. Finally, after another
-interval of a few minutes juggling and conjuring,
-he lifted the cloth again, and, holding the pot in
-one hand, he pulled up the little mango tree with
-the other, showing it had stem, roots, and all. The
-man had an assistant, but he only played a very
-subordinate part, handing the conjurer the various
-things he wanted from time to time, holding the
-mongoose, but not performing in any way. These
-wonders were to be seen for the fee of three rupees.
-The conjurer was very proud of his “chits” which
-he showed, and among the signatures were those
-of “Castlereagh” and “Wenlock”; and he asked
-for a written testimonial in his book.</p>
-
-<p>At Lucknow we had an introduction to the Chief
-Commissioner, Mr Ross Scott, who received us
-very cordially at his charming house, and offered to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-do anything for us. Among other kindnesses he
-sent my wife (whose health had suffered from the
-climate everywhere in India) a supply of excellent
-milk from his own cows during her stay, which
-proved of immense benefit. At his house we met
-Mrs Dowden and her daughter, who kindly undertook
-to show us over the ruins of the Residency
-which were quite close by. The building stands,
-or what remains of it after the bombardment it
-sustained during the terrible days of “the Mutiny,”
-amid pleasant lawns and fine trees, and creepers
-cover the ruins. In one of the rooms is a good
-model of the Residency as it was in 1857 in the
-midst of the native city on a rising ground, but
-thickly surrounded by the houses and mosques, from
-which guns and mortars were trained on to it.
-These were shown planted on flat roofs or in
-courtyards, wherever there was vantage ground.
-Nothing but a few shapeless ruins remain hereabouts
-now of the old native city, which has since
-been curtailed and cut in two by a broad road for the
-rapid movement of troops. However savage and
-cruel the sepoys may have been, the British
-reprisals were certainly severe. They seemed to
-have practically “wiped out” old Lucknow afterwards.
-We were shown a building—the Sikander
-Bagh—a high-walled enclosure, once a fair rose garden,
-which was taken by Colin Campbell, and
-where 2000 rebels were bayoneted without mercy
-by the British troops. A young English officer,
-speaking professionally, perhaps, we met at a
-friend’s house, said that Sikander Bagh gave him
-more satisfaction than any other memorial of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">190</a></span>
-mutiny. He positively “gloated over it,” and
-intended to go there again and “gloat.” It is said
-even that British soldiers bayoneted even the sick
-and wounded Hindu soldiers in the hospitals who
-begged to be shot instead!</p>
-
-<p>The whole place is overshadowed by memories
-of that awful period. Nothing can impair the
-courage and endurance of the heroic defenders of
-the Residency; but it is now, I believe, generally
-admitted that the outbreak was not without its
-causes, and that the government of the day did not
-act judiciously, to say the least. It is commonly
-called “The Mutiny,” but it was really an insurrection,
-which must from various causes have been
-smouldering for some time before it burst into
-flame. The “greased cartridges” were only the
-last straw. There seems to have been much discontent.
-Many sepoys, too, had been disbanded.
-The British annexation, the deposition and deportation
-of the reigning King of Oudh and the confiscation
-of his revenues, must all be considered as
-provocative causes; and it is a question whether at
-any time British rule has made itself loved in India,
-or the British residents have ever really understood
-the Indian people. Native feeling must have been
-generally ignored.</p>
-
-<p>It was a formidable revolt, accompanied, no
-doubt, by explosions of race hatred and by terrible
-cruelties, but there was savagery on both sides—a
-desperate attempt to regain possession of their own
-country and its government on the part of the
-princes and people.</p>
-
-<p>The question remains, with all the official<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-solicitude of the British government for the welfare
-of the natives, all the railways, engineering, and
-irrigation works, are they really better off than they
-were under native rule?</p>
-
-<p>Are they not, though under British administration,
-more heavily taxed than they were under the
-native kings? Mr William Digby, C.I.E., who had
-long personal and official experience in India,
-brings a formidable array of facts and statistics
-(from official sources, too), in his “Prosperous
-British India,” in support of the view that they
-<em>are</em>, and, moreover, that the ryot—the tiller of the
-soil—is gradually becoming poorer under our rule.</p>
-
-<p>To a passing observer, the Hindus—nay, the
-people of India, either Hindus or Mohammedans—can
-never be Europeanised. There is a great gulf
-between the East and the West. After all these
-years of British occupation and administration, the
-two races live entirely apart and separate. In
-religion, manners, and customs, and sentiment, they
-are fundamentally different, opposed, one might
-say.</p>
-
-<p>The British remain a transitory garrison of
-military and civil administrative aliens, in the midst
-of vast populations, rooted in the traditions, religious
-beliefs and observances of untold centuries,
-during which they have carried on the same mode
-of life, and who seem neither to seek or to desire
-change.</p>
-
-<p>The mere struggle to live must occupy the
-energies of the vast majority, but among the more
-educated and leisured classes of natives there is a
-growing feeling of what we should call nationalism<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-in Europe, though it may be more strictly racial
-than national. It is difficult, however, to see how
-anything like a universal movement over the whole
-peninsula could arise, considering the differences of
-caste, race and religion, or the wide differences
-which separate Hindus and Mohammedans. Some,
-however, rather think that political change may be
-forced by bankruptcy, considering the poverty of
-the people and the limits of taxation being reached.</p>
-
-<p>We were shown, at the Residency, the room
-where Sir Henry Laurence was struck with the
-shell, the holes its explosion made in the wall, his
-grave also, and many other memorials which have
-a profound interest for the English visitors. Old
-rust-eaten, muzzle-loading muskets, sabres, and
-shot and shell, with which the Residency was
-peppered, were collected in a group in one of the
-rooms, and the place, as far as possible, has been
-made an historical museum of the period of the
-siege.</p>
-
-<p>Our friends introduced us at the Chatter Manzel,
-formerly a palace of the kings of Oudh, but now
-used as an English club. The rooms were of
-spacious and good proportions—long in comparison
-with their width. Proportion, in fact, is the principal
-notable quality of the local architecture at
-Lucknow, the details being comparatively common-place
-after the beautiful inventive detail and decoration
-of the Mogul architects at Delhi and Agra,
-the ornamentation being mostly mere repetitions.
-After the marble inlay of the Taj Mahal and the
-Diwan-ud-Daulat, and Sikandra, or the rich
-arabesques of the Zenana rooms at Amber, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-white and yellow wash and the rather coarse
-plaster work of the palaces and pavilions of Lucknow
-look, comparatively speaking, cheap. The
-stuccoed domes of the mosques miss the splendour
-of the gold and ivory-like marble seen elsewhere.
-Even the Jama Musjid, fine in scale as it is, lacks
-the charm of colour. There was a smaller mosque
-near the old stone bridge, however, which stood
-out against the deep-blue sky in dazzling whiteness,
-but this only showed how beautiful plain whitewash
-appears illuminated by the Indian sun—pearly with
-delicate reflections and warm shadows.</p>
-
-<p>The Iambara had a beautifully-proportioned
-court, with steps up to the pavilion, the symmetry
-of the spacing being rather pleasantly broken by
-the mosque on one side being placed at a different
-angle in order to point to the direction of Mecca,
-as all Mohammedan mosques must do.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the pavilion, under canopies of heavy
-embroidery in gold and silver, supported by chased
-silver poles, were the tombs of one of the kings and
-his zenana. On the walls were mirrors which
-reminded us of our English empire-period framed
-mantle-glasses. Some of these had curious tempera
-paintings inserted in their frames of native birds
-and trees, and there were other Indian paintings,
-one showing General or Captain Martin—the
-French adventurer who founded the Martinière at
-Lucknow in the early nineteenth century—in a
-blue coat and gold lace and white nankeen trousers,
-like a naval officer of that period, conferring with
-the King of Oudh and his court. An image of
-a winged horse (a Buddhist symbol) strikingly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-resembled the Assyrian type of winged man-headed
-creatures, the treatment being remarkably
-similar. The crowned head, with long, black,
-curled locks, and formal, rather small, wings, with
-each feather expressed. There was an umbrella
-attached, which moved to and fro over the head of
-the figure by clock-work.</p>
-
-<p>We were interested to see in the Daulat Khan—a
-sort of gallery up a steep flight of steps—a
-series of full-length portraits of the kings of Oudh
-in their robes, painted by English artists. Most of
-these were signed by my friend T. Erat Harrison,
-1882–4, and I recalled the fact of having seen him
-at work on one of them about that time.</p>
-
-<p>An English lady, Mrs Dowden (wife of Colonel
-Dowden), was kind enough to conduct us through
-Lucknow and its wonders, and she proved an
-excellent cicerone, and waved off all unnecessary
-attentions from caretakers and their hangers-on
-with the decisive air of a resident.</p>
-
-<p>We passed a hideous clock tower—one of many
-in India—put up by some modern architect (as a
-Jubilee memorial, I think). It is astonishing what
-monstrosities in clock towers have been perpetrated
-by modern architects in India.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, we got to the gate of the old city of
-Lucknow, by which we entered the principal street
-of the bazaar. There were many interesting native
-shops. At one I noticed some blocks of patterns
-for printing by hand on cotton. They were cut in
-some hard wood. The handicraft, too, was still
-carried on here. There were many pretty bead
-necklaces, tassels, and quaint toys. We visited,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-up a steep narrow staircase, a muslin and jewel merchant’s
-store. He showed some charming Indian
-muslins spangled with silver spots and patterns.
-He also had one or two pieces of old Lucknow
-enamel not ordinarily seen in the bazaars now.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_195" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 21.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_195.jpg" width="348" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">BETTER LUCK AT LUCKNOW—THROUGH THE CHOWK
-ON AN ELEPHANT</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-We visited another friend who had been spending
-the winter at Lucknow—Mrs Jopling-Rowe,
-the well-known artist, whose son is a Magistrate
-here, dining with them at their charming bungalow
-one evening. Mr Commissioner Jopling very
-courteously placed elephants at our disposal on
-which to ride through the chowk.</p>
-
-<p>An irrigation well near the hotel interested me,
-and I made a sketch of it in a chequered shade.
-The yoke of oxen and two natives at work hauling
-up the water for the garden in a leather bucket.
-While thus engaged another friend travelling in
-the East came up, so that as regards friends we
-were quite in luck’s way at Lucknow.</p>
-
-<p>After this it was time to go and meet the
-elephants our friends had ordered at the chowk.
-Mrs Jopling-Rowe took us in her carriage through
-Wentworth Park, and past the palaces to the gate
-of the city, where we found two fine elephants in
-waiting. My wife and I mounted one of them by
-the usual ladder, the animal kneeling. A young
-officer who was of the party, however, showed us
-another way. He got a leg up by means of the
-trunk, and so over the elephant’s head on to his
-back. We then processed through the bazaar (the
-chowk), preceded by a native policeman, in khaki
-with a scarlet turban, to clear the way, and two
-more behind. The elephants seemed to quite fill
-up the narrow street, so that there was danger of
-a block when we met an ox-cart. A very comprehensive
-view is to be had from an elephant’s
-back, as one can see not only a long way ahead,
-but well into the shops where the people are at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-work, and also command the balconies and roofs,
-where there were often interesting groups.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_196" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_196.jpg" width="600" height="423" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">IRRIGATION WELL, LUCKNOW</div></div>
-
-<p>We threaded our way through the chowk, passing
-at its end under one of the old arched gateways
-and along a narrower street, which led us out into
-the broad military road, which the British, after
-the revolt, ruthlessly cut right through the old city,
-uglifying it, of course. There is a wonderful
-variety and richness, again, here, in the old house fronts
-with arcaded balconies and doorways of
-carved wood. The patterns, chiefly running
-borders, treated very fancifully and delicately.
-The native houses were not so high as in Lahore,
-but the carving might compare with the same sort
-of work there in detail.</p>
-
-<p>We lunched at the charming abode of another
-English official and his wife (Mr and Mrs Saunders),
-who were very pleasant and hospitable. The lady
-had considerable taste in furniture and decoration,
-and her rooms showed the influence of white and
-green, and looked cool and agreeable in a light key.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards we drove to see the celebrated
-Martinière, the young officer accompanying us.
-The Martinière is the fantastic palace built by
-the French General or Captain Martin, before
-mentioned, and is a curious conglomerate sort of
-scenic design of late Italo-French Renaissance
-character, reminding one rather of Isola Bella, semi-classical
-figures being perched on every pinnacle
-and balustrade, and there were two grotesque lions,
-doing duty as supporters or consoles, with mouths
-so open that the sky could be seen through them.
-The building towered high in several stories in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-the centre, and spread out wide into two curved
-long and low wings of one story, opening on to
-broad terraces and steps leading to a small lake,
-from the middle of which rose a fluted column.
-The general’s heart is said to be buried beneath
-this. The Martinière was intended by him to be
-a college for boys. He founded another at Calcutta,
-and another in his native town—Lyons—in
-France. Martin seems to have had a curious,
-eventful history, beginning as a French prisoner,
-under the British, afterwards entering the British
-army and becoming a captain, when he took service
-under the Nawab of Oudh and became general of
-his army, finally accumulating by some means a
-large fortune, which he spent on this building and
-in founding the schools which bear his name.</p>
-
-<p>We passed another house ruined at the time of
-“the Mutiny,” whence the women and children
-were removed to from the Residency, and where
-Lieutenant Paul is buried.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Ross Scott entertained us with a distinguished
-company to dinner at his hospitable house before
-we left Lucknow. One English colonel of the
-party with whom I had a conversation had recently
-returned from Burmah, and had brought back some
-fine silk embroidered robes, some china bowls, and
-caps. The latter were of soft felt, and could be
-worn either with the edge turned down or up,
-forming a brim.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had lived some time in Burmah and
-had seen service there, having been through the
-British campaign against the “Dacoits.” He said
-that the Dacoits were largely composed of men of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">199</a></span>
-the disbanded native army (for which I suppose
-our Government were responsible), and they roamed
-about the country preying on the people, plundering
-and sometimes murdering them. The Burmese
-people, he said, only wanted to be left alone in
-peace (like most people). He had made many
-friends among them, as he knew the language and
-had lived amongst them at that time. On revisiting
-the country and finding things under British control
-and administration, he found most of his Burmese
-native friends in prison. They were there,
-he said, merely for breaking some official regulation
-which probably they did not in the least understand.
-The natives complained to him that the
-English officials lived aloof from them, and were
-not friendly and sympathetic as he (the Colonel)
-had been, and they never got any forwarder.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">200</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">BENARES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Our</span> next destination was Benares. I had for
-long had the feeling, from the descriptions
-one had read and the photographs one had seen
-of this wonderful place, that it would sum up and
-centralise, as it were, to the eye the whole life of
-the Indian people, while it would also be a symbol
-of their faith to the mind.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, with unusual anticipations that
-we turned our faces thither, and on the 21st of
-January took the early morning train from Lucknow
-to the great focus of Hindu worship on the sacred
-Ganges. The kind commissioner’s native servant,
-in scarlet, awaited us at the station with a
-parting gift and a note of introduction to the
-Maharajah of Benares.</p>
-
-<p>The train passed through a richer and more
-fruitful country than usual, but level, plain all the
-way, reaching Benares Cantonment about two
-o’clock. We drove to Clark’s hotel, which has a
-pretty portico full of palms, and a splendid orange
-creeper, then in full flower, hung over the usual
-bungalow annexe. The house was quiet, and
-had a semi-private aspect, more like a country
-bungalow.</p>
-
-<p>Finding the Maharajah’s palace was some five<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-or six miles off and on the other side of the river,
-we were advised to leave our letter at the Guest
-House with our cards. The Guest House was
-quite near by. Continuing our drive through the
-bazaar we thought the main street wider than
-most of the native cities, but the bazaars did not
-look so busy, and many shops were vacant. Balconies,
-the roofs of which were supported on arcades
-of slender columns with Hindu caps, were of a different
-type to those hitherto seen. In the European
-quarter there were poorly-designed, would-be
-Gothic British buildings, and mission churches
-of the usual bald type. There was a Queen’s
-Park with the commonplace iron railing and low
-stone parapet enclosing it, these innovations,
-as usual, quite spoiling the surroundings of a
-native city.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we had a visit from the Maharajah’s
-private secretary, who invited us to drive
-in the afternoon to visit the Buddhist topes and
-sculptures at Sarnath about five miles from Benares.
-An American lady we had previously met was to
-be of the party, and she was staying at the Guest
-House, and at the appointed hour the Maharajah’s
-carriage, with a coachman in a green and gold
-turban and scarlet tunic, and two active young
-Hindus, similarly dressed, acted as running footmen
-to clear the way, when not at their posts standing
-at the back of the carriage. We called at the Guest
-House for our American friend. It was a more
-palatial building than the one at Gwalior, standing
-in a small park with outer gates and a drive. The
-house was in the classic style—a white building<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-with flat roof and columned portico. In the
-large hall on the ground floor there was a
-small coloured statuette of the Maharajah on
-horseback, photographs and portraits upon the
-walls, including English miniatures of an English
-officer and his ladies of the early nineteenth
-century, and some engravings of portraits of
-Queen Caroline. A stuffed lioness was lying
-on a side-board.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_202" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_202.jpg" width="412" height="474" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MAHARAJAH PLACES HIS CARRIAGE AT OUR DISPOSAL</div></div>
-
-<p>The road to Sarnath lay through avenues of fine
-trees a great part of the way, chiefly mangoes,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-banyans, acacias, and tamarinds. The young
-trees planted to fill the gaps were protected by
-circular fences, sometimes topped by prickly pears.
-Sometimes the circular fence was made of bricks,
-an aperture being left between every alternate
-brick.</p>
-
-<p>At Sarnath we saw the results of recent excavations.
-There was a wonderful pillar made
-out of a single piece of marble, but fractured in
-digging it out. One part stood upright in the
-earth, the other lay horizontally. The top or cap
-was placed under an awning near by. It was
-formed of four lions facing outwards, their heads,
-chests, and fore limbs being alone visible, their
-claws resting on the rim of a circular fillet, on which
-was sculptured in low relief a horse, an elephant, a
-lion, and a bull, each animal being placed between
-a wheel of a solar character, each wheel having
-twenty-four spokes. Below this fillet was a curved
-drooping fringe of leaves such as are characteristic
-in Persian columns as well as Hindu. The marble
-of which the column and the sculptures were made
-was of a peculiar greyish almost of a flesh colour,
-with small spots. Both the column and the sculptures
-were very highly polished, and the treatment
-of the lions was remarkably Greek in character with
-perhaps a touch of Persian or even Assyrian formalism
-in the treatment of the heads and manes
-of the lions. The animals in relief, between
-the wheels, too, were remarkably free, spirited, and
-well modelled.</p>
-
-<p>There were the remains of an ancient Buddhist
-temple near. In what was probably the inner<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-shrine was a sculptured standing figure of Buddha,
-about two-thirds life size, in alto relievo. The
-figure was represented in a long robe, the limbs
-being boldly expressed through the drapery, which
-hung broadly and smoothly over them, without
-folds, except at the sides, which were treated in
-the rather formal spiral manner of early Greek
-work.</p>
-
-<p>The American lady remarked on seeing this
-figure that “The gentleman seems to have put his
-legs through his clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>The figure was framed in a border of astralagus,
-cut in low relief, having a running escalloped
-border outside it and stepped mouldings. The
-doorway to this shrine, too, had a richly carved
-bordering.</p>
-
-<p>There were many most interesting fragments
-collected together in and around a building near.
-In the court was a large circular carved stone.
-This was called Buddha’s umbrella, and its original
-position was over the head of a large figure of the
-saint, sculptured in the round, close by. The
-design of the umbrella, a lotus flower, the flower
-of life, the petals radiating from the centre, and
-enclosing this were a series of concentric rings of
-pattern; the first consisted of rosettes, or smaller
-lotus flowers, alternating with grotesque lions,
-winged horses, elephants, camels, and bulls; the
-next showed the anthemion, doubled or reversed,
-alternating with the fylfot or gammadion 卍, and
-another form frequent in early Greek pattern (as
-well as Chinese) the geometric four-petalled flower.
-There were numerous small figures of Buddha here,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-treated in a similar way to the one first mentioned,
-as well as other sculptures of a Hindu type,
-resembling those at Ellora.</p>
-
-<p>There we saw the great Tope (called the
-Dhamek). This stood on rather higher ground,
-and was apparently built of rubble, which was exposed
-at the top, but the sides were covered with
-fine bands of carved ornament in stone, carried to
-a considerable height, and consisting of a frieze
-of bold scroll work of a Greek character, alternating
-with bands of a kind of Chinese-like diagonal diaper,
-divided by plain belts of stone. At intervals these
-bands were intersected by flat dome-shaped forms
-slightly projecting beyond the bands, and in these
-were recesses intended, no doubt, originally to
-contain seated figures of Buddha. These flat dome-shaped
-forms, connected by bands, suggested a
-palisade, which may have been the original
-way of enclosing and protecting these topes
-or tombs; and they may also have been the
-early form or prototype of the curious clustered
-dome-shaped pinnacles which are multiplied to
-form the spires of Jain temples so often seen
-in India.</p>
-
-<p>Sarnath is the place where Buddha began to
-preach, and the great tope is supposed to mark the
-spot where his first sermon was delivered. The
-excavations of General Cunningham here disclose
-the fragments of a great city which probably stood
-here about 2000 years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to Benares from this intensely interesting
-spot, we dined at the Guest House with our
-American friend. The rooms were luxuriously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">206</a></span>
-upholstered and furnished from Europe, and were
-occupied by the Prince and Princess of Wales when
-they were here in 1905. The dinner was excellently
-cooked and served by native attendants, with
-the choicest wines and liquors.</p>
-
-<p>There were some lovely old Indian miniatures on
-vellum framed and hanging on the wall of one of
-the salons, representing various scenes in the life
-of a Maharajah—a cock-fight, polo, reception of a
-foreign embassy (in Dutch seventeenth century
-costume), and other subjects, each full of charming
-details of architecture, dress and decoration. Besides
-these there were the usual official photographic
-groups, showing English officers, princes, and
-governor-generals grouped around the Maharajah—in
-one the Czar of Russia appeared. Indian
-carpets were on the floor, and English sporting
-prints on the walls of the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, January 23rd, His Highness’s
-secretary had arranged to send a carriage for us
-quite early (about 7 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span>), to take us to see the
-ghats. When we reached the river side, which
-is a considerable drive from the Guest House,
-we found a beautiful state barge awaiting us.
