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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63959 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63959)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Harim and the Purdah, by Elizabeth Cooper
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Harim and the Purdah
- Studies of Oriental Women
-
-
-Author: Elizabeth Cooper
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 5, 2020 [eBook #63959]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HARIM AND THE PURDAH***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Richard Tonsing, Fritz Ohrenschall, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 63959-h.htm or 63959-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/63959/63959-h/63959-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/63959/63959-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/cu31924023537552
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-
-
-
-
-THE HARIM AND THE PURDAH
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- DANCING GIRL OF JEYPORE.
-
- Frontispiece.]
-
-
-THE HARIM AND THE PURDAH
-
-Studies of Oriental Women
-
-by
-
-ELIZABETH COOPER
-
-Author of “My Lady of the Chinese Courtyard,” “The Soul Traders,” etc.
-
-Illustrated
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-The Century Company
-
-(All rights reserved)
-
-(Printed in Great Britain)
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- INTRODUCTION 9
-
- CHAPTER
- I. EGYPTIAN WOMEN OF THE PAST 19
-
- II. THE MODERN EGYPTIAN WOMAN 39
-
- III. MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, POLYGAMY 56
-
- IV. THE WOMAN OF THE DESERT 69
-
- V. INDIAN SOCIAL LIFE 85
-
- VI. INDIAN HOME LIFE 100
-
- VII. MARRIAGE—THE GOAL OF WOMAN 113
-
- VIII. INDIAN MOTHERHOOD 130
-
- IX. WOMAN’S SORROW 143
-
- X. HYDERABAD AND THE MOHAMMEDAN WOMAN 154
-
- XI. MOHAMMEDANISM WITHIN THE ZENANA 170
-
- XII. BURMAH 179
-
- XIII. BURMESE RELIGION AND SUPERSTITION 200
-
- XIV. THE LADY OF CHINA 211
-
- XV. THE RED CHAIR OF MARRIAGE 240
-
- XVI. WHEN CHINESE WOMEN DIE 254
-
- XVII. CHANGING CHINA 260
-
- XVIII. JAPANESE WOMEN AT HOME 271
-
- CONCLUSION 307
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- DANCING GIRL OF JEYPORE _Frontispiece_
-
- Facing page
- “TWO WOMEN SHALL BE GRINDING AT THE MILL” 9
-
- EGYPTIAN WOMAN OF THE LOWER CLASS 19
-
- RAMESES AND HIS WIFE 20
-
- A WATER-CARRIER 36
-
- THE TAILOR 44
-
- A WOMAN OF THE MASSES 64
-
- CHILDREN ON THE NILE 66
-
- BEDOUIN WOMEN IN FRONT OF TENT 69
-
- A HOLY MAN, BENARES 96
-
- CRADLE IN VILLAGE, BARODA 132
-
- INDIAN WOMEN SPINNING 148
-
- A CARRIAGE FOR WOMEN 154
-
- MOHAMMEDAN WOMEN, HYDERABAD 170
-
- HUSKING RICE IN A BURMESE VILLAGE 179
-
- BURMESE GIRL 180
-
- DANCING AT A VILLAGE FESTIVAL, BURMAH 183
-
- A BUDDHIST SCHOOL MANDALAY (SHOWING BEGGING-BOWL) 194
-
- BURMESE BOY WITH TATTOOED LEGS 196
-
- _EN ROUTE_ TO A FESTIVAL, BURMAH 198
-
- A BURMESE WOMAN AND HER CIGAR 206
-
- BURMESE WORKING WOMAN 208
-
- GOLDEN PAGODA, MANDALAY 210
-
- CHINESE WOMEN WARMING HANDS AND FEET WITH BRAZIERS 214
-
- CHINESE WOMEN AND CHAIR-BEARERS 218
-
- BOUND FEET OF CHINESE WOMAN 221
-
- AN OLD-FASHIONED CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL 224
-
- WHEELBARROW AND COOLIE—USED IN PLACE OF WAGONS IN TOWNS
- AND COUNTRY VILLAGES NEAR SHANGHAI 236
-
- RAIN-COATS OF CHINESE WORKMEN 246
-
- RICE-BOATS ON CANAL, CHINA 260
-
- JAPANESE CHILDREN PLAYING 276
-
- AN OUTDOOR KITCHEN IN JAPAN 290
-
-[Illustration:
-
- “TWO WOMEN SHALL BE GRINDING AT THE MILL.”
-
- To face p. 9.]
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- “What thou biddest
- Unargued I obey. So God ordains;
- God is _thy_ law, thou mine: to know no more
- Is woman’s happiest knowledge, and her praise.”
-
-
-This is the creed of the woman of the East to-day. It is the same as it
-has been for centuries; it will continue the same for centuries to come.
-Indeed, it is a question whether the Oriental woman, with all her
-intellectual and social advance which is already beginning, will be able
-ever to free herself from those traditional and inherent influences
-which have been wrought into the very warp and woof of Eastern humanity.
-
-The Eastern woman is primarily a traditionalist. She is more closely
-bound by hereditary tendency than the woman of the West. One of her
-outstanding characteristics has lain for years in her dependency and
-passive reliance upon her husband for economic support and protection.
-Her very seclusion means to her, not that which the word would connote
-to the Westerner, slavery or imprisonment; to her it is rather the
-mantle of protective care and interest thrown over her by her lord and
-master. It has helped to make her feminine, as it has naturally added to
-her inefficiency as far as any work is concerned that bears a similitude
-of masculine activity.
-
-With the exception of the Burmese woman, and to an appreciable and
-growing extent the women of Japan, the Oriental woman has been
-influenced and moulded by her economic necessities. The Eastern attitude
-toward woman, which in general has been to keep her ignorant and to
-consider that her charms other than those relating to her physical
-attractions are minute, has brought about a feminine type peculiar to
-itself. The result is a woman who outside of the home has no power of
-gaining a livelihood, and who as a natural consequence has turned her
-whole thought, emotion, and imagination upon her domestic affairs.
-Furthermore, we find in such countries of the Orient as Burmah and
-Japan, where women are solving the problem of self-support, that they
-have also been able, not only to have greater freedom, but also, to a
-certain extent, they have demanded the right to choose their own mates
-and regulate the laws concerning their home life. For instance, in each
-of these countries the wife has the right of divorcing her husband—a
-right denied the woman of other Oriental lands. The property rights of
-women in these lands, where women are just beginning to be wage-earners,
-are also clearly set forth in their civil codes, giving justice to the
-women.
-
-The realm of the Eastern woman is primarily the realm of the home. She
-has the true spirit of the bee; she considers the collective good of the
-household before her own. Her great vocation is to be a wife and mother.
-She attends personally to her household duties, and domestic service is
-to her not a disgrace. Her children are to her a veritable life-work.
-She looks after them personally, superintends their every act, and
-watches closely their development. Even the high lady of the East does
-not consider it demeaning to cook with her own hands that which she
-knows will appeal to the taste of her family. Cooking, indeed, is
-regarded as a fine art in the East, and recipes are handed down like
-heirlooms from mother to daughter along with the family jewels.
-
-The Eastern woman is honoured by the honour of her household. It is her
-business to make it possible for her husband and her sons to advance,
-and she shines in the reflected light of their achievements. She has not
-been taught, neither has she any suspicion of the Western ambition to
-make name and fame for herself. There is a certain delight and
-satisfaction in living behind the veil which one can hardly appreciate
-from the Western point of view. That this Eastern feminine regards her
-success as domestic rather than social is abundantly proved to any one
-who lives intimately in touch with the women of these countries.
-
-The one great cry which goes up from the heart of every Oriental woman,
-regardless of place or station, in any home between Algiers and Tokio,
-is, “Give me sons!” It is this desire for men-children, and the belief
-on the part of the woman that this is the primal and ultimate destiny of
-womanhood, that has made marriage the universal custom for all women
-throughout the East. Rarely indeed do you find an unmarried woman. In
-India marriage is assured by betrothal in early childhood; and even in
-those countries where education and Western influence are raising the
-age limit of marriages one finds no diminution in the general feeling
-that woman’s world is the home, with her children about her.
-
-This devotion to the purely domestic realm has left the woman a victim
-to ignorance, superstition, and the many evils that follow in their
-train. One finds the same superstition working in the minds of the women
-in Cairo, in Calcutta, and in Peking. The Egyptian mother dresses her
-boy in rags to guard him from the baneful influence of the “evil eye,”
-while the woman of China pierces her son’s ears and places a ring
-therein, to deceive the gods and make them think he is a girl. The woman
-of Algiers will buy charms and magic symbols to bring her the blessing
-of motherhood, while the woman of Japan visits shrines and holy places,
-where her faith and superstition are traded upon by those who understand
-the weakness of their womenkind. She has so long been accustomed to rely
-upon her superstitions, her emotions, and to use her intuition in the
-place of a brain, that the present beginnings in education have been
-hampered. That, however, she will prove herself capable in the realm of
-mental training is proven by the fact that, especially in Egypt and in
-Japan, modern schools for girls are becoming really popular movements in
-the development of these countries. Every advance in the education of
-men adds to the possibility of intellectual emancipation for women.
-
-During long ages Eastern women have been denied the right to think for
-themselves and have been compelled to feel their way emotionally, and
-their power to feel thus has become abnormally developed at the expense
-of their power to judge or reason. The woman of the Orient is a woman
-swayed by emotions, by the heart instead of by the intellect.
-
-There is a logical line of connection to be traced among the modern
-women of the East. Her phases of development have been the inevitable
-outcome of influences to which she has been taught to submit as a duty.
-Her religious sense—the strong spiritual craving that is deep within the
-heart of all women—has been utilized as a means of influencing her to
-yield implicit obedience to her mankind, whether he be father, brother,
-or husband. She has made him, in a certain sense, her god, and in
-yielding all to him she has ceased to think in the terms of her own
-individuality, accepting the common opinion that the Eastern woman lives
-for her home and the amusement and the material comfort of her husband.
-A mental deficiency bill was passed upon her centuries ago, and the laws
-command her husband to keep her under restraint. Her menfolks expect her
-to be deficient, and have carefully guarded her from opportunities of
-becoming otherwise. Her husband has not associated her with any of his
-outside life, and she has found little or nothing in his conversation to
-stimulate or to broaden her mind. Considering her as a being who only
-understands her children and the petty gossip of the women’s quarters,
-he has deprived her of the mental possibilities which have reached the
-men of the East. He has not only tried to teach her not to think for
-herself, but the Eastern masculine has endeavoured to make her
-understand that she cannot think. Nor is this tendency entirely
-abolished by modern education. The young girl fresh from her school in
-Cairo or Calcutta, where she has caught glimpses of a new world, and
-where her brain has been slightly awakened, marries and goes into the
-traditional home, where her faith in herself is gradually diminished by
-living constantly in the atmosphere of ignorance and superstition which
-still rules so largely in her woman’s world. Finally, she gives up
-trying, resigning herself to the standard of the man-made world in which
-she finds herself, and her husband becomes her keeper in every sense of
-the word.
-
-The Eastern woman naturally tends in this way to lose her self-reliance,
-which she is not allowed to exercise. She often decides few matters for
-herself, even the small details of her daily life being settled by her
-husband. The effect is insidious, but none the less relaxing, since the
-faculty of responsibility, like every other faculty, is strengthened
-only by exercise, and passes away with disuse.
-
-Can the woman of the East be awakened to an advanced development without
-harm to herself? Within her is found an enormous amount of suppressed
-capacity for good and evil. This suppression, which has been her cue for
-generations, possesses great dynamic power. Force becomes dangerous when
-confined; it should be directed, and unless properly guided and
-controlled, when it does burst forth, as it is bound to do with these
-women who are becoming educated and learning their power, it is likely
-to riot widely, with havoc for its effect. The Eastern woman who has
-traded upon her emotional nature for her livelihood, who has used these
-same emotions to keep her husband in a land where divorce is easy and
-where polygamy is practised by many, may be guided by her feelings
-rather than her intellect, using her new-found freedom to bring her
-lasting unhappiness instead of the joy which she now believes is lying
-just outside her doors. In India advance has come too rapidly at times,
-and the woman in her desire to slavishly imitate her sisters from the
-West has shocked the conservative traditions of her nation, and thereby
-greatly retarded her cause. The Egyptian woman when in England or France
-becomes almost ludicrous in her attempts to be like the European woman,
-forgetting that she lacks the foundation of the years of freedom and
-equality with men which bring judgment and confidence to the woman of
-the Western world.
-
-The woman of the Orient is awakening and is setting herself the task to
-consider what is best to be done. How can she remedy the deficiency of
-the social life of her land? The case is not a hopeless one by any
-means, even though her capacities and wonderful possibilities have lain
-dormant for so long. Many of these women now see the things that are
-wrong; they see the iniquity of a system in which they are not allowed
-to choose their own mate; they see the crying wrongs of their antiquated
-marriage and divorce laws, made for another period than the twentieth
-century—laws which do not fit the present conditions, however successful
-they may have been in other times. These women are learning to respect
-themselves and their position, learning to appreciate and value the
-weight of their majorities, and some are having the courage to speak
-out. These bolder ones are being punished for their intrepidity; but it
-does not check them. The cause for which they are working is gradually
-becoming more and more possible with the advent of education and Western
-influences, which are causing the present-day educated men of the Orient
-to require a certain amount of education in their wives and daughters.
-As this new order comes to the land of the Nile and the Ganges, the
-old-time woman who passed her days lounging on the divans, eating
-sweets, drinking coffee, and gossiping with servants and friends as
-ignorant as herself, will pass away. The new woman of the East will
-never be a suffragette; she will never attend mass meetings nor carry
-banners marked “Votes for Women”; indeed, it would be as incongruous to
-think of these sheltered women doing such a thing as to imagine the long
-row of mummies at the Museum of Cairo suddenly starting a procession
-down the aisles of the museum. These women, however, are setting up a
-high standard for themselves, eager to accept all the Western world has
-to offer them by way of education and growth, while they feel that they
-have the capacity to attain the objects of their new ambitions.
-
-In all this change, will the Oriental woman remain the same as regards
-the deepest things in her nature? Will she keep her innate sense of
-modesty, her womanliness, her love of home and children, her feminine
-qualities which seem to us of the Western world almost a weakness, but
-which comprise her appealing charm? We cannot but feel that although the
-woman of the East may change radically in the outward expression of her
-life, inwardly she will remain the same. Indeed, it would be a great
-mistake if the Eastern woman became satisfied with any mere superficial
-imitation of her Western sisters. She would lose her birthright. She
-would lose the consummate opportunity of being an Oriental in an
-Oriental world, and bringing out of her treasure things new and old for
-the benefit of the women of every race. Her message to the world of the
-West in the devotion and the keeping of the home, in the love and pride
-of children, in her self-effacement for the good of the family, is a
-high message and in no period has it been more insistently needed. It is
-this contribution which the woman of the Orient will bring in return for
-the education and enlightenment from the Occident.
-
-If the Western woman comes to the Oriental bringing in her hands the
-fair gifts of intellectual advancement and broadened life, her Eastern
-sister will not be her debtor if she, by example, presents in return the
-even more precious charms of obedience, modesty, and loyalty which
-fundamentally are the priceless jewels in the crown of the world’s
-womanhood.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EGYPTIAN WOMAN OF THE LOWER CLASS.
-
- To face p. 19.]
-
-
-
-
- The Harim and the Purdah
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- EGYPTIAN WOMEN OF THE PAST
-
-
-The word Egypt opens the Book of Romance to the traveller in the East,
-and he longs to come under the spell of its mysterious grandeur, and
-gaze upon the monuments which will speak to him of the power and
-splendour of a people long since gathered to their gods. It is a land in
-which to dream dreams and see visions. The temples, broken columns, and
-great pylons call with a voice that must be heard even by the prosaic
-tourist, and the hands he sees painted upon the walls of Denderah or
-Deirel Bahari will beckon him when sitting in office, club, or home, far
-from the dazzling sands or burning sun of Africa.
-
-The charm of the land of the Pharaohs is very real, and it is hard to
-speak of Egyptian life in a calm and lucid style, or free oneself from
-extravagant descriptions.
-
-Egypt and its fascination are favourite themes for novelists and writers
-of travel, and yet in spite of a good deal of general knowledge we
-remain curiously ignorant of the Egyptian woman, from the point of view
-of her moral and mental development. In common with women of other
-Oriental lands, she has been an object of mystery to the Western world.
-We know that in the olden time, in the days of the Pharaohs, she held an
-important place in the life of her world. We see her pictures on the
-tombs, temples were erected in her honour, and we know that there were
-queens who in their day governed their country with dignity and rare
-ability.
-
-In former days the purity of the blood of the royal line was assured by
-the marriage of a brother and sister, the queen reigning equally with
-the king. If a queen of royal birth took as her consort a male not
-descended directly from a royal mother, even though his father might
-have been a Pharaoh, at the death of his wife he was compelled to
-abdicate in favour of the son or daughter who could call the queen
-“mother.” This was shown when Thotmes I was compelled to resign his
-crown in favour of that great Queen Hatshepsu, his daughter, who for
-twenty years governed Egypt. Although her reign was a stormy one because
-of her half-brothers who claimed the throne, her name and features
-erased from all the monuments, and omitted from the official tablets and
-chronological records, yet enough was left to show that her power had
-been great and that she commanded the attention of the world. It is said
-that Hatshepsu had herself everywhere depicted as a man, wearing the
-dress and even the beard of the stronger sex, perhaps hoping in this way
-to gain a greater allegiance of her people.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- RAMESES AND HIS WIFE.
-
- To face p. 20.]
-
-One of the most interesting temples along the Nile is that of the first
-woman ruler of Egypt of whom we have accurate knowledge. One rides over
-the hot sands beneath a burning sun to a series of great terraces and
-broken white columns against a background of tiger-coloured precipices.
-This beautiful temple of the XVIIIth Dynasty, called by the Egyptians
-“the Sublime of the Sublime,” was dedicated to Amen Ra and his companion
-gods, Hathor and Anubis, but it was really erected to commemorate the
-glorious reign of a great queen.
-
-Another woman who influenced Egypt was the mother of Amenophis IV, the
-great reformer. He disestablished the State religion, some say at the
-instance of his mother; confiscated the lands and destroyed the power of
-the priests of Amon who were becoming all-powerful; and established the
-worship of one God.
-
-Solomon evidently held the Egyptians in high favour. He had many wives
-before he married a princess of Egypt, but we hear of no palaces being
-built especially for any of them, nor of the worship of their gods being
-introduced into Jerusalem. Yet we are told that a magnificent palace was
-built for Pharaoh’s daughter and that she was permitted, although
-contrary to the laws of Israel, to worship the gods of her country.
-
-Then there was Hypatia, an Alexandrine, who established a school of
-philosophy where learned men from all parts of the world came to listen
-to her words of wisdom; and in the British Museum there is a manuscript
-of the Old and New Testament, written on parchment immediately after the
-Council of Nice, by an Egyptian woman, which goes to prove that men did
-not possess all the knowledge nor learning of their time.
-
-We all know the story of Cleopatra and the part she played in the
-downfall of her country, and history abounds with tales narrating the
-bravery, courage, and charm of Egyptian women.
-
-Women are also associated with the religion of this old land. The
-worship of Isis was as general as the worship of her brother Osiris, and
-this goddess is reverenced as the representation of true and loyal
-wifehood.
-
-Another woman, Athor, the goddess of love, who was called the “Great
-Mother” and served as the protectress of earthly mothers, was good and
-beautiful, lovely and gentle, the goddess of love and joy. Neith was
-worshipped as the goddess of art and learning. Maat was the goddess of
-truth and justice; and in ancient times judges, when trying cases, held
-a small figure of the goddess Maat in their hands, and touched the
-persons acquitted with it, to show that they had won their cause.
-
-There was Taur, the goddess of evil, and Sekhet, typical of the
-scorching, destructive power of the sun, and many minor goddesses whose
-emblems, seen on columns and walls of the ancient ruins, tell us that in
-those days woman was thought fit to represent Divinity.
-
-The women of ancient Egypt were evidently not secluded, as is shown by
-the story of Pharaoh’s daughter who was going with her train of maids to
-bathe when she found Moses. The story of Potiphar’s wife and Joseph
-would never have been told in modern times, as a man-servant would not
-have dared to go to the women’s quarters.
-
-This valley of the Nile has always been the home of mystery and charm.
-The inscriptions on its tombs and temples have been deciphered and
-receive much attention in modern days; but they are not more interesting
-than is the woman of Egypt, who, as we have learned, enjoyed greater
-liberties and received more honour than is the heritage of her modern
-daughters. It is difficult to understand her, as even yet she represents
-traditions and the habits of dead centuries, fit to be relegated to the
-past.
-
-She is the Sphinx of this Oriental land, and will not easily give to the
-world her secrets.
-
-
- THE MOHAMMEDAN WOMAN.
-
-When first one visits Egypt, romance seems to peer from beneath the veil
-of each black-robed figure, and mystery lurks behind the intricate
-carving that covers the windows where one is sure some languid beauty
-sits waiting for the moment when her lord and master will be gone, that
-she may wave a white hand to the passionate suitor below. This idea of
-Egypt is generally derived from highly coloured and erotic novels which
-always make this country alluring and often sensual. To one who has been
-given this highly seasoned food for his imagination to feed upon the
-modern Egypt, with its great glaring hotels, its motor-cars, its shops
-that might be in London or New York, is a great disappointment.
-
-Illusions will again be lost if one is permitted to enter the beautiful
-homes on the fashionable drives of Cairo, for they are not Eastern in
-any sense, nor is there anything about them to indicate that their
-owners are Orientals. They express no individuality, and might belong to
-any person of means whether in the East or the West. The drawing-rooms
-are furnished in French fashion, with gilded chairs, a grand piano,
-hangings and curtains made in England or France. Great glass chandeliers
-holding the glaring electric lights express the cosmopolitanism which
-the mistress feels she must show the world, in order that she may not be
-considered as belonging to the old school of Egyptian womanhood.
-
-One hears the word harim and instantly conjures up an Arabian Nights
-picture of rare hangings, subdued lights, beautiful odalisques lounging
-on soft divans, slaves, incense, and a general air of sensuousness
-pervading the entire place. I read a book not long ago written by a
-well-known woman writer who says, “I am thankful to say that I have
-never been within a harim except twice, and the memory of that dreadful
-place will rest with me for many years.” Yet she admits that on her
-first visit to this “dreadful place” she had no interpreter and could
-only draw upon her imagination to give the women she saw their position
-in the elaborate household. This imagination was evidently a vivid one,
-as she believed that many women she saw were “the poor deluded slaves”
-of the master of the house, while quite likely they were the innumerable
-relatives and woman-servants that always throng the rich man’s home.
-
-In reality, in present-day modern Cairo, if one enters the harim of the
-better class, or of the official class, one is greeted by a hostess
-dressed in the latest French creation, tea is served, while the politics
-of the world are discussed easily in either French or English by the
-polished, up-to-date Egyptian women.
-
-The word harim is much misunderstood by the people of the Western world.
-The Arabic word harim simply means the women’s quarters. The selam-lik
-are the apartments in which the men of the household have their business
-offices, receive their friends, and pass their time, while the harim-lik
-are the apartments reserved for the female members and children of the
-family. The literal meaning is exclusiveness, seclusion, privacy. In its
-restricted sense it embodies the two meanings of the women of the
-household and their exclusive apartments. In the wider acceptance of the
-term we understand by harim an established social system deriving its
-sanction from a body of laws promulgated by the Arabian prophet
-Mohammed. When a woman is harim it means that she is secluded, and we
-hear the expression in regard to schoolgirls. “Yes, my daughters go to
-school,” a mother will say, “but they are kept harim.”
-
-In Persia and Turkey the word zenana is used, and in India the common
-form of expression for the woman who is not seen by any male except
-those of her immediate family is, “She is purdah-nashim, or simply
-purdah.” The purdah is the screen that shuts her from the outside world,
-and the Oriental, whatever his race, whether in Egypt, Turkey, or India,
-whether he calls it the harim, purdah, or zenana, speaks of it in his
-literature and poetry as the “Sanctuary of Conjugal Happiness.”
-
-One can live years in the East and get little idea of the life of the
-Moslem woman of the better class. In Egypt ten million out of the twelve
-million inhabitants are followers of the prophet Mohammed, and to
-understand at all the Eastern woman one must learn something of the
-religion that dominates the entire life of the Mohammedan. The actions
-of the Moslem woman, whether in India, Arabia, Egypt, Persia, or
-Algiers, are controlled and forced to comply with the laws made by the
-Arabian prophet of the seventh century, and even to-day his word
-practically governs each act of the domestic life as well as the world
-outside the home.
-
-Before Mohammed’s time there were no social, religious, nor educational
-institutions in Arabia, as we understand them. Unlimited polygamy,
-slavery, drunkenness, polytheism, gambling, child murder, and plunder
-existed. He taught that there was but one God, forbade child murder,
-limited the number of wives to four, forbade the use of intoxicating
-liquors, gambling, usury, and gave women a definite legal status.
-
-The reforms inaugurated by this wonderful man effected vast and marked
-improvement in the position of the women of the Eastern world. Her
-status had degenerated from that held in ancient times until her
-position was extremely degraded. She was the chattel of her father,
-brother, or husband, like his camel or his sheep, and could be bought
-and sold as any other chattel. She was an integral part of her husband’s
-estate and was inherited by his heirs. The son inherited his father’s
-wives and often married them. This Mohammed severely censured, and laid
-down most exacting laws in regard to the women lawful for a man to
-marry. He says:—
-
- And marry not them whom your fathers have married; for this is a
- shame and hateful, and an evil way—though what is past may be
- allowed. Forbidden to you are your mothers and your daughters, and
- your sisters, and your aunts, both on your father’s and your
- mother’s side, and your foster-mothers and your foster-sisters, and
- the mothers of your wives, and your stepdaughters who are your
- wards, born of your wives, and the wives of your sons, and ye may
- not have two sisters.
-
-He is severely criticized that he authorized polygamy, but when one
-remembers the wild, lawless people whom he governed, it seems that he
-showed extreme moderation in limiting the number of wives to four. He
-added that a man might possess the slaves within the household, and his
-followers say he was compelled to put in this postscript in order to
-quiet the unrest that was caused by the new domestic regulation which
-was so contrary to all ideas then controlling his immediate world.
-
-He expressly stated that if a man could not deal justly and love equally
-all his wives, he must then marry but one. All true believers quote this
-as meaning that Mohammed really intended his people to be monogamous, as
-it was fully known that no man could love four women with equal ardour.
-The husband is also enjoined to partition his time equally amongst his
-families, and there is a saying that if a man inclines particularly to
-one of the women of his household, in the day of judgment he will
-incline to one side by being a paralytic.
-
-He allowed women to inherit property, although he gave a girl only half
-the inheritance of a boy. A wife may inherit one-fourth of her husband’s
-estate if there are no children, and one-eighth if there are children;
-if there is more than one wife, the eighth is divided equally amongst
-them. A man may inherit one-half of his wife’s property in the event of
-her being childless, but only one-quarter if she leaves children, and
-neither one can disinherit the other.
-
-Yet the laws show clearly that a woman was not legally the equal of a
-man, as it takes the testimony of two women to equal that of one man,
-and the price of a woman’s life was only fifty camels instead of the
-hundred camels demanded for the life of a man. There is a reason for
-this other than the mere disregard of women. Those days were lawless
-days, when tribe was fighting tribe and the non-fighting women were
-naturally not held in such esteem as were the men who were needed to
-fight in the continuous tribal wars.
-
-Moslems claim that the Mohammedan woman is more truly protected by the
-laws of Mohammed than are the women of Western countries. She can
-dispose of any property that she may receive, either from her family or
-her husband, as she sees fit. She is not responsible for the debts of
-her husband; she can sue and be sued; or she can make contracts or enter
-into any business undertaking without consulting her husband; and she
-may even take him before the courts if he does not live up to an
-agreement he may have made with her.
-
-Yet this wily Eastern prophet did not believe in the absolute equality
-of women; as he says:—
-
- Men are superior to women on account of the qualities with which God
- hath gifted one above the other, and on account of the outlay they
- make from their substance for them;
-
-and he warns his followers from making too large settlements on them or
-in giving them too many valuable gifts:
-
- And entrust not to the incapable the substance which God hath placed
- with you for their support; but maintain them therewith, and clothe
- them, and speak to them with kindly speech.
-
-A Moslem woman is supposed to share the responsibilities of life as well
-as its pleasures. In the case of destitute parents, sons are required to
-contribute two-thirds towards their support, while the daughters must
-add their third. This is a very wise law, because Egypt, like
-practically all Oriental countries, makes no provision from its public
-funds for the maintenance of the poor or old. Each family must care for
-its own helpless.
-
-Many reasons are given for the laws compelling the women of Mohammedan
-lands to be veiled and to pass their life within the inner apartments
-reserved for their especial use. Some say that Mohammed caused women to
-be veiled because of his jealousy of his young wife Ayesha; others claim
-that the prophet, becoming enamoured by the beauty of his adopted son’s
-wife, caused her to be divorced, afterwards marrying her, contrary to
-the laws he himself had made; he wished to protect men from being
-subjected to the temptation which had overtaken him and had brought upon
-him the displeasure of his people. But the seclusion of women was found
-in Asia, in ancient Rome, in Syria, and even in Athens, long before the
-time of Mohammed. It was in practice amongst many Oriental nations from
-the earliest times, and quite likely Mohammed simply adopted the customs
-of the people with whom he came in contact on his conquering tours.
-
-The seclusion of women, especially among the nomads, can be traced to
-the warlike habits of the people. In times of war the enemy would first
-of all carry away the women, children, and cattle of the tribe with whom
-they were fighting. In order to protect the helpless they were kept in
-inner rooms. The richer and stronger the family, the more secluded were
-the women, and it became a mark of caste to be kept within the women’s
-quarters, or protected. Thus what first originated as a necessity became
-afterwards a matter of aristocracy, and the man who could keep his women
-strictly harim was looked upon as higher in the social scale than one
-who was compelled, from economic reasons or otherwise, to allow the
-females of his household to come and go freely in the world.
-
-An Egyptian woman, from the time when she is seven or eight years old,
-never shows her face unveiled to any man except her father, her brother,
-or her husband. No chance is given the followers of the Arabian prophet
-to have the little flirtations that are so dear to the heart of many of
-her Western sisters. Mohammed says:—
-
- And speak to the believing women that they refrain their eyes and
- display not their ornaments, except those which are external; and
- that they throw their veils over their bosoms, and display not their
- ornaments except to their husbands, or their fathers, or their
- husbands’ fathers, or their sons, or their husbands’ sons, or their
- brothers or their brothers’ sons, or their sisters’ sons, or their
- women, or their slaves or their children. And let them not strike
- their feet together so as to discover their hidden ornaments.
-
-The present-day Mohammedan woman observes this law more strictly than
-was at first intended, even to not being seen by the father of her
-husband. I know an Egyptian woman who is never seen by her father-in-law
-except on the first day of the year, when he calls upon her to wish her
-the joys of the coming year. She enters the room closely veiled and
-offers him the season’s greetings, then leaves without further
-conversation. I was calling upon an Indian Mohammedan woman who could
-not enter the room until her father-in-law had left it, as it would have
-been a serious breach of etiquette for him to see her.
-
-This seclusion does not rest heavily upon the Mohammedan woman, as she
-considers it the desire of her husband to protect her, and she would be
-the first to resent the breaking of her seclusion, as showing that she
-had lost value in his eyes. She lives for no one except her family, is
-supposed to be of no interest to any one else, it being a great breach
-of social decorum for any male member of a family to even inquire about
-her. A man would never say to another man, “Is your wife well?” He would
-say, “Is your household well?” And the husband would never speak of his
-“wife” to another man, but would speak of his “house,” which would
-naturally include the female occupants.
-
-The harim is the “Holy of Holies” in the Moslem world. Even a police
-official would hardly dare to penetrate the women’s quarters in search
-of a criminal. When a man has retired to his harim he is free from any
-disturbing influence from the outside world. If a friend or enemy should
-call and servants would say that the master was in the harim, the caller
-would be compelled to leave or wait until the master was disposed to
-enter again the selam-lik, or rooms assigned to the male members of the
-household.
-
-The greatest evil in the harim life lies in the dreadful seclusion and
-the paralysing monotony. Many of the older women are unable to read and
-write, and they pass their days in weary idleness and a vacuous routine
-which is only broken by visits to women friends as mentally impoverished
-as themselves. Not being allowed the friendship of the opposite sex,
-they are denied the stimulation of the mind which would no doubt result
-from the interchange of ideas with men who come in contact with the
-outside world. Naturally the intellectual development is restricted, and
-this starving of the mentality of the women must have a result
-detrimental to the rising generation.
-
-Seclusion also makes a woman very much more the actual possession of her
-husband than she would be if allowed to come and go in the world, to
-know her rights and the means by which to enforce them. Although the
-laws are very much in her favour, in regard to property rights
-especially, it takes a woman of more than ordinary courage and
-intelligence to break away from the walls which encircle her and parade
-her troubles in open court. We are told of the wonderful laws allowing
-the woman to dispose of her property as she wishes; but we are not told
-that she may give this property to her husband, and when once within the
-harim, pressure is often brought compelling the woman to give all that
-she possesses to her husband, making her doubly helpless and wholly
-within his power.
-
-They have a proverb that a woman must always answer the call of her
-husband, “even if she is at the oven.” Her happiness depends entirely
-upon the treatment she receives from him. His visits to the harim are
-the only breaks in the monotony of her life, and he brings to her the
-only touch she may have with the great man-world outside. By a few men
-the wives are treated as if they were intellectual equals, but these are
-few and far between. The average Oriental treats his womenfolk as if
-they were upon a lower plane than himself, “brought up amongst ornaments
-and contentious without cause.”
-
-One would judge that, handicapped as they are, Moslem women would take
-no part in the political or social life of their country, but facts
-prove that they can rise to great heights and exhibit rare courage and
-executive powers in time of need. Ayesha, the favourite wife of
-Mohammed, showed an instance of bravery and courage that might belong to
-women of any land. When Ali, the cousin of the prophet, rebelled against
-the successors of Mohammed, Ayesha took the field against him,
-commanding the troops in person at the “Battle of the Camel,” and in
-later days they have shown that the restrictions of the harim do not
-deaden the fires that burn in women’s breasts when tyranny or oppression
-rules their land.
-
-In Persia, where Mohammedanism in its strictest sect has sway, the women
-have been known to rise in force and demand the rights of their people
-when all the efforts of the men have failed. In 1861, at the time of the
-great famine, foodstuffs rose to an exorbitant price, because of a few
-greedy officials who were enriching themselves at the expense of their
-starving countrymen. It was impossible to bring the matter before the
-Shah by the methods generally employed, but the women rose, and one day
-thousands of them surrounded his carriage as he was returning from a
-hunting trip, and stating the wrongs of his people, demanded that he
-should make an investigation. The Shah was thoroughly frightened at the
-sight of this unprecedented exhibition on the part of his usually unseen
-subjects, and promised all they asked, and, what was more wonderful,
-kept his promise. The leaders of the party who were causing the distress
-were beheaded, and the price of bread was diminished by half within
-twelve hours. It is only a few years ago that the women of Persia
-confronted the President of the Assembly in his hall, and tearing aside
-their veils and producing revolvers, confessed their decision to kill
-their husbands and sons and add their own dead bodies to the sacrifice
-if the deputies should waver in their duties to uphold the liberties of
-the Persian people.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A WATER-CARRIER.
-
- To face p. 36.]
-
-These Moslem women display a fortitude and courage that is almost
-fanatical in times of persecution. Thousands in Persia have given their
-lives for their faith in Baha Ullah, the leader of a sect of reformed
-Mohammedans. They have been dragged from the harims to the public
-market-places, where they have been subjected to unheard of indignities
-before having the privilege of dying for their faith. They have also
-been compelled to sit in rows facing the public execution grounds while
-their husbands and sons were beheaded before their eyes, but even the
-torture and death of those they loved did not cause them to waver from
-what they believed to be right. The story of one woman exemplifies the
-fanatical courage that will dominate such a shut-in woman, when in some
-dim, tragic hour she has been compelled to give her contribution in the
-life she loved to her religious cause. In Tabriz one day a crowd of
-women were seated facing the executioner’s block, and amongst them a
-delicate, dainty woman who had been protected all her life within the
-harim of one of the prominent men of Tabriz, but whose death had left
-his women helpless to bear the brunt of his enemy’s wrath. Chance had
-made this enemy the city Governor, and he remembered that the family of
-the man he hated even in death were followers of Baha Ullah. On this
-morning in June the mother was brought to see the death of her
-fourteen-year-old son, her only child. When the executioner had done his
-work, the head was tossed into her lap, and she was told “Take back your
-son.” She stood up, and holding the loved head in her hands, held it
-towards the sky, as if to give it as an offering to the God who seemed
-to have deserted her in her hour of need, looked long into the closing
-eyes, then threw it to the official’s feet, saying, “I do not take back
-what I give my God!” and turning quickly, took her place among the
-sorrow-maddened women.
-
-Her cousin, who told me the story and who was a witness to the scene,
-said to me: “It is impossible for a Western woman to understand a Moslem
-woman. Perhaps because of our exclusion and the lack of means of
-self-expression, we have over-developed our inner emotional natures,
-which at times of sorrow burst forth like a hidden flame. We not only
-gave our lives in those dread days of Tabriz, but what is worse, we gave
-the lives of those we loved—and still lived on.”
-
-The women of Egypt have as yet had no reason to rise up _en masse_ and
-show what they may do in times of national distress. It is unusual for
-the women of any Mohammedan land to usurp the prerogatives of men. They
-are fundamentally intensely feminine, the home their only domain.
-Sa’adi, the Persian poet, said:—
-
- No happiness comes to the house of him whose hen hath crowed like a
- cock.
-
-It will be many years before the Egyptian woman joins the ranks of the
-militant suffragettes, and tries to blow up the Pyramids or deface the
-walls of Egypt’s famous temples in the spirit of emulation and zeal for
-_the Cause_.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE MODERN EGYPTIAN WOMAN
-
-
-The conservative woman of Egypt prides herself that she never leaves her
-home. I know several ladies well advanced in years who say they have
-never been outside their homes since they were brought there as brides.
-An Eastern household is composed of many people, and this seclusion of
-the women does not cause such loneliness as would be felt by a Western
-woman if thus closely confined always to the home. In the East the
-patriarchal life prevails, and the financially fortunate member of the
-family finds himself supporting an immense army of poor relations, who
-act in all capacities, from maids in the kitchen to the servants at the
-door. They expect little or nothing as wages, but they _do_ expect that
-the prosperous member of their clan or family will provide clothing,
-food, and a roof beneath which they may live.
-
-In all Egyptian homes of the better class there are many servants. They
-are not the competent, trained servants to which we are accustomed, and
-it takes many of them to accomplish what one well-trained servant will
-do in England or America. They have no system, each servant doing his
-task in his own appointed time and in his own way. Within the harim the
-servants are generally women, and they are on much more familiar terms
-with the inmates than are servants in the West. They take on a feeling
-of equality with their mistresses, taking part in the conversation when
-guests are present, entering doors without knocking, and generally
-considering themselves as part of the family. Mohammed taught that all
-true believers are free and equal—the servant the equal of his master.
-This is one of the reasons that the traveller is often surprised by
-having the donkey-boy offer his hand when saying good-bye. He does not
-intend it as an impertinence; he simply wishes to bid his patron “God
-speed” in the Western manner.
-
-The women of the harims take much time to dress, and spend long hours in
-the public baths, if they do not possess that luxury at home. They take
-great care of their skin, using all the arts to keep it soft and
-unwrinkled. They have not yet learned the charm of beautiful hands, and
-the manicurist has not yet penetrated the harim, but it is only a
-question of time when she will arrive, as the Egyptian woman seizes with
-avidity every means of improving her personal appearance.
-
-Many of them tint their straight black locks with henna, by making a
-paste which is allowed to dry on the hair for twenty-four hours, then
-removed. This, when used not too freely, gives a charming glint of
-reddish gold to the thick hair, and utterly obliterates any trace of
-age. The henna-tinted locks are not seen as much as formerly, as the
-custom is passing out with the advent of the newer generation, and is
-mainly to be seen on the older women or the women of the desert. In
-former times the nails of the hands were tinted a deep orange, but this
-also is being relegated to the “things that were,” as the young girls
-are beginning to see that instead of a beautifier, it makes the hands
-appear most untidy. I have seen an old lady with her fingers stained a
-deep brownish yellow to the first joint, the palms of her hands, the
-toes, and even the bottoms of the feet coloured with the henna paste.
-
-The house dress of the Egyptian woman is a long _négligé_ made in an
-empire form or what we used to call a “Mother Hubbard,” with the
-fullness of the cloth gathered to a much-trimmed yoke, and ending in a
-train that sweeps the floor. The wearer may follow her fancy in the
-choice of goods with which these dresses are made. The ordinary dress
-worn every day is of some material easily laundered, but the gown for
-gala occasions is often most elaborate, made of rich silks, satins, or
-brocades with great figures in gold or silver. Many of them appear as if
-made of cloth originally intended for furniture covering. If she has a
-wide range from which to select the material for her dresses, she also
-is not restricted in the choice of colours, as each woman indulges in
-whatever shades she most admires, and a party of women with their red,
-blue, yellow, and mauve creations look like a party of animated dolls
-dressed for a fancy bazaar.
-
-The hair is braided in one or two braids and allowed to hang down the
-back, sometimes tied with strings on which dangle gold coins or balls. A
-veil is always worn over the head, hanging down to the waist line. It is
-very graceful and adds to the dignity of the Egyptian woman. With the
-poor this head covering is a large piece of cotton with a gay-coloured
-border, and even ladies wear in the morning a cotton veil, but on dress
-occasions it is of chiffon or net elaborately bordered with gold or
-silver, or in some cases sewn with sequins, very similar to the shawls
-offered by the vendors in front of the big hotels.
-
-The feet are slipped into toe slippers that can easily be removed when
-entering the living-rooms or when sitting upon the divans. In the matter
-of footwear there is a wide range from which to choose. From the wooden
-bath clog to the tiny heelless covering for the toes, embroidered in
-gold or silver or even tiny seed pearls, the Egyptian woman’s slipper is
-a thing of beauty and dainty femininity. Stockings are considered a
-superfluity while in the house, except by those influenced by the
-customs of foreign lands.
-
-If the lady wishes to make a call she dons a black silk or satin skirt
-with a long train, and over it ties a piece of black goods shaped like a
-large apron hanging down the back instead of the front. The lower end is
-brought up over the head and tied under the chin, acting as hat and
-shoulder covering, completely disguising the form. Over the face below
-the eyes is tied a piece of white chiffon. This is really an addition to
-the woman’s charming appearance, as the present-day Egyptian woman is
-wearing the veil so thin that the shape of the features can be dimly
-seen, softened and refined by the delicate chiffon, until even a plain
-woman takes on an appearance of beauty that perhaps vanishes when the
-veil is removed. She is allowed to show her chief attraction, her great
-black eyes, which peer at one curiously over the folds of white. They
-are not so large as are the Indian woman’s eyes, but they are very
-expressive, shaded by long straight lashes, which are generally touched
-up by kohl, since even with the advent of modernism the Egyptian woman
-cannot be persuaded to relegate her kohl-pot to the lumber-room.
-
-The woman of the labouring class, seen on the street, is dressed in a
-long gown hanging straight from the shoulders, over which, when she
-leaves her home, she drapes a large black shawl covering her from head
-to feet. The veil of this class of woman is of black cloth, so thick
-that it is impossible to distinguish the features beneath it, and often
-weighted at the bottom with gold or silver coins. Covering the nose is
-the disfiguring piece of wood which holds the veil in place. The picture
-of this sombre-clad woman, with her ugly veil and grotesque nosepiece,
-is taken by the average tourist as representing the Egyptian woman,
-while, in fact, she represents only the lower class, such as the wife of
-the labourer, the small artisan, or the petty merchant. These women may
-be seen on the streets walking with the stately grace that is given to
-the woman who carries a burden on the head, or five or six of them may
-be seen sitting on a flat-bottomed cart drawn by a much decorated donkey
-_en route_ to visit relatives or watch the festivities connected with a
-marriage, or going to the cemeteries. This last seems to be a favourite
-excuse for an outing with women of this class, as it gives them a chance
-to have a good gossip on the way, and opportunity of strolling in the
-open air, which must be a great boon to the poor in the large cities, as
-their homes are small, dark, dirty, and most unsanitary. Yet as one
-lives in the Orient and sees the conditions under which the great
-majority of the population live, one grows to believe that there are no
-such things as microbes, else all these people would have been dead long
-ago.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE TAILOR.
-
- To face p. 44.]
-
-Even in modern Cairo one rarely sees a lady except as she passes in a
-closed carriage or limousine. Women do not go to the mosques, as
-Mohammed said that women in places of public worship distracted men from
-the real business which brought them there. They are also never found in
-restaurants, hotels, nor coffeehouses. In fact, an Egyptian woman never
-goes to a place where she might be looked upon by men other than those
-of her immediate family. Even the most modern product of the present
-system of education would hardly dare to be seen in any place that was
-not harim. At the bazaars held for charity and other public functions a
-day is set apart when the women may visit them without danger of being
-looked upon by men. An Egyptian woman told me that these men must be
-educated and elevated before Egyptian women will dare to go freely upon
-the street. Even a foreign woman dreads passing the outdoor cafés, where
-the men turn noisily in their chairs and stare rudely at the woman who
-has the courage to pass them. In the case of an Egyptian lady, I was
-told that these men do not confine their rudeness to stares, but that
-the low remarks made to her confirm the belief that the time is not yet
-ripe for the Egyptian woman to try to enter the world, so long closed to
-her.
-
-These harim women are just beginning to learn the joys of shopping.
-Formerly the husbands or fathers bought the goods for their dresses, or
-the shopkeepers sent their assistants, who laid the gay stuffs and
-jewels on mats within the courtyards, where the women could make their
-choice. But now in some of the larger shops parties of veiled ladies may
-be seen fingering the soft silks and satins, looking with curious eyes
-at the hats, and selecting the jewels with which they love to adorn
-themselves. Cairo is the happy hunting ground of the Parisian jeweller,
-as Egyptian women are noted for their love of bracelets, ear-rings,
-necklaces, and pins. The old-time heavy gold chains and hoops are losing
-their charm, and now the lady whose husband has a purse easy to open
-buys long pendant ear-rings set with many diamonds, bracelets of pearls
-and rubies, rings of turquoise and sapphires, and necklaces of emeralds.
-Quantity, not quality, she desires, and the colour and purity of a stone
-are not so much to be desired as the size or number. The women who make
-no claim to modernism are still seen in the goldsmiths’ shops in the
-native streets, sitting in front of the tiny cupboard-like holes in the
-wall, weighing, pricing, trying on the great barbaric hoops of gold for
-the ears, or the chains with large hammered pendants, made in the same
-form and with the same design as those worn by their mothers and their
-grandmothers. The merchant does not need to originate new designs to
-attract the conservative Egyptian woman who still clings to her native
-jewelry. It has been the same shape and design from time immemorial.
-
-Another product of the West has penetrated the harims of Cairo—the
-French dressmakers. Many of the rich merchants’ wives and the wives of
-the officials who cannot get their gowns direct from Paris, and who are
-discarding the straight empire pattern for clothes more _à la mode_, get
-their dresses fashioned by these clever French women, who come to the
-women’s courtyards loaded down with fashion books, tape measures, and a
-running stream of flattering talk, leaving with many orders written in
-their little books. It must be admitted that the Egyptian woman looks
-best when dressed in her native costume, which mercifully disguises the
-over-abundant flesh with which most women who spend their lives within
-the harims are blessed. Sweets, a sedentary life, and many sweetened
-drinks conspire to make the lady of Egypt extremely fat, after the first
-flush of youth is past. This is not a sorrow to her as it would be to
-her Western sister, and when she has arrived at the age of thirty, and
-the pounds that she feels should come with the advancing years have not
-been added to her figure, she sends to the chemist for a mixture to
-convert her into the present ideal of Egyptian beauty. This ideal in the
-olden time, if we may judge of the pictures seen upon the walls of the
-tombs and temples, was that of a slight, willowy figure. But that ideal
-has changed. The woman now seems to strive to be as wide as she is long,
-and because of this fact and also because stays are not looked upon with
-joy by the Egyptian woman, who has always been allowed an uncompressed
-figure, the modern dress is not adapted to her style of beauty.
-
-Women are not prisoners in any sense of the word, nor are they pining
-behind their latticed windows as we are sometimes led to believe by
-writers of fiction. They visit freely amongst each other, and their
-visits are not confined to the passing of a few senseless platitudes
-that generally mark conversation of Western women making afternoon calls
-upon each other. They do not “call,” they go for a visit of several
-hours or even days.
-
-When a lady enters the home of her friend, she takes off the veil and
-the cape-like covering of her head, steps out of the long black skirt,
-and stands arrayed like Solomon in all his glory. They dress as
-elaborately for their women friends as if to meet admirers of the
-opposite sex, and they spend hours drinking the delicious coffee,
-sipping sherbets, eating fruits or confectionery, and chatting over the
-gossip of the day. When time for serving the meal arrives, a large tray
-is brought into the room and placed upon a low stand, around which the
-women group themselves in comfortable attitudes on rugs. From these
-trays they help themselves to the deliciously cooked mutton or chicken,
-the vegetables and desserts with which it is laden. Pork is never
-served, as it was forbidden by Mohammed. They eat with their fingers,
-using only the right hand, as the left hand is ceremonially unclean, and
-after the meal a servant pours water over their hands from a
-long-spouted brass ewer, the water falling into a brass basin. Many of
-the ladies smoke, but it is not a universal habit. If they indulge in
-the habit with which we always associate the Eastern woman, it is by
-using a large water pipe with an extraordinarily long, supple stem, the
-smoke passing through perfumed water and becoming cool before reaching
-the user’s lips.
-
-The Eastern woman loves perfumes and prefers them much stronger than we
-of the Western world think agreeable. A hostess will pass around the
-little wooden scent-bottles, and each guest may add as much as she
-wishes to her already over-perfumed body. The mixture is not always
-pleasant to sensitive nostrils. Incense and sweet-smelling woods are
-often burned in little braziers and add to the congeries of odours.
-
-Many of the old-time Egyptian women cannot read; indeed, it is stated
-that only three out of a thousand women could read ten years ago; their
-conversation is therefore confined to the gossip of the neighbourhood:
-who is married, who is engaged; the social and financial standing of the
-families involved; the presents and the trousseaux. Society is divided
-into cliques, as in any other part of the world, and there is a decided
-“Who’s Who,” especially in Cairo and in the larger towns.
-
-The woman’s life seems to centre around her children, since it is this
-evidence of Allah’s blessing that makes her greatest happiness. A great
-part of their talk is involved in the discussion of their children’s
-ailments, the remedies, their children’s education and life in general.
-There are no nurseries in Egypt, and both boys and girls live within the
-harim until they are seven years old, when the boy, if he does not go to
-school, has a tutor and lives in the selam-lik. When, as at present,
-Government schools are established in every small town and village in
-Egypt, both boys and girls go to school. The girl is kept strictly harim
-even in the school, and the teachers are women, who guard carefully from
-men’s eyes the girls who are entrusted to them for the day.
-
-Besides visiting with their friends or relatives, the Egyptian women go
-to weddings, where they look upon the dancing and hear the singing from
-their places behind the screens, or they make pilgrimages to the tombs
-of saints or holy men, where they pray for the health of their children;
-or, if they have not been so fortunate as to have children, they pray
-for that blessing. They do not pray _to_ the saints, as even Mohammed
-himself cannot answer prayers, but they believe that the austere lives
-passed by these holy men will intercede for them with the Great and One
-God.
-
-An Egyptian friend of mine, telling me of the efficacy of one of the
-places of pilgrimage in the cure of eye troubles, said:—
-
-“Yes, I believe in these charms obtained at the tomb of some of the
-marabouts, and I have been on several pilgrimages, although it is not
-much encouraged in our family. You saw my brother’s wife to-day. She has
-visited the tomb of every saint in the vicinity of Cairo, but it is just
-because she is restless and wants to get out. She cares no more about
-the saints than you do, but it gives her an opportunity to get away from
-my mother. My life, that you think so restricted, is wildly exciting to
-what it was when I was a girl at home. Mother is most conservative, and
-will not even allow a man-servant near the harim. Her cook has never
-seen her, although he has been in the family since I was a baby. Here in
-the country I have men-servants who see me unveiled, but they are the
-descendants of slaves who were in the family of my husband for
-generations, and that is permitted if we are not too orthodox.”
-
-I noticed while visiting friends in the country with this progressive,
-educated Egyptian woman that if we passed an ordinary fellah, or
-workman, she did not take care to cover her face. If we met an overseer
-or a man above the farmer class, she very carefully drew her veil across
-her face, leaving only the eyes visible.
-
-The women are very superstitious, and believe in the efficacy of charms
-and amulets for every known disease. Nearly every woman wears around her
-neck, lost to sight amidst the innumerable chains with which she covers
-the upper part of her body, an amulet or charm of some kind. Perhaps it
-is a silver box containing a few words of the Koran, or a small piece of
-parchment with mystic letters written on it, guaranteed to guard her
-household from harm. All Egyptian women know of charms and lotions and
-shrines or mystic words to give the wife who has not presented a son
-unto her lord. One of the first questions asked by Egyptian women is,
-“How many children have you?” If the answer is “None!” they cannot keep
-the looks of pity from their eyes, nor the sympathetic words of
-condolence from their lips. They are also most generous in giving
-talismans to remedy this defect, and will wax enthusiastic over the
-beneficial effects of some favourite pilgrimage, amulet, or prayer.
-
-I have a piece of sheepskin with the ninety-nine names of Allah written
-upon it in gold, intended to insure, not only the advent of a son, but
-also, if bound upon his arm, to guard him from all danger throughout his
-lifetime.
-
-At the opera in cosmopolitan Cairo one may hear rustlings and low
-laughter from behind the closely screened boxes, and know that an
-Egyptian Bey or wealthy merchant is there with his family, allowing them
-to enjoy the play and watch the people in the house, themselves unseen.
-But this joy is given usually only to the women of Cairo, as the smaller
-towns have not as yet become sufficiently modernized that the women may
-go to the public theatres. In the conservative homes, if a hostess
-wishes to entertain her guests with professionals, she sends for the
-singing girls or dancing women to come to her home, and there they
-perform before the ladies, who watch them from the divans, and talk and
-laugh with their entertainers, getting far more amusement from them than
-by simply looking at them on the stage.
-
-Fortune-tellers are often brought into the women’s quarters, and blind
-men who chant the words of their sacred book, the Koran. This latter is
-a popular form of entertainment, and even to Western ears the sad, minor
-music has a charm, although after a time it becomes monotonous to one
-who cannot understand the Arabic in which the Koran is written.
-
-Even the conservative Egyptian mother is now beginning to see that she
-must educate her daughter as well as her son, if she wishes her to make
-a good marriage. The modern Egyptian youth does not care for an ignorant
-wife who can only entertain him with household gossip when he comes from
-office or shop.
-
-There is ample opportunity given the Egyptian girl to obtain an
-education, as the Government has established schools in every city,
-town, and village. One sees also a great number of private schools for
-girls, supervised by every imaginable type of mistress. The Italian,
-Spanish, French, and English woman is taking advantage of this craving
-on the part of young Egypt for education. Many of these schoolmistresses
-are unfitted for their work, but as yet her pupils are not able to judge
-of the quality of information they are so eagerly absorbing. The mission
-schools, next to those provided by the Government, are perhaps the best
-equipped with trained teachers from England and America. These latter
-schools are filled with bright-faced young girls, who are taking the
-newer ideas to their secluded mothers, who shake their heads dolefully
-over the new spirit of independence so swiftly creeping into the lives
-of their children, and which they fear, but to which they must accede.
-
-Egypt, in common with the entire world, is experiencing vital changes,
-and her younger women, although walled in by custom, tradition, and
-habit, are eager to get into step with their advancing sons and
-husbands. It is only the older woman who is the implacable foe of
-progress, as she fears a change may mean the destruction of her little
-world. Yet she is fast losing the power as well as the wish to resist
-it, and the number of schools for girls shows that a real awakening to
-Egypt’s greatest need is being felt and met. At first the mother feared
-her daughter would be led astray from the true Faith, but the English
-Government bore this well in mind when establishing the educational
-system. The Koran and the practical observances of its tenets are taught
-by faithful followers of the prophet in the schools, and this has
-induced mothers to look with complacent eyes upon the new learning.
-
-Infinitely better daughters and prospective mothers come each year from
-the Government and mission schools, if for no other reason than that
-they are intelligently trained in domestic economy and in the laws of
-hygiene. The frightful waste of infant life which heretofore has been
-caused by the ignorance of mothers will stop. The present training of
-the young girl strikes directly at this huge infant mortality and in the
-coming mother, educated and equipped for her duties, lies the hope of
-Egypt.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, POLYGAMY
-
-
- SOCIAL LIFE OF EGYPTIAN WOMEN
-
-The Koran enjoins marriage on all and calls bachelors the worst of
-mankind. Consequently there are few spinsters or bachelors in any Moslem
-land, and a woman who is divorced or widowed must have another husband
-found for her as soon as possible.
-
-Although Mohammed believed that all men should be married, there were
-four classes of women against whom he warned his fellows:—
-
-A _Yearner_—that is, a woman who has children by a former husband and
-wishes to get everything possible for them from her present husband.
-
-A _Deplorer_.—One who is constantly deploring the loss of her first
-husband and stating his virtues to the disparagement of the present
-incumbent.
-
-A _Backbiter_.—One who is kind to her husband’s face and behind his back
-accuses him of cruelty, miserliness, and ill-treatment.
-
-A _Toadstool_.—A beauty who is lazy and tyrannical and uses all the
-substance of her husband to buy silks, jewels, and perfumes with which
-to adorn herself.
-
-There is no courtship as we know it. The marriage is made by the parents
-or by a “go-between,” and the parties most interested do not see each
-other until the night of the marriage, although they may have exchanged
-photographs and have heard eulogistic descriptions of each other. But
-there are no shy meetings, no gazing into the eyes of the loved one. A
-girl would be considered as lacking in modesty and maidenly reserve if
-it were known that she attempted to see the man to whom she will be
-compelled to owe all allegiance and who will practically own her, body
-and soul, as soon as she is his wife.
-
-During the time before the marriage the bridegroom, if a man of wealth,
-sends his bride-to-be many costly presents, generally in the shape of
-jewelry, silks, fans, slippers, and boxes of sweets. Her gifts to him
-are cigarette cases, embroidered sleeping suits, a rich fez, or some
-other practical evidence of her affection.
-
-In families of any social pretensions whatsoever, there is drawn a
-marriage contract which stipulates the amount of dowry and whatever
-business relationships are entered into by the husband and wife. If the
-amount of dowry is not expressly stated in the contract, the woman is
-entitled to the customary dower of a woman of her class, which is judged
-according to that received by the other female members of her family.
-This contract can also contain a stipulation that the husband may not
-marry another wife so long as the present wife is living with him, and
-it also often states that the wife may divorce her husband for certain
-expressly stated causes.
-
-There are two kinds of dower, one called “prompt” which is all paid at
-the time of the marriage, the other where only part is given at that
-time and the rest retained to be paid in case of divorce or on the death
-of the husband. In the latter case the dower must be paid before the
-other debts of the estate are settled. The wife has absolute rights over
-her dower and can refuse to go to her husband’s home until it is paid.
-
-The trousseau is provided by the father of the bride, and the articles
-she takes to her new home in the shape of furniture, jewelry, etc., are
-her property and can be taken with her if she should return to her
-father’s home or if she should be left a widow. The bridegroom is
-supposed to help pay the expenses of the elaborate feasting which lasts
-from three to seven days, and which is often a great drain upon the
-resources of both families. Custom has commanded that no parsimony shall
-be shown at this time of rejoicing, and each family tries to outdo its
-neighbour in the form of entertainment offered to its guests.
-
-Theatrical entertainments are held in the courtyards, or in the large
-guest-room. Dancing girls dance and jugglers perform, while food is most
-plentifully provided, but there is no drinking of intoxicating liquors
-in the home of a follower of Mohammed. In the place of wines, sherbets,
-fruit juices, and coffee are served.
-
-The culmination of the festivities comes when the bride in a gaily
-decorated carriage is conducted to her new home. In the streets of any
-large city one often sees these processions, the band leading the march,
-dozens of singers preceding the carriage, and friends following, all
-trying to show their joy in the happy event.
-
-According to Western ideals there is one great bar to the lasting
-happiness of the Moslem woman, and that is the question of divorce. It
-is said that 90 per cent. of the marriages in Egypt end in divorce, and
-that two people who live to an old age together without one of them
-being divorced are rarely found. Mohammed has been severely censured
-because of this great blot upon the progressive laws he made for his
-people, but before his time there was no check on divorce; a man could
-divorce often and for no reason, and a woman was helpless. This wise man
-laid down laws far in advance of his time on this subject, and (what was
-then an unheard of thing) allowed a woman to divorce her husband for
-explicitly stated causes.
-
-If they divorce for mutual incompatibility—that is, if they both agree
-to it—there need be no question of the courts; but if the wife wishes to
-be free and the husband will not permit it, the woman may go before a
-judge and state her case, and if her charges are proven she will be
-granted her petition. Often a woman will return her dower or agree to
-forfeit the part not yet paid, or in many cases make a money payment to
-the avaricious husband in return for her liberty. A case not long ago
-came before the judge where the husband treated his wife brutally in
-order to force from her a certain sum of money in exchange for her
-freedom. The woman paid the sum demanded, then took the case before the
-judge, and proved that his cruel treatment would entitle her to a
-divorce, and the courts compelled the man to return the money to his
-ex-wife with an added gift.
-
-The different sects have different modes of procedure. One requires the
-husband to pronounce the words of divorce once in a single sentence and
-not live with his wife for three months, when the divorce is
-accomplished. Another form requires that the words be pronounced three
-times in succession at the interval of a month, the divorce becoming
-effective when the last formula is pronounced. Another formula allows
-the husband to say three times in succession, “I divorce thee! I divorce
-thee! I divorce thee!” and the legal separation takes place.
-
-A woman may say to her husband, “Give me a divorce in exchange for my
-dower,” and if the man will say, “I do,” a lawful dissolution of the
-marriage is effected.
-
-Whatever the rule, divorce is very easy for the Moslem husband, and the
-woman lives in constant fear that she will hear the words “I am
-discharged from the marriage between you and me,” and will be compelled
-to return to her home. This insecurity of the marriage bond causes the
-woman to hoard what money she may obtain, and takes away the interest
-she might otherwise have in the affairs of her husband, fearing that
-prosperity may only mean that he will yearn for a younger and more
-beautiful woman to share with him his riches. It also makes her try in
-every way to preserve her beauty, buying cosmetics and talismans that
-clever merchants assure her will aid in retaining the love of her
-husband.
-
-In the event of divorce the woman is commanded to remain single three
-months, but the man may marry immediately. There is no especial disgrace
-attached to divorce, yet the woman’s value is lowered to a certain
-extent, and quite likely she will not be able to make so good a marriage
-again.
-
-No child under two years may be taken away from the mother, as the Koran
-commands her to suckle the infant for that period. Unless it is proved
-that she is totally unworthy to bring up her child, or unless she
-marries an unbeliever, the boy is entitled to live with his mother until
-he is seven years old, and the girl until she is nine, when the father
-takes the guardianship of them both. Often they are allowed to live on
-indefinitely with the mother, especially the girl, if the father marries
-again and the new wife does not wish the care of the children of her
-predecessor. This makes the burden of divorce fall heavily upon the
-innocent children, as the mother generally marries and her husband may
-not care for the children of another man; consequently they are left in
-the care of the mother’s parents or other relatives, who quite likely
-consider them a superfluous addition to an already overcrowded
-household, although the father is compelled to contribute towards their
-support.
-
-If divorce is prevalent in the Land of the Nile, that other great
-domestic evil, polygamy, is slowly dying out, mainly for an economic
-reason. All the wives in a family are supposed to have equal support,
-and in these days, when the women of Egypt are beginning to know and
-crave the luxuries of life, it is hard for a man, unless of the very
-wealthy class, to provide for more than one family. In a rich household
-each wife would demand, not only her own suite of rooms, but quite
-likely her own house and staff of servants, and she would see that her
-husband did not show favouritism in regard to clothes, jewelry, or
-amusements towards the women and children in his harim. Often in poorer
-homes one sees two wives living in peace together, but the man with more
-than one wife is becoming rarer each year. It is said that not one man
-in fifty has more than one wife. The cynics say that it is because
-divorce is so much easier and cheaper, but we believe that it is because
-of the higher ideals that are coming to the Egyptian along with the
-education that he is receiving from the Western world.
-
-It is easy for the Western mind to take exaggerated views of the
-unhappiness of the life in the harim. I found, among the better classes,
-with whom I came into contact more than I did with the very poor, the
-same average of happiness that prevails in any land. Seclusion which
-seems so dreadful in our eyes has grown to be a matter of caste, and the
-older women, at least, have no desire to depart from it. The power of
-the husband is greater than it is in foreign lands, but he is generally
-a kindly man who leaves the women’s department strictly alone, to be
-ordered as his wife desires. It is she who has charge of the children
-while in infancy, teaching them or having them taught the Koran, taking
-them with her on visits to friends, and being with them much more than
-does the average Western mother of the same class. A middle-class
-Egyptian woman does practically the same things as does the wife of a
-middle-class Englishman. She cooks, washes, mends the clothing, keeps
-the house, and sews her children’s dresses. If she is able to have
-servants—and one is very poor in Egypt not to be able to afford at least
-one servant—the work of the household is superintended directly by the
-mistress. Of course she may not go to the market nor to the shops, but
-she inspects the food when brought to the house by the vendor or the
-cook.
-
-The care of the clothing is a great task if there are many sons in the
-family who dress in the native costume, which is made of light-coloured
-silk; the long black cloak is prone to sweep up the dust of the streets.
-The children of the poor wear only a short shirt until they are about
-six years old, but the children of the rich don European dress, either
-made in the house or bought in the shops. The ready-made clothing has
-found its way to the harims and saves the mother much work, as the
-sewing-machine is not so well known there as it is in the homes of the
-West.
-
-Although the Egyptian woman is not seen in the mosques, she is very
-religious, and more zealous in the faith than is her husband, who has a
-chance to broaden his religious views by coming in contact with people
-of other beliefs. The wife does not observe the prayers as strictly as
-does her husband, but she has been taught her Koran in childhood and
-follows its precepts to the best of her ability.
-
-The woman, like women all over the world, is much more rigidly ruled by
-her superstitious beliefs than is the man. She attributes the
-extraordinary phenomena of Nature to the work of good or evil spirits
-and believes in placating them or controlling them as far as possible.
-These evil spirits are liable to lurk in all places, in the ovens, the
-wells, and even in the market basket, which is covered to protect it
-from the evil eye of covetous passers-by, or to guard it from a
-wandering spirit who may be seeking a place of retreat.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A WOMAN OF THE MASSES.
-
- To face p. 64.]
-
-The women in general are very ignorant in regard to all sanitary laws,
-and there is an enormous amount of preventable sickness within the
-harims. Children are allowed to eat what and whenever they wish, and
-sweets are indulged in at all times. All babies suffer from eye trouble,
-mainly caused by uncleanliness. A baby is not washed for eight days
-after birth, then if the father or mother is suffering from any form of
-skin disease, it is considered fatal to put water on the child. Flies
-and mosquitoes abound, carrying contagion to all. Doctors are unknown
-amongst the poorer class, and the mothers are in the hands of unskilled
-midwives at the time of child-bearing, and the mortality is great.
-
-When the angel of death enters the household of an Egyptian, it may be
-known by the wailing of the women. The custom of weeping and wailing,
-beating of the breasts, and tearing out of the hair still prevails on
-the death of the member of a family. The body is buried within
-twenty-four hours. It is enclosed in a coffin which is covered by a rich
-shawl or piece of embroidery and carried to the cemetery on the
-shoulders of men, preceded by blind men chanting the Koran and followed
-by friends and relatives. The same ceremony is observed for the women as
-for the men.
-
-The soul is supposed not to leave the body for three days. The first
-night an angel whispers in the ear of the deceased, “What is your
-faith?” and the soul must answer, “I am a Moslem.” The angel again
-whispers, “In whom do you believe?” and the soul will answer, “I believe
-in the One God,” and the third question is, “And who is your prophet?”
-and the answer, “Mohammed is the Prophet of God,” allows the soul to be
-left in peace.
-
-Three days, seven days, and forty days after death memorials are held at
-the home of the late deceased, when friends call and offer their
-sympathy, and food and money are distributed in great quantities to the
-beggars. At times of festivity or mourning the poor come in crowds, and
-are never turned away empty-handed. There are practically no almshouses
-in Egypt, nor any organized charity, but Mohammedans are commanded to
-give one-twentieth of their income to the poor. Whether they follow this
-law exactly or not, they are very generous to those in need, not giving
-with much discernment, but always willing to drop a coin into the
-outstretched hand or to fill the empty bowl.
-
-One cannot judge of the life of the average Egyptian woman by living
-only in Cairo, where the note of modernism has sounded with such call as
-to reach even the inner rooms of the harim, but in the smaller towns of
-Egypt one sees the real Egyptian life, untouched by the customs of alien
-lands.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CHILDREN ON THE NILE.
-
- To face p. 66.]
-
-I visited in a home on the banks of the Nile and watched with interested
-eyes the life around me: saw the mother attend to her household duties
-in the morning, giving the servants directions for the day’s work,
-measuring and weighing out the stores to the cook, and taking his
-accounts as he came from the market-place with the day’s provisions. An
-old blind woman came in the morning to give the children their lesson in
-the Koran. She would start a surah, then the children would repeat the
-remaining verses in a sing-song voice, the slightest break in the
-intonation calling forth a rebuke from the leader, whose nodding head
-kept time to the chant. At nine o’clock the older children took their
-books under their arms and started for the village school, in the same
-noisy manner as do our children at home. I watched the fellaheen as they
-lifted the water from the river to irrigate the thirsty fields, and saw
-the black-robed women filling their water-jars and placing them upon
-their heads with a beautiful sweeping gesture, walk gracefully away to
-their little mud huts that could scarcely be distinguished from the
-sands around them.
-
-Trains of camels passed our wall on their way to the distant city, and
-the shepherd boys drove their flocks of sheep and goats in search of
-pasture. I remembered Browning’s beautiful David, who sang:—
-
- And I first played the tune all our sheep know, as one after one
- So docile they come to the pen door till folding is done.
- They are white and untorn by bushes, for lo, they have fed
- Where the long grasses stifle the water within the stream’s bed.
- And now one after one seeks its lodging, as star follows star
- Into eve and the blue far above us—so blue and so far.
-
-We watched the little boys ride the great unwieldy water buffaloes to
-the water side, slipping off their backs to allow them, groaning with
-content, to wallow in the sluggish waters, and when the hard white stars
-came out in the sapphire sky, we looked far over the Libyan hills, which
-had changed from the gold and opal of sunset to the grey blue that
-heralds the coming of the Egyptian night. The evening breeze that always
-comes with the setting of the sun brought the smell of the desert to us,
-and the deep swish of the Nile came as an accompaniment to the cry of
-the muezzin from the tiny mosque in the distance, and we saw its
-response in the fellah kneeling beside his waiting camel, lifting his
-hands to the heavens, as the clear, bell-like voice came over the
-evening air:—
-
- There is no God but God, and Mohammed is His Prophet.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BEDOUIN WOMEN IN FRONT OF TENT.
-
- To face p. 69.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- THE WOMAN OF THE DESERT
-
-
-“Behold the townsman,” cried one of the Bedouins, “they have for the
-desert but a single word, while we have a legion.”
-
-The desert, which in many eyes is a wilderness of desolation, has for
-the dweller beneath the tents another aspect. It is the desert which he
-loves, where he was born, under the brown tents of his tribe where he
-hopes to pass his life, and in the sands where he wishes to be buried.
-He loves each one of its many phases, from the sand burnt to powder by
-the white fire of the noonday sun, to the cool breeze of the dying day,
-that causes the smoke from the many fires to rise in blue-grey wreaths
-to the evening sky, which changes from violet to greyer blue, and then
-to the intense dark blue of the precious sapphire.
-
-The Bedouin, to whatever tribe he may belong, sitting astride his camel,
-padding softly through the desert sands, sees before him the low black
-tents of a desert village, and knows that he may descend and find a
-welcome. The host will say to him, “Every stranger is an invited guest,
-and the guest while in the tent is the lord thereof.” He may sit before
-the large round bowl of mutton and eat his fill, and when the stars have
-come out, and seem so near that he may put up his hand and pluck them
-from their field of blue, he will be conducted to the guest-tent or to
-the tent of the headman, and, wrapping himself more tightly in his long
-cloak, he will lie down secure, knowing that his life is safe so long as
-he remains a guest of the tribe, having eaten of their salt and drank
-their water.
-
-These Arabs of the desert are proud with a pride we do not understand.
-They are proud of their long lineage, of the purity of their blood, of
-their unbroken traditions. They are an impulsive, restless people, who,
-with their emotional temperament, give impetuosity to everything which
-they touch. They are the real adventurers of the world, and their
-nervous, high-strung, daring characteristics have become so absorbed
-into their very being as to have become permanent marks of their race.
-At the seat of all troubles, in countries where the Bedouins are strong,
-one finds them ready to do and dare anything that appeals to their
-imagination. At the rising of a Mahdi, it is the Arab of the desert who
-is his strongest support, who will die for him, who will sweep down like
-a holocaust upon the people who do not share with him his beliefs in the
-cause, for which he throws his life away with a bravado that makes men
-of a more sluggish blood gasp in astonishment. This cause must appeal to
-his emotions—those same riotous emotions which never produce, but always
-ruin. We are told that the Bedouin is the author of complete desolation,
-and that destruction follows in his pathway; that his effects are always
-sinister, and that this race brings ruin to any land where they have
-been permitted to have full sway. We know he is not a creature of habit,
-and that routine, a settled existence, a fixed round of duties, are
-things which he does not understand nor practise. He does not reason and
-is not practical, yet it is the Arab that has succeeded in sending the
-faith of El Islam around the world, and every movement of revival comes
-directly from the desert.
-
-Few people travelling in Egypt or Algeria see the real dweller beneath
-the tents. There are Bedouins in the cities, and one soon learns to tell
-them, with their keen eyes, their eager faces, and majestic stride, from
-the more placid, self-satisfied Egyptian. But in the city he is not his
-true self, as life in the cities has a permanent and degrading effect on
-the character and physique of the race; the fire of the desert dies
-within him. It is in the shifting sands beneath the tents that he is at
-his best. There he carries out his tribal customs, and there he
-practises that wonderful virtue of hospitality that Mohammed, himself an
-Arab, laid upon his people. He said, “Whoever believes in God and the
-Resurrection must respect his guest; and the time of his being kind to
-him is one day and night; and the period of entertaining him is three
-days; and after that if he does it longer, it benefits him more, but it
-is not right for a guest to stay in the house of a host so long as to
-incommode him.” It is said that even a deadly enemy may come to the tent
-and demand water and salt, and it will be given him, and he will be
-allowed to rest for the night. In the morning he will be sent on his
-way, and his life is safe until he has passed the boundary of the
-tribe’s dominions, then his enemy is entitled to follow him and kill him
-if he can.
-
-All tourists passing through Egypt look forward to a few days passed in
-the desert. The guide paints in glowing colours the wonders of the
-sands, the colours of the evening sky, the sounds of the hobbled camels
-as they wait for the morrow’s march, and the traveller from the West
-decides to see for once the life of which he had read and dreamed so
-many years. In every soul is a cry for romance, a desire to leave the
-prosaic everyday life which he knows too well, and explore the mysteries
-of the unknown, hoping that there by chance he will find food to feed
-his hungry imagination. A trip to the desert does this for many people.
-There the broker or the banker, with the wife he has looked upon for
-many years, sit in front of their hired tent, and watch the camel man,
-as with scolding voice he prepares the growling, surly camels for the
-night. When all is quiet but the distant barking of the dogs, they sit
-in front of the evening fire and watch the stars come out in the sky
-that seems a great inverted cup of blue above them. The camel drivers,
-dragomen, and guards sprawl in easy attitudes and chant mournful, weird
-songs that have come to them from the Persian mystics of olden time.
-These people from New York or London do not realize that they are not
-seeing the real desert nor the people of the desert. The setting is all
-staged most carefully by the wily dragoman, who imports his Bedouins
-from the neighbouring villages, who dresses tents until they would cause
-the man who calls them home to stare in blank amazement at their tawdry
-hangings. The only thing he cannot import is the wonderful dessert
-sands, the sky, the cooling breezes that always come when the sun has
-set. These are free for all, to the ragged camel driver as well as to
-the man who scatters so freely the English gold.
-
-We had the pleasure of knowing the chief of a large tribe of Bedouins,
-and from his castle on the edge of the desert were permitted to make
-many visits to these picturesque people. Our first glimpse of the true
-man of the desert was obtained from the visitors in the guest-house,
-where any Bedouin could stop from one to three days as the guest of the
-chief, and every day about sundown strange white-robed men with guns
-strapped across their back rode up on horses and dismounted at the gate,
-craving the hospitality of the chief. There were always from ten to
-thirty guests within the rest-house, men looking like the Senouisses,
-who cause so much trouble for the unbelievers of foreign lands. We were
-told that many of them were going to join their brothers in Tripoli to
-fight against the hated unbeliever. They were not permitted by the
-Government to go openly, as Egypt was supposed to be neutral, so they
-took the long caravan journey of thirty days across the desert to aid in
-what they considered an unjust war against the true faith.
-
-Within the harim of my hostess were rooms set aside for travelling
-Bedouin women, but they were seldom occupied, as the women of the tents
-are not wanderers like their husbands, unless the whole tribe moves. My
-hostess was a young, educated girl, to whom the confines of a Bedouin
-harim must have been very wearying. The laws concerning the women of the
-tribe were very strict, one being that a woman must stay within her
-apartment until the birth of her first child. My friend was not blessed
-with children, but had been compelled to conform to the usages of her
-husband’s family, in part at least, by remaining within her home for a
-year. Now she went about freely among the villages of the Bedouins near
-the castle, only taking the precaution of being veiled. These Bedouin
-women were quite another type from those seen in the cities. They had
-magnificent physiques, tall and supple, and carried themselves with a
-stately grace. They were dressed in long, straight, cotton gowns of blue
-or black, and a many-coloured sash was wrapped around the waist. The
-only foot covering was the anklets of silver that fell down over the
-instep; and they wore over their hair, which was braided in many braids,
-and in which was plaited small gold coins that clinked as they moved
-their heads, a veil of black with a coloured border, or of dark red with
-a yellow border. This veil adds to the dignity and beauty of a woman in
-a most charming manner. At the time of feasting or of gaiety the plain
-veil is changed for one sewed with bright-coloured beads or sequins.
-
-From the lower lip to the neck, and lost in the covering of the dress,
-are three dark blue lines of tattooing. This is seen now only on the
-older women, and is being thrown on the altar of modernity by the
-daughters of the Bedouins who have peeped into the world and are trying
-to be like their more sophisticated Egyptian neighbours. The hair is
-straight and black, and with many has been given a tinge of red by
-washing it in henna. I saw no grey-haired women; because those who have
-been touched by the finger of time, kindly custom has allowed to dye
-their locks, and there were many flaming heads above wrinkled faces.
-While a guest with the Bedouins, they were quite determined to give me
-the touch of red that to them is so beautiful. They say it keeps the
-hair cool and prevents it from falling out, protecting it from the
-burning sun. I resisted, although I watched the process, which was most
-interesting. The henna powder is mixed with water until the consistency
-of a paste, and then the head is covered and left for the night, when in
-the morning it is washed, and if not applied too thickly there is just a
-glint in the dark locks. Henna is also applied to the nails of the
-fingers and toes, and with many it practically covers the fingers to the
-first joint, making the hands look most uncleanly to European eyes. The
-inside of the feet and the palms are not forgotten by the Bedouin or the
-Egyptian woman who has conserved the customs of her mother, but the
-henna-dyed hands are rarely seen now by the newer generation, who have
-relegated the henna-pot to the lumber-room along with the tattooing-ink.
-A great mass of jewellery was worn, not the diamonds and rubies found in
-the French shops of Cairo, but the true ornaments of a barbaric people.
-Great hoops of gold were in the ears, one from the top of the ear,
-another hanging from the lobe. The neck, even to the waistline, was
-covered with chains formed of balls of gold or of coins, and on the arms
-were bracelets. In writing coldly of the Bedouin woman, her tattooing,
-her henna-coloured hair, her kohl-blackened eyes, and her massive chains
-of gold and anklets of silver, it seems as if she were living in an age
-of barbarism, yet it is becoming to her rich colouring, and she is not
-overdressed. They all belong to the time and place, and are made for
-these women, who need strong settings for their savage beauty.
-
-The women of the desert are much more free to come and go than are the
-women of the cities, and it is only when they come in close proximity to
-an Egyptian village that the Bedouin expects his wife to be secluded.
-They do not mix with members of the other sex as do the women of the
-West, because that is contrary to the instincts of all Eastern women,
-but naturally they cannot be confined so strictly within the tents as
-can the women who live in houses. In each tent is a division or curtain,
-behind which the women retire when men approach, but they may be seen
-sitting in front of their doorways, and passing to and fro in the
-villages without veiling their faces. They pass their spare time when
-not occupied in the household duties in weaving gaily coloured blankets,
-striped red and yellow and black. These constitute the woman’s fortune.
-My friend took me to one tent in which there were forty of these
-blankets piled around the edge of the tent, and she said, “Five or six
-of these in the possession of a woman and she is considered rich in this
-world’s goods. This woman is a multi-millionaire.” She was an old woman
-who seemed to be the leader of her village. It was she who met us and
-conducted us to the guest-tent, which was at least twenty by thirty feet
-in circumference, and which was hung with these beautiful hand-woven
-blankets. The sands were covered with rugs on which we sat, and on which
-the large round tray was placed for the meal which the kindly hospitable
-women insisted that we should eat with them. There are no tables, beds,
-nor chairs. The Bedouin says that we can never understand the desert
-until we get close to her, rest our feet on her sands, and our head on
-her bosom—
-
- But man is earth’s uncomfortable guest
- Until she takes him on her lap to rest.
-
-One thinks of a tent in the desert under the pitiless sun as a most
-uncomfortable place of retreat, but I found it quite the opposite, as
-the strong wind, that seems to be always trying to temper the actions of
-its enemy, blew over the desert and entered the open flaps, and crept
-under the turned-up edges of the tent, fanning into flame the fire of
-sweet-smelling woods that had been kindled in the tiny brass jar. Water
-was hanging in porous bottles and in sheepskins in the draught, and when
-mixed with the perfumed syrups was cool and refreshing. Coffee with a
-touch of ambergris in the cup was served, and melons were given us in
-great cool slices. These latter are a favourite fruit of the desert
-people, I presume because of the vast amount of water of which they are
-composed, and water is the luxury of all luxuries to those who dwell
-among the sands. An old Arabian poet said: “There are seven things when
-collected together in a drinking-room, it is not reasonable to stay
-away. A melon, honey, roast meat, a young girl, wax lights, a singer,
-and wine.” Twice during our visit was perfume sprinkled over us, and the
-brass brazier was often replenished with sandalwood, a small packet of
-the latter being given us as we were leaving. The Arabs, in fact all
-Eastern people, love perfumes, and they use them in far greater quantity
-and of stronger essence than we consider delicate. Musk and a heavy
-perfume distilled from jasmine and roses seems to be a favourite.
-Mohammed himself loved perfumes, and speaks of them in his promises to
-the faithful who shall fall in battle: “And the wounds of him who shall
-fall in battle shall on the day of judgment be resplendent with
-vermilion and odorous as musk.” We visited the smaller tents, and in
-some it was impossible to stand erect even at the ridge pole. In one was
-a young baby wrapped in white cloth and twined with yards and yards of
-camel’s-hair rope, only his tiny head and feet protruding to show that
-there was a real baby in the bundle. He was bound practically the same
-as are the babies of our North American Indian. I took him in my arms,
-and he stared at me with great black eyes, and then he laughed and
-cooed, much to the delight of the young father, who stood proudly by.
-The mother was quite a young girl, not more than fifteen years old, I
-should judge, and in her shyness she retired into the security of the
-tent, resisting all my friendly overtures to have her picture taken with
-the baby in her arms. Children abounded; there will be no race
-extinction of the Bedouins so long as they remain in their deserts.
-Their little brown bodies snuggled up to us, and their black eyes
-twinkled saucily as they shyly held out their hands for the gifts which
-evidently my friend always brought with her. They were a much better
-type of children than are those in Egyptian villages—strong, pretty
-bodies, and without the unhealthy eyes that are seen so much on the
-young in Egypt.
-
-In every tent was hung a gun, as robbers are frequent visitors, and each
-dweller in the tent must protect his own. He keeps a fierce and noisy
-dog that sees a stranger far across the sands, and one is followed far
-beyond village confines by these canine police.
-
-Polygamy is practised by the Bedouin more than it is by his city
-brothers. I visited in the tent of a woman who was the second wife of
-her husband, the other wife living in a tent adjoining. She had two
-children, and the first wife one, and from what I heard there was not
-the most pleasant relationship between them. Divorce is also one of the
-evils, and these primitive men take advantage of it to an alarming
-degree. Nearly every one I met had been divorced some time or other. It
-was such a common occurrence that it produced no feeling of shame in the
-woman who had been divorced.
-
-The Bedouins are so proud of their lineage that they wish to keep the
-tribal blood pure, and it leads to intermarriage. Cousins are frequently
-married, and often a whole tribe is related in some manner. I was told
-that the Bedouin settled an argument with a scolding or recalcitrant
-wife by giving her a good chastising with a stick. While in Cairo I met
-a most charming Bedouin who had left the sands for the gaieties of the
-city. He was quite the polished gentleman to be found in any city, and I
-was surprised when told that he had divorced his Bedouin wife because
-she was not as progressive as his cosmopolitanism now required, and my
-gossipy friend informed me, “They used to quarrel dreadfully and he
-would beat her most frightfully.” I saw the lady in question, who had
-returned to the tribe and remarried, and I rather admired the hardihood
-of the somewhat effeminate man who would dare to try to beat this great
-stalwart Bedouin woman, who looked as if she would take an active part
-in any chastening that might be passing around her tent.
-
-There is no such word as “privacy” in the Bedouin vocabulary; their
-private life must be an open book to all the tribe. Their one great
-blessing is the wonderfully clear, dry air, which gives them health and
-vigour and makes them immune to many of the diseases that afflict their
-Egyptian neighbour. But if they leave the desert and go to live within
-the cities, they fall easy victims to the great white plague,
-tuberculosis.
-
-The Bedouins are followers of Mohammed, but they put their faith in holy
-tombs and charms and sacred groves. They are not so strict in regard to
-prayers as are the people who live within call of the muezzin, and the
-religion of the women seems to be more superstition than worship of a
-God. They placate a God who may do them harm, and they have innumerable
-charms and amulets for the guarding of their children. In the desert
-whirlwinds they see sweeping across their sands are “ginns” and evil
-monsters; and at night, when a star shoots across the dark blue sky,
-they believe it is a dart thrown by God at an evil genie, and they
-whisper, “May God transfix the enemy of the faith.” Around the naked
-children’s neck is hung a small box containing some quotation from the
-Koran that will guard them from the evil eye, that curse most dreaded by
-all mothers of an Eastern land. For every evil that man is heir to, the
-Koran is the cure. A few words from its precious pages are bound upon
-the arm of the camel driver, who feels that with this as guardian he
-will not be lost upon the trackless sands. When ill, the wife will call
-the astrologer, who writes a few words upon a piece of paper, and
-soaking it in water, gives it to the wailing child, and the mother is
-assured that all will soon be well, because has he not drunk of the very
-fount of wisdom, the words that came from God?
-
-The old custom of a life for a life prevails in the desert, and feuds
-are handed down from father to son. If a father or brother is killed, it
-is the duty of the son or brother to take the life of the enemy of his
-house. In the olden time there was blood money which could be paid,
-although it was considered a cowardly thing to accept it. A man’s life
-was worth a hundred camels, a woman’s only fifty, but the man of honour
-asked the life. The chief of the tribe has the power to decide in all
-cases between his people, and the English Government does not materially
-interfere in the life of the Bedouin.
-
-In regard to the custom of taking a life for a life, there is a story
-told of how in the early days the missions made a convert from
-Mohammedanism, the only convert made among these tribes. In a blood feud
-a man stabbed his enemy, but not fatally, and fleeing to the tent of a
-friend he lingered there many days. This tent was one visited by the
-missionary of the Christian faith, and while lying on his bed of pain
-the wounded man heard of a faith that said, “Love your enemies,” and
-before his death he sent word to his tribe that they must forget his
-death and not try to avenge it. He even sent word that he forgave his
-enemy. This was so astonishing that neither could the man who killed him
-nor his tribe believe the fact, and secretly the enemy decided to find
-for himself what had caused the unheard of message to be brought to his
-tent. He learned of the new religion that said, “Revenge is Mine, saith
-the Lord,” and he became the only Bedouin convert to the Christian
-faith.
-
-Living in this home on the edge of the desert we saw the real life of
-the tent people. We watched them as, weary and tired looking, they
-returned from their long journeys. We saw the trains of laden camels as
-they started for the distant cities. We saw the shepherd boys drive in
-the flocks of sheep or goats, looking as they did in olden Bible times.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- INDIAN SOCIAL LIFE
-
-
-There is no woman in the world who is so bound down by custom, so tied
-to the wheel of conventionality, as is the Indian woman, both Hindu and
-Mohammedan. In the olden times the ancient law-makers realized the
-danger menacing a people surrounded by an inferior race, as were the
-natives of India compared to their Aryan invaders, and instituted that
-remarkable social system that peculiarly affects the women of the
-country, and is the cause of many of the evils that has made her life
-one not to be envied—caste.
-
-Hindu society is divided into hundreds of communities consisting of
-several clans, each clan having its own peculiar customs and iron-bound
-rules. The clans are composed of families, governed by the family
-custom, which in turn must obey the clan custom, and these must be
-governed by the rules of the community. If a person violates the custom,
-he forfeits all the privileges which he or his family may have in the
-life of the community. His social life is entirely cut off from other
-families and from the protection of his people. No one of his community
-will eat or drink with him, visit his house, or marry his children. The
-priest will not serve him, the barber will not shave him, nor the
-washman wash for him. He will be absolutely alone and friendless in the
-world, not able to get employment, even allowed to starve by the members
-of his own family, who dare not help him, knowing they themselves would
-be outcasted. He may not have the solace of joining another caste,
-either lower or higher, because he must live and die in the caste in
-which he was born.
-
-Originally there were only four great castes in India: the Brahmans, or
-priestly class, who held all the intellectual or cultural prerogatives;
-the Kashatriyas, or warrior caste; the Vaisayas, or merchant caste; and
-the Sudras, or working class. Below that still are the outcastes, who
-are almost slaves, and do the lowest menial services. Manu, the great
-law-maker, said that the Brahman issued from the head of Brahma, hence
-his intellectual superiority; the warrior from his arms, the husbandman
-from his thighs, and the Sudras from his feet, thus exactly placing the
-man’s social position in life.
-
-The laws of caste as explained by Mr. Dutt, a Hindu writer, are as
-follows—
-
-Individuals cannot be married who do not belong to the same caste.
-
-A man may not eat with another not of his own caste.
-
-His meals must be cooked by persons either of his own caste or by
-Brahmans.
-
-No man of an inferior caste is to touch his food or the dishes in which
-they are served, or even to enter his cook-room.
-
-No water or other liquid contaminated by the touch of a person of
-inferior caste can be made use of—rivers, tanks, and other large sheets
-of water being held incapable of defilement.
-
-Articles of dry food, such as rice, wheat, etc., do not become impure by
-passing through the hands of a person of inferior caste so long as they
-remain dry, but cannot be taken if they become wet or greased.
-
-Certain prohibited articles, such as cow’s flesh, pork, fowls, etc., are
-not to be eaten.
-
-The ocean and other boundaries of India must not be crossed.
-
-These rules would not be so oppressive if there were only the four
-original great castes into which society was first divided, but now each
-class is divided into thousands of subdivisions, whose members may not
-intermarry, nor eat together, nor even touch the food prepared by those
-of another community. Mr. Sidney Low has very well expressed the
-difficulties caused by this very intricate social ruling in his “Vision
-of India”—
-
-“To get a loose analogy, we might suppose that everybody who could claim
-descent from one of the old Norman families in England formed one caste;
-that members of the ‘learned professions,’ who had never soiled
-themselves with commerce, were combined in a second; and that others
-consisted exclusively of bankers or moneylenders, or of pork butchers,
-costermongers, bricklayers, and so on _ad infinitum_.
-
-“Add that a man born in the costermonger class would remain, or ought to
-remain, a member of that connection to the end of his days, and that he
-would bring up his sons to the same business; that a greengrocer ought
-not to eat food in company with a poulterer, that a baker might not give
-his daughter in marriage to a cheesemonger, and that neither could have
-any matrimonial relations with a bootmaker; and, further, that none of
-these persons could place himself in personal contact with a clergyman
-or a solicitor—imagine all this, and you begin to acquire some faint
-notion of the involved tangle in which the entire Hindu community has
-managed to get itself enwound.”
-
-Mr. Low quotes from the census report of Sir H. Risley further to
-illustrate what the caste system means in the matrimonial sphere, that
-sphere that especially touches the womanhood of India—
-
-“He imagines the great tribe of the Smiths throughout Great Britain
-bound together in a community, and recognizing as their cardinal
-doctrine that a Smith must always marry a Smith, and could by no
-possibility marry a Brown, a Jones, or a Robinson. This seems fairly
-simple; there would be quite enough Miss Smiths to go round. But, then,
-note that the Smith horde would be broken up into smaller clans, each
-fiercely endogamous. Brewing Smiths,” Sir H. Risley asks us to observe,
-“must not mate with baking Smiths; shooting Smiths and hunting Smiths,
-temperance Smiths and licensed-victualler Smiths, Free Trade Smiths and
-Tariff Reform Smiths, must seek partners for life in their own
-particular section of the Smithian multitude. The Unionist Smith would
-not lead a Home Rule damsel to the altar, nor should Smith the tailor
-wed the daughter of a Smith who sold boots.”
-
-In its effect upon women the caste system has been most deleterious
-because of the difficulty of finding husbands within the same caste. It
-has led to the making away with undesirable daughters, which was
-frequently practised by the parents before the English Government
-stepped in and made female infanticide a crime and severely punished the
-culprits. Yet we are told that the disproportion of female to male
-children shows that the practice has not been completely stamped out,
-and that many fathers foreseeing the financial difficulties to be
-encountered in marrying their daughters, have deliberately made away
-with them at birth. In the smaller villages the crime is difficult of
-detection, but when the ratio of girls to boys falls particularly low in
-a community, the Government quarters extra police upon the people,
-making all the inhabitants contribute towards the cost of their
-maintenance, and the records soon show that girl babies are again being
-born in the villages.
-
-Life in a high-caste Brahman family is much more complicated than that
-of the low-caste family, and many burdens are added to the already heavy
-ones borne by the Hindu woman, because of the rituals and customs woven
-around this caste system. A woman told me that she had a friend who
-lived in the house of two maiden aunts who were most orthodox Hindus.
-This woman was not allowed to touch a thing in the morning before her
-bath. Beside her bed was a long pole with which she must handle her
-towels and clothing, and she was not permitted to enter the presence of
-her aunts until her uncleanliness had been removed by ablutions and
-prayers.
-
-The mother-in-law of my friend has practically no social intercourse
-with her son’s wife because she has broken caste, eats with Europeans,
-and wears shoes made from leather. Her own mother at first felt her
-daughter’s disgrace keenly, and would not see her for many years. At
-last love triumphed over custom, and now the mother will visit the
-daughter if assured that a place will be made ceremonially clean where
-she may spread her mat of holy dharba grass, on which she sits while
-chatting. She will receive nothing from the hand of her daughter,
-neither water nor food, and when she returns home she takes a complete
-bath and changes her wearing apparel that has become polluted by contact
-with her daughter’s house.
-
-Orthodox Hindus do not like sitting upon a mat of cloth or walking upon
-a carpet. In many houses a wooden bench or board is kept for visitors.
-The wife of a Resident in one of the Indian cities gave a reception to
-which came several ladies from the conservative Hindu families. They
-carefully avoided walking upon the rugs, and sat upon the edge of the
-chairs, looking most unhappy. The wife of the Resident asked an advanced
-Hindu lady why her afternoon was not a success so far as the Indian
-guests were concerned. She was told that the only thought that possessed
-these little women was a desire to get home. They wished to be polite
-and stay as long as etiquette demanded, but they welcomed with avidity
-the finality of the party when they might return and bathe and purify
-themselves from the close contact of foreigners and Mohammedans.
-
-The members of the Brahmo Samaj, that progressive offshoot of Hinduism,
-have broken caste and allow their women to go about freely. I was in a
-town of Southern India with a member of this sect, and we called upon
-the head mistress of a large school for girls. She was at home with her
-newly born baby, waiting for the forty days of uncleanness to pass
-before returning to her school. She was a very intelligent woman,
-talking freely of the good and the bad of their social system. She said
-that a school for girls such as that of which she was the head, where
-four hundred young girls were being educated in modern thought, would
-have the greatest influence upon the women of the next generation, but
-that it would take time to eradicate the instincts of generations of
-ignorance and superstition, so deeply woven into the very nature of the
-Indian woman.
-
-At the close of the visit the baby was brought to me, and rather lacking
-a subject for conversation I made the unfortunate remark to the baby,
-“You will grow up a good Hindu and stick to your caste.” I was not
-prepared for the storm of protest it raised from my friend who had
-brought me to the home. She turned on me furiously and said: “How can
-you say such things, you, a modern woman? Caste is the ruin of India. If
-we want progress we must break caste: it is our only hope.”
-
-It is not caste alone that makes the rules that govern the life and
-actions of the Indian woman, but from birth to the burning-ground every
-detail of life is cast into a mould of ceremony and ritual, which in the
-hands of a less spiritual people would have degenerated into mere sham.
-Of the sixteen events in the life of a man, all are viewed from a
-religious aspect, and accompanied by a religious ceremony. The most
-sacred prayers are said in the morning before partaking of food, and it
-is the husband, the head of the house, who is supposed to say the
-prayers for all beneath his roof-tree. “No sacrifice is allowed to women
-apart from their husbands, no religious rite, no fasting; as far as a
-wife honours her lord, so far is she exalted in heaven,” says the laws
-of Manu, yet the instinct of religion is strong in the Hindu woman, as
-it is in women all over the world, and they do perform a worship. At the
-time of her marriage, at the marriage of her children, and at many of
-the sacred feasts, the wife must sit with her husband during the time he
-is engaged in the performance of the acts of worship, though she takes
-no active part in the ceremonies. If a man has lost his wife, he cannot
-perform the sacrifice of fire.
-
-The Hindu woman has her gods, which she keeps in the kitchen, the most
-sacred room in a Hindu household. In all the time I was in India I never
-saw the inside of the kitchen of any of my Indian friends. I have been
-told that it is divided into two parts, the smaller room used for the
-cooking and as pantry for the storing of food, and must be kept free
-from ceremonial defilement. The larger half of the kitchen of a
-middle-class household serves as dining-room, and in an alcove or in one
-corner are the household gods and the utensils to be used in their
-worship. None of the images used by a woman are consecrated, but she
-lights her lamp and bows her head and prays for the safety of her dear
-ones, then offers a bit of fruit or betel or a sweetmeat that she has
-prepared, and scatters sandal paste and coloured rice or the petals of
-sweet-smelling flowers over her god. There is generally in each tiny
-yard or in the kitchen a tulasi plant, around which the women walk while
-chanting a prayer. This plant is considered the wife of Vishnu, and is
-revered by all. There are many blessings promised to one who attends and
-waters one of these plants, and it will keep care and tribulation from
-its worshippers and grant pardon to the sinner who cherishes the tulasi
-plant. Yet it is more particularly worshipped by women. At one time, it
-is said, women were commanded to walk around it one hundred and eight
-times each day, which certainly was a blessing from a hygienic point of
-view, as it gave exercise to these shut-in women, who are restricted to
-the four walls of their homes.
-
-At night when the lamps are lighted the wife makes obeisance to the
-flame, saying—
-
- The flame of this lamp is the supreme good.
- The flame of this lamp is the abode of the Supreme.
- By this flame sin is destroyed,
- Oh, Thou light of the evening, we praise thee.
-
-At the time of the evening meal the men have an elaborate religious
-ceremony, but the women say simply, “Govinda, Govinda,” a name for
-Vishnu, before partaking of their food.
-
-The devout mother teaches her children the tales of the gods, and at
-worship time when the bell is sounded they are taught to place their
-hands together in the attitude of prayer and bow their little heads to
-the gods. It is the father who is expected to teach them the Vedic texts
-and the truths to be found in the Puranas.
-
-The daily worship is held in the homes, but on feast days or for
-especial acts of devotion, such as prayers for the blessings of a son,
-or the giving of thanks for favours received, the women go to the
-temples. These are crowded on holy days or days of anniversary of the
-gods. No one ever goes to the temple empty-handed, and one sees the
-little brass jar of holy water, the wreath of marigold or sweet-smelling
-flowers which are supposed to give pleasure to the aesthetic senses of
-the gods. Many women take a coconut to the temple, which fruit seems to
-be generally connected with temple worship. The breaking of the coconut
-is said to represent the slaying of the sacrificial animal, which is
-only done now in the temples dedicated to Kali, that goddess of terror
-who delights in the blood of her victims.
-
-While in Benares I visited a temple dedicated to Shiva, in which were
-several enormous bulls, the animal sacred to this god. They were of a
-bluish grey in colour, and from long living in the temple had become as
-clever as the priests in looking for offerings from their worshippers.
-But while the priests looked for silver or gold, the bulls had an eagle
-eye with which to discern from afar the woman who carried a basket of
-grain. They stood at the back of the temple and eyed each worshipper as
-she entered. If the pious woman had only a brass water-pot in her hand
-they did not move; but if they saw a basket, they immediately started
-for her, and graciously allowed her to pour the grain into their open
-mouths, the woman taking care that she did not pollute the bulls by
-touching their lips with her hand. A wreath of marigolds was then thrown
-over the neck of the bull, the holy water was poured on his shoulders,
-and he returned to his place. I saw an old lady lovingly stroke the back
-of one of these pampered beasts, ending with the tail, the end of which
-she used to stroke her face, and afterwards lovingly kissed this
-appendage of her idol. The expression on her face was one of deepest
-reverence, and for her the great blue bull represented the god for whom
-her hungry soul was longing. The educated Hindu would say that she was
-struggling to find a god as are we all, but that she was still a child
-in matters spiritual and required a material representative of her
-ideal. They say that the real Hindu, the man who has studied the Vedas
-and understands the spirit of his religion, needs no images nor ritual.
-In his prayer he plainly shows that to him God is a spirit. He says—
-
- Oh, Lord, pardon my three sins. I have in contemplation clothed Thee
- in form, who art formless; I have in praise described Thee, who art
- ineffable; and in visiting shrines I have ignored Thy omnipresence.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A HOLY MAN, BENARES.
-
- To face p. 96.]
-
-In many of the temples, besides the priests to minister to the gods, are
-dancing girls, whose duties are to dance at the shrines, sing hymns, and
-generally delight the gods. They are a recognized religious institution,
-and are honoured next to the priests. They are obtained when quite young
-by purchase or by gift. Often in times of famine a girl is sold to the
-temple, that her price may save the rest of the family from starvation.
-One is given that all may live. In other cases a girl is often a
-thank-offering given to the gods because of recovery from sickness or
-great tribulation. A rich man, instead of presenting his own daughter,
-would buy the daughter of some poor family and present her. These girls,
-who have no word to say in regard to the disposal of their persons, are
-public women, and the gains of their profession go towards the support
-of the temple. If there should be children born to these professional
-dancing girls, they are brought up in their mother’s profession, very
-much as were the children born to the priestesses of Aphrodite in the
-temples of Alexandria.
-
-All Indian girls must be married, consequently these temple women are
-formally married to a dagger, a tree, or some inanimate object, who, as
-a husband, cannot object to the actions of his wife. Lately, in some
-places it has been made a criminal offence to sell a girl or give a
-daughter to a temple, and it is only done surreptitiously. One is told
-in India that it is a thing of the past, yet in one large temple in the
-South there are said to be over one hundred dancing girls kept for the
-amusement of the blasé gods.
-
-These dancing girls share with their sisters, the nautch girls, the only
-real freedom given to Indian women. The latter are taught to read and
-write, to play musical instruments, and to make themselves attractive
-and charming to men. They come and go freely, mingling with both men and
-women. They are found at all feasts and public ceremonies, and have a
-very definite and honourable place in Indian society. Whatever discredit
-may be attached to her calling, she is considered a necessary adjunct to
-the temple and the home. Her presence at weddings is considered most
-fortunate, and in some castes it is the nautch girl who fastens the tali
-around the neck of the bride, a ceremony similar to placing the
-wedding-ring upon the finger. She holds the centre of the stage at all
-entertainments given in honour of guests. While we were in a native
-province ruled by a prince who had the reputation of liking wine, women,
-and song even more than did the average ruling prince in India, we were
-edified by the dancing of a woman brought from Bombay at the expense to
-the prince of nearly one hundred pounds a day.
-
-The dancing is extremely modest, as the dancer is fully clothed, and it
-is the graceful, languorous poses of her slim body, the waving of her
-arms heavily laden with bracelets, and the slow moving, gliding steps
-that keep time to the tinkle of the anklets, that charm her admirers.
-There is a proverb that says, “Without the jingling of the nautch girl’s
-anklets, a dwelling-place does not become pure.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- INDIAN HOME LIFE
-
-
-Although the women are supposed to have no religious standing and are
-considered unfit to read the Vedas or touch the consecrated gods, still
-their entire life is influenced by religion or superstition, and the
-religion and superstition of the Eastern woman, of whatever land, is so
-inextricably entwined, that it is hard to tell where one leaves off and
-the other begins. Like her sisters of China and Egypt, she is afraid of
-the evil eye. She firmly believes that if her jewels, her dress, or her
-children are looked upon with jealous or covetous eyes, much sorrow will
-come to her, and she has many charms and ceremonies with which to
-counteract the baneful influence of spiteful persons. It is never wise
-for a visitor to regard a baby too closely or to admire its jewels or
-clothing openly, as, even if the mother is one of the advanced minority,
-instinct will assert itself, and deep within her heart, bred there by
-centuries of tradition, will be a little feeling that something _might_
-happen to her dear one. Quite likely, when the unwise caller departs,
-the mother will make a lamp of kneaded rice flour and fill it with oil
-or clarified butter, which, when lighted and passed round the baby’s
-head, will remove the dreaded evil.
-
-The Hindu woman’s life is ruled by omens to a far greater extent than is
-the life of the woman of the Western world. If she is starting on a
-visit to a friend, it is a very bad sign for her to meet a widow, any
-one carrying a new pot, a bundle of firewood, a pariah, a lame man, two
-men quarrelling, a leper—in fact, there are about a dozen things she
-should avoid, or else be under the necessity of returning to her home
-and saying a few prayers before daring to start on her journey again. If
-she should sneeze once, it is most unfortunate, and should be followed
-by a second in order to avert the evil, but if the second sneeze is
-followed by others, the more the better, it is a most certain sign that
-her most ardent wishes will soon be granted. When one yawns it is polite
-to snap the fingers and say, “Govinda, Govinda,” as many believe that
-the life may leave the body while yawning, and to avert this calamity
-from a baby the mother snaps her fingers and murmurs, “Krishna,
-Krishna,” in its tiny ears.
-
-Mohammedan and Hindu customs are so much alike that it is often hard to
-say that one is a Mohammedan custom or that another is purely Hindu. At
-the marriages, and the return of the daughter to her home to give birth
-to her first child, at the birth of the children, and in many of the
-social customs of the Mohammedans are seen the influence of the Hindu
-religion. It was the Mohammedans who brought the “purdah” system, or the
-seclusion of women, into India. Before the invasion of these warlike
-people the women of India went about freely, but now the Hindus are
-practically as secluded as are the Mohammedan women. In the North, where
-the influence of the followers of the Arabian prophet made itself most
-dominant, the women are much more secluded than in the South, where the
-Mohammedans did not come in such large numbers.
-
-It is in the villages that true India is to be found, unchanging,
-languorous India. Here is a self-centered commonwealth, with little
-dependence for its welfare upon the outer world, and the people have
-remained the same as their fathers and their father’s fathers,
-impervious to new innovations and ideas. To look at one of these
-villages is very different from ideas one may have formed of them by
-reading books of travel. The first impression received upon entering one
-is that of an enlarged barnyard, as cows and farm implements take entire
-possession of the narrow streets. The low, thatched mud houses are
-without doors, windows, or chimneys. The floor is generally plastered
-with cow dung, which, when dry, leaves a hard shellac-like polish,
-considered by the natives most sanitary. It has to be redone every two
-weeks, and to Western eyes is a most unsightly operation, as it is done
-with the hands of the housewife. It is said that when the Salvation Army
-sent its first volunteers to India, they required them to live the life
-of the Indian, and that this smearing of the earthen floors with the
-national substitute for varnish was one of the chief causes why women
-were not always ready to volunteer for service in the East.
-
-There is virtually no furniture in the homes. The stove consists of
-three or four bricks, around which the fuel, consisting of dried cakes
-of mud and cowdung, are broken, and which smoulder rather than burn. A
-few earthenware pots and a large dish in which to serve the food, some
-brass utensils, and a large jar for carrying water, complete the
-culinary arrangements. For plates, banana or plantain leaves are used,
-or, lacking these, small leaves are sewn together. This saves the
-drudgery of washing dishes, as the leaves are thrown away after each
-meal, and the fingers are used in place of the knives and forks of the
-more aesthetic races. Chairs and tables are not needed, as the Indian
-squats upon his haunches, as only an Oriental can; and in silence,
-regarding only his own food, to which he helps himself from the central
-dish, he eats his meal. When the lord of the household has finished, he
-graciously allows his wife to eat from the same leaf. No Indian woman
-who conforms to the customs of her race ever eats at the table with the
-men of her household, yet this is not confined to the women of India.
-The separation of the men from the women at the dinner-table is
-practised by all Orientals. The women of China and Japan eat with the
-younger children when the master of the house has finished, and no
-Egyptian husband, unless one of the small class who have become
-thoroughly Westernized, would think of inviting his wife to share with
-him his evening meal.
-
-In the village homes the man shows his superiority also in the fact that
-the only bed in the house of the peasant or workman is that for the
-master, if bed it can be called—simply a rough framework of wood with
-coir ropes strung across it. The extra wardrobe of the family, if they
-are so fortunate as to possess more than the one garment which they
-wear, is hung on a pole in a corner of the room, and need not take much
-space, as the clothing of India’s poor is scant—a loin-cloth, a sheet
-for the shoulders, and a long piece of cotton for the head suffices him.
-His wife will only possess a tight-fitting little bodice, and six yards
-of cloth which she will drape gracefully around her body, making it
-serve both as dress and head covering. Yet the woman’s arms are covered
-often with bracelets, anklets tinkle as she walks, and as she draws her
-sari across her face when passing the stranger, the glint of a nose-ring
-is seen, or the light flashes from a necklace that rests against her
-brown skin. This jewellery may be of gold, silver, brass, or even of
-glass, but the woman of the village loves these aids to feminine charms
-as well as does her city sister. In the olden time the peasant had no
-trust in banks, and when he accumulated a few extra rupees, he added a
-bangle to his wife’s arm, or bought a nose or ear-ring. It served the
-double purpose of saving money which might be foolishly spent at the
-autumn fair, and also was easy to take to the moneylender in times of
-stress. There are many thousands of pounds of gold that go into India
-each year and disappear. The officials say it is turned into jewellery
-for these wives and daughters of India’s great middle class, who seem
-never too poor to have a touch of gold or silver upon the persons of
-their womenfolk.
-
-The village wife is relieved of the necessity of providing clothing for
-the children, because until they are seven or eight years old an amulet
-string or a silver anklet completes their wardrobe. There are many of
-these little brown bodies around every doorway, looking like
-dark-skinned cupids. One rarely sees a child in India with a bad skin,
-which perhaps is due to the oil-baths which they receive in early
-childhood. Mothers bathe their babies in oil, then wash it off with a
-vegetable soap, leaving the skin soft and shining as satin. This is a
-luxury indulged in by older people also, and the giving of oils for the
-bath is a favourite present among friends.
-
-In the shade of the porch is often seen a cradle, a very simple affair
-made of four pieces of wood with a hammock of cloth held between them.
-Around the top of the cloth is arranged baby’s toys so that he may lie
-and amuse himself, which is quite necessary where the mother has as many
-household duties to attend to as the Indian farmer’s wife. In places
-where the woman is working in the field, the baby may be seen wrapped in
-a hammock-like affair and tied to the limb of a tree; and it is a common
-practice among labouring women, I am told, to give the babies a drug to
-keep them quiet while the mothers work. Opium is very generally used in
-India, especially among the higher classes, although forbidden by both
-Hindu and the Mohammedan religion. It is supposed to invigorate the
-aged, and an Indian told me that he thoroughly believed that all men
-after they pass the age of fifty were better for the moderate use of
-opium.
-
-The wife of the village man or peasant is not “purdah nashim,” or
-secluded, as is the wife of the rich man. She takes her share in the
-agricultural work, besides carrying water from the village well, making
-the cakes of fuel and plastering them against the side of the house to
-dry, grinding the meal, husking the rice, washing the clothing, and
-cooking the meals. Yet with all her work the monotony of her life is
-broken by many feasts and ceremonies in which she takes a part. Each
-district and temple has its own particular fête day, and there are many
-family feasts where work is given up at the time of special rejoicing.