-It was shaped and painted like a peacock,
-and had a little pavilion in the centre. In
-this lovely vessel we embarked, and glided
-slowly down the river with the stream, guided
-by the scarlet-jacketed oarsmen, with their long
-bamboo handled oars, and a broad steering paddle
-at the stern.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_207" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_207.jpg" width="414" height="522" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">BENARES: VIEWING THE GHATS FROM THE MAHARAJAH’S
-PEACOCK BOAT</div></div>
-
-<p>The spectacle of Benares from a boat on the
-Ganges is perhaps the most extraordinary sight in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-all India. At every ghat or opening to the river,
-down the great flights of steps, a throng of natives
-in all the colours of the rainbow press to the water’s
-edge. Some plunge in, some approach timidly,
-and very gradually submerge themselves. Their
-brown skins shining in the water. The men always
-have some sort of waist cloth on, but the women
-go in in their garments, or, at least, clad to their
-waists. All ages are there—it recalled the mediæval<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-allegories of the Fountain of Youth. One does
-not often see infants dipped, though they are,
-occasionally, by their parents, and object to
-the water in the same natural and vigorous
-manner as European babies are apt to do at
-their baptism.</p>
-
-<p>Old tottering women and men may be seen, as
-well as the young, strong and vigorous, all earnestly
-washing, or performing strange genuflexions with
-the most determined devotion. Characteristic
-features of this wonderful scene are the large
-matting umbrellas of the priests, who sit on small
-platforms of bamboo raised on the steps. These
-expect fees to be paid them by those who come to
-bathe at the ghats. Rows of snake charmers greet
-the traveller on landing at the ghats, who turn
-hissing cobras out of circular boxes and hold them
-aloft or twine them round their necks, or perhaps,
-as an extra attraction, empty out a swarm of
-scorpions to catch the eye of the stranger, all
-eager to perform the marvels of their art on
-the slightest encouragement—and a few rupees.
-Sacred zebu bulls wander about and often lie on
-the steps.</p>
-
-<p>It seems strange that people should lave and drink
-of the water, which is fouled one would suppose by
-all sorts of impurities at the margin. Washing of
-clothes goes on everywhere, decayed flowers float
-along, even bodies of drowned dogs are seen
-occasionally. It must have been at Benares that
-Æsop’s fable of the two pots was born, for there the
-earthen and brazen vessels might quite possibly
-float down the stream together. Pots are scoured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-on the steps, and at the Burning Ghat they pour the
-ashes of the dead into the river.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_209" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.6875em;">
- <img src="images/i_209.jpg" width="363" height="484" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">WE SEE SNAKES AT BENARES</div></div>
-
-<p>At the Burning Ghat they pile up logs of wood to
-form the pyre, and the white turbaned dark figures,
-with nothing on but waist cloths, are kept busy at
-their ghastly work. Some of the bodies are brought
-down with flowers and chanting: others lie there
-with no following or ceremony: some are swathed in
-red or white cloth like mummies, others as they were
-born are lifted on to the piles of logs, which being
-set alight, soon reduce all to the same condition.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-Some of the bodies are carefully dipped in the
-Ganges before being burned, and are often left at
-the water’s edge while the pyre is being prepared.
-Wood was placed over as well as under the bodies,
-and a torch was put to the mouth. Other bodies,
-again, are taken out in boats unburned and apparently
-dressed and seated in chairs, and suddenly in
-mid-stream are toppled over into the water. We
-saw an old man disposed of in this way. Our
-boatman pointed him out as a specially holy person,
-and we did not realise he was a corpse. The
-bodies of infants, swathed in white, are also treated
-in this way.</p>
-
-<p>The Maharajah’s secretary explained that the
-Ganges water had been analysed by European
-experts and pronounced to be the best water in the
-world, having a peculiar property of destroying the
-germs of disease. It was difficult, however, to see
-how even “the best water” could avoid getting fouled
-with such operations constantly going on; but of
-course there is a strong stream all the time, so that
-everything must eventually be carried down to the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>A continuous many-coloured stream of pilgrims,
-bearing huge bundles of bedding, were constantly
-moving along behind this busy life of the bathing
-ghats, ascending or descending the great flights
-of steps leading up through the various gates
-to the city. It seemed to be part of that universal
-exodus we had witnessed at every railway
-station in India. It is said that representatives
-from every village in the peninsula may be found
-at Benares.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-Then, as a no less striking background to these
-extraordinary human groups, rise the domes of
-temples and minarets of palaces, their golden vanes
-and finials glittering against the deep blue sky.
-Windows, balconies and terraces placed high up,
-with vast walls below them. These great walls,
-which give so much distinction and breadth to the
-river front of Benares, have a practical reason,
-inasmuch as it is a necessity thus to raise the
-temple and palace floors, owing to the sudden
-rising of the Ganges in the rainy season, when
-these walls are sometimes hidden in the waters.</p>
-
-<p>The musical accompaniments of the spectacle
-consist in the weird and wandering notes which
-issue from the temples, produced by a sort of hautboy,
-and the subdued thud of the tom-toms. I saw
-a dusky long-haired fakir stand on the steps at the
-Mahikarunika ghat and sound a long straight brass
-trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>After voyaging in the peacock boat the whole
-length of the ghats, we returned to our carriage-in-waiting
-at a convenient point from which to
-approach the Golden Temple. From the main
-street of the Bazaar we were conducted by the
-secretary down a very narrow passage crowded
-with worshippers, and then up a dark staircase to a
-terrace from which we could see the cluster of gilded
-copper domes. Afterwards in the sacred precincts
-we saw the “well of knowledge,” but did not drink
-of it, having too much foreknowledge of the condition
-of its water.</p>
-
-<p>Our next excursion was to pay a visit to the
-Maharajah at his palace. We were conducted by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-his secretary in the carriage as before, driving to
-the river side opposite the palace some six miles
-off. On the road we stopped to see the famous
-Monkey Temple—a Hindu Temple in an arcaded
-court of the usual type. This court was full of
-monkeys—a sandy-brown coloured sort with pink
-faces, probably Macaques—not so handsome as the
-wild silver grey ones we had seen at Ahmedabad.
-They accepted offerings, but not so greedily, as
-they were evidently well fed, and dried peas lay
-about untouched. They gambolled about the
-temple at their sweet will. These monkeys are
-sacred to Vishnu, and represent Hunuman the
-monkey god.</p>
-
-<p>There was a fine tank with steps to the water’s
-edge, close by the temple. Just before this we
-passed the Hindu College which Mrs Annie Besant
-has established for the higher education of native
-children of both sexes—but not a mixed school.
-This work has been liberally endowed by the
-Maharajah of Benares, who also granted the site.
-Mrs Besant is the principal, but owing to the illness
-of Colonel Alcott, she was not then there,
-being at Madras nursing the Colonel in what proved
-to be his last illness.</p>
-
-<p>Reaching the river side, a boat was in waiting to
-take us across to the palace, rowed by two Hindu
-boys—at least they started rowing, but soon we
-got into shallows, where they took to poling, and
-finally had to get out and push the boat along,
-until getting into deeper water again they rowed
-us to the palace steps.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite a high steep flight, no doubt existing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-for the same river reason as the high walls of
-Benares—to be out of the reach of the floods.
-There were numbers of natives ascending and
-descending or grouped on the steps.</p>
-
-<p>We climbed up, and entered the palace up more
-stairs, and were shown into a large reception salon,
-where much of the furniture was “under canvas,”
-but there was one handsome couch displayed,
-inlaid with ivory. Presently H.H. the Maharajah
-entered, accompanied by his two chief officers, who
-spoke English well, his painter in ordinary, and
-several attendants. Chairs were placed in the
-centre of the room, around a small marble table.
-The Maharajah seated himself, and we with the
-private secretary grouped ourselves about him.
-The Maharajah was dressed in a small-patterned
-long tunic of pink brocaded with gold, a small round
-cap on his head, close fitting white trousers and
-patent leather shoes. He seemed quite merry and
-pleased to see us. I showed him my book of
-sketches, which interested him, as he said he had
-never seen drawings of the kind before. His
-painter in ordinary, to whom I was introduced, was
-also interested, and asked some questions through
-the secretary, not himself speaking English. He had
-painted the full length portraits of the Maharajahs
-which hung aloft in this salon. The Prince presently
-rose and invited us to the terrace, to which we
-passed after him, through an arcade, an attendant
-holding a large silk umbrella over him. There was
-a very fine view from this terrace up and down the
-river. The city of Benares, with its domes and
-minarets, seen far down on the left, and the open<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-plain country opposite. The secretary said that
-when the Ganges rose the city looked as if it was
-floating on the surface of the water.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_214" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_214.jpg" width="399" height="443" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE MAHARAJAH’S RECEPTION, DECORATING THE VISITORS</div></div>
-
-<p>We then all returned to the salon (or Durbar Hall,
-as I ought to have called it) and took our leave,
-H.H. presenting us with a book of photographs of
-the ghats, with his own portrait, both of which he
-inscribed. Finally he placed necklaces of some
-kind of gold or gilt tissue around the necks of the
-ladies, and one of silver-tissue around mine, and
-concluded by putting scent on our handkerchiefs
-from a handsome silver bottle.</p>
-
-<p>Before we left the palace the Maharajah’s jewels<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">215</a></span>
-were shown to us—wonderful strings of rubies and
-emeralds almost as big as hen’s eggs. These were
-in rather worn and faded cases of velvet, and offered
-up on rusty old tea trays—a strange mixture of
-splendour and squalor.</p>
-
-<p>The secretary then took us by carriage to see a
-Hindu Temple, covered with sculpture, standing
-clear on a raised platform ascended by a flight of
-steps, and surrounded by the usual open court.
-We saw several fine elephants waiting at a gateway,
-and afterwards visited the Maharajah’s pleasant
-flower garden, prettily laid out with long centre
-tanks, and rose trellises, terraces, and pavilions.
-From here we soon reached the river side, and
-embarking in the boat again, returned in the same
-manner we had come, returning to our quarters in
-the dusk of the evening, the secretary leaving us at
-his dwelling at Benares.</p>
-
-<p>The Maharajah having placed a boat and a
-carriage at our disposal, we arranged to visit the
-ghats again the next day, especially as I was anxious
-to obtain a sketch or two of the wonderful scenes
-by the river. So driving to the steps again we
-embarked, taking Moonsawmy with us to interpret.
-I got the boatmen to stop the boat off the Manikaranika
-Ghat,<a id="FNanchor_B" href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">B</a> which is perhaps the most striking
-of all, with its red sandstone pinnacles, immense
-flights of steps and terraces. Here I worked till
-noon, when one had rather the sensation of everything
-curling up with the heat of the sun, including
-one’s own frame! The next morning we again returned
-to the river, using the Maharajah’s carriage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">216</a></span>
-and boat, which latter was not, however, the beautiful
-peacock barge of our first morning, but a very
-substantial sort of house-boat, with plenty of space
-on the upper deck or flat roof of the house, and
-solid chairs to sit on. This time I chose the Nepal
-Temple for my subject. This temple, with its
-pagoda-like roof and shining golden finial, had a
-Chinese aspect. The temple itself was of a deep
-rich Indian red, and had a terrace in front on the
-top of a high wall close to the river, on one side
-being the entrance to the palace with two minarets.
-A mass of dark green foliage partly shaded the
-Temple on the left hand and added to the charm
-and richness of the subject—the throng of figures
-on the steps, and the boats rocking on the clear
-green water, completing the picture at the river’s
-edge, alive with colour and movement. The procession
-of pilgrims in an endless line, and the whole
-human drama going on just as before, and as it has
-been every day for ages.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_B" href="#FNanchor_B" class="fnanchor">B</a> See <a href="#i_frontis">frontispiece</a>.</p></div>
-
-<p>The moon was now again bright at nights and it
-was much warmer. We heard the jackals again
-as at Udaipur.</p>
-
-<p>We met two London friends at the hotel,
-and made some pleasant acquaintances—a young
-American who had been travelling in China
-and Japan and Java and was going on to Europe;
-also three young Oxford men, connected with the
-Oxford Mission, I understood—one of them on his
-way to take up some official post in Japan.</p>
-
-<p>The roses at Clark’s Hotel were very profuse,
-a beautiful silver bowl of Benares work full of them
-each day decorated our table.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-It was extremely quiet except for the almost
-continual cry of a bird I could not name, but which
-at first we thought was a pea-fowl. The note,
-however, was not hoarse or grating but full and
-bell-like, though very monotonous, consisting of
-two notes. We heard this bird everywhere south
-after Benares.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">218</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">CALCUTTA—DARJEELING</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">With</span> parting compliments to the Maharajah,
-whom I ventured to present, and his
-officers, with photographs of some of my pictures,
-we left Benares for Calcutta on January 26th,
-departing by a mid-day train, belated as usual.
-This took us to Mogul Serai, where we changed
-into the Calcutta mail. At the station it was
-difficult to find a place for the soles of our feet,
-as the whole of the platform was occupied by
-native infantry, in khaki, who were camping down
-with their arms piled and their baggage around
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The Calcutta mail was preceded by the limited
-mail, consisting chiefly of post-office vans, but
-having room for a few passengers. One of our
-friends of the Oxford party who were going on by
-it very kindly tried to get us places also, but there
-was no room left. However, the other mail
-followed very quickly, in which we found plenty of
-room, our only fellow-traveller being an American.</p>
-
-<p>We had, before reaching Mogul Serai, obtained
-a farewell glimpse of Benares as we crossed the
-iron bridge over the Ganges, below the city, and
-saw the slender minarets of the Aurangzer Mosque,
-and the smoke of the Burning Ghat. The country<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-for some distance was richer and more fruitful than
-usual, and well clad with trees, among which were
-many fine cocoa palms, their smooth, slender stems
-having a steely blue effect against the deep green
-foliage of mangoes and acacias.</p>
-
-<p>The scenery grew tamer afterwards, and generally
-flat, with occasional mud-walled and thatch-roofed
-villages huddled together.</p>
-
-<p>After passing as bad a night as might be expected
-in the train, we got into Calcutta about six in the
-morning at the Howrah station.</p>
-
-<p>After some difficulty in getting a tickorgary—the
-Indian equivalent for a “four-wheeler”—we
-had rather a long drive to the Grand Hotel, crossing
-the river by a bridge just outside the station,
-where there was a bathing ghat, gaily populous at
-that hour, the bathing operations being followed by
-breakfast on the steps or in the pavilions on the
-terrace behind.</p>
-
-<p>The streets of Calcutta looked rather dingy and
-neglected. The hotel was vast but gloomy, and
-the prices high; but a bath and a rest after the
-long railway journey were very welcome, and we
-were glad to get our letters. We found the temperature
-much warmer, however, and more like
-Bombay.</p>
-
-<p>The Minto Fête—a sort of bazaar and military
-tournament combined—absorbed a great deal of
-attention among the residents. This occupied a
-large enclosure on the Esplanade, under canvas.
-The familiar posters used for the Military Tournament
-in London met the eye on all sides, with gay
-fluttering bunting strung across the streets as it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">220</a></span>
-appeared the Amir was expected here too, though
-his visit was to be considered “private.”</p>
-
-<div id="ip_220" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_220.jpg" width="392" height="470" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE SOOTHSAYER AT CALCUTTA—(OR PALMISTRY UNDER
-THE PALMS)</div></div>
-
-<p>One of our introductions here was to Miss
-Sorabji, a Parsee lady of much influence, and a
-most interesting personality, well known and
-beloved by a large circle of English friends. She
-had a charming house, in a garden of palms, in
-Carnac Street. We found her entertaining a party
-of fashionable ladies at afternoon tea, on a shady
-lawn in front of her house. In the midst of the
-group, squatting on the grass, was a soothsayer and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-palmist—a Hindu “wise man,” robed in white,
-but without any turban. He had some oblong-shaped
-pages out of an ancient book of palmistry,
-and some curious phrenological-looking diagrams
-lying on the grass in front of him, and these he
-appeared to be consulting from time to time, while
-with great deliberation he examined the hands of
-the ladies, who gazed at him quite anxiously, as if
-he were really an inspired diviner of their lives.
-This man was supposed to be gifted with very
-special powers, and seemed to be taken quite
-seriously, but as far as we could gather, he was
-only mentioning the usual range of probable or not
-impossible events which might happen in the
-course of any life, though, no doubt, more or less
-adapted to the circumstances and character of the
-lady before him, as far as he could guess it, and
-calculated to fit individual cases. He certainly
-looked wily and cunning enough for anything, as he
-moved his finger mysteriously over the charts, or
-pretended to count or reckon something while
-keeping the lady’s left hand open before him.
-A curious scene altogether, with the afternoon tea-table,
-and the ordinary chatter going on.</p>
-
-<p>There was an Industrial Exhibition open on
-some open ground near a large, yellow-washed,
-eighteenth century style of church. It combined
-a switchback railway, and some of the popular
-attractions of Earl’s Court, with an interesting show
-of hand-weaving in linens, silks, and carpets, with
-dyeing, printing, and other industries, the exhibits
-being those of societies or firms. In some cases
-the work of various schools of Art were shown, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-that of the Maharajah’s, at Jaipur, chiefly metal
-work and enamelling. Among the brass work
-were to be seen the spherical brass rolling lamps,
-pierced with an all-over intricate floral design, that
-left fairly evenly distributed apertures through
-which the rays of light would strike when the lamp
-was lighted within. This, by an ingenious piece of
-mechanism, always maintained its level position,
-though the sphere might be rolled along the ground
-like a ball. It could be opened by hinges in two
-equal hemispherical halves. These lamps are used
-at festivals in the temples, and have a beautiful
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>Calcutta is not impressive architecturally, certainly.
-The modern buildings are of the usual
-commercial type as a rule. Government House
-has a certain stateliness with its white columned
-porticoes among the palms and greenery of other
-trees; and Carnac Street is a long wide street of
-large detached residences standing in ample
-gardens. The Esplanade is a wide open plain in
-the midst of the town, with some groups of trees
-upon it, but rather brown and desolate, the turf
-being burned by the sun. The native quarters are
-very squalid. The bazaars and shops were often
-tumble-down temporary-looking sheds and structures
-of bamboo sticks and straw, old tins being often
-seen thrown on to weight the rotten matting or
-thatch which formed the roofs, which were often,
-too, patched with corrugated iron. Occasionally
-there was a house-front which had seen better
-days—a former villa or mansion, with a columned
-portico, but now become a squalid tenement house.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-These were at least one’s impressions on a very
-short visit; but it was so oppressive that we were
-anxious to get away to Darjeeling, and so took our
-departure on January 28th by an afternoon train
-from the Iscaldah station. For about an hour or
-so after leaving Calcutta, the train runs through
-beautiful groves of palms and mangoes, plantains
-and bamboos, intersected by tanks of water,
-vegetable gardens, and thatched villages among
-the trees. Later we crossed the great open plains
-of Bengal, cultivated and fertile under irrigation,
-with but few trees, stretching as far as the eye could
-see under the full moon.</p>
-
-<p>At Sara we changed, having to leave the train
-to cross the river Ganges. The scene was a
-strange one. The waiting steamer lying ready,
-had to be approached over the wide shallows by
-two long narrow gangways, constructed out of a
-few planks, suspended from bamboo sticks stuck
-upright in the shallow water, with lights at intervals.
-A troop of European and American travellers
-wending their way from the train along one of the
-gangways to the white steamer, and a procession
-of natives with their bundles crowding along the
-other to the same vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived on board we found a table spread ready
-on the quarter-deck and we had an excellent dinner—very
-superior to those provided by most of the
-hotels. After this meal was over the steamer
-started on its voyage across the wide river, having
-a strong electric search-light at the bows which
-threw a great shaft of white light to the opposite
-shore, along which it seemed to travel as if finding its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-way. Moths and flying insects fluttering into the
-beam of light flashed like sparks or fire-flies.</p>
-
-<p>We found another train waiting for us at a
-station on the other bank. Here we got into
-sleeping compartments. I had an American bishop
-and his friend, a young man, as travelling companions.
-About 6 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span> the next morning we
-reached the foot of the hills, where another change
-was necessary and where breakfast was to be had
-at the station, after which we packed ourselves and
-our belongings into the tiny carriages of the little
-narrow gauge, toy-like train which makes the
-ascent of 7000 feet to Darjeeling.</p>
-
-<p>Starting about level, the ascent was quite gradual
-at first, the line winding through bamboo groves
-and tea plantations, and as it grows steeper the
-track twists up in <b class="sans smaller">S</b> curves and loops, threading,
-like a steel snake, through umbrageous woodlands,
-sometimes following the road, sometimes crossing
-it. Among the many beautiful trees there was
-one of frequent occurrence which was new to us.
-It had something the manner of growth of an ash,
-but having a silvery bark like a birch, and clusters
-of large scarlet buds and flowers, without leaves.
-Some called it the “Forest Flame.” Many of the
-trees were hung with climbing plants, forming
-lovely tangles and festoons, and through the openings
-in the woods, here and there, we had glimpses of
-the plains veiled in the morning haze. Higher and
-higher the little train carried us, curving so sharply,
-sometimes, that one could see the little puffing
-engine in front, which had almost the effect, when
-rounding the sudden curves and loops, of some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-grotesque creature trying to catch its own tail, like
-a playful kitten or puppy!</p>
-
-<div id="ip_225" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_225.jpg" width="389" height="480" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE DARJEELING TOY-RAILWAY TRYING TO CATCH ITS OWN TAIL!</div></div>
-
-<p>At intervals the various attitudes attained were
-painted on tablets at the side of the rail, or at the
-little stations. At Siliguri a halt was made for
-tiffin. Here the Mongolian and Bhutian peasants
-came up to the railway carriages and offered us interesting
-things in the way of silver rings, and silver
-ornaments set with turquoise, and large turquoise
-earrings of a fine bold design. The women all
-wore relic or charm-boxes with lids worked in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">226</a></span>
-delicate filigree and set with turquoise, and these
-were suspended by bead necklaces. Silver
-chatelaines and other charming ornaments were
-shown us, the women carrying the stock-in-trade
-of jewellery upon their persons. The high cheekbones
-and narrow eyes, black hair and long pig-tails
-of the Mongolian were very marked, the men
-having quite a Chinese look, with their soft felt,
-turned-up inverted cup-and-saucer-shaped hats and
-pig-tails. The women had broad, smiling faces, the
-effect of which was heightened by a kind of bright
-brown varnish which made their faces look as
-if they had been French polished—perhaps to suit
-somebody’s furniture?—their hair was intensely
-black, and they wore two long plaits or pig-tails.</p>
-
-<p>The huts of the villages were of wood, and the
-original native roofing was of thin wooden shingles,
-which harmonised perfectly with the scenery; but
-unfortunately corrugated iron was being extensively
-substituted for roofing purposes, and the old thatch
-or wooden shingles were frequently patched with it.
-At Darjeeling it was almost universal, and in
-consequence the buildings might be described as
-tin and temporary. Here and there was a fantastic,
-but generally not tasteful, touch of Germany, or the
-Swiss border, in the modern villa. Little toy-like
-dwellings are scattered along the mountain-sides in
-an accidental sort of way, as if they had been upset
-out of a box, and had stuck here and there among
-the trees in their fall.</p>
-
-<p>English suburban names catch the eye—at
-Darjeeling—such as “Daisy Bank” and “Rose
-Cottage.” The Europeans come out from Calcutta<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-in the hot season to dwell here. The huts of the
-native people look very frail, almost like card-houses,
-leaning up against each other on the edges
-of cliffs, their roofs of ragged matting, straw thatch,
-or thin wooden shingles, or the corrugated iron
-aforesaid. Tall, tapering bamboo canes are frequently
-stuck up outside, bearing vertical strips
-of white cotton or linen cloth, like standards, with
-light tags of the same fluttering at intervals from
-their outer edges. These are said to represent
-prayers, and are supposed to ward off evil influences.</p>
-
-<p>We put up at “Woodlands” hotel, which has
-a pretty walk up from the station, lined with fine
-old trees of the pine kind, very thick and dark, and
-having a slender cone-like form, reminding one of
-cypresses. These abound all down the mountain-sides,
-but are now in danger of being thinned too
-freely. The mountain-sides are intersected with
-paths, and terraced bridle roads, along which are
-perched the dwellings, above or below the road.
-As one rides up one can look almost perpendicularly
-down upon the tin roofs and into the little gardens,
-as these paths almost double back on themselves
-at different heights, as they wind up the hills.</p>
-
-<p>The manager and proprietor of “Woodlands”
-was an Italian by birth, but he spoke English like
-a native. He was one of an expedition which
-attempted to climb the Kinchin Junga (18,000 feet),
-a great snow peak of the Himalayas, which is
-conspicuous from Darjeeling when the clouds disclose
-the view of the wonderful snow-clad range.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_228" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_228.jpg" width="371" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">CHARACTERS IN A TIBETAN MASQUE, DARJEELING</div></div>
-
-<p>He occasionally entertained his guests by a
-lecture in the evenings, illustrated by photographic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-slides taken on the expedition (in 1905) in which,
-however, four of the party lost their lives by losing
-their footing on a snow precipice. Climbing in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-the Himalayas seems to be handicapped by the
-necessity of taking coolies to carry provisions and
-camp furniture, as the explorer leaves the human
-world entirely behind him in entering these trackless
-snow-bound solitudes.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, just before daylight had quite
-faded, we witnessed a very curious and remarkable
-performance in the courtyard of the hotel, lighted
-by a few lanterns, which, however, rather increased
-the mystery of the half-light than really added to
-the illumination of the scene. It was a Tibetan
-dance or masque. To the sound of tom-toms,
-which marked the time, a dancer in loose white
-garments appeared—a man; he wore a white tunic
-with a full skirt, and held a sort of white veil up
-over his head as he moved, and he appeared to
-have on Mongolian leggings and boots. He danced
-like a dervish, whirling rapidly round and round,
-his skirts forming a sort of spiral wheel of drapery
-about him as he moved.</p>
-
-<p>This dancer having finished his <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">pas de seul</i>, as a
-kind of prelude, retired, and was immediately
-succeeded by another—a fantastic-looking figure
-also in white, with the Tibetan conical turban, the
-details of whose costume I could not quite make
-out, owing to the fitful light, but he appeared in the
-characteristic loose tunic and leggings and the
-Chinese-like shoes. His style of dancing was quite
-different to the dervish, and might be described as
-a combination of the jig and the reel. While he
-was dancing there entered two very grotesque
-Chinese-looking lions, queer monsters, made up of
-two people who furnished the four legs—probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-a man for the fore-quarters and a boy for the hindmost.
-Their heads or masks seemed to be each
-formed of half a tortoise shell, ingeniously enough
-the openings at the side of the shell being utilised
-as the sockets of large fierce staring eyes, a large
-open red mouth, and gleaming rows of pointed
-white teeth, completing a terrific countenance.
-Yellow drapery concealed all but the feet, which
-were clad in some kind of tawny soft leather.
-These lions were extremely lively, and frisked
-about, and lashed their tails in a most spirited way,
-keeping time with the tom-toms through all their
-wild movements; as, together with the second
-dancer, who was, it appeared, the lion-tamer, they
-went through a very active and energetic dance.
-This over, each lion lay down, one on one side of
-the ground (there being no stage), and one on the
-other, facing the audience as they couched.</p>
-
-<p>Then entered a sort of knight, or warrior, on a
-red hobby-horse, and the dance was continued by
-his chasing the lion-tamer round and round, the
-latter always eluding his pursuer, and always
-emphatically repeating by the action of his arms
-the beat of the tom-toms in a defiant sort of
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Six more hobby-horsed riders in different
-costumes and colours next came in, one after the
-other, and joined in the pursuit of the lion-tamer.
-Presently, however, they changed the figure, the
-red hobby-horse remaining stationary, while the
-other six formed a sort of quadrille, advancing
-and retiring, and crossing over, as in the opening
-figure of “the Lancers.” I forget exactly how the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-lion-tamer employed himself while this proceeded,
-but I think he must have temporarily subsided,
-while the hobby-horses kept the attention of the
-audience. Finally they all joined hands and
-danced in a ring, raising a curious kind of chant
-the while, after which the hobby-horses all marched
-out in single file, still chanting.</p>
-
-<p>Then a peacock (with a skirt) came in, moving
-in a slow, measured and stately fashion, dancing
-and bowing in a quaint manner, flapping its wings
-occasionally; next it approached one of the
-couchant lions, who all this while had remained
-passive, and apparently sleeping, and gave it a
-sudden and decisive peck, the action being
-instantly emphasised by the tom-toms. After more
-genuflexions the peacock finished his dance by
-giving a similar peck to the other lion, each lion
-at the touch starting violently and lashing their
-tails. Then exit the peacock.</p>
-
-<p>Next appeared, crawling in with a sort of wobble,
-a turtle, also wearing a skirt which concealed its
-feet. At its entry the lion-tamer exhibited all the
-symptoms of comic fear, trying to hide himself from
-the turtle, and finally as it approached nearer, he
-threw himself on the ground and wriggled and
-writhed about in an access of ridiculous terror.
-Presently, however, whatever had animated the
-interior of the turtle it vanished unperceived, and
-the shell lay motionless on the ground. The
-lion-tamer approaching it apprehensively, but
-eventually taking up the shell, he danced up to the
-lions, who sprang to their feet, and then all these
-whirled about in a wild tempestuous dance to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">232</a></span>
-double quick time, until the lions, apparently
-exhausted, both lay down again in the same order
-as before. Again the troops of hobby-horses
-entered, and after another spin with the lion-tamer,
-all marched out, chanting, the beat of the tom-toms
-gradually growing fainter till they ceased as the
-company disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>We had not yet been favoured with a glimpse
-of the great snow peaks. Kinchin Junga seemed
-extremely shy, and remained wrapped in impenetrable
-folds of cloud which rolled over the edges
-of the narrow hills, or steamed up from the deep
-valleys, enacting the constant-inconstant drama
-of cloud and mountain, always a most fascinating
-spectacle. On January 30th, however, in the
-morning, between seven and eight, we were at
-last rewarded by a beautiful glimpse of the snow
-peaks of the Himalayas, dominated by that of
-Kinchin Junga, clear in the golden light of early
-morning, piercing the turquoise sky, like the vision of
-some celestial city floating on a sea of roseate cloud.
-The unusual height of the peaks in the sky surprised
-the eye, accustomed to see clouds where now were
-these vast mountains. The delicate modelling
-of the snow summits clear and sharp in the
-sunlight had the effect of making them look much
-nearer than the intervening valleys and dark pine
-covered slopes lost in mist and deep shadow, and it
-was strange to think that one gazed at these snow
-peaks across a distance of about 45 miles.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_232" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_232.jpg" width="600" height="418" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">KINCHIN JUNGA FROM DARJEELING</div></div>
-
-<p>Human dwellings and structures looked flimsy
-and trifling, no more than the work of ants
-or spiders, comparatively speaking, but indeed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-Darjeeling has no architecture to boast of. For a
-region subject to earthquakes great allowances must
-necessarily be made, but the corrugated iron style
-certainly failed to assert the dignity of man in
-such a landscape, and the native hut did not
-look more permanent or substantial than a bird’s
-nest.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_233" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.4375em;">
- <img src="images/i_233.jpg" width="391" height="566" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE SHY PEAK OF KINCHIN JUNGA</div></div>
-
-<p>The little town has a central square where there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-is a native market. Little low bazaars line the
-sides, and the streets, but in the centre the vendors
-spread out their stock-in-trade on the bare ground.
-There may be seen turquoises in great quantity,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-and unset stones of many kinds, and an infinitude
-of silver rings and ornaments. The best, however,
-were always offered by the country people and the
-coolies, and the Bhutian women, who always
-seemed able to produce any number, and we were
-followed by quite a little crowd holding out rings
-and silver ornaments to tempt us, when we went
-through the market. My wife discovered a pair
-of green pigeons in a characteristic Indian domed-cage
-made of canes, hanging outside one of the
-native huts, and sent our bearer to negotiate the
-purchase, and for six rupees they changed hands.
-The birds travelled with us to Ceylon, and on the
-steamer homewards till we met the cold weather
-in the Mediterranean, when the hen bird died, the
-cock surviving until we reached Italy. They had
-to be fed upon a sort of meal made from a kind of
-powdered dried peas, not always easily obtainable.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_234" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_234.jpg" width="372" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A RIDE AT DARJEELING: “UP HILL SPARE ME”</div></div>
-
-<p>There were many interesting walks and rides
-at Darjeeling. A favourite excursion was to Tiger
-Hill, a distance of six miles, from where Mount
-Everest, the highest mountain of the world, can be
-seen—in fine clear weather, and sunrise is the
-usual time for it. The modes of progression are
-by jin-rickshaws or ponies. There are excellent
-ponies to be had at Woodlands, and we enjoyed the
-steepest ride we had ever experienced.</p>
-
-<p>The pig-tailed Mongolian coolies are always on
-hand in the courtyard of the hotel, waiting for custom
-in either mode of transport. Palanquins are also used.</p>
-
-<p>We met here some English friends and fellow-travellers.
-It was pleasant to fall in with my old
-Bostonian friend, Mr Louis Prang, who, with Mrs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-Prang, were travelling with a party of some twelve
-Bostonians.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_236" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 19.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_236.jpg" width="319" height="507" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A HAILSTONE CHORUS—DEPARTURE FROM DARJEELING</div></div>
-
-<p>The alarming accounts of the prevalence of smallpox
-at Bhutia deterred us from going to see the
-Buddhist temple at Bhutia Busti, though the
-immediate cause was a thunder-storm, which came
-on just as the rickshaws had been ordered, and
-stopped our excursion; and being advised to abandon
-the project for the reason above given we made
-no second attempt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-Before leaving Darjeeling we were favoured by
-another clear vision of the snow peaks and Kinchin
-Junga in all his glory, before breakfast, and I was
-glad to have been able to secure two drawings as
-a record of that wonderful view. We departed on
-the first of February in a hail-storm, walking down
-to the station in a pelting shower of enormous
-stones, which rattled around us with a thunder and
-lightning accompaniment. The hail-stones are
-so large sometimes in that district, and the storms
-so violent, that much damage is done. At Woodlands
-all the glass windows here on one occasion
-were broken, we heard; and also that the stones
-were known to have been occasionally large
-enough to kill deer!</p>
-
-<p>We were soon on our way, joggling down to the
-plains again in the squeezy little train, the hail
-turning to rain lower down, and we were sometimes
-wrapped in cloud. As we got still lower, however,
-the sky towards the north-west began to clear, and
-there was a striking effect as of a great curtain
-being lifted up, showing the bright sky beyond and
-the sun shining on the plains. Soon we passed
-into his light again, and enjoyed clear weather to
-his setting.</p>
-
-<p>Reversing in the course of our journey the
-changes, we proceeded to Sara again, recrossing
-the Ganges, the search-light producing striking
-effects as it wandered over the shore and the vessels,
-picking out its twin white steamer with startling
-distinctness. We had the morning light over the
-fruitful plains of Bengal, in which the scarlet flowering
-trees or “forest flame” before spoken of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238">238</a></span>
-looked more wonderful than ever. The thatched
-huts of the native villages were interesting in shape,
-and differed from any other local variety we had
-seen. They were built of bamboo, with curving
-roof ridges. Groups of these huts were of frequent
-occurrence; they stood on raised platforms, interspersed
-with plantains, or date or cocoa palms, the
-window openings on the inward side only, and
-under the deep overhanging eaves.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239">239</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">MADRAS AND THE SOUTH</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap av"><span class="smcap1">Availing</span> ourselves of the kind hospitality of
-our friend in Carnac Street, we reposed
-during the day intending to leave Calcutta again
-by the night train (Madras Mail) for Madras, our
-next destination. This was a considerable journey
-as a glance at the map will show; in fact it was our
-longest in India, occupying two nights and two
-days.</p>
-
-<p>After some anxious moments in Carnac Street,
-through our tickorgary not turning up for us at
-the time ordered, or through some muddling on the
-part of our bearer, we eventually got conveyed to
-Howrah Station. Luckily the train did not start
-so soon as stated—it never does in India—and we
-were saved.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_240" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.625em;">
- <img src="images/i_240.jpg" width="394" height="550" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">CALCUTTA TO MADRAS—SECTION OF SLEEPER—OR SOMETHING
-LIKE IT</div></div>
-
-<p>The train proved, however, to be very crowded,
-and we could only secure a berth each in separate
-compartments, though there was a small sliding
-door between the ladies’ and the gentlemen’s sleeping
-compartment, through which communication could
-be made. Four ladies, a baby, and a parrot, and
-the green pigeons made up the complement in the
-ladies’ part. I had two travelling companions only,
-a river-steamer captain or engineer on sick leave,
-going south with his family, and an English officer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240">240</a></span>
-of the Army Medical Service going to some hill
-station beyond Madras. The former kept himself
-going with whiskey and soda, of which he freely
-invited his fellow travellers to partake. The
-latter proved to be Capt. J. B. Dalzell Hunter of
-the 64th pioneers. He was studying Persian, and
-introduced me to a most interesting book, the
-“IQD-I-GUL,” or “The Rose Necklace,” being<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-selections from the Gulistan and auwār-i-suhaite
-translated into literal English with notes by Adālat
-Khan. This was full of delightful stories, and
-rich with oriental imagery and wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Calcutta in the darkness of night, of
-course nothing could be seen of the country till
-next morning when we were approaching Cuttack,
-when we took “Chota Hazri”—or early light
-breakfast. A little south of this hills appeared
-inland reminding one in character and apparent
-height of our lake country. We passed Poori,
-the junction for Juggernath, where crowds of
-pilgrims go, especially at the time of the great
-festival of Krishna in March, when the image of
-the god is borne through the town on the famous
-car, out to a temple in the country. The old
-story we were told in childhood of the dreadful
-heathen custom of the natives on such occasions
-throwing themselves under the wheels of the car
-of Juggernath has been discredited. Krishna,
-being a god of love and life, not a destroyer,
-would not be pleased with human sacrifices, and
-they would be quite inappropriate. It might be
-possible, however, that the car, drawn as it is by
-men with great cables, through the press of pilgrims,
-might accidentally crush some one fallen in the
-crowd, and European missionaries may have misunderstood
-what had really happened, and had
-misrepresented and exaggerated it.</p>
-
-<p>There were many new and different types of
-natives at the stations. We were now on the
-Bengal-Nagpur Railway, and the native crowds,
-and groups entering or leaving the train all down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242">242</a></span>
-the line, were most interesting in character and
-colour. Pilgrims from Juggernaut bearing small
-canes back with them as signs of their pilgrimage,
-Brahmans with red marks like seals on their foreheads,
-and others with the triple pronged fork-like
-mark of Siva in white and red. The men
-wore their hair long like women, sometimes done
-up in ample knots at the back of the head, and
-sometimes hanging down the back. All wore a
-sort of tight cotton skirt or piece of drapery
-chequered or patterned in colour wrapped round
-the loins, and depending from the waist to the
-feet; a white loose jacket frequently surmounted
-this, so that judging only from the back view,
-the stranger with European prepossessions as to
-dress distinctions between the sexes, might have
-some difficulty in saying which was which, or who
-was who, especially as the native women frequently
-wore similar skirts, white bodices, and their hair
-in knots. It was chiefly the beards that betrayed
-the gentlemen; otherwise the equality of the
-sexes was fairly well established, as to outward
-appearance at least, in the way that might astonish
-some of our Western reformers. It is true some
-of the men, like the ancient Egyptians, wore nothing
-above the skirt, except perhaps a white scarf on
-the shoulders, and the field-workers and coolies
-all down the Coromandel coast wore nothing but
-white turbans and waist cloths.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_243" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.5625em;">
- <img src="images/i_243.jpg" width="377" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">LADIES OR GENTLEMEN? (FASHIONS IN SOUTHERN INDIA)</div></div>
-
-<p>We passed the Silver Lake, really an inlet of the
-sea nearly surrounded by hills, the train startling
-large flocks of brown geese from the margin as it
-passed. Our old friends the white cranes we saw<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243">243</a></span>
-again lower down the line among the marshy pools.
-Paddy fields in various stages, often under water,
-irrigation wells drawn by oxen, as well as another
-pattern—like the Hungarian or Egyptian, a walking
-beam weighted at one end, the other having a rope
-attached to the bucket. The Southern Indian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244">244</a></span>
-ones are, however, worked by the natives, generally
-two, working up and down from the centre, from
-which the beam swings, making it dip and rise
-again with bucket, the men steadying themselves
-by upright bamboos fixed each side, sometimes
-chanting a song to mark the time and enable them
-to move together.</p>
-
-<p>Groves of palms were passed and pyramidal
-hills, bringing the same suggestion of Egypt
-we had had before, on the way to Chitorgarh.
-There was no doubt about getting further south as
-the temperature was much higher, the thermometer
-registering 75° to 80° and this was February 4,
-whereas only two days before we had been shivering
-over a fire at Darjeeling! In the burning sun we
-could see the dark figures in white turbans and
-waist cloths, coolies on the railway line, and
-ploughmen in the fields toiling in the heat. We
-stopped for breakfast at Berhampore. In the
-district from here to Vizianagram there was formerly
-a flourishing silk weaving industry among the
-natives. “All gone now,” said a bright-looking
-European official in white drill and topi who
-entered our compartment. From what he told us
-further, it seems that this industry declined for
-very obvious causes—because the raw silk, the
-very material upon which it subsisted, was exported
-and consequently the occupation of the native hand-loom
-weavers was gone.</p>
-
-<p>At Waltair, one passenger left, but our compartment
-was kept full as another immediately
-succeeded him and all four berths were occupied
-on the second night. One got more or less<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245">245</a></span>
-broken sleep, but perhaps more than might be
-expected.</p>
-
-<p>At Bapatia next morning there was chota hazri,
-or early tea, ready, and it was very welcome. At
-Bitragunta there was a halt for breakfast. As we
-approached Madras, late in the afternoon, we came
-by lovely groves of palms, quite dark thick forests
-of them, with pools of water among them in which
-water lilies bloomed. Green parroquets decorated
-the telegraph wires, sitting in rows much as the
-swallows do in England in the autumn. The
-telegraph wires all over India are however a
-favourite resting perch with a variety of birds,
-and quick an observer may get a good notion of
-the variety of species in Indian Ornithology by
-noticing the many kinds of birds which may be
-seen in such positions, clearly silhouetted against
-the sky.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at the Beach Station, Madras, about
-five o’clock on February 4, relieved to have reached
-the end of our long journey. Hotel touts here
-may be described as active and strong on the wing.
-We eventually squeezed ourselves into a tickagary
-with our light baggage, and in spite of the presence
-of Moonsawmy—or perhaps in colusion with him—an
-officious native guide mounted the box and
-offered us information as to the public buildings
-we passed on the way to the hotel. The Prince
-of Wales’s was full, but the proprietor advised us
-of another not far off, known as the Castle, which
-had formerly been the pavilion or palace of a native
-prince, and was a large two-storied yellow washed
-building with colonnades on the ground floor, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246">246</a></span>
-extensive terraces on to which the rooms opened
-out, on the first floor. These terraces were protected
-by a parapet which took the form of low
-battlements, whence possibly the hotel derived its
-name. There was a pleasant garden shaded by
-trees around the building, walled in from the road,
-and having entrance gates. Here we found
-agreeable rooms and plenty of space, without
-oppressive luxury or comfort, and as cool as might
-be expected, if it is ever cool anywhere in Madras?
-The hotel was under English management, and
-photographs of familiar places at Torquay and on
-the Cornish coast hung in our salon. Mosquito
-curtains told their usual tale, being generally a
-necessity in India, but are more particularly so at
-Madras.</p>
-
-<p>On the drive from the station we passed Fort
-St George which dates from 1680, and is the only
-building of any historic interest. There were big
-Law Courts in a pretentious Italian Gothic style
-after the manner of modern Bombay architecture.
-The British traders and their stores and posters
-were in evidence, and “summer sales” going strong
-at the drapers, attracting smartly dressed English
-ladies in their motors and dog-carts. The streets
-were broad, and there was plenty of space everywhere.