-Relatives and friends meet together, the houses are decorated, bright
-saris are brought forth, and the time is spent in pleasure and
-merry-making. There are eighteen obligatory feasts in the year for the
-orthodox Hindu, but only a few of the principal ones are celebrated.
-
-Many of the ceremonies in the home originated in sanitary laws, which
-would not have been obeyed unless the people were made to believe that
-they were of divine origin. At a certain time of the year when smallpox
-is rife, and the epidemic has passed, there is a worship of the
-“Mother,” which requires the house to be thoroughly cleaned and
-purified, all the old vessels broken, all old clothing burned or placed
-in the sun for a certain time, before the women are permitted to go to
-the temple to worship their favourite goddess. There is another spring
-feast, when the women go down to the water dressed in yellow, and send
-small lighted lamps down the stream to the spring goddess. At the feast
-of the serpents the villagers take offerings to the sand-hills, and pour
-milk and honey into the holes where the snakes are supposed to dwell,
-asking protection of these gods of wisdom, who especially guard the eyes
-of their worshippers. At another feast the women take red water and
-sprinkle it upon each other, rejoicing over the slaying of the giant god
-of evil. The girls take part in a pretty feast in the fall, when they
-decorate their little brothers with flowers and garland the houses, and
-at night light innumerable little lamps, making a village look like a
-miniature fairyland.
-
-The village women appear rather sullen, but when known they are found to
-be as happy as is the wife of the average working man. If there is no
-drought drying up the crops, if no disease comes to the cattle, if the
-moneylender is not too avaricious, if a few pennies can be saved to buy
-bracelets from the bangle-man at the annual festival, and if the gods do
-not disgrace her by sending too many daughters, she is happy. Yet the
-village woman and her family are always but half a step in advance of
-the waiting wolf; famine comes with swiftness, and quick deaths from
-plagues to hundreds of thousands of these peasant people, who constitute
-nine-tenths of the population of India.
-
-The life of the women in the small towns and villages is like life in
-another world compared to that led by the women in the large cities of
-Calcutta or Bombay or Madras. Here the Indian lady seems to be trying to
-lose her national characteristics, and Indian society is very
-disappointing to a visitor from the West who wishes to see something of
-the life lived by the lady of India. It seems to be merely a copy of the
-life of the English society woman, and her day is filled with teas,
-society concerts, and receptions. Their homes are thoroughly English in
-every department, their drawing-rooms are filled with English
-bric-à-brac, they go to the entertainments in most luxurious motors;
-their children, dressed in European clothes, are brought down to see the
-guest by an English governess, and English is the language of the home.
-Many of the Indian women are members of clubs, musical societies, and
-are taking active part in the charities for the benefit of their people.
-
-The Indian woman wields a strong influence over her husband, and has
-more of a place in the life around her than we imagine, from the stories
-we hear of unhappy days spent “Behind Zenana Bars.” We are apt to
-consider the secluded, shut-in Eastern woman as a cowed, frightened
-creature, afraid to say her soul is her own, while among the better
-class, at least, it is quite the contrary. It takes a brave man to go
-absolutely against the wishes of his womenfolk, as they have the
-advantage of numbers in their favour. In every great household there are
-innumerable women relatives, satellites, and servants revolving around
-the personality of the mistress. These Eastern women have been schooled
-in the art of intrigue and understand thoroughly the efficacy of passive
-resistance. If the wife wishes to accomplish a certain object, and is
-able to enlist the women of the household on her side, the man will be
-compelled sooner or later to submit to her wishes.
-
-The older, conservative women are very tyrannical, and try their best to
-combat the newer ideas brought to the zenanas by their sons and
-daughters. Many of the younger generation are trying to break from the
-patriarchal custom of all the family living under one roof. They say it
-is very fine in theory, and has worked with good results in the
-villages, but that it has many bad points, the chief of which is that it
-allows no expression of individuality. The personality must be sunk in
-the family. When all the men will work and become producers and
-contributors to the family fund, it makes for harmony in the home, but
-when some are drones and live on the toil of others, it makes the burden
-too heavy for the few and causes quarrels and dissensions.
-
-Women are helpless in India in the earning of a living for themselves,
-and if widowhood comes they must depend for support on some male
-relative of their own or of the family of their deceased husband. I know
-a boy of eighteen who is the only support of his wife, his aunt, a
-widow, his widowed mother, and his young sister. He was compelled to
-leave school and take a position in an office in order to take care of
-all these women, as he was the responsible head of the family. It is
-hard for a boy who is ambitious and anxious to obtain an education, when
-there are many women in his household, as they care more for the
-immediate necessities than for a prospective successful future. They
-feel that his father and his father’s father were able to provide for
-the wants of the family, so why should the boys of to-day spend years in
-studying books when they might be adding to the family exchequer?
-
-It is the women who are compelling the younger boys and girls to conform
-to the old usages and traditions in regard to marriage. Many a boy
-leaves school and would like a chance to find a place for himself in
-life before burdening himself with a wife. But this he is not allowed to
-do. His mother believes that all boys should be married early in life,
-consequently the boy is saddled with a family at about the age when the
-American boy is taking his first shy look at the girl across the aisle
-in the schoolroom. These modern young men would also like to have a
-voice in the selection of their wives, but that also is denied them.
-They must conform to the traditions of their caste and the customs of
-their family. I know a boy who was compelled to marry his niece,
-although his education had taught him that these intermarriages were not
-for the good of his race; still, he was helpless, and could not
-successfully oppose the combined wishes of the women of his family.
-
-Side by side with these Indian women who guard jealously the customs and
-traditions of other days are the Westernized society women, who seem to
-share with their husbands in the spirit of imitation that has entered
-into the very soul of the Indian people who have come into contact with
-the English. The Indian gentleman feels that he must talk “sport,” the
-schoolboy prides himself upon the knowledge of cricket and football and
-talks the jargon of Eton and Rugby. Because the meat-eating Englishmen
-from cold, dreary England must exercise in order to live, the Indian
-also devotes himself to a strenuous regime that is absolutely alien to
-his habits and the requirements of his climate. The Indian lady, with
-her exaggerated English accent, and her costume that is neither of the
-East nor of the West, is a paradox. She may well be zealous in borrowing
-what she needs from the English, but it seems hard for her to assimilate
-what she takes and make it a part of herself. The affectations which she
-uses to show her cosmopolitanism are palpably grafted upon her tree of
-knowledge, and we who wish to see the real India are only consoled in
-the thought that these unusual conditions which prevail in the large
-cities are only the graftings, and that the tree itself is not affected
-by them. The real woman of India is bound to grow in knowledge brought
-by education and experience, but deep down in her heart she will be
-essentially the same for years to come. She will not try to exchange her
-personality for another’s, even in outward appearance.
-
-The dawn of consciousness that has been preceded by long twilight is now
-awakening in the soul of the Eastern woman, and she will see by its
-light that she has a strength and individuality of her own and that she
-need not mortgage her birthright to borrow alien charms from the women
-of other lands.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- MARRIAGE—THE GOAL OF WOMAN
-
-
-There are three great events in a Hindu woman’s life: first, her
-marriage; second, the birth of her son; and third, if she should be so
-unfortunate, her widowhood.
-
-These three events are of immense importance to all women, but as a
-woman of the Far East is supposed to be created for one purpose only,
-the rearing of sons to her husband’s house, marriage and birth of
-children assume a larger place in her life than in the life of the
-Western woman, where these two events are often merely incidents. Also
-when a Hindu woman marries she expects to stay married, as she cannot
-divorce her husband, and he can only divorce her for infidelity. Even
-death will not open for her the doorway to remarriage, because if her
-husband should die before her, she must remain true to his memory for
-life.
-
-The woman’s inclinations are seldom consulted in regard to the choice of
-a husband, because, quite likely, when she is not much more than a
-child, her parents begin to look around for a suitable alliance for her.
-Their choice must fall upon a man of the same caste, a relative if
-possible. The prospective bridegroom may be a young boy, or he may be an
-old man, a widower. The girl _must_ be married. There are no reasons in
-the Hindu philosophy which allow a girl to pass the marriageable age
-without a husband being chosen for her. Men may become “sanyassis,” that
-is, renounce the world and remain bachelors, but this is not allowed
-women under any circumstances, as they must fulfil their destiny, which
-is to be the mothers of men.
-
-If a girl passes the marriageable age, if she should be twelve or
-thirteen without being settled in life, her family would feel that they
-were disgraced, and she would have slight opportunity for marriage in
-any respectable family. Therefore, it is incumbent upon her parents to
-find for her a husband as soon as possible, which leads to one of the
-greatest crimes against Indian womanhood—child marriages.
-
-There are many preliminaries to be arranged before the final choice of a
-bridegroom is decided, but when he is found at last, the important
-question of the dowry arises. In some places the father of the bride
-gives a dowry with his daughter, in others the groom’s father pays a
-certain sum to the parents of the little bride, practically buying her.
-Nearly every caste has a different mode of procedure regarding the
-exchange of presents and money.
-
-The girl’s personal jewellery and everything she receives from her
-future father-in-law, or that she takes with her to her new home, are
-most clearly set down, article by article, in a document, and constitute
-her own personal property, which she may claim if she becomes a widow.
-
-Marriage is a most ruinous operation financially for the parents,
-especially for the father of the bride. He must give a feast lasting for
-five days to all friends and relatives, presents to all the contracting
-parties, and great liberality must be shown the Brahmans and priests who
-assist in the ceremony. If his new son-in-law is an educated youth, he
-will demand a much larger dowry with his bride, in these days when
-Western education is meaning so much in the life of the Indian youth. If
-he is a “failed B.A.,” he may only demand, we will say, one thousand
-rupees from his father-in-law. If he successfully passed his
-examinations and is a full B.A., he quite likely would feel that those
-letters added to his name were worth at least two thousand rupees; and
-if he should by chance be a Doctor of Laws, his demands might be limited
-only by the knowledge of the amount of gold the father of his bride has
-stored for this emergency.
-
-After the preliminary ceremonies have been concluded and the family
-priest has decided upon the most propitious day for the nuptials, the
-family begin to make preparations for the wedding. Invitations are taken
-to friends and relatives who are within visiting distance by the women
-of the household, who make upon the forehead of the invited female guest
-the round red caste mark, and leave a small bundle of pan leaves and
-betel-nut for the other members of the family. Often a little sandalwood
-paste is touched to the chin and between the shoulders by the bearer of
-the invitation. Mohammedan ladies send a tiny mica box with a cardamom
-seed in it and a piece of confectionery, which is given with the verbal
-invitation by the messenger, who must, if possible, be some member of
-the family instead of a servant.
-
-In the case of rich people the strong box is opened and the hoarded
-rupees brought forth with which to buy the gold and silver jewellery for
-both bride and groom, the elaborate wedding garments, and the saris,
-which are given as presents to the women guests, and shawls for the men;
-the store-rooms are examined to make sure that there is rice in plenty,
-also wheat flour, butter, oil of sessaman, peas, vegetables, fruits,
-pickles, curries, in fact, all the many foodstuffs necessary in the
-preparation of the elaborate feasts which are the main events of the
-wedding. Sandalwood powder is bought in great quantities, antimony for
-the eyes, incense, the red paste which wives use on the forehead, and
-innumerable numbers of the beautiful flower wreaths with which the
-guests are garlanded after the entertainments. Plenty of new earthen
-dishes are selected from the potters’ store, for these vessels may never
-be used the second time.
-
-In the case of the poor man, now is the time when the visits are made to
-the moneylender, because, rich or poor, prince or peasant, there must be
-no question of stint at this time of rejoicing.
-
-A wedding is a very gorgeous affair, being limited only by the means of
-the contracting parties, but it is generally conceded that all Indians,
-of whatever class of society they may be members, spend far too much
-upon the nuptials of their children.
-
-Each one of the five days has its especial religious rite. One ceremony
-typifies the giving of the girl by the father to the husband and the
-renunciation of his parental authority. On another day the husband
-fastens the tali around his young wife’s neck, which is practically the
-same as placing the marriage-ring upon the finger of the new bride. This
-tali is a small gold ornament strung on a little cord composed of one
-hundred and eight very fine threads closely twisted together and dyed
-yellow with saffron. Before tying the tali it is taken to the guests,
-both men and women, who bless it. Old ladies whose husbands are alive
-are specially requested to bless the tali, in order to insure the couple
-a long married life. This symbol of wifehood is tied with three knots,
-thus trebly ensuring the marriage tie, and is never to be removed unless
-the wearer is so unfortunate as to become a widow, when the cord is cut.
-The most unkind thing one woman can say to another is, “May your tali be
-cut!”
-
-After the tying of this emblem the newly married couple walk three times
-around a lighted fire, which is the ultimate binding of the marriage
-contract, for there is no more solemn engagement than that which is
-entered into in the presence of fire. Rice is thrown over the pair, and
-they throw it upon each other, signalling that they hope to enjoy an
-abundance of this world’s goods and a fruitful union. Rice is used at
-weddings in nearly all Eastern countries as typifying prosperity and
-fruitfulness, and it is perhaps from the Far East that we borrow our
-custom of throwing rice upon the newly married pair.
-
-Many Hindu women wear, in addition to the tali, an iron bracelet to
-indicate their marriage state. Among the rich it is gilded and,
-consequently, not easily distinguished from the many bracelets that
-always cover the Indian lady’s arm.
-
-A young Hindu boy is not supposed to chew betel-nut nor put flowers in
-his hair until he is married. On the fourth day of the marriage
-festivities the groom is given his first betel-nut by his
-brother-in-law, and his head is wreathed with flowers. In a few castes
-the bride has her left nostril bored on the fifth day of the marriage
-and an ornament placed therein. After marriage in some parts of India
-the woman wears a streak of red powder in the parting of her hair, and
-in practically all provinces she wears the little round mark of wifehood
-between the eyes, which, as age comes, is elongated, until gradually, by
-the time that children and grandchildren cluster around her knee, the
-little red mark has grown into a straight line, losing itself in the
-whitening locks. In Mysore and in some of the southern provinces a woman
-does not tuck up her dress in the back until she is married. Then an end
-of the long sari, which is twisted several times around the body, is
-brought from the front to the back and tucked into a belt, forming a
-sort of trousers, and incidentally exposing more brown leg than we women
-of the Western world think consistent with modesty.
-
-At the final feast the bride and groom eat together from the same leaf
-to show their complete union. This is the first and last time that the
-wife will eat in company with her husband, if he is an orthodox Hindu
-and not imbued with the new Western ideas. Always, in the future, she
-will serve him his meal, and after he has finished she will eat with the
-other women of the household and the smaller children, using the same
-leaf which has done service for her lord and master.
-
-When all the religious rites are finished and the festivities have come
-to an end, there is a final procession, when the wife and husband,
-gorgeously arrayed in all their jewellery, are carried round the town to
-the accompaniment of music, the explosion of fire crackers, the shooting
-of rockets, and the shouting of friends. Then, if the bride is still a
-child, she returns home with her parents, who keep her secluded until
-the time arrives for her to return to her husband’s home and fulfil the
-duties of a wife. The day the husband and mother-in-law come to take the
-wife to their home is made another time of rejoicing. She remains with
-them for a month when she revisits her old home, and often for the first
-few years, or until she has children, she lives alternately in her
-husband’s house and in that of her parents. If she finds herself
-ill-treated by her husband and tormented by her mother-in-law, the young
-girl often seeks her father’s home for shelter and protection, and
-remains with them until the husband or his mother come in person to
-persuade her to return home. Nearly always her family add their
-persuasions, if not their force, to compel the wife to return to her
-husband’s roof, as it is a great disgrace to all concerned to have a
-wife leave her husband. After the children come, the wife rarely leaves
-her house and devotes her time and energies to the rearing of the little
-ones that fill all homes, from the mansions of the rich to the huts of
-the poor peasants. There seem to be more little brown bodies in India
-than in any place I have visited, unless I except China, where the
-staple articles are rice and babies.
-
-The new wife has to accommodate herself to the customs of her husband’s
-family, and much of her future happiness depends upon the women members
-of the household. If it is a very aristocratic family, she may have all
-the luxuries of life, beautiful gold-embroidered saris, jewels,
-servants, and slaves, but very little liberty. There is a saying that
-you can tell the degree of a family’s aristocracy by the height of the
-windows in the home. The higher the rank, the smaller and higher are the
-windows and the more secluded the women. An ordinary lady may walk in
-the garden and hear the birds sing and see the flowers. A higher grade
-lady may only look at them from her windows, and if she is a very great
-lady indeed, this even is forbidden her, as the windows are high up near
-the ceiling, merely slits in the wall for the lighting and ventilation
-of the room.
-
-There are many rules of etiquette prescribed for the young girl-wife if
-she would show that she has been properly trained by her parents. For
-example, she must never speak of her husband by name, nor may she use a
-word with the same syllable as her husband’s first name. A friend of
-mine has a husband whose name begins with the same syllable as that used
-in the word sugar. She always speaks of sugar as “the substance you put
-in your tea,” and she generally refers to her husband as “he.” Nor would
-the man say “my wife,” but “my house,” or some word denoting the home. A
-man in Hyderabad met his doctor on the street and said, “I wish you
-would come and see me. My house has a boil on its neck.”
-
-This same wife would not sit in the presence of her mother-in-law or her
-husband if others were present. It would show extreme lack of respect;
-nor would she speak if her husband were in the room. We called upon the
-wife of a high official of Bangalore, who came into the room with her
-daughter-in-law and her young daughter, an extremely pretty girl. The
-daughter-in-law would not sit down in the presence of her husband’s
-mother, nor did she speak, and looked extremely awkward and
-self-conscious, as she stood with her sari drawn across her mouth and
-watched us with her big black eyes. The little daughter played the
-veena, the national instrument, and as she sat upon the rug, gorgeously
-arrayed in an elaborate red and gold sari, with jewellery on arms, neck,
-ankles, toes, and with diamonds in each tiny nostril, she made a picture
-never to be forgotten.
-
-In some of the big households where the sons bring their wives to live
-beneath the family roof-tree, the married quarters are not large enough
-to allow a separate room for each couple, and the women sleep in one
-room and the men in another. The mother has the right of assigning the
-couples who are to inhabit the married quarters for the week. But even
-the eagle eye of the mother-in-law cannot always watch the young people,
-and many a girl-wife steals across the courtyard to find her husband,
-who is waiting for her in the shadows. A crowd of young men in a school
-were asked to give their idea of what was the most beautiful music in
-the world. One answered, “The song of the bul-bul,” another, “The
-plaintive strains of the zither,” a third, “The cry of the night bird,”
-but a young bridegroom said, “The music of my wife’s anklets as she
-tries to suppress their sound when she steals to meet me in the
-moonlight.”
-
-One is amazed at the amount of jewellery worn by the Indian women, yet
-this vanity is not confined solely to the women, as in some of the
-provinces nearly every man has a jewel in his ear, and many of them wear
-most expensive finger-rings. The women excel in the artistic use of
-jewellery that on other people would seem tawdry and barbaric, but on
-these dainty little women is most becoming to their rich, dark beauty.
-Jewellery is not only worn by the lady, but women of every class are
-covered with it. The village woman will have perhaps but one cotton
-sari, and her home would be merely a mud hovel, but she will clink as
-she walks, and you know she wears silver anklets, and as she moves her
-sari to peep at you, you see the glisten of a bracelet. It may be of
-brass or it may be of silver, or, if she be very poor, coloured glass
-bangles will satisfy her cravings for the beautiful, and her arms will
-be covered with these ornaments from the wrist to the elbow.
-
-At a railway-station near Baroda I saw women whose legs to the knee were
-covered with huge brass bands that must have been most inconvenient and
-heavy to carry. In Poona we stopped to watch a merchant of toe-rings
-place his wares upon his patron’s toes which were held out to him for
-the purpose. The rings were so tight that soap had to be used to force
-them over the twinging toes. The operation was most painful to vanity,
-judging from the faces of the victims, but evidently the sight of the
-shining ring as they trudged down the dusty road repaid them for the
-suffering they had undergone. In this same market were innumerable
-booths for the sale of the glass bracelets that are worn by all the
-women of India, with the exception of widows. I watched an old woman in
-the bangle bazaar working them over the hands of the women who sat on
-the ground in front of her, prepared to spend unlimited time in
-acquiring these articles of adornment. The purchaser made her choice
-from the green or gold or red bangles piled carelessly upon the trays in
-front of her, then the bangle-seller squeezed and manipulated the hand,
-slowly working, pushing, coaxing the bangle over the hand, until finally
-it was on the arm, where evidently it would remain.
-
-My husband and I dined with a Mohammedan who, after dinner, asked me
-into the zenana to meet his wife. The bareness of my arms shocked her,
-and she insisted upon presenting me with three bracelets for each arm,
-working them on so skilfully that it did not pain me, but on arriving at
-the hotel I found I could not remove them. I tried to persuade the
-Indian servant to break them for me, but he was horrified and said it
-would bring me very bad luck, as only widows had them broken on the arm.
-I feared I would be compelled to wear them all my life as my husband
-would not break them, having overheard the remarks about the widow.
-Finally I broke them myself, much to the detriment of my arms, which
-carried the scars for many days.
-
-There is an immense amount of money going into India each year that
-never gets into circulation, as the gold coins are strung upon chains or
-melted to make the bracelets for the women and children. Life could be
-made much more comfortable for the Indian peasant if he would turn the
-money invested in jewellery for his womenfolk into comforts for the
-home.
-
-The Hindu woman has few legal rights. Any property which her husband
-wishes to leave her must be given to her in his lifetime, as she cannot
-inherit his estate, but she may claim maintenance from his heirs, and if
-she should survive her son, she may become his legal heir. The male
-relatives are supposed to provide maintenance for the women of the
-family.
-
-An outsider looking upon the Hindu home does not see where real union
-can possibly exist between a husband and wife. This is especially true
-at the present time, when nearly all the better class of India’s sons
-are being educated, and are reading, listening, touching hands with the
-outside world. The women of the middle and lower classes, except in rare
-cases, are practically without education, few being able to read or
-write. The signs point to the fact that they will not long remain in
-this ignorant state, because the young men are demanding educated wives,
-and a desire for education is abroad in the land, although an old
-proverb says that to educate a woman is like placing a knife in the
-hands of a monkey. The English Government is establishing schools for
-girls in every town and village, and in Baroda enforced schooling is
-demanded for girls as well as for boys. But because of the early
-marriage of the girl, she has little opportunity of becoming a real
-companion to her husband, as he may continue his studies for years,
-while, when she becomes a wife, her schooldays are over.
-
-I met a gentleman of about fifty years of age in the South of India who
-asked me to call upon his wife, a young girl of seventeen years, who
-became his bride at the age of twelve. She was not at all what the
-average girl of seventeen years would be in England or America. She was
-the polite hostess, with no trace of self-consciousness or gaucherie,
-graceful in her every movement. She was exquisitely dressed and covered
-with jewels. Large diamond clusters were in her ears, diamonds in each
-nostril, and around her neck a chain of rubies with a large pendant of
-pearls. Her manners were charming, and as we were parting she excused
-herself for a moment then returned to the room with a small tray on
-which was the red powder for the caste mark, betel-nut, fruit, and a
-small bouquet of flowers. She came to each of us and bowed, then with
-her right hand made the mark of wifehood upon our foreheads, and handed
-us the betel-nut and flowers. This gracious and pretty service is one of
-the many little kindly acts that are always performed by the hostess
-herself, as it would not be polite to delegate it to a servant.
-
-I was charmed with this dainty little woman, yet I could not help
-thinking that she might be a pretty toy, but not a companion to the man
-with whom I had been conversing a few hours previous, and in whose
-library I had seen Emerson’s “Essays,” Farrar’s “Life of Christ,”
-“Pilgrim’s Progress,” the works of Tolstoy, Epictetus, and lying upon
-the desk, as if just left by the master, Maeterlinck’s “Life and Death.”
-
-According to the ethical, moral, and religious standards of the Hindus,
-man and woman are equal. The Vedas teach—
-
- Before the creation of this phenomenal world, the first born Lord of
- all creatures divided his own self in two halves so that one half
- should be male and the other half female. Just as the halves of
- fruit possess the same nature, the same attributes and the same
- properties in equal proportion, so man and woman, being the equal
- halves of the same substance, possess equal rights, equal
- privileges, and equal power.
-
-This sounds very well in print, and learned Hindus quote us the Vedas to
-show that in their country women and men are considered equal. They are
-most indignant at the conception by the Western people of the treatment
-accorded the Indian woman by her husband. They say that books are filled
-with the stories of the brutality of husbands who marry these girl-wives
-without love on either side, yet they point out that it is a well-known
-fact that there are fewer wife-beaters in India than there are in
-England. Manu, the great law-giver, says, “A woman’s body must not be
-struck hard even with a flower, because it is sacred.”
-
-In the olden time we are told that women were well versed in the Vedas,
-although it is now claimed that they are forbidden to read them or to be
-taught their truths. It is known that two of the famous songs of the Rig
-Veda were revealed by women, and when Sankaracharya, the great
-commentator of the Vedanta, was discussing this philosophy with another
-savant, a Hindu lady well versed in the Hindu scriptures was requested
-to act as umpire.
-
-Whatever may have been her position in former times, at present there is
-no woman on earth who reveals more true attachment and devotion to her
-husband than does the Hindu wife. There is a beautiful saying, “Man is
-strength, woman is beauty; he is the reason that governs and she is the
-wisdom that moderates.”
-
-In the Mahrabarata we find this definition of a woman—
-
- A man’s wife is his truest friend;
- A loving wife is a perpetual spring
- Of virtue, pleasure, wealth; a faithful
- Wife is his best aid in seeking Heavenly bliss.
- A sweetly speaking wife is a companion
- In solitude, a father in advice,
- A mother in all seasons of distress,
- A rest in passing through life’s wilderness.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- INDIAN MOTHERHOOD
-
-
-When it is known that the girl-wife is to fulfil her destiny by giving
-her lord a child, she becomes a person of importance in her home circle,
-and there are endless ceremonies to be observed. Feasts are given
-friends, and many days are passed in rejoicing. One of the earliest
-celebrations is given the children of all friends and relatives, when
-the glass-bangle man comes with his wares, which are bought and freely
-distributed to the guests. About two months before the baby is expected
-the mother takes the daughter to her home, where she remains until after
-the formal purification, which is forty days after the birth of a girl,
-and thirty should she be so fortunate as to give a man-child to the
-world. At the end of that time her husband or his mother must come and
-take her home again. It would be an insult to send a lesser person,
-unless it were absolutely impossible for either of them to be the
-messenger. This custom of the young mother giving birth to her first
-child under her own family roof-tree is followed by Mohammedans as well
-as by Hindus.
-
-The midwife in the villages is generally the wife of the barber, and
-naturally her knowledge of medicine is very much limited. She is ruled
-entirely by superstition and old-time custom. Her chief knowledge
-consists in different prayers, and a woman who is an expert in this
-field of obstetrics is always in demand, because there is no time when
-prayers are a greater necessity than at the birth of a child. Both the
-baby and its mother are peculiarly susceptible to the evil eye, to the
-influences of lucky and unlucky days, and a thousand other superstitions
-that make this time of a woman’s life one of great danger. Happily for
-Indian women, the Marchioness of Dufferin, and the wives of other
-viceroys, have taken the cause of Indian womanhood to heart, and have
-established hospitals for women and supply nurses for the home. There
-are nearly two hundred and fifty hospitals and dispensaries throughout
-India, and women doctors with degrees from the highest institutions in
-Europe are giving their life to help the women of India. These doctors,
-with their assistants, their native students, and trained nurses, during
-the year 1903 took care of a million and a half of girls and women. Yet
-there is a vast opportunity for the enlarging of the work, as I was told
-that there are still a hundred million people who have no knowledge of
-the blessings to be obtained from European medicine and surgery, but who
-depend entirely upon the native doctors and midwives.
-
-Many hospitals are maintained by missionaries, who have always been the
-forerunners in work to help the helpless, and it will only be a question
-of time when the mothers of India will not be compelled to be sacrificed
-to the superstition and ignorance of the women who are the only ones
-allowed near them in their time of travail. Even the most advanced men
-in India to-day would hardly allow a man doctor to attend his wife at
-the birth of a child. He would rather lose the life of the wife than so
-violate the customs of his class.
-
-When the child is born, the date of the month, the hour of the day, and
-the star that is in the ascendant are carefully noted in order that the
-guru, or family priest, may cast the horoscope. Many of these
-astrologers are astute humbugs, and impose upon the credulity of their
-patrons to an enormous degree.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CRADLE IN VILLAGE, BARODA.
-
- To face p. 132.]
-
-The house where a child has been born, as well as those who live in it,
-are considered impure for ten days, unless it is a rented house, when
-only the room in which the mother lies is unclean, and into which no one
-can enter except the midwife. The room is kept extremely warm, and
-incense is burned in it every day, and leaves are hung in front of the
-door to ward off evil spirits. On the eleventh day the linen and
-clothing is sent to the washman, and the mother, taking the child in her
-arms and with the husband sitting beside her, goes through the ceremony
-of purification by the family priest, after which he purifies the entire
-household and the rooms. Still the mother is not supposed to receive her
-friends, and must keep apart from the rest of the family until the
-thirty or forty days are passed, when she passes through another
-purification ceremony, and then goes to the temple to offer sacrifice.
-Even the little baby is considered impure for twenty days, and must not
-be touched unless clothed in silk or woollen.
-
-The new-comer has a succession of ceremonies to celebrate his arrival
-into this world of sorrows. On the twelfth day he is named; on a later
-day the first bracelets are put upon his arms and tiny anklets upon his
-ankles. When he is six months old he is given his first food. Five kinds
-of syrup are made, and the baby is given a taste of each one, and rice
-is put into his mouth. The father offers sacrifice to the household
-gods, the first loin-cloth is tied on the little man, the women sing,
-music is played, and feasting is indulged in by all. Each event is made
-the occasion of an elaborate feast, to which friends and relatives are
-invited and presents are given to the guests and to the priests. In
-fact, the priests seem to be omnipresent at all occasions in a Hindu
-family. A woman whom I was visiting was complaining of the many
-ceremonies that had taken place in her family during the past year, and
-she said that she was thoroughly tired of the worry and expense
-connected with them. I said: “But who benefits by these elaborate feasts
-and rituals that give so much trouble and cause such an outlay in
-presents and money?” She said wearily: “Who benefits? Why, the priests
-and the Brahmans. They always reap their harvest, whether we are born,
-marry, or die. If we are wicked, we must ask them to intercede for us;
-if we are good, we must ask them to thank the gods for us; and if we
-die, they must help us across the river of fire. We can do nothing of
-ourselves; they are our taskmasters with ever-open palm.”
-
-If the newborn son survives the first two years—and the mortality of
-babies is frightful, especially in the cities—he will quite likely have
-the opportunity of having the tonsure made for the first time, and this
-event is only rivalled by the entertainment given when, whether boy or
-girl, the ears are pierced by the goldsmith and it is announced that
-babyhood is passed. These endless feasts would be ruinous to the poor
-Hindu were it not for the fact that it is practically the only time when
-he entertains his friends. There is no promiscuous dinner-giving as
-among the Western people; friends are invited only in connection with
-some religious rite or to inaugurate a special event in the family.
-
-If a member of one of the higher castes, the mother who has watched her
-baby grow from babyhood into boyhood, looks forward to the most solemn
-and important event in his life, the ceremony called “the introduction
-to knowledge,” when he is invested with the sacred cord. This ceremony
-lasts from four to five days and is nearly as expensive as a wedding.
-The father must provide many pieces of cotton cloth and small gold and
-silver coins to be given as presents to the guests. He must have
-unlimited food and a great collection of pottery, because, as at a
-marriage feast, the dishes are broken after their first use.
-
-This cord may be seen on all Brahmans and on the members of a few of the
-higher castes, hanging from the left shoulder to the right hip. It is
-composed of three strands of cotton, each strand formed by nine threads.
-The cotton with which it is made must be gathered from the plant by the
-hand of a Brahman, and corded and spun by persons of the same caste, in
-order that it may not be defiled by passing through the hands of persons
-who are ceremonially unclean. For a young boy the cord has only three
-strands, but after he is married it is composed of six strands and may
-have nine. It is symbolical of the body, speech, and mind, and when the
-knots are tied, means that the man who wears the thread has gained
-control over these three organs that cause all worldly troubles.
-
-At the end of the ceremony the guests accompany the boy, who is
-elaborately dressed and seated in an open palanquin, through the streets
-to the sound of singing, music, and merry-making. On his return to his
-home, he, for the first time, performs the sacrifice of fire, showing
-that he is now a member of his caste and a twice-born son of India.
-
-If the mother belongs to a poor family, quite likely her boy will work
-to earn a few annas to add to the family exchequer, or if they are
-farmers, his days will be passed in the fields frightening the greedy
-crows from the ripening crops or driving away the animals that infest
-the fields which are near the jungles. In Baroda, education is
-compulsory; but many a mother gets around the law by paying the fine of
-two rupees a month, and selling her small boy’s labour for five rupees,
-thus gaining a livelihood.
-
-England has established free schools in every town and village, and
-there is little excuse even for the boy or girl of poor parents not to
-have an education. Even members of the depressed classes, or, as they
-are called, the pariahs, have their schools. The question that is
-agitating the minds of the educators is what form of education should be
-given these sons of a people who have been practically slaves for many
-centuries. Many contend that they should have only a technical
-education, that the sons of the carpenter caste should be made better
-carpenters, and that they should not be made barristers. A lady said to
-me: “Said, my sweeper’s son, goes to school, and after getting an
-education he naturally feels himself better than his father, a sweeper,
-or his uncle, who is my groom. He cannot affiliate himself with a higher
-caste than that into which he was born, as they will not accept him, and
-he has outgrown his own caste. What is he to do? He puts on a foreign
-hat and leaves his home, and in the next census, drops his name of Said
-Faruki and becomes John James Jones, a half-caste, and the census-taker
-wonders why there has been such an increase in half-castes. The
-population of half-castes grows from the lower castes who wish to raise
-themselves, but it is kept down in the census returns by the half-castes
-who wish to better themselves socially, and call themselves Portuguese
-or subjects of some other dark-skinned race of Europeans.”
-
-This question of the education of the Indian youth is a very serious
-problem with which those who have the welfare of India at heart have to
-contend. Many a boy when he returns to his home and his people says:
-“Why did they educate me?” There are few avenues of livelihood open to
-the Indian boy, as there is no Army or Navy or Church in which to enlist
-so many of the younger sons as in England or America. The main prizes
-are the Government offices, and failing these, the chief desire of all
-Indians is to be a lawyer. There are few places in the Government employ
-now, and the country is flooded with impecunious barristers.
-
-The Indian feels that he has a real grievance in the question of the
-Civil Service examinations. For the higher positions in this service it
-is necessary for the student to go to England and obtain his degree at
-an English university. The question of expense is a bar to the great
-majority. One often hears of parents mortgaging their homes and
-practically selling themselves to the moneylender for life, that the boy
-may have this one great opportunity. If he wins, they have not struggled
-in vain, but if he fails, life will be very grey and grim, because quite
-likely his life and his son’s, and his son’s son’s life will be given in
-a vain attempt to get rid of the burden of debt which seems to always
-hang over the heads of India’s poor.
-
-The question of the education of the daughter is not so much a matter of
-thought to the middle-class Mohammedan or Hindu mother, because at the
-time when, if she were in Western lands, she would be taking her books
-under her arm and starting for her first day at school, in India she is
-getting married. She may, if in a village, attend the school with her
-brothers until she is eight or nine years old, but rarely, except in the
-highest classes, does the little girl have a longer opportunity for
-study. In the cities the rich families are sending their daughters to
-private schools, and the Oriental home is the happy hunting ground for
-the English governess, who is engaged to teach, not only the knowledge
-to be found in books but also the etiquette to be observed in English
-society, as it seems to be the main object in life of the educated
-Indian, both man and woman, to be more English in manner than are the
-English themselves.
-
-In all the better class homes the piano is seen, and seldom now does the
-daughter of the house play upon the veena or any instrument of Indian
-music. In Calcutta I went to a reception given by a great Indian lady.
-With the exception of the costumes worn by the pretty dark-eyed
-Bengalis, and the absence of men, I would have thought I was in an
-English house at an afternoon tea. English was spoken by nearly every
-one, the music was European, the refreshments were from an English
-caterer, and there was no distinct note of India in all the afternoon’s
-ceremonies. Most of the ladies wore high-heeled French slippers, and
-many of them had their beautifully draped saris twined around bodies
-held in place by the French corset, which must have been most
-uncomfortable for these people, used to untrammelled freedom in regard
-to their dress.
-
-Times are changing so fast in India that it is hard to say “This is a
-custom” or “That is a custom.” Education is opening the eyes of the
-younger generation of Indian women to the fallacy of many of the
-old-time rites and superstitions. Still, many of the mothers are
-conservative and feel keenly their daughter’s departure from the beliefs
-of her day, yet the pressure is so strong that many of these
-conservative mothers are sending their daughters to the schools, both
-mission and Government, where in the former they avail themselves
-eagerly of the education, but are not influenced by the religious
-teaching. One devout Mohammedan mother said to me: “Yes, I send my
-daughter to a mission school, as it is the best in our town. I feel that
-they cannot hurt her, as she has had a good religious training in the
-home.”
-
-A great many of the mothers feel that the present system of education
-for women in India is wrong, and that the text-books are not the ones
-that should be adopted for the use of Indian children. The stories have
-little to do with Indian life, and the children do not understand them.
-For instance, stories of snowstorms, ice, and things that are to be seen
-in a foreign land, are far above the understanding of the average Indian
-girl. It is also said that the girl is taught of Joan of Arc and of
-English heroines, but nothing is said of the heroines of Indian history,
-nor is anything taught of Indian history before the English occupation.
-There is nothing given the child to inspire a feeling of patriotism, nor
-is she given any moral training except in the mission schools. She is
-given a certain amount of book knowledge, which quite likely she cannot
-assimilate, and is considered educated. I remember visiting a girls’
-school where the teacher asked a class of girls to recite Wordsworth’s
-poetry, extracts from Shelley and Keats; they could tell the place of
-birth and give the list of English poets and chronology of the English
-kings most glibly, but what actual good it afforded the Indian girl to
-have all these interesting facts in her little head I could not see.
-
-The Indian girl learns easily and is often most eloquent. There are no
-better public speakers than are the Bengali women, who seem to share
-with their men in the alertness of their brain. A prominent educator of
-India said:—
-
- I have come in contact with people from all over the world in my
- capacity as educator, but I believe there are no men of any country
- who can compare with the Indian in quickness of thought and in
- capacity to learn. Within the small round head of the Bengali is a
- dynamo of resistless energy, that is for ever working, either for
- good or bad, but which ever way it turns, we of England must
- recognize its power.
-
-The crying need of India is the great teacher, both man and woman; the
-teacher who will really take an interest in his pupils and not feel the
-bar of race. This is the fault of the average man who comes to India,
-and if he does not have it when he arrives he soon acquires a pride in
-being one of the ruling race. The Indian boy and girl are extremely
-clever, and feel instantly this racial prejudice of the Englishman, and
-consequently resent his attitude of superiority. Tennyson’s indictment
-of English schoolmasters could be justly applied to many of the teachers
-in India to-day:—
-
- Because you do profess to teach, and teach us nothing, feeding not
- the heart.
-
-There are wanted teachers who will give the Indian boy and girl the true
-value of an education other than its advantages from an economic
-standpoint. That must be considered also, and in a land where the crowds
-are great and famines many, it assumes even a larger importance in the
-lives of the boys who must become the wage-earners, than it does in
-Western lands, where life is not such a fierce struggle for the
-necessities. But along with the training for the making of a livelihood
-should be given another training. These boys and girls of India who are
-just starting on the road that their Occidental brothers and sisters
-have been treading for many generations should be given the broader view
-of education, its worth and meaning. They should be taught by loving
-teachers the true knowledge of which so beautiful a definition is given
-by Bishop Mant:—
-
- What is true knowledge! Is it with keen eye
- Of Lucre’s sons to thread the mazy way?
- Is it of civil rights, and royal sway,
- And wealth political, the depths to try?
- Is it to delve the earth, to soar the sky?
- To marshal nations, tribes in just array;
- To mix and analyze, and mete and weigh
- Her elements, and all her powers descry?
- These things, who will may know them, if to know
- Breed not vainglory; but, o’er all, to scan
- God in his works and Word shown forth below,
- Creation’s wonders and Redemption’s plan;
- Whence came we, what to do, and whither go:
- This is true knowledge, and the whole of man.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- WOMAN’S SORROW
-
-
-Abbe Du Bois says: “The happiest death for a woman is that which
-overtakes her while she is still in a wedded state. Such a death is
-looked upon as a reward of goodness extending back for many generations;
-on the other hand, the greatest misfortune that can befall a wife is to
-survive her husband.”
-
-Death is a tragedy in all lands, but with the Hindus it is made doubly
-tragical because of superstition and the endless ritual connected with
-their religion. The idea of mourning is not so much sorrow as it is
-uncleanness, defilement.
-
-When death seems imminent the family priest is summoned to administer
-the last sacrament. The dying person is lifted from the couch and laid
-upon the ground, which has been made ceremonially pure by smearing it
-with cowdung and by placing the sacred dharba grass upon it. It is said
-that if a man dies upon a bed he must carry it through eternity. It is
-most important that a man should breathe his last upon the earth, and
-not within the house, as there are certain phases of the moon when it
-would be a serious annoyance for all within the house to have a death
-beneath the roof. In fact, it pollutes the whole neighbourhood to have a
-death in the vicinity, and the neighbours share in the unclean state of
-the family until the corpse is carried to the burning-ground. Often if a
-death occurs in a house in an unpropitious phase of the moon, the
-dwelling must be vacated until such time as the priest shall permit it
-to be purified; sometimes the ban cast upon the place lasts from three
-to six months.
-
-The duration of the state of ceremonial impurity varies according to the
-age of the deceased. In the case of mere infants the time is about one
-day. In the case of a boy who has not been invested with the sacred
-cord, or a girl not married, the time is three days; and after that, in
-either case, the time is ten days. In the case of a married girl,
-whether or not she has gone to live with her husband, her own people
-must observe the ceremonial for three days. During these periods the
-near relatives of the dead are unclean and their touch would defile any
-person or thing. They must not enter their own kitchen nor touch any
-cooking utensil. The food must be cooked by some one not personally
-connected with the dead, but of equal caste. If for some reason the
-mourning family cannot get any one of their own caste to cook for them,
-they must procure kitchen utensils and cook their food in some place
-other than the usual kitchen, not using the utensils again. If a person
-in mourning went into a kitchen or storehouse, everything would have to
-be thrown away immediately.
-
-The wailing of the women tells the story of a death, as they abandon
-themselves completely to their sorrow, tearing their hair, striking
-their foreheads, and uttering shrill cries to show their desolation. As
-soon as the breath leaves the body preparations are made at once for its
-disposal, as a corpse is never kept longer than twenty-four hours in
-this hot climate. The eldest son, if there is one of suitable age, or
-the father or eldest brother in order of nearest relationship, or the
-husband if the deceased is a woman, must conduct the funeral ceremonies.
-The body is washed and shaven and adorned with the marks of his caste,
-and placed in a sitting position, with the head uncovered, and the son
-or heir performs a sacrifice before it. Then the two thumbs and the
-great toes are tied together and the body is enveloped in a new white
-cloth and placed upon a bier, formed of two long poles with seven
-cross-pieces. With the heir at the head, carrying a pot of fire, the
-procession starts for the burning-ground. This bier must always be
-carried by relatives or members of the same caste. When a man is ill and
-it is necessary to tell him that he will soon depart from this world, it
-is broken to him gently by some one saying, “You will soon ascend a
-palanquin carried by bearers of your own caste.” On the way to the
-cemetery the procession is stopped three times and the bier placed on
-the ground, the face uncovered, and a prayer is said. If, as sometimes
-occurs, the person is not really dead and he revives, it is most
-unfortunate for all concerned, the revived man included, as he is
-considered as dead and not allowed to return to his home or to his
-caste.
-
-Arrival at the burning-ground, where the funeral pile has been prepared
-by men whose profession it is to attend to the dead, and who are always
-of the pariah class, the untouchables, the body is put on the pyre and
-the sacred thread and loin-cloth are removed with the winding-sheet, as
-the body must depart from the world in the state in which it entered it,
-completely naked. The head should be placed towards the south and the
-legs towards the north. If near a sacred river, like the Ganges, the
-body is laid for a few moments with the feet in the sacred water, and
-water is sprinkled over it. The heir performs the sacrifices, and it is
-he who sets the pile alight, while the priests repeat the prayers for
-the dead. After the pyre is lighted the family retire to a distance and
-leave the body to the administrations of the men in charge. In some
-places the heir is supposed to break the skull so that the gases may
-escape and the body may not explode. I was told of one woman who wished
-to establish her right to a rich man’s property; consequently at the
-critical moment she dashed from the arms of her friends and with one
-blow of a stick broke the head of her late liege lord, thus clearly
-showing her heirship, as only the legal heir is entitled to perform this
-last kind office for the dear departed.
-
-I heard one rather peculiar story while in India in regard to the
-cremation of the dead. I sat at dinner beside an English official who
-had been many years in the Government service of India. In the course of
-the conversation I asked him what he thought about cremation. He said,
-with a smile: “Well, I am perhaps a little prejudiced in regard to the
-cremation of the dead. I had rather a peculiar experience.” I settled
-back in my chair, hoping I was to hear one of the many stories of Indian
-life which these old officials have to tell us if they find we are
-interested in the lives of the people amongst whom they work. He said:
-“I had an acquaintance once, a Scotchman, who died here in India, and
-asked in his will that I and another friend would cremate him, and not
-allow an Indian hand to touch him, but that we should personally attend
-to all the details. We were young then in things Indian, and made our
-first mistake in buying the wood for the pyre. Unfortunately for our
-friend, the wily wood-merchant sold us green wood, and for the first day
-he only smoked. By the second day the wood had dried out, and all would
-have been well if we had known that the skull of a person burned should
-be broken in order to allow the gases to escape. We did not know
-this—our friend blew up. We spent the remainder of the second day in
-gathering his remains and replacing them upon the fire. The third day
-the work was fully accomplished; his ashes were collected and now repose
-in a beautiful urn in his family chapel near Edinburgh.”
-
-Ceremonies are held and sacrifices are made for ten days by the members
-of a family in which there has been a death. If the deceased was a
-married man, it is on the tenth day that the widow is degraded into her
-state of widowhood. This rite is called “the cutting of the cord,”
-because then the tali, the symbol of wifehood, is cut, and the woman has
-no more place in Hindu society. The relatives and friends come to the
-house and deck the poor woman in all her festive clothing; jewels are
-put upon her, flowers, and sandal paste. Her friends mourn with her for
-a time, then her bright clothing is removed, her beautiful black hair is
-cut, and she must remain for ever close-shaven and clothed in a garment
-of white. She may attend no feast, is permitted to eat only one meal a
-day, and that should be prepared by her own hands, may not partake of
-meat, and if she is so unfortunate as to be poor in this world’s goods
-she becomes the drudge and servant of her husband’s family. She is
-considered unclean, a thing of ill-omen, so unlucky that if a man were
-starting on some business venture and on leaving his doorway should by
-chance meet a widow he would return to his house and say a few prayers
-to counteract his bad luck.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- INDIAN WOMEN SPINNING.
-
- To face p. 148.]
-
-When the widow is a child, not yet arrived at the age of living with her
-husband, the only ceremony at the death is the cutting of the tali cord.
-The other ceremonies and degradations are reserved for the time when she
-arrives at the full age of wifehood, when the whole ceremony is enacted
-as though the wife had been a real wife, and the little girl-widow is
-compelled to join that great army of women in India, nearly twenty
-million strong, of whom a million are child-widows.
-
-I met a great many widows in India, and even among the Brahmo Samaj,
-which sect is now trying to break the tyrannical yoke of custom, I never
-heard of one who dared to brave public opinion and remarry. I knew one
-charming widow—I think the most beautiful woman I saw in India—who had
-practically broken all class restrictions except this last. It was said
-that she had been in love with a man for many years, and he had
-repeatedly tried to persuade her to undergo the censure of her people by
-marrying him, but she dared not do it. She was only thirty years old,
-but she must remain until the end of her life a widow, almost an
-outcast.
-
-In the cities and among the modernized people of India this state does
-not hold such sorrow for women as in the villages and country districts,
-where the people have not come into contact with Western civilization.
-In these purely Hindu towns, where all social life is controlled by
-custom and the influences of superstition and religion, when the woman
-can no longer wear the red mark of wifehood upon her forehead, her case
-is pitiable.
-
-The Indian Government has made laws legalizing the remarriage of widows,
-but even when it has the Government sanction, custom and tradition are
-too strong, and practically no woman will take advantage of it. It would
-mean not only lifelong disgrace for her, but also would reflect so
-severely upon her relatives and the members of her caste that they would
-be involved in endless disgrace.
-
-There are many homes scattered throughout India for these helpless
-women. Pundita Ramabai has a place near Poona where she has nearly eight
-hundred widows in her charge, and they are a sad sight as they go in
-squads of from two to three hundred to their work at the printing press
-or at the looms attached to the mission. Some widows had been with her
-for years, and quite likely will remain for life, as no one will marry a
-widow, and they do not seem to be acquiring a practical education with
-which they could earn their living in the world. The Gaekwar of Baroda
-is solving the widow question by educating them as teachers at the
-Government expense, only asking that in return for his care they devote
-a certain number of years as school-teachers in his State.
-
-Pundita Ramabai’s home for widows is a very remarkable institution, and
-well repays one for a visit. It is a faith mission—that is, its members
-do not receive a salary, but depend upon donations for their support.
-What remains after the expenses of the establishment have been met is
-divided among the workers according to their needs. They are a very
-devoted band, with an orthodox, old-fashioned brand of religion that
-holds the wrath of God and the terrors of hell over these emotional
-women, whose only outlet for their emotions is their prayers, and at
-noon they are permitted to pray aloud and express their desires and
-their states of feeling. One day we heard a great buzzing, sounding from
-the distance like an immense swarm of bees, and found it was the 1,350
-widows, rescued street women, and children having their noonday prayer.
-Some of them worked themselves into a veritable ecstasy of religious
-emotion, swaying their bodies, the tears running down their faces as
-they prayed for the forgiveness of their sins, real or imaginary.
-
-The business manager was more interested in the practical than the
-religious aspects of the mission, and looked at the whole question with
-the eye of the man who has to provide for all these people who give
-nothing to the common good. When asked the outcome of it all, he said he
-could not see what good was being accomplished except in the actual
-saving of the lives. They could not marry, they could not support
-themselves, they were helpless, and would be a burden on others’
-shoulders so long as they lived. He said: “Now look! There go four
-hundred women who should be married to-morrow; but who will marry them?
-No Hindu would dare break his caste by marrying one of them. It would
-completely ostracize him from his community. And again, we would not
-want to marry a Christian girl to a Hindu or a Mohammedan.”
-
-I asked: “Are there no Christian boys to marry them?”
-
-He replied: “There are not enough to go around, and even a Christian
-does not marry a widow.”
-
-“Do you ever have any offers?” I asked.
-
-He laughed. “Yes, once in a while some man takes courage and comes here
-to find a wife, but he generally goes away without one. We seem here
-rather to go on the principle of getting rid of the speckled apples
-first, and if there is a girl with a hare lip, or only one eye, she is
-the one trotted out for inspection. Naturally, the boy beats a hasty
-retreat, saying he believes he does not want to get married to-day.”
-
-The lot of the widowed woman in India is not so pitiable if she has been
-so fortunate as to have borne sons. In India, as in all Eastern
-countries, filial piety, the respect for parents, is bred into the very
-fibre of the man’s soul. When the mother becomes a widow and dons the
-gown of white, her son cares for her and cherishes her all her days. She
-is still the ruler of his household, and it would be a most unfilial
-son, on whom his world would soon cry shame, if he did not ask the
-advice of his mother on matters of importance, nor heed her warnings in
-times of stress. Her whole life is given for others, as this world is
-supposed to have no joys for her except the joy of service. For her
-“this world is but a dream: God alone is real”; and her days are passed
-in caring for the many lives around her and in prayers and religious
-rites that will help her to more swiftly pass the time ere she may join
-her lost one. The woman of India who has lost her mate turns
-instinctively to the gods for solace, because she has been taught from
-childhood that “the religion of the wife lies in serving her husband:
-the religion of the widow lies in serving God.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- HYDERABAD AND THE MOHAMMEDAN WOMAN
-
-
-The city of Hyderabad seems to have been dropped to the earth from an
-Oriental dream. It is the most Eastern city in this most Eastern land,
-and you are filled with a sense that it is not at all real, but
-especially staged and set for your amusement, and when you leave, it
-will all disappear. The gaily painted shops will be pulled down and put
-in the property-room, the goldsmiths who make the bracelets, nose-rings,
-and necklaces for the pretty, dark-eyed women within the zenanas is only
-waiting for his cue to leave the stage. The men on the corners with
-their great wreaths of white flowers, with their marigolds and garlands
-to be hung about the necks of friends, or to curtain the doorways at
-some feast or wedding, are there only for show, to add colour to the
-picture. These women passing by with saris of purple or crimson, with
-gleaming bracelets and tinkling anklets, with kohl-blackened eyes that
-stare at you wonderingly from above the closely drawn sari, or, what is
-more peculiar to visitors from the West, the women draped in long white
-cloaks like winding-sheets, which cover them completely from the view of
-the passer-by, seem part of the chorus; and the sheen of knives and guns
-and huge silver chains hanging over the shoulder of the man from the
-North, the elephant swaying slowly down the street, looking with keen,
-twinkling eyes at the people who make way for him, are all a part of the
-pantomime, or a mirage caused by the brilliant sunshine of this
-Southland.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A CARRIAGE FOR WOMEN.
-
- To face p. 154.]
-
-We are told that Hyderabad is the oldest and greatest native State in
-the Indian Empire, and we have heard from childhood of the magnificence
-of the Nizam of Hyderabad, the man who seemed to outrival Solomon with
-his palaces, his jewels, and his wives. His hospitality was given with
-Oriental lavishness. Those who were fortunate enough to be his guests at
-the great Durbar at Delhi, when King George was proclaimed Emperor of
-India, will never forget the gorgeousness and prodigality of his
-entertainment. For sixteen months he had an army of workmen clearing the
-ground, making the lawns and flower-gardens, and erecting the tents that
-were to accommodate his guests and the four thousand people he took with
-him from Hyderabad. His women were lodged in an old palace at a distance
-from the tents of the guests and were unseen, viewing the spectacle from
-afar.
-
-Even those of the immediate circle surrounding the Nizam at Hyderabad
-knew nothing of his private life within the zenana, and only conjectures
-were made in regard to the number of women within its walls. Gossip says
-that when the late Nizam died there was a cartload of broken glass
-bracelets (the bangles that are worn by wives, but that are broken on
-their wrists when they become widows) taken away from the palace. This
-fortunate man was credited with a great many more wives than he actually
-possessed. Hyderabad is a feudal country, with many of the customs that
-prevailed in France under the old feudal régime. The Nizam is the
-overlord. His feudal princes when possessing a pretty daughter are
-always anxious to give her as wife to the Nizam. He perhaps may accept
-her and send her to his women’s quarters, never seeing her again. But
-her people are satisfied, as they have the honour of having a daughter
-in the Imperial zenana, consequently a friend at Court, as she will
-naturally remember her family when Imperial offices or gifts are being
-distributed. She receives a stated income, said to range from sixty
-dollars to four hundred dollars a month, according to her status, number
-of children, etc.
-
-The Nizam was planning to give his first ball while I was in Hyderabad,
-and every one was on the _qui vive_ regarding those who should be asked
-and those who should not. It is remarkable how everything seems to
-revolve around the ruler of one of these principalities. His Highness is
-an absolute autocrat concerning the life and actions of his people, and
-the foreigners seem to have caught the infection, because in every State
-we visited the name of the ruler was on all tongues. “His Highness
-thinks so and so,” or “His Highness does not think so and so,” was the
-ultimate, final word for everything. His greatness and his Oriental
-splendour seem to overpower the people and make them subservient. Yet it
-is not from any personal contact, as few of even the Nizam’s ministers
-have seen him, and his people never have that honour, unless at some
-great Durbar, where, arrayed in royal magnificence, he permits them to
-view him upon his throne, or when, as he is being swiftly whirled along
-in his motor, four shrill blasts from the whistles of the police notify
-the populace that their ruler is passing.
-
-A native ruler seems to attract a genuine admiration and respect from
-his subjects. He appeals to their instincts with his display. They love
-to hear the glories of his magnificence, to see his elephants, his
-guards, and his foreign motors. He can understand his people and his
-people understand him; and even if the taxes are oppressive and he
-grinds the faces of the people into the dust to get money to squander
-upon his favourites and to build great palaces, the peasant will bear it
-all and not complain, as he feels it is ordained, and his Rajah is the
-child of the gods and entitled to his very life.