-The hotels and bungalows were surrounded
-by large gardens, and abundant trees—palms being
-very plentiful.</p>
-
-<p>It was pleasant to hear the clear notes of birds
-in the early morning, and of course we had the
-usual kite and crow chorus. In the evening there
-was a children’s party going on at a pavilion in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-garden, and popular European waltz tunes came
-from a piano.</p>
-
-<p>The temperature in our rooms ranged from 75° to
-80° and we felt anything but energetic. We had,
-moreover, in the afternoon an interesting drive out
-to the Adyar Library, the headquarters of the
-Theosophical Society built by Colonel Alcott who
-was now lying ill there. Having had a telegram
-from Mrs Annie Besant in the morning, a visit was
-arranged. She could not leave the Colonel, as he
-was then in a dying state. Our road lay between
-beautiful groves of palms of various kinds, mostly
-cocoa palms, and native villages, the huts of one
-story, long and low, and roofed with ridge tiles of
-a delightful bronze colour, the tiles, probably sun-baked,
-being doubled and trebled over and under
-alternately. The roads were covered with a fine
-dust of a rich reddish-brown tint, almost coffee
-colour, and this tint varied with the full red and
-bright white of the dresses of the natives, and their
-dark skins, and relieved by the clear light green of
-the paddy fields, and the gold and green of the
-palms, in the warm evening sunlight, made a fine
-harmony.</p>
-
-<p>We passed a Hindu temple and a tank, and
-crossed a bridge over the broad river (Adyar) and
-on the other side presently drove under an ancient
-fragment of a stone carved gateway, and so through
-the wooded grounds to the Adyar Library, a new
-building of red brick and red sandstone of semi-Hindu
-type.</p>
-
-<p>A lady clad in white conducted me to a large
-upper chamber very lofty and long in proportion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248">248</a></span>
-to its width, furnished more or less like a European
-drawing-room, with chairs and couches, but high on
-the wall at intervals were various religious symbols,
-in white plaster relief, among which I noticed the
-Gammadion and the Serpent and the Tree. There
-was a pretty view over the river from the windows,
-on the side.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Mrs Besant entered. She was robed
-in white. It was the sari dress of the native women
-in some fine soft material, with embroidered borders
-also white. Her hair too had whitened since I
-knew her in London many years before. We
-spoke of the old days—of Cunninghame Graham,
-G. Bernard Shaw, and Sidney Webb. Mrs Besant,
-once an active and ardent socialist, seemed to have
-quite removed herself into another world, strikingly
-different from the one of strife and protest in which
-she with her wonderful eloquence had been a potent
-influence, and was now devoting her life to inculcating
-the principles of Theosophy and educational
-work among the young Hindus. Her idea was to
-gather the best elements out of all religions, and to
-unite them in one comprehensive creed, the keynote
-of which, as I understood, is universal brotherhood.
-In her schools she desired to cultivate the
-higher side of the native Hindu religion, refining
-and spiritualising, though by no means Europeanizing,
-but preserving all native characteristics in
-dress and courteous manners, and as far as possible
-preventing any Western contamination.</p>
-
-<p>In the great hall on the ground floor the first
-thing that catches the visitor’s eye is the text
-inscribed aloft on the entablature in large carved<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-characters—“There is no religion higher than
-truth.”</p>
-
-<p>On the walls of this hall, also, are carved in stone
-another series of symbols, treated as a series of
-panels in relief, and among these it was interesting
-to find Mr Holman Hunt’s well-known picture
-“The Light of the World,” reproduced in relief by
-a native sculptor. In a recess in the opposite
-wall was a life-size seated portrait of Madame
-Blavatsky in marble. It was intended to place a
-statue of Colonel Alcott standing beside her, Mr
-Besant told me. His loss will be a severe one
-for the Society.</p>
-
-<p>We drove back by way of the Triplicane or
-Mohammedan quarter—the native bazaar, a brilliant
-scene of colour and movement. On the way we
-passed several “Toddy Tappers,” as they are called,
-at work on the palm and stems. These are natives
-who extract a sort of spirit from the palm, and who,
-clad only in white turbans and waist-cloths, climb
-the tall, smooth columnar stems of the cocoa palm,
-by a curious method—a sort of loop of cane which
-encircles the upper part of the body, and hooks
-round the tree stem. This they shift in jerks as
-they climb, using their legs and feet in the usual way
-as a grip on the stem. We noticed the small, gourd-like
-bottles attached to some of the trees, which are
-placed so as to catch the juice from incisions made
-in the bark. The spirit made from this juice is
-sold in the bazaars.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_250" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_250.jpg" width="383" height="536" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">MADRAS—A JIN-RICKSHAW MADE FOR TWO</div></div>
-
-<p>The jin-rickshaw is much in use in Madras as a
-means of locomotion, and some of them will even
-carry two people at once, though this seems heavy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250">250</a></span>
-for one boy. The native boys who draw them
-are, however, active enough and but little
-encumbered with clothes, and are always eager
-for custom. Mount Road is the main thoroughfare
-in the European quarter, and here all the principal
-shops and stores are situated. These as buildings
-were mostly pretentious and tasteless. St George’s
-cathedral was a semi-classic church with a pointed
-spire. The Post Office had red-tiled gabled spires<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251">251</a></span>
-of a more or less Swiss type, with iron crestings,
-and arcaded balconies on each story. One sees
-relics of eighteenth century semi-classic taste in
-some of the older houses with plastered walls yellow
-and white-washed. The vast gardens which broke
-the continuity of the buildings, and often isolated
-them, and the pleasant avenue-like character of the
-main roads, always lined with shady trees, made
-up for many architectural short-comings, and again
-suggested spacious ideas for a garden city.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of Mount Road was the Munro
-statue where other roads diverged—a bronze statue
-by Chantry of a gentleman in a cloak pointing—probably
-to indicate his line of policy, though,
-more literally, he might be taken to be showing
-the stranger what a long way he was from
-Madras. The electric trams are no doubt useful
-as the distances are enormous and dusty, walking
-being impossible for Europeans, as they would
-soon be covered with a powdering of fine red
-dust.</p>
-
-<p>We paid a visit one evening to the Botanic
-Gardens where we saw the Victoria Regia (which
-is usually associated with the inside of a hothouse
-at Kew) growing in the open on a lake.
-There were beautiful palms here and many
-varieties of trees. One we noted was covered
-with white blossoms which looked and smelled like
-orange or lemon flowers, and had green fruit of
-an egg shape, hanging from its branches.</p>
-
-<p>Madras we found too oppressive and inervating
-to stay long, and so on February 8th we departed
-for Tanjore, rising at 4.30 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span> to catch an early<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252">252</a></span>
-train, and were only able to snatch a hasty hazri,
-and get into a belated carriage and drive through
-the gloom of the early morning—or rather by the
-dim light of the waning moon to the station for the
-5.45 train South.</p>
-
-<p>Our compartment was shared at different stages
-of the journey by British officers. A Babu with a
-quantity of baggage, and three German Mission
-people—a gentleman and two ladies with still more
-baggage, who filled it pretty well up to Tanjore.</p>
-
-<p>The country seemed very productive, and on each
-side of the line most of the way were large crops
-of paddy, much of it under water. In many places,
-too, the natives were ploughing <em>in</em> the water.
-The crops in some of the fields (or rather pastures
-separated by low banks of earth) were a brilliant
-light green, in others the grain was ripe, and was
-being reaped with hooks by the natives, while
-further on they would be threshing and stacking
-the straw. The method of threshing out the grain
-was primitive. A man would hold a loose sheaf in
-his hand and beat it hard, several times in succession,
-on the ground; this shook out the grain, and
-then he would cast the straw that remained to the
-men who were stacking it near by. They made
-low wide stacks straight on to the bare earth. The
-women gathered up the paddy as it was reaped.</p>
-
-<p>We passed more fine groves of cocoa palms,
-distant hills were visible inland here and there, and
-there were generally large sheets of water each
-side of the line, but the rivers which we frequently
-crossed were almost dry.</p>
-
-<p>The crowds of natives at all the stations were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253">253</a></span>
-again very interesting. The men generally wearing
-their hair long and done up in knots. In fact
-the men had finer and more luxuriant heads of hair
-than the women, whose hair was usually short and
-fuzzy. Sometimes the men had their foreheads
-and temples shaved, and let their hair grow freely
-at the back. Caste marks were painted very
-boldly and distinctly on the dark foreheads. The
-sacred mark of Siva occurring most frequently—a
-red vertical stroke in the centre between two
-white lines radiating from the nose.</p>
-
-<p>The men also wore the coloured skirt tightly
-wrapped about their middle and falling to their
-feet, the upper parts of their bodies being left bare,
-except for a loose white scarf, like a towel, thrown
-over their shoulders. The coolies and agriculturists
-wore nothing but turbans and waist-cloths. The
-women invariably wore silver nose rings, earings
-and anklets, and the Sari dress. Mahomedans
-seemed to be very scarce in these parts. As to
-colour, reds and whites prevailed in the dresses.
-Sometimes the vivid crude (magenta) aniline pink
-which has become unfortunately too common in
-India was to be seen. A favourite blend was red
-and yellow in the women’s Sari dresses, in stripes,
-or crossed tartan-wise.</p>
-
-<p>Light cakes, bananas, and painted toys and
-other trifles were hawked about at the stations, the
-sellers uttering curious cries and chants. Every
-station had its tap of water, and always a thirsty
-throng of natives from their crowded compartments
-would be seen clustering around it filling
-their bright brass drinking cups, which they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254">254</a></span>
-invariably carry, quenching their thirst and washing
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Apropos of the refreshment stations, I find a note
-in my journal as to what appears to have been a
-particularly unsatisfactory Tiffin at Villuparam, for
-which we were induced to pay 1 rupee 8 annas in
-advance, but of which “only a little currie was really
-eatable.” How much more sensible (perchance not
-so profitable) it would be to give travellers the
-chance of ordering from the carte, and paying
-according to a fixed tariff. Travellers are by no
-means always able to eat the provided meal, and
-need milk and easily digestible foods, and simple
-cookery. The hard meat, stringy fowl, and messed
-up dishes usually offered are very inappropriate, if
-not positively injurious food. Simply cooked sound
-fresh food is a great want at hotels and railway
-stations all over India.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at Tanjore between 6 and 7 in the
-evening. There were sleeping and refreshment
-rooms at the station. The station-master met us
-and said that a room would be vacant at 9 o’clock,
-as Lord and Lady ——? who then occupied them
-were leaving by the 9 <span class="smcap smaller">P.M.</span> mail. In the meantime
-we had a ladies’ waiting-room to ourselves and could
-dine during the interval. The sleeping-rooms
-were across a bridge on the other side of the line
-in a new terraced building, with an English housekeeper
-sort of woman to receive us and our rupees.
-There was quite an up-to-date porcelain bath, but,
-on examination, one tap was cut off, and there was
-no water in the other! There were spring beds
-and mosquito curtains, and it was a fairly cool room.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255">255</a></span>
-The system here was to charge 1 rupee 8 annas
-for a room for the first twelve hours, and if occupied
-for longer then the rate was higher.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_254" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 27.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_254.jpg" width="437" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TANJORE—THE GREAT GATE OF THE TEMPLE</div></div>
-
-<p>Hearing there was a good Dak bungalow near
-by, we decided to take up our quarters there the
-next morning and found it quite nice, cool, quiet,
-old-fashioned and unpretentious, and there being no
-other travellers we had it all to ourselves. From
-what the native in charge said it appeared that the
-new station rooms rather injured his custom, as
-travellers now mostly stayed there.</p>
-
-<p>Our exploration of Tanjore commenced by driving
-to the Old Fort within which stands the great
-Hindu Temple dedicated to Siva. The great
-gateway is approached by a bridge over a moat,
-then dry, which surrounds the Fort. The outer
-gate is plastered and is crowned by a row of figures
-of deities in niches which are brightly coloured.
-The great gateway is of yellow sandstone and is
-richly carved—a mass of figures and detail. The
-image of the god Siva and his various incarnations
-constantly appears. Various legends connected
-with these are painted on the walls of the court at
-the back of an arcade, and are exceedingly curious.</p>
-
-<p>The great Nandi, or sacred Bull of Siva, a
-colossal image of a recumbent Bull, richly ornamented
-with chains and bells around his neck, is
-seen on a pedestal approached by steps in the
-centre of the court, under a pillared and decorated
-canopy. When we saw it first a magnificent peacock
-had perched himself upon the head of the bull, his
-tail drooping over its neck. The bull was carved
-out of a fine black stone, really syenite, but much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256">256</a></span>
-darkened by libations of oil with which the image
-is constantly anointed. It has all the character of
-the type of zebu in this district. We saw its living
-prototype in a street of Tanjore—a splendid black
-bull (short-horned) lying down with its yoke companion,
-a white one, equally noble looking.</p>
-
-<p>The pillared front of the small temple close by
-was richly coloured, and on a sort of frieze was
-a series of portraits of the reigning family of
-Maharajahs.</p>
-
-<p>The Temple guide spoke a little English, but
-occasionally would stop for want of words, but we
-generally gathered his meaning, and he seemed
-unusually intelligent.</p>
-
-<p>Ganesha, the elephant god (of generation) frequently
-appeared among the others, Siva and
-Parvati being the chief. One of the scenes
-painted on the wall of the arcade, already spoken
-of, represented the wedding of Siva and Parvati,
-who stood, hand in hand, with a tree in the middle—like
-Adam and Eve. Among the guests at this
-wedding were represented two giants, one whose
-appetite seemed to know no limit, while the thirst
-of the other was unquenchable. The first was
-shown devouring all kinds of food, and to express
-the drinking capacity of the other a stream of water
-full of fish was flowing into the mouth of the other.
-These were very primitive paintings, but expressive.
-The figures were drawn in black outline and filled
-in with flat tints. At the gate of the Temple there
-were drawings on the white-washed wall in thick
-outline in Indian red, in quite a different style and
-no doubt of a much later date. A large number of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257">257</a></span>
-Lingams were shown in rows placed together in
-one corner of the court, and there were many
-Lingam shrines in the arcade besides. Here and
-there was colouring on the carved figures, but, as a
-rule, the elaborately carved pagodas were left in
-yellow sandstone, which had blackened where
-exposed to the weather, and it may have been that
-colour had been worn off.</p>
-
-<p>The later temple (dating from about the fifteenth
-century) had remarkably delicate carving on its
-lower courses, the edges being frequently pierced.
-At the steps of the entrance an elephant, carved on
-each side, formed the balustrade, each having two
-trunks, one curling inwards and holding a man in
-its coil, and the second extended and terminating
-in a volute at the end of the steps on each side.</p>
-
-<p>There was a noticeable point, as giving further
-evidence of primitive wooden construction, in the
-carved detail under the eaves of the great temple
-where there was a sort of intersected lattice work
-faithfully rendered in stone. It recalled the screens
-of bamboo and matting, commonly used in this
-district, added on to the edges of the tiled roofs in
-front of the huts and bungalows as extra shields
-from the sun, and this carved stone lattice work
-may have been derived from the wood work and
-the cane and wicker structure of the primitive
-buildings which preceded the use of stone.</p>
-
-<p>In the court of the great temple, in a shed (roofed
-with corrugated iron I regret to say), we saw the
-cars used for the procession through the city, on
-the occasion of the great annual festival in March,
-which appears to be similar to the Juggernaut.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-The high pyramidal canopied roof, supported on
-columns, was carved like the pagoda of a temple,
-which, in fact, it represented. The image of the
-god being placed within. The car would be drawn
-by a pair of oxen.</p>
-
-<p>We saw afterwards a religious procession of the
-kind passing down the principal street. Two men
-carried a banner in front, a piece of red cloth suspended
-between two poles. After them came a
-band playing tom-toms and hautboys, such as we
-heard at Benares. Then came the car drawn by
-two zebus, with its high pagoda, accompanied by
-priests in white robes, with long hair and marks on
-their foreheads.</p>
-
-<p>It struck me as remarkable how closely the dress
-of the native men here resembles that of the people
-of ancient Egypt as pictured on the monuments.
-Indeed, the Hindu pantheon itself suggests a
-certain kinship to the symbolic Egyptian religion,
-embracing, as it appears to do, the deification of
-all natural forces and types of animals and birds.
-The Hindus have their elephant god, their monkey
-god, and their parrot god, for instance, each figured
-with the animal’s head but otherwise human, just
-as the Egyptians imaged their hawk-headed, cat-headed,
-and other deities. The ox of Osiris, too,
-seems to present a parallel to the sacred bull of Siva.</p>
-
-<p>We next visited the tank in the citadel, noted
-for the purity of its water, but it looked muddy
-enough we thought, and felt no inclination to test
-the sample offered us by a native in a cup.</p>
-
-<p>Near the tank was a very plain Christian church,
-dating from about the end of the 18th century or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259">259</a></span>
-the beginning of the 19th, absolutely bare of ornament
-or symbol, with the exception of a small
-mural monument at the west end—a bas-relief in
-marble by Flaxman, in memory of one Schwartz, a
-British missionary. Not, however, a very good
-specimen of the sculptor’s work, and looking as if
-it had been rather done to order, and though it
-had Flaxman’s characteristic broad simple treatment,
-was rather over smooth and “goody-goody”
-in expression—a missionary looking benevolent on
-his death-bed, clerical attendant and probable successor
-at his side, group of good boys in front, and
-row of turbaned Indians, presumably converts, on
-the other side of the bed.</p>
-
-<p>It was curious to see this bare, gaunt, puritanical-looking
-church, planted almost in the shadow of the
-great Hindu temple with its frank nature worship,
-pantheism, and riot of symbolism and imagery.</p>
-
-<p>From the citadel and the temples we drove over
-the bridge across the river into the city to see the
-palace of the Maharajah. Not a very beautiful
-building—a big, rambling, yellow-washed pile,
-looking rather untidy and neglected. In the guardroom
-at the entrance gate, there was a portrait of
-the father of the present prince. Through a corridor,
-the walls of which were painted with quaint
-figures, we reached a small chamber, open on one
-side, but painted on the three other walls with large
-equestrian portraits of three Maharajahs—grandfather,
-father, and son. They were in profile, very
-richly dressed, and on finely caparisoned horses,
-with hunting dogs—the dogs running underneath
-the horses. These mural portraits were painted in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260">260</a></span>
-tempera, apparently, on the white-washed wall,
-and had flaked off in places, but they were good
-characteristic Indian work, and reminded one a
-little in treatment of European mediæval design,
-such as may be seen in Burgundian tapestries of
-the end of the fifteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>We next came to a small court where we saw
-the Durbar Hall, divided from the court by an open
-colonnade. Inside was a miscellaneous collection
-of objects—portraits, rather dreary ones of the
-Maharajahs and favourite hounds, some on very
-dilapidated canvasses with holes through them—old-fashioned
-French lithographs of the early
-“fifties,” much fly-blown; a handsome palanquin,
-with dragons’ heads on the ends of the poles;
-another one was carved, and plated with ivory.
-There was also a beautiful ivory fan, of a large
-size and peculiar shape, probably to be used as a
-punka. Then, too, there was a bronze bust of
-Lord Nelson, presented by some English lady to
-a former Maharajah, and her own work. Then we
-saw the library, which contained quite a large collection
-of old-fashioned English books—in eighteenth
-and early nineteenth century bindings—such as a
-set of <cite>The Spectator</cite>, Hayley’s Poems, Burns, Scott,
-etc., and also an extensive library of Hindu and
-Tamil manuscripts. These were peculiar in form,
-and consisted of long oblong sheets of a roughish
-sort of paper, rather resembling papyrus in quality,
-protected by thin boards on loose covers of thin
-wood, secured round the middle by ties. These
-covers were sometimes lacquered on their outsides
-in various designs. On one I noticed the typical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-design representing Vishnu, with the lotus flower
-springing from his navel which contains the figure
-of Buddha, Laksmi looking on in wonder. These
-figures were drawn in black outline on gold, the
-gold high-toned with coloured lacquers. A smell
-of naphtha or some such moth antidote pervaded
-the place.</p>
-
-<p>We were then shown the armoury, where there
-were some rather showy sporting guns of English
-make, bearing the name of Mortimer &amp; Co., and
-elaborately chased. There were very vile portraits
-of King Edward VII. and Queen Alexandra.</p>
-
-<p>After this we saw another Durbar Hall—the
-Maharana’s—adorned with more dreary portraits of
-the family and a few stuffed birds. The most
-curious thing was a real skeleton in a real cupboard,
-side by side with a skeleton beautifully
-imitated in ivory. There they hung inside a plain
-upright cupboard, looking like a hanging wardrobe—but
-what a wardrobe! What hung there
-needed no robes!</p>
-
-<p>Down the main street of Tanjore there were
-placed at intervals very curious and richly carved
-wooden pagodas, apparently very old, upon cars
-with massive wheels of wood, somewhat like rude
-ox-cart wheels, some of them being discs. These
-were probably used in processions at the festivals.</p>
-
-<p>The houses were generally low, and of only one
-story, with the low-pitched ridge-tiled roofs as at
-Madras, the porches and raised terraces on platforms
-in front forming the shops, being further
-protected from the sun by lean-to extra roofs or
-screens of matting and bamboo, sometimes supported<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262">262</a></span>
-on uprights of cocoa palm stems. Occasionally
-these screens are supported by growing
-trees which spread their foliage above. Pumpkins
-and gourds are often grown upon the tiled roofs,
-and have a charming effect with their wandering
-stems, green leaves, and golden spheres of fruit
-scattered over the rich brown tiles.</p>
-
-<p>The roads are deep in red-brown dust as at
-Madras, and there is a continual traffic of little
-covered tongas drawn by little trotting zebus in
-single harness. We had a broken-down victoria
-to drive in, and a fearful old crock of a horse, given
-to jibbing and really not fit to drive. The carriage
-seats were sliding ones, too!</p>
-
-<p>Tanjore spreads itself over a large area of open
-spaces, interspersed with trees, gardens, and tanks.
-The water is abundant, and washing operations
-frequent. There is no coherent plan about the
-town, the streets wandering about into open space,
-and leaving off in a casual sort of way. There was
-a considerable market going on in provisions, and
-there was a silk-weaving quarter where may be
-seen the native weavers stretching long threads of
-silk on bamboo frames the whole length of the
-street, and winding it off on to wheels—our
-carriage nearly collided with one in a narrow
-street. The raw silk is often wound round
-short staves.</p>
-
-<p>We visited a weaver’s shop, and were shown
-some hand-woven silk saris, brocaded with silver
-thread, the silver being turned into gold by some
-colouring process. A dress of ten yards can be
-bought of this beautiful material for 24 rupees.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263">263</a></span>
-Red and purple are the principal colours, and
-these, with the gold thread woven in border
-designs of elephants, horses and peacocks, have
-a very gorgeous effect.</p>
-
-<p>European influence seems to have declined in
-Tanjore, although there are numerous Christian
-missions about. What strikes the unprejudiced
-spectator is the extreme unsuitability of any modern
-western type of Protestant Christianity, with all
-that it involves to the native mind, to say nothing
-of climate and habit.</p>
-
-<p>Western influence, it is true, asserts itself to the
-eye, at least, in the form of an ugly clock tower,
-and we passed “The Tanjore Union Club,” where
-we saw native gentlemen in their cool, white, loose
-clothing playing lawn tennis in a well laid-out
-court. But the life of the mass of the people goes
-on unchanged as it has done for ages.</p>
-
-<p>In driving through the town we saw many little
-white-washed temples among the native houses,
-their richly carved pagodas rising above the low
-brown tiled roofs. At the doors are quaint paintings
-of elephants or tigers, and the white walls of
-the shops and dwellings are frequently ornamented
-in the same way with curious figures, among which
-occurs not unfrequently the English soldier with a
-dragoon’s helmet and jack-boots. Outside a liquor
-shop I saw, painted rather boldly in red outline, a
-European lady and gentleman refreshing themselves
-with wine-glasses in their hands. The lady’s
-costume reproduced the rather fussy fashion of
-twenty-five or thirty years ago, the frills and
-furbelows quite carefully worked out with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264">264</a></span>
-Indian love of detail, but somehow the general
-effect was rather Elizabethan than Victorian.</p>
-
-<p>In passing along one of the streets we heard a
-sound of tom-toms, and presently saw approaching
-on a zebu cart a large theatrical poster painted
-on the outer sides of two large boards leaning
-together, tent-wise, on the cart. These bore
-announcements in Hindustani and Arabic, with
-pictures of exciting scenes—Rajahs flourishing
-scimitars over people, and so forth. Natives
-walked alongside the cart distributing pink bills
-of the performances printed in Arabic, while the
-tom-toms attracted attention to the forthcoming
-show.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening we drove to the theatre, accompanied
-by our bearer. We reached an open
-ground outside the town; it was rather dark, but
-we saw a row of lights in front of us, and heard the
-sound of tom-toms. The old horse jibbed and
-would not go further, so we left the carriage, and
-Moonsawmy conducted us to some temporary
-structures of matting and bamboo, where tickets
-were sold. One rupee secured a chair in the front
-row. The theatre was a large, tent-like structure,
-with plastered piers supporting a roof of matting.
-The floor was of earth, the common ground, in fact,
-upon which the back rows squatted. The stage
-was also of earth, raised about three or four feet,
-the front being painted in broad red and white
-vertical stripes. The footlights were ordinary oil
-lamps, clustered in groups. The audience was
-entirely native (besides ourselves, who were the
-only Europeans present). Some sat close up<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265">265</a></span>
-alongside the stage on raised steps of earth. Dark
-draperies hung at the sides of the proscenium, and
-there was a coarsely-painted drop scene, of the kind
-familiar in third-rate provincial theatres and music-halls
-at home.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_265" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_265.jpg" width="389" height="515" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TANJORE—NATIVE THEATRE—HOUSE FULL. PERFORMANCE FROM
-9 P.M. TILL 2 A.M.—BUT WE DIDN’T STOP TO SEE IT THROUGH</div></div>
-
-<p>The first scene apparently represented a suburban
-street in the European quarter of an Indian town;
-at least there was a square towered church in it,
-ugly enough, although some high-pitched gables<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266">266</a></span>
-rather suggested suburban England. A road
-in very acute perspective ran through the
-centre of the scene, which might, after all,
-have been bought from some European travelling
-theatre.</p>
-
-<p>The curtain raiser was of a sort of operatic,
-conventional courtship motive, and consisted of a
-musical dialogue between a young lady and gentleman
-of uncertain country, costume, and period.
-The girl was badly dressed in a white muslin
-frock, with a little red silk waistband, and a
-tinsel coronet or tiara on her head. She kept
-her eyes on the ground the whole time, and
-moved stiffly and shyly; her action, as well as
-that of the gentleman, being rather suggestive
-of marionettes.</p>
-
-<p>The lady began by singing, each strophe or
-couplet being repeated or answered by an antistrophe
-from a chorus concealed behind the scenes,
-to the accompaniment of tom-toms. The little
-wooer presently appeared (also a girl), dressed in a
-cap of tinsel, a tunic of black velvet trimmed with
-silver tinsel, and breeches of the same, with brown
-hose or boots. He also began singing strophes,
-which were responded to or repeated by the chorus,
-and the lady replied in the same way. Whenever
-the lover made any advances the lady repelled
-them, and, after each of her sung speeches, crossed
-over to the opposite side of the stage, the lover
-doing the same. After a long course of this monotonous
-question and answer, sing-song business,
-they finally came to terms, and stood singing
-together, the lover with his arm round the lady’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267">267</a></span>
-shoulders. A harmonium, playing at the wings,
-assisted the tom-toms.</p>
-
-<p>The <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">pièce de resistance</i> next began. The first
-scene was a room of state in a Rajah’s palace.
-The Rajah and his grand vizier, and an old priest
-or soothsayer in a turban and Indian dress, were
-the characters. The Rajah was a white man, of a
-rather Irish cast of countenance. He was dressed
-in black and silver, having wonderful silver spangles
-in circular patches as big as dinner plates down the
-front of his trousers. He wore a sabre at his side,
-and he was seated on a throne mounted on several
-steps, and each step was decorated by a large
-globe of silvered Bohemian glass. The vizier was
-attired in a similar way, but not quite so gorgeous
-as the king.</p>
-
-<p>From our bearer’s interpretation it appeared that
-the Rajah, or king, who commenced chanting in a
-most doleful and monotonous way, was in trouble
-for want of an heir to the throne, and consulted the
-turbaned old gentleman about it, who gave his
-advice at considerable length.</p>
-
-<p>The next scene showed the interior of a temple;
-an image of the sacred bull was there, and a black
-man, clad only in a waist cloth, was officiating,
-apparently as priest. He was also evidently
-regarded as a comic actor by the audience, and it
-was rather curious to observe that his obvious
-burlesque of some native religious observances
-were received with laughter. He seemed to put
-the Rajah, the vizier, and the soothsayer, who now
-entered, through their religious paces, waving a
-brush over them and putting garlands round their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268">268</a></span>
-necks, uttering curious gibberish the while, with
-extravagant action, which seemed vastly to amuse
-the audience.</p>
-
-<p>The next scene showed the Rajah seated again
-in his palace, and to him entered a troop of zenanas
-to announce the joyful news of the birth of an heir;
-but after they had departed with many salaams,
-something seemed to go wrong, and the Rajah
-began his doleful plaint again. The soothsayer
-and the vizier were again consulted, and both had
-a good deal to say, but matters did not seem to
-mend much, and the scene promising to be interminably
-long, we felt we had had about as much of
-the drama as we could do with, and hearing, moreover,
-that the performance would continue until
-2 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, having commenced at nine, we left Moonsawmy
-to sit it out, after he had found us our
-carriage.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we had another drive through the
-city and its surroundings, reaching a pleasant
-region of palm-groves, and lakes where buffaloes
-were enjoying a bath. They lie in the water quite
-deeply, with often only their heads out or the ridges
-of their backs showing.</p>
-
-<p>At the bungalow various native pedlars and
-travelling merchants came up with their bundles,
-and, as we sat under the verandah, they would
-untie these and spread out their wares before us.
-These were generally new silver and copper repoussé
-dishes and bowls, samples of the craft of
-the Tanjore district, but not good, being vulgar
-and mechanical in workmanship, although repeating
-traditional patterns and representations of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269">269</a></span>
-chief deities of the Hindu pantheon. Some of
-these were embossed in silver, or rather were partly
-silvered over the copper, leaving bright copper
-in parts, but they had rather a flashy and tasteless
-appearance. The best things were the small
-antique bronzes and brass objects—bulls, horses,
-birds, peacocks, lamps, and curious shaped vessels,
-and many of these were highly interesting. A pair
-of bronze stirrups I acquired were charmingly
-designed, and showed delicate design and workmanship.</p>
-
-<p>In the town they make a kind of brass standard
-lamp, in various sizes, having a moulded stem supporting
-a shallow vessel for the oil, with niches
-from four inches, the brass image of a cock is usually
-placed at the top as a sort of finial. The parts are
-made to unscrew like the well-known antique
-Roman lamp which, in general design and structure,
-this Tanjore lamp strongly recalled. Some,
-indeed, were terminated by ring handles just like
-the Roman ones.</p>
-
-<p>We had been fairly comfortable at the Dak
-bungalow, and the two brothers who kept it were
-most anxious to please. The cooking was unusually
-good, and the place was certainly very quiet.
-The windows had no glass, but were closed with
-Venetian shutters (which did not always act, however,
-satisfactorily). The floors were covered with
-India matting, and the beds were furnished with
-mosquito nets. The meals were nicely served, and
-the table always decked with flowers. The thermometer
-in our rooms registered usually about 75
-degrees, whereas at Madras it went up to 80 degrees.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270">270</a></span>
-Water was not carried here in goat-skins as in
-Bombay and the North-West and Central Provinces,
-but in large earthen jars. A man would carry one
-in each hand, or slung by strings from a stick over
-the shoulder. There was a fine young native who
-watered the garden in front of our bungalow—he
-had a splendid figure, and was almost the colour of
-ebony. I tried to get hold of him to get a study
-from him, but somehow he was not to be found
-when the time came, and another very inferior
-specimen was offered in his stead.</p>
-
-<p>We left Tanjore on the evening of February 11
-for Trichinopoly. It is only a two hours’ journey
-by the railway, and we arrived quite punctually
-about 8.30. It was too dark to see much of the
-country, or get anything but a vague idea of the
-place, especially when under the cover of an ox
-tonga, two of which vehicles conveyed us and our
-baggage to the travellers’ bungalow about a mile
-off, the little zebus trotting along at a brisk pace as
-fast as ponies, and much better conditioned than
-any tonga ponies we saw in India.</p>
-
-<p>At the bungalow we found an English lady and
-gentleman, a newly arrived official and his wife,
-who had not yet got a house—who were then
-dining by candle light on the verandah—in possession
-of the best room, and had to make the best of
-it in a small side room, poorly furnished, and with
-no mosquito nets. We got some soda and milk
-and turned in, but, alas, the beds were hard as nails
-and the mosquitoes troublesome and strong on the
-wing, while the temperature went up to 80 degrees
-again!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271">271</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_271" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.125em;">
- <img src="images/i_271.jpg" width="386" height="489" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TRICHINOPOLY—OX TONGA—VITA BREVIS!</div></div>
-
-<p>After breakfast the next morning we got a carriage
-(which was a considerable improvement both
-as to vehicle and horse to the one at Tanjore), and
-drove towards the fort, which stands conspicuously
-on a bold rock rising abruptly from the plain.
-Passing through the native bazaar we crossed over
-a long bridge, which spanned a very broad river
-thronged with bathers, and people washing clothes,
-and watering cattle, all busy in the stream which
-was quite shallow, not more than waist high. This
-bridge had been designed and built by an English<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272">272</a></span>
-engineer, somewhere in the forties. It was of red
-sandstone, and our driver pointed out a stone in the
-coping inscribed to certain English officers who
-served under Clive, and helped to lay “the foundations
-of the British Empire in India” in 1750–4.</p>
-
-<p>At about two miles from Trichinopoly we came
-to the great Temple of Seringham. Thatched
-native huts, forming a sort of bazaar, led up to
-and were clustered about the great gates, which
-resembled the entrance to the Temple of Tanjore.
-The height of the gateways were very great in
-proportion to their width. The great pagodas piled
-over them were carved with the greatest richness
-and intricacy of detail, and covered with the figures
-of gods and imagery of all kinds, surmounted by
-the curious rounded long barrel-like cresting, which
-is so characteristic of Hindu temple-architecture.
-The sculptured or modelled work here was all
-coloured, but many of the figures were said to be
-in stucco.</p>
-
-<p>I think we passed through three of these gateways
-before we reached the final one leading into
-the court, with a many columned pavilion in the
-centre, having a painted ceiling in which the Hindu
-gods figured. The great Temple of Seringham is
-sacred to Vishnu, whose image appears very frequently.
-Opposite to this central pavilion is a
-colonnade having a frieze of carved and coloured
-figures under a cresting, Vishnu being in the centre.
-This seemed to be the Hindu equivalent for a
-sculptured pediment. The effect of the thickly
-clustered columns of white-washed stone supporting
-this band of rich carving and colour was very striking,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273">273</a></span>
-the sharp light and shade of noontide throwing
-the front into strong relief, and through the aisles
-formed by the columns we could see another lighted
-court beyond.</p>
-
-<p>The main passage through was lined by the little
-stalls of a bazaar, grouped at the bases of the
-columns, where mementoes in the shape of small
-tin pictures heightened with coloured lacquer were
-stamped in relief with representations of Vishnu
-and his goddess, bead rosaries and necklaces, and
-jewellery were also sold, and little silk bags
-embroidered with portraits of the same deities.</p>
-
-<p>As we stood facing the second court, the sacred
-elephant of the temple came up, his forehead bearing
-the mark of Vishnu, painted large in red and
-white. It was amusing to see the animal pick up
-a two-anna piece from the ground, and pass it over
-its head to its keeper and driver seated on its neck.
-Another younger and smaller elephant soon joined
-the other, and this one had beautiful tusks which
-his larger companion was without. This one, too,
-skilfully picked up the small coins in the same way,
-fumbling with the sensitive finger-like point of his
-trunk to get hold of them in the crannies of the
-pavement.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_274" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.875em;">
- <img src="images/i_274.jpg" width="398" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE SACRED ELEPHANTS OF SERINGHAM—SECURING TWO-ANNA
-PIECES!</div></div>
-
-<p>We then, passing across this second court,
-entered the Hall of a Thousand Columns—a sort of
-architectural forest. Before this is reached, however,
-there is a smaller hall which has a very
-remarkable range of carved columns—the most
-extraordinary carved stone work in Southern India.
-They are strictly speaking rather columnar brackets,
-bracketed columns or corbels resting on bases, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274">274</a></span>
-they represent warriors on horses spearing lions
-and tigers. The chief feature in each is the rearing
-horse, which with its rider and lance, and smaller
-figures below, and the attacking tiger, or, sometimes,
-elephant, form a connected group cut out of a single<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275">275</a></span>
-block of stone. These sculptures have so barbaric
-and antique an appearance that it seems surprising
-they should only date from the seventeenth and
-eighteenth centuries together with the whole of the
-temple buildings.</p>
-
-<p>A curious effect is given to the interior of some
-of the temples here by the practice of whitewashing
-the pillars and walls, and leaving the carved figures
-untouched in the stone, which gives them by
-contrast an unusually swarthy appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Returning, we had a view of the Rock of
-Trichinopoly with the old fort and temple on the
-summit. This syenite rock crops out in various
-places in this district, but not often rising much
-above the ground, but only emerging here and
-there from the earth in a manner rather suggestive
-of the backs of tortoises.</p>
-
-<p>Saw a mongoose at the roadside which soon crept
-out of sight and hid in the low brushwood at our
-approach. Trichinopoly is well wooded, but is not
-particularly picturesque, though the scattered tiled
-or thatched bungalows look pretty enough in their
-gardens, but on the whole it gives one the impression
-of rather a straggling place. There was
-a deserted looking mission church with a few
-tombstones about it quite near our bungalow,
-trying to look like an English village church, but
-not succeeding. Leipzig Lutherans and Wesleyan
-Methodists are said to have “missions” here, as
-well as the Church of England. These missionaries
-seem to plant their stations wherever there are
-important Hindu temples. The wonder is that the
-natives are so tolerant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276">276</a></span>
-Madura was our next destination, and we were
-not sorry to get away from our stifling little barn
-of a room at the bungalow, leaving in the early
-morning about daybreak for the 5.45 Madras mail.</p>
-
-<p>The country was flat at first, with, again, large
-sheets of water along the sides of the line, but as
-we passed from the Trichinopoly district to the
-Madura district we entered a mountainous region,
-thickly wooded. I noted many cedar trees, and a
-kind of cactus growing high with tall tree-like stem.
-It was an interesting and varied country the rest
-of the way. The crops were chiefly paddy and
-castor oil plant.</p>
-
-<p>One station had the extraordinary name of
-Ammayanayakanur, and we were soon in the
-tobacco-growing district, passing Dindigul with a
-rock and an old fort upon it, not unlike Trichinopoly
-in character. Cigars of the district were offered at
-the station, but we saw no tobacco crops near the
-line.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Madura about noon, in time for
-tiffin, and engaged a room at the station, which was
-a great improvement as to beds and general appointments
-on our recent bungalow experiences.
-The sleeping-rooms were built out on a separate
-wing which appeared to be new. They opened on
-to a corridor which led to a large open terrace, and
-were in charge of a Eurasian woman. There was
-also a good dining-room at the station.</p>
-
-<p>It was tremendously hot, however, and we could
-not very well move out until after 4 o’clock, when
-having engaged a guide we drove out to see the
-great temple. Our bearer objected strongly to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277">277</a></span>
-guide and there was some friction between them,
-but as native servants were prohibited from entering
-the temples, and were always stopped at the
-gates, Moonsawmy could not show cause why the
-guide was not necessary, and we found him very
-intelligent, speaking English well, and having the
-history of the place at his fingers’ ends.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_277" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_277.jpg" width="323" height="498" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE RIVALS. OUR MOONSAWMY AND THE MADURA GUIDE</div></div>
-
-<p>The Madura temple is so remarkable and is on
-such a scale that I was anxious to get all the
-information about it I could. Mr Pillai (the guide)<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278">278</a></span>
-was very useful and well-informed, and he gave us
-many interesting stories and details about the
-sculptured figures and paintings.</p>
-
-<p>There are four great pagoda-gates, richly carved
-and painted, of the same type but larger than
-those at Tanjore and Trichinopoly. Evidently
-the Hindus had no scruples about colouring their
-sculpture, and the colouring has been renewed
-from time to time. The prevailing tints used are
-turquoise blue, vermilion, yellow, white, and green.
-One of the gates the guide pointed out was granite
-up to the first story, and the figures were in stucco
-above.</p>
-
-<p>The four gates mentioned are connected by a
-high wall, on the crest of which occur at intervals
-the image of Siva (to whom the temple is dedicated)
-seated between two bulls, the bulls being
-placed upon the top of the wall, and the image of
-the God in a sort of arched recess, sunk into it a
-little below. The upper part of the wall is uncoloured,
-but a sort of high dado is carried along
-it below, painted in broad vertical stripes of red and
-white which seems a favourite scheme of decoration
-in Southern India. The wall encloses a broad
-paved court, and inside this is another wall with
-gates, through which the various temples and
-columned halls are entered.</p>
-
-<p>In the centre of all is the sacred tank, a large
-pool of water surrounded by steps, and an arcade
-of white columns. As we approached this, we
-saw a crowd of natives, men and women, seated
-on the paved margin of the tank along one side
-and between the columns listening to a priest who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279">279</a></span>
-was preaching with much earnestness. Our guide
-said he was translating or expounding (one did not
-know with what gloss) passages from the sanskrit
-text of the sacred books which another priest
-previously read in the original.</p>
-
-<p>The scene was a picturesque one. The various
-colours of the people’s dresses, in which dark red
-prevailed, showed against the white wall and columns,
-and the brown faces made a harmonious scheme of
-colour.</p>
-
-<p>The wall along the upper part was painted with
-a series of histories of Siva and his incarnations.
-These picture-stories were arranged in tiers or
-friezes, about four or five deep, one above the other,
-and running the entire length of the wall behind
-the colonade, each side the tank. These paintings
-were highly interesting, painted probably with the
-main object of making the stories intelligible to the
-people, they were quite decorative, full of detail, and
-forming a rather closely filled and dark pattern of
-colour, having the effect of a woven hanging.</p>
-
-<p>One of the painted legends treated of a certain
-Maharajah who appears to have persecuted the
-early Jain seceders, much as the Roman emperor
-treated the early Christians, with great ferocity,
-finally impaling them on stakes, and thus they
-were painted all of a row!</p>
-
-<p>The Jain sect was at first apparently regarded as
-a schism, and the Jains as heretics or apostates falling
-away from the pure Hindu worship of Siva.</p>
-
-<p>One seems here, in this great Temple of Madura,
-to get back to the most ancient type of religion, and
-one which, after all, allowing for evolution in our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280">280</a></span>
-ideas, seems the most lasting—Nature worship. The
-Hindus in their pantheon include and embrace
-everything, at least in their own universe, which is
-their own country, and to them, truly, “nothing is
-common or unclean.” Their deities incarnate
-themselves in all sorts of forms. Siva, according
-to one legend, for instance, even taking the form of
-a wild sow, and suckling the young of the mother
-which had been slain by the hunters. The second
-son of Siva rides upon a peacock, the representative
-bird of India. The Zebu bull is sacred to Siva,
-and in the Lingam is symbolised and revered the
-male and female principle of generation, the root
-and source of all life on the earth.</p>
-
-<p>In one place in the temple, between two of the
-columns, was a group of the nine planets personified
-and placed around the sun—a golden sphere in the
-centre. For each of these embodied planets might
-be found a corresponding personality among the
-deities of the classical world.</p>
-
-<p>Another striking thing about the Madura temple
-is the force of realization and expression in the
-figure sculpture. Life-sized figures of different
-gods and demons are carved in stone in front of
-the columns in many of the halls of the temple, the
-columns themselves frequently white-washed, while
-the figures are left in the untouched stone and look
-in contrast like bronze figures, their elaborate detail
-and undercutting emphasizing this suggestion.