-
-There is no fear in the State of Hyderabad that the present race of
-rulers will become extinct. When a child is born to the Nizam there is a
-public holiday in the State, the schools are closed, cannon are fired,
-and every one is supposed to rejoice with the happy father. While we
-were there the people enjoyed four public holidays within eight days
-arising from this fact, and nine more were expected the following week.
-
-While we were in this State there arose a case that was causing a great
-deal of comment. The son of a woman was killed and the murderer was
-condemned to death. In this Mohammedan country the law “a life for a
-life” prevails, and the death penalty cannot be revoked unless the heir
-of the dead man demands it. In some Hindu communities, where the saving
-of life is a meritorious performance, the village or city will often
-raise a certain sum and offer it to the heir in exchange for the life of
-the condemned prisoner. Men, I was told, will sometimes take the money,
-but women, especially if it was their son or husband who was killed,
-will practically always demand the life. In this instance the woman, who
-was a devout Mohammedan, took the money and sent it to help her
-fellow-Mohammedans in their war with the infidel Italians. Her religious
-zeal overcame the instinct for revenge, so deeply planted within the
-breast of all followers of the Arabian prophet.
-
-At tea at the home of a Mohammedan I met several ladies, who willingly
-discussed with me the difference between the social customs of our
-Western land and those governing the life of the woman of the East. I
-was told that there is no society life as we know it, no calling, nor
-promiscuous making of new acquaintances. The social life centres around
-the three great events of Indian life—births, weddings, and deaths. If a
-wedding occurs in a family, the mother will send invitations to all the
-ladies of the same social standing as herself, and, dressed in their
-most gorgeous saris and jewels, they come to the house, where elaborate
-refreshments are served with much gossiping and merry-making. The guests
-stay hours or days, according to their relationship to the family. Also
-at times of death they go and offer their condolences to the bereaved
-family, and although colours are much more subdued at the time of sorrow
-than at the time of rejoicing, it is often another place in which to
-show off new finery. These secluded women feel like the little girl who
-stopped to see a friend on her way to a funeral. She was dressed in a
-bright pink sari, and when remonstrated with on wearing such a gay dress
-on such a mournful occasion, said, “Why, how can I be sure that I will
-get another chance to show it.”
-
-I said to my hostess in the course of the conversation: “If I were a
-Mohammedan or a Hindu lady and came here to live, would the ladies whose
-husbands perhaps had business associations with my husband come to call
-upon me?” She said: “No, not at all. You would never meet the ladies
-unless at the time of some festivity you were invited.” I asked the
-reason for this, and they answered, “Custom”—the word that rules the
-whole Eastern world. This lack of exchange of courtesies between new
-people is traced in some cases to the attitude of the husbands, who seem
-afraid to allow their wives to make new acquaintances. They must decide
-whom the wife shall visit. They must know that the house visited is
-strictly secluded, that the hostess has no advanced ideas, and that the
-husband is a man of standing before they allow their women to make new
-friends. They say that it is the desire of protection, not deprivation
-of liberty, that causes them to take such care of their dear ones.
-
-An Englishwoman ten years ago tried to meet the Indian ladies, and sent
-sixty invitations for a tea. Only three of the invited guests put in an
-appearance. She persisted, convinced the husbands that no male eyes
-would gaze upon their secluded treasures, and now the original sixty
-have come with nearly every high-class lady in Hyderabad, so that on her
-reception days the house is crowded.
-
-There is a club where the Mohammedan and Hindu ladies meet once a month
-and play badminton, and eat much cake and gossip. Still, they are not as
-yet taking any active interest in social work, nor in what is going on
-in the world outside. Mme. Sarojinni Naidu, the Indian poetess whose
-charming poems have been so well received in England, and who is herself
-a social favourite in that country, has been trying to interest the
-ladies of Hyderabad in social work among women. She has been specially
-interested in reviving the old industry of silk-weaving, and the weavers
-through her efforts have been encouraged to do their best work. She has
-sold thousands of rupees worth of the beautiful silks to her friends
-within the zenanas, but it is rather discouraging work, as it has caused
-her to be looked upon with suspicion by many of the officials, who fear
-that she may be using her influence with the people for some Socialistic
-movement.
-
-While in Hyderabad I saw a great deal of this wonderfully attractive
-woman, who looks like a young girl, but who is the mother of children
-nearly as big as herself. She herself is not “purdah,” and she has
-violated the customs of her caste by marrying a man of another caste.
-She goes to public entertainments and lives the life of an Englishwoman.
-I went with her to see the “sports,” that form of entertainment which
-always follow the English wherever they go. They were held at the race
-track, and in the grand stand were the entire foreign community, with a
-mixture of Indian gentlemen. We watched the riders in the field below,
-and I must confess the Indian gentlemen easily carried the honours. They
-are wonderful horsemen, and are most picturesque. I think there is no
-handsomer man in the world than the high-class Indian gentleman. With
-his clear brown skin, his large black eyes, his stately carriage, and
-magnificent physique, accentuated by the pugaree or turban on his head,
-he is a picture that, once seen, cannot easily be forgotten. The average
-Englishman looks either too fat or too thin, does not hold himself well,
-has generally, if a resident in the East, a most unhealthy complexion,
-and in comparison with his Indian neighbour makes a very poor showing.
-
-Mme. Naidu was the only Indian woman in the grand stand, and after tea
-was served, she asked me if I would like to visit the Indian women. We
-went upstairs to an enclosed room, which was filled with Indian ladies,
-who could see all that was going on in the grounds below, but were
-protected from view by the carved woodwork enclosing the room. They came
-to a side entrance in their carriages or motors; a screen of canvas was
-made from their carriage to the entrance so that they could pass
-immediately from their carriage to a covered stairway, themselves
-unseen.
-
-There were about twenty ladies, dressed in most brilliant colours and
-decked with an immense amount of jewellery. One woman had seven
-piercings in her ears, in four of which were set small buttons of
-turquoises, and in the others great hoops of gold in which were hanging
-pearls about the size of a pea. In her right nostril was a diamond and
-in her left a ruby. Her arms were covered with bracelets, and there were
-five necklaces of diamonds around her neck. Her trousers, the ugly
-trousers of the Mohammedan lady, were of bright pink brocade, the tunic
-was of white, and over it all was a long veil of light blue gauze. One
-would imagine a glaring clash of colours, but all this riot of colour
-blends and makes the right setting for the dark beauty of these Indian
-women. They are extremely pretty, with the colouring of an Italian or
-Spaniard from the South; their big black eyes are shaded by long silky
-lashes, their noses are most delicate, and they have exquisitely shaped
-mouths. I do not think that I saw an ugly woman all the time I was
-visiting the “purdah” women of India. Some of them with age become a
-little too stout, but their dress disguises the figure if too well
-blessed with flesh, and softens harsh outlines if too thin.
-
-The women in this secluded enclosure seemed to be enjoying themselves
-much more than the conventional Englishwomen below them. There was a
-table with a varied assortment of non-alcoholic drinks, and many kinds
-of cakes and sweets. Each lady had her silver pan-box, and made pan for
-her friends, all chatting and laughing with the utmost freedom and
-good-fellowship. They do not seem to feel it a deprivation at all to be
-compelled to pass their lives with women. I am sure they would feel very
-ill at ease if they thought that they could be seen by any man except
-their husband, brother, or immediate relative.
-
-I had an example of what instinct will do in the fear of being seen by
-some one outside of the family circle. Mme. Naidu and I called upon a
-Mohammedan lady who was strictly “purdah.” We were taken into a
-drawing-room furnished in European fashion, where the father-in-law of
-our hostess was chatting with another gentleman. The stranger left
-immediately, but the father-in-law remained to talk with me while Mme.
-Naidu went in search of the mistress of the house. She returned soon,
-and said to the man, “You must leave,” and after his departure the lady
-entered. When she sat down she noticed that one of the blinds of the
-window was open, and she drew her sari across her face and spoke to Mme.
-Naidu, who went to the window and closed the blind. Even that did not
-satisfy her, and a servant was called, who saw that all the windows were
-securely closed and that no one could possibly look into the room from
-the outside. It seemed a useless precaution to me, as the windows opened
-on to a garden, and no one could pass unless some member of the
-household. She laughed apologetically and said: “I know what you think,
-but I cannot sit here with any degree of comfort if I think some one, a
-servant or one of my husband’s guests, might pass by. It is instinct; my
-mother and my mother’s mother were ‘purdah’ women, and it is in the
-blood.”
-
-She asked us to come to her rooms and look at some new clothing. Her
-rooms were big and rather bare, as are most rooms in this hot country,
-but the furniture was all European. Bed, dressing-table, and chairs all
-looked as if made in England or France. She had a servant bring her
-pan-box. This giving of pan is the first thing offered to a guest on
-arrival and the last thing on going away. Her pan-box was of silver,
-about nine inches wide by twelve long. It had a shallow tray in the top,
-in which was kept in tiny compartments the betel-nut and spices. In the
-bottom of the box, covered with a damp cloth, were the leaves. The
-hostess takes a leaf, covers it with a thin layer of lime, and with a
-pair of scissors breaks a betel-nut into small pieces, puts it with half
-a dozen different spices into the leaf, folds it up, sticking a clove
-through the leaf as a fastener, and hands it to the guest. The guest
-removes the clove and places the leaf in the mouth, where it makes a
-huge bunch on the side of the face until it is slowly masticated. It
-gives forth a juice which colours the inside of the mouth and the teeth
-a dark red, but not permanently, as it rinses quite easily. The pan has
-a spicy taste, and leaves the mouth feeling deliciously clean, I presume
-owing to the lime in it. Many of the great houses have a servant or
-slave whose only duty is to make pan for the inmates of the zenana. One
-such servant said she made five hundred a day and her wrist became quite
-lame from time to time caused by cutting the betel-nut.
-
-Our hostess had a box of clothing put in front of her on the floor, and
-she showed us a beautiful collection of saris of woven gold cloth made
-in Benares, long tunics of embroidered chiffon-like gauze, and trousers
-of heavy gold and silver goods, almost like tapestry.
-
-I asked them to tell me the duties of a high-class lady of Hyderabad.
-Mme. Naidu laughed and said—
-
-“About eight o’clock in the morning my lady yawns, and a slave-girl will
-say, ‘Will not the Begum rise?’ and the Begum will slowly get out of bed
-and allow her slave to brush her teeth with powdered charcoal and wash
-her face and hands. Then she would sit down upon a mat and have her hair
-dressed, while other slaves came in with articles of dress or of the
-toilet. Soon the other women of the household would join her, and they
-would chew betel-nut and talk and gossip until about ten o’clock, when a
-large tray would be brought in with breakfast, consisting of rice and
-curry and sweets. After breakfast, more friends or relatives come in,
-and the sewing women and higher servants, and they all talk and laugh
-together. In the afternoon the silk merchants may send their wares or
-the jewellers their bracelets and rings and precious stones, which are
-brought into the zenana by women. These shopwomen are great gossips, and
-tell all the news from other zenanas—who is engaged and who married and
-what presents were given, etc. The women shop and haggle, and perhaps
-buy and perhaps do not, and by the time the merchants leave it is time
-to eat again. In the evening the husband or the sons visit the women’s
-quarters and brings the Begum the news of the world of men outside, and
-then it is time to sleep again.”
-
-A great many women—nearly all Indian women, in fact—attend personally to
-their households. For instance, I went with one of my friends, who
-belonged to a very rich and powerful family, to call upon her mother,
-and found her and her daughter-in-law sitting in the courtyard preparing
-the vegetables for dinner. All ladies know how to cook, and think it no
-disgrace to prepare the dinner with their own hands. If a guest is to be
-especially honoured, the mother or wife will prepare the meal for him.
-In a Hindu community, where the food must be cooked by a person of their
-own or a higher caste, where no one of a lower caste is even allowed to
-look into the kitchen, it might cause great annoyance if the women of
-the household did not know how to cook, as even in India the mistress
-has the servant question with which to contend from time to time.
-
-In these old families in Hyderabad there are a great many people under
-the one roof. The patriarchal family life prevails—that is, the sons
-bring their wives to their father’s home, and a large house shelters
-many families. The mother is the head of the women’s quarters and her
-word is law. Innumerable servants and poor relations are ever present,
-and to our Western eyes disorder and chaos seem to reign. There are some
-old families in this city that keep up the state of princes or petty
-kings. There is one great lady who is surrounded by a bodyguard of
-amazons, women dressed as soldiers, who salute and present arms with
-military precision when her courtyard is entered by a visitor.
-
-We went from the house of our young hostess, loaded down with pan and
-fruit, to the home of a colonel in the Nizam’s bodyguard. His wife is
-“purdah,” but his daughter is allowed to be seen in public. In the
-drawing-room was a man tuning the piano, and Mme. Naidu said to the
-daughter, “Your mother cannot come here. There is a man.” The daughter
-replied: “Oh, it is all right, he is blind.” The mother had travelled
-extensively in Europe, Egypt, and Turkey. While abroad she went about
-freely as any European, only becoming the secluded Indian wife while in
-her own country. Her daughter was to be married and she showed me the
-clothes for the trousseau. There were about fifty complete outfits, made
-of gorgeous Benares cloth, heavy with gold. This clothing lasts a
-lifetime, and is handed down from daughter to daughter, as styles do not
-radically change. The mother told me that the custom of giving so much
-clothing is dying out, and money is given instead, allowing the daughter
-to buy from time to time, according to her fancy.
-
-While we were talking the husband came in. He was dressed in English
-riding clothes, and was a very up-to-date man-of-the-world. The moment
-he entered, the mother and daughter, who up to this time had been
-chatting affably and freely, became silent. They virtually did not speak
-a word while he was in the room, but became at once true Indian women,
-silent before that superior being—the man.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- MOHAMMEDANISM WITHIN THE ZENANA
-
-
-We are often told that Mohammedan women are not religious, that they
-leave all devotional exercises for their lords and masters, who are
-accountable to Allah for their salvation, and to whom they must look for
-permission to enter the abode of the blessed. It is a fact that the
-women followers of the Arabian prophet are not seen in the mosques,
-because no Mohammedan woman appears in a public place where she may come
-in contact with the other sex. Mohammed discouraged the worship of women
-in public by saying, “The presence of women in the mosques inspires men
-with feelings other than those purely devotional.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MOHAMMEDAN WOMEN, HYDERABAD.
-
- To face p. 170.]
-
-Although restricted to the home in which to say her prayers, the
-Mohammedan woman is very religious, and often more narrow and bigoted
-than her husband, who has the opportunity of broadening his religious
-views by contact with those of other faiths. The Mohammedan religion,
-like those of Western lands, has its divisions and subdivisions,
-differing from each other on the subject of ritualism and the different
-interpretations of the Koran. The two most important branches of El
-Islam are the Shiahs and the Sunnis. At the death of the prophet, Abu
-Bekr was elected to take his place—wrongfully, as many believe. They
-feel that the mantle of prophethood should have fallen upon the
-shoulders of his son-in-law, Ali, who was one of his first disciples and
-his cousin. The coterie who adhered to the election of the caliph
-instead of the hereditary descent are called the Sunnis. All of the
-Egyptians, the Turks, and many Indians are followers of this party.
-Those who think that Ali was deprived of his just rights are called the
-Shiahs; the Persians, many Arabs, and a few Indians compose the main
-body of this division. Ali was finally made caliph, but was murdered,
-the caliphate passing out of his family instead of descending to his
-grandsons, Hossain and Hassan, who rebelled against the ruling caliph
-and were killed in battle. They are considered the great martyrs of the
-Mohammedan faith, and their deaths are mourned annually by the Shiahs.
-
-We were in Hyderabad, the great Mohammedan State of India, at the time
-of mourning, and I was fortunate enough to be asked to a “mourning
-party,” given by the women of one of the old Mohammedan families. It was
-most exceptional, as outsiders are never asked to these homes during
-this time of religious emotion. Even their Sunni friends and their
-acquaintances in the Hindu faith, know that intruders are not looked
-upon kindly during the days set apart for sorrow.
-
-We arrived at the home, which was surrounded by a great wall, in which
-was a massive wooden door studded with iron nails. In the olden time
-these homes were used as fortresses, and were made strong enough to
-repel an invasion by the enemy. Within an embrasure by the side of the
-gate was a man on guard, with a gun beside him. It is true that the gun
-was of an obsolete pattern, that would quite likely do the user more
-damage than any one else, if the guard had been called upon to act, but
-it looked picturesque. The guard immediately turned his back when he saw
-that the carriage contained ladies, and our servant went ahead to see
-that all men-servants were out of sight before my Mohammedan friends
-would enter the courtyard. We drove into what seemed an immense
-stable-yard. Bullocks were standing by the side of great lumbering
-carts, horses were in their stalls, and stable accessories were
-scattered about in great disorder. A curtain was raised by a
-woman-servant, disclosing a short stone stairway, ascending which we
-found ourselves in the women’s quarters. It was a courtyard, with rooms
-opening upon it from the four sides. These rooms were more like large
-alcoves, being separated from the court only by arches.
-
-At one end was a large room, where about sixty ladies were sitting on
-the floor in front of a strip of white cloth, that served as table and
-tablecloth combined. They were seated on the three sides of the room,
-leaving the open space in the middle for the servants to pass while
-serving the food. We left our shoes at the entrance and were taken to a
-servant, who poured water over our hands from a brass ewer, allowing it
-to fall into a basin in which was some finely chopped straw to conceal
-the water. Our hostess seated us opposite her, and an old servant dipped
-from a central bowl of rice a generous helping for me, and then various
-curries, unknown to me, were passed. I watched my friend, and took from
-the dishes she favoured, mixing it with the rice upon my plate, making
-rather a sticky mess, that was conveyed to my mouth with difficulty.
-Eating with the fingers is not so easy as it may appear to a casual
-observer, but evidently practice makes perfect, because all seemed most
-adept, using only the thumb and three fingers of the right hand. No food
-must be touched with the left hand, as it is, religiously, unclean.
-
-After my feet had so thoroughly gone to sleep that they ceased from
-paining me, I took the opportunity of looking around and trying to
-become acquainted with my neighbours. The ladies wore no jewellery, and
-their dresses were supposed to be of a subdued hue, yet every colour of
-the rainbow was represented except red, which is the colour of joy and
-associated with festive occasions. The Mohammedan dress is not so
-graceful as is the Indian sari. The women wear a pair of tight trousers,
-made of satin, silk, or brocade, coming to the tops of their embroidered
-slippers. Over the chest is a small sleeveless jacket, then a tunic of
-white or embroidered gauze, and over all a chiffon-like drapery which is
-drawn over the head. All of these outer draperies were of so diaphanous
-a material that they did not disguise the outlines of the figure.
-
-Down the centre of the strips of cloth which served as table were great
-dishes of rice and sweets, many curries, fruits, and an elaborate
-assortment of cakes. Servants were everywhere, and it was hard for a
-stranger to distinguish between some of the servants and their
-mistresses, as many of the former were very well dressed and covered
-with jewellery. They wore bracelets, anklets, nose-rings, ear-rings, and
-necklaces, mainly of silver or glass; but one often saw the glint of
-gold upon the neck of a serving-woman, and found she was the personal
-slave of some member of the family.
-
-Slavery exists still in Hyderabad, although in a modified form. No
-person of good family would think of selling a slave, and the slaves
-themselves feel the honour of belonging to one of the old families. In a
-quarrel with a servant a slave will draw herself up proudly and say,
-“You are only a servant—_I_ belong to the family.” Both servants and
-slaves are treated with a familiarity unknown in the West. They take
-part in the conversation, enter the rooms without knocking—in fact, I
-don’t believe there is such a thing as a locked door in all India—and
-talk to the mistress on terms of equality. While at dinner a small boy,
-very prettily dressed, came to the hostess and snuggled his head against
-her, while he stared at the peculiar-looking foreign woman opposite. I
-asked if he was her son. She turned his face up to study it more
-carefully, then said, “No; he is the son of one of my sister’s slaves.”
-
-Resisting all the importunities of my hostess to have my plate refilled
-with the curry and rice, we rose and went again to the servants in
-charge of the ewer and basin, and our hands were washed. We then
-adjourned to a courtyard, where many of the guests had preceded us.
-There appears to be no etiquette in regard to leaving the table; when a
-guest has eaten her dinner she rises and leaves, not asking to be
-excused, nor feeling that it is necessary to wait for her hostess.
-
-The ladies were sitting on the floor of the alcoves in groups of six or
-seven, and pan boxes were much in evidence. Our hostess went into the
-open courtyard and mounted a low, square table, over which was thrown a
-rug. We sat down opposite her and she proceeded to make pan for us, and
-we remained there for perhaps half an hour, waiting for the servants to
-finish their dinner. There were at least fifty servants and slaves, all
-running around aimlessly, doing whatever they found to do at the time,
-with what seemed no system nor order governing their work. The mistress
-had rather a shrill voice, and her orders could be heard very distinctly
-as she called to some one in another part of the court. I asked my
-friend if Indian ladies generally had such loud voices and commanding
-tones, and she laughed and said: “Well, if they have not to begin with
-they soon acquire them, as they must be heard above the confusion always
-reigning in one of these great houses, where there are innumerable
-servants, slaves, and poor relations. It takes a strong-minded woman,
-and one with no mean executive ability, to keep peace and harmony in an
-Eastern zenana.”
-
-After every one had gossiped to her heart’s content, we went to a large
-room at the end of the courtyard, which was fitted up as a chapel. In
-front of an altar were three pieces of wood wreathed with flowers to
-represent the tombs of Ali, Hossain, and Hassan. Facing the tombs were
-ten girls, and the guests grouped themselves around them on the floor.
-When we were all seated they began to chant. One would sing a line, then
-the rest would join their voices and sing four or five lines; then a
-short pause, and the leader would again start the chant. The listeners
-were absolutely quiet, and the music rose and fell in weird, minor
-strains that sounded tragic even to ears that could not understand the
-words. The whole story of the slaying of the martyrs was told, and this
-recital of their passion play moved the hearers deeply. From one part of
-the room I heard a sob, then from another, and soon there was not a dry
-eye in the place. At a certain strain in the music all rose, preceded by
-the women carrying the miniature tombs, and marched slowly into an outer
-courtyard, where incense was waved over the flower-wreathed pieces of
-wood, after which a return was made to the room and the chanting
-commenced again. We did not sit down, and the most dramatic part of the
-performance began. All stood and beat their breasts in time with the
-music, and, as chorus to the verses, would cry, “Hossain, Hassan!
-Hossain, Hassan!” The servants beat their breasts so severely that it
-seemed they would seriously hurt themselves, and it is considered a
-great mark of piety to severely chastise themselves at this time, but
-the ladies were more conservative and kept time with light taps.
-
-This continued, with slight intermissions, for half an hour, some
-sobbing, others crying quietly. At the end each one dropped to her knees
-with her face towards Mecca, and from outside the wall the voice of a
-man from the mosque chanted a benediction. It was most exquisitely sung,
-and added the final touch to a weirdly beautiful scene—the moon shining
-down into the courtyard, the flickering lights before the tiny
-flower-wreathed tombs, the dark-faced women in their pretty gowns, with
-the tears glistening on their eyelashes, kneeling, while the unseen
-voice cried softly, “Salaam! Peace be with you! There is no God but
-God.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- HUSKING RICE IN A BURMESE VILLAGE.
-
- To face p. 179.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- BURMAH
-
-
-Passing from India to Burmah is in many ways like going from darkness to
-sunlight, from tears to gaiety. India is a land of tragedy; Burmah is a
-land of comedy. In India you see faces sad, worried, harassed, and life
-seems a bitter struggle for the great masses in their endeavour to keep
-the hungry wolf from the door. But in Burmah you are greeted with
-smiles, no one is serious, and no one except the Chinese seem to be
-really working. The women in the little booths within the bazaars,
-smoking their long cheroots, gossiping with their neighbours, and
-flirting with the youth passing by, give one the impression that it is
-not business in which they are interested, but that they are there for
-their amusement and to pass a few hours with their friends.
-
-The dress also shows the difference in the temperaments of the people.
-In India the women’s saris are made of dark reds, dark blues, and heavy
-purples. In Burmah the colours are light and gay; you rarely see a
-darkly clad person. The long piece of silk wound tightly around the
-woman’s body is always of light blue, or pink, or yellow, or else a gay
-check composed of all three colours. The loose cotton or linen jacket is
-spotlessly white, and around the neck is thrown carelessly a piece of
-silk or a handkerchief of contrasting colour to the skirt. The hair, of
-ebony blackness, is well oiled and twisted high upon the head and twined
-with flowers. Their toes are tucked into small heelless slippers, which
-take a certain amount of dexterity to keep in place; but all young girls
-learn early in life to give that flirtatious outward jerk of the heels
-which keep the slipper from falling, and also prevents the folds of the
-skirt from opening in front. The city belle when she starts forth upon
-the street has well powdered her nose and often touched her lips with
-carmine, and goes forth boldly to claim the admiration of all, not like
-the Indian woman, who is compelled to hide her charms behind the sari.
-
-The man of Burmah also dresses in gaily coloured silks. He wears a long
-silk cloth around his body, tucks it in with a twist in front, and the
-remaining portion he allows to hang in folds or throws jauntily over his
-shoulder. He wears a short white cotton jacket, over which another one
-of darker cloth is worn for street wear. The old and wealthy when they
-are paying visits of ceremony or going to worship at the pagoda wear
-long white coats, closed only at the neck and reaching to the knee. Men
-of all classes wear flowered silk handkerchiefs around their heads as
-turbans, but when age comes these are exchanged for simple ones of white
-muslin.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BURMESE GIRL.
-
- To face p. 180.]
-
-The women of Burmah have unlimited freedom as compared with the women of
-other Eastern countries. Unlike the women of India, China, or Egypt,
-they may choose their own husbands and have a courtship such as we of
-the Western world so thoroughly understand. From the time of the first
-great event in a young girl’s life, the boring of her ears, which
-announces to her world that she is no longer a child but a woman, until
-her betrothal, the Burmese girl looks forward to the finding of a
-husband as the one aim of her life. Until her ears are bored she is a
-child and may run and play with her brothers upon the village street,
-but finally the day arrives when her friends and relatives bring with
-them the ear-borer and the soothsayer, and the frightened girl must pay
-the price of gaining maidenhood. Her cries are drowned by the music and
-the talk and laughter that seem so heartless; but the pain is soon over,
-and she herself will make the hole larger by every means in her power,
-because until the hole is large enough to receive the great round tube,
-nearly half an inch in diameter, she does not feel that she is indeed a
-woman. It is her initiation into womanhood, it corresponds to the
-entrance into the monastery or the tattooing of his legs of her brother,
-the sign that he is no longer a boy, but may sit with men and chew
-betel-nut and discuss affairs of the world with wondrous wisdom.
-
-After the ear-boring ceremony each man our maiden sees may be a possible
-husband, and she copies the coquettish sway of the hips that is so
-effective in her older sister as she walks down the street with mother,
-aunt, or married friend, who carefully guards her from all improprieties
-now that she has arrived at marriageable age.
-
-When all these arts have had the desired effect and her roving eye has
-alighted upon the man of her choice, the Burmese girl may have her days
-of courtship. She can meet her sweetheart at pwés, those festive parties
-that seem to occur every night in Burmah, at which she may have a stall
-for selling tobacco, or long cheroots, or flowers. This keeping of a
-stall is not lowering to a woman’s social status, and numbers of
-well-to-do women set them up at all places where crowds are liable to
-congregate. There may be a reason for this besides the economic one, as
-it is said a stall or shop or booth within the bazaar is the quickest
-way of attracting a desirable husband. In the smaller towns there is
-scarcely a house where the women have not arranged a small shop for sale
-of betel-nut, coco-nuts, little looking-glasses, toilet articles, or
-cotton goods from Manchester. The profits of this little trade are given
-as pin-money to the wife or daughters. The English say that the Burmese
-woman is a better businessman than her husband, and that in driving a
-sharp bargain her successes are far in advance of those of her less
-aggressive husband.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- DANCING AT A VILLAGE FESTIVAL, BURMAH.
-
- To face p. 183.]
-
-Pagoda feasts offer exceptional opportunities for lovelorn swains, and
-many young couples have found their future happiness when gazing into
-Buddha’s eyes. Evening-time is courting-time in all the world,
-especially in this country, which is too hot during the day to permit of
-any useless expenditure of energy, even by an ardent lover. They also
-say that the men of Burmah are influenced by the proverb that says: “In
-the morning women are cross and peevish, in the middle of the day they
-are testy and quarrelsome, but at night they are sweet and amiable.”
-
-If the lover does not expect to meet his sweetheart at a festival or a
-theatrical entertainment, he waits around until he thinks the old people
-have retired for the night, and then with a friend or two as chaperons
-he calls upon his adored one, and finds her with powdered face and
-pretty dress awaiting him in the moonlit veranda. There is little
-privacy in this courtship, because divisions between the rooms are often
-only made of matting, and mothers in Burmah are proverbial for the
-quickness of hearing when it concerns the courtship of their daughters.
-There is no lovemaking as we know it—kissing, and holding of hands, and
-embracing—which would be most shocking to the modest instincts of the
-Burmese maiden. Yet love has signs, and finally father’s and mother’s
-consent is asked, the dowry fixed, and the astrologer consulted, who
-will tell them if a boy born on Monday and a girl on Wednesday may wed.
-No matter how ardently the match is desired by the interested parties,
-some unions, judged according to their birthdays, would be most unlucky.
-For example:—
-
- Friday’s daughter
- Didn’t oughter
- Marry with a Monday’s son;
- Should she do it
- Both will rue it,
- Life’s last lap will soon be run.
-
-Each day of the week is guarded by an animal, and it naturally follows
-that if a man was born on a day that was ruled by a serpent and a woman
-on a day ruled by a mongoose, the serpent’s deadly enemy, they would
-surely not live happily together. But if the parent’s consent is given,
-the combination of birthdays are lucky, the dowry is satisfactory to all
-concerned, then the propitious day must be found from the horoscope for
-the actual wedding to take place. During June, July, August, and
-September, the Buddhist Lent, all marriages are barred to the strict
-followers of Buddha, and it would be a very unregenerate son or daughter
-who would shock his old father and mother by daring to ask to marry
-during this time. Marriage is a very precarious proceeding, because if
-it takes place in certain months the couple will be rich, in other
-months they will always love each other, while there are unfortunate
-months that bring sickness and death to those tempting Hymen at this
-time. Nevertheless, notwithstanding all the obstacles that seem to be
-placed in the way of marriage, there are few spinsters in Burmah, and
-virtually every man over twenty years of age has a wife.
-
-The marriage ceremony is a strictly civil affair, no religious rite
-entering into the performance. The friends meet at the house of the
-bride’s parents, where a great feast has been prepared at the expense of
-the bridegroom’s father, and the eating and drinking and publicity of
-the affair make the marriage as binding as are any marriages in Burmah.
-Contrary to all Eastern usages, the young couple take up their abode
-with the bride’s parents instead of going to the home of the groom’s
-people, which is the custom in India, China, and Japan. If the home roof
-is too small to shelter the new family, they may build a new home for
-themselves. This is not an expensive affair, as the houses are extremely
-simple. They are practically all of one story, because of the Burman’s
-aversion to any one walking over his head. The house is built on posts,
-thus raising the floor seven or eight feet from the ground, which is
-very desirable in rainy weather. It consists of two or three rooms and
-an open balcony, where the family may sit of an evening or where the
-daughter of the house may receive her lover, and not interrupt the
-slumbers of father and mother, who have spread their sleeping-mats upon
-the floor of the main living-room.
-
-In the rainy season the cooking is done in one of the rooms, but in the
-long, dry months the yard at the back of the house serves as kitchen. In
-the smaller towns the roofs are thatched with palm-leaves or with grass,
-but in the cities the ugly iron roofs are now seen, with here and there
-a more pretentious roof of tiling.
-
-Moving is not a laborious process, as there is little necessary
-furniture in a Burmese home. A few rush mats, which serve for beds, some
-rugs and blankets for use when nights are cold, which during the day are
-rolled up and placed in an unused corner of the room, a cooking-range,
-which is simply a square box filled with earth on which the wood is
-lighted, some earthen pots for making curries and the cooking of the
-rice, a water-jar, ladles made of the half of a coconut placed on a
-handle, the huge round lacquer tray, which serves as table, and the
-bowls for the curries and deserts.
-
-With nearly every house there is a small yard, in which are found
-flowers if the wife is inclined to love the beautiful; but if she is
-more practically inclined chickens hold sway within the small domain,
-until the evil day arrives for them when they pass into the curry-pot.
-The strict Buddhist does not utilize the eggs, believing that they hold
-the germ of life which it would be sinful to destroy. These Burmese
-roosters can take the place of clocks, as it is said that they crow
-regularly four times a day—at sunrise, noon, sundown, and at midnight.
-The story goes that in the olden time there was a great fire made of
-books that contained unlawful teaching. Among these books were those of
-a famous astrologer, and after the fire the cocks came and ate the
-ashes, thus taking into their very being the knowledge of the stars and
-the actions of the sun.
-
-If the wife lives in the city, she does not have the weary task of
-husking the rice, as it is bought ready for cooking, nor does she need
-waste much thought in planning the menu for the day. The two meals are
-practically the same—the plain boiled rice upon the table-tray, around
-which sit the household, squatting upon their heels. No knives or forks
-are needed, as each takes upon his plate from the central dish the rice,
-pours over it curry, arranges on the top the vegetables and condiments
-that he loves, and eats it with the forks with which Nature has provided
-him—his fingers. The food is very good if too much dried fish, which is
-a delicacy loved by Burmans, or garlic has not been incorporated in the
-curries. Only water is drunk at mealtime. If the husband has acquired
-the habit of tippling, which has come to Burmah with other foreign
-customs, he must go to the shop where it is sold to indulge in what, to
-every good householder, is still a thing of which to be ashamed.
-
-After meals every one smokes—father, mother, and children. It is said
-that baby learns while at his mother’s breast to take the long cigar
-from between her lips and puff it between alternate draughts at Nature’s
-font; but Burmese deny this most indignantly, and say that smoking is
-forbidden the children until they have learned to walk. I can quite
-believe this, because it would take a strong baby to manage the enormous
-cheroot smoked by all Burmans, although they are so mild that they would
-not affect the nerves even of a child. The cigar seen in the homes is
-from six to eight inches in length and about an inch in diameter. It is
-made of the pith of a plant mixed with chopped tobacco-leaves, wrapped
-in the leaf of the teak-tree, the ends tucked in and tied by a piece of
-red silk, where stiff pieces of pith keep the loose tobacco from the
-mouth. It splutters and scatters its fine fire in all directions, and
-cannot be smoked by an amateur without danger to himself and all about
-him. These are often made within the home by the wife and daughters, yet
-they may be seen in tiny booths at all festivities, where pretty girls
-sell them to admiring swains who are too lazy to roll them for
-themselves.
-
-Chewing betel-nut is also indulged in by both man and wife, and the
-stain it leaves upon the lips and tongue is not an addition to the
-beauty of the mouth; yet it can be easily cleansed, as witness the
-pretty teeth and rosy lips of the women one meets in the street. There
-is no furniture to dust, few dishes to wash, and little clothing to be
-sewn, and small care expended upon the children. Their daily bath
-consists in throwing a few buckets of water over their naked bodies,
-which they learn early to do for themselves, and often around a village
-well the tiny babies, dressed in only an amulet string, may be seen with
-coconut ladle throwing the cooling water over their bodies and shrieking
-with delight. The children of the poor go naked until about eight or
-nine years old, and those of the better class dress practically as do
-their fathers and mothers while in the street, although, even in houses
-of the rich, clothing is considered a useless luxury for the young.
-
-The simple life leaves much time for the wife, which she employs in
-gossiping with friends, in attending pagoda festivals and pwés until
-that happy event arrives, the birth of the first child. From the moment
-it is known that the wife is to become a mother she is the recipient of
-much care and attention and presents from her family and from her
-friends, and when she can say, “I am the mother of a son,” then, like
-all Oriental women, she has attained the great crown of womanhood. But
-because of the lack of medical skill in Burmah she has to face a most
-dreadful ordeal. As soon as her child is born the mother is rubbed all
-over with saffron, a fire lighted near her, and all the blankets that
-can be begged or borrowed are heaped upon her. She is given a drink
-prepared by the midwife for the purpose of making her perspire. This is
-given her many times a day, and together with the large bricks that are
-heated and wrapped in damp cloths and placed in her bed conspire to have
-the desired effect, and the poor mother passes seven days in a Turkish
-bath. Then on the seventh day, as a finish to this trying ordeal which
-she has undergone, she is forced to go through a most elaborate steaming
-process, and if this does not smother her completely, she is pronounced
-well. The midwife receives her mats, her allotment of rice and her
-shilling, and the woman returns to her household duties. In the larger
-towns now the Burmese woman may call in the European-trained doctor, and
-there are hospitals which answer the great need that the women have for
-proper care at this critical time of their lives. Yet I am told that the
-mortality at child-bearing is not so great as that in India and other
-Eastern countries. The main effect upon the woman is to age her greatly;
-at the birth of her first child she changes from the pretty girl-wife to
-the middle-aged woman.
-
-About two weeks after the birth of the child a great feast is given to
-celebrate the naming of the new arrival, and on this day also the young
-man’s head is washed for the first time. All the friends of the family
-and the neighbours are invited, and they come, bringing presents with
-them to help pay for the feast. The mother sits down with her child in
-her arms, then some elder or relation of the parents suggests the name,
-and everybody accepts it at once, whereupon all adjourn to the feast,
-where they eat, chew betel, and smoke cheroots until nightfall. If the
-people have sufficient means, there is a pwé, which lasts until morning.
-
-It is a rule amongst families that a child’s name must begin with one of
-the letters belonging to the day on which it was born, and they all
-believe that the stars which were in evidence at the hour of birth
-decide a man’s character. A man born on Monday will be jealous, on
-Tuesday honest, on Wednesday bad-tempered, on Thursday quiet, on Friday
-garrulous, on Saturday quarrelsome, and on Sunday stingy. Each day also
-has a particular animal which represents it. Monday is represented by a
-tiger, Tuesday, a lion, etc., and in temples one sees yellow and wax
-candles made in the form of these animals, representing his birthday,
-placed before the god by the man who wishes special benefits from lord
-Buddha.
-
-Swinging by a couple of ropes from the roof is a rude home-made basket,
-which is used for baby’s cradle. Even this useful article of furniture
-in which the Burmese baby passes his sleeping hours is subject to the
-actions of belligerent spirits, and must be hung in such a manner as not
-to tempt the nats to use it for a resting-place. Burmese mothers, like
-mothers all over the world, croon lullabies to their babies as they
-swing them back and forth while waiting for the sand-man to come. I give
-a verse of one of the popular lullabies known generally to all babies in
-Burmah—
-
- Nasty, naughty, noisy baby,
- If the cat won’t, nats will maybe
- Come and pinch and punch and rend you—
- If they do I won’t defend you.
- Oh, now please,
- Do not tease,
- Do be good,
- As babies should,
- Just one tiny little while;
- Try to sleep, or try to smile.
-
-When the son is eight or nine years of age he goes as a matter of course
-to the monastery school, which is open to all alike, the poor and rich,
-and which is practically the only thing that the priests, which flood
-this country, afford the people in return for the food which is placed
-in their begging-bowls each day. Every Buddhist boy is taught to read
-and write, and he learns many of the formulas connected with the tenets
-of his religion and the stories relating to the existence and teachings
-of Buddha. Until the English came, all little boys went to the monastery
-schools, but now there are Government schools and Burmese laymen schools
-and many private schools, to which the more advanced Burmans are sending
-their sons; yet the schoolrooms in the monasteries are not vacant. The
-young Burmese are not so forced by the economic conditions to acquire
-the foreign education as is the Indian boy, where life is much more
-difficult and the Government certificate simply a means to an
-end—Government employment. Until lately it was not thought necessary to
-educate the girls. To be pretty, to know how to take care of her
-household, to smile sweetly, and be of a gay disposition were sufficient
-for a woman; and as book knowledge would not help her in those
-accomplishments, book knowledge was, therefore, dispensed with. But now
-the larger towns provide educational facilities for girls, and in
-Rangoon and Mandalay there are many private schools for the daughters of
-the better class.
-
-Until a Buddhist has entered the monastery, joining the noble order of
-the yellow robe, if for no longer than a day, he is nothing more than a
-mere animal. He has a name given him for worldly purposes, so has a dog,
-a horse, or a cow; but until he has shown himself ready to leave the
-world by retiring into the quiet and peace of the monasteries, he cannot
-expect to reap the good that he has sown in the past life, nor would it
-be possible for him to look forward to a happy future. At the beginning
-of the Buddhist Lent, all Buddhist boys from the age of twelve to
-fifteen don the yellow robe and carry the begging-bowl before the priest
-on his daily rounds. On this most important day in his life his parents
-give a feast, where the young novice, dressed in finest clothes, loaded
-with all the family jewels, goes slowly through the village, preceded by
-a band of music and his friends and relatives dressed in their gayest
-clothing. He calls at the houses of his friends and pays respects to the
-officials of his village. Returning to his home, he finds, seated upon a
-raised daïs, several priests from the monastery to which he is soon to
-retire. They hold before their faces the large lotus-leafed-shaped fans,
-so as not to see the row of pretty women, dressed in their pinks and
-blues and yellows, flowers in their hair, jewels and chains on necks,
-and bracelets on arms, and pearl powder softening smiling faces. The
-solemnity of the ceremony commences when the boy throws off his fine
-clothing, and, binding a piece of white cloth around his loins, sits
-down before the barber and permits that glory of his boyhood, his long
-black hair, to be cut off close to his head. After he has been carefully
-shaved, water is poured over his body, and, dressed again in his bright
-clothing, he prostrates himself three times before the monks, begging in
-Pali, which quite likely he does not understand, that he may be admitted
-to the holy assembly. Then the yellow garments are given him, the
-begging-bowl is hung around his neck, and he is formally a member of the
-monastery. With the departure of the priests and the novice feasting
-begins, which, according to many Burmese festivities, lasts until dawn.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A BUDDHIST SCHOOL, MANDALAY (SHOWING BEGGING-BOWL).
-
- To face p. 194.]
-
-In many cases, if the boy is working and his services are needed, he
-remains in the monastery only long enough to enable him to go once
-around the village begging from door to door in the train of the
-priests. Some stay seven days, some a fortnight, and others, if they are
-able, remain throughout the four months of Lent. Of course many of them
-enter the monastery for life, and there is no country in the world where
-there are so many priests as in Burmah. The monasteries offer a refuge
-for men in trouble, for those who desire to leave the cares of the world
-and lead a life of meditation and repose. And it is said that this
-departure from the world is made by many a man in this country, where
-women are noted for the strength of their characters and the length of
-their tongues.
-
-The Burmese boy does not consider he has attained manhood until he has
-been tattooed. When I was first in Burmah, being rather nearsighted, I
-thought all Burmese men of the lower class wore short, dark, skin-tight
-drawers, but when I became more courageous and examined them more
-closely I found what I considered underclothing was the man’s own skin.
-This had been tattooed from the waistline down to the kneecap with a
-series of pictures so closely set together that they could not be
-distinguished one from the other, and melted into a background of blue
-and black, with here and there a softened red to accentuate the fading
-colours of the darker dye. This is a sign of manhood, which, the Burmese
-say, will probably not die out, because a Burman would be as ashamed to
-have a spotless white skin without a mark of the tattooer’s needle as
-would the American boy to find no manly hairs upon his chin at the age
-when other boys begin to shave. And woe to the hapless youth if a
-wind-blown paso should show the girl he was courting a white and
-spotless leg; she would tell him that his place was in the women’s
-quarters and offer him a woman’s dress! Each figure in this mosaic has a
-meaning, and there are charms for protection of the body, for the
-gaining of a loved one, thus assuring the wearer great riches, and,
-mixed with these, are figures of all kinds—lizards, birds, and pictures
-of the Buddha. Sometimes women who wish to ensnare the object of their
-affection endure the pain of having a love charm tattooed upon the
-tongue or upon the lips. Often a few round spots tattooed with the
-prescribed formula repeated over it and placed between the eyes will be
-enough to bring back a wandering lover to her side. If this is not
-effectual or if the maiden sees herself drifting towards a lonely middle
-age with no lover in her view, she cuts off the locks of hair hanging
-over her ears, announcing to all the world that she is looking for a
-lover. They say in Rangoon that if a woman is tattooed it means that she
-desires an Englishman for her husband.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BURMESE BOY WITH TATTOOED LEGS.
-
- To face p. 196.]
-
-In olden days Burmah shared with Japan in the number of its women given
-in marriage _à la mode_ to men of alien races. Nearly every English
-official and merchant had his house presided over by a little native
-maiden. These arrangements were very happy and tragedies did not occur
-until the Englishman, longing for home sights and sounds, and the
-dignity of an English wife, went back home and returned to his station
-with the woman of his choice. Then there was sorrow, and even the
-English gold could not repay the little Burmese woman for the loss of
-the love of the kindly, careless man who had been her master for the
-many years. Often attempts were made to regain that master’s love, and
-many a time the attempts succeeded, because in the formality and dignity
-of his English home and the coldness of his English wife, the man
-remembered the happy days and nights spent under the Burmese roof and
-the pretty little Burmese girl who shyly slipped her hand in his and
-called him master, lord of all her days and nights.
-
-There is a story told of an English official in Upper Burmah who, when
-time for leave of absence came, closed up his Burmese home, giving to
-its little hostess money sufficient to make her rich for life. On his
-return to Burmah he brought with him the girl from Devonshire to whom he
-had been betrothed for many years. At dinner their first night soft
-steps were heard upon the verandas, and curtains moved as if in the
-swaying of an evening breeze, but nothing could be seen. The next
-morning when starting for his office the frightened horse shied madly at
-a little mound of silk lying by the side of the gateway. It was the
-little Burmese wife, with a dagger through her heart. Pinned upon her
-pretty dress was a letter for her lord, in which she said: “I have
-looked upon thy newly wedded wife and found her good. If I had seen
-within her eyes—and love would quick have told me—that she were not the
-worthy one, that she were not fitted to be thy mate through all these
-years to come, I would have plunged my knife deep in her heart, but now
-I know it is better for me to go, as life without thee has no joy.”
-
-One can understand the charm that these happy, smiling, care-free little
-women have for the men who come from homes where levity and
-_laissez-faire_ are things to be condemned. The Burmese wife makes no
-demands upon her lord and master; she is obedient, attendant to his
-every want, and never scolding and discontented. As far as material
-wants are concerned, the native woman of any Eastern country makes an
-ideal wife for the average European, yet they can never be real
-companions one with the other. There is more than the bar of language
-between them; there is the bar of instincts, customs, and traditions.
-The entire life of each has been passed in different environments.
-Practically always the woman has little or no education, and knows
-nothing of the world outside the town where she was born. There is never
-any question of equality between the foreign husband and the native
-wife; he is always her lord, she is always his slave. To the
-light-hearted Burmese woman, to whom the marriage tie even with a man of
-her own race is not a binding cord, these “marriages for a day” are not
-always things of tragedy, but the curse falls heavily upon the child if
-there should be one. In all Eastern countries—Egypt, India, Burmah,
-China, and Japan—the half-caste is a being set apart. Ostracized by the
-members of his father’s race, unrecognized by his mother’s people, he is
-a social pariah, and one almost feels that, if society could enforce it,
-he would be compelled to call out, “Unclean, unclean!” as did the lepers
-in the olden time.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EN ROUTE TO A FESTIVAL, BURMAH.
-
- To face p. 198.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- BURMESE RELIGION AND SUPERSTITION
-
-
-Judging from appearances, the Burmese woman is deeply religious. We see
-her offering her flowers before the many shrines scattered throughout
-the country, and hear the deep-toned bell hanging before the lord of
-light as she strikes it three times to call the attention of the spirits
-of the air to her piety. On days of festival the pagoda is thronged with
-gaily dressed women, and at the greatest of all pagoda feasts, that of
-the Shwe Dagon in Rangoon, women pilgrims from every part of Burmah come
-to lay their tribute before the greatest shrine in Buddha-land. They
-come by train and boat and bullock-cart, and to many it is the most
-important event of the whole year. Girls look forward to the chance it
-offers to show their charms to the male world, old ladies count on the
-meeting of friends and the discussion of the events of the past year,
-while to all it offers a chance to lay up merit for themselves and
-advance a step on the long road that leads to Neban.
-
-Near the temple are marionette shows, and theatrical companies make
-these festivals their place of greatest profit, while the merchants
-offer their wares for sale, and the sellers of incense, candles,
-flowers, and offerings for the different shrines reap their harvest. Yet
-over the whole joyous occasion, which would strike the casual observer
-as simply a holiday for these happy people, is thrown the veil of a deep
-religious motive. In the fascination of the secular gaieties around
-them, these spiritual women do not forget the real object of their
-pilgrimage, and the prayers and protestations before the altars, and the
-constant booming of the deep-toned bells, show that praise of the Lord
-of lords is not forgotten amidst the excitement and pleasures of the
-world outside.
-
-The Burmese woman may go to the pagoda on the duty days of each month,
-of which there are four, or she may stay at home. The only force upon
-her is that of public opinion, yet she generally goes, as it is the
-meeting-place of all her world, and the care-free Burmese, both men and
-women, are always looking for a chance of amusement and a meeting with
-friends.
-
-Whether or not she attends these duty days once a week is solely
-dependent upon her piety, or her love of companionship; but deeply
-ingrained within her soul is a daily duty that no Burman, unless of the
-very advanced class, neglects—the propitiation of the nats, those
-spirits inhabiting the air, the ground, the water, and all things, both
-animate and inanimate. Even the stones upon the roadside may be the home
-of spirits who may prove destructive or hostile at any time. To guard
-against the evils that might come with neglect of such powerful enemies
-to his happiness, the Burmese erects a shrine at the extremity of his
-village, sometimes no larger than a bird house built in the pipul-tree.
-There he may offer food, and light his tiny lamps, and pour his
-offerings of water, and burn his incense.
-
-He leaves the nats of the household to the especial care of his wife,
-who covers all the posts within the rooms with white cloth, so that they
-may be comfortable while sitting in their favourite places. To
-counteract the effect of the evil spirits who may wish to take up their
-dwelling within the home, the careful housewife keeps near at hand a jar
-of water that has been blessed, and daily sprinkles floor and roof for
-the protection of her family. It is believed that people who have been
-executed for their crimes or who have met a violent death become nats
-and haunt the place where they so suddenly departed from this world, and
-this belief led to many cruel practices in former times. The burial of
-men and women alive under the gates of a city originated in this desire
-to protect its inhabitants, as these spirits wander around the place of
-their death, and bring disaster upon strangers who may come with evil
-intent. It is said that under the palace gates fifty men and women were
-buried alive to protect those within the Imperial residence.
-
-This belief in spirits leads to many evils, and the woman’s life is one
-of constant fear for herself and for her loved ones. She naturally
-consults in time of trouble with those who have a knowledge of spirit
-lore, or who have power to control them and make of no avail their wrong
-intentions. Consequently Burmah abounds in astrologers, necromancers,
-wizards, and witch-doctors, who impose upon the fears of the women to a
-marvellous extent. These charlatans vie with the doctors in their
-ignorance.
-
-A man of medicine in this land ruled by superstition needs no diploma,
-and he administers a mixture of herbs and nasty tasting condiments in
-such strong doses that they are bound to cure or kill. Quantity, not
-quality, is what the sick Burmese requires; and if after a medicine is
-administered five times she is not better, another kind is tried, and if
-the desired effect is not produced, another doctor is called, who
-perhaps makes a distinctly different diagnosis of the case, and the
-dosing is commenced all over again with another set of medicines. It is
-well known by all that the body is composed of four elements—earth,
-water, fire, and air—and derangement of these four properties may cause
-the illness. Before medicine is administered, the horoscope must be
-consulted in order to learn the proportions of the elements within the
-body, when perhaps it is found that the sickness is caused by an evil
-act committed in a former life, or the seasons may be the cause of her
-misfortune. It is always a most complicated affair, and perhaps the
-doctor finds that the sufferer must refuse all food whose initial letter
-begins with the same letter as that of the day of her birth. There are
-ninety-six diseases that afflict mankind, and it often takes many
-doctors and much medicine to decide with which one of the ninety-six
-ailments the woman is contending.
-
-If she should die, it is believed that the soul, in the shape of a black
-butterfly, issues from the mouth, and dies at the same time as that of
-the body which it inhabited. Although the Buddhists do not believe in
-the actuality of the soul as we know it, this black butterfly is the
-real spirit of the woman, and is with her constantly except at times of
-sleep, when it may leave the earthly body and go roaming over the world.
-It can never visit places strange to its owner, as it might lose its way
-and not come back again, when both would die—the body because its spirit
-was gone, the butterfly because it had lost its earthly home. One reason
-why a Burman will not rouse one suddenly from a deep slumber is because
-he is afraid that the butterfly might be on a visit and unable to return
-to its home upon the man’s awakening, which, of course, would be most
-fatal. This roaming spirit takes many chances, as there are goblins and
-evil genii who desire nothing better than to eat black butterflies, and
-often they become so frightened that they return home in a great panic,
-which throws the owner of the soul into a fever. It sometimes happens
-that the spirit is kept prisoner, and then the witch doctors are brought
-in and many incantations are gone through to induce the evil gnomes to
-release their hold upon the poor butterfly before it is too late.
-
-Two souls who deeply love each other often wish to leave the world
-together, or a mother dies and wishes her loved one, perhaps her only
-child, to join her in the other land, and her spirit calls for her
-baby’s butterfly, who will follow that of the mother unless frustrated
-by the machinations of some wise woman who understands the way of
-spirits. This woman comes to the house, and placing a mirror on the
-floor by the dead mother or wife who is calling for her child or
-husband, entreats the dead not to demand the soul of the living. As she
-pleads with her she allows a piece of down to slip slowly on to the face
-of the mirror and catches it in a handkerchief, which is then gently
-placed on the breast of the living, and the spirit comes back to its
-resting-place.
-
-Superstition dominates the life of the Burmese woman as much as it does
-her Indian sister. She believes in love potions and philtres to bring a
-longed-for lover to her side. She consults with wise men, who tell her
-whether the waning love of husband is caused by the nat or guardian of
-the house; or if she is not yet wedded, she finds that the horoscopes of
-herself and lover are not propitious and that he is not intended for her
-mate. She also uses this man of science to revenge herself upon a hated
-rival, and will cause an image to be made of clay, over which are
-chanted devilish rituals which will cause death or madness to fall upon
-the unsuspecting person.
-
-Not only do the spirits of all worlds influence her, but each act of the
-things around her has its meaning. If a hen should lay an egg upon a
-cloth, the lucky owner will receive a present; and if she is going on a
-journey and a snake should cross her path, her misfortune would be
-certain. If a dog should carry a bone into the house, she blesses him,
-as great riches and honour will come to all beneath her roof. But she is
-hampered in her actions by the number of lucky and unlucky days that
-control her destiny. There are days unfortunate for all the world, and
-others that apply only to her, when she must act with exceeding care,
-and understand the lore of the stars which were in the ascendant at her
-birth. Thursday is generally a good day for all, but if a woman was so
-foolhardy as to commence a work on Tuesday it might be fatal and she
-would lose her life. Friday is the day of days on which to commence a
-new enterprise, as success is bound to follow. The hair should be washed
-once a month, if possible, but never on Monday, Friday, or Saturday. A
-good mother on sending her son into the monastery would see that the
-rite of cutting the hair did not fall upon Monday, Friday, or his
-birthday, and it limits the choice of days, as this latter event, the
-birthday, occurs once a week. There are also a few months especially
-unlucky for a woman born under certain stars, and no undertaking should
-be commenced in those months. In fact, the Burmese woman is ruled by
-signs and omens from her birth to her death, and when the necromancers,
-the wizards, the doctors, and the witches are unable longer to keep the
-spirit, the little black butterfly, within the body, and she is gathered
-to her fathers, rules and traditions govern her laying away to her last
-resting-place.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A BURMESE WOMAN AND HER CIGAR.
-
- To face p. 206.]
-
-In former days the dead were all cremated, but now burying has come into
-general use. When death comes to a family it means elaborate
-preparations and feasting from the time that the breath has left the
-body and the coin is put into the mouth to pay the ferryman for the last
-journey over the lonely river, until the seven days of mourning are
-over. Yet it is hard to speak of these days as days of mourning, for
-music, dancing before the bier, and the feasting in the home would cause
-the onlooker at a Burmese funeral to believe that he was witnessing a
-wedding-festival instead of a scene of sorrow.
-
-The Burmese, like most Eastern nations, spend far too much upon their
-funeral observances; and often a man goes into debt for life to pay for
-the extravagances which custom and tradition make necessary to uphold
-his standing in the community when the Angel of Death visits his
-household.