-Indeed, the variety of character, invention, as well
-as the vigour and freedom, governed by a certain
-formalism, of some of this sculpture at its best
-reminds one of European gothic sculpture in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281">281</a></span>
-Middle Ages, not only in its symbolical and
-legendary aspect, but also its all embracing character
-and sympathy with the life of the people. The type
-of the Hindu mother appears, for instance, in one
-of the best of the figures carrying her child on her
-hip, just as the native women do to this day, while
-a suckling infant is suspended at her breast.</p>
-
-<p>Mockery, if not humour, too, seems to come out
-here and there sometimes, as in the dancing figure
-of a mocking musician playing on his pipes.</p>
-
-<p>A frequent subject is Siva presenting his sister
-in marriage to Vishnu, and there are besides a
-number of curious legends connected with the
-sculptures here, which are very various, and, of
-course, not unfrequently become grotesque or
-monstrous under the influence of the Hindu
-religious symbolic ideas and the Hindu inventiveness;
-but one feels that here is a genuine piece of
-ancient life, expressed in the forms of Hindu art—frank
-nature worship in full vigour of life, and a
-dominant influence in the lives of millions of people.</p>
-
-<p>In the sacred tank the people were constantly
-bathing and washing their clothes. The water
-never seems to be changed and is perfectly green
-in colour. Our guide said it remained pure and
-ordered a man to show its quality by dipping his
-hands in and holding a small quantity in them,
-cupwise. The water, however, was, even in this
-small quantity, quite green, although a clear green.
-It must have been full of vegetable matter, one would
-think. It reminded us of what the Maharajah’s
-secretary had said of the Ganges water at Benares.</p>
-
-<p>The colouring of the interior of the Temple in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282">282</a></span>
-parts recalled the mural decoration of ancient
-Egypt in its use of simple primary colours—red,
-green, white, and yellow prevailing. The lotus
-flower, too, was constantly introduced, treated as a
-rosette upon the ceilings.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the pillared halls were, however, left in
-plain stonework, or simply whitewashed. One
-long hall we entered looked very impressive in the
-dim light, a single ray from the sun penetrating,
-and making a spot of intense light upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p>We saw a gilded copper dome, and a golden
-flag staff, and our guide pointed out the great doors
-behind which the festival cars were kept, and we
-saw, too, wonderfully decorated life-sized images of
-elephants and horses which formed part of the show
-on great occasions. There were two black and
-two white elephants, standing between the columns,
-under rather tawdry and tinselly canopies, and other
-furniture of the festivals; one large hanging bearing
-the words of welcome to the Prince and Princess
-of Wales, which must have been used for the occasion
-of their visit.</p>
-
-<p>Various donors of parts of the temple were
-pointed out, in effigy. The Czar of Russia appeared
-(not however in person) as the donor of certain
-shrines and a brass canopy or arch which held many
-lamps.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_282" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_282.jpg" width="600" height="427" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">SACRED TANK OF THE GREAT TEMPLE, MADURA</div></div>
-
-<p>The practice of drawing the image of the god on
-festival days through the streets on great cars seems
-general at all the chief temples in Southern India,
-and not confined to Juggernath. At Seringham
-we saw the great car on which the image of Siva
-was drawn on such occasions, and also the thick<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283">283</a></span>
-cables—like ship’s cables—which were used for the
-purpose—multitudes of men hauling the car out of
-the temple and along the streets by these means.
-Here, too, at Madura the god Siva is represented
-seated upon his car which is treated as a kind of
-throne, the wheels and the horses sculptured at the
-sides in a symbolic sort of way.</p>
-
-<p>In some of the painted histories on the walls,
-Siva is shown in a winged car (suggesting his rapid
-flight and omnipresence, perhaps) and, presumably,
-his image is drawn out on a car at festivals to keep
-his presence and moving influence vividly in the
-minds of his worshippers.</p>
-
-<p>It was curious to see the bazaars in the corridors
-and outer courts of the temple. Rows of stalls,
-where all sorts of miscellaneous things were sold—brass
-ware, pottery, woven stuffs, beads, and all
-kinds of knick-knacks and toys. Some of the sellers
-squat on the pavement and spread out their goods
-before them. The temple and its courts is a great
-resort of the people, in fact. Pilgrims lie down and
-sleep near its shrines, and the children play freely
-between its pillars. Bats flutter in and out of the
-crevices of the ceilings, or hang in little black
-clusters up aloft in their recesses.</p>
-
-<p>In sketching at the sacred tank a very large crowd
-of natives gradually collected behind me, and on each
-side, and it was as much as the guide could do to
-keep them from closing in, and completely surrounding
-me. Some American visitors to the temple
-whom we met afterwards in Ceylon said that, seeing
-this vast concourse pressing round the tank, they
-thought it was a suicide! Travellers usually take<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284">284</a></span>
-snap-shots with hand cameras, and I imagine
-that a sketcher in colours is comparatively rare.
-The crowd, however, were quite quiet. The
-guide was encouraging, and remarked when
-I had finished that it was “better than a
-photograph.”</p>
-
-<p>Another afternoon we drove out through the city
-and some three miles beyond to see the “Teppa
-Tank”—a large sheet of water, enclosed by a low
-wall painted in red and white stripes, with steps to
-the water and carved bulls decorating the balustrades.
-On an island in the centre of the tank rose
-the pagoda of a temple, in stucco, and four small
-pagodas at the four corners of the garden-island—a
-mass of foliage amid which the pagodas shone,
-ivory-white in the sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>Near this tank on the roadside was another
-temple sacred to a goddess who was the object of
-solicitude in the case of people desiring offspring,
-and to whom votive offerings of cradles were made
-by the devotees, as well as doll-like images of
-children made of baked clay and painted. The
-flat roof of this temple was peopled with a crowd of
-these grotesque images, and the carriage boy was
-sent to fetch one for our inspection.</p>
-
-<p>Then we drove on to where grew a gigantic
-Banyan tree—eighty feet in girth, and having
-quite a small forest around its central vast trunk
-of offshoots—new trees which had rooted themselves
-in the earth from the parent branches.
-It was rather suggestive of a many pillared
-sylvan temple.</p>
-
-<p>After this we reached the Palace of Tiramala,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285">285</a></span>
-which stood at the head of a large village—an
-imposing structure in stucco, mostly yellow washed.
-The enormous columns of the court looked out of
-proportion to the arches they supported, which were
-of a rather debased Mogul type, heavy with very
-elaborate grotesque ornamentation in stucco in the
-spandrils and on the ceilings, many of which had
-as a central device a large lotus flower formally
-treated as a rosette, and in some instances elaborately
-painted. The effect of the whole building
-was rather weird, and suggested a rather queer
-architectural nightmare, in which massive Norman
-cathedral piers had swallowed Roman Doric ones,
-or vice versa, and a Hindu modeller had broken
-up some Mogul arches, and fastened them together
-again with grotesque elephants and dragons’
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>The palace was now used as law courts, and it
-was curious to see two modern oil portraits of two
-neat English lawyers hanging on the walls of these
-vast columned halls.</p>
-
-<p>We next visited a native shop in the village bazaar
-where the fine muslins and silks of the district were
-made and sold. We were duly seated in chairs
-and fanned by boys, while an active brown member
-of the firm unfolded tempting saris, pugarees, and
-silk stuffs, some beautifully brocaded with gold
-thread, and of course we possessed ourselves of a
-few specimens.</p>
-
-<p>In this district there is a thriving native silk
-industry, hand-weaving, also dyeing, and the ingenious
-native craft of making patterns on cottons
-and muslins by tying and dipping. Hanks of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286">286</a></span>
-cotton and silk may be seen hung out over bamboo
-poles placed horizontally, and ox-carts roll by filled
-with the dyed skeins. There is a fine dark rich red,
-frequently seen in the sari dress of the women, also
-a dark purple. The women here generally wear
-the dark red sari with a narrow border of black;
-in some cases the sari is black with a red border.</p>
-
-<p>In the village street we saw a little native bride
-drawn in a carriage.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the city in the cool of the evening
-we stopped at the temple bazaar and bought some
-zebu bells—curious little pear-shaped brass bells,
-each with a different tone, which are hung round
-the animals’ necks. Their foreheads, too, are
-frequently bound with strings of beads, or shells
-fixed on leather bands, and their horns are painted
-green or red.</p>
-
-<p>There is a method of decorating the centres of
-the dining tables in Southern India which, I think,
-we first noticed at the hotel at Madras, or at one
-of the refreshment stations on the Coromandel
-coast. It consists in arranging dyed sago seeds in
-patterns forming a table centre on the white cloth.
-At the station refreshment room at Madura there
-was a more elaborate example done by means of
-stencils—a border of yellow enclosed a lightly
-powdered filling, and an effective outer border was
-produced by a repeated sprig of a red rose with
-green leaves. The general effect was that of an
-embroidered pattern, but of course it was liable to
-slight displacements, and was constantly done
-afresh, one of the waiters being the special
-artist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287">287</a></span>
-We left Madura on the 15th of February for
-Tuticorin.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_287" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.5625em;">
- <img src="images/i_287.jpg" width="393" height="542" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TUTICORIN. DEPARTURE FOR COLOMBO. THE LAST OF THE
-KITES AND CROWS.</div></div>
-
-<p>The country traversed was flat and plain for the
-most part, with cultivated crops of castor oil
-plants, paddy, and corn, alternating with jungle
-of brushwood, but no fine trees. Hills were
-seen in the distance on the right, and we made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288">288</a></span>
-several stoppages at short places with very long
-names.</p>
-
-<p>Arriving at Tuticorin about four in the afternoon,
-we went on to the beach station, and got on
-board a small steam launch or tug in waiting at
-the jetty, then we saw the last quarter, as it were, of
-our Moonsawmy, and took our leave of him, after
-he had had his usual fierce dispute with the coolies,
-who certainly never received trade union wages
-from <em>him</em>. On the whole we were not sorry
-to get away from the rupee-hunting throng
-which usually hang about stations and wharves—the
-kites and crows in pursuit of the traveller,
-their prey, who for the time being, at least, now
-escaped their clutches.</p>
-
-<p>Tuticorin presented no obvious attractions
-except the sea, which we were quite glad to meet
-again. The launch seemed just large enough to
-hold the train-load of passengers—Americans,
-Germans, and English with their baggage, and after
-about half-an-hour’s steam across the harbour we
-reached the steamer (the “Pandua” of Glasgow) and
-climbed up the gangway to the saloon deck. We
-secured a rather small but well-appointed berth
-opening off the saloon, and were able to enjoy a
-well-served dinner—food seems generally better on
-ship-board than on land—at least Indian land.
-Cargo boats were clinging to the steamer’s side,
-and, at sunset, one by one cast off and hoisted
-their lateen sails (like those of an Arab dhow) each
-boat having one about the length of the vessel.
-The sailors in hoisting up the sail climbed and
-clung to the rope, to bring it up with their weight.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289">289</a></span>
-Chanting a curious sort of song the while, our
-steamer weighed anchor and started, and we looked
-astern and saw the last of India fading from view
-behind the shining wake of the steamer, and lost in
-the glow of an orange sunset.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290">290</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">NOTES OF CEYLON</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> voyage across the straits to Colombo
-proved to be wonderfully calm, which was
-rather unusual as we understood it was as a rule
-tempestuous, and we did not find our cabin nearly
-so hot as our room at Madura. We sighted the
-coast of Ceylon early in the morning of February 16,
-and got into harbour at Colombo about 8 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span> A
-fleet of fishing boats had previously passed us, of the
-curious native rig—a square sail apparently arranged
-to sail before the wind only. Our steamer was
-soon surrounded by a little fleet of odd shaped outrigger
-canoes, some of them mere planks, paddled
-by active little darkie boys, who dived for small
-silver coins if they could induce the passengers to
-throw them. These little amphibians seemed as
-much at home in the water as in their canoes, and
-they swam like fishes.</p>
-
-<p>Our good friend Mr Bois sent a messenger on
-board to meet us and help us through the customs,
-having secured us rooms at the Galle Face. Most
-things are chargeable under the tariff, but the
-traveller pays duty on his own valuation.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer did not land its passengers at the
-quay, but anchored in the harbour, and everyone
-landed in boats. The Hotel boats, manned by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291">291</a></span>
-native oarsmen, row swiftly to the Custom House,
-and often race each other. After passing the
-customs we got into a little Victoria and drove
-straight to the Galle Face.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_291" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.4375em;">
- <img src="images/i_291.jpg" width="375" height="452" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">LANDING AT COLOMBO</div></div>
-
-<p>Not much can be said for the architectural
-beauty of Colombo, the buildings being, generally
-speaking, of ordinary commercial type. The
-Grand Oriental Hotel, or G.O.H. as it is commonly
-called, is a big pile near the harbour, and has an
-arcade surrounding the ground story, like most of
-the stores, and continuous balconies above, partitioned
-off according to the rooms which open on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292">292</a></span>
-to them. Here and there there is a relic of the
-Dutch occupation in some of the frontages with
-round recessed arches and pilasters.</p>
-
-<p>The Governor’s house, as usual, is the most
-attractive looking building, half hidden amidst
-masses of palms and other trees. A rather bold
-clock tower faces a long esplanade, which extends
-for nearly half a mile along the sea front, at the
-end of which is situated the Galle Face Hotel,
-with its cluster of slender-stemmed cocoa palms
-leaning over the sea. Here, the long ocean
-breakers rolling in, the turquoise waves melting
-into dazzling foam, seen through the palm trees
-has an enchanting effect, both in the sunlight and
-the moonlight. There was a young crescent at
-night—seen, as only seen in the East, on its back—floating
-like a fairy boat, and casting a mysterious
-light over the dark ocean, the waving palms overhead
-and the sound of the breaking waves adding
-to the wonderful charm of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>Jin-rickshaws were in great request, but the
-supply seemed fully equal to the demand, and the
-esplanade was always full of the trotting boys
-drawing white clad Europeans in topis up and
-down the terra-cotta coloured road. There was a
-wide, green strip extending along the drive, and on
-the other side of the suburbs of Colombo extended
-northwards, chiefly native houses, and bungalows
-of European residents often enclosed in gardens
-and hidden in ample foliage of trees.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_292" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_292.jpg" width="413" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">UNDER THE PALMS AT THE GALLE FACE, CEYLON</div></div>
-
-<p>The hotel was served by an army of Cingalese
-waiters who wore their hair much like the southern
-Indians—long, like a woman’s, and done up in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293">293</a></span>
-knot at the back, their peculiar distinction, however,
-being a semicircular comb of tortoise-shell worn
-like a coronet on the top of the head, but with the
-open points in front. Otherwise their costume
-consisted of a close white skirt, and a neat white
-jacket with green facings. Their feet were always
-bare, like the Indian boys.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_293" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_293.jpg" width="357" height="541" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">COMMON OBJECTS OF COLOMBO. (JIN-RICKSHAWUS BIPEDES)</div></div>
-
-<p>There was a band at dinner, served in a vast
-white hall, and after, on the terrace, when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294">294</a></span>
-guests would sit out among the palms lighted up
-by jewels of electric light. The white breakers
-foaming under the moon, the shadowy waving
-palms, the sky flashing with sheet lightning, the
-brilliantly lighted hotel, and the white figures flitting
-about “among the guests star-scattered on the
-grass,” all contributed to a striking stage effect.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_294" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 20.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_294.jpg" width="335" height="520" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A CINGALESE WAITER</div></div>
-
-<p>The hotel was certainly spacious and well
-appointed, having large cool corridors and rooms
-to sit in—comparatively cool that is to say, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295">295</a></span>
-without the gloom of so many of the Indian hotels.
-In the matter of food, cookery, and the service too,
-it was a great improvement on the Peninsula.
-There were electric fans everywhere in motion, and
-we could always turn one on in our room—which
-was normally an oven. The draft from these fans,
-however, are said to be apt to give people chills,
-and some caution in their use in bedrooms is
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>We visited our friends in their charming house—one
-of the older style of Colombo dwellings, in a
-delightful garden where afternoon tea was served
-on a pleasant lawn shaded by fine trees, among
-which we recognised the forest flame, which with
-its wonderful scarlet blossoms had struck us on the
-way to Darjeeling, though not then in flower here.</p>
-
-<p>Another day Mr Bois took us out for a drive in
-his motor all around Colombo and its neighbourhood.
-We went through the town and along by
-the dry dock, and through the native quarter
-(Zeppa or Teppa) and away through narrow lanes
-shaded by cocoa palms, plantains, banyans, mangoes
-and other trees growing with tropical luxuriance
-each side the way, in plantations, and around the
-bungalows.</p>
-
-<p>The motor seemed a strange vehicle in the midst
-of the primitive life of the Cingalese; and it is said
-that extremes meet, and certainly a motor and a
-primitive ox-wagon represent about the greatest
-contrast in means of locomotion and transport that
-one can well imagine. It was rather wonderful
-that we escaped a collision sometimes meeting such
-vehicles in the narrow lanes, or that we avoided<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296">296</a></span>
-running over stray chickens or dogs—the latter
-kind always resenting the motor and imperilling
-their lives by running and barking in close
-proximity with the enemy. The natives we met
-walking, too, were by no means alert in getting out
-of the way, and did not seem to realise the danger.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_296" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.6875em;">
- <img src="images/i_296.jpg" width="363" height="600" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">IN CEYLON—EXTREMES MEET—THE MOTOR AND THE OX-CART</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297">297</a></span>
-We passed mission houses and churches of all
-sorts, and of every shade of theological colour—Wesleyans,
-Roman Catholics, and Salvation Army—all
-the plagues of sectarian Christianity which
-afflict humanity in Europe, alas!</p>
-
-<p>Our friend said, à propos of some remarks of mine
-about the ignorance and indifference of missionaries
-as to native religions and their natural suitability
-to the races, and their habits of life and the climates
-where they are found, that he had cautioned
-missionaries against running down the native
-religion. This in Ceylon, is mainly Buddhist (and
-Buddha surely discovered something analogous to
-Christian ethics, if not superior, long before Christ).
-The Tamils are Buddhists, but there are some
-Hindus and Mohammedans in Ceylon, and even
-pure Buddhism is mingled in some curious way
-with a primitive devil-worship.</p>
-
-<p>We saw the golf links and a golf club house—quite
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">à la Anglaise</i>—on a rising ground and bare
-of trees, for a wonder in Ceylon. It appeared that
-these links occupied the site of a farm which did
-not succeed. Then we saw the river, where an
-engineer’s iron bridge had taken the place of a former
-bridge of boats. Colombo must have largely lost
-its primitive and Dutch character when the old
-Fort was destroyed. This has been replaced by
-terribly ugly Barrack buildings, and the town is
-rapidly becoming a modern commercial centre, big
-warehouses and universal provider’s stores are
-rising up after the European or American type.
-The native character, however, manifests itself still,
-peeping out here and there, especially in the older<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298">298</a></span>
-shops, and there is more native costume to be seen
-than one had imagined. The country ox-cart is a
-striking object with its huge tilt of matting projecting
-forward and backward like a hood, the
-single zebu by which it is usually drawn appearing
-small for the size of the vehicle.</p>
-
-<p>We did not see many native women about, but
-those we did see wore the native dress, consisting
-of a white bodice, cut round and rather low in the
-neck, with a lace edging; a necklace and earrings,
-and the narrow skirt wrapped about the lower half
-of the figure to the feet generally printed with a
-pattern, or chequered, similar to that worn by the
-men.</p>
-
-<p>We drove round by the Cinnamon gardens, and
-rested at a club house—a mixed European Club—a
-pleasant house with a large and well-kept croquet
-lawn in front where ladies were playing. We sat
-a while, after being refreshed and making some
-new acquaintances, we returned in the motor to our
-hotel.</p>
-
-<p>We had thunder and lightning at night. The
-lightning flashing almost incessantly all over the
-heavens, but mostly from great clouds rolling up
-from the north and east.</p>
-
-<p>While sitting at tea in the hall of the Galle Face
-one afternoon we met an old friend in the person
-of Mr Cyril Holman Hunt, the son of the famous
-pre-Raphaelite painter, who had been a planter for
-some years, first in Ceylon and afterwards in the
-Straits, from which he had just arrived. So that it
-was quite a chance our meeting, as he was not even
-staying at the same hotel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299">299</a></span>
-The same evening the officers of the Italian warship
-<i>Marco Polo</i> were entertained at dinner at the
-Galle Face, and their band played selections
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>The scene in the hall of a Colombo hotel is
-always busy, but in a different way to a European
-hostelry—one might almost say it was feverish
-haste in the midst of languid indolence—a ballet
-of energetic action before a crowd of unconcerned
-spectators. While some are in the fuss of departure
-or arrival, rows of enervated travellers lounge in
-wicker chairs, reading, chatting, smoking, or
-engaged with tea or cooling drinks, mostly attired
-in white; many of the ladies in delicate summer
-dresses, the men in white drill or tussore suits.
-All nationalities are represented, the majority
-American, and mostly people waiting for their
-steamers outward or homeward.</p>
-
-<p>Most visitors to Ceylon make a trip to Kandy,
-and one morning early saw us on our way thither.
-The railway carriages are good and comfortable,
-but they do not allow the stacking of hand luggage
-in them as they do to such an extent on the Indian
-railways. The train passed through a very rich
-and fruitful-looking country, where the paddy crops
-in different stages—under water, green and ripe or
-being reaped and thrashed—reminded us of India.
-The fields were generally surrounded by groves of
-plantains and palms.</p>
-
-<p>The vegetation being most luxuriant everywhere:
-banyans, mangoes, and flowering trees of different
-kinds including spireas and the “forest flame” we saw
-at Darjeeling; tangled masses of creepers hanging<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300">300</a></span>
-from the boughs, and often covering the whole tree.
-Several rivers were crossed the red earth showing
-on their banks, and the water generally tinged with
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Kandy about 11.15, the train
-ascending to this place about 4400 feet. The line
-curving up the slopes so that we could frequently
-see the engine and forepart of the train rounding
-the loop in front of us. We could only secure a
-room for one night at the hotel (the Queen’s), so
-that we had to make the most of our time.
-Accordingly, after tiffin, we started in a carriage for
-what the hotel people prosaically called “No. 2.
-drive” (!).</p>
-
-<p>Skirting the large tank or lake in front of the
-hotel, which has a solid stone palisading around it
-cut into points and pierced, we ascended a steep
-road, winding up the hills through lovely woodlands,
-at every turn presenting fine mountainous and
-panoramic views of the country. Beautiful clusters
-of bamboo of enormous size occurred frequently, the
-stems very thick and of an oxidized bronze colour,
-varying from dark to light. Another kind had
-bright golden coloured stems, and a lighter, more
-feathery foliage. Cocoa palms, plantains, and
-mangoes were abundant, also cinnamon plants.
-A native boy offered us a cocoa bean pod, and a
-spray of cinnamon—a pretty tree with a tassel-like
-flower. There were also large trees bearing massive
-pendulous fruits, which grow directly out of the
-trunk suspended on very short stalks in clusters of
-two and three. This fruit was called “Jack fruit.”
-It looked like a sort of gigantic walnut, and was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301">301</a></span>
-covered with a soft green velvety kind of rind.
-The leaves of this tree was small and poplar-like in
-shape. The brilliant scarlet lily-like bloom of a
-dark leaved shrub was often seen, the flower having
-long stamens hanging out like a tassel.</p>
-
-<p>The various drives which had been made over
-the hills and through these great woods were
-apparently named after different governors’ wives.
-There was Lady Longden’s drive, Lady Macarthy’s,
-Lady Horton’s, and so on. We sometimes had
-the impression, as the carriage followed the gravelled
-curves of these drives, that we were approaching
-some country seat among the hills. The drives,
-though well planned for points of view, and well
-kept, were, perhaps, a little too suggestive of
-the landscape gardener, a little too conscious and
-laid out to order, to be thoroughly enjoyable. We
-should have preferred to see the untouched work
-of the original designer of Ceylon scenery. The
-natural wild country unanglicised—though I know
-I should be told that without such roads and
-clearings one would not be able to see the country
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>We British, somehow, always seem to carry
-suburban ideas with us everywhere, and English
-trimness and neatness even out into the tropical
-wilderness. We passed neat homes surrounded
-by smooth tennis and croquet lawns, as if bits of
-Chiselhurst or Surbiton had been suddenly dumped
-down in the midst of all this wonderful world of
-luxuriant growth and unfamiliar trees, and close
-to native huts of the most primitive kind.</p>
-
-<p>The native roof here, as at Darjeeling, appeared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302">302</a></span>
-to be either thatch or wooden shingles, and here,
-again, we were sorry to see corrugated iron creep into
-use everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>The most primæval sight we had was perhaps
-that of the elephants bathing in the river. This
-was at a spot close to a native village, where we
-left our carriage and, walking through a grove,
-came out on the river shore where five or six black
-elephants—one a large one with fine tusks—were
-disporting themselves in the water, in charge
-of native attendants, rolling over on their sides
-and squirting the water over themselves by means
-of their trunks with the greatest enjoyment. The
-water was rather thick and reddish in colour from
-the clay of the banks.</p>
-
-<p>On the way back to the hotel we passed the
-famous Buddhist Temple of the Tooth with its
-pagoda-like roof, but it looks but an insignificant
-building to be the centre of Buddhistic reverence
-and tribute.</p>
-
-<p>This was a lovely moonlight night, and the
-walk by the lake would have been perfect but for
-the touts and vendors of all sorts of things that
-you do not want.</p>
-
-<p>We left Kandy the next morning for Nuwara-Eliya;
-our travelling companions were two Germans
-from Berlin, father and son. The train continued
-to climb, the line curving more sharply than before.
-We saw some fine mountain distances and Adam’s
-Peak rising up afar, and soon entered a vast tea-planted
-district, the tea plants often bordering the
-railway line, and covering the slopes of the hills
-which seemed covered with a more or less regular<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303">303</a></span>
-green pattern, the dark velvety green of the tea
-plants intersected by the light feathery foliage of
-young rubber-trees, planted in regular rows at intervals
-in some places. The landscape was very
-clear and every detail sharply defined in the bright
-sunlight, with very little suggestion of atmosphere,
-except for the mountain distances which were deep
-blue.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_303" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.125em;">
- <img src="images/i_303.jpg" width="370" height="430" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>TEA PLANTATION, CEYLON</p></div>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“She liked coffee, and I liked tea,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And that is the reason we always agree!”<br /></span>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the afternoon about four or five o’clock we
-reached Nunnoya station, where we had to change
-into a narrow-gauge train to finish the last part
-of the journey to Nuwara-Eliya. We continued<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304">304</a></span>
-to climb in shorter and more loop-like curves,
-being able often to gaze down on the line we had
-just traversed winding below like a glittering
-serpent among the wooded hills and tea plantations.
-Tea everywhere, and not a drop to drink—yet
-suggesting potentially more than the whole
-world could consume.</p>
-
-<p>Something after five found us at Nuwara-Eliya
-where we got into a wagonette, and a good pair of
-greys brought us through the village to the St
-Andrews Hotel, a very pleasant homelike place
-in a nice garden and backed by beautiful woods.
-The original house looked as if it might have been
-a private residence, and there was just a touch of
-Rydal Mount about it and its situation, at the
-first glance, but a new wing had been added with
-a tin-roof, and there was a golf course in the valley
-just below.</p>
-
-<p>The valley is very beautiful, with its richly
-wooded hills and a lake with blue mountainous
-distance. Delicate feathery, aspen-like trees wave
-in the soft air, and there are numbers of firs and
-cypresses which give an Italian touch to the landscape,
-but no palms. In fact, the whole character
-of the country is totally different from Colombo
-and Kandy. The climate, too, is much cooler, the
-thermometer falling to 40 degrees at night, or even to
-frost, though the sun is hot enough in the middle
-of the day.</p>
-
-<p>There is a native bazaar, and an English quarter
-with a red club house, tennis courts, and a race-course—of
-course. St Andrews, however, where
-we were quartered, was quite away by itself, and was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305">305</a></span>
-altogether perhaps the pleasantest place we had
-stayed at either in India or Ceylon. It was possible,
-for one thing, to walk out without being worried
-by guides and touts, or to buy things. The climate
-was delightful after the enervating heat of Colombo,
-and there being hardly any other guests the quiet
-of the place was a great relief and very restful.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon we had a walk up the opposite
-hills, the track being mostly through tea-plantations,
-with forest bits occasionally. The tea tree left to
-itself apparently grows high on a stem, having a
-very striking character and shape, suggesting almost
-the stone-pine. The small, thick-stemmed, closely-trimmed,
-flat-headed dwarf bushes which are its
-characteristic forms in the tea plantations also have
-an interesting effect in some situations on the hill-sides,
-intersected by wandering paths whereon
-the dark natives move up and down. The tea-plant
-has a leaf somewhat of the character of a
-laurel or orange tree, and its flower recalls that of
-the orange. Ceylon tea when made is of a beautiful
-clear orange colour—I mean when poured from the
-pot.</p>
-
-<p>The Hagdalla gardens, founded by the government
-in 1861, well repay a visit, and are deeply
-interesting to anyone interested in the flora of
-Ceylon. It is a drive of about six miles; passing
-through the native village, and by the English
-Club and race-course, the lake is skirted, and after
-that the road takes the character rather of a
-mountain pass, and runs along the edge of a deep
-wooded ravine down which a rocky stream tumbles
-into falls over boulders. There was just a touch of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306">306</a></span>
-a sort of Borrowdale, translated into Cingalee, about
-this part of the drive. The wild forest which clad
-the hills each side of the valley was very different
-in character and colour to anything seen in Europe,
-the trees showed the most lovely tints of varied
-bronze, from pale green to copper red. The tea
-tree was abundant, and the rhododendron, which
-here is totally different in character and general
-shape to the cultivated shrub-like bushes in English
-gardens. Here it is a thick-stemmed tree, with a
-rugged bark, and a bold irregular outline with
-rather sparse leavage and deep crimson flowers
-which glow splendidly among the dark metallic
-green of the leaves. There is a sort of formal
-grotesqueness about the tree, too, which is rather
-Chinese.</p>
-
-<p>On the way through the ravine, at a solitary
-spot below the road, we saw a Buddhist shrine.
-On a little platform surrounded by a rough fence of
-loose stones, and facing the road, was a row of
-carved images, in some dark wood, standing figures
-of Buddha. In front of this rude structure we saw
-a native worshipper prostrating himself on the edge
-of the road, and bowing and bending towards the
-shrine.</p>
-
-<p>The Magdalla gardens are botanic and horticultural
-gardens laid out with great care and skill
-on the slope of a mountain. They apparently
-contain all the varieties of trees and plants indigenous
-to Ceylon. Tree ferns are there in abundance,
-flowering trees of many kinds, and parasitic
-plants, and orchids in great variety, growing in
-their natural manner. As one threads the narrow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307">307</a></span>
-wandering paths it is as if one passed through a
-thick jungle or tropical forest, only that the walking
-is made easy, and botanical labels here and there,
-and signs of gardener’s care and labour, remind one
-it is a garden.</p>
-
-<p>There is a keeper’s lodge, in this Cingalese paradise,
-covered with creepers, and a formal level
-parterre in front, one mass of brilliant floral colour—African
-marigolds, fuchsias, poppies, <em>blue</em> centred
-daisies, sunflowers, blue convolvulus, Amaryllis,
-and white eucharis lilies, canaryensis, polyanthus
-and many more; some that might be found in
-English gardens and hot-houses, with other tropical
-wonders only seen at Kew.</p>
-
-<p>After a ramble here we returned to the carriage,
-and drove back through the now burning sun.</p>
-
-<p>Gorse grows about the links and open common-like
-ground in the valley at Nuwara-Eliya, though
-the bushes seem to grow rather taller and straighter
-than they do in England. Instead of our lords and
-ladies, arum lilies grow wild. Great clusters of
-them may be seen by the sides of streams or in
-marshy places. The woods were delightful to
-wander in, and altogether Nuwara-Eliya might
-make good claims to be an earthly paradise, other
-things being equal.</p>
-
-<p>We had taken our passage, however, from
-Colombo, and were due to sail for home on the
-2nd of March. It was now the 28th of February,
-and we had to make our way back again, descending
-from Il Paradiso to a certainly hotter region.
-The descent by the narrow gauge railway was even
-more striking than the ascent, the train passing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308">308</a></span>
-through luxuriant growths of forest in which tree-ferns,
-rhododendrons, the tea tree, and what looked
-like a sort of box tree were abundant.</p>
-
-<p>The rubber-trade in Ceylon is now being added
-to the tree-trade, which, according to our competitive
-wasteful individualistic system, has somewhat
-outgrown its profitable market. One effect
-of this new development upon the landscape is
-devastation, as large tracts of wild forest on the
-mountain sides are being cleared by burning the
-natural growth in the first place, and then removing
-the stones and boulders which cumber the ground.
-This process does not add to the beauty of the
-scenery, nor can we expect that monotonous plantations
-will be good substitutes to the eye for the
-wild beauty and varied and luxuriant vegetation
-they displace.</p>
-
-<p>The Englishman in Ceylon seems to think of
-nothing but profit-making, however, like many of his
-race elsewhere; and is probably often even unaware
-of the beauty he destroys for commercial reasons,
-and he is always able to import cheap coolie labour
-from India to carry out his schemes.</p>
-
-<p>The Cingalese native it seems is unwilling to
-work, or probably has not the physique for heavy
-field labour, so he prefers to live the natural life
-of his country so far as he is allowed by his new
-masters, and of course is denounced as a lazy dog.</p>
-
-<p>Ceylon, indeed, one cannot help reflecting must
-have been a delightful paradise, if somewhat warm
-in parts, for its own people, before they were
-interfered with by western civilisation, with its
-pushful commerce, and missions, bringing in their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309">309</a></span>
-train poverty and disease, and the struggle for
-existence, in a land naturally fruitful and bountiful,
-and able to support its inhabitants without any
-special efforts on their part.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_309" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.125em;">
- <img src="images/i_309.jpg" width="370" height="405" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">TEA AND RUBBER IN CEYLON—A RISING INDUSTRY</div></div>
-
-<p>The planters are now clamouring for railway
-extension. In an interview which the Editor of
-<cite>The Ceylon Times</cite> sought with me I gathered
-that there was considerable discontent with the
-Home Government, who, he asserted, had derived
-greatly increased revenues from the extension of
-rubber planting and the new development of the
-industry, but who would not grant money for the
-desired extensions, the advice given by the
-present secretary for the colonies being to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310">310</a></span>
-effect that the Ceylon people should save their
-money, or “put by for a rainy day.”</p>
-
-<p>Of course the Editor’s point of view was that of
-the capitalist, and that the more the country was
-opened up the better, and he did not care to consider
-the effects of the ultimate outcome of the monopoly
-which absorbs the results of and succeeds commercial
-competition.</p>
-
-<p>He spoke, however, incidentally of the increase
-of poverty—poverty in such a land!—and that
-there was no poor law <em>yet</em>. He said the Cingalese
-would not work, and had even neglected the
-irrigation machinery which had been set up by the
-planters for their benefit, <em>in obedience to the
-requirements of the home government</em>.</p>
-
-<p>This would seem to show the difficulty of introducing
-ostensible benefits in a primitive country
-which has not reached the necessary stage of
-development to be able to take advantage of, or
-really to utilise, modern methods. From the point
-of view of the simple native no doubt there does
-not appear to be any reason why he should change
-the habits and customs of his race simply for the
-benefit of foreign settlers whose chief object is to
-exploit him.</p>
-
-<p>Changing trains at Nunnoya we were again
-greatly impressed by the splendour of the scenery
-traversed. For a great part of the distance towards
-Kandy and Colombo, the line passes through a
-mountainous district, at a high altitude, gradually
-descending, the line following the contours of the
-hill-sides for the most part, though tunnelled occasionally.
-One looks across a wide valley with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311">311</a></span>
-distant mountain ranges, ridge beyond ridge, in
-marked and emphatic outlines, and occasionally
-abrupt precipices—the sharp conical summit of
-Adam’s Peak conspicuous among them. The
-hill-sides are largely covered with tea-plantations,
-but the railway also passes through wild bush and
-forest, and high above one may see great towering
-crags of limestone and gritstone. Mountain
-streams are frequently crossed, and these break
-into cascades and falls among tumbled black rocks;
-great boulders frequently strew the mountain slopes
-as if tumbled by Titans among the foliage. There
-is occasionally a suggestion of Derbyshire scenery
-here and there, but on a grander scale.</p>
-
-<p>After Kandy the line descends still more till we
-reach the palm groves again, the river, and the
-lakes, and the heat of Colombo again. This time
-on returning we put up at the G.O.H., which is
-conveniently near the pier or departure stage for
-the steamers.</p>
-
-<p>Here we met Mr Cyril Holman Hunt again, and
-were introduced to several of his planter friends,
-who were very agreeable. There is a delightful
-garden of palms and tropical plants here, which is
-a pleasant resort in the cool of the evenings. With
-Mr Hunt we visited the Colombo Museum, which
-was courteously opened specially for us, it not being
-a public day. Here in a glass case and alive some
-extraordinary leaf-insects arrested our attention.
-They were feeding on green leaves, which they
-exactly resembled in colour, form, and texture, so
-that it would be most difficult to tell which was
-leaf and which was insect without closely watching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312">312</a></span>
-them. The young ones were like the red shoots
-of a plant, but the mature insects were quite green
-and quite flat like a leaf while showing the ribs and
-veinings. One could hardly have believed that
-nature, deceptive and imitative as she is, could have
-been capable of such a trick. I remember that a
-native at Kandy had shown me one of the green
-leaf insects in a box, but I thought it was an
-artificial thing, which indeed it looks.</p>
-
-<p>On the staircase were some copies of exceedingly
-interesting ancient Cingalese fresco-paintings from
-caves, resembling ancient Indian work in style, but
-in some instances showing a certain freedom in
-handling, the brush outline recalling later Greek
-vase-painting.</p>
-
-<p>There were excellent collections of native
-Cingalese decorative art in jewellery, silver work,
-and ivory-carving, of which latter craft some combs
-were the most delicate and interesting. There
-were also block-printed stuffs similar to the Indian
-hand-printed cottons. Among the jewellery, the
-necklaces of garnets and other stones set in filagree
-gold were characteristic. There were models of
-native boats of which there are several interesting
-varieties, and these were exceptionally good life-sized
-models of types of the aboriginal inhabitants
-(the Veddas)—the wild bush-tribes of Ceylon.</p>
-
-<p>The natural history department was very
-complete, and the whole museum judiciously comprehended
-the history, natural and archæological,
-of the island, and included some highly interesting
-Greco-Buddhistic sculptured remains, not so fine in
-style as those we had seen at Sarnath, but there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313">313</a></span>
-was the same type of standing figure in drapery
-expressing the lines of the figure, and also portions
-of an “umbrella,” showing a similar arrangement
-to the one at Sarnath, with the lotus flower centre,
-and the series of concentric rings of ornament
-containing the images of the lion, the horse, the ox,
-and the elephant in sunk relief. There was also a
-zoological collection attached to the museum in
-sheds and aviaries outside the main building—live
-animals and birds, including leopards, jackals,
-monkeys, flamingoes, pelicans, and a collection of
-small birds, minas, doves, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The time, however, for our departure from
-Colombo drew near. Our steamer the <i>Tourane</i>
-of the Messageries Maritime line arrived punctually
-on March the 2nd, calling at Colombo on her
-homeward voyage from China, and the same
-evening saw us aboard.</p>
-
-<p>We made our adieus, and our steamer cast off,
-or rather weighed anchor, about sunset, and we
-were soon under way. The dinner-bell rang at
-6.30, and going on deck afterwards we saw the last
-of Colombo—a mere thread of glittering beads of
-light on the horizon, and soon lost in the darkness
-of night.</p>
-
-<p>There was a large proportion of French people
-among the passengers, and they were chiefly officials
-and their families returning on leave from Chinese
-stations. They were exceedingly gay and lively,
-and always had plenty of conversation. It was
-like a continual comedy going on with much variety
-of character.</p>
-
-<p>On the 7th day, after a voyage of undisturbed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314">314</a></span>
-serenity over the Indian ocean, the blueness of
-the sea varied only by the steamer’s track, and the
-foam dancing into rainbows, with flying fish, or an
-occasional turtle, or an albatross or two, which
-flapped heavily after us, we sighted Aden, and
-rounded the striking rocky coast to cast anchor off
-the port. Here the tugs brought up the coal
-lighters, and the cargo boats, and the swarm of
-Soumalis, as before, and the usual bazaar on deck
-took place, and the hauling of the coal and cargo
-went on all through the night—the clamours of the
-coolies being occasionally fiendish, and the din was
-often punctuated by bangs on an iron bar, which
-sent a shiver through the ship. This was the
-method of giving warning to the man engaged in
-the loading operations in the hold. We afterwards
-learned that two poor coolies had lost their lives
-by venturing into the hold before it had been
-ventilated, and the air was so foul as to suffocate
-them, and a ship’s officer who went to their rescue
-also became insensible for a time. It seemed much
-hotter, too, now the ship was stationary.</p>
-
-<p>Artillery practice was going on from the fort the
-next morning, and we could see the shots strike the
-water. We did not get clear of Aden till about
-10 <span class="smcap smaller">A.M.</span>, but at last the swarm of boats and swarthy
-Soumalis left us, and the <i>Tourane</i> entered on her
-course through the Red Sea, and in due time
-passed Mocha (to starboard) and Perim (to port)
-and the Arabian coast, the sea churned into foam
-by the steamer flashed with phosphorescence at
-night,—the effect in the wake of the vessel being
-very beautiful, green sparks appearing and floating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315">315</a></span>
-on the surface, and globes of subdued light glowed
-under the fleeting foam, rapidly swept along and
-lost in the darkness of the night lit only by stars—among
-which the Great Bear showed how much we
-had altered our latitude.</p>
-
-<p>The heat continued very great for three days
-after leaving Aden, when it rather suddenly grew
-cooler, and by the time we passed “the Brothers”
-towards evening on the 12th of March, the weather
-grew quite grey and cloudy with a cold wind.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Suez early on the morning of the
-13th, and here it was fine and bright again, though
-the air felt thin and cool. The colour of the water
-had changed, too, and was now a fine clear
-turquoise—precisely the colour of the Egyptian
-glass bracelets, but dark blue on the horizon and
-against the land, which looked pink.</p>
-
-<p>The drama of the official tug and the cargo boats
-was again performed, and there was much hoisting
-of coffee-bags, in and out, and a taking of fresh provisions
-on board. The Traders came aboard, too,
-with Fez caps, bead and shell necklaces, post-cards,
-and other trifles. It was amusing to see our French
-friends buying the Fez freely, and not only wearing
-them themselves but putting them on the heads
-of their children. There had already been some
-astonishing transformations in costume on board
-since the cooler weather set in, topis and white
-drill being exchanged for tweed suits and caps or
-felt hats, and, in some cases, smart official uniforms
-with shakos.</p>
-
-<p>We left Suez about the middle of the day and
-entered the canal, the water still such a brilliant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316">316</a></span>
-turquoise colour that the reflection in the strong
-sunlight caused the white breasts of the sea-gulls,
-which now followed our ship, to appear green.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_316" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.0625em;">
- <img src="images/i_316.jpg" width="385" height="548" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">A FEW TRIFLES THE WIFE WISHED TO BRING HOME FROM INDIA</div></div>
-
-<p>We made some very agreeable acquaintances on
-board, which made the time pass more quickly, and
-we arrived at Port Said early on Friday the 14th
-of March. The coaling <em>this</em> time was a comparatively
-clean process, the wind not being ahead as
-before. Some few of the passengers got off for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317">317</a></span>
-Egypt here, but we were soon under way again;
-and M. de Lèsseps’ large effigy, the green dome of
-the Custom House, the steamers, the wharves, and
-the posters of Port Said soon all faded from view
-as we bade farewell to the East and entered the
-Mediterranean on our way to Marseilles, the last
-stage of our long voyage, where after some tossing
-we had a passing vision of snow-capped Sicily, and
-the Lipari Islands, with Stromboli still smoking
-away; and so, in due course, through the straits of
-Bonifazio, with no further sea troubles, landed at
-Marseilles on March 19, safe and sound.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319">319</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="index">
-<h2><a id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Abu, Mount, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adam’s Peak, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aden, outward and homeward call at, <a href="#Page_12">12–15</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adinath, Jain, pontiff, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adyar Library, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Afghanistan, Amir of, preparations for reception of—</li>
-<li class="isub1">At Agra, <a href="#Page_113">113–114</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Gwalior, <a href="#Page_135">135–136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aga Khan, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agra—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Jaipur, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrival—the hotel, <a href="#Page_112">112–113</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Pearl mosque, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drive to the Fort—Akbar’s great gate, <a href="#Page_113">113–114</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Taj Mahal, <a href="#Page_114">114–118</a>—</li>
-<li class="isub2">its garden, <a href="#Page_118">118–119</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Jama Musjid mosque, <a href="#Page_119">119–120</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drive to the mausoleum of Itmad-ud-Daulat, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">churches, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaars, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">excursion to Sikandra—tomb of Akbar, <a href="#Page_122">122–125</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">otherwise mentioned, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ahmed Khan, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ahmedabad—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Bombay, <a href="#Page_48">48–49</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drive through the city, <a href="#Page_49">49</a> <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mosques, <a href="#Page_49">49–53</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cotton factories, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaar and street life, <a href="#Page_55">55–58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native pottery, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">railway station, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ajmir—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Ahmedabad, <a href="#Page_62">62–63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Akbar Fort, <a href="#Page_64">64–65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaars, <a href="#Page_65">65–66</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Dargah, <a href="#Page_66">66–68</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fort of Targarh, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mosque of Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Daulat Bagh, <a href="#Page_68">68–69</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cantonments outside the native city, <a href="#Page_69">69–70</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">custom of nailing horse-shoes on the doors, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Akbar, Emperor, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tomb of, at Sikandra, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alviella, Count Goblet d’, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alcott, Colonel, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alexandra, Queen, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Altamash, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Altamsh, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alu-ud-din, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amber, deserted city and palace, <a href="#Page_106">106–7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">American tourists, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96–97</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ammayanayakanur, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amritzar—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Delhi, <a href="#Page_161">161–162</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hotel touts, <a href="#Page_162">162–163</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the hotel, <a href="#Page_163">163–164</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drive through the—its open drains, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Golden Temple, <a href="#Page_165">165–166</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">carpet manufactory, <a href="#Page_166">166–167</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">interview with a native pedlar, <a href="#Page_167">167–169</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Atal tower, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">public gardens, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">departure for Lahore, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anderson, Colonel, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arab dhow, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arabian coast, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra, mosque of, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arjamand Bann, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnold, Sir Edwin, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Baker, Sir Samuel, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bandakin, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bapatia, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bareilly, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barielly, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bearer, native, engagement of, <a href="#Page_30">30–33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bedding, need for travellers to supply their own, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Begara, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benares—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Arrival at—Clark’s Hotel, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216–217</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">first impressions, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Guest house, <a href="#Page_201">201–202</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205–206</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">expedition to see the Buddhist remains at Sarnath, <a href="#Page_201">201–205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">viewing the Ghats from the Maharajah’s peacock boat, <a href="#Page_206">206–211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Burning Ghat, <a href="#Page_209">209–210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Manikaranika Ghat and the Nepal Temple, <a href="#Page_215">215–216</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">pilgrims, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Golden Temple, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Hindu College, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Monkey Temple, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to the Maharajah in his palace, <a href="#Page_213">213–215</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">farewell glimpse of, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bengal-Nagpur Railway, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berhampore, <a href="#Page_244">244</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320">320</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Besant, Mrs Annie, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to, at Madras, <a href="#Page_247">247–249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bhutian peasants, <a href="#Page_225">225–226</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birdwood, Sir George, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bitragunta, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blavatsky, Madame, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blow, Mr Detmar, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bois, Mr, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bombay—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Impressions of, from the sea, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the landing at, <a href="#Page_21">21–23</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Malabar Hill, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29–30</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">street scenes, <a href="#Page_24">24–25</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">modern British buildings, <a href="#Page_25">25–26</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Crawford market, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaar, <a href="#Page_26">26–28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native wedding processions, <a href="#Page_27">27–28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Victoria Gardens, <a href="#Page_28">28–29</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Victoria and Albert Museum, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">engagement of a native servant, <a href="#Page_30">30–33</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">oppressive heat, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">welcome of M. Dadabhai Naoroji to, <a href="#Page_46">46–47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cotton factories, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonifazio, straits of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brahmans, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">British administration, benefits of, discussed—causes of unrest, <a href="#Page_141">141–143</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190–192</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Brothers, The,” lightship, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, Mr Percy, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buddhism—</li>