-
-A new custom, or an old custom made more elaborate, has increased the
-cost of living for the hospitable Burman. When invitations are given for
-any festivity, the invitation is accompanied by a present, often a silk
-handkerchief or a turban, but with the rich this present is growing more
-expensive, until it is becoming a burden that is causing many of the
-conservative to complain. I was told while in Mandalay that when a
-certain gentleman sent out invitations for his daughter’s wedding, he
-accompanied each invitation with a gold sovereign, and as he bade more
-than two hundred guests to the feast, his entertainment cost him a
-goodly sum before the actual expense of the festival took place. This
-useless expenditure falls heavily upon the small official who is trying
-to live upon his salary, as salaries are not large in Burmah. A
-gentleman with a sense of humour was calling upon us, and in the course
-of conversation we touched upon the servant question. He asked us what a
-Chinese butler received for his services in America. I told him ten
-pounds a month. He gasped, and then he laughed and a twinkle came to his
-black eyes as he said: “I am an official of the city of Mandalay, and I
-receive just that amount. I think I will go to America.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BURMESE WORKING WOMAN.
-
- To face p. 208.]
-
-The Burmese woman in her home is allowed much more liberty than any
-other Oriental woman. She is her husband’s equal, although she is taught
-to look upon man as a superior being; still, that is only theoretical.
-In actual life she is one with him in business, his amusements, and in
-his religious life. He consults her upon matters of importance, and she
-has proved worthy of trust and confidence, because she has a good mind
-and has been allowed to use her judgment in matters of business as well
-as in her own particular realm—the home. She has domestic troubles with
-which to contend, but public opinion is helping her, especially in the
-case of polygamy. This destroyer of woman’s happiness is sometimes
-practised, but sentiment is against it, and it is a very brave man who
-cares to run counter to the general opinion of his village or city in
-regard to the number of women he shelters beneath his roof-tree. But if
-the Burman may not marry more than one woman at a time, he may divorce
-as many wives as he wishes. As the woman also shares in this
-prerogative, the law is not so one-sided as it is in Mohammedan
-countries. Manu, the ancient law-maker, allowed women to divorce their
-husbands if they were too poor to support them; if they were lazy and
-would not work; or if they were incapacitated by reason of old age, or
-became cripples after marriage. The husband may send his wife away if
-she bears him no male children; if she is not loving; or if she is
-disobedient. Divorce is purely a personal affair, and the marriage tie
-may be dissolved at any time the parties concerned think fit, without
-calling in priest or lawyer.
-
-There are very definite provisions in the laws in regard to the property
-of the separating couple. In the event of divorce each party takes with
-them the property brought by them to the new home, and what they
-accumulated since marriage is either divided by mutual agreement or by a
-decision of the village elders who sanction the separation.
-
-I am told that divorce is not so common as one would believe,
-considering the ease with which it may be obtained. The Burman is a very
-easy-going man, the Burmese wife a clever woman who makes it her
-business to understand her lord and master, and consequently she
-generally rules him. “Burmah is the land of henpecked husbands,” one
-Burman told me, “all the world knows our shame”—and then he laughed.
-
-Education is coming more slowly to the Burmese woman than it is to the
-Indian or the Egyptian. She has not seen its need, consequently has not
-demanded it. But it will come in time, and the intellectual broadening
-will free her from the cloud of superstition that now surrounds her and
-controls her actions to a great extent.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- GOLDEN PAGODA, MANDALAY.
-
- To face p. 210.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE LADY OF CHINA
-
-
-It is not easy for the woman of the Occident to understand the life of
-the woman of the Orient. The woman of the West, in her freedom, her
-complex social life, her husband’s love, looks pityingly upon the
-Eastern woman in what appears to be a seemingly restricted sphere—the
-home. It is known that she is practically a prisoner, not by force but
-by custom and convention; that the wall of the compound are the walls of
-the world to her. It is not realized, however, that there she is
-supreme, and from within those compound-walls, she sways to a great
-extent the thought and life of China.
-
-The Chinese lady does not lead a life of leisure or indolence. The
-picture of the Eastern woman sitting upon divans and eating sweetmeats
-does not apply to the women of this country. If she is the wife of an
-official or of a man of wealth, she has a large household over which she
-must preside. If the husband has a mother living the mother is the head
-of the house, and her will is absolute. This was shown rather forcibly a
-few years ago in Peking. The son of a Chinese official while abroad
-married a European woman. She returned to Peking with her husband, and
-within a few months fled to a foreign embassy and asked protection, as
-she believed her life in danger. The mother-in-law had said: “While I
-was in Europe with you I was powerless, but here I am absolute. I could
-even kill you and no one would question the act. It is my right to do
-with you as I wish.” The minister could do nothing, as by her marriage
-the girl had become a Chinese subject and was under the laws of China,
-which gave the mother of her husband absolute control over her life and
-person.
-
-Often there are an incredible number of people living under one
-roof-tree, as all the sons bring their wives to their father’s home
-instead of establishing separate households. Sheng, the director of
-railways, told me that there were 250 people who took rice each day
-within his compound. The walls of his garden enclosed a small village.
-There was a large building containing his office and residence.
-Radiating from this there were rows of smaller houses, where his
-brothers and married sons lived with their numerous families.
-
-A Chinese house, even of the very rich, is a shabby affair, judged from
-Western standards. It is always surrounded by a wall, generally painted
-white. Within the entrance gate is a large wooden screen, placed to
-insure privacy, and also to guard the doorways from evil spirits, which
-are known to travel only in straight lines and to abhor corners. If the
-family is large the home consists of a series of houses built around
-courtyards. Across the first court are the master’s rooms and offices;
-then come the houses of the different families, as each wife has a suite
-of rooms for herself and her children. Some of the wives of the more
-wealthy Chinese occupy an entire building. The kitchen and the servants’
-quarters are at the end of the last courtyard.
-
-The floors of all the rooms are of rough boards, with great cracks
-between them, sometimes covered with a rug but more often bare. The
-walls are composed of the same wide boards, with here and there an
-embroidered hanging or a scroll bearing the words of some honoured sage.
-The furniture of the reception-room consists of small tables alternating
-with straight-backed chairs, arranged with mathematical precision around
-the three sides of the room. Opposite the doorway is the seat of honour,
-or an opium-couch. Often the furniture is elaborately carved or inlaid
-with mother-of-pearl, but it looks formal and precise. The chairs, with
-their red embroidered cushions, are very uncomfortable for the
-Westerner, because of their straight, low backs and high, narrow seats,
-that make one long for a footstool. There are no buffets nor sideboards
-in the dining-rooms, and stools are used in place of chairs. The tables
-are square, seating eight, and neither tablecloths nor napkins are
-considered necessary adjuncts to dining.
-
-The bedrooms are small, and filled wellnigh to overflowing by an
-enormous carved bed, with red embroidered curtains hanging from the
-heavy canopy and long silken tassels draping the four posts. The Chinese
-do not indulge in mattresses nor springs, sheets, nor pillow-cases. The
-pillows are small bolsters, and the bedclothing consists of a series of
-wadded “comfortables” made of silk or cotton. Their dislike of springs
-is very intense. A hospital for the Chinese was opened in one of the
-interior towns, and the doctors, wishing to do the very best they could
-to make their patients comfortable, bought, at great expense, foreign
-beds with springs. They found, to their disgust, that the patients, as
-soon as the nurse turned her back, insisted on placing the bedclothing
-upon the floor and lying there, instead of in the nice comfortable beds
-that had been provided for them. They claimed that the springs made them
-“seasick.” When Chinese ladies are calling upon a foreign woman, one of
-the chief ways to amuse them is to take them over the house and permit
-them to see the furnishings of the homes of the people from over the
-sea. They are always intensely interested in the beds and look at the
-springs from all sides, sitting on them and pressing them down with
-their hands, finally shaking their heads, as much as to say, “It is past
-all belief what these strange people will have in their houses.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CHINESE WOMEN WARMING HANDS AND FEET WITH BRAZIERS.
-
- To face p. 214.]
-
-The chief article of furniture in the kitchen is the stove, a huge
-affair made of brick. This stove has generally three holes, in which are
-set the iron cooking-pots, shaped like large washbowls and made of very
-thin metal, in order that the ingredients may cook with the smallest
-amount of heat necessary, as the question of fuel is a serious one in
-China. In the country around Shanghai, rice-straw and faggots are the
-main fuel, while on every hillside in the country one sees women and
-children cutting the dried grass and gathering every available thing
-that may be burned. Because of the lack of body in the fuel it keeps one
-person busy feeding the fire while another attends to the cooking.
-
-The food served at a feast, and which the average foreigner sees, is
-quite different from that eaten every day. At a feast there are often
-twenty or thirty courses. Swallow’s-nest soup, shark-fins, pigeon eggs
-cooked with nuts, ducks prepared in many ways, fowl, fish, and
-innumerable sweets. Rice is served as the last course, while at the
-ordinary dinner it is the principal dish. It is to the Chinese what
-bread is to the European or potatoes to the Irish. The food is cooked in
-vegetable oil, made from beans or cabbages, or, for the richer class,
-from peanuts. The chief meat is pork, which is cut into little bits and
-cooked with a vegetable. Beef is not used by the average Chinese. The
-cow is a beast of burden, and none of her products are eaten. I have
-seen a great official, on being told that the ice-cream he was eating
-was made of milk, deposit upon his plate the contents of his mouth with
-more haste than grace. One receives the impression from pictures that
-the Chinese politely picks up a few grains of rice with his chopsticks
-and carries them slowly to his mouth. This is a picture of Occidental
-imagination rather than Oriental reality. He takes with his chopsticks
-some vegetables from the dishes in the centre of the table, to which all
-have access, and, after depositing the chosen morsel on the top of his
-rice, he lifts the bowl to his face and uses his chopsticks to shovel as
-much of the rice into the opening as its capacity will permit. The
-Chinese are supposed to be a slow and phlegmatic race, but if one were
-to judge by the rapidity with which a bowl of rice will disappear, one
-would easily give them a place among the most rapid and progressive
-races of the world.
-
-Food used by the Chinese is very cheap. The Viceroy at Nanking, a man of
-unlimited wealth and power, told me that the food for himself did not
-cost more than twenty cents a day. The servants in the American
-Consulate had their food bought by the second cook, paying him five
-shillings each per month, which sum included food, cooking, and service.
-On board a foreign houseboat the captain is paid four shillings per day
-for the hire of six men, and they are fed by him out of this sum. It is
-made possible by the cheapness of the vegetables. I have seen him buy
-three bushels of a curly-leaved vegetable resembling spinach for
-twopence.
-
-The lady of China takes no part in her husband’s business or social
-life. Much of the business in China among the official and rich class is
-transacted socially, and the dinners are generally given at a tea-house
-or restaurant, or on the pleasure-boats kept for that purpose. Even the
-very finest of these entertainment-places are very shabby affairs, from
-a Western standpoint. They are also extremely dirty. The floors are made
-of unmatched boards that have never seen the scrubbing-brush, and the
-guests throw their fish-bones, cigarette-ends, etc., under the table.
-
-The Chinese understand the art of dining, and we who simply go to eat
-cannot appreciate the social side of this form of entertainment as does
-the Eastern man. He eats a few courses, sheds a jacket, loosens a belt,
-talks to a singing girl, smokes, then eats a few more courses, gambles a
-while, and really enjoys himself for four or five hours. When he enters
-the room for the feast he is given a slip of paper, on which he writes
-the name of his favourite singing girl and her place of residence. When
-all the guests arrive the slips are taken by a servant to the different
-places, and at intervals during the dinner the girls arrive. These girls
-are owned by men or women who bought them when they were very young, and
-have trained them for singing girls or professional amusers. They sway
-in on their tiny bound feet, beautifully dressed, painted and powdered,
-and take their place behind the man who sent for them. They sit on a
-narrow stool, chat with the man, have a few puffs from a water pipe, eat
-melon-seeds (they never eat or drink anything from the table); then
-their maid brings them their musical instrument, and they sing, in a
-high falsetto voice, a song or two. If the song and the singer are
-admired, the guests show their approval by loud “Hah, hah’s.” After her
-song the girl arises, says good-bye to her patron, and leaves for her
-next engagement. The girl’s owner receives from four to sixteen
-shillings, according to the fame of the girl; she receives nothing,
-unless a present is given her by some admirer. Many of them have
-beautiful bracelets and hair ornaments of pearls and jade, and many own
-gold water pipes that are very costly. They all carry little makeup
-boxes, and powder their noses whenever the desire seizes them. To
-Western eyes they are not pretty, with their red and white faces. They
-paint their forehead, nose, and around their mouth white, the cheeks and
-under-lip bright red, and to obtain the proper willow-leaf pattern for
-the eyebrows their own are shaved and others more slanting are painted
-in their place. It is hard to see any charm in these little women. They
-sing through their noses, talk very little, and that the most inane
-gossip, powder themselves, then bow and go away. They seem to have
-neither ideas, expression, nor figure.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CHINESE WOMEN AND CHAIR-BEARERS.
-
- To face p. 218.]
-
-With each one of these entertainers is a maid, who supports her as she
-sways along on her little feet, and who sees that she does not try to
-run away from her master. If the girl is popular and in much demand she
-has a sedan chair and two bearers; if a very young girl, she is carried
-on the shoulders of a strong, husky coolie. Many of them lead pitiful
-lives, and a singing girl’s only hope of escape is to become the
-secondary wife or concubine of a rich man; then, if she should be so
-fortunate as to bear a son for her husband she would hold an honourable
-position, and nothing could be said against her because of her former
-life.
-
-A Chinese gentleman is out to dinner practically every night, or else he
-is entertaining friends. He sleeps until noon, goes to his particular
-club for amusement and to meet his friends in the afternoon, and returns
-to his home in the wee sma’ hours of the night. The wife or wives stay
-at home and take care of the house and children. No Chinese lady ever
-dines at a restaurant; in fact, no Chinese lady ever eats at the same
-table with her husband; he would “lose face” if he ate with a woman.
-Although a lady is never seen dining in public, she frequently gives
-dinner parties to her friends and relatives. The courtyards are then
-filled with the chattering chair-bearers, who, squatting on their
-haunches as only an Eastern servant can, drink innumerable cups of tea
-served by the servants of the hostess. The guests are met at the
-entrance to the women’s quarters by the lady of the house, and a great
-many bows are made, varying in depth according to the rank of the guest.
-
-Each guest has a maid, who from time to time brings her mistress a
-vanity box, from which is extracted powder and rouge; and she, like her
-frailer sister, the sing-song girl, applies a little more white to her
-already whitened nose, or rouges her cheeks, or touches a little red
-paint to the lower lip. Paint and powder are not confined to the women
-of the amusement class, as the Chinese lady (that is, the younger ones;
-older women do not make up at all) paints her face more than is
-beautiful to foreign eyes. Even the hands are not forgotten, and within
-the palms the rouge brush is used. The hands of a Chinese lady are
-beautiful—long, slender, and delicate, looking as helpless as a flower.
-In the olden time long fingernails were worn as a mark of ladyhood, and
-were often covered with jade or gold, telling plainly that the wearer
-belonged to the leisured class and did not need to toil. In fact, the
-whole expression of a Chinese lady is helplessness. From her exquisitely
-coiffured head, with its mass of pearl and jade, to her tiny feet, on
-which she sways instead of walks, she impresses one as a dainty piece of
-jewellery, too fragile for real life. The small feet accentuated this,
-but now they are passing, and the new woman of China is not binding her
-daughter’s feet.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BOUND FEET OF CHINESE WOMAN.
-
- To face p. 221.]
-
-The curse of footbinding does not fall so heavily upon women who may sit
-and embroider, or if needs must travel can be borne upon the shoulders
-of their chair-bearers; but it is upon the poor girl, whose parents hope
-to have one in the family who may better their fortunes by a rich
-marriage, and, hoping thus, they bind their feet. If this marriage fails
-and she is forced to work within her household, or, even worse, if
-poverty compels her to work in the fields, or add her mite gained by
-most heavy labour to help fill the many eager mouths at home, then she
-should have our pity. We have seen the small-footed woman pulling heavy
-boats along the tow-paths, or leaning on their hoes to rest their tired
-feet while working in the fields of cotton. To her each day is a day of
-pain, and this new law forbidding the binding of the feet of children
-will come as a blessing from the gods. But it will not pass at once, as
-so many now loudly proclaim; it will take at least three generations:
-the children of the present children will quite likely all have natural
-feet. The people in the country, far from the noise of change and
-progress, will not feel immediately that they can wander so far afield
-from the old ideas of what is beautiful in their womenkind.
-
-The most noticeable thing about a Chinese woman, poor as well as rich,
-is her hair: it is jet-black, and made shiny and smooth with a paste
-until not a strand is out of place. At certain times of the year small
-wreaths are made from tiny yellow flowers and placed around the knot at
-the back. The hair is never untidy, and the artistic disorder of the
-hair of the foreign woman is secretly much disliked by the Chinese. The
-late Empress-Dowager once gave the wife of a foreign Minister a set of
-combs as a present. The Minister’s wife was delighted, as the gift was
-enclosed in an elaborate silver box, and she did not see the subtle
-suggestion in the present, over which the Chinese of the province
-chuckled for many a day.
-
-A party of Chinese ladies presents a very gay appearance. They wear silk
-or satin, nearly always brocaded and often heavily embroidered. In the
-winter, as the houses are not heated, many furs are worn, but almost
-entirely, except in the case of sable, as linings for the silken coats.
-One garment is put on over the other until the right degree of warmth is
-obtained. Instead of speaking of degrees of cold, the Chinese say it is
-three-coat weather or five-coat weather. The children are clothed in
-wadded garments, so thick that the overdressed babies look like little
-round balls and can scarcely move. In the summer the ladies wear
-delicate gauzes over their undergarments of grass-linen.
-
-Nearly every province in China has its own customs and peculiarities in
-dress as well as in everything else, but they all agree on the rich reds
-and blues, the purples and mauves for the making of their jackets, while
-their wide, skirt-like trousers are often of a much deeper colour than
-the jacket and trimmed with a wide band of black. The mixture of tints
-sounds most incongruous to foreign ears, but Chinese women have the
-faculty of weaving the most clashing hues into a work of harmonious art.
-Except in the case of an old lady, black is seldom worn, and as white is
-the colour of mourning, it is seen only on occasions of sorrow. A
-Chinese lady can never understand why European babies are dressed in
-white. Children are the symbols of happiness, and it seems to them most
-inappropriate to garb them in sorrow’s colours. All the gayest and
-brightest colours of China’s dye-pots are made to produce the clothing
-for China’s children.
-
-The dress of the Chinese woman, rich or poor, is very modest, fastening
-close around the neck, with sleeves coming to the hands and the loose
-jacket formed so as to disguise the lines of the body. European women
-are severely censured in China because of their _décoletté_ gowns and
-tight dresses, which seem to the Chinese the height of vulgarity. When
-one of the Imperial princes was _en route_ to England, he attended his
-first foreign dinner in Shanghai. About twenty-five of the guests were
-English and American ladies, dressed in their most elaborate gowns,
-which means extreme _décoletté_. The attachés of the prince had tried to
-prepare his highness for the sight he was to witness; but they had
-evidently underestimated its startling qualities, because when the
-prince arrived and gave one amazed look at his hostess and the line of
-waiting ladies he was nonplussed. He looked pitifully for his
-interpreter, and, not receiving aid from him, put down his head, shut
-his eyes, and bravely stumbled around the room, groping blindly for each
-lady’s hand, as he had been informed that he should shake hands with
-them. This was another serious breach of Chinese etiquette, as no
-Chinese man must ever touch a woman. The Chinese views in regard to
-modesty connected with the dress of women has caused the missionaries in
-the interior to expurgate from the magazines that may by chance fall
-into the hands of Chinese visitors all pictures of lightly clad ladies
-who are used to advertise soaps and powders and the underwear of our
-American markets.
-
-The Chinese are very fond of their children. They say, “In the children
-our parents return to us; in the children we live again.” When ladies
-visit each other they always ask for the children, who are brought in by
-the nurses. With their jackets of red, their trousers of bright green or
-purple, their baby-caps with its rows of tiny brass Buddhas that shine
-and glitter like gold, and the mark of red paint on the forehead or on
-the tip of the tiny nose, they look like brilliant little elfs. The
-girls are dressed quite as richly as the boys, and it is to the interest
-of the nurse to make the children as attractive as possible, because the
-pleased visitor generally gives her a small present of money wrapped in
-red paper.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- AN OLD-FASHIONED CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL.
-
- To face p. 224.]
-
-Visiting a high-class Chinese lady, one is impressed with the number of
-children and servants that seem to be swarming over the place. When one
-of a family has distinction or wealth, all the poor relatives come to
-dwell with him. Li Hung-chang built a home in Shanghai in which to live
-when he should retire from private life. When asked why he built so far
-from his home province, which was contrary to Chinese custom, he said he
-built as far as possible from his native town, hoping that his poor
-relations could not obtain the money with which to come to Shanghai.
-
-The servants in a Chinese family are not expensive, so far as wages are
-concerned, but they cost a great deal in perquisites. They rarely
-receive more than eight shillings a month, but they are given their
-food, and they help themselves lavishly to anything they may desire.
-They dress themselves from the old clothing of the family, freely take
-the hairpins and the toilet articles of the mistress, clothe their
-children from the common wardrobe, and, in fact, are a part of the
-family.
-
-There is a peculiar democratic custom which servants may claim, but
-which is seldom used—the right of reviling the family when discharged.
-The youngest son of Li Hung-chang lived next door to me, and an old
-serving-woman was discharged for a reason that evidently did not appeal
-to her sense of justice. She sat beneath the gateway and for three hours
-called down curses upon the Li family at the top of her voice. This
-happened on one of the principal residence streets of Shanghai, and the
-police passed and repassed, but no one tried to stop her. The house
-steward made two or three feeble attempts to persuade her to leave, but
-she would turn her facile tongue upon him, and he would gather his
-skirts in his hands and start on a most undignified run for the house,
-evidently believing discretion to be the better part of valour. At the
-end of three hours, when she was completely exhausted, she was led away.
-
-The Chinese lady and her servants gossip together as friends, rooms are
-entered without warning, conversations interrupted, and suggestions
-offered which, to the foreigner, seem to be of the grossest
-impertinence. This intimacy is due partly to the restricted life the
-lady leads, and partly to the fact that many of the servants are distant
-relatives. Practically the only news from the outside world that comes
-to the woman behind the walls is brought by her sons or by the servants.
-She makes few visits, and these usually at the home of some relative,
-entering her closely covered chair within her courtyard and carried
-swiftly to the courtyard of the house where she is to visit. There is no
-such thing as “calling” between the wives of men who are mutually
-interested in affairs or who are business associates. The wife of a
-Treaty Commissioner called upon the wives of the Chinese officials who
-were associated with her husband in conducting the treaty. They were
-very polite and returned her call, but are still wondering _why_ she
-called.
-
-The wife of a consul wished to give a luncheon to the wife of the Mayor
-of Shanghai. She asked the interpreter who was assisting her in the
-arrangements if other Chinese ladies of the same rank might be asked.
-The interpreter said, “No; a Chinese lady would rather not meet women
-other than relatives.”
-
-The Chinese wife lives entirely for her family and with her family. She
-rarely goes to a public place of amusement, although in some of the
-ports, like Shanghai and Canton, entire families are seen at the Chinese
-theatres. Theatrical companies come to the houses of the rich and
-official class for the amusement of guests, and story-tellers and
-musicians, nearly always blind, go from door to door asking to be taken
-into the women’s courtyards to help while away the dreary hours.
-Astrologers and fortune-tellers pass along the resident streets,
-striking their little gong to attract the notice of the women behind the
-walls. They are extremely clever, and cast horoscopes in a manner
-similar to that of the Egyptians of olden times. They are very popular
-among the Chinese women, as are fortune-tellers with women of all races.
-
-We are prone to sympathize with the Chinese woman because of the
-plurality of wives, but one sees little evidence of the need of our
-sympathy. The Chinese have a saying: “The head wife should cherish the
-inferior wives as the great tree cherishes the creepers that gather
-round it.” I do not know whether this sage advice is always followed,
-but I have seen the several wives of many officials, all friendly as
-sisters and all working for the common good of the home.
-
-I called upon the wife of an official and was met at the door by two
-ladies. One of them was a very old Chinese lady, with the smallest bound
-feet that I have ever seen; they could not have been more than 2½ inches
-in length. She was partially supported on one side by a servant, and on
-the other by a beautifully dressed Manchu woman. After I was seated in
-the place of honour at the left of the elderly lady, and tea was
-brought, I asked the usual question, “What is your honourable age?” She
-replied, “Sixty-two”; then, as always follows, I said, “How many
-children have you?” She replied, “Five.” I asked their ages, and, to my
-astonishment, heard her say that the eldest was seventeen years and the
-youngest two months. When I could find words to continue the
-conversation, I turned to the Manchu lady and asked her practically the
-same questions. She replied that she was thirty-five years old, was the
-mother of five children, the eldest being seventeen years and the
-youngest two months. Then I realized that the first wife had no
-children, but, according to Chinese custom, claimed as her own all
-children born to the secondary wives.
-
-The custom was further exemplified by the wife of a magistrate who was
-calling upon me, accompanied by the second wife. After the usual
-questions in regard to age and health, I asked this lady how many
-children she possessed. She looked at me in a puzzled manner for a
-moment, then turned to the other wife and, keeping track of the names by
-turning down a finger at each count, said: “Let me see—how many children
-have I? Tsai-an has three, Wo-kee has five—that is eight; Ma-lu has
-two—ten; Sin Yun has four—fourteen; Sih-peh two—sixteen; and you have
-three”; then, turning to me, she said, “I have nineteen children.”
-
-I have a Chinese friend who lived in Canton until he became involved in
-some political trouble that caused him to leave for Shanghai, where he
-would be under the protection of the foreign settlements. He left behind
-him his mother, four wives, and sixteen children. He became lonely in
-his exile, and asked his mother to send him a couple of his wives. She
-wrote him that they were busy attending to the education of their
-children, and that they did not speak the dialect in Shanghai and would
-feel like strangers; consequently it would be better for him to marry a
-couple of women native to the province, who would be more contented. He
-took her advice.
-
-There is an American woman doctor in Shanghai who goes to the homes of
-the rich Chinese in the practice of her profession. I asked her one day
-if she knew the wife of Mr. Lu, a prominent merchant who had a most
-beautiful home on the smart drive in Shanghai. She replied that she knew
-a part of her—numbers one, four, seven, and eleven. A rich man is only
-restricted in the number of wives he may possess by his ability to
-support them. Gossip says—I do not know how true it is—that Yuan Shi-kai
-has the unlucky number of thirteen wives beneath the roof-tree of the
-President’s palace in Peking.
-
-One would naturally suppose that endless complications of a disagreeable
-nature, leading to quarrels and bitterness, would arise, yet there does
-not seem to be more unhappiness in the average Chinese home than in
-those of any other country. The first wife, she who has been chosen by
-the parents, is the head of the household, and her word is law, the
-other wives practically occupying the position of servants. That is the
-theory, but in actual practice she who is fortunate enough to be the
-mother of sons, or perhaps the last girl-wife, is generally the
-favourite, and wields great influence over the master of the household.
-I said to a woman calling upon me one day that I should not feel so
-badly after the first wife was chosen to replace me, but that the choice
-of my immediate successor would make me very unhappy. She looked
-astonished, and said: “That depends entirely upon the woman. If she is
-agreeable and pleasant, it is a pleasure to have her in the family.
-Often a first wife chooses a second.”
-
-We of the Western world look upon a great many wives as a luxury only to
-be enjoyed by the very rich. I have a friend who is very intimate in a
-Chinese family in which there are five wives. Since hearing her talk I
-have changed my mind in regard to the luxury of the plurality of wives.
-In this household the first wife lives with the husband’s family at
-their country place; the other four live with him. The husband supplies
-a cook for the common use of the family, and this cook provides rice,
-the staple article of food for the household. Each wife is given a
-servant and one pound a month with which to buy her luxuries, and once a
-year she is given a complete suit of silk or satin clothing, and if a
-favourite, I presume she receives jewels, etc., from her husband. A man
-told me that in the interior of China (Shanghai, Peking, and some of the
-larger cities are much more expensive) he could support easily his four
-wives and fourteen children on an income of £200 a year.
-
-There are many foolish women who marry attachés of the Chinese embassies
-in England and America, or, more foolish still, who marry a Chinese
-merchant. They are, in fact, marrying the romance of the East
-represented to them in the person of the suave little almond-eyed man,
-and they pay bitterly for their mistake if they ever return to their
-husband’s country. They are recognized by neither Chinese nor
-foreigners, have no social standing in any community, and lead an
-existence that calls for pity.
-
-There lived in Shanghai a man who had once been a secretary of the
-Legation in London. He had a great career ahead of him until he married
-an Englishwoman, when he was ordered home, degraded, and lived for years
-as the petty official in the office of the mayor of the city, at a wage
-scarcely liveable even for a Chinese. His wife, recognized by neither
-English nor Chinese, became addicted to opium and drink, and died after
-a few years of unhappiness. A woman doctor told me that she found the
-body lying in an outhouse, on a bundle of straw, waiting for burial,
-where finally it found a resting-place in a Chinese cemetery.
-
-A few years ago a woman came to the English Consul in Nanking and asked
-for protection. She had married a Chinese merchant in London, and on his
-return to his own country he met with business reverses that reduced him
-practically to the position of a coolie. She had been forced to go into
-the paddy-fields transplanting rice. It is bad enough to see a Chinese
-woman standing in the mud and water to her knees, doing this
-back-breaking work, but it would be heartrending to see a woman of our
-race toiling alongside of the ignorant Chinese peasant, under the rays
-of the tropical sun, which beats down so pitilessly upon the exposed
-rice-fields. The Consul was extremely sorry for the woman, but could not
-interfere in the domestic life of a Chinese subject. When she found
-nothing could be done for her, she took the little round ball of sleep
-with which so many Chinese wives pass across the bridge of death—opium.
-
-If these women who think that it would be such a wonderful experience to
-live in the glorious East, of which they have read most glittering
-tales, would realize that when the man returns to his homeland his
-parents have the right of choosing a wife for him, who is his real wife,
-and the poor foreign woman is reduced to the position of a concubine, I
-think many of them would not take a step so fatal to happiness. Dr.
-Barchet, of the Baptist Mission near Ningpo, saw an American woman
-living in a small village who was one of four wives, all occupying the
-same peasant’s cottage. When asked why she did not return to her
-homeland, she said that she was ashamed to have her people learn of her
-great mistake, as she married against their wishes. The bad air and
-coarse food were having their effect upon this delicately raised girl,
-and she was a victim to the great white plague that claims so many lives
-in China.
-
-Suicide is very common among the women of China. When the mother-in-law
-becomes too oppressive, or life becomes intolerable from other causes,
-the wife often takes the law into her own hands and takes opium or jumps
-into the well. She then not only receives surcease from her sorrows,
-but, according to Chinese superstition, her spirit will linger around
-the home, haunting and tormenting the person who was the cause of her
-taking the fatal step.
-
-There is very little intercourse between foreign and Chinese women. The
-latter do not seem to care about making the acquaintance of the women
-from over the seas. It is only of late years that the wives of foreign
-officials in Shanghai have had any intercourse with the families of the
-local officials. Such intercourse consists simply in an interchange of
-calls, and a luncheon given once a year by the wife of the senior
-Consul, and returned by the wife of the Chinese taotai or mayor. There
-can never be any degree of friendship between the Chinese woman and the
-European. Their lives are radically different; the Chinese woman’s
-ideals are not the same as those of her foreign sister. Their only
-common subject of conversation is in regard to their children; and even
-there a bar is soon put across the conversation, as the Chinese mother
-has different hopes and ambitions for the future of her children than
-those of the woman from England or America. She knows nothing of the
-outside world, and her only subjects of conversation relate to household
-gossip, clothes, and the actions of her friends. In Shanghai a society
-is formed that is trying to bring the women of all nationalities into
-touch with one another, but it is not a very great success so far as the
-Chinese lady is concerned. She feels awkward and ill at ease in the
-presence of these women, who talk so easily on matters of which she
-knows nothing, and she much prefers the quiet of her courtyards, amidst
-the life she understands.
-
-When a Chinese lady is persuaded to go into the world she is always most
-dignified, even under embarrassing circumstances. I once gave a luncheon
-for the wife of a Governor of a province, to which the wives of the
-consuls and a few other ladies were invited, about twenty in all. When
-the guest of honour arrived all the other guests rose to meet her. As
-she entered the doorway her tiny bound feet stepped upon a rug, which
-slipped from beneath her, and instead of swaying gently across the room
-she sat down and slid to the feet of her astonished hostess. She was
-helped to rise by the frightened guests, and turned and shook hands with
-them gravely, without a flicker of the eyelids to indicate that sliding
-was not the usual mode of entering a drawing-room.
-
-The Chinese lady is trained not to show emotion of any kind. Her face,
-to be beautiful, must be absolutely placid, care-free, “like unto the
-full moon in its glory.” They consider the foreign woman extremely ugly,
-with their long, care-lined faces. They say that if it were not for the
-clothing they could not distinguish men from women. Their faces, with
-their prominent noses and deep-set eyes, appear to them coarse and
-unrefined. I have seen children when suddenly confronted with a foreign
-woman scream in terror.
-
-The Chinese do not impress the casual visitor as a nervous people. It is
-said that they can bear without murmuring the most severe punishments,
-and a torture that would reduce a foreign man to frenzy will elicit only
-a groan from a member of this phlegmatic race. The women seem to share
-with their menfolk in this lack of “nerves.” I once made a visit to the
-wife of the city magistrate, whose home was in the official “yamen.” She
-showed me over her house, and on entering her bedroom I went to the only
-window in the room to see what kind of a view was to be obtained. What
-was my horror to find that the window looked directly upon the
-punishment courtyard, where a man was then being held down upon his face
-and a bamboo vigorously applied by the lictor. The moans of the victim
-could be faintly heard, and what it would be in the summer-time, when
-the windows were open, could very well be imagined. I turned to my
-hostess and said, “How frightful! How can you stand it?” She shrugged
-her shoulders and said, “Oh, one becomes used to it.”
-
-The Chinese woman is very devout, and observes all the feast days and
-days of fasting. It is really the woman who keeps up the religion of
-Confucius and Buddha. An official who had just returned from sacrificing
-to the dragon who was supposed to have swallowed the sun at the time of
-an eclipse, was asked if he believed in this dragon. He laughed and
-said, “Of course not.” “Then,” the curious questioner continued, “why do
-you do it?” He said, “Why do men in America go to church? Mainly because
-their wives wish them to go. It is the same here. It is the women who
-are the spiritual force of China. It is they who are devout, and it is
-they who keep open the temples and preserve the belief in the gods.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WHEELBARROW AND COOLIE—USED IN PLACE OF WAGONS IN TOWNS AND COUNTRY
- VILLAGES NEAR SHANGHAI.
-
- To face p. 236.]
-
-The Chinese woman’s religion is difficult of definition, but whatever
-she is, a follower of the teachings of Confucius or of the Great Buddha,
-she turns to her gods both in time of trouble and in time of
-thanksgiving. It is a real factor in her life. Buddhism has a great
-festival in the spring, about the time of our Easter. Then the roads are
-covered with processions of women going or coming from the temples. All
-ranks are seen—the lady borne swiftly along in her sedan chair with the
-spirit money hanging from the poles; the middle-class woman riding on
-the passenger wheelbarrows with four or five of her friends, with her
-incense and candles in her lap; and the poor woman trudging along the
-stone-covered road, carrying her offerings in a basket of rice-straw
-which she has woven at home. When they arrive at the temple they are all
-of one great sisterhood. The spirit money of rich and poor alike is
-placed in the great incense-burner in the outer courtyard, where it goes
-up in flames to the gods. Then the temple is entered, the candles are
-lighted, and the incense is placed before the particular deity whose
-kind offices they implore; the head is touched to the floor, prayers are
-uttered, and the woman returns to the courtyards, where she may pass the
-time with her friends, feeding the carp in the ponds or admiring the
-great trees which are found within the courts of many of the big
-temples. If a special boon is to be asked, or if there is doubt and
-trouble, she takes a hollow bamboo vase, about the size of a quart
-measure, in which are a couple of dozen sticks of slit bamboo. She
-kneels three times, touching her head to the floor each time, then
-shakes the bamboo with a rotary motion until one of the sticks detaches
-itself from the others and falls to the floor. This she takes to a
-priest, who reads the number upon it and gives her a slip of yellow
-paper covered with Chinese characters, and from it she will find the
-answer to her prayers. It takes considerable imagination to obtain
-solace from one of these pieces of paper, as they are made to fit all
-cases, and carry about as much meaning as does the “fortune” on the card
-handed one by the figure in the slot-machine for which we pay a penny.
-
-The gods are not only worshipped at the temples, but religious adoration
-plays an important part in the home life. Over the kitchen stove, in a
-niche, reposes the household god. From that high place he watches all
-that goes on within the household. He knows the sins of commission and
-the sins of omission. Once a year he is taken down and with great
-ceremony burned and sent up to the Great God to report upon the actions
-of the household for the year, and a new god is installed in his place.
-In the meantime he is propitiated in various ways. The first thing in
-the morning a small bowl of rice and another of water is placed before
-him, and incense and candles are burned daily at his feet to gain his
-favour.
-
-Priests are frequent visitors at the homes, and religious ceremonies
-attend all the great family events, like the first shaving of the baby’s
-head, or that most important day when the mother attains her fiftieth
-year. This is a day of general rejoicing, when her children unite and
-buy the happy mother the greatest and most precious present she can
-receive—her grave-clothes. They are presented amidst much feasting, and
-chanting of prayers, and burning of candles and incense, and the mother
-is congratulated by all her friends for the blessing of such filial
-children.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- THE RED CHAIR OF MARRIAGE
-
-
-The home must have its basis in marriage, and to that important episode
-in woman’s life the greatest attention is given. In China, as in India,
-the betrothal ceremony is as binding as the marriage, although I am told
-that the “new woman” of China is rebelling at the child betrothals and
-the lack of freedom granted her in the choice of a mate. It is said that
-in Shanghai a couple who have been betrothed in childhood by their
-parents, on arriving at marriageable age, may go before a magistrate and
-repudiate the agreement, and in many instances their cases have been
-upheld even against the protests of father and mother. This shows the
-most extreme progressiveness of present-day China, as hitherto a child,
-especially a girl, was simply a chattel to be disposed of according to
-the dictates of the nearest male relative. Still, with the exception of
-the foreign settlement of Shanghai, the old customs of betrothal and
-marriage prevail, and the principals in the marriage have very little to
-say in regard to the disposal of their future. Often children are
-betrothed before their birth by parents, who, being good friends and
-desiring to unite the families, agree that if a boy is born in one
-family and a girl in the other, they shall marry. Other matches are made
-by a professional “go-between,” who is employed by the parents of either
-the boy or girl to find a suitable alliance for their child. This
-“go-between” is so thoroughly recognized that the Chinese have a saying,
-“Without a go-between no happy marriage can be effected.”
-
-After the search culminates in the discovery of the bride and groom of
-equal social standing and endowed with the proper amount of this world’s
-goods, the names of the girl and boy are written upon a paper and taken
-to the necromancer, who decides whether the marriage will be fortunate.
-Every child is born under the protection of some animal; if the
-protecting animal of the daughter is a sheep and that of her fiancé a
-lion, naturally they should not marry. But if the guardian animal of the
-bride-to-be should be a bird, they will live in peace with one another.
-The girl must be thirteen or fifteen or seventeen years of age, as an
-even number would be most unlucky. Seventeen years is about the average
-marriageable age of a Chinese girl at present, although formerly they
-married when hardly more than children.
-
-The marriage customs are essentially the same all over China. The
-husband gives a certain sum of money to the bride’s parents, which
-varies with the position of the families. Among the poor the girl is
-practically sold, although the money is supposedly used for the purchase
-of the wedding outfit. The bride’s standing in the family of the husband
-often depends largely upon the trousseau and the furnishings she takes
-with her to her new home.
-
-The outfit a girl of the middle class should take with her, in order
-that she might command the proper respect of her new relatives, should
-include three red trunks, one table, two chairs, one wardrobe, three
-tubs, two buckets, one washstand, one dressing-case, a set of scissors,
-a footstove, a teapot, wine-pot, two candlesticks, a basin, sugar-bowl,
-tea-caddy, one set of cups, a complete set of bowls and dishes, two
-wadded quilts, two embroidered pillows, embroidered curtain for the bed,
-and a complete outfit of clothing.
-
-This donation of the bride’s parents to the formation of a new home is
-carried before the bride in the wedding procession. Often musicians
-herald the coming of a bride, who, from her closely covered red chair,
-watches with beating heart the procession taking her to her new
-mother-in-law, who can make of her future home a prison or a palace of
-love. When she finally arrives at the house, that is decorated with red
-hangings and long scrolls of red silk and flowers, both real and
-artificial, she sees her husband for the first time as she steps over
-the threshold. After the one quick look, they go before the ancestral
-tablet, and, kneeling, touch their heads three times to the floor. Thus
-she shows that she is now one of the family, worshipping her husband’s
-ancestors instead of those of her own family; and after prostrating
-themselves before her husband’s parents and drinking from the same cup
-as a symbol of their unity, they retire to a room, where they sit upon
-two red chairs and the merry-making begins. Their friends come in, and,
-facing them, try to make the bride laugh, showing that she will be a
-most frivolous woman. There is much music, feasting, and playing of
-tricks on this joyous occasion, and for this little woman, dressed in
-red satin embroidered in gold, with a big crown upon her head and
-bead-fringe hanging over her face, the three days of the wedding
-festivities are most wearying. But she realizes that she must enjoy them
-if she can, because after they have passed she settles down into the
-daughter-in-law, which too often proves to be almost the place of a
-slave, or at the most a household drudge. One can imagine the discord
-and strife there is within a household where there are several sons who
-are married, each bringing his wife to his parents’ home. I knew a
-family of grandparents, parents, and children numbering thirty-eight,
-all living in one modest house. We can understand the Chinese savant
-making the character for discord a roof with two women under it.
-
-Often in a rich girl’s dowry are slave-girls, and although it is really
-against the law to own slaves, it is, in fact, one of the great evils of
-China. These helpless people are owned by even the poor. The mother of
-my maid possessed two slave-girls whom she had bought when very young.
-She treated them well, and when they grew to marriageable age expected
-to find husbands for them, giving them an outfit of clothing and a small
-dowry. In times of famine girls are sold for very small amounts of money
-or exchanged for the more precious rice. This seems most cruel; but in
-order that the rest of the family may live, one must be sacrificed. When
-everything of value is sold, when the winter clothing is in the
-pawnshop, when there is no rice to give to crying children, then there
-is but one thing left for the despairing mother, she must sell her
-daughter. Chinese mothers are the same as mothers from all over the
-world, and she only parts with her little girl as a last resort, to the
-merchants who follow the disasters and fatten on the misery of the
-Chinese peasant. When it has become known that a famine has made
-desperate the poor of a province, the merchants from the tea-houses and
-the brothels of the great cities go to the little towns and villages in
-the track of the famine, and buy the girls from the fathers and mothers,
-who can see nothing but death ahead for all unless they sacrifice one.
-The clever, pretty girls are trained for the tea-houses, inmates of
-brothels, or concubines of rich men. The ugly, stupid ones are
-domestics, and often are most cruelly treated.
-
-The owners prefer buying the girl very young, from five to seven years
-of age, when she can be more easily trained. If she is a pretty girl,
-her feet must be bound, and if this is a cruel operation under the
-tender hands of a mother, how much more dreadful it may become when
-attended to by some one whose only thought is to profit by the girl’s
-beauty!
-
-The slaves in a rich family fare very well. Each child is given one or
-two personal servants, and when the children grow up and marry they
-follow them to the new home. Often a pretty, attractive slave-girl
-becomes the secondary wife of her master, and if she should be so
-fortunate as to bear him sons, she ranks with her mistress in the honour
-given her within the household.
-
-There is a home in Shanghai for the rescue of little girls whose
-mistresses are more than ordinarily cruel. There is also a branch of the
-Florence Crittenden work for the rescue of girls sold to tea-houses. It
-is very hard for the people who are engaged in this good work to obtain
-the girls unless they are so badly treated that it comes to the notice
-of the magistrate, who may send the girl to the home for a given period.
-
-I saw a pitiful case at a hospital at Soochow. We were sitting in the
-clinic when a very pretty woman came in and threw herself on her knees
-before the doctor and began to cry. She said between her sobs: “Oh,
-foreign doctor, help me to get away, help me, help me!” She was a
-respectable girl from Ningpo who had been sold by her husband to a place
-in Soochow for four years. She loathed the life, and when for the first
-time she had eluded the old woman who always goes out with these
-unfortunates to see that they do not get away, she had appealed to the
-only hope she knew. Yet that appeal was useless, as nothing could be
-done for her. She was nothing but a chattel of her husband, according to
-Chinese law, and he had a perfect right to sell her if he wished. I saw
-another pretty girl of sixteen who had been sold for eighty dollars to
-the same place. She came to the hospital to have her back treated, as
-she had been severely beaten with a brick because she would not make
-herself sufficiently pleasing to a guest.
-
-But the average Chinese girl goes to her husband’s home quite likely
-within a short distance of her girlhood village, and passes a most
-uneventful life, one day being exactly like another unless broken by the
-ceremonies attending the births, weddings, and deaths of her husband’s
-people. Every village is surrounded by trees and is exactly like its
-neighbour, with its one-story, thatched-roof houses, or, perhaps, if the
-owner is especially prosperous, the pointed roofs may be formed of
-blue-grey tiling. Part of the front yard is beaten and made smooth to be
-used for threshing the rice, the front room of the house is used for the
-storing of the farming implements, and the other rooms are given to the
-different members of the family according to their needs. There is no
-light and little ventilation in these rude village homes. Windows are
-expensive and cold, as the houses are not heated in the winter. The
-mothers may be seen sitting in their doorways, holding in their hands
-brass hand-warmers, in which are a few burning coals of charcoal, and
-under their feet are the braziers which provide the only heat for these
-poor people during the cold months of the year.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- RAIN-COATS OF CHINESE WORKMEN.
-
- To face p. 246.]
-
-The life lived by these village people is life reduced to its simplest
-form. The main food is rice and a little cabbage. Meat is an unknown
-quantity unless on special feast days. Beef is not used, as the cow is a
-beast of burden, and the Chinese have the same feeling in regard to its
-flesh that we have for the flesh of horses. Ducks, chicken, eggs, fish,
-crabs, snails, and clams are the poor man’s luxuries. No hole is too
-muddy nor water too filthy for a fish-net to be drawn across it, or for
-the little crowd of boys who catch the crabs to help fill the family
-pot.
-
-The question of clothes is a simple one and easily solved. The father
-wears a pair of blue cotton trousers in the summer, while the mother
-wears the same style garment with the addition of an apron effect which
-covers the bust. An amulet and a string are sufficient clothing for the
-children during the warm days, but when winter comes the wadded clothing
-must be brought forth, often from the pawnshop, where it goes in the
-spring to obtain money to buy the seed for planting.
-
-The great prayer which rises from the heart of all Chinese women, rich
-and poor, peasant and princess, is to Kwan-yin for the inestimable
-blessing of sons. “Sons, give me sons!” is heard in every temple. A
-woman is not honoured until she has sons to worship at the tablets of
-her husband’s ancestors. One of the chief reasons for divorce in China
-is the lack of sons, and if the first wife has no male children, and the
-secondary wife has borne sons to her lord, the lot of the first wife is
-very bitter. In one of the foreign hospitals in Shanghai for Chinese
-women, the wife of an official in Tientsin gave birth, much to her
-sorrow, to a girl. She was inconsolable, and would not allow the
-dreadful news to be sent to her home, and the doctors feared that she
-would take her life. But through a servant the unhappy woman saw a way
-to regain the love and respect of her family. At the same time that the
-daughter was born to her a beggar-woman in the charity department gave
-birth to a boy. She bought the boy and telegraphed her husband, “Thou
-art the father of twins.”
-
-One of the upper servants in a consulate, growing rich on the foreign
-spoils, took to himself a second wife, giving as his excuse that he had
-four daughters and no sons. At the birth of a son to the new wife the
-first wife tried to starve herself to death, and failing that, took
-opium and gained her wish. She could not survive the ignominy of being
-only the mother of girls.
-
-Sons mean so much to a Chinese mother that she feels that the gods must
-be jealous of her happiness, consequently she puts an ear-ring in one
-ear of her boy to deceive the god and make him think the loved one is a
-girl. She also calls him her “ugly one,” her “stupid one,” or simply
-gives him a number so the gods will not see how much he is loved and
-covet her treasure. There is an economic reason behind all this love for
-the man-child. A poor Chinese, a workman, cannot save enough money to
-provide for even his simple wants in his old age. Try as he may, he can
-only earn enough to live upon from day to day, but if he has sons he
-knows that when old age comes, and he can no longer work, that care will
-be given him and he will not want. There is no crime so great as the
-lack of filial piety, and the State punishes severely the son who does
-not provide for his aged parents. Indeed, of the five punishments of the
-criminal code directed against three thousand offences, disobedience or
-neglect of parents is the most severe.
-
-An illustration of this occurred not long ago in the interior of China.
-A man arose in the night at the sound of a burglar, and in the struggle
-in the dark the robber was killed. On bringing a light it was found that
-the robber was the father of the man whose house he entered. He was
-known to be a ne’er-do-well, but the unparalleled act of killing one’s
-own father aroused intense excitement in the whole province. The case
-was deemed of such importance that it could not be tried by the local
-magistrate, but it was transferred to the courts in Peking, which
-condemned the man to death, not because he killed the robber, but
-because his father had evidently been compelled to rob for a living.
-
-Another similar case came to the notice of the foreigners in Shanghai. A
-man accidentally hit his father with a hoe, causing his death. The whole
-village took the man to the city, but while on the road they met the
-magistrate, who asked them not to bring the dreadful case before him
-officially, but for the clan or village to mete out the punishment and
-then report to him. They buried the son alive.
-
-Missionaries from a town in the interior asked the American Consul to
-intervene in the case of a boy nine years old, who, while in play,
-allowed a stool accidentally to slip from his hand, hitting his mother
-on the head and killing her. He was condemned to death, but because of
-his youth was to be kept in prison until he was sixteen, when he would
-pay the penalty. The Consul did all in his power to save the boy, but,
-outside of friendly arguments, nothing could be done, as he was a
-Chinese subject and came under the jurisdiction of Chinese courts of
-law.
-
-Because of this necessity for the provision for the old age of parents,
-there are no homes for the aged nor houses for the poor in China, unless
-one excepts those established through foreign influence. Each family
-must take care of its own helpless, and if a person is so unfortunate as
-to have no family, the begging-bowl by the roadside is the only recourse
-when the years are many and the once strong arms are weak.
-
-The filial piety and respect for parents that are so strongly entrenched
-in the Chinese character causes the son to obey his father until the day
-of his death. I know a man fifty years of age who was offered the post
-of secretary of the Embassy in London, but who declined this very
-advantageous position because his mother did not want him to go to a
-foreign land. He gave up willingly the chance of a lifetime rather than
-cause sorrow to his mother in her old age.
-
-A mission in a certain town was very desirous of buying a certain piece
-of ground on which to erect a church, and the plan was balked by the
-local official. The missionary conducting the negotiations could find no
-suitable reason for the official’s action in the matter, and finally
-asked the help of his consul. The taotai was firm in his refusal, and
-offered the mission land in another part of the city for their church.
-When pressed for a reason for his refusal he finally said: “My mother
-passes that place each time she goes to her favourite temple, and she
-objects to a building holding a foreign god being erected there. She
-thinks it would pollute the good spirits of the air. I know it is what
-you call superstition, but she is my mother and I must obey her wishes.”
-
-Family life has been from time immemorial the foundation-stone of the
-Chinese Empire, and filial piety is the foundation-stone of the family
-life. The Chinese is taught that the interest of the family is always of
-greater importance than the interest of the individual. This respect and
-veneration is not only for the living, but also for the dead. The death
-days of two generations of parents are kept sacred with solemn rites,
-and every home has its family shrine, to which all the members must pay
-due reverence.
-
-This respect and worship is paid by the woman to the ancestors of her
-husband’s family, as it is her destiny on reaching womanhood to go to a
-new home and live in submission to her new parents, and burn incense
-before the shrines of her husband’s people. When she marries she
-practically leaves her home for ever. If she is returned to it—that is,
-if she is divorced—“shame shall cover her to her latest hour.” Divorce
-is very rare in China, but there are seven reasons given for divorcing a
-wife. The first is disobedience to father- or mother-in-law, barrenness,
-lewdness, leprosy, overmuch talking, and stealing.
-
-The woman is taught that her lifelong duty is obedience. Her husband
-must be looked upon as “heaven itself,” and she must pay all outward
-respect to his parents. Her first duty each morning is to bring a cup of
-tea to the bedside of her husband’s mother, and to bow her head before
-her as a sign of submission and respect. She is taught that the only
-qualities that benefit a woman are gentle obedience, chastity,
-quietness, and mercy, and that the five worst infirmities that may
-afflict a female are indocility, discontent, slander, jealousy, and
-silliness. Confucius says: “These five vices are found in seven or eight
-out of every ten women, and it is from these that arise the inferiority
-of the sex.”
-
-Generations of this teaching has made the Chinese woman into a modest,
-quiet, lovable woman, to be protected and cared for, appealing to all
-that is chivalrous in her menfolk, her very weakness her greatest
-strength.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- WHEN CHINESE WOMEN DIE
-
-
-In a country where the worship of ancestors plays such an important part
-in the religion, death has a greater meaning than it has for those of
-Western lands. The Chinese spend far too much upon the ceremonies
-connected with death, rich and poor alike vying with each other in the
-elaborate arrangements for the disposal of their dead. I met not long
-ago the funeral procession accompanying the body of a captain of labour
-to his last resting-place. He was many times a millionaire, who began
-life as a boatman. The sons boasted that they spent twenty thousand
-dollars on his funeral. There were eight native bands in the procession,
-led by the European band of Shanghai, twenty men carrying banners and
-umbrellas, about fifty men carrying scrolls, on which were written the
-name and rank of the deceased; there were over two hundred Buddhist
-priests, dressed in their sackcloth robes, and the wailing mourners and
-friends in their mourning clothes of white, followed in sedan-chairs and
-carriages. The enormous coffin was covered with red embroidered satin
-and carried by thirty chanting coolies. Within the home the walls were
-covered with white, and there were long scrolls from friends telling of
-their sympathy and of the greatness of the deceased family. At twenty
-tables, seating eight each, feasting was carried on day and night for a
-week.
-
-In the summer-time there are hundreds of deaths, and the funerals of the
-poor pass our house daily. They are very different from the elaborate
-processions of the rich men. The coffins, instead of being made of the
-finest teak or heaviest ebony, are nothing but plain, rough boxes, and
-the mourners either are on wheelbarrows or they walk to the place of the
-dead, the weeping wife being supported on each side by a friend, who
-practically carries her as she stumbles along in her grief. Paper money
-is always scattered in front of the corpse in order to pay his way into
-the new world; and often one sees either a live rooster or an imitation
-one standing on the coffin to bring back to his home one of the man’s
-three souls.
-
-The body is often kept months within the houses before a suitable day is
-found by the necromancer on which to bury him, but because of the manner
-of preparing for burial it is not insanitary to keep a corpse in the
-house for a few months. The coffins are made of hardwood of four or five
-inches in thickness. First a certain number of bags of lime are placed
-in the bottom, varying according to the weight of the person; over that
-is laid a wadded blanket, if of a rich family it is of silk and often
-embroidered, if the person be poor it is only cotton; the body is laid
-in the coffin, dressed in as handsome a suit of wadded clothing as is
-consistent with the means of the family; the ancestral tablet is laid
-upon the breast, paper money at the feet; he is covered with the blanket
-and the coffin hermetically sealed. The coffin is the most precious
-possession of the Chinese, and is often purchased years before death in
-order that they may be sure of a dignified last resting-place.
-
-We often hear stories told at women’s clubs of mothers who throw babies
-within the “baby tower” to die. These baby towers are small, round
-houses, situated on the outskirts of a city or a village for the purpose
-of permitting the poor to dispose of their dead children without the
-expense of a coffin or a funeral. The interior of the house is partially
-filled with quicklime, and a small door opening on to a slanting chute
-permits the poor mother to give her baby its final resting-place. I have
-never heard of a case of a live baby being sent to these baby towers, as
-I found that a mother’s heart is the same all over the world. My cook
-came to me one morning with his eyes red from weeping. I asked him the
-cause of his sorrow, and he told me that his three-months-old baby had
-died the evening before. He had no money with which to pay for its
-burial, so in the night, when the mother had at last fallen into a
-sleep, he softly arose and, wrapping the tiny body in a blanket, had
-laid it upon the table with twenty cents beside it in order that the
-garbage-man who came in the early morning might take it to the baby
-tower outside the city. I said to him: “But, cook, why did you not bury
-it properly? Does not your wife feel very badly?” He shook his head
-sorrowfully, and said: “Yes, she too muchee cry, but what can we do? We
-must buy rice for live babies.” That is the great secret of the stoicism
-of the Chinese race. They must buy rice for the living, and what often
-seems to us as heartlessness and cruelty is simply the effect of the
-great economic pressure in a land where millions are on the verge of
-starvation, and where the lack of a day’s work means the lack of a day’s
-food.