-<li class="isub1">In Ceylon, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">remains of, at Sarnath, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203–205</a>—the Great Tope, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Temple of the Tooth, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buffalo cow, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burmese people, discontent of, under British rule, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cactus plant, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caine, Mr W. S., <em>cited</em>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calabrian coast, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calcutta—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Races at, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">National Congress at, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">journey to, from Benares, <a href="#Page_218">218–219</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">impressions, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Minto Fête, <a href="#Page_219">219–220</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a Hindu soothsayer at, <a href="#Page_220">220–221</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">industrial exhibition, <a href="#Page_221">221–222</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">general impressions, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">otherwise mentioned, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Colin, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Candia, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caroline, Queen, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carpet manufactory at Amritzar, <a href="#Page_166">166–167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carts, native, <a href="#Page_22">22–23</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104–105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cashmere travelling merchants, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ceylon—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Notes of, <a href="#Page_290">290</a> <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">decorative art of, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native costumes in, <a href="#Page_292">292–293</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">religion of, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rubber trade in, <a href="#Page_308">308–310</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tea-plantations of, <a href="#Page_302">302–303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">vegetation, luxuriant, and scenery, <a href="#Page_299">299–301</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304–307</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310–311</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Western civilisation—its questionable benefits, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Ceylon Times, The</cite>, interview with editor of, <a href="#Page_309">309–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charybdis, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chitor, city of, <a href="#Page_77">77–79</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chitorgarh—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Ajmir, <a href="#Page_74">74–75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">night spent at, <a href="#Page_75">75–77</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to the ruined fortress, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79–81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Tower of Victory, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">otherwise mentioned, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cinnamon tree, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Clan Campbell</i>, s.s., <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clock towers, modern, in India, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colombo—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Arrival at, <a href="#Page_290">290–291</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">general description of, <a href="#Page_291">291–299</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">garden of palms, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">museum, <a href="#Page_311">311–313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coromandel Coast, native costumes on, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corsica, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Costumes, native, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in Southern India, <a href="#Page_241">241–242</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252–253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotton factories, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotton yarn, preparation of, for hand weaving, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cranes, white, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crete, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crows, Indian, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cultivated Crops, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cunningham, General, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curzon, Lord, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuttack, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Dacoits, <a href="#Page_198">198–199</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daulatabad, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36–37</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44–45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dargah of Ajmir, <a href="#Page_66">66–68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darjeeling—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Calcutta, <a href="#Page_223">223–226</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">toy railway, <a href="#Page_224">224–225</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">general description, <a href="#Page_226">226–227</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Woodlands’ hotel and its entertainments—the Tibetan masque, <a href="#Page_227">227–232</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the town, <a href="#Page_233">233–234</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">walks and rides round, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dauvergne, M., <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321">321</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Delhi—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Agra, <a href="#Page_146">146–147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrival—British residential quarter—Kashmir Gate, <a href="#Page_148">148–149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mutiny memorial, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the palace—peacock throne, etc., <a href="#Page_149">149–151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Moti Musjid (Pearl mosque), <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Jama Musjid mosque, <a href="#Page_151">151–152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Jain temple, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Chandni Chouk, <a href="#Page_152">152–154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">excursion to the Kutab Minar, <a href="#Page_154">154–158</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mosque of Shin Shah, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Old Delhi, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ancient city of Indrapat, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tomb of Humayun, <a href="#Page_155">155–156</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cemetery of Nizam-ud-din, <a href="#Page_156">156–157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">driving experiences, <a href="#Page_159">159–160</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">departure, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">otherwise mentioned, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Delwara, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Digby, Mr William, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dindigul, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dinghra, Dr, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dowden, Mrs, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Driving in India, risks of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dutt, Mr Romesh, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dyeing, native methods of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">East India Company, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eastern life, influence of Western ideas on, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141–143</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190–192</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edward VII., <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Egyptian religion, parallelism between the Hindu religion and, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elephants—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Excursions on, <a href="#Page_77">77–78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bathing of, at Kandy, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellora, caves of—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Bombay, <a href="#Page_33">33–38</a>—and back again, <a href="#Page_44">44–46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">temple of Kylas, <a href="#Page_38">38–43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Buddhist temples, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">village of Ellora, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enamel, Champlévé, <a href="#Page_179">179–180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Etna, Mount, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Everest, Mount, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Famines, native, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flaxman, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flying fish, <a href="#Page_15">15–16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Food at refreshment stations, unsatisfactoriness of, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Forest flame,” <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">French tourists, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fruit-bats, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Funeral, native, <a href="#Page_93">93–94</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ganesha, the elephant god, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ganges, scenes at the Ghats at Benares, <a href="#Page_206">206–211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Burning Ghat, <a href="#Page_209">209–210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gardens, Eastern type of, <a href="#Page_100">100–101</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girgenti, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glass, convex-mirror-mosaic work, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gohad, Rana of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grace, A. F., <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Graham, Cunninghame, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gramophones in India, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green ray, phenomenon of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gunj Baksh, mosque and tomb of, <a href="#Page_59">59–60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gwalior—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Arrival at—the Guest house, <a href="#Page_127">127–128</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136–137</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tomb of Mohammed Ghaus, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drive to the Fort, <a href="#Page_128">128–132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">palace of the Man Mandir, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Jain Temples, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">new town (Lashkar), <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134–135</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to Maharajah’s palace, <a href="#Page_132">132–133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sunsets over the Rock, <a href="#Page_137">137–138</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">description of the old town, <a href="#Page_138">138–140</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">departure—scene at the railway station, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hail and thunder storms combined, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hardy, Miss, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harrison, T. Erat, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hathi Sing, shrine of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Herefordshire</i>, s.s., <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Himalayas—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Climbing in the, <a href="#Page_227">227–229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">snow peaks of, <a href="#Page_232">232–233</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hindu and Tamil MSS., library of, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hindus—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Educated, debarred from high administrative posts, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Religion of—nature worship in, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279–280</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">parallelism between the Egyptian religion and, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Temples of—at Madura, <a href="#Page_277">277–283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">at Seringham, <a href="#Page_272">272–275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">at Tanjore, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Weddings of, <a href="#Page_27">27–28</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Women, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hiroshigi, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horton, Lady, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hotel life, picturesque feature of, <a href="#Page_84">84–85</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322">322</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humayun, Tomb of, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunt, Holman, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunt, Mr Cyril Holman, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunter, Capt. J. B. Dalzell, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunuman, Hindu god, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunuman, the monkey god, temple of, at Benares, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hyndman, Mr H. M., <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">India Office, policy of, <a href="#Page_141">141–143</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190–192</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Indian Ocean, incidents on voyage in, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Iqd-i-gul, or <em>The Rose Necklace</em>, <a href="#Page_240">240–241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irrigation wells, <a href="#Page_170">170–171</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Southern India, <a href="#Page_243">243–244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ismailia, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Israelites, passage of, through the Red Sea, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ivory carver’s workshop at Delhi, <a href="#Page_153">153–154</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jack fruit, <a href="#Page_300">300–301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jagmandir, palace of, <a href="#Page_88">88–91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jahanara Begum, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jahangir, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jain pontiffs, sandstone carvings of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jain sect, persecution of, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jain temples at—Ajmir, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Chitorgarh, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Delhi, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Gwalior, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Udaipur, <a href="#Page_86">86–87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jaipur—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Ajmir, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">first impressions, <a href="#Page_97">97–99</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the city, “the rose-coloured city,” <a href="#Page_99">99–100</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaars, <a href="#Page_101">101–102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104–105</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">enamelled jewellery of, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spherical rolling lamps of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Maharajah’s state elephant, <a href="#Page_102">102–103</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Maharajah’s palace, <a href="#Page_103">103–104</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">street scenes, <a href="#Page_105">105–106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Maharajah’s horses, <a href="#Page_110">110–111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jehan, Shah, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jhansi, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jijibhai, Sir Jamsetji, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jopling-Rowe, Mrs, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jubbelteer, Island of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jugglers, native—the mango-tree trick, <a href="#Page_187">187–188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Juggernath—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Temple of, <a href="#Page_86">86–87</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">festival of the Krishna at, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Juggernaut, pilgrims from, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jullumpore, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kali, goddess, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kandy, visit to—its scenery and foliage, <a href="#Page_299">299–302</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Khusru, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinchin Junga, view of, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232–233</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kipling, Mr, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kites, Indian, <a href="#Page_23">23–24</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Koh-i-noor diamond, the, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Krishna, festival of, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kunja Sahib, shrine of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kutab Minar, <a href="#Page_157">157–158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kutab-ud-din, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><i>La Nera</i>, s.s., <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lahore—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Amritzar, <a href="#Page_170">170–171</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Charing Cross hotel, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">British residential and business quarter, <a href="#Page_171">171–173</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178–179</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native quarter, <a href="#Page_173">173–175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaars, <a href="#Page_175">175–176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Fort, <a href="#Page_176">176–177</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Samadh, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Jama Musjid, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Wazar Khan tiled mosque, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Courts of Justice, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Museum, <a href="#Page_179">179–180</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">street scenes in, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit from the Princess Duleep Singh, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">departure for Lucknow, <a href="#Page_182">182–183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lamps, spherical rolling, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lashkar, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134–135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laurence, Lord, statue of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laurence, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leaf insects, <a href="#Page_311">311–312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lèsseps, M. de, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Light of the World, The,” <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lipari Islands, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Longden, Lady, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lucknow—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Lahore, <a href="#Page_183">183–184</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Wurtzler’s hotel, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in hospital, <a href="#Page_185">185–186</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native jugglers—the mango-tree trick, <a href="#Page_187">187–188</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ruins of the Residency, <a href="#Page_189">189–190</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Sikander Bagh, <a href="#Page_189">189–190</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Chatter Manzel, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">architecture of, <a href="#Page_192">192–193</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Jama Musjid, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Iambara, <a href="#Page_193">193–195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bazaar of the old city, <a href="#Page_194">194–195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">through the bazaar on elephants, <a href="#Page_196">196–197</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Martinière, <a href="#Page_197">197–198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyons, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Macarthy, Lady, <a href="#Page_301">301</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323">323</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Madura—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Scenery near, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to the Great Temple, <a href="#Page_276">276–283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Temple Courts, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Teppa Tank, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gigantic Banyan tree, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">palace of Tiramala, <a href="#Page_284">284–285</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">silk industry, <a href="#Page_285">285–286</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">table decorations at, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Madras—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Calcutta, <a href="#Page_239">239–245</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrival—the Castle Hotel, <a href="#Page_245">245–246</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">public buildings and street scenes, <a href="#Page_246">246–247</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249–251</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">temperature at, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to the Adyar library, <a href="#Page_247">247–249</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Toddy Tappus, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">jin-rickshaws, <a href="#Page_249">249–250</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Botanic Gardens, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mahmudshah, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malabar Hill, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29–30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mandal, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maratha chiefs, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marble—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Piercing patterns in, <a href="#Page_64">64–65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">suitability of Indian climate for preserving, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marseilles, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin, General or Captain—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Painting of, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">schools founded by, <a href="#Page_197">197–198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayo, Lord, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mecca, sign of having visited, on house walls, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Messina, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><em>Migration of Symbols</em> (d’Alviella), cited, <a href="#Page_41">41–42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mirza Jahangir, tomb of, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Missionaries, indifference of, to native religions, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mocha, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mogul Emperors, private chapel of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mogul Serai, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mohammedans—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Educated, debarred from high administrative posts, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Tombs of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59–60</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Weddings among the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Women, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174–175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mongolian peasants, <a href="#Page_225">225–226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monkeys, silver grey, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moonsawmy, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125–126</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mori, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morley, Mr John, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moses, well of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moti Musjid, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mulich, Dr, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Munmad, a night at, <a href="#Page_34">34–36</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Muslin, native method of printing on, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mussulman mosque of Arhai-din-ka-Jhonpra, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mutiny, memorials of, <a href="#Page_189">189–190</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">provocative causes of, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Nadir Shah, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Naoroji, M. Dadabhi, welcome of, to Bombay, <a href="#Page_46">46–47</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Naisirabad, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nelson, Lord, bust of, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nemnath, Jain pontiff, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nizam of Hyderabad, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nizam-ud-din, cemetery of, <a href="#Page_156">156–157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nunnoya, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nuwara-Eliya, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scenery at, <a href="#Page_304">304–305</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Magdala Gardens, <a href="#Page_305">305–307</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Parsees—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Burial place of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Merchant, description of, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Weddings among, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parvati, goddess, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paul, Lieutenant, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perrim, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Picturesque India</i> (W. S. Caine), quoted, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pillai, Mr, <a href="#Page_277">277–278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pillour, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plague, bubonic, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ploughs, native, <a href="#Page_74">74–75</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ploughman, native, earnings of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poori, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Port Said, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poverty of natives, <a href="#Page_140">140–141</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prang, Mr Louis, and Mrs Prang, <a href="#Page_235">235–236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Prosperous British India</cite> (Digby), cited, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Rai, Mr Laipat, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Railway travelling in India—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Facilities for, <a href="#Page_48">48–49</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native travellers, <a href="#Page_70">70–72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rajpootana, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><em>Ramayana</em>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rani Sipri, mosque of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Readymoney, Sir Cowasji Jehangir, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Sea, passage of, <a href="#Page_11">11–12</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Rena</i>, s.s., <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rhododendron, Cingalese, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rozah—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Drive to, from Daulatabad, <a href="#Page_36">36–37</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">description of a night at, <a href="#Page_37">37–38</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324">324</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rubber trade of Ceylon, <a href="#Page_308">308–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Russia, Czar of, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ryot, Indian, average earnings of, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Said, Port, visit to, <a href="#Page_5">5–9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salaams, custom as to, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sara, crossing the Ganges at, <a href="#Page_223">223–224</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sarbarmati River, scenes on, <a href="#Page_53">53–54</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58–59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sardinia, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sarkhai, excursion to, <a href="#Page_58">58–61</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saunders, Mr and Mrs, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scott, Mr Ross, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schwartz, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scylla, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seringham—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Religious procession at, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Temple of, <a href="#Page_272">272–275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shaw, G. Bernard, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheep, fat-tailed, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sicily, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sidi Sayyids’ Mosque, <a href="#Page_51">51–52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sikandra, excursion to—tomb of Akbar, <a href="#Page_122">122–125</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sikhs, religious centre of, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silignis, <a href="#Page_225">225–226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silk-weaving at—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Ahmedabad, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Vizianagram, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Tanjore, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Madura, <a href="#Page_285">285–286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silver Lake, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinai, Mount, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sindhia, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Singh, Princess Duleep, <a href="#Page_181">181–182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Siva, god—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Representations of, at Madura, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sacred bull of, <a href="#Page_255">255–256</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sacred mark of, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">otherwise mentioned, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sketching, native interest in, <a href="#Page_283">283–284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sorabji, Miss, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soumalis at Aden, <a href="#Page_13">13–15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">South Kensington, Indian museum at, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spartivento, Cape, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Squirrels, palm, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stromboli, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suez, call at, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suez Canal, passage through <a href="#Page_9">9–10</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315–316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sun, eclipse of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Table decorations of Southern India, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taj Mahal—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Visit to, and account of, <a href="#Page_114">114–118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gardens of, <a href="#Page_118">118–119</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">compared with the Itmad-ud-Daulat, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">moonlight visit to, <a href="#Page_120">120–121</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sketches of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tamils, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tanjore—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Journey to, from Madras, <a href="#Page_251">251–254</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">accommodation at, <a href="#Page_254">254–255</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the old fort and Hindu Temple, <a href="#Page_255">255–258</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">religious procession at, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Christian church at, <a href="#Page_258">258–259</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">palace of the Maharajah, <a href="#Page_259">259–261</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">description of—street scenes, etc., <a href="#Page_261">261–264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">decline of Western influence at, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native theatre, <a href="#Page_264">264–268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">native pedlars—Tanjore craftsmanship, <a href="#Page_268">268–269</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">water carrying, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taormina, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taragarh, Fort of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tea, Ceylon, colour of beverage, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tea plantations of Ceylon, <a href="#Page_302">302–305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theatre, native, at Tanjore, <a href="#Page_264">264–268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theosophical Society, headquarters, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Threshing of grain, native methods, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thull Ghat, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tibetan fat-tailed sheep, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tibetan masque at Darjeeling, <a href="#Page_229">229–232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tiled mosques, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Tourane</i>, s.s., <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trinchinopoly—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Arrival at—general impressions, <a href="#Page_270">270–272</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to the temple of Seringham, <a href="#Page_272">272–275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Rock of Trinchinopoly, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tuticorin, <a href="#Page_287">287–289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Twelve Apostles, The,” <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Udaipur—</li>
-<li class="isub1">Native group from, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">journey to, from Chitorgarh, <a href="#Page_82">82–83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hotel experiences, <a href="#Page_83">83–84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">place of tombs, <a href="#Page_85">85–86</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">palace of the Maharajah, <a href="#Page_87">87–88</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">excursion to the palace of Jagmandin, <a href="#Page_88">88–91</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">feeding of the Maharajah’s wild pigs, <a href="#Page_91">91–92</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Maharajah’s gardens, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Victoria Institute, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">departure from—the station, <a href="#Page_94">94–95</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325">325</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Umballa, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Villuparam, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vishnu, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vizianagram, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Voyages out and home, descriptions of, <a href="#Page_1">1–20</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313–317</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wales, Prince and Princess, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waltair, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Water filter and water bearers at railway stations, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watts, G. F., <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wax, raised designs of, on textiles, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webb, Sidney, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wedding processions in Bombay, <a href="#Page_27">27–28</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Western civilisation, questionable value of, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Women, native, costumes of, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174–175</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Zebu bulls, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace">
-<span class="small">PRINTED BY<br />
-TURNBULL AND SPEARS,<br />
-EDINBURGH</span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter transnote">
-<h2><a id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>An attempt was made to regularize inconsistent hyphenation,
-but many inconsistencies remain.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.</p>
-
-<p>The illustrations on the title and dedication pages are decorative.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations originally printed mid-paragraph have been moved
-to nearby paragraph breaks, so the page numbers in the List of
-Illustrations do not always match the positions in this eBook.
-However, links, in versions of this eBook that support them,
-do lead to the matching illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>Index not checked for proper alphabetization or correct page references.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_83">83</a>: “In meeting one’s compatriots aboard” probably should
-be “abroad”.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_218">218</a>: “Aurangzer Mosque” should be “Aurangzeb Mosque”.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_231">231</a>: “in an access of ridiculous” probably should be “excess”.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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