-
-In times of great epidemics rich Chinese and the guilds or clubs of
-different forms of industry, such as the Bankers’ Guild, the Tea Guild,
-or the Goldsmiths’ Guild, provide coffins for the burial of the poor,
-and in times of famine these same guilds are most generous to their less
-fortunate brothers. Near Soochow is a tomb of a man who gave his entire
-fortune to relieving the wants of the people of his province during a
-time of famine. He is buried in the most picturesque spot in the hills,
-the road to which is bordered by a great many enormous boulders that
-rise straight up from the ground. The Chinese say that these stones
-stood up to show their respect for the great man when his body was
-carried to its last resting-place and that they are waiting his commands
-to lie down again.
-
-The dead are buried on the family estate; if there is not room for all,
-a spot is leased from a neighbour. The interment is not beneath the
-surface except in a few provinces; the coffin is set on the ground and
-the dirt is heaped over it. Sometimes the fields are so thickly covered
-with mounds that there is little room left for cultivation. Especially
-is this so in the country around Shanghai, which looks to the casual
-passer-by like one vast graveyard. Funeral expenses for parents are the
-most sacred of obligations, and it is not uncommon for the sons to part
-with everything they have in the world in order to render proper respect
-to the memory of their parents. A son is supposed to mourn three years
-for his father, during which time all occupation is to cease. In the
-case of a son holding an important official position, he often has to
-resign his post during the period of mourning, or else be called
-unfilial. Strict mourning for the mother only lasts three months,
-otherwise the same honour is paid her memory as given to the head of the
-household.
-
-When a woman is left a widow, she often vows that she will not remarry,
-and she spends her life in pious acts that cause her village or her clan
-at her death to erect a memorial to her honour. This is generally in the
-form of an arch, built of stone and erected near her village. In the
-country districts one can see many of these concrete evidences of the
-respect which the Chinese have for loyal womanhood.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- CHANGING CHINA
-
-
-China is changing so rapidly, and is becoming so thoroughly Westernized,
-especially in the ports where the Chinese come in contact with the
-foreigner, that she can scarcely be recognized by her old-time friends.
-We all admit that the change is for the better so far as the nation is
-concerned, but whether it makes for the individual good is another and
-more serious question. China is flooded with foreign adventurers who
-want her untouched wealth, and who have cast their greedy eyes upon her
-mines of coal and iron and gold. These foreigners from all classes and
-grades of society have brought dishonesty and corruption in business
-dealings to the merchant of China, whose word in the old time was as
-good as his bond. In those days when a Chinaman said, “Can putee book,”
-it was known that the contract was settled and that he would live up to
-his spoken word, whether it meant loss or profit to him. But when
-dealing with the foreigner the Chinese found that there were no old-time
-customs to bind the merchant from over the seas, except those of bond
-and written agreement. If he had any traditions of honour, he evidently
-left them in the homeland, as nothing less than a court of law would
-hold him to his contract if it seemed expedient for him to break it.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- RICE-BOATS ON CANAL, CHINA.
-
- To face p. 260.]
-
-For years the word “China” meant to the adventurer of other lands a
-place for exploitation, where money was to be obtained easily by the man
-with fluent tongue and winning ways. Even foreign officials did not
-scruple to use their influence to enter trade. In one of the great
-inland cities there was no water nearer than a river several miles away.
-A foreign official, boring an artesian well upon his place and finding
-pure, clear water, conceived the idea of boring wells throughout the
-city and bringing water to the doors of the half-million of people who
-resided in its narrow streets. He interested the officials and raised a
-sum of money, and to doubly assure the Chinese that their money was safe
-he signed the contracts, not only with his name but affixed to them the
-great seal of his Government. After a few months’ trip to his homelands,
-and a few aimless borings in the earth in search of the water that never
-came, he relinquished the project, but not the money, and the officials
-could do nothing but gaze sadly into the great holes that had taken
-their silver. They learned that wisdom comes with experience and now put
-into practice the proverb: “When a man has been burned once with hot
-soup, he for ever afterwards blows upon cold rice.”
-
-Another case in which the Chinese officials were duped by clever-tongued
-foreigners was in Ningpo. Three Americans visited that city and talked
-long and loud of the dark streets, the continual fires caused by the
-flickering lamps of oil that were being constantly overturned by the
-many children. They showed the officials the benefits of electricity,
-that a light upon each corner would make it impossible for robbers and
-evildoers to carry on their work, which must be done in darkness. They
-promised to turn night into day, to give poor as well as rich the
-incandescent lamp at no greater cost than the bean-oil wick. They were
-most plausible, and raised thirty thousand dollars as contract money.
-They left, ostensibly to buy machinery; the years have passed; they
-never have returned. Ningpo still has streets of darkness, men still
-walk abroad with lighted lanterns, the lamp is seen within the cottage,
-and will continue to be quite likely until the hills shall fade, if
-electricity depends upon the officials who once dreamed dreams of a city
-lit by a light from Western lands.
-
-This is one of the most serious handicaps of the missionary in trying to
-Christianize China. The dissolute white man is in every port,
-manifesting a lust, greed, and brutality which the Chinese, who are
-accustomed to associate the citizenship of a person with his religion,
-attribute to Christianity. It is no wonder that it is hard for the
-missionary to make converts among the people who have business dealings
-with men from Christian nations.
-
-But there are other questions besides those of business integrity
-vitally affecting the Chinese youth to-day. Along with the slight
-knowledge which they have obtained of the manners and customs of the
-Western world, they have absorbed many of its vices. With their
-rose-wine and their samshu the Chinese boy has learned to drink
-champagne and brandy. I know the father of five sons who told me that he
-would give all that he possessed in the world if he had not brought
-those sons to Shanghai.
-
-Change is now the order of the day in China, educationally as well as
-politically. We do not hear the children shouting their tasks at the top
-of their little voices, nor do they learn by heart the thirteen
-classics. The simple schoolroom, with hard benches and earthen floor,
-with a faint light striking through the unglazed windows, is no more.
-The old-time examinations at Peking have gone, the degrees which have
-been the nation’s pride have been abolished, the subjects of study in
-the schools have been completely changed. The privileges which were once
-given the scholars, the social and political offices which were once
-open to the winners of the highest prizes, have been thrown upon the
-altar of modernity. The faults of the old system of education lay in the
-stress it placed upon the memorizing of the many books whose contents
-were not always understood by the young mind, and in the lack of
-original ideas that might be expressed by a student, who must give the
-usual interpretation of the classics. Now the introduction of free
-thought and private opinion has produced an upheaval in the minds of
-China’s young men, and they say what they think, even trying to show
-that Confucius was at heart a staunch Republican, and that Mencius only
-thinly veiled his sentiments of modern philosophy. It is generally
-conceded that the newer education leads to the greater individualism
-which is now the battle-cry of China.
-
-The Chinese, both men and women, are reaching out eager hands to obtain
-for themselves the knowledge that is being brought from other lands. Yet
-this thirst for education is not a newly acquired virtue, for in no
-country is real learning held in higher esteem than in China. It is the
-greatest characteristic of the nation that in every grade of society
-education is considered above all else. As a race they have devoted
-themselves to the cultivation of literature for a longer period by some
-thousands of years than any existing nation. To literature, and to it
-alone, they look for the rule to guide them in their conduct. To them
-all writing is sacred, and the very symbols and materials used in the
-making of the written character have become objects of veneration. Even
-the smallest village is provided with a scrap-box, into which every bit
-of paper containing printed or written words is carefully placed, to
-await a suitable occasion when it may be burned.
-
-The mission schools have been the pioneers in the education of the young
-people of China, and if the teaching of Christianity has not as yet made
-many converts, the effect has been great in the spread of higher ideals
-of education, and much of the credit of the progress of the modern life
-of China to-day must be given to the mission schools, which have opened
-new pathways in the field of learning and caused the youth of China to
-demand a higher system of education throughout the land.
-
-It is said that practically all the officials in the new China are men
-who have been educated abroad or who have been in one of the many
-mission schools scattered throughout the country. They are the ones who
-have taken what they have learned of foreign lands and adapted it to the
-needs of their country; but there are others who have been abroad only
-long enough to acquire the veneer of Western education, and they are the
-young men who become the discontented ones of China.
-
-When Chinese boys go to a foreign land they have many difficulties to
-overcome. They must receive their information and instruction in a
-language not their mother tongue. They have small chance to finish their
-education by practical work in bank or shop or factory. They get a mass
-of book knowledge and little opportunity to practise the theories that
-they learn, and they are not clever enough to understand that their
-textbook knowledge is nearly all foreign to their country and to the
-temperament of their race. When they return to their home they often
-find that they have grown out of touch with their people’s ways and
-customs. They come back looking for employment, for a chance to use
-their new-found knowledge; but they feel that they should begin at the
-top of the ladder instead of working up slowly rung by rung, as their
-fathers did before them. They feel that they are entitled to be masters,
-not realizing that even with this wonderful foreign education acquired,
-experience is necessary to make them leaders of great enterprises or of
-men. It is these boys who are the teashop orators and preach the
-Socialistic dogma for which China will not be prepared for many years to
-come.
-
-The Chinese boys and girls are going too far and too fast in their
-thirst for the broader knowledge and teaching of the Western world. It
-is like the clothes that the Chinese girl is wearing, trying to imitate
-her sisters of the Occident. She has discarded the soft, clinging silks,
-the gay embroideries, the jade and flowers in her black locks, for the
-straight, dark skirt, the ugly coats, and the untidy manner of dressing
-the hair seen with the European women of the coast towns. These do not
-become her, any more than the scientific degrees become the woman who
-has been for centuries a woman of the home. We do not condemn education
-for the Chinese woman any more than we entirely condemn the change in
-the style of clothing; but they should both be adapted to the
-individual. This new education seems to be too general, the personality
-of the boy or girl being entirely left out. The youth are being made
-into a set of jelly-moulds, all looking alike, all trying to be formed
-upon the models brought them from England or America.
-
-Three things should be taken into account—who the boy or girl is, where
-he is, and where he is going. The mistake should not be made in China
-that has been made in India—that is, the turning out of a race of
-barristers and clerks from her schools. China needs technical schools
-for her boys and common sense applied to the education of her girls. I
-have been in a school for the education of the daughters of the better
-class of Chinese, where the main accomplishment for which the girl was
-applauded was her facility in rendering a piece upon the piano. I should
-have said “executing” a piece upon the piano, because that is exactly
-what is done when a Chinese girl attempts to interpret foreign music. It
-is alien to her in every way, and generations of study will not make the
-Chinese maiden a musician in the foreign sense, nor will they really
-care for the foreign music. These girls who have wasted so many hours in
-the practise of the piano will go to homes where they cannot have a
-piano, or if they did have one they would be the only persons in the
-family who would appreciate its music. It would be a conglomeration of
-bad sounds to father, mother, husband. Many feel that the young girls
-would be better employed in learning a musical instrument understood and
-appreciated by her people and one that would give pleasure to her
-husband at night, and perhaps be a factor in keeping him from the
-tea-house, and the singing girls who have a monopoly of the musical
-talent of China.
-
-Another thing that causes sorrow to the conservative fathers and mothers
-is the fact that as soon as their children receive a smattering of the
-Western civilization they immediately begin to scoff at their own modes
-of acquiring knowledge and the text-books which have trained their
-people’s minds for so many years. They become proud of the fact that
-they know nothing of the classics, and they quote Shelley, Byron, Burns,
-and Browning instead of their own beautiful poets. But, what is more
-serious for the youth of this Eastern land, this worldly knowledge seems
-to have freed his intelligence without teaching him self-control, and it
-has taken him away from the gods of his fathers without replacing them
-with others. He, like his cousin of Japan, is inclined to become
-agnostic and say, “There are no gods.”
-
-Whether the religion from the West is the religion best suited for the
-Oriental we cannot say, but whatever he receives from us must be adapted
-to fit the needs and conditions of his race and country. China must
-raise up leaders from her own people, both men and women, as her
-regeneration will come from within, not without. More and more the West
-must see that the East and the West may meet, but they can never mingle.
-Foreigners can never enter the inner door of Chinese thought or feeling.
-The door is never wholly opened, the curtain never quite drawn aside
-between the two races. They are unlike in almost every characteristic.
-The Westerner is much more a materialist than is the cultured man of
-China. To him the taste of the tea is not so important as the aroma, and
-the acquiring of wealth and honours is not so much to be desired as is
-the ability to live the leisured life, the life of thought and
-meditation, when he may sit apart from the noise and cares of the
-present day.
-
-The rush and worry of the Western world seem to have penetrated even to
-the women’s courtyard, and there is no doubt that the new China will be
-Westernized in every department of her being. But we who love China hope
-that she will not change too rapidly, that she will take what is
-necessary for her happiness from the knowledge and the mode of life of
-the Occident, but that she will touch it with her own individuality,
-making it a real part of her and not simply becoming an imitation of the
-alien people by whom she is surrounded.
-
-There is a charm about old China, and there is more than a charm about
-the old-time secluded Chinese women, who have been protected and guarded
-from life’s worries and battles, until they represent all that is most
-beautiful and feminine and demand the chivalry of the men of the world.
-
-Let the West come to China with all its modern inventions and its
-politics and educational policies, but let us always be able to find
-within its quiet courtyards the quiet, sweet-faced woman of China.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- JAPANESE WOMEN AT HOME
-
-
-I have been eight times to Japan, living in the big European hotels in
-Yokohama, Tokio, Kobe, and Nagasaki, stopping for days at a time in the
-native inns in the interior, or visiting at the homes of friends. I
-decided that my ninth trip to the little island would be different;
-consequently we planned a few months’ stay in some out-of-the-way place
-where we could keep house and live _à la Japonaise_. We had heard of the
-beauties of Hakodate, the most northern port of any size in Japan, and
-obtaining a letter to the American Consul, we wrote him asking if it
-were possible for him to find us a furnished Japanese house for the
-summer months. We were delighted to hear a few days later that he had
-found a place for us, the summer home of a rich merchant, situated on
-the mountain-side, overlooking the sea, and surrounded by giant
-cryptomerias and pines. Needless to say, we were soon on our way to this
-paradise.
-
-There were only four berths in the sleeping-car on the Northern Express,
-and we engaged two, but were not given the opportunity of using them. At
-one of the stations a prince with his retinue came on the train and
-pre-empted the entire car. He used only one of the berths, as no one
-could sleep over him, nor evidently near him, and on all the long
-journey he selfishly occupied the room by himself, while we, in company
-with the half-dozen men composing his suite, had to fit ourselves into a
-tiny compartment that should have only accommodated four. The men
-removed their elaborate outer robes, curled themselves into comfortable
-positions, and smoked and chatted or slept until a station of any
-importance was neared, when they donned their gowns, threw around their
-necks a long, stiff piece of silk on which was embroidered the Imperial
-chrysanthemum, and prepared to receive the delegation of townspeople who
-were always at the station to present an address to his Imperial
-Highness, or to send in an elaborate meal, served on beautifully
-lacquered trays.
-
-I had a good look at the prince on his entrance, and found him exactly
-like the representations of the daimios of olden times that we see on
-the fans and tea-boxes. He had the long, slim, pale face of the
-aristocrat, absolutely different from the round-faced Japanese who
-comprise the greatest proportion of the island’s population. He looked
-as if he might almost belong to another race. I was told by one of his
-men that he represented to many thousands of the people a god, as in his
-branch of the family a certain godhead had descended from father to son.
-When the train stopped for any length of time at a station, the people
-came in crowds and knelt, touching their heads to the ground, and one
-old lady kept bowing and holding up her hands, with the tears streaming
-down her face at the joy of beholding so great a divinity. He looked at
-them without seeing them at all, never showing by any motion or sign
-that there was anything to be seen except the distant hills. I do not
-see how it was possible for any human being to look so thoroughly
-impersonal at a crowd of bowing, worshipping people, when he knew he was
-the object of all the adoration. Yet he looked at them as if their faces
-were windows and their back hair the landscape.
-
-Train travel is interesting in Japan, if one will travel in the ordinary
-day coach and watch the people. The Japanese are great travellers, and
-the clack-clack of their wooden clogs makes a deafening noise at the
-stations, especially on the bridges leading over the tracks. One sees
-whole families going for an outing or on a visit to a distant relative.
-They come on the train with bundles and packages—most mysterious things
-done up in large squares of cloth. They drop their shoes before the seat
-and curl their feet under them, and proceed thoroughly to enjoy
-themselves. The seats run lengthwise of the cars, and often a little
-woman gets tired of looking out of the windows or at her
-fellow-passengers opposite, and, turning her back on the car and sitting
-practically upright, will lean her face against the side of the window
-and go to sleep. The manner in which they can sit upon their feet for
-hours impresses a foreigner. At the larger stations tea in tiny pots,
-with a little porcelain cup, is brought in by the salesmen, and “bento,”
-the lunch of cold rice, pickles, and fish of some description, is sold
-in neat boxes, the dainty lunch only costing ten cents, including a pair
-of new wooden chopsticks. The Japanese masses, like their prototypes
-everywhere, enjoy eating in public, and the car is filled with the
-divers and sundry odours of fruit, sweets, tea, and food. They are not
-noisy, and always most polite, and because of the dainty clothes of the
-women and children, and the variety of their colouring, a few hours can
-be spent quite well in studying travelling Japanese close at hand. At
-one station a party of pilgrims came on, dressed in white. They belonged
-to some club in a far northern village whose members paid a small
-assessment each week, and each year lots were chosen to judge who should
-benefit by the annual pilgrimage to some famous shrine or to Mount Fuji.
-The lucky winners in the lottery joined other pilgrims, donned the
-pilgrim’s dress, and under the direction of a guide made the one great
-visit of their lives, the wonders of which they would be able to tell
-their amazed neighbours when they returned. These would listen with
-interest, as it might be their good fortune to draw the lucky number the
-coming year.
-
-At the end of our long train ride, Amorri, we went on the small boat
-bound for Hakodate, where we were met by the Consul, a jolly, big,
-whole-hearted man, who took us, metaphorically speaking, at once to his
-bosom and became as a long-lost brother. His wife, much to our surprise,
-was a tiny little Japanese woman, no bigger than a good-sized doll, and
-as pretty as a picture. They looked so incongruous together that one was
-inclined to smile. He weighed at least 250 lb., was over six feet tall;
-and I should think that when dressed in all her finery, Mrs. Consul
-might have weighed 85 lb. She was a well-educated, well-informed little
-woman, who needed all her charm and tact to keep her unruly family in
-order. It was a big one, the last, a boy, being the pride of the
-father’s heart, and as nearly spoiled as the clever mother would allow
-him to be by his worshipping father. When I knew them better it was a
-joy to me to see how she managed these children. The father, who had
-been at one time captain of a sailing vessel, always spoke to them as if
-they were at the top of a mast on a wintry night with a cyclone blowing.
-Tommy, the irrepressible, would get up on the window seat, and his
-father would hail him in a voice that could be heard by the boats coming
-from Kamschatka: “Tommy, get out of that window seat; you’ll break your
-neck.” Tommy would not move; again his father’s stentorian tone would
-offend the evening air. The quiet little mother would turn and give a
-nod of her pretty head to Tommy, and Tommy would immediately climb down
-from his perch and proceed to behave himself as young boys should.
-
-The Consulate was partly foreign and partly Japanese, and the children
-while at home in the morning dressed in kimona and wooden clogs, but in
-the afternoon they were gay in “home” dresses and resplendent in hair
-ribbons, only showing by the little turn of the eyes that they were
-members of their mother’s race.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- JAPANESE CHILDREN PLAYING.
-
- To face p. 276.]
-
-Soon after our arrival we went to see the place that was to be our home
-for the next few months. We did not see the house until we came to the
-great gateway with its pointed roof leading into a path shaded by giant
-cryptomerias, completely guarding the house from view of the passer-by.
-This hillside garden contained about five acres of land, in which were
-winding pathways, giant pine-trees, terraces of flowers, and here and
-there a tori, a huge bronze stork, a grim stone lantern, or a calmly
-reposing Buddha to show us we were in the land of Nippon. We looked out
-over the northern ocean, dotted here and there with the sails of
-fishing-boats, or saw the smoke of a steamer coming from Kamschatka,
-Saghlain, or some of those mysterious northern ports, the names of which
-were only places on a map. After listening for awhile to the murmur of
-the surf, we visited the interior of the house, which contained five
-rooms. The furniture consisted of the matting on the floor, the sliding
-“shojis,” the fire-boxes, the cooking utensils, and dishes for the
-serving of the meals. It was necessary for us to buy our “futons”—that
-is, our bedding; but otherwise the home was completely furnished _à la
-Japonaise_. The servant problem was easily solved, as the daughter of
-the gardener wished to be our maid, the gardener would run our errands,
-and his wife would be the general superintendent of the place. I
-expected to do the cooking, as the time would be too short in Hakodate
-to train a man in matters culinary. We were soon installed, and then
-passed pleasant days in _dolce far niente_, spending our mornings in
-trips to the seashore, watching the fishermen come in with their
-boatloads of squids. Their arrival was the signal for all the women and
-children of the village to flock to the shore and unload the boats,
-then, after cleaning and pressing these ugly fish, hang them upon lines
-to dry, making the whole ocean front as far as the eye could see a
-miniature wash-Monday. We were not allowed to climb the mountain-sides
-except to a certain distance, as the hills were heavily fortified, and
-at sudden turns we were met by great signs which stated plainly in
-English, French, German, Japanese, and Russian that further explorations
-were forbidden. We never tried to disobey the laws in Japan, as these
-little people are vigorous in their punishment of offenders, to whatever
-race they may belong, and I feel that they have been justified in
-upholding the manhood of their people. In India and in China you see the
-white man treat the native with barbarous cruelty. While travelling once
-in India our servant was making up the bed in the compartment we had
-engaged on the train. A white man entered, and without one word of
-explanation, grabbed our man and beat and kicked him and nearly threw
-him out of the car. In reply to our indignant demands as to the cause of
-his ill-treatment of our servant, he said that he thought the man had
-made a mistake in the berth and was taking one for which he had paid. I
-said afterward to Ali, “Why did you not strike him when he treated you
-so brutally?” Ali replied: “Oh, mem-sahib, he was a white man. If I had
-touched him I would have lain many long days in prison.” In China also,
-on one hot day in August I saw a rickshaw coolie, naked to the waist,
-with the perspiration running down his face in streams, running swiftly
-with a heavy man inside his two-wheeled carriage. In passing by a
-crowded corner, he brushed against a white man, who was having his
-afternoon stroll. The white man angrily turned, and, grabbing the coolie
-by his hair, beat him across his bare back with his cane until he
-stopped from sheer exhaustion. The panting, perspiring coolie was
-helpless as he could not drop the shafts, and so was compelled to take
-the punishment. His patron in the carriage, a richly-dressed Chinese,
-dared not interfere because he also was a native and understood there
-was no court of justice when it was a question of a white man’s word
-against that of the yellow man. They have a saying in China, that when a
-Chinese walks along the sidewalk of his own city of Shanghai, he is
-pushed into the middle of the road by the American, who only laughs at
-him, by the Englishman, who swears at him, and by the German, who kicks
-him, but—he is pushed into the middle of the road. This could not happen
-in Japan, as the Japanese courts punish severely any one who dares to
-lay his hand in violence upon a Japanese, however lowly may be his
-station or however strong may be the provocation. While we were in
-Yokohama, an officer of an American ship had his hand severely hurt
-through the carelessness of a Japanese longshoreman. In his pain and
-first flush of anger he knocked the Japanese down, and for his
-impatience was compelled to remain six months in jail. His captain and
-his Consul tried their best to help him, but it was in vain, and he saw
-his ship sail away without him.
-
-I came very near sharing his fate while in Hakodate. The fisherman came
-to our doors each morning with his enormous baskets of fish swung over
-his shoulders. The maid, her mother, and myself, spent many interesting
-moments in turning over the scaly contents of his baskets in order to
-make our choice amongst the varied assortment he had for sale. I paid
-him by the week, and one morning was called to the kitchen by an
-indignant maid, who said the fisherman had greatly overcharged me. The
-amount was far too small, it seemed to me, to cause such keen
-excitement, and I intended to dismiss the man, saying I would pay him,
-but employ him no more. I went over to a bucket of water, and taking up
-the long-handled dipper to take a drink, and not noticing that it was
-broken, I gave it a little shake toward the fisherman, and said, “Oh, go
-away, and don’t make so much noise.” The cup part of the dipper flew off
-and hit the indignant fisherman in the eye, whereupon he immediately
-shouldered his baskets and started for the magistrate. Needless to say,
-I was frightened, and I immediately donned my bonnet and started for the
-Consulate. The Consul heard my story and sadly shook his head: “If you
-really hit that coolie and he has you arrested, I can do nothing. It
-will only make matters worse to have me to interfere, so the best thing
-for you to do is to go with me and find that fisherman; offer him half
-of your estate, but don’t get mixed up with the law in Japan.” For two
-hours we haunted side-streets, where at last we found our man, and,
-after a small money payment and a promise to take fish from him for the
-rest of the season, and practically binding myself to listen to his
-insolence as long as I was in Hakodate, he grudgingly assented to
-withdraw his charge.
-
-These itinerant dealers make housekeeping in Japan easy. Men clad in
-blue cotton coats with great straw hats on their heads and baskets piled
-high with vegetables, come to the door each morning; one passing along
-the streets both night and day can hear the cries of the travelling
-vendors, selling all that the average householder may require.
-
-Hakodate is filled with crows—monstrous, black, impertinent thieves, who
-will come boldly into the kitchen and take the fish from out the
-frying-pan. Mornings I would take a pan of corn, and in the rear of the
-house upon the hillside, and hitting upon the pan’s side with a spoon,
-would soon be surrounded by hundreds of these beady-eyed birds, that are
-almost considered sacred in this province. They were so tame that they
-would fight at my feet for the kernels, and I would be compelled to push
-them from my lap and then, much to the maid’s disgust, the greedy birds
-would follow me into the house.
-
-We used to play a game, the crows and I. I would pound on the pan until
-I had summoned fifty or sixty, then I would start the song, “Onward,
-Christian Soldiers,” and rapping on the pan for accompaniment, would
-march solemnly at the head of my serious, expectant army, up hill and
-down dale, through the house, out again, down the small paths, until
-even the maid who considered the crows her enemies, would be compelled
-to laugh.
-
-Soon I found that if I was to live as the Japanese, I certainly should
-dress in the clothes of the country, as European clothes and shoes are
-not comfortable in Japanese houses. All my friends were Japanese, and I
-found I must conform to their customs so far as was possible if I would
-be happy and not an object of curiosity. Consequently I went with the
-wife of our Consul and passed two delightful hours in choosing kimonas,
-which, if I had been allowed to exercise my taste, would have been far
-too gay for one of my years. I always associated kimonas with pinks and
-blues and riotous colours, but I found that, being a married woman, I
-must confine my choice of colours to greys and browns and soft-toned
-mauves. I could indulge my love for ornamentation in the obis, as these
-may be of stiff brocades in rose and gold, or purple and gold, or, in
-fact, any colour one may wish. I found also that the Japanese dress
-itself may not be expensive, but the price of the obis is ruinous to a
-small pocketbook. It is in these last articles of adornment that the
-Japanese lady spends her husband’s money. She buys obis and puts them
-away in her treasure-chest, only bringing them to the light of day on
-occasions of festivity. The tying of the obi is by no means a simple
-process, and I could never learn its intricacies. The end must be of a
-certain length, the big bow must be just so correctly arranged or else
-it shows that one is not _à la mode_. My friends were always lengthening
-an end or tying a little tighter the roll that gave the obi the correct
-tilt at the back. I found it necessary to practise privately for several
-days walking in the clogs before I dared try them in public. The
-Japanese have three kinds of clogs—high ones raised by two pieces of
-wood three or four inches from the ground and with a piece of leather as
-a mud-guard for use in wet weather; another pair of dress clogs were
-necessary, with the plain wooden sole covered with fine matting; and
-still another pair of sandals, which were for use around the garden or
-in places that did not necessitate rough walking. The two pieces of cord
-that pass between the great and the first toe, and by which the clog is
-held on the foot, compelled me to wear the Japanese sock, which is made
-of white cotton, like a mitten, the great toe being separated from the
-rest of the foot. These socks are short, only coming to the ankle, and
-are fastened by two or three metal clasps. The shoes are never worn in
-the house, always being left at the doorways, the thick cotton sole of
-the stocking protecting the foot. It would be as insulting to walk on
-the clean matting of a Japanese house as it would be to walk on the
-snowy damask of your hostess’s dining-table. After a few falls and many
-awkward movements I found the Japanese foot covering most comfortable,
-the foot being absolutely free; but I soon learned that my American
-stride did not conform to the close-fitting dress of the kimona, as with
-it the feet should not be set apart and one should slightly “toe in” in
-order that the folds of the kimona do not fly open. In one way Japanese
-dress is not expensive, as the Japanese lady, whatever her rank or
-wealth, does not wear jewellery—no necklaces, nor bracelets, nor
-ear-rings, nor brooches; even rings are an innovation brought in with
-foreigners. Her only jewels are the clasp of her obi fastener, generally
-a piece of chased gold, and a couple of ornamental hairpins or a comb
-for the hair.
-
-I did not attempt the hair-dressing, as that is a most complicated
-affair, and must be left to the attentions of a hair-dresser, who comes
-to the homes once or twice a week and makes the elaborate coiffures that
-add so much to the beauty of a Japanese face. Each age has its coiffure,
-and a woman never tries to disguise her age in Japan, because by her
-dress and style of hair-dressing she frankly confesses the stage she has
-reached in life. There is the baby with her shaven head, then the little
-queue tied on the crown; afterward the hair is cut square across the
-neck, like the little dolls we see in the London shops; then when she is
-ten years old the hair is divided and made into a bow knot tied with a
-piece of ornamental paper. As she arrives at young ladyhood there is the
-elaborate “shimada,” which in the case of the young woman is very large,
-and, if Nature has not been generous, helped out with tresses bought in
-the shops. The married woman has a special coiffure which grows smaller
-with age, until, when she is a matron of forty, the age when the woman
-of the Orient considers herself an old woman, it is quite small. If the
-woman is so unfortunate as to lose her husband, she cuts her hair, and
-thus shows all the world that she is a widow. The Japanese mature early,
-and old age comes to them sooner than it does to people from the West. A
-Japanese proverb says that man lives but fifty years, and rarely does
-his span exceed seventy years. In former days old age began at fifty,
-and a man then considered himself unfit for business and made over his
-name and property to his son, passing the rest of his life in ease
-without the cares of business. Old age is not a burden to the Japanese
-woman, but is a paradise to be looked for longingly. Then she, who has
-perhaps been subservient to the mother of her husband all her married
-life, knows that she will be the head of her household, with her sons
-and daughters ready to obey her, and, because of her age and motherhood,
-respected and holding a position in life denied her as a young woman.
-
-Many of these quiet, soft-voiced mothers of Japan were brought to call
-upon me by Mrs. Consul. They taught me how to serve the tea, the
-proper way of bowing, and even tried to make of me a good follower of
-the Law by taking me with them to the temples and visiting shrines and
-holy places. One kindly woman brought me a tablet for my
-“august-spirit-dwelling,” which she placed in a tiny model of a Shinto
-temple and put above the inner doorway of the hall, where I was
-supposed to burn before it each morning candles and incense, and keep
-the little cups for rice and water filled. I was well provided with
-gods, as another friend gave me a Buddha for my household shrine, and
-all the paraphernalia of service with which to worship him.
-
-Below us on the hillside was the swagger tea-house of the town, and the
-tinkle of the samisens and the singing of the pretty girls came to us
-faintly until late into the night. This pretty music, mingled with the
-sound of the surf upon the shore, was always the last sound we heard at
-night after the maid had placed the night-light, the tobacco-box, and
-the brazier for the tea at our head, and then had knelt and said
-“Goodnight.” In the morning we were wakened by a softly murmured “O
-Hayo,” and a tray of tea was respectfully slid across the matting to
-give us strength to begin the morning’s work.
-
-While in Hakodate I made the acquaintance of many Japanese ladies and
-learned their customs and the manner of their life, which is controlled
-by thoughts and ideals entirely different from those entertained by
-women of the Western world. I think I much prefer the woman of the old
-school, with her charming manners, her elaborate bows, and her
-antiquated superstitions and beliefs, to her daughter, who, like her
-sister of China, India, and Egypt, is trying too hard to wear clothes
-not made for her, and to adapt customs and usages for which she is not
-formed temperamentally or physically. The customs of the modern world
-will come to the woman of Japan, but they must be adapted to her
-conditions and not be taken _en masse_.
-
-One of the most beautiful characteristics of the Japanese is their
-reverence for old age and their intense love for children. Japan has
-justly been called the baby’s paradise, and certainly in no country does
-the home life so thoroughly revolve around the children as it does in
-Japan. Like all Eastern women, the desire for children is the most
-ardent wish of the Japanese woman’s heart. The childless wife will move
-heaven and earth in her desire to gain the blessing of motherhood. She
-will visit watering-places, offer prayers at temples, make long, irksome
-pilgrimages, wear amulets, drink strange decoctions, and allow herself
-to be imposed upon and robbed by every charlatan who claims a knowledge
-that will help her gain the craving of her heart—a child. It will,
-therefore, be imagined with what eagerness the arrival of a little
-stranger is awaited in the home, and the happiest day in the girl-wife’s
-life is the day on which they tell her she is the mother of a son.
-
-As soon as the event takes place, a special messenger is dispatched to
-notify friends and relatives while letters of announcement are sent to
-those who are not so closely related in friendship to the family. All
-thus notified must then make a visit to the new baby and either send or
-bring with them a present. Toys or clothing, always accompanied by eggs
-or a fish to bring good luck, come in great profusion, and when baby is
-about thirty days old, return presents must be made to all who
-remembered him at time of birth. When baby is seven days old he receives
-his name, and when he is thirty-one—or if a girl, when she is
-thirty-three—days old, the first important occasion of his life must be
-observed. He is dressed in his best and gayest garments, and,
-accompanied by members of his family, is taken to a temple and placed
-under the protection of one of the Shinto deities, who is supposed to
-become the guardian of the child through life. This is a day for
-present-giving also, and one especial gift must come to the child, a
-papier mâché dog, which is always placed at the head of the child’s bed
-at night as a charm against evil influences.
-
-The infant should not walk until it is a year old; but if it is so
-precocious that it commences to toddle before that time, a small bag of
-rice is laid upon its back, and it is made to stumble and fall. To walk
-before its first birthday is a sign that it will die young or else
-become a resident of a distant land. There are many superstitions
-connected with the early life of a baby. If he sucks his fingers before
-he does his thumb, he will be a help to his parents in their old age. If
-he crawls out of his covers at night, he will rise in the world, but if
-he snuggles down in the bed and is inclined to crawl towards the foot,
-it augurs that a downward course is his fate in life. If many of the
-children of a family have died in infancy, the nervous mother will make
-for this last gift of the gods a dress composed of thirty-three pieces
-of cloth collected from thirty-three different families, or she will
-shave his head until he is seven years old, or give him a girl’s name
-instead of a boy’s, thus deceiving the gods who covet her treasure. If
-baby has prickly heat, the first egg plant of the season is hung over
-the door; while suspending the empty rice-pot, still hot, over the
-baby’s head for a few moments will make him immune from that affliction
-of childhood, the measles. It passes its days tied to the back of little
-brother or sister or nurse until it can walk, then when it is two years
-old the fifteenth of November is a great day for all the babies. They
-are taken to the temple and the blessing of the gods is invoked, and the
-priests purify their bodies by waving over them a sacred wand. This is
-the occasion for showing new clothes and calling upon all friends, who
-make presents to the child.
-
-At three or four years children are sent to a kindergarten, and at six
-years they enter the Primary Schools, where there is a six-years’
-compulsory course for both boys and girls. Then it only rests with the
-parents whether the child receives a higher education, as there are in
-all towns and villages a Middle School for boys and a High School for
-girls. The average girl stops her education with the Primary School, or
-at most with the High School, but there is a University in Tokio where
-the girl may complete her education and fit herself for a vocation. But
-if she has been six years at Primary School and four years at High
-School, she is sixteen years old, and of a marriageable age, although
-the average girl does not marry until she is eighteen or nineteen.
-
-There are a great many accomplishments which it is necessary for a
-Japanese girl of good family to know. The knowledge of needlework is so
-general that it really is not considered an accomplishment. But the art
-of letter-writing must be known by all accomplished young ladies, and
-the tea ceremony, which is the strictest and most complicated of all the
-ceremonies which surround the cultured Japanese, must be thoroughly
-learned by the daughter of the house. Each movement is regulated by
-custom, and a mistake in turn of hand or position of the body or the
-omission of any of the minute details in regard to the bows and
-salutations in offering, receiving, and returning the cups would show a
-lack of proper training. The young girl is taught the arrangement of
-flowers, which is an art by itself in Japan. In the sitting-room of a
-Japanese home there is a single vase of flowers sitting in the tiny
-alcove, and they would lose half of their attraction if they were not in
-some manner symbolical in tone and colour with the picture upon the
-kakemono which hangs above them. The young girl is often taught to play
-upon the koto, a kind of zither, although the national musical
-instrument is the samisen, which is played everywhere—at home, in
-story-tellers’ halls and theatres, and at every tea-house party. Girls
-start to learn this instrument at a very early age, because it is
-necessary to learn it while the fingers are still pliant. It takes time
-to learn these instruments, as there are no scores and the tunes must be
-committed to memory. Women teachers come to the home to teach the girls
-in all these arts, and often the samisen teacher has been a famous
-geisha, whose support now is teaching the music that once made her
-welcome at the dinner-parties of gay Japan.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- AN OUTDOOR KITCHEN IN JAPAN.
-
- To face p. 290.]
-
-After mastering the accomplishments, her business in life is now to
-marry, and few Japanese maidens think seriously of any other lot in life
-than that of marrying and becoming the mothers of future Japanese. Japan
-is more progressive than any other Oriental country, if we except
-Burmah, in that it allows the girl to exercise a certain amount of
-choice in the selection of a husband. There are never cases of love
-matches, but if she positively objects to a man who is proposed to her,
-she is seldom forced to marry him. It would be thought most immodest if
-she refused to marry a man until she loved him, as love is supposed to
-come with marriage and the advent of the children. Only simple
-toleration is expected before the marriage. The offices of a go-between
-are asked to assist in the search for a husband or wife, unless the
-match is made by friends of the interested parties. When the future
-husband has been selected, the go-between, who must always be a married
-man, as his wife takes an important part in the transactions, brings
-about a meeting of the young couple as if by accident. They may be
-strolling in a garden looking at the hanging wistaria, or meet at a
-theatre, where the families are introduced, and the two most concerned
-have a chance to take a good look at each other, and the next day, when
-the anxious match-maker comes to the house to learn whether his choice
-has met with favour, they will give their consent, or the match will be
-broken off, and the go-between will start again the hunt for an eligible
-alliance. If everything is satisfactory, a lucky day is appointed for
-the formal proposal, presents are exchanged, and then all look forward
-to the wedding. A couple of days before the wedding the bride’s
-trousseau and household goods are sent to her new home, and its
-elaborateness is only limited by the father’s wealth. Yet there are some
-things considered indispensable in the outfit of a bride, such as a
-bureau, a writing-table, a work-box, two of the little trays on which
-meals are served, together with the full dining outfit, and two or more
-complete sets of bed furnishings. If she is of a rich family, quite
-likely the clothing she will bring with her will last her entire life,
-as styles do not change so radically as to make gowns go so completely
-out of fashion that they cannot be worn. A wedding is a most expensive
-proceeding for the father of the bride, as each member of the groom’s
-family—father, mother, brothers, sisters, aunts, and cousins, even the
-servants—must all receive a present to mark the joyous occasion. The
-wedding itself is in the presence of only a few witnesses, and consists
-in a few formal acts, the most important of which is the drinking “three
-times three” cups of saki together. To make the marriage conform to the
-laws of Japan, the bride’s name is removed from her family register and
-transferred to that of her husband’s family.
-
-After the ceremony there are entertainments in the new home and at the
-home of the bride’s parents, and then the couple settle down into the
-married state for two or three months, when the ultra-smart give a
-series of entertainments to the friends who had no formal announcement
-of the marriage.
-
-The young wife does not have the happiness of setting up an
-establishment of her own, but she must go to the home of her husband’s
-father. The mother-in-law question is a very serious one in Japan,
-because she is absolutely the head of the household, and the young wife
-has to submit in all things to her mother-in-law’s will. This is
-especially serious for the modern Japanese girl, who perhaps has been
-educated in the Government school, if she is compelled to go to the home
-of a conservative old-time woman. Naturally, the mother cannot
-understand why the ideas with which she herself was brought up should
-not be good enough for the other, and finds fault with, what are in her
-eyes, outlandish ways introduced by the new regime. These conservative
-women are always loud in praise of the old state of things, and believe
-that the world is going to ruin, socially, morally, and physically,
-because of the innovations brought into their homes by their progressive
-sons and daughters.
-
-In addition to the parents of her husband, the wife has to win the
-affection of his brothers, sisters-in-law, and sisters, and her life is
-often made intolerable by the envies, jealousies, and petty
-faultfindings of the many women beneath the new roof-tree. The
-patriarchal life prevails in Japan as in all Eastern countries, and the
-successful man finds he must support a crowd of less successful
-relatives, whose claims are not admitted by law, but whose appeals on
-the score of kinship cannot be ignored, as custom allows those related
-by blood or marriage to look for help to the least unfortunate among
-them. The new civil code forces the support of parents, brothers,
-sisters, and other near relatives upon the head of the household, in
-addition to that of his wife and children. Thus a man is handicapped in
-life and has to spend the money he might otherwise use in educating his
-children in the support of uncles, aunts, and cousins, and perhaps a
-host of his wife’s relations. From the social point of view this is
-undoubtedly an excellent system, as it relieves the nation of the
-support of its poor, but it bears heavily upon the individual, and many
-a young man’s ambition has been shattered and his road to success
-blocked by the sordid cares and petty troubles caused by the necessity
-of maintaining a large household.
-
-The great authority on the conduct of women who marry was written by a
-Japanese scholar, based on the teaching of the Chinese sages. In it the
-wife is told she must give unconditional obedience to her husband, who
-is in every respect her superior and the absolute lord and master of her
-body and soul; whatever he does is right and she may not even murmur.
-She occupies a position in her husband’s household practically of an
-upper servant. She must not frequent public resorts, nor go sight-seeing
-with the wealth her husband may obtain, and until she is forty years old
-is not to be seen in company, but to remain at home attending to her
-household and her children. This sounds very well, but women are women
-the world over; and although Japanese wives are gentle, docile, and
-obedient, yet they have a virility and strength of character that compel
-the respect of their husbands, and in their own domain their word is
-law.
-
-In the olden time each Japanese girl was supposed to know the precepts
-contained in a book called “Greater Learning for Women,” written by a
-famous scholar several hundred years ago. For nearly two hundred years
-it was one of the indispensable articles that a bride took with her to
-her new home, but the present modern Japanese maiden knows very little
-of the “Greater Learning.” I am afraid, indeed, that she is more
-thoroughly conversant with a parody of these famous precepts, which has
-been written by a young man of modern Japan. This is so radical that it
-is forbidden in the libraries of the mission schools in the fear that
-the Japanese girl will imbibe too early the tendencies fatal to the
-happiness of the Eastern woman, as she takes her first step from her
-secluded doorway into the path that leads to the higher learning of the
-Western world.
-
-Japanese women are womanly, kindly, gentle, and pretty, and perhaps they
-owe this gentleness and courtesy to the precepts taught by their old
-sages.
-
-According to Shingoro Takaishi, in his “Wisdom and Women of Japan,” the
-famous moralist left the following instructions to help women in their
-perilous journey through life—
-
-“Seeing that it is a girl’s destiny, on reaching womanhood, to go to a
-new home, and live in submission to her father-in-law, it is even more
-incumbent upon her than it is on a boy to receive with all reverence her
-parents’ instructions. Should her parents, through their tenderness,
-allow her to grow up self-willed, she will infallibly show herself
-capricious in her husband’s house, and thus alienate his affection;
-while, if her father-in-law be a man of correct principles, the girl
-will find the yoke of these principles intolerable. She will hate and
-decry her father-in-law, and the end of these domestic dissensions will
-be her dismissal from her husband’s house and the covering of herself
-with ignominy. Her parents, forgetting the faulty education they gave
-her, may, indeed, lay all the blame on the father-in-law. But they will
-be in error; for the whole disaster should rightly be attributed to the
-faulty education the girl received from her parents.
-
-“More precious in a woman is a virtuous heart than a face of beauty. The
-vicious woman’s heart is ever excited; she glares wildly around her, she
-vents her anger on others, her words are harsh and her accent vulgar.
-When she speaks it is to set herself above others, to upbraid others, to
-envy others, to be puffed up with individual pride, to jeer at others,
-to outdo others—all things at variance with the way in which a woman
-should walk. The only qualities that befit a woman are gentle obedience,
-chastity, mercy, and quietness.
-
-“A woman has no particular lord. She must look to her husband as her
-lord, and must serve him with all worship and reverence, not despising
-or thinking lightly of him. The great lifelong duty of a woman is
-obedience.
-
-“A woman shall be divorced for disobedience to her father-in-law or
-mother-in-law. A woman shall be divorced if she fail to bear children,
-the reason for this rule being that women are sought in marriage for the
-purpose of giving men posterity. A barren woman should, however, be
-retained if her heart be virtuous and her conduct correct and free from
-jealousy, in which case a child of the same blood must be adopted;
-neither is there any just cause for a man to divorce a barren wife if he
-have children by a concubine. Lewdness is a reason for divorce. Jealousy
-is a reason for divorce. Leprosy or any like foul disease is a reason
-for divorce. A woman shall be divorced who, by talking overmuch and
-prattling disrespectfully, disturbs the harmony of kinsmen and brings
-trouble on her household. A woman shall be divorced who is addicted to
-stealing.
-
-“All the ‘Seven Reasons for Divorce’ were taught by the sage. A woman
-once married and then divorced has wandered from the ‘way,’ and is
-covered with great shame, even if she should enter into a second union
-with a man of wealth and position.
-
-“It is the chief duty of a girl living in the parental house to practise
-filial piety towards her father and mother. But after marriage her duty
-is to honour her father-in-law and mother-in-law, to honour them beyond
-her father and mother, to love and reverence them with all ardour, and
-to tend them with practise of every filial piety. While thou honourest
-thine own parents, think not lightly of thy father-in-law. Never should
-a woman fail, night and morning, to pay her respects to her
-father-in-law and mother-in-law. Never should she be remiss in
-performing any tasks they may require of her. With all reverence must
-she carry out, and never rebel against, her father-in-law’s commands. On
-every point must she inquire of her father-in-law and mother-in-law, and
-abandon herself to their direction. Even if thy father-in-law and
-mother-in-law be pleased to hate and vilify thee, be not angry with
-them, and murmur not. If thou carry piety towards them to its utmost
-limits, and minister to them in all sincerity, it cannot be but that
-they will end by becoming friendly to thee.”
-
-There is a sword of Damocles always hanging over the head of the
-Japanese woman—that is, the fear of divorce. Among the higher classes
-the dread of scandal and gossip serves as a restraint upon the too free
-use of the power of divorce, but even now one meets many respectable and
-respected persons who, some time in their life, have gone through such
-an experience. Obtaining a divorce is not such a complicated affair as
-it is in America. It is enough that the parties agree to separate and
-make a declaration, witnessed by two reputable witnesses, at a local
-magistrate’s office, and the divorce takes place by mutual consent. As
-in the case of marriage the consent of the parents or guardians of a
-girl under twenty-five years of age and a man who is under thirty must
-be obtained, so this consent of parents or guardians is necessary before
-a divorce may be granted. Then the domicile of the wife is retransferred
-in the books of the registrar from the domicile of the family in which
-she was married to that of her original family. If one of the parties
-concerned refuse to give their consent to the divorce an application is
-made to the courts. There are several grounds upon which judicial
-divorce is granted—first, for bigamy; secondly, the wife may be divorced
-for adultery, but not the husband, unless the crime has been committed
-with a married woman, when the unfaithful wife and her lover are liable
-to penal servitude for a term not exceeding two years, if the charge is
-brought by the outraged husband. The man cannot be punished alone; the
-woman must share his fate. As in many European countries, marriage is
-forbidden between the respondent and the co-respondent in a divorce
-case.
-
-Another, and one of the chief causes for divorce in Japan, are the
-complications that naturally arise from the many people living in one
-house. Either party may seek divorce if ill-treated or insulted by the
-parents or grandparents of the other, and mothers-in-law, with their
-hard tongues and bitter words, are the frequent causes of separation of
-husband and wife. One provision of the law which serves to make most
-mothers endure any evil of their married life rather than sue for
-divorce is the fact that the children belong to the father, and the
-mother returns childless to her father’s house. In this country, where
-the woman is economically dependent upon her menfolk, even if she were
-allowed to take the children, quite likely they would not be made
-welcome in a home where there are always too many mouths to feed;
-therefore the Japanese mother puts up with many brutalities and
-heartaches in order to keep with her the only bright things she has in
-life, her children.
-
-The Japanese wife leads a very busy life. In all but the very wealthiest
-and most aristocratic families the wife and daughters do a large part of
-the housework. In a house with no furniture, no carpets, no pictures, no
-stoves or furnaces, no windows to wash, no latest styles to be imitated
-in the making of clothing, there is not so much work in the care of a
-house as there is in the Western world, where the rooms are filled with
-a multitude of unnecessary articles that seem only made to give toil to
-women. But because of the lack of conveniences it takes time to properly
-care for the rooms in a Japanese house. Every morning there are the beds
-to be rolled up and placed in the closets, the mosquito-nets to be taken
-down, the rooms to be swept, dusted, and aired; and the veranda floor is
-polished several times a day as if it were a precious piece of silver.
-The cooking and washing of the dishes take a great deal of time, as the
-former is done over a tiny charcoal stove and the dishes are washed in
-cold water. There is not a moment of time that the wife is idle, as
-there is always the family sewing to be superintended, the mats and
-cushions to be recovered, the wadding to be renewed in the bed coverings
-and the winter kimonas. Many of the Japanese dresses must be taken to
-pieces whenever they are washed, and the wet breadths smoothed upon a
-board and placed in the sun to dry. The careful housewife makes over the
-older daughters’ dresses for the younger daughters, and these clothes
-are washed, turned, dyed, and made over and over again so long as there
-is a shred of the original material left to work upon.
-
-The Japanese believe that a woman passes through three critical stages
-in her journey through life. If she passes her nineteenth, her
-thirty-third, and her thirty-seventh years safely, she has a chance of
-living to a good old age and seeing her children and her grandchildren
-grow up around her. Her most critical year is her thirty-third, and not
-only this year itself, but the years immediately preceding and following
-are considered inauspicious. Consequently there are three years during
-which period women will refrain as much as possible from acts which may
-appear like tempting Providence. When a woman attains her sixtieth
-birthday it is an occasion for great festivities, when she invites all
-her friends to a dinner to celebrate this wonderful event. If a man or
-woman should have occasion to celebrate their seventieth birthday, they
-distribute among their friends and relatives large red and white cakes
-with the character signifying “longevity” written upon them, and with
-each increasing year the old man or woman gain in the respect of their
-community.
-
-When the last illness comes to father and mother it would be considered
-most unfilial for any of the children not to be present at the parent’s
-death-bed. When all is over the son or the wife wets his lips with
-water, and so universal is this custom that the expression “to wet the
-dying lips with water” has come to signify the tending of a patient in
-his last illness. One of the reasons why the Japanese believe that the
-wife should be younger than the husband is that she may be able to
-fulfil this last office for her loved one.
-
-It is known that death is in the room by the placing upside down of a
-screen before the bed, and the quilt covering the body is reversed, the
-foot covering the dead man’s breast. A white cloth is laid over the
-face, as its exposure would be an obstacle to the soul’s journey on its
-road to the other world. Everything done for the dead is the reverse of
-that done for the living; for example, in the tub for the last bath cold
-water is poured first, then hot water added until it is of the right
-temperature. The head is shaved by touching it with the razor in small
-patches instead of running it continuously as in life. The burial
-garment is made by two women relatives, sewing with the same piece of
-thread in opposite directions, and the kimona is folded from right to
-left instead of from left to right as a man would wear it ordinarily.
-Mittens, leggings, and sandals are worn, the sandals being tied on the
-foot with the heel in the place of the toe, to signify that the dead
-must not return, drawn back by the love of the world. Around the neck is
-suspended a bag of Buddhist charms, and a small coin, or picture of a
-coin, with which to pay the ferryman. If the wife dies, the husband does
-not publicly mourn for her, although her children do; but if the husband
-dies the wife should mourn the rest of her life, and she often cuts off
-her long hair and places it in the coffin of her husband, showing that
-she resolves to be always faithful to his memory. In a child’s coffin a
-doll is placed to keep the child company on its first journey without
-mother or father. The last rite is to cover the body with incense-powder
-or dried aniseed, and then it is ready for the funeral ceremonies.
-
-A funeral procession in Japan is an imposing affair. The corpse, in its
-palanquin or in the modern hearse, is preceded by men carrying large
-white lanterns on poles, bundles of flowers stuck in bamboo pedestals,
-stands of artificial flowers, and birds in enormous cages, which are set
-free at the temples as an act of merit. The priests, friends, and
-relatives move slowly and sadly to the temple, in which there is a
-service, then the bier is taken to the crematory by the chief mourner
-and the near relatives. The ashes are removed the next day to their
-permanent home in the public crematorium or in the temple burying-ground
-of the family.
-
-For fifty days after the death incense and lights are kept burning
-before the tablet of the deceased at his late home, and prayers are
-offered at the grave for the same length of time. A priest comes from
-the temple every seventh day to offer incense and prayers with the
-sorrowing family, who believe that for forty-nine days the spirit of
-their dead wanders in the dark space that lies between this world and
-the next. Every seventh day it makes a step forward and is helped by the
-prayers of loved ones left behind. The sorrowing wife is taught that the
-spirit cannot tear itself away from its old home and hovers over it, and
-unless it is absolutely necessary no loving woman would remove from her
-home until the forty-nine days were past, for fear of giving sorrow to
-the spirit of her husband, if he did not find her in the place where
-they had passed together their years of happiness.
-
-The dead are not quickly forgotten in Japan. Memorial services take
-place the forty-eighth day, the hundredth day, and the first anniversary
-of the death, and services are held for even fifty years. Lafcadio Hearn
-expresses the reverence which these people give their loved ones who
-have gone before them by saying:—
-
-“In this worship we give the dead they are made divine. And the thought
-of this tender reverence will temper with consolation the melancholy
-that comes with age to all of us. Never in our Japan are the dead too
-quickly forgotten; by simple faith they are still thought to dwell among
-their beloved and their place within the home remains holy. When we pass
-to the land of shadows we know that loving lips will nightly murmur our
-names before the family shrine, that our faithful ones will beseech us
-in their pain and bless us in their joy. We will not be left alone upon
-the hillside, but loving hands will place before our tablet the fruit
-and flowers and dainty food that we were wont to like, and will pour for
-us the fragrant cup of tea or amber rice-wine. Strange changes are
-coming upon this land, old customs are vanishing, old beliefs are
-weakening, the thoughts of to-day will not be the thoughts of to-morrow;
-but of all this we will know nothing. We dream that for us as for our
-mothers the little lamps will burn on through the generations; we see in
-fancy the yet unborn, the children of our children’s children, bowing
-their tiny heads and making the filial obeisance before the tablet that
-bears our family name.”
-
-
-
-
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-The ocean that geographically divides the East from the West is not more
-wide nor deep than is that invisible ocean between the minds of the
-woman of the Orient and the woman of the Occident. A sympathetic
-understanding between peoples whose ideals have been so differently
-constructed, and who have had such radically opposite training, is next
-to impossible. No matter what the Western woman may do in the hope of
-touching the emotional life of the woman of the East, she soon finds
-that further progress is barred, that a gate before unseen has closed,
-shutting her out from the inner life.
-
-I knew a very advanced woman in Southern India who had broken caste and
-who went about freely, mingling with both Europeans and Indians with the
-same freedom as an American woman would. She dressed in a costume
-partially Indian and partially European, wore slippers, and arranged her
-hair in the European fashion. One day I went to her house rather earlier
-than the usual hour for calling. I hardly recognized her, as she was the
-Indian woman of the home, dressed in a sari, her hair hanging down her
-back in braids, and with heavy anklets over her bare feet. She blushed
-and said: “Oh, I do not want you to see me like this,” and she did not
-understand me when I told her that I felt that I was seeing the real
-woman for the first time.
-
-I thought many times in my long residence in the East that I had really
-entered into the life and understood the thoughts, hopes, and ambitions
-of the Eastern woman, when at some thoughtless word or action on my part
-a wall of fog would come between us, with a thick, impenetrable,
-blanket-like mist, made up of custom, tradition, and the results of
-environment, and when it would lift we would find our little boats far
-from each other on a sea of mutual misunderstanding.
-
-Despite our incapacity to enter into the soul life of this ancient East,
-we find ourselves fascinated and bewitched by the charm of these
-secluded women of the Orient, who live a life of instinctive
-unselfishness, their days given to the making of happiness for others.
-
-We say: “Must there always remain the width of the world between the
-Eastern woman and the woman of the West? Will the education which is
-being grasped so eagerly by the woman of the Orient lessen the distance,
-and will it break down the barriers?” Only time will tell. The children
-of the present boys and girls in school and college will have had the
-foundation of the three generations of intellectual training, and will
-have learned to take what is best for them from Western knowledge and
-use it as a means of breaking the iron bands of ignorance, superstition,
-and loyalty to old-time custom and tradition, which stands an immovable
-mountain in the pathway of true friendship between the woman of the West
-and the woman of the East.
-
-
- UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- 2. Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
-
- 3. The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed
- in the public domain.
-
-
-
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Harim and the Purdah, by Elizabeth Cooper</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The Harim and the Purdah</p>
-<p> Studies of Oriental Women</p>
-<p>Author: Elizabeth Cooper</p>
-<p>Release Date: December 5, 2020 [eBook #63959]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HARIM AND THE PURDAH***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by<br />
- Richard Tonsing, Fritz Ohrenschall,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/cu31924023537552
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-
-<div class='section ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>THE HARIM AND THE PURDAH</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id='Frontispiece' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/frontispiece.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>DANCING GIRL OF JEYPORE.<br /><br /><span class='right'>Frontispiece.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div class='box'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'><span class='color_red'>THE HARIM AND THE PURDAH</span><br /> <span class='large'>STUDIES OF ORIENTAL WOMEN</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='box'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='color_red'><span class='xlarge'>ELIZABETH COOPER</span></span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='xsmall'>AUTHOR OF “MY LADY OF THE CHINESE COURTYARD,” “THE SOUL TRADERS,” ETC.</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>ILLUSTRATED</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='box'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>NEW YORK</div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='color_red'><span class='large'>THE CENTURY COMPANY</span></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>(<em>All rights reserved</em>)</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>(PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN)</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='15%' />
-<col width='73%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='c007'></th>
- <th class='c008'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c009'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>INTRODUCTION</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c007'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></th>
- <th class='c008'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c009'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>I.</td>
- <td class='c008'>EGYPTIAN WOMEN OF THE PAST</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_19'>19</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>II.</td>
- <td class='c008'>THE MODERN EGYPTIAN WOMAN</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_39'>39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>III.</td>
- <td class='c008'>MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, POLYGAMY</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_56'>56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c008'>THE WOMAN OF THE DESERT</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_69'>69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>V.</td>
- <td class='c008'>INDIAN SOCIAL LIFE</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_85'>85</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c008'>INDIAN HOME LIFE</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>MARRIAGE—THE GOAL OF WOMAN</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_113'>113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>INDIAN MOTHERHOOD</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_130'>130</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c008'>WOMAN’S SORROW</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>X.</td>
- <td class='c008'>HYDERABAD AND THE MOHAMMEDAN WOMAN</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_154'>154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c008'>MOHAMMEDANISM WITHIN THE ZENANA</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_170'>170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>BURMAH</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_179'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>BURMESE RELIGION AND SUPERSTITION</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_200'>200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c008'>THE LADY OF CHINA</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_211'>211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>XV.</td>
- <td class='c008'>THE RED CHAIR OF MARRIAGE</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_240'>240</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c008'>WHEN CHINESE WOMEN DIE</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_254'>254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XVII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>CHANGING CHINA</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_260'>260</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>XVIII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>JAPANESE WOMEN AT HOME</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_271'>271</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c008'>CONCLUSION</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_307'>307</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='ILLUSTRATIONS'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='80%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>DANCING GIRL OF JEYPORE</td>
- <td class='c010'><em><a href='#Frontispiece'>Frontispiece</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c008'></th>
- <th class='c010'><span class='small'>Facing page</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“TWO WOMEN SHALL BE GRINDING AT THE MILL”</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_009'>9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>EGYPTIAN WOMAN OF THE LOWER CLASS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_019'>19</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>RAMESES AND HIS WIFE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_020'>20</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A WATER-CARRIER</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_036'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>THE TAILOR</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_044'>44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A WOMAN OF THE MASSES</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_064'>64</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>CHILDREN ON THE NILE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_066'>66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>BEDOUIN WOMEN IN FRONT OF TENT</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_069'>69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A HOLY MAN, BENARES</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_096'>96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>CRADLE IN VILLAGE, BARODA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_132'>132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>INDIAN WOMEN SPINNING</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_148'>148</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A CARRIAGE FOR WOMEN</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_154'>154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>MOHAMMEDAN WOMEN, HYDERABAD</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_170'>170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>HUSKING RICE IN A BURMESE VILLAGE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_179'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>BURMESE GIRL</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_180'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>DANCING AT A VILLAGE FESTIVAL, BURMAH</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_183'>183</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A BUDDHIST SCHOOL MANDALAY (SHOWING BEGGING-BOWL)</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_194'>194</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>BURMESE BOY WITH TATTOOED LEGS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_196'>196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">EN ROUTE</span></i> TO A FESTIVAL, BURMAH</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_198'>198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A BURMESE WOMAN AND HER CIGAR</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_206'>206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>BURMESE WORKING WOMAN</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_208'>208</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>GOLDEN PAGODA, MANDALAY</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_210'>210</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>CHINESE WOMEN WARMING HANDS AND FEET WITH BRAZIERS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_214'>214</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>CHINESE WOMEN AND CHAIR-BEARERS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_218'>218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>BOUND FEET OF CHINESE WOMAN</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_221'>221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>AN OLD-FASHIONED CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_224'>224</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>WHEELBARROW AND COOLIE—USED IN PLACE OF WAGONS IN TOWNS AND COUNTRY VILLAGES NEAR SHANGHAI</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_236'>236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>RAIN-COATS OF CHINESE WORKMEN</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_246'>246</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>RICE-BOATS ON CANAL, CHINA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_260'>260</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>JAPANESE CHILDREN PLAYING</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_276'>276</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>AN OUTDOOR KITCHEN IN JAPAN</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_290'>290</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='i_009' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_009.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>“TWO WOMEN SHALL BE GRINDING AT THE MILL.”<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c011'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in13'>“What thou biddest</div>
- <div class='line'>Unargued I obey. So God ordains;</div>
- <div class='line'>God is <em>thy</em> law, thou mine: to know no more</div>
- <div class='line'>Is woman’s happiest knowledge, and her praise.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>This is the creed of the woman of the East
-to-day. It is the same as it has been for
-centuries; it will continue the same for centuries
-to come. Indeed, it is a question whether the
-Oriental woman, with all her intellectual and
-social advance which is already beginning, will
-be able ever to free herself from those traditional
-and inherent influences which have been wrought
-into the very warp and woof of Eastern humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Eastern woman is primarily a traditionalist.
-She is more closely bound by hereditary
-tendency than the woman of the West.
-One of her outstanding characteristics has lain
-for years in her dependency and passive reliance
-upon her husband for economic support and protection.
-Her very seclusion means to her, not
-that which the word would connote to the
-Westerner, slavery or imprisonment; to her it
-is rather the mantle of protective care and
-interest thrown over her by her lord and master.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>It has helped to make her feminine, as it has
-naturally added to her inefficiency as far as any
-work is concerned that bears a similitude of
-masculine activity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With the exception of the Burmese woman,
-and to an appreciable and growing extent the
-women of Japan, the Oriental woman has been
-influenced and moulded by her economic necessities.
-The Eastern attitude toward woman,
-which in general has been to keep her ignorant
-and to consider that her charms other than those
-relating to her physical attractions are minute,
-has brought about a feminine type peculiar
-to itself. The result is a woman who outside
-of the home has no power of gaining a livelihood,
-and who as a natural consequence has
-turned her whole thought, emotion, and imagination
-upon her domestic affairs. Furthermore,
-we find in such countries of the Orient as
-Burmah and Japan, where women are solving
-the problem of self-support, that they have also
-been able, not only to have greater freedom, but
-also, to a certain extent, they have demanded
-the right to choose their own mates and regulate
-the laws concerning their home life. For
-instance, in each of these countries the wife has
-the right of divorcing her husband—a right
-denied the woman of other Oriental lands. The
-property rights of women in these lands, where
-women are just beginning to be wage-earners,
-are also clearly set forth in their civil codes,
-giving justice to the women.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>The realm of the Eastern woman is primarily
-the realm of the home. She has the true spirit
-of the bee; she considers the collective good
-of the household before her own. Her great
-vocation is to be a wife and mother. She attends
-personally to her household duties, and domestic
-service is to her not a disgrace. Her children
-are to her a veritable life-work. She looks after
-them personally, superintends their every act,
-and watches closely their development. Even
-the high lady of the East does not consider it
-demeaning to cook with her own hands that
-which she knows will appeal to the taste of her
-family. Cooking, indeed, is regarded as a fine
-art in the East, and recipes are handed down
-like heirlooms from mother to daughter along
-with the family jewels.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Eastern woman is honoured by the honour
-of her household. It is her business to make
-it possible for her husband and her sons to
-advance, and she shines in the reflected light of
-their achievements. She has not been taught,
-neither has she any suspicion of the Western
-ambition to make name and fame for herself.
-There is a certain delight and satisfaction in
-living behind the veil which one can hardly
-appreciate from the Western point of view. That
-this Eastern feminine regards her success as
-domestic rather than social is abundantly proved
-to any one who lives intimately in touch with
-the women of these countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The one great cry which goes up from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>heart of every Oriental woman, regardless of
-place or station, in any home between Algiers
-and Tokio, is, “Give me sons!” It is this desire
-for men-children, and the belief on the part of
-the woman that this is the primal and ultimate
-destiny of womanhood, that has made marriage
-the universal custom for all women throughout
-the East. Rarely indeed do you find an unmarried
-woman. In India marriage is assured
-by betrothal in early childhood; and even in
-those countries where education and Western
-influence are raising the age limit of marriages
-one finds no diminution in the general feeling
-that woman’s world is the home, with her children
-about her.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This devotion to the purely domestic realm
-has left the woman a victim to ignorance, superstition,
-and the many evils that follow in their
-train. One finds the same superstition working
-in the minds of the women in Cairo, in Calcutta,
-and in Peking. The Egyptian mother dresses
-her boy in rags to guard him from the baneful
-influence of the “evil eye,” while the woman of
-China pierces her son’s ears and places a ring
-therein, to deceive the gods and make them
-think he is a girl. The woman of Algiers will
-buy charms and magic symbols to bring her
-the blessing of motherhood, while the woman
-of Japan visits shrines and holy places, where
-her faith and superstition are traded upon by
-those who understand the weakness of their
-womenkind. She has so long been accustomed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>to rely upon her superstitions, her emotions,
-and to use her intuition in the place of a brain,
-that the present beginnings in education have
-been hampered. That, however, she will prove
-herself capable in the realm of mental training
-is proven by the fact that, especially in Egypt
-and in Japan, modern schools for girls are
-becoming really popular movements in the development
-of these countries. Every advance
-in the education of men adds to the possibility
-of intellectual emancipation for women.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>During long ages Eastern women have been
-denied the right to think for themselves and have
-been compelled to feel their way emotionally, and
-their power to feel thus has become abnormally
-developed at the expense of their power to judge
-or reason. The woman of the Orient is a woman
-swayed by emotions, by the heart instead of by
-the intellect.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a logical line of connection to be
-traced among the modern women of the East.
-Her phases of development have been the
-inevitable outcome of influences to which she
-has been taught to submit as a duty. Her
-religious sense—the strong spiritual craving that
-is deep within the heart of all women—has been
-utilized as a means of influencing her to yield
-implicit obedience to her mankind, whether he
-be father, brother, or husband. She has made
-him, in a certain sense, her god, and in yielding
-all to him she has ceased to think in the terms
-of her own individuality, accepting the common
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>opinion that the Eastern woman lives for her
-home and the amusement and the material comfort
-of her husband. A mental deficiency bill
-was passed upon her centuries ago, and the laws
-command her husband to keep her under
-restraint. Her menfolks expect her to be
-deficient, and have carefully guarded her from
-opportunities of becoming otherwise. Her
-husband has not associated her with any of
-his outside life, and she has found little or
-nothing in his conversation to stimulate or to
-broaden her mind. Considering her as a being
-who only understands her children and the petty
-gossip of the women’s quarters, he has deprived
-her of the mental possibilities which have reached
-the men of the East. He has not only tried to
-teach her not to think for herself, but the Eastern
-masculine has endeavoured to make her understand
-that she cannot think. Nor is this
-tendency entirely abolished by modern education.
-The young girl fresh from her school in
-Cairo or Calcutta, where she has caught glimpses
-of a new world, and where her brain has been
-slightly awakened, marries and goes into the
-traditional home, where her faith in herself is
-gradually diminished by living constantly in the
-atmosphere of ignorance and superstition which
-still rules so largely in her woman’s world.
-Finally, she gives up trying, resigning herself
-to the standard of the man-made world in which
-she finds herself, and her husband becomes her
-keeper in every sense of the word.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>The Eastern woman naturally tends in this
-way to lose her self-reliance, which she is not
-allowed to exercise. She often decides few
-matters for herself, even the small details of her
-daily life being settled by her husband. The
-effect is insidious, but none the less relaxing,
-since the faculty of responsibility, like every
-other faculty, is strengthened only by exercise,
-and passes away with disuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Can the woman of the East be awakened to
-an advanced development without harm to herself?
-Within her is found an enormous amount
-of suppressed capacity for good and evil. This
-suppression, which has been her cue for generations,
-possesses great dynamic power. Force
-becomes dangerous when confined; it should
-be directed, and unless properly guided and
-controlled, when it does burst forth, as it
-is bound to do with these women who are
-becoming educated and learning their power,
-it is likely to riot widely, with havoc
-for its effect. The Eastern woman who
-has traded upon her emotional nature for her
-livelihood, who has used these same emotions
-to keep her husband in a land where divorce is
-easy and where polygamy is practised by many,
-may be guided by her feelings rather than her
-intellect, using her new-found freedom to bring
-her lasting unhappiness instead of the joy which
-she now believes is lying just outside her doors.
-In India advance has come too rapidly at times,
-and the woman in her desire to slavishly imitate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>her sisters from the West has shocked the conservative
-traditions of her nation, and thereby
-greatly retarded her cause. The Egyptian
-woman when in England or France becomes
-almost ludicrous in her attempts to be like the
-European woman, forgetting that she lacks the
-foundation of the years of freedom and equality
-with men which bring judgment and confidence
-to the woman of the Western world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The woman of the Orient is awakening and
-is setting herself the task to consider what is
-best to be done. How can she remedy the deficiency
-of the social life of her land? The
-case is not a hopeless one by any means, even
-though her capacities and wonderful possibilities
-have lain dormant for so long. Many of these
-women now see the things that are wrong; they
-see the iniquity of a system in which they are
-not allowed to choose their own mate; they
-see the crying wrongs of their antiquated
-marriage and divorce laws, made for another
-period than the twentieth century—laws which
-do not fit the present conditions, however successful
-they may have been in other times.
-These women are learning to respect themselves
-and their position, learning to appreciate
-and value the weight of their majorities, and
-some are having the courage to speak out.
-These bolder ones are being punished for their
-intrepidity; but it does not check them. The
-cause for which they are working is gradually
-becoming more and more possible with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>advent of education and Western influences,
-which are causing the present-day educated men
-of the Orient to require a certain amount of
-education in their wives and daughters. As this
-new order comes to the land of the Nile and the
-Ganges, the old-time woman who passed her
-days lounging on the divans, eating sweets,
-drinking coffee, and gossiping with servants and
-friends as ignorant as herself, will pass away.
-The new woman of the East will never be
-a suffragette; she will never attend mass
-meetings nor carry banners marked “Votes
-for Women”; indeed, it would be as incongruous
-to think of these sheltered women doing such
-a thing as to imagine the long row of mummies
-at the Museum of Cairo suddenly starting a
-procession down the aisles of the museum.
-These women, however, are setting up a high
-standard for themselves, eager to accept all the
-Western world has to offer them by way of
-education and growth, while they feel that they
-have the capacity to attain the objects of their
-new ambitions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In all this change, will the Oriental woman
-remain the same as regards the deepest things
-in her nature? Will she keep her innate sense
-of modesty, her womanliness, her love of home
-and children, her feminine qualities which seem
-to us of the Western world almost a weakness,
-but which comprise her appealing charm? We
-cannot but feel that although the woman of the
-East may change radically in the outward expression
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>of her life, inwardly she will remain
-the same. Indeed, it would be a great mistake
-if the Eastern woman became satisfied with
-any mere superficial imitation of her Western
-sisters. She would lose her birthright. She
-would lose the consummate opportunity of being
-an Oriental in an Oriental world, and bringing
-out of her treasure things new and old for the
-benefit of the women of every race. Her
-message to the world of the West in the devotion
-and the keeping of the home, in the love
-and pride of children, in her self-effacement for
-the good of the family, is a high message and
-in no period has it been more insistently needed.
-It is this contribution which the woman of the
-Orient will bring in return for the education and
-enlightenment from the Occident.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the Western woman comes to the Oriental
-bringing in her hands the fair gifts of intellectual
-advancement and broadened life, her Eastern
-sister will not be her debtor if she, by example,
-presents in return the even more precious charms
-of obedience, modesty, and loyalty which fundamentally
-are the priceless jewels in the crown
-of the world’s womanhood.</p>
-
-<div id='i_019' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_019.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>EGYPTIAN WOMAN OF THE LOWER CLASS.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span></div>
-<div class='section ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>The Harim and the Purdah</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER I<br /> <span class='large'>EGYPTIAN WOMEN OF THE PAST</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The word Egypt opens the Book of Romance
-to the traveller in the East, and he longs to
-come under the spell of its mysterious grandeur,
-and gaze upon the monuments which will speak
-to him of the power and splendour of a
-people long since gathered to their gods. It
-is a land in which to dream dreams and see
-visions. The temples, broken columns, and
-great pylons call with a voice that must be heard
-even by the prosaic tourist, and the hands he
-sees painted upon the walls of Denderah or Deirel
-Bahari will beckon him when sitting in office,
-club, or home, far from the dazzling sands or
-burning sun of Africa.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The charm of the land of the Pharaohs is
-very real, and it is hard to speak of Egyptian
-life in a calm and lucid style, or free oneself
-from extravagant descriptions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Egypt and its fascination are favourite themes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>for novelists and writers of travel, and yet in
-spite of a good deal of general knowledge we
-remain curiously ignorant of the Egyptian
-woman, from the point of view of her moral
-and mental development. In common with
-women of other Oriental lands, she has been
-an object of mystery to the Western world. We
-know that in the olden time, in the days of the
-Pharaohs, she held an important place in the
-life of her world. We see her pictures on the
-tombs, temples were erected in her honour, and
-we know that there were queens who in their
-day governed their country with dignity and rare
-ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In former days the purity of the blood of
-the royal line was assured by the marriage of a
-brother and sister, the queen reigning equally
-with the king. If a queen of royal birth took as
-her consort a male not descended directly from
-a royal mother, even though his father might
-have been a Pharaoh, at the death of his wife he
-was compelled to abdicate in favour of the son
-or daughter who could call the queen “mother.”
-This was shown when Thotmes I was compelled
-to resign his crown in favour of that great Queen
-Hatshepsu, his daughter, who for twenty years
-governed Egypt. Although her reign was a
-stormy one because of her half-brothers who
-claimed the throne, her name and features erased
-from all the monuments, and omitted from the
-official tablets and chronological records, yet
-enough was left to show that her power had
-been great and that she commanded the attention
-of the world. It is said that Hatshepsu had herself
-everywhere depicted as a man, wearing the
-dress and even the beard of the stronger sex,
-perhaps hoping in this way to gain a greater
-allegiance of her people.</p>
-
-<div id='i_020' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_020.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>RAMESES AND HIS WIFE.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>One of the most interesting temples along the
-Nile is that of the first woman ruler of Egypt
-of whom we have accurate knowledge. One rides
-over the hot sands beneath a burning sun to a
-series of great terraces and broken white columns
-against a background of tiger-coloured precipices.
-This beautiful temple of the XVIIIth
-Dynasty, called by the Egyptians “the Sublime
-of the Sublime,” was dedicated to Amen Ra and
-his companion gods, Hathor and Anubis, but
-it was really erected to commemorate the glorious
-reign of a great queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another woman who influenced Egypt was the
-mother of Amenophis IV, the great reformer.
-He disestablished the State religion, some say
-at the instance of his mother; confiscated the
-lands and destroyed the power of the priests
-of Amon who were becoming all-powerful; and
-established the worship of one God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Solomon evidently held the Egyptians in high
-favour. He had many wives before he married
-a princess of Egypt, but we hear of no palaces
-being built especially for any of them, nor of the
-worship of their gods being introduced into
-Jerusalem. Yet we are told that a magnificent
-palace was built for Pharaoh’s daughter and that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>she was permitted, although contrary to the laws
-of Israel, to worship the gods of her country.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Then there was Hypatia, an Alexandrine, who
-established a school of philosophy where learned
-men from all parts of the world came to listen
-to her words of wisdom; and in the British
-Museum there is a manuscript of the Old and
-New Testament, written on parchment immediately
-after the Council of Nice, by an Egyptian
-woman, which goes to prove that men did not
-possess all the knowledge nor learning of their
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We all know the story of Cleopatra and the part
-she played in the downfall of her country, and
-history abounds with tales narrating the bravery,
-courage, and charm of Egyptian women.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Women are also associated with the religion
-of this old land. The worship of Isis was as
-general as the worship of her brother Osiris,
-and this goddess is reverenced as the representation
-of true and loyal wifehood.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another woman, Athor, the goddess of love,
-who was called the “Great Mother” and served
-as the protectress of earthly mothers, was good
-and beautiful, lovely and gentle, the goddess of
-love and joy. Neith was worshipped as the
-goddess of art and learning. Maat was the
-goddess of truth and justice; and in ancient
-times judges, when trying cases, held a small
-figure of the goddess Maat in their hands, and
-touched the persons acquitted with it, to show
-that they had won their cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>There was Taur, the goddess of evil, and Sekhet,
-typical of the scorching, destructive power of
-the sun, and many minor goddesses whose
-emblems, seen on columns and walls of the ancient
-ruins, tell us that in those days woman was
-thought fit to represent Divinity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The women of ancient Egypt were evidently
-not secluded, as is shown by the story of Pharaoh’s
-daughter who was going with her train of maids
-to bathe when she found Moses. The story of
-Potiphar’s wife and Joseph would never have
-been told in modern times, as a man-servant
-would not have dared to go to the women’s
-quarters.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This valley of the Nile has always been the
-home of mystery and charm. The inscriptions
-on its tombs and temples have been deciphered
-and receive much attention in modern days; but
-they are not more interesting than is the woman
-of Egypt, who, as we have learned, enjoyed
-greater liberties and received more honour than
-is the heritage of her modern daughters. It
-is difficult to understand her, as even yet she
-represents traditions and the habits of dead
-centuries, fit to be relegated to the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>She is the Sphinx of this Oriental land, and will
-not easily give to the world her secrets.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c013'><span class='sc'>The Mohammedan Woman.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c014'>When first one visits Egypt, romance seems to
-peer from beneath the veil of each black-robed
-figure, and mystery lurks behind the intricate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>carving that covers the windows where one is
-sure some languid beauty sits waiting for the
-moment when her lord and master will be gone,
-that she may wave a white hand to the passionate
-suitor below. This idea of Egypt is generally
-derived from highly coloured and erotic novels
-which always make this country alluring and
-often sensual. To one who has been given this
-highly seasoned food for his imagination to feed
-upon the modern Egypt, with its great glaring
-hotels, its motor-cars, its shops that might be
-in London or New York, is a great disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Illusions will again be lost if one is permitted
-to enter the beautiful homes on the fashionable
-drives of Cairo, for they are not Eastern in
-any sense, nor is there anything about them to
-indicate that their owners are Orientals. They
-express no individuality, and might belong to
-any person of means whether in the East or
-the West. The drawing-rooms are furnished in
-French fashion, with gilded chairs, a grand piano,
-hangings and curtains made in England or
-France. Great glass chandeliers holding the
-glaring electric lights express the cosmopolitanism
-which the mistress feels she must show
-the world, in order that she may not be considered
-as belonging to the old school of Egyptian
-womanhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One hears the word harim and instantly
-conjures up an Arabian Nights picture of rare
-hangings, subdued lights, beautiful odalisques
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>lounging on soft divans, slaves, incense, and a
-general air of sensuousness pervading the entire
-place. I read a book not long ago written by
-a well-known woman writer who says, “I am
-thankful to say that I have never been within
-a harim except twice, and the memory of that
-dreadful place will rest with me for many years.”
-Yet she admits that on her first visit to this
-“dreadful place” she had no interpreter and
-could only draw upon her imagination to give
-the women she saw their position in the elaborate
-household. This imagination was evidently a
-vivid one, as she believed that many women she
-saw were “the poor deluded slaves” of the
-master of the house, while quite likely they were
-the innumerable relatives and woman-servants
-that always throng the rich man’s home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In reality, in present-day modern Cairo, if
-one enters the harim of the better class, or of
-the official class, one is greeted by a hostess
-dressed in the latest French creation, tea is served,
-while the politics of the world are discussed easily
-in either French or English by the polished, up-to-date
-Egyptian women.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The word harim is much misunderstood
-by the people of the Western world. The Arabic
-word harim simply means the women’s
-quarters. The selam-lik are the apartments
-in which the men of the household have their business
-offices, receive their friends, and pass their
-time, while the harim-lik are the apartments
-reserved for the female members and children
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>of the family. The literal meaning is exclusiveness,
-seclusion, privacy. In its restricted sense
-it embodies the two meanings of the women
-of the household and their exclusive apartments.
-In the wider acceptance of the term we understand
-by harim an established social system
-deriving its sanction from a body of laws promulgated
-by the Arabian prophet Mohammed.
-When a woman is harim it means that she is
-secluded, and we hear the expression in regard
-to schoolgirls. “Yes, my daughters go to
-school,” a mother will say, “but they are
-kept harim.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In Persia and Turkey the word zenana is
-used, and in India the common form of expression
-for the woman who is not seen by any male
-except those of her immediate family is, “She is
-purdah-nashim, or simply purdah.” The purdah
-is the screen that shuts her from the outside
-world, and the Oriental, whatever his race,
-whether in Egypt, Turkey, or India, whether he
-calls it the harim, purdah, or zenana, speaks
-of it in his literature and poetry as the
-“Sanctuary of Conjugal Happiness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One can live years in the East and get little
-idea of the life of the Moslem woman of the
-better class. In Egypt ten million out of the
-twelve million inhabitants are followers of the
-prophet Mohammed, and to understand at all
-the Eastern woman one must learn something
-of the religion that dominates the entire life of
-the Mohammedan. The actions of the Moslem
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>woman, whether in India, Arabia, Egypt, Persia,
-or Algiers, are controlled and forced to comply
-with the laws made by the Arabian prophet of
-the seventh century, and even to-day his word
-practically governs each act of the domestic life
-as well as the world outside the home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before Mohammed’s time there were no social,
-religious, nor educational institutions in Arabia,
-as we understand them. Unlimited polygamy,
-slavery, drunkenness, polytheism, gambling, child
-murder, and plunder existed. He taught that
-there was but one God, forbade child murder,
-limited the number of wives to four, forbade the
-use of intoxicating liquors, gambling, usury, and
-gave women a definite legal status.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The reforms inaugurated by this wonderful
-man effected vast and marked improvement
-in the position of the women of the Eastern
-world. Her status had degenerated from that
-held in ancient times until her position was
-extremely degraded. She was the chattel of her
-father, brother, or husband, like his camel or
-his sheep, and could be bought and sold as any
-other chattel. She was an integral part of her
-husband’s estate and was inherited by his heirs.
-The son inherited his father’s wives and often
-married them. This Mohammed severely censured,
-and laid down most exacting laws in
-regard to the women lawful for a man to marry.
-He says:—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>And marry not them whom your fathers have married; for this
-is a shame and hateful, and an evil way—though what is past
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>may be allowed. Forbidden to you are your mothers and your
-daughters, and your sisters, and your aunts, both on your father’s
-and your mother’s side, and your foster-mothers and your foster-sisters,
-and the mothers of your wives, and your stepdaughters
-who are your wards, born of your wives, and the wives of your
-sons, and ye may not have two sisters.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He is severely criticized that he authorized
-polygamy, but when one remembers the wild,
-lawless people whom he governed, it seems that
-he showed extreme moderation in limiting the
-number of wives to four. He added that a man
-might possess the slaves within the household,
-and his followers say he was compelled to put
-in this postscript in order to quiet the unrest
-that was caused by the new domestic regulation
-which was so contrary to all ideas then controlling
-his immediate world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He expressly stated that if a man could not
-deal justly and love equally all his wives, he
-must then marry but one. All true believers
-quote this as meaning that Mohammed really
-intended his people to be monogamous, as it was
-fully known that no man could love four women
-with equal ardour. The husband is also enjoined
-to partition his time equally amongst his families,
-and there is a saying that if a man inclines
-particularly to one of the women of his household,
-in the day of judgment he will incline to one
-side by being a paralytic.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He allowed women to inherit property,
-although he gave a girl only half the inheritance
-of a boy. A wife may inherit one-fourth of her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>husband’s estate if there are no children, and
-one-eighth if there are children; if there is
-more than one wife, the eighth is divided equally
-amongst them. A man may inherit one-half of
-his wife’s property in the event of her being
-childless, but only one-quarter if she leaves
-children, and neither one can disinherit the
-other.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Yet the laws show clearly that a woman was
-not legally the equal of a man, as it takes the
-testimony of two women to equal that of one
-man, and the price of a woman’s life was only
-fifty camels instead of the hundred camels demanded
-for the life of a man. There is a reason
-for this other than the mere disregard of women.
-Those days were lawless days, when tribe was
-fighting tribe and the non-fighting women were
-naturally not held in such esteem as were the
-men who were needed to fight in the continuous
-tribal wars.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Moslems claim that the Mohammedan woman
-is more truly protected by the laws of Mohammed
-than are the women of Western countries. She
-can dispose of any property that she may receive,
-either from her family or her husband, as she
-sees fit. She is not responsible for the debts
-of her husband; she can sue and be sued; or she
-can make contracts or enter into any business
-undertaking without consulting her husband; and
-she may even take him before the courts if he
-does not live up to an agreement he may have
-made with her.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Yet this wily Eastern prophet did not believe
-in the absolute equality of women; as he says:—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>Men are superior to women on account of the qualities with
-which God hath gifted one above the other, and on account
-of the outlay they make from their substance for them;</p>
-<p class='c016'>and he warns his followers from making too
-large settlements on them or in giving them too
-many valuable gifts:</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>And entrust not to the incapable the substance which God
-hath placed with you for their support; but maintain them
-therewith, and clothe them, and speak to them with kindly
-speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A Moslem woman is supposed to share the
-responsibilities of life as well as its pleasures.
-In the case of destitute parents, sons are required
-to contribute two-thirds towards their support,
-while the daughters must add their third. This
-is a very wise law, because Egypt, like practically
-all Oriental countries, makes no provision
-from its public funds for the maintenance of the
-poor or old. Each family must care for its own
-helpless.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many reasons are given for the laws compelling
-the women of Mohammedan lands to
-be veiled and to pass their life within the inner
-apartments reserved for their especial use. Some
-say that Mohammed caused women to be veiled
-because of his jealousy of his young wife
-Ayesha; others claim that the prophet, becoming
-enamoured by the beauty of his adopted son’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>wife, caused her to be divorced, afterwards
-marrying her, contrary to the laws he himself
-had made; he wished to protect men from being
-subjected to the temptation which had overtaken
-him and had brought upon him the displeasure
-of his people. But the seclusion of women was
-found in Asia, in ancient Rome, in Syria, and
-even in Athens, long before the time of
-Mohammed. It was in practice amongst many
-Oriental nations from the earliest times, and
-quite likely Mohammed simply adopted the customs
-of the people with whom he came in
-contact on his conquering tours.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The seclusion of women, especially among the
-nomads, can be traced to the warlike habits of
-the people. In times of war the enemy would
-first of all carry away the women, children, and
-cattle of the tribe with whom they were fighting.
-In order to protect the helpless they were
-kept in inner rooms. The richer and stronger
-the family, the more secluded were the women,
-and it became a mark of caste to be kept within
-the women’s quarters, or protected. Thus what
-first originated as a necessity became afterwards
-a matter of aristocracy, and the man who could
-keep his women strictly harim was looked
-upon as higher in the social scale than one who
-was compelled, from economic reasons or otherwise,
-to allow the females of his household to
-come and go freely in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>An Egyptian woman, from the time when she
-is seven or eight years old, never shows her face
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>unveiled to any man except her father, her
-brother, or her husband. No chance is given the
-followers of the Arabian prophet to have the
-little flirtations that are so dear to the heart of
-many of her Western sisters. Mohammed
-says:—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>And speak to the believing women that they refrain their eyes
-and display not their ornaments, except those which are external;
-and that they throw their veils over their bosoms, and display
-not their ornaments except to their husbands, or their fathers, or
-their husbands’ fathers, or their sons, or their husbands’ sons,
-or their brothers or their brothers’ sons, or their sisters’ sons, or
-their women, or their slaves or their children. And let them
-not strike their feet together so as to discover their hidden
-ornaments.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The present-day Mohammedan woman
-observes this law more strictly than was at first
-intended, even to not being seen by the father
-of her husband. I know an Egyptian woman
-who is never seen by her father-in-law except
-on the first day of the year, when he calls upon
-her to wish her the joys of the coming year.
-She enters the room closely veiled and offers
-him the season’s greetings, then leaves without
-further conversation. I was calling upon an
-Indian Mohammedan woman who could not
-enter the room until her father-in-law had left
-it, as it would have been a serious breach of
-etiquette for him to see her.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This seclusion does not rest heavily upon the
-Mohammedan woman, as she considers it the
-desire of her husband to protect her, and she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>would be the first to resent the breaking of her
-seclusion, as showing that she had lost value
-in his eyes. She lives for no one except her
-family, is supposed to be of no interest to any
-one else, it being a great breach of social
-decorum for any male member of a family to
-even inquire about her. A man would never say
-to another man, “Is your wife well?” He would
-say, “Is your household well?” And the husband
-would never speak of his “wife” to another
-man, but would speak of his “house,” which
-would naturally include the female occupants.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The harim is the “Holy of Holies” in the
-Moslem world. Even a police official would
-hardly dare to penetrate the women’s quarters in
-search of a criminal. When a man has retired
-to his harim he is free from any disturbing
-influence from the outside world. If a friend
-or enemy should call and servants would say
-that the master was in the harim, the caller
-would be compelled to leave or wait until the
-master was disposed to enter again the selam-lik,
-or rooms assigned to the male members of
-the household.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The greatest evil in the harim life lies in the
-dreadful seclusion and the paralysing monotony.
-Many of the older women are unable to read
-and write, and they pass their days in weary
-idleness and a vacuous routine which is only
-broken by visits to women friends as mentally
-impoverished as themselves. Not being allowed
-the friendship of the opposite sex, they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>denied the stimulation of the mind which would
-no doubt result from the interchange of ideas
-with men who come in contact with the outside
-world. Naturally the intellectual development
-is restricted, and this starving of the mentality
-of the women must have a result detrimental to
-the rising generation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Seclusion also makes a woman very much
-more the actual possession of her husband than
-she would be if allowed to come and go in the
-world, to know her rights and the means by
-which to enforce them. Although the laws are
-very much in her favour, in regard to property
-rights especially, it takes a woman of more than
-ordinary courage and intelligence to break away
-from the walls which encircle her and parade
-her troubles in open court. We are told of the
-wonderful laws allowing the woman to dispose
-of her property as she wishes; but we are not
-told that she may give this property to her husband,
-and when once within the harim, pressure
-is often brought compelling the woman to give
-all that she possesses to her husband, making
-her doubly helpless and wholly within his power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>They have a proverb that a woman must
-always answer the call of her husband, “even
-if she is at the oven.” Her happiness depends
-entirely upon the treatment she receives from
-him. His visits to the harim are the only
-breaks in the monotony of her life, and he brings
-to her the only touch she may have with the
-great man-world outside. By a few men the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>wives are treated as if they were intellectual
-equals, but these are few and far between. The
-average Oriental treats his womenfolk as if they
-were upon a lower plane than himself, “brought
-up amongst ornaments and contentious without
-cause.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One would judge that, handicapped as they
-are, Moslem women would take no part in the
-political or social life of their country, but facts
-prove that they can rise to great heights and
-exhibit rare courage and executive powers in
-time of need. Ayesha, the favourite wife of
-Mohammed, showed an instance of bravery and
-courage that might belong to women of any land.
-When Ali, the cousin of the prophet, rebelled
-against the successors of Mohammed, Ayesha
-took the field against him, commanding the
-troops in person at the “Battle of the Camel,”
-and in later days they have shown that the restrictions
-of the harim do not deaden the fires
-that burn in women’s breasts when tyranny or
-oppression rules their land.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In Persia, where Mohammedanism in its
-strictest sect has sway, the women have been
-known to rise in force and demand the rights
-of their people when all the efforts of the men
-have failed. In 1861, at the time of the great
-famine, foodstuffs rose to an exorbitant price,
-because of a few greedy officials who were
-enriching themselves at the expense of their
-starving countrymen. It was impossible to bring
-the matter before the Shah by the methods
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>generally employed, but the women rose, and
-one day thousands of them surrounded his
-carriage as he was returning from a hunting
-trip, and stating the wrongs of his people, demanded
-that he should make an investigation.
-The Shah was thoroughly frightened at the sight
-of this unprecedented exhibition on the part of
-his usually unseen subjects, and promised all
-they asked, and, what was more wonderful, kept
-his promise. The leaders of the party who were
-causing the distress were beheaded, and the price
-of bread was diminished by half within twelve
-hours. It is only a few years ago that the
-women of Persia confronted the President of
-the Assembly in his hall, and tearing aside their
-veils and producing revolvers, confessed their
-decision to kill their husbands and sons and add
-their own dead bodies to the sacrifice if the
-deputies should waver in their duties to uphold
-the liberties of the Persian people.</p>
-
-<div id='i_036' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_036.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A WATER-CARRIER.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>These Moslem women display a fortitude and
-courage that is almost fanatical in times of
-persecution. Thousands in Persia have given
-their lives for their faith in Baha Ullah, the
-leader of a sect of reformed Mohammedans.
-They have been dragged from the harims to the
-public market-places, where they have been subjected
-to unheard of indignities before having
-the privilege of dying for their faith. They have
-also been compelled to sit in rows facing the
-public execution grounds while their husbands
-and sons were beheaded before their eyes, but
-even the torture and death of those they loved
-did not cause them to waver from what they
-believed to be right. The story of one woman
-exemplifies the fanatical courage that will
-dominate such a shut-in woman, when in some
-dim, tragic hour she has been compelled to give
-her contribution in the life she loved to her
-religious cause. In Tabriz one day a crowd of
-women were seated facing the executioner’s
-block, and amongst them a delicate, dainty
-woman who had been protected all her life within
-the harim of one of the prominent men of
-Tabriz, but whose death had left his women
-helpless to bear the brunt of his enemy’s wrath.
-Chance had made this enemy the city Governor,
-and he remembered that the family of the man
-he hated even in death were followers of Baha
-Ullah. On this morning in June the mother was
-brought to see the death of her fourteen-year-old
-son, her only child. When the executioner
-had done his work, the head was tossed into her
-lap, and she was told “Take back your son.”
-She stood up, and holding the loved head in her
-hands, held it towards the sky, as if to give it
-as an offering to the God who seemed to have
-deserted her in her hour of need, looked long
-into the closing eyes, then threw it to the official’s
-feet, saying, “I do not take back what I give
-my God!” and turning quickly, took her place
-among the sorrow-maddened women.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Her cousin, who told me the story and who
-was a witness to the scene, said to me: “It is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>impossible for a Western woman to understand
-a Moslem woman. Perhaps because of our exclusion
-and the lack of means of self-expression,
-we have over-developed our inner emotional
-natures, which at times of sorrow burst forth like
-a hidden flame. We not only gave our lives
-in those dread days of Tabriz, but what is worse,
-we gave the lives of those we loved—and still
-lived on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The women of Egypt have as yet had no
-reason to rise up <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en masse</span></i> and show what they
-may do in times of national distress. It is unusual
-for the women of any Mohammedan land to
-usurp the prerogatives of men. They are fundamentally
-intensely feminine, the home their only
-domain. Sa’adi, the Persian poet, said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>No happiness comes to the house of him whose hen hath
-crowed like a cock.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It will be many years before the Egyptian
-woman joins the ranks of the militant suffragettes,
-and tries to blow up the Pyramids or deface the
-walls of Egypt’s famous temples in the spirit
-of emulation and zeal for <em>the Cause</em>.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER II<br /> <span class='large'>THE MODERN EGYPTIAN WOMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The conservative woman of Egypt prides herself
-that she never leaves her home. I know several
-ladies well advanced in years who say they
-have never been outside their homes since they
-were brought there as brides. An Eastern
-household is composed of many people, and this
-seclusion of the women does not cause such
-loneliness as would be felt by a Western woman
-if thus closely confined always to the home.
-In the East the patriarchal life prevails,
-and the financially fortunate member of the
-family finds himself supporting an immense
-army of poor relations, who act in all capacities,
-from maids in the kitchen to the servants at
-the door. They expect little or nothing as
-wages, but they <em>do</em> expect that the prosperous
-member of their clan or family will provide
-clothing, food, and a roof beneath which they
-may live.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In all Egyptian homes of the better class
-there are many servants. They are not the competent,
-trained servants to which we are accustomed,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>and it takes many of them to accomplish
-what one well-trained servant will do in England
-or America. They have no system, each servant
-doing his task in his own appointed time
-and in his own way. Within the harim the
-servants are generally women, and they are on
-much more familiar terms with the inmates than
-are servants in the West. They take on a feeling
-of equality with their mistresses, taking part
-in the conversation when guests are present,
-entering doors without knocking, and generally
-considering themselves as part of the family.
-Mohammed taught that all true believers are
-free and equal—the servant the equal of his
-master. This is one of the reasons that the
-traveller is often surprised by having the donkey-boy
-offer his hand when saying good-bye. He
-does not intend it as an impertinence; he simply
-wishes to bid his patron “God speed” in the
-Western manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The women of the harims take much time to
-dress, and spend long hours in the public baths,
-if they do not possess that luxury at home.
-They take great care of their skin, using all the
-arts to keep it soft and unwrinkled. They have
-not yet learned the charm of beautiful hands,
-and the manicurist has not yet penetrated the
-harim, but it is only a question of time when
-she will arrive, as the Egyptian woman seizes
-with avidity every means of improving her
-personal appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many of them tint their straight black locks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>with henna, by making a paste which is allowed
-to dry on the hair for twenty-four hours, then
-removed. This, when used not too freely, gives
-a charming glint of reddish gold to the thick
-hair, and utterly obliterates any trace of age.
-The henna-tinted locks are not seen as much
-as formerly, as the custom is passing out with
-the advent of the newer generation, and is mainly
-to be seen on the older women or the women of
-the desert. In former times the nails of the
-hands were tinted a deep orange, but this also
-is being relegated to the “things that were,” as
-the young girls are beginning to see that instead
-of a beautifier, it makes the hands appear most
-untidy. I have seen an old lady with her fingers
-stained a deep brownish yellow to the first joint,
-the palms of her hands, the toes, and even the
-bottoms of the feet coloured with the henna
-paste.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The house dress of the Egyptian woman is
-a long <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">négligé</span></i> made in an empire form
-or what we used to call a “Mother Hubbard,”
-with the fullness of the cloth gathered to
-a much-trimmed yoke, and ending in a
-train that sweeps the floor. The wearer may
-follow her fancy in the choice of goods with
-which these dresses are made. The ordinary
-dress worn every day is of some material easily
-laundered, but the gown for gala occasions is
-often most elaborate, made of rich silks, satins,
-or brocades with great figures in gold or silver.
-Many of them appear as if made of cloth originally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>intended for furniture covering. If she has
-a wide range from which to select the material
-for her dresses, she also is not restricted in the
-choice of colours, as each woman indulges in
-whatever shades she most admires, and a party
-of women with their red, blue, yellow, and mauve
-creations look like a party of animated dolls
-dressed for a fancy bazaar.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The hair is braided in one or two braids and
-allowed to hang down the back, sometimes tied
-with strings on which dangle gold coins or balls.
-A veil is always worn over the head, hanging
-down to the waist line. It is very graceful and
-adds to the dignity of the Egyptian woman.
-With the poor this head covering is a large piece
-of cotton with a gay-coloured border, and even
-ladies wear in the morning a cotton veil, but on
-dress occasions it is of chiffon or net elaborately
-bordered with gold or silver, or in some cases
-sewn with sequins, very similar to the shawls
-offered by the vendors in front of the big hotels.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The feet are slipped into toe slippers that can
-easily be removed when entering the living-rooms
-or when sitting upon the divans. In the matter
-of footwear there is a wide range from which
-to choose. From the wooden bath clog to the
-tiny heelless covering for the toes, embroidered
-in gold or silver or even tiny seed pearls, the
-Egyptian woman’s slipper is a thing of beauty
-and dainty femininity. Stockings are considered
-a superfluity while in the house, except by those
-influenced by the customs of foreign lands.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>If the lady wishes to make a call she dons
-a black silk or satin skirt with a long train, and
-over it ties a piece of black goods shaped like
-a large apron hanging down the back instead
-of the front. The lower end is brought up over
-the head and tied under the chin, acting as hat
-and shoulder covering, completely disguising the
-form. Over the face below the eyes is tied a
-piece of white chiffon. This is really an addition
-to the woman’s charming appearance, as the
-present-day Egyptian woman is wearing the veil
-so thin that the shape of the features can be
-dimly seen, softened and refined by the delicate
-chiffon, until even a plain woman takes on an
-appearance of beauty that perhaps vanishes when
-the veil is removed. She is allowed to show her
-chief attraction, her great black eyes, which peer
-at one curiously over the folds of white. They
-are not so large as are the Indian woman’s eyes,
-but they are very expressive, shaded by long
-straight lashes, which are generally touched up
-by kohl, since even with the advent of modernism
-the Egyptian woman cannot be persuaded
-to relegate her kohl-pot to the lumber-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The woman of the labouring class, seen on
-the street, is dressed in a long gown hanging
-straight from the shoulders, over which, when
-she leaves her home, she drapes a large black
-shawl covering her from head to feet. The veil
-of this class of woman is of black cloth, so thick
-that it is impossible to distinguish the features
-beneath it, and often weighted at the bottom with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>gold or silver coins. Covering the nose is the
-disfiguring piece of wood which holds the veil
-in place. The picture of this sombre-clad woman,
-with her ugly veil and grotesque nosepiece, is
-taken by the average tourist as representing the
-Egyptian woman, while, in fact, she represents
-only the lower class, such as the wife of the
-labourer, the small artisan, or the petty merchant.
-These women may be seen on the streets walking
-with the stately grace that is given to the woman
-who carries a burden on the head, or five or
-six of them may be seen sitting on a flat-bottomed
-cart drawn by a much decorated donkey <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</span></i>
-to visit relatives or watch the festivities connected
-with a marriage, or going to the cemeteries. This
-last seems to be a favourite excuse for an outing
-with women of this class, as it gives them a
-chance to have a good gossip on the way, and
-opportunity of strolling in the open air, which
-must be a great boon to the poor in the large
-cities, as their homes are small, dark, dirty, and
-most unsanitary. Yet as one lives in the Orient
-and sees the conditions under which the great
-majority of the population live, one grows to
-believe that there are no such things as microbes,
-else all these people would have been dead long
-ago.</p>
-
-<div id='i_044' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_044.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE TAILOR.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>Even in modern Cairo one rarely sees a lady
-except as she passes in a closed carriage or
-limousine. Women do not go to the mosques,
-as Mohammed said that women in places of
-public worship distracted men from the real business which brought them there. They are also
-never found in restaurants, hotels, nor coffeehouses.
-In fact, an Egyptian woman never goes
-to a place where she might be looked upon by
-men other than those of her immediate family.
-Even the most modern product of the present
-system of education would hardly dare to be seen
-in any place that was not harim. At the
-bazaars held for charity and other public functions
-a day is set apart when the women may
-visit them without danger of being looked upon
-by men. An Egyptian woman told me that these
-men must be educated and elevated before
-Egyptian women will dare to go freely upon
-the street. Even a foreign woman dreads passing
-the outdoor cafés, where the men turn noisily
-in their chairs and stare rudely at the woman who
-has the courage to pass them. In the case of
-an Egyptian lady, I was told that these men do
-not confine their rudeness to stares, but that the
-low remarks made to her confirm the belief that
-the time is not yet ripe for the Egyptian woman
-to try to enter the world, so long closed to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These harim women are just beginning
-to learn the joys of shopping. Formerly the
-husbands or fathers bought the goods for their
-dresses, or the shopkeepers sent their assistants,
-who laid the gay stuffs and jewels on mats within
-the courtyards, where the women could make
-their choice. But now in some of the larger
-shops parties of veiled ladies may be seen fingering
-the soft silks and satins, looking with curious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>eyes at the hats, and selecting the jewels with
-which they love to adorn themselves. Cairo is
-the happy hunting ground of the Parisian
-jeweller, as Egyptian women are noted for their
-love of bracelets, ear-rings, necklaces, and pins.
-The old-time heavy gold chains and hoops are
-losing their charm, and now the lady whose
-husband has a purse easy to open buys long
-pendant ear-rings set with many diamonds, bracelets
-of pearls and rubies, rings of turquoise and
-sapphires, and necklaces of emeralds. Quantity,
-not quality, she desires, and the colour and purity
-of a stone are not so much to be desired as the
-size or number. The women who make no claim
-to modernism are still seen in the goldsmiths’
-shops in the native streets, sitting in front of
-the tiny cupboard-like holes in the wall, weighing,
-pricing, trying on the great barbaric hoops
-of gold for the ears, or the chains with large
-hammered pendants, made in the same form and
-with the same design as those worn by their
-mothers and their grandmothers. The merchant
-does not need to originate new designs to attract
-the conservative Egyptian woman who still clings
-to her native jewelry. It has been the same
-shape and design from time immemorial.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another product of the West has penetrated
-the harims of Cairo—the French dressmakers.
-Many of the rich merchants’ wives and the wives
-of the officials who cannot get their gowns direct
-from Paris, and who are discarding the straight
-empire pattern for clothes more <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la mode</span></i>, get
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>their dresses fashioned by these clever French
-women, who come to the women’s courtyards
-loaded down with fashion books, tape measures,
-and a running stream of flattering talk, leaving
-with many orders written in their little books. It
-must be admitted that the Egyptian woman looks
-best when dressed in her native costume, which
-mercifully disguises the over-abundant flesh with
-which most women who spend their lives within
-the harims are blessed. Sweets, a sedentary
-life, and many sweetened drinks conspire to make
-the lady of Egypt extremely fat, after the first
-flush of youth is past. This is not a sorrow to
-her as it would be to her Western sister, and
-when she has arrived at the age of thirty, and
-the pounds that she feels should come with the
-advancing years have not been added to her
-figure, she sends to the chemist for a mixture to
-convert her into the present ideal of Egyptian
-beauty. This ideal in the olden time, if we may
-judge of the pictures seen upon the walls of
-the tombs and temples, was that of a slight,
-willowy figure. But that ideal has changed. The
-woman now seems to strive to be as wide as
-she is long, and because of this fact and also
-because stays are not looked upon with joy by
-the Egyptian woman, who has always been
-allowed an uncompressed figure, the modern dress
-is not adapted to her style of beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Women are not prisoners in any sense of the
-word, nor are they pining behind their latticed
-windows as we are sometimes led to believe by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>writers of fiction. They visit freely amongst each
-other, and their visits are not confined to the
-passing of a few senseless platitudes that generally
-mark conversation of Western women
-making afternoon calls upon each other. They
-do not “call,” they go for a visit of several
-hours or even days.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When a lady enters the home of her friend,
-she takes off the veil and the cape-like covering
-of her head, steps out of the long black skirt,
-and stands arrayed like Solomon in all his glory.
-They dress as elaborately for their women friends
-as if to meet admirers of the opposite sex, and
-they spend hours drinking the delicious coffee,
-sipping sherbets, eating fruits or confectionery,
-and chatting over the gossip of the day. When
-time for serving the meal arrives, a large tray
-is brought into the room and placed upon a low
-stand, around which the women group themselves
-in comfortable attitudes on rugs. From these trays
-they help themselves to the deliciously cooked
-mutton or chicken, the vegetables and desserts
-with which it is laden. Pork is never served,
-as it was forbidden by Mohammed. They eat
-with their fingers, using only the right hand, as
-the left hand is ceremonially unclean, and after
-the meal a servant pours water over their hands
-from a long-spouted brass ewer, the water falling
-into a brass basin. Many of the ladies smoke,
-but it is not a universal habit. If they indulge
-in the habit with which we always associate the
-Eastern woman, it is by using a large water pipe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>with an extraordinarily long, supple stem, the
-smoke passing through perfumed water and becoming
-cool before reaching the user’s lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Eastern woman loves perfumes and prefers
-them much stronger than we of the Western
-world think agreeable. A hostess will pass
-around the little wooden scent-bottles, and each
-guest may add as much as she wishes to her
-already over-perfumed body. The mixture is not
-always pleasant to sensitive nostrils. Incense and
-sweet-smelling woods are often burned in little
-braziers and add to the congeries of odours.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many of the old-time Egyptian women cannot
-read; indeed, it is stated that only three out of a
-thousand women could read ten years ago; their
-conversation is therefore confined to the gossip
-of the neighbourhood: who is married, who is
-engaged; the social and financial standing of
-the families involved; the presents and the trousseaux.
-Society is divided into cliques, as in any
-other part of the world, and there is a decided
-“Who’s Who,” especially in Cairo and in the
-larger towns.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The woman’s life seems to centre around her
-children, since it is this evidence of Allah’s blessing
-that makes her greatest happiness. A great
-part of their talk is involved in the discussion
-of their children’s ailments, the remedies, their
-children’s education and life in general. There
-are no nurseries in Egypt, and both boys and
-girls live within the harim until they are seven
-years old, when the boy, if he does not go to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>school, has a tutor and lives in the selam-lik.
-When, as at present, Government schools are
-established in every small town and village in
-Egypt, both boys and girls go to school. The
-girl is kept strictly harim even in the school,
-and the teachers are women, who guard carefully
-from men’s eyes the girls who are entrusted to
-them for the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Besides visiting with their friends or relatives,
-the Egyptian women go to weddings, where they
-look upon the dancing and hear the singing from
-their places behind the screens, or they make
-pilgrimages to the tombs of saints or holy men,
-where they pray for the health of their children;
-or, if they have not been so fortunate as to have
-children, they pray for that blessing. They do
-not pray <em>to</em> the saints, as even Mohammed
-himself cannot answer prayers, but they believe
-that the austere lives passed by these holy men
-will intercede for them with the Great and One
-God.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>An Egyptian friend of mine, telling me of the
-efficacy of one of the places of pilgrimage in
-the cure of eye troubles, said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Yes, I believe in these charms obtained at
-the tomb of some of the marabouts, and I have
-been on several pilgrimages, although it is not
-much encouraged in our family. You saw my
-brother’s wife to-day. She has visited the tomb
-of every saint in the vicinity of Cairo, but it
-is just because she is restless and wants to get
-out. She cares no more about the saints than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>you do, but it gives her an opportunity to get
-away from my mother. My life, that you think
-so restricted, is wildly exciting to what it was
-when I was a girl at home. Mother is most
-conservative, and will not even allow a man-servant
-near the harim. Her cook has never
-seen her, although he has been in the family since
-I was a baby. Here in the country I have men-servants
-who see me unveiled, but they are the
-descendants of slaves who were in the family of
-my husband for generations, and that is permitted
-if we are not too orthodox.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I noticed while visiting friends in the country
-with this progressive, educated Egyptian woman
-that if we passed an ordinary fellah, or workman,
-she did not take care to cover her face. If we met
-an overseer or a man above the farmer class,
-she very carefully drew her veil across her face,
-leaving only the eyes visible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The women are very superstitious, and believe
-in the efficacy of charms and amulets for every
-known disease. Nearly every woman wears
-around her neck, lost to sight amidst the innumerable
-chains with which she covers the upper part
-of her body, an amulet or charm of some kind.
-Perhaps it is a silver box containing a few words
-of the Koran, or a small piece of parchment
-with mystic letters written on it, guaranteed to
-guard her household from harm. All Egyptian
-women know of charms and lotions and shrines
-or mystic words to give the wife who has not
-presented a son unto her lord. One of the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>questions asked by Egyptian women is, “How
-many children have you?” If the answer is
-“None!” they cannot keep the looks of pity
-from their eyes, nor the sympathetic words of
-condolence from their lips. They are also most
-generous in giving talismans to remedy this defect,
-and will wax enthusiastic over the beneficial
-effects of some favourite pilgrimage, amulet, or
-prayer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I have a piece of sheepskin with the ninety-nine
-names of Allah written upon it in gold,
-intended to insure, not only the advent of a son,
-but also, if bound upon his arm, to guard him
-from all danger throughout his lifetime.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the opera in cosmopolitan Cairo one may
-hear rustlings and low laughter from behind the
-closely screened boxes, and know that an
-Egyptian Bey or wealthy merchant is there
-with his family, allowing them to enjoy the play
-and watch the people in the house, themselves
-unseen. But this joy is given usually only to
-the women of Cairo, as the smaller towns have
-not as yet become sufficiently modernized that
-the women may go to the public theatres. In
-the conservative homes, if a hostess wishes to
-entertain her guests with professionals, she sends
-for the singing girls or dancing women to come
-to her home, and there they perform before the
-ladies, who watch them from the divans, and talk
-and laugh with their entertainers, getting far more
-amusement from them than by simply looking
-at them on the stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>Fortune-tellers are often brought into the
-women’s quarters, and blind men who chant the
-words of their sacred book, the Koran. This
-latter is a popular form of entertainment, and
-even to Western ears the sad, minor music has
-a charm, although after a time it becomes monotonous
-to one who cannot understand the Arabic
-in which the Koran is written.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Even the conservative Egyptian mother is now
-beginning to see that she must educate her
-daughter as well as her son, if she wishes her
-to make a good marriage. The modern
-Egyptian youth does not care for an ignorant
-wife who can only entertain him with household
-gossip when he comes from office
-or shop.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is ample opportunity given the Egyptian
-girl to obtain an education, as the Government
-has established schools in every city, town, and
-village. One sees also a great number of private
-schools for girls, supervised by every imaginable
-type of mistress. The Italian, Spanish,
-French, and English woman is taking advantage
-of this craving on the part of young Egypt for
-education. Many of these schoolmistresses are
-unfitted for their work, but as yet her pupils
-are not able to judge of the quality of information
-they are so eagerly absorbing. The mission
-schools, next to those provided by the Government,
-are perhaps the best equipped with trained
-teachers from England and America. These
-latter schools are filled with bright-faced young
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>girls, who are taking the newer ideas to their
-secluded mothers, who shake their heads dolefully
-over the new spirit of independence so
-swiftly creeping into the lives of their children,
-and which they fear, but to which they must
-accede.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Egypt, in common with the entire world, is
-experiencing vital changes, and her younger
-women, although walled in by custom, tradition,
-and habit, are eager to get into step with their advancing
-sons and husbands. It is only the older
-woman who is the implacable foe of progress,
-as she fears a change may mean the destruction
-of her little world. Yet she is fast losing
-the power as well as the wish to resist it, and
-the number of schools for girls shows that a
-real awakening to Egypt’s greatest need is being
-felt and met. At first the mother feared her
-daughter would be led astray from the true Faith,
-but the English Government bore this well in
-mind when establishing the educational system.
-The Koran and the practical observances of its
-tenets are taught by faithful followers of the
-prophet in the schools, and this has induced
-mothers to look with complacent eyes upon the
-new learning.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Infinitely better daughters and prospective
-mothers come each year from the Government
-and mission schools, if for no other reason than
-that they are intelligently trained in domestic
-economy and in the laws of hygiene. The frightful
-waste of infant life which heretofore has been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>caused by the ignorance of mothers will stop.
-The present training of the young girl strikes
-directly at this huge infant mortality and in the
-coming mother, educated and equipped for her
-duties, lies the hope of Egypt.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER III<br /> <span class='large'>MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, POLYGAMY</span></h2>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c017'><span class='sc'>Social Life of Egyptian Women</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c014'>The Koran enjoins marriage on all and calls
-bachelors the worst of mankind. Consequently
-there are few spinsters or bachelors in any
-Moslem land, and a woman who is divorced or
-widowed must have another husband found for
-her as soon as possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Although Mohammed believed that all men
-should be married, there were four classes of
-women against whom he warned his fellows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A <em>Yearner</em>—that is, a woman who has children
-by a former husband and wishes to get everything
-possible for them from her present
-husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A <em>Deplorer</em>.—One who is constantly deploring
-the loss of her first husband and stating his
-virtues to the disparagement of the present incumbent.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A <em>Backbiter</em>.—One who is kind to her husband’s
-face and behind his back accuses him of cruelty,
-miserliness, and ill-treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A <em>Toadstool</em>.—A beauty who is lazy and tyrannical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>and uses all the substance of her husband
-to buy silks, jewels, and perfumes with which
-to adorn herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is no courtship as we know it. The
-marriage is made by the parents or by a “go-between,”
-and the parties most interested do not
-see each other until the night of the marriage,
-although they may have exchanged photographs
-and have heard eulogistic descriptions of each
-other. But there are no shy meetings, no
-gazing into the eyes of the loved one. A
-girl would be considered as lacking in modesty
-and maidenly reserve if it were known that she
-attempted to see the man to whom she will be
-compelled to owe all allegiance and who will
-practically own her, body and soul, as soon as
-she is his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>During the time before the marriage the
-bridegroom, if a man of wealth, sends his bride-to-be
-many costly presents, generally in the shape
-of jewelry, silks, fans, slippers, and boxes of
-sweets. Her gifts to him are cigarette cases,
-embroidered sleeping suits, a rich fez, or some
-other practical evidence of her affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In families of any social pretensions whatsoever,
-there is drawn a marriage contract which
-stipulates the amount of dowry and whatever
-business relationships are entered into by the
-husband and wife. If the amount of dowry is
-not expressly stated in the contract, the woman
-is entitled to the customary dower of a woman
-of her class, which is judged according to that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>received by the other female members of her
-family. This contract can also contain a stipulation
-that the husband may not marry another
-wife so long as the present wife is living with
-him, and it also often states that the wife may
-divorce her husband for certain expressly stated
-causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are two kinds of dower, one called
-“prompt” which is all paid at the time of the
-marriage, the other where only part is given at
-that time and the rest retained to be paid in case
-of divorce or on the death of the husband. In
-the latter case the dower must be paid before
-the other debts of the estate are settled. The
-wife has absolute rights over her dower and can
-refuse to go to her husband’s home until it is
-paid.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The trousseau is provided by the father of the
-bride, and the articles she takes to her new home
-in the shape of furniture, jewelry, etc., are her
-property and can be taken with her if she should
-return to her father’s home or if she should
-be left a widow. The bridegroom is supposed
-to help pay the expenses of the elaborate feasting
-which lasts from three to seven days, and which
-is often a great drain upon the resources of both
-families. Custom has commanded that no parsimony
-shall be shown at this time of rejoicing,
-and each family tries to outdo its neighbour in
-the form of entertainment offered to its guests.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Theatrical entertainments are held in the courtyards,
-or in the large guest-room. Dancing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>girls dance and jugglers perform, while food is
-most plentifully provided, but there is no drinking
-of intoxicating liquors in the home of a follower
-of Mohammed. In the place of wines, sherbets,
-fruit juices, and coffee are served.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The culmination of the festivities comes when
-the bride in a gaily decorated carriage is conducted
-to her new home. In the streets of any
-large city one often sees these processions, the
-band leading the march, dozens of singers preceding
-the carriage, and friends following, all
-trying to show their joy in the happy event.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>According to Western ideals there is one great
-bar to the lasting happiness of the Moslem
-woman, and that is the question of divorce. It
-is said that 90 per cent. of the marriages in
-Egypt end in divorce, and that two people who
-live to an old age together without one of them
-being divorced are rarely found. Mohammed
-has been severely censured because of this great
-blot upon the progressive laws he made for his
-people, but before his time there was no check
-on divorce; a man could divorce often and for
-no reason, and a woman was helpless. This
-wise man laid down laws far in advance of his
-time on this subject, and (what was then an unheard
-of thing) allowed a woman to divorce her
-husband for explicitly stated causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If they divorce for mutual incompatibility—that
-is, if they both agree to it—there need be no
-question of the courts; but if the wife wishes
-to be free and the husband will not permit it,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>the woman may go before a judge and state
-her case, and if her charges are proven she will
-be granted her petition. Often a woman
-will return her dower or agree to forfeit the
-part not yet paid, or in many cases make a money
-payment to the avaricious husband in return for
-her liberty. A case not long ago came before
-the judge where the husband treated his wife
-brutally in order to force from her a certain
-sum of money in exchange for her freedom.
-The woman paid the sum demanded, then took
-the case before the judge, and proved that his
-cruel treatment would entitle her to a divorce,
-and the courts compelled the man to return the
-money to his ex-wife with an added gift.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The different sects have different modes of
-procedure. One requires the husband to pronounce
-the words of divorce once in a single
-sentence and not live with his wife for three
-months, when the divorce is accomplished.
-Another form requires that the words be pronounced
-three times in succession at the interval
-of a month, the divorce becoming effective when
-the last formula is pronounced. Another formula
-allows the husband to say three times in succession,
-“I divorce thee! I divorce thee! I
-divorce thee!” and the legal separation takes
-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A woman may say to her husband, “Give me
-a divorce in exchange for my dower,” and if the
-man will say, “I do,” a lawful dissolution of
-the marriage is effected.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>Whatever the rule, divorce is very easy for
-the Moslem husband, and the woman lives in
-constant fear that she will hear the words “I
-am discharged from the marriage between you
-and me,” and will be compelled to return to her
-home. This insecurity of the marriage bond
-causes the woman to hoard what money she may
-obtain, and takes away the interest she might
-otherwise have in the affairs of her husband,
-fearing that prosperity may only mean that he will
-yearn for a younger and more beautiful woman
-to share with him his riches. It also makes
-her try in every way to preserve her beauty,
-buying cosmetics and talismans that clever merchants
-assure her will aid in retaining the love
-of her husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the event of divorce the woman is commanded
-to remain single three months, but the
-man may marry immediately. There is no
-especial disgrace attached to divorce, yet the
-woman’s value is lowered to a certain extent, and
-quite likely she will not be able to make so good
-a marriage again.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>No child under two years may be taken away
-from the mother, as the Koran commands her to
-suckle the infant for that period. Unless it is
-proved that she is totally unworthy to bring up
-her child, or unless she marries an unbeliever,
-the boy is entitled to live with his mother until
-he is seven years old, and the girl until she is
-nine, when the father takes the guardianship of
-them both. Often they are allowed to live on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>indefinitely with the mother, especially the girl,
-if the father marries again and the new wife
-does not wish the care of the children of her predecessor.
-This makes the burden of divorce fall
-heavily upon the innocent children, as the mother
-generally marries and her husband may not care
-for the children of another man; consequently
-they are left in the care of the mother’s parents
-or other relatives, who quite likely consider them
-a superfluous addition to an already overcrowded
-household, although the father is compelled to
-contribute towards their support.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If divorce is prevalent in the Land of the Nile,
-that other great domestic evil, polygamy, is
-slowly dying out, mainly for an economic
-reason. All the wives in a family are supposed
-to have equal support, and in these days, when
-the women of Egypt are beginning to know and
-crave the luxuries of life, it is hard for a man,
-unless of the very wealthy class, to provide for
-more than one family. In a rich household each
-wife would demand, not only her own suite of
-rooms, but quite likely her own house and staff
-of servants, and she would see that her husband
-did not show favouritism in regard to clothes,
-jewelry, or amusements towards the women and
-children in his harim. Often in poorer homes
-one sees two wives living in peace together, but
-the man with more than one wife is becoming
-rarer each year. It is said that not one man in
-fifty has more than one wife. The cynics say
-that it is because divorce is so much easier and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>cheaper, but we believe that it is because of the
-higher ideals that are coming to the Egyptian
-along with the education that he is receiving from
-the Western world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is easy for the Western mind to take exaggerated
-views of the unhappiness of the life in
-the harim. I found, among the better classes,
-with whom I came into contact more than I did
-with the very poor, the same average of happiness
-that prevails in any land. Seclusion which seems
-so dreadful in our eyes has grown to be a matter
-of caste, and the older women, at least, have
-no desire to depart from it. The power of the
-husband is greater than it is in foreign lands,
-but he is generally a kindly man who leaves the
-women’s department strictly alone, to be ordered
-as his wife desires. It is she who has charge of
-the children while in infancy, teaching them or
-having them taught the Koran, taking them with
-her on visits to friends, and being with them much
-more than does the average Western mother of
-the same class. A middle-class Egyptian woman
-does practically the same things as does the wife
-of a middle-class Englishman. She cooks,
-washes, mends the clothing, keeps the house, and
-sews her children’s dresses. If she is able to
-have servants—and one is very poor in Egypt not
-to be able to afford at least one servant—the work
-of the household is superintended directly by the
-mistress. Of course she may not go to the market
-nor to the shops, but she inspects the food when
-brought to the house by the vendor or the cook.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>The care of the clothing is a great task if there
-are many sons in the family who dress in the
-native costume, which is made of light-coloured
-silk; the long black cloak is prone to sweep
-up the dust of the streets. The children of the
-poor wear only a short shirt until they are about
-six years old, but the children of the rich don
-European dress, either made in the house or
-bought in the shops. The ready-made clothing
-has found its way to the harims and saves the
-mother much work, as the sewing-machine is not
-so well known there as it is in the homes of the
-West.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Although the Egyptian woman is not seen in
-the mosques, she is very religious, and more
-zealous in the faith than is her husband, who has
-a chance to broaden his religious views by coming
-in contact with people of other beliefs. The
-wife does not observe the prayers as strictly as
-does her husband, but she has been taught her
-Koran in childhood and follows its precepts to
-the best of her ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The woman, like women all over the world,
-is much more rigidly ruled by her superstitious
-beliefs than is the man. She attributes the extraordinary
-phenomena of Nature to the work of
-good or evil spirits and believes in placating
-them or controlling them as far as possible.
-These evil spirits are liable to lurk in all places,
-in the ovens, the wells, and even in the market
-basket, which is covered to protect it from the
-evil eye of covetous passers-by, or to guard
-it from a wandering spirit who may be seeking
-a place of retreat.</p>
-
-<div id='i_064' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_064.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A WOMAN OF THE MASSES.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>The women in general are very ignorant in
-regard to all sanitary laws, and there is an enormous
-amount of preventable sickness within the
-harims. Children are allowed to eat what and
-whenever they wish, and sweets are indulged in
-at all times. All babies suffer from eye trouble,
-mainly caused by uncleanliness. A baby is not
-washed for eight days after birth, then if the
-father or mother is suffering from any form of
-skin disease, it is considered fatal to put water on
-the child. Flies and mosquitoes abound, carrying
-contagion to all. Doctors are unknown
-amongst the poorer class, and the mothers are
-in the hands of unskilled midwives at the time
-of child-bearing, and the mortality is great.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When the angel of death enters the household
-of an Egyptian, it may be known by the wailing
-of the women. The custom of weeping and
-wailing, beating of the breasts, and tearing out of
-the hair still prevails on the death of the member
-of a family. The body is buried within twenty-four
-hours. It is enclosed in a coffin which
-is covered by a rich shawl or piece of
-embroidery and carried to the cemetery on the
-shoulders of men, preceded by blind men chanting
-the Koran and followed by friends and
-relatives. The same ceremony is observed for
-the women as for the men.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The soul is supposed not to leave the body for
-three days. The first night an angel whispers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>in the ear of the deceased, “What is your faith?”
-and the soul must answer, “I am a Moslem.”
-The angel again whispers, “In whom do you
-believe?” and the soul will answer, “I believe
-in the One God,” and the third question is,
-“And who is your prophet?” and the answer,
-“Mohammed is the Prophet of God,” allows the
-soul to be left in peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Three days, seven days, and forty days after
-death memorials are held at the home of the
-late deceased, when friends call and offer their
-sympathy, and food and money are distributed in
-great quantities to the beggars. At times of
-festivity or mourning the poor come in crowds,
-and are never turned away empty-handed. There
-are practically no almshouses in Egypt, nor any
-organized charity, but Mohammedans are commanded
-to give one-twentieth of their income
-to the poor. Whether they follow this law exactly
-or not, they are very generous to those in need,
-not giving with much discernment, but always
-willing to drop a coin into the outstretched hand
-or to fill the empty bowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One cannot judge of the life of the average
-Egyptian woman by living only in Cairo, where
-the note of modernism has sounded with such call
-as to reach even the inner rooms of the harim,
-but in the smaller towns of Egypt one sees the
-real Egyptian life, untouched by the customs of
-alien lands.</p>
-
-<div id='i_066' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_066.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CHILDREN ON THE NILE.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>I visited in a home on the banks of the Nile
-and watched with interested eyes the life around
-me: saw the mother attend to her household
-duties in the morning, giving the servants directions
-for the day’s work, measuring and weighing
-out the stores to the cook, and taking his accounts
-as he came from the market-place with the day’s
-provisions. An old blind woman came in the
-morning to give the children their lesson in the
-Koran. She would start a surah, then the
-children would repeat the remaining verses in
-a sing-song voice, the slightest break in the
-intonation calling forth a rebuke from the leader,
-whose nodding head kept time to the chant. At
-nine o’clock the older children took their books
-under their arms and started for the village
-school, in the same noisy manner as do our
-children at home. I watched the fellaheen as
-they lifted the water from the river to irrigate
-the thirsty fields, and saw the black-robed
-women filling their water-jars and placing them
-upon their heads with a beautiful sweeping gesture,
-walk gracefully away to their little mud
-huts that could scarcely be distinguished from
-the sands around them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Trains of camels passed our wall on their way
-to the distant city, and the shepherd boys drove
-their flocks of sheep and goats in search of
-pasture. I remembered Browning’s beautiful
-David, who sang:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>And I first played the tune all our sheep know, as one after one</div>
- <div class='line'>So docile they come to the pen door till folding is done.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>They are white and untorn by bushes, for lo, they have fed</div>
- <div class='line'>Where the long grasses stifle the water within the stream’s bed.</div>
- <div class='line'>And now one after one seeks its lodging, as star follows star</div>
- <div class='line'>Into eve and the blue far above us—so blue and so far.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>We watched the little boys ride the great unwieldy
-water buffaloes to the water side, slipping
-off their backs to allow them, groaning with
-content, to wallow in the sluggish waters, and
-when the hard white stars came out in the
-sapphire sky, we looked far over the Libyan hills,
-which had changed from the gold and opal of
-sunset to the grey blue that heralds the coming
-of the Egyptian night. The evening breeze that
-always comes with the setting of the sun brought
-the smell of the desert to us, and the deep swish
-of the Nile came as an accompaniment to the
-cry of the muezzin from the tiny mosque in the
-distance, and we saw its response in the fellah
-kneeling beside his waiting camel, lifting his
-hands to the heavens, as the clear, bell-like voice
-came over the evening air:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>There is no God but God, and Mohammed is His Prophet.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i_069' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_069.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>BEDOUIN WOMEN IN FRONT OF TENT.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER IV<br /> <span class='large'>THE WOMAN OF THE DESERT</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c012'>“Behold the townsman,” cried one of the
-Bedouins, “they have for the desert but a single
-word, while we have a legion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The desert, which in many eyes is a wilderness
-of desolation, has for the dweller beneath the
-tents another aspect. It is the desert which he
-loves, where he was born, under the brown tents
-of his tribe where he hopes to pass his life,
-and in the sands where he wishes to be buried.
-He loves each one of its many phases, from
-the sand burnt to powder by the white fire of
-the noonday sun, to the cool breeze of the dying
-day, that causes the smoke from the many fires
-to rise in blue-grey wreaths to the evening sky,
-which changes from violet to greyer blue, and
-then to the intense dark blue of the precious
-sapphire.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Bedouin, to whatever tribe he may belong,
-sitting astride his camel, padding softly through
-the desert sands, sees before him the low black
-tents of a desert village, and knows that he may
-descend and find a welcome. The host will say
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>to him, “Every stranger is an invited guest,
-and the guest while in the tent is the lord
-thereof.” He may sit before the large round
-bowl of mutton and eat his fill, and when the
-stars have come out, and seem so near that
-he may put up his hand and pluck them
-from their field of blue, he will be conducted
-to the guest-tent or to the tent of the headman,
-and, wrapping himself more tightly in his long
-cloak, he will lie down secure, knowing that
-his life is safe so long as he remains a guest of
-the tribe, having eaten of their salt and drank
-their water.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These Arabs of the desert are proud with a
-pride we do not understand. They are proud
-of their long lineage, of the purity of their blood,
-of their unbroken traditions. They are an
-impulsive, restless people, who, with their emotional
-temperament, give impetuosity to everything
-which they touch. They are the real
-adventurers of the world, and their nervous, high-strung,
-daring characteristics have become so
-absorbed into their very being as to have become
-permanent marks of their race. At the seat
-of all troubles, in countries where the Bedouins
-are strong, one finds them ready to do and dare
-anything that appeals to their imagination. At
-the rising of a Mahdi, it is the Arab of the desert
-who is his strongest support, who will die for
-him, who will sweep down like a holocaust upon
-the people who do not share with him his beliefs
-in the cause, for which he throws his life away
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>with a bravado that makes men of a more sluggish
-blood gasp in astonishment. This cause must
-appeal to his emotions—those same riotous
-emotions which never produce, but always ruin.
-We are told that the Bedouin is the author of
-complete desolation, and that destruction follows
-in his pathway; that his effects are always
-sinister, and that this race brings ruin to any
-land where they have been permitted to have
-full sway. We know he is not a creature of habit,
-and that routine, a settled existence, a fixed round
-of duties, are things which he does not understand
-nor practise. He does not reason and is not
-practical, yet it is the Arab that has succeeded
-in sending the faith of El Islam around the
-world, and every movement of revival comes
-directly from the desert.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Few people travelling in Egypt or Algeria see
-the real dweller beneath the tents. There are
-Bedouins in the cities, and one soon learns to tell
-them, with their keen eyes, their eager faces,
-and majestic stride, from the more placid, self-satisfied
-Egyptian. But in the city he is not
-his true self, as life in the cities has a permanent
-and degrading effect on the character and
-physique of the race; the fire of the desert dies
-within him. It is in the shifting sands beneath
-the tents that he is at his best. There he carries
-out his tribal customs, and there he practises
-that wonderful virtue of hospitality that
-Mohammed, himself an Arab, laid upon his
-people. He said, “Whoever believes in God
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>and the Resurrection must respect his guest;
-and the time of his being kind to him is one day
-and night; and the period of entertaining him
-is three days; and after that if he does it longer,
-it benefits him more, but it is not right for a
-guest to stay in the house of a host so long as
-to incommode him.” It is said that even a
-deadly enemy may come to the tent and demand
-water and salt, and it will be given him, and
-he will be allowed to rest for the night. In
-the morning he will be sent on his way, and his
-life is safe until he has passed the boundary of
-the tribe’s dominions, then his enemy is entitled
-to follow him and kill him if he can.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All tourists passing through Egypt look
-forward to a few days passed in the desert. The
-guide paints in glowing colours the wonders of
-the sands, the colours of the evening sky, the
-sounds of the hobbled camels as they wait for
-the morrow’s march, and the traveller from the
-West decides to see for once the life of which
-he had read and dreamed so many years. In
-every soul is a cry for romance, a desire to leave
-the prosaic everyday life which he knows too
-well, and explore the mysteries of the unknown,
-hoping that there by chance he will find food
-to feed his hungry imagination. A trip to the
-desert does this for many people. There the
-broker or the banker, with the wife he has looked
-upon for many years, sit in front of their hired
-tent, and watch the camel man, as with scolding
-voice he prepares the growling, surly camels for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>the night. When all is quiet but the distant
-barking of the dogs, they sit in front of the evening
-fire and watch the stars come out in the
-sky that seems a great inverted cup of blue
-above them. The camel drivers, dragomen, and
-guards sprawl in easy attitudes and chant mournful,
-weird songs that have come to them from
-the Persian mystics of olden time. These people
-from New York or London do not realize that
-they are not seeing the real desert nor the people
-of the desert. The setting is all staged most
-carefully by the wily dragoman, who imports his
-Bedouins from the neighbouring villages, who
-dresses tents until they would cause the man who
-calls them home to stare in blank amazement
-at their tawdry hangings. The only thing he
-cannot import is the wonderful dessert sands, the
-sky, the cooling breezes that always come when
-the sun has set. These are free for all, to the
-ragged camel driver as well as to the man who
-scatters so freely the English gold.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We had the pleasure of knowing the chief
-of a large tribe of Bedouins, and from his castle
-on the edge of the desert were permitted to make
-many visits to these picturesque people. Our
-first glimpse of the true man of the desert was
-obtained from the visitors in the guest-house,
-where any Bedouin could stop from one to three
-days as the guest of the chief, and every day
-about sundown strange white-robed men with
-guns strapped across their back rode up on
-horses and dismounted at the gate, craving the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>hospitality of the chief. There were always from
-ten to thirty guests within the rest-house, men
-looking like the Senouisses, who cause so much
-trouble for the unbelievers of foreign lands. We
-were told that many of them were going to join
-their brothers in Tripoli to fight against the hated
-unbeliever. They were not permitted by the
-Government to go openly, as Egypt was supposed
-to be neutral, so they took the long caravan
-journey of thirty days across the desert to aid
-in what they considered an unjust war against
-the true faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Within the harim of my hostess were rooms
-set aside for travelling Bedouin women, but they
-were seldom occupied, as the women of the tents
-are not wanderers like their husbands, unless the
-whole tribe moves. My hostess was a young,
-educated girl, to whom the confines of a Bedouin
-harim must have been very wearying. The laws
-concerning the women of the tribe were very
-strict, one being that a woman must stay within
-her apartment until the birth of her first child.
-My friend was not blessed with children, but
-had been compelled to conform to the usages
-of her husband’s family, in part at least, by
-remaining within her home for a year. Now she
-went about freely among the villages of the
-Bedouins near the castle, only taking the precaution
-of being veiled. These Bedouin women
-were quite another type from those seen in the
-cities. They had magnificent physiques, tall and
-supple, and carried themselves with a stately
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>grace. They were dressed in long, straight,
-cotton gowns of blue or black, and a many-coloured
-sash was wrapped around the waist.
-The only foot covering was the anklets of silver
-that fell down over the instep; and they wore
-over their hair, which was braided in many
-braids, and in which was plaited small gold coins
-that clinked as they moved their heads, a veil
-of black with a coloured border, or of dark red
-with a yellow border. This veil adds to the
-dignity and beauty of a woman in a most
-charming manner. At the time of feasting or of
-gaiety the plain veil is changed for one sewed
-with bright-coloured beads or sequins.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>From the lower lip to the neck, and lost in
-the covering of the dress, are three dark blue
-lines of tattooing. This is seen now only on
-the older women, and is being thrown on the
-altar of modernity by the daughters of the
-Bedouins who have peeped into the world and
-are trying to be like their more sophisticated
-Egyptian neighbours. The hair is straight and
-black, and with many has been given a tinge
-of red by washing it in henna. I saw no grey-haired
-women; because those who have been
-touched by the finger of time, kindly custom
-has allowed to dye their locks, and there were
-many flaming heads above wrinkled faces.
-While a guest with the Bedouins, they were quite
-determined to give me the touch of red that
-to them is so beautiful. They say it keeps the
-hair cool and prevents it from falling out,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>protecting it from the burning sun. I resisted,
-although I watched the process, which was most
-interesting. The henna powder is mixed with
-water until the consistency of a paste, and then
-the head is covered and left for the night, when
-in the morning it is washed, and if not applied
-too thickly there is just a glint in the dark locks.
-Henna is also applied to the nails of the fingers
-and toes, and with many it practically covers the
-fingers to the first joint, making the hands look
-most uncleanly to European eyes. The inside
-of the feet and the palms are not forgotten by
-the Bedouin or the Egyptian woman who has
-conserved the customs of her mother, but the
-henna-dyed hands are rarely seen now by the
-newer generation, who have relegated the henna-pot
-to the lumber-room along with the tattooing-ink.
-A great mass of jewellery was worn, not the
-diamonds and rubies found in the French shops
-of Cairo, but the true ornaments of a barbaric
-people. Great hoops of gold were in the ears,
-one from the top of the ear, another hanging
-from the lobe. The neck, even to the waistline,
-was covered with chains formed of balls of gold
-or of coins, and on the arms were bracelets. In
-writing coldly of the Bedouin woman, her tattooing,
-her henna-coloured hair, her kohl-blackened
-eyes, and her massive chains of gold and anklets
-of silver, it seems as if she were living in an
-age of barbarism, yet it is becoming to her
-rich colouring, and she is not overdressed.
-They all belong to the time and place, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>are made for these women, who need strong
-settings for their savage beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The women of the desert are much more free
-to come and go than are the women of the cities,
-and it is only when they come in close proximity
-to an Egyptian village that the Bedouin expects
-his wife to be secluded. They do not mix with
-members of the other sex as do the women of
-the West, because that is contrary to the instincts
-of all Eastern women, but naturally they cannot
-be confined so strictly within the tents as can the
-women who live in houses. In each tent is a
-division or curtain, behind which the women retire
-when men approach, but they may be seen sitting
-in front of their doorways, and passing to and
-fro in the villages without veiling their faces.
-They pass their spare time when not occupied
-in the household duties in weaving gaily coloured
-blankets, striped red and yellow and black.
-These constitute the woman’s fortune. My
-friend took me to one tent in which there were
-forty of these blankets piled around the edge of
-the tent, and she said, “Five or six of these in
-the possession of a woman and she is considered
-rich in this world’s goods. This woman is a
-multi-millionaire.” She was an old woman who
-seemed to be the leader of her village. It was
-she who met us and conducted us to the guest-tent,
-which was at least twenty by thirty feet
-in circumference, and which was hung with these
-beautiful hand-woven blankets. The sands were
-covered with rugs on which we sat, and on which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>the large round tray was placed for the meal
-which the kindly hospitable women insisted that
-we should eat with them. There are no tables,
-beds, nor chairs. The Bedouin says that we
-can never understand the desert until we get
-close to her, rest our feet on her sands, and
-our head on her bosom—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>But man is earth’s uncomfortable guest</div>
- <div class='line'>Until she takes him on her lap to rest.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>One thinks of a tent in the desert under the
-pitiless sun as a most uncomfortable place of
-retreat, but I found it quite the opposite, as the
-strong wind, that seems to be always trying to
-temper the actions of its enemy, blew over the
-desert and entered the open flaps, and crept under
-the turned-up edges of the tent, fanning into
-flame the fire of sweet-smelling woods that had
-been kindled in the tiny brass jar. Water was
-hanging in porous bottles and in sheepskins in
-the draught, and when mixed with the perfumed
-syrups was cool and refreshing. Coffee with a
-touch of ambergris in the cup was served, and
-melons were given us in great cool slices. These
-latter are a favourite fruit of the desert people,
-I presume because of the vast amount of water
-of which they are composed, and water is the
-luxury of all luxuries to those who dwell among
-the sands. An old Arabian poet said: “There
-are seven things when collected together in a
-drinking-room, it is not reasonable to stay away.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>A melon, honey, roast meat, a young girl, wax
-lights, a singer, and wine.” Twice during our
-visit was perfume sprinkled over us, and the
-brass brazier was often replenished with sandalwood,
-a small packet of the latter being
-given us as we were leaving. The Arabs, in fact
-all Eastern people, love perfumes, and they use
-them in far greater quantity and of stronger
-essence than we consider delicate. Musk and a
-heavy perfume distilled from jasmine and roses
-seems to be a favourite. Mohammed himself
-loved perfumes, and speaks of them in his
-promises to the faithful who shall fall in battle:
-“And the wounds of him who shall fall in battle
-shall on the day of judgment be resplendent
-with vermilion and odorous as musk.” We
-visited the smaller tents, and in some it was
-impossible to stand erect even at the ridge pole.
-In one was a young baby wrapped in white cloth
-and twined with yards and yards of camel’s-hair
-rope, only his tiny head and feet protruding to
-show that there was a real baby in the bundle.
-He was bound practically the same as are the
-babies of our North American Indian. I took
-him in my arms, and he stared at me with great
-black eyes, and then he laughed and cooed, much
-to the delight of the young father, who stood
-proudly by. The mother was quite a young girl,
-not more than fifteen years old, I should judge,
-and in her shyness she retired into the security
-of the tent, resisting all my friendly overtures
-to have her picture taken with the baby in her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>arms. Children abounded; there will be no
-race extinction of the Bedouins so long as they
-remain in their deserts. Their little brown
-bodies snuggled up to us, and their black eyes
-twinkled saucily as they shyly held out their
-hands for the gifts which evidently my friend
-always brought with her. They were a much
-better type of children than are those in Egyptian
-villages—strong, pretty bodies, and without the
-unhealthy eyes that are seen so much on the
-young in Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In every tent was hung a gun, as robbers are
-frequent visitors, and each dweller in the tent
-must protect his own. He keeps a fierce and
-noisy dog that sees a stranger far across the
-sands, and one is followed far beyond village
-confines by these canine police.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Polygamy is practised by the Bedouin more
-than it is by his city brothers. I visited in the
-tent of a woman who was the second wife of
-her husband, the other wife living in a tent
-adjoining. She had two children, and the first
-wife one, and from what I heard there was not
-the most pleasant relationship between them.
-Divorce is also one of the evils, and these primitive
-men take advantage of it to an alarming
-degree. Nearly every one I met had been
-divorced some time or other. It was such a
-common occurrence that it produced no feeling
-of shame in the woman who had been divorced.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Bedouins are so proud of their lineage that
-they wish to keep the tribal blood pure, and it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>leads to intermarriage. Cousins are frequently
-married, and often a whole tribe is related in
-some manner. I was told that the Bedouin
-settled an argument with a scolding or recalcitrant
-wife by giving her a good chastising with a
-stick. While in Cairo I met a most charming
-Bedouin who had left the sands for the gaieties
-of the city. He was quite the polished gentleman
-to be found in any city, and I was surprised
-when told that he had divorced his Bedouin wife
-because she was not as progressive as his cosmopolitanism
-now required, and my gossipy friend
-informed me, “They used to quarrel dreadfully
-and he would beat her most frightfully.” I saw
-the lady in question, who had returned to the
-tribe and remarried, and I rather admired the
-hardihood of the somewhat effeminate man who
-would dare to try to beat this great stalwart
-Bedouin woman, who looked as if she would take
-an active part in any chastening that might be
-passing around her tent.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is no such word as “privacy” in the
-Bedouin vocabulary; their private life must be an
-open book to all the tribe. Their one great
-blessing is the wonderfully clear, dry air, which
-gives them health and vigour and makes them
-immune to many of the diseases that afflict their
-Egyptian neighbour. But if they leave the
-desert and go to live within the cities, they fall
-easy victims to the great white plague, tuberculosis.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Bedouins are followers of Mohammed, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>they put their faith in holy tombs and charms
-and sacred groves. They are not so strict in
-regard to prayers as are the people who live
-within call of the muezzin, and the religion of the
-women seems to be more superstition than
-worship of a God. They placate a God who
-may do them harm, and they have innumerable
-charms and amulets for the guarding of their
-children. In the desert whirlwinds they see
-sweeping across their sands are “ginns” and
-evil monsters; and at night, when a star shoots
-across the dark blue sky, they believe it is a dart
-thrown by God at an evil genie, and they whisper,
-“May God transfix the enemy of the faith.”
-Around the naked children’s neck is hung a small
-box containing some quotation from the Koran
-that will guard them from the evil eye, that curse
-most dreaded by all mothers of an Eastern land.
-For every evil that man is heir to, the Koran is
-the cure. A few words from its precious pages
-are bound upon the arm of the camel driver, who
-feels that with this as guardian he will not be lost
-upon the trackless sands. When ill, the wife
-will call the astrologer, who writes a few words
-upon a piece of paper, and soaking it in water,
-gives it to the wailing child, and the mother is
-assured that all will soon be well, because has
-he not drunk of the very fount of wisdom, the
-words that came from God?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The old custom of a life for a life prevails in
-the desert, and feuds are handed down from
-father to son. If a father or brother is killed, it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>is the duty of the son or brother to take the life
-of the enemy of his house. In the olden time
-there was blood money which could be paid,
-although it was considered a cowardly thing to
-accept it. A man’s life was worth a hundred
-camels, a woman’s only fifty, but the man of
-honour asked the life. The chief of the tribe
-has the power to decide in all cases between his
-people, and the English Government does not
-materially interfere in the life of the Bedouin.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In regard to the custom of taking a life for
-a life, there is a story told of how in the early
-days the missions made a convert from
-Mohammedanism, the only convert made among
-these tribes. In a blood feud a man stabbed
-his enemy, but not fatally, and fleeing to the
-tent of a friend he lingered there many days.
-This tent was one visited by the missionary of
-the Christian faith, and while lying on his bed
-of pain the wounded man heard of a faith that
-said, “Love your enemies,” and before his death
-he sent word to his tribe that they must forget
-his death and not try to avenge it. He even sent
-word that he forgave his enemy. This was so
-astonishing that neither could the man who killed
-him nor his tribe believe the fact, and secretly
-the enemy decided to find for himself what had
-caused the unheard of message to be brought
-to his tent. He learned of the new religion that
-said, “Revenge is Mine, saith the Lord,” and
-he became the only Bedouin convert to the
-Christian faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>Living in this home on the edge of the desert
-we saw the real life of the tent people. We
-watched them as, weary and tired looking, they
-returned from their long journeys. We saw the
-trains of laden camels as they started for the
-distant cities. We saw the shepherd boys drive
-in the flocks of sheep or goats, looking as they
-did in olden Bible times.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER V<br /> <span class='large'>INDIAN SOCIAL LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>There is no woman in the world who is so bound
-down by custom, so tied to the wheel of conventionality,
-as is the Indian woman, both Hindu
-and Mohammedan. In the olden times the
-ancient law-makers realized the danger menacing
-a people surrounded by an inferior race, as were
-the natives of India compared to their Aryan
-invaders, and instituted that remarkable social
-system that peculiarly affects the women of the
-country, and is the cause of many of the evils
-that has made her life one not to be envied—caste.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Hindu society is divided into hundreds of
-communities consisting of several clans, each
-clan having its own peculiar customs and iron-bound
-rules. The clans are composed of
-families, governed by the family custom, which
-in turn must obey the clan custom, and these
-must be governed by the rules of the community.
-If a person violates the custom, he forfeits all
-the privileges which he or his family may have
-in the life of the community. His social life is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>entirely cut off from other families and from the
-protection of his people. No one of his community
-will eat or drink with him, visit his house,
-or marry his children. The priest will not serve
-him, the barber will not shave him, nor the
-washman wash for him. He will be absolutely
-alone and friendless in the world, not able to get
-employment, even allowed to starve by the members
-of his own family, who dare not help him,
-knowing they themselves would be outcasted. He
-may not have the solace of joining another caste,
-either lower or higher, because he must live and
-die in the caste in which he was born.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Originally there were only four great castes
-in India: the Brahmans, or priestly class, who
-held all the intellectual or cultural prerogatives;
-the Kashatriyas, or warrior caste; the Vaisayas,
-or merchant caste; and the Sudras, or working
-class. Below that still are the outcastes, who are
-almost slaves, and do the lowest menial services.
-Manu, the great law-maker, said that the
-Brahman issued from the head of Brahma, hence
-his intellectual superiority; the warrior from his
-arms, the husbandman from his thighs, and the
-Sudras from his feet, thus exactly placing the
-man’s social position in life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The laws of caste as explained by Mr. Dutt, a
-Hindu writer, are as follows—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Individuals cannot be married who do not
-belong to the same caste.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A man may not eat with another not of his
-own caste.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>His meals must be cooked by persons either
-of his own caste or by Brahmans.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>No man of an inferior caste is to touch his
-food or the dishes in which they are served, or
-even to enter his cook-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>No water or other liquid contaminated by the
-touch of a person of inferior caste can be made
-use of—rivers, tanks, and other large sheets of
-water being held incapable of defilement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Articles of dry food, such as rice, wheat, etc.,
-do not become impure by passing through the
-hands of a person of inferior caste so long as
-they remain dry, but cannot be taken if they
-become wet or greased.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Certain prohibited articles, such as cow’s flesh,
-pork, fowls, etc., are not to be eaten.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The ocean and other boundaries of India must
-not be crossed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These rules would not be so oppressive if there
-were only the four original great castes into which
-society was first divided, but now each class is
-divided into thousands of subdivisions, whose
-members may not intermarry, nor eat together,
-nor even touch the food prepared by those of
-another community. Mr. Sidney Low has very
-well expressed the difficulties caused by this
-very intricate social ruling in his “Vision of
-India”—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“To get a loose analogy, we might suppose
-that everybody who could claim descent from one
-of the old Norman families in England formed
-one caste; that members of the ‘learned professions,’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>who had never soiled themselves with
-commerce, were combined in a second; and that
-others consisted exclusively of bankers or moneylenders,
-or of pork butchers, costermongers,
-bricklayers, and so on <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ad infinitum</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Add that a man born in the costermonger
-class would remain, or ought to remain, a
-member of that connection to the end of
-his days, and that he would bring up his
-sons to the same business; that a greengrocer
-ought not to eat food in company
-with a poulterer, that a baker might not give his
-daughter in marriage to a cheesemonger, and
-that neither could have any matrimonial relations
-with a bootmaker; and, further, that none of
-these persons could place himself in personal
-contact with a clergyman or a solicitor—imagine
-all this, and you begin to acquire some faint
-notion of the involved tangle in which the entire
-Hindu community has managed to get itself
-enwound.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Mr. Low quotes from the census report of
-Sir H. Risley further to illustrate what the caste
-system means in the matrimonial sphere, that
-sphere that especially touches the womanhood of
-India—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“He imagines the great tribe of the Smiths
-throughout Great Britain bound together in a
-community, and recognizing as their cardinal
-doctrine that a Smith must always marry a Smith,
-and could by no possibility marry a Brown, a
-Jones, or a Robinson. This seems fairly simple;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>there would be quite enough Miss Smiths to
-go round. But, then, note that the Smith horde
-would be broken up into smaller clans, each
-fiercely endogamous. Brewing Smiths,” Sir H.
-Risley asks us to observe, “must not mate with
-baking Smiths; shooting Smiths and hunting
-Smiths, temperance Smiths and licensed-victualler
-Smiths, Free Trade Smiths and Tariff
-Reform Smiths, must seek partners for life in
-their own particular section of the Smithian
-multitude. The Unionist Smith would not lead
-a Home Rule damsel to the altar, nor should
-Smith the tailor wed the daughter of a Smith
-who sold boots.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In its effect upon women the caste system has
-been most deleterious because of the difficulty
-of finding husbands within the same caste. It
-has led to the making away with undesirable
-daughters, which was frequently practised by the
-parents before the English Government stepped
-in and made female infanticide a crime and
-severely punished the culprits. Yet we are told
-that the disproportion of female to male children
-shows that the practice has not been completely
-stamped out, and that many fathers foreseeing the
-financial difficulties to be encountered in marrying
-their daughters, have deliberately made away
-with them at birth. In the smaller villages the
-crime is difficult of detection, but when the ratio
-of girls to boys falls particularly low in a community,
-the Government quarters extra police
-upon the people, making all the inhabitants contribute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>towards the cost of their maintenance,
-and the records soon show that girl babies are
-again being born in the villages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Life in a high-caste Brahman family is much
-more complicated than that of the low-caste
-family, and many burdens are added to the
-already heavy ones borne by the Hindu woman,
-because of the rituals and customs woven around
-this caste system. A woman told me that she
-had a friend who lived in the house of two maiden
-aunts who were most orthodox Hindus. This
-woman was not allowed to touch a thing in the
-morning before her bath. Beside her bed was
-a long pole with which she must handle her
-towels and clothing, and she was not permitted
-to enter the presence of her aunts until her
-uncleanliness had been removed by ablutions
-and prayers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The mother-in-law of my friend has practically
-no social intercourse with her son’s wife because
-she has broken caste, eats with Europeans, and
-wears shoes made from leather. Her own mother
-at first felt her daughter’s disgrace keenly, and
-would not see her for many years. At last love
-triumphed over custom, and now the mother will
-visit the daughter if assured that a place will be
-made ceremonially clean where she may spread
-her mat of holy dharba grass, on which she sits
-while chatting. She will receive nothing from
-the hand of her daughter, neither water nor food,
-and when she returns home she takes a complete
-bath and changes her wearing apparel that has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>become polluted by contact with her daughter’s
-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Orthodox Hindus do not like sitting upon a
-mat of cloth or walking upon a carpet. In many
-houses a wooden bench or board is kept for
-visitors. The wife of a Resident in one of the
-Indian cities gave a reception to which came
-several ladies from the conservative Hindu
-families. They carefully avoided walking upon
-the rugs, and sat upon the edge of the chairs,
-looking most unhappy. The wife of the Resident
-asked an advanced Hindu lady why her afternoon
-was not a success so far as the Indian guests
-were concerned. She was told that the only
-thought that possessed these little women was a
-desire to get home. They wished to be polite and
-stay as long as etiquette demanded, but they
-welcomed with avidity the finality of the party
-when they might return and bathe and purify
-themselves from the close contact of foreigners
-and Mohammedans.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The members of the Brahmo Samaj, that progressive
-offshoot of Hinduism, have broken caste
-and allow their women to go about freely. I was
-in a town of Southern India with a member of
-this sect, and we called upon the head mistress
-of a large school for girls. She was at home
-with her newly born baby, waiting for the forty
-days of uncleanness to pass before returning to
-her school. She was a very intelligent woman,
-talking freely of the good and the bad of their
-social system. She said that a school for girls
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>such as that of which she was the head,
-where four hundred young girls were being
-educated in modern thought, would have the
-greatest influence upon the women of the next
-generation, but that it would take time to
-eradicate the instincts of generations of ignorance
-and superstition, so deeply woven into the
-very nature of the Indian woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the close of the visit the baby was
-brought to me, and rather lacking a subject for
-conversation I made the unfortunate remark to
-the baby, “You will grow up a good Hindu and
-stick to your caste.” I was not prepared for
-the storm of protest it raised from my friend
-who had brought me to the home. She turned
-on me furiously and said: “How can you say
-such things, you, a modern woman? Caste is
-the ruin of India. If we want progress we must
-break caste: it is our only hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is not caste alone that makes the rules
-that govern the life and actions of the Indian
-woman, but from birth to the burning-ground
-every detail of life is cast into a mould of
-ceremony and ritual, which in the hands of
-a less spiritual people would have degenerated
-into mere sham. Of the sixteen events in
-the life of a man, all are viewed from a
-religious aspect, and accompanied by a religious
-ceremony. The most sacred prayers
-are said in the morning before partaking of
-food, and it is the husband, the head of the
-house, who is supposed to say the prayers for all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>beneath his roof-tree. “No sacrifice is allowed
-to women apart from their husbands, no religious
-rite, no fasting; as far as a wife honours her
-lord, so far is she exalted in heaven,” says the
-laws of Manu, yet the instinct of religion is
-strong in the Hindu woman, as it is in women all
-over the world, and they do perform a worship.
-At the time of her marriage, at the marriage of
-her children, and at many of the sacred feasts,
-the wife must sit with her husband during the
-time he is engaged in the performance of the
-acts of worship, though she takes no active part
-in the ceremonies. If a man has lost his wife,
-he cannot perform the sacrifice of fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Hindu woman has her gods, which she
-keeps in the kitchen, the most sacred room in a
-Hindu household. In all the time I was in
-India I never saw the inside of the kitchen of
-any of my Indian friends. I have been told
-that it is divided into two parts, the smaller
-room used for the cooking and as pantry for the
-storing of food, and must be kept free from
-ceremonial defilement. The larger half of the
-kitchen of a middle-class household serves as
-dining-room, and in an alcove or in one corner
-are the household gods and the utensils to be
-used in their worship. None of the images used
-by a woman are consecrated, but she lights her
-lamp and bows her head and prays for the safety
-of her dear ones, then offers a bit of fruit or betel
-or a sweetmeat that she has prepared, and
-scatters sandal paste and coloured rice or the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>petals of sweet-smelling flowers over her god.
-There is generally in each tiny yard or in the
-kitchen a tulasi plant, around which the women
-walk while chanting a prayer. This plant is
-considered the wife of Vishnu, and is revered by
-all. There are many blessings promised to one
-who attends and waters one of these plants, and
-it will keep care and tribulation from its
-worshippers and grant pardon to the sinner who
-cherishes the tulasi plant. Yet it is more particularly
-worshipped by women. At one time,
-it is said, women were commanded to walk
-around it one hundred and eight times each day,
-which certainly was a blessing from a hygienic
-point of view, as it gave exercise to these shut-in
-women, who are restricted to the four walls of
-their homes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At night when the lamps are lighted the wife
-makes obeisance to the flame, saying—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The flame of this lamp is the supreme good.</div>
- <div class='line'>The flame of this lamp is the abode of the Supreme.</div>
- <div class='line'>By this flame sin is destroyed,</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh, Thou light of the evening, we praise thee.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the time of the evening meal the men have
-an elaborate religious ceremony, but the women
-say simply, “Govinda, Govinda,” a name for
-Vishnu, before partaking of their food.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The devout mother teaches her children the
-tales of the gods, and at worship time when the
-bell is sounded they are taught to place their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>hands together in the attitude of prayer and bow
-their little heads to the gods. It is the
-father who is expected to teach them the
-Vedic texts and the truths to be found in
-the Puranas.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The daily worship is held in the homes, but
-on feast days or for especial acts of devotion,
-such as prayers for the blessings of a son, or
-the giving of thanks for favours received, the
-women go to the temples. These are crowded
-on holy days or days of anniversary of the gods.
-No one ever goes to the temple empty-handed,
-and one sees the little brass jar of holy water,
-the wreath of marigold or sweet-smelling flowers
-which are supposed to give pleasure to the
-aesthetic senses of the gods. Many women take
-a coconut to the temple, which fruit seems to be
-generally connected with temple worship. The
-breaking of the coconut is said to represent the
-slaying of the sacrificial animal, which is only
-done now in the temples dedicated to Kali, that
-goddess of terror who delights in the blood of
-her victims.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While in Benares I visited a temple dedicated
-to Shiva, in which were several enormous bulls,
-the animal sacred to this god. They were of a
-bluish grey in colour, and from long living in
-the temple had become as clever as the priests
-in looking for offerings from their worshippers.
-But while the priests looked for silver or gold,
-the bulls had an eagle eye with which to discern
-from afar the woman who carried a basket of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>grain. They stood at the back of the temple
-and eyed each worshipper as she entered. If
-the pious woman had only a brass water-pot in
-her hand they did not move; but if they saw a
-basket, they immediately started for her, and
-graciously allowed her to pour the grain into
-their open mouths, the woman taking care that
-she did not pollute the bulls by touching their
-lips with her hand. A wreath of marigolds was
-then thrown over the neck of the bull, the holy
-water was poured on his shoulders, and he
-returned to his place. I saw an old lady lovingly
-stroke the back of one of these pampered beasts,
-ending with the tail, the end of which she used
-to stroke her face, and afterwards lovingly kissed
-this appendage of her idol. The expression on
-her face was one of deepest reverence, and for
-her the great blue bull represented the god for
-whom her hungry soul was longing. The
-educated Hindu would say that she was
-struggling to find a god as are we all, but that
-she was still a child in matters spiritual and
-required a material representative of her ideal.
-They say that the real Hindu, the man who has
-studied the Vedas and understands the spirit of
-his religion, needs no images nor ritual. In his
-prayer he plainly shows that to him God is a
-spirit. He says—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>Oh, Lord, pardon my three sins. I have in contemplation
-clothed Thee in form, who art formless; I have in praise
-described Thee, who art ineffable; and in visiting shrines I
-have ignored Thy omnipresence.</p>
-
-<div id='i_096' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_096.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A HOLY MAN, BENARES.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>In many of the temples, besides the priests to
-minister to the gods, are dancing girls, whose
-duties are to dance at the shrines, sing hymns,
-and generally delight the gods. They are a
-recognized religious institution, and are honoured
-next to the priests. They are obtained when
-quite young by purchase or by gift. Often in
-times of famine a girl is sold to the temple, that
-her price may save the rest of the family from
-starvation. One is given that all may live. In
-other cases a girl is often a thank-offering given
-to the gods because of recovery from sickness
-or great tribulation. A rich man, instead of
-presenting his own daughter, would buy the
-daughter of some poor family and present her.
-These girls, who have no word to say in regard
-to the disposal of their persons, are public women,
-and the gains of their profession go towards the
-support of the temple. If there should be
-children born to these professional dancing girls,
-they are brought up in their mother’s profession,
-very much as were the children born to the
-priestesses of Aphrodite in the temples of
-Alexandria.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All Indian girls must be married, consequently
-these temple women are formally married to a
-dagger, a tree, or some inanimate object, who,
-as a husband, cannot object to the actions of his
-wife. Lately, in some places it has been made a
-criminal offence to sell a girl or give a daughter
-to a temple, and it is only done surreptitiously.
-One is told in India that it is a thing of the past,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>yet in one large temple in the South there are
-said to be over one hundred dancing girls kept
-for the amusement of the blasé gods.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These dancing girls share with their sisters,
-the nautch girls, the only real freedom given to
-Indian women. The latter are taught to read
-and write, to play musical instruments, and to
-make themselves attractive and charming to men.
-They come and go freely, mingling with both
-men and women. They are found at all feasts
-and public ceremonies, and have a very definite
-and honourable place in Indian society. Whatever
-discredit may be attached to her calling, she
-is considered a necessary adjunct to the temple
-and the home. Her presence at weddings is
-considered most fortunate, and in some castes it
-is the nautch girl who fastens the tali around the
-neck of the bride, a ceremony similar to placing
-the wedding-ring upon the finger. She holds the
-centre of the stage at all entertainments given in
-honour of guests. While we were in a native
-province ruled by a prince who had the reputation
-of liking wine, women, and song even more than
-did the average ruling prince in India, we were
-edified by the dancing of a woman brought from
-Bombay at the expense to the prince of nearly
-one hundred pounds a day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The dancing is extremely modest, as the dancer
-is fully clothed, and it is the graceful, languorous
-poses of her slim body, the waving of her arms
-heavily laden with bracelets, and the slow
-moving, gliding steps that keep time to the tinkle
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>of the anklets, that charm her admirers. There
-is a proverb that says, “Without the jingling
-of the nautch girl’s anklets, a dwelling-place does
-not become pure.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER VI<br /> <span class='large'>INDIAN HOME LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Although the women are supposed to have no
-religious standing and are considered unfit to
-read the Vedas or touch the consecrated gods,
-still their entire life is influenced by religion or
-superstition, and the religion and superstition of
-the Eastern woman, of whatever land, is so inextricably
-entwined, that it is hard to tell where
-one leaves off and the other begins. Like her
-sisters of China and Egypt, she is afraid of the
-evil eye. She firmly believes that if her jewels,
-her dress, or her children are looked upon with
-jealous or covetous eyes, much sorrow will come
-to her, and she has many charms and ceremonies
-with which to counteract the baneful influence of
-spiteful persons. It is never wise for a visitor to
-regard a baby too closely or to admire its jewels
-or clothing openly, as, even if the mother is one
-of the advanced minority, instinct will assert
-itself, and deep within her heart, bred there by
-centuries of tradition, will be a little feeling that
-something <em>might</em> happen to her dear one. Quite
-likely, when the unwise caller departs, the mother
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>will make a lamp of kneaded rice flour and fill
-it with oil or clarified butter, which, when lighted
-and passed round the baby’s head, will remove
-the dreaded evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Hindu woman’s life is ruled by omens to
-a far greater extent than is the life of the woman
-of the Western world. If she is starting on a
-visit to a friend, it is a very bad sign for her
-to meet a widow, any one carrying a new pot, a
-bundle of firewood, a pariah, a lame man, two
-men quarrelling, a leper—in fact, there are about
-a dozen things she should avoid, or else be under
-the necessity of returning to her home and saying
-a few prayers before daring to start on her
-journey again. If she should sneeze once, it is
-most unfortunate, and should be followed by a
-second in order to avert the evil, but if the second
-sneeze is followed by others, the more the better,
-it is a most certain sign that her most ardent
-wishes will soon be granted. When one yawns
-it is polite to snap the fingers and say, “Govinda,
-Govinda,” as many believe that the life may
-leave the body while yawning, and to avert this
-calamity from a baby the mother snaps her
-fingers and murmurs, “Krishna, Krishna,” in its
-tiny ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Mohammedan and Hindu customs are so much
-alike that it is often hard to say that one is a
-Mohammedan custom or that another is purely
-Hindu. At the marriages, and the return of the
-daughter to her home to give birth to her first
-child, at the birth of the children, and in many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>of the social customs of the Mohammedans are
-seen the influence of the Hindu religion. It was
-the Mohammedans who brought the “purdah”
-system, or the seclusion of women, into India.
-Before the invasion of these warlike people the
-women of India went about freely, but now
-the Hindus are practically as secluded as are the
-Mohammedan women. In the North, where the
-influence of the followers of the Arabian prophet
-made itself most dominant, the women are much
-more secluded than in the South, where the
-Mohammedans did not come in such large
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is in the villages that true India is to be
-found, unchanging, languorous India. Here is
-a self-centered commonwealth, with little dependence
-for its welfare upon the outer world, and the
-people have remained the same as their fathers
-and their father’s fathers, impervious to new
-innovations and ideas. To look at one of these
-villages is very different from ideas one may
-have formed of them by reading books of travel.
-The first impression received upon entering one
-is that of an enlarged barnyard, as cows and
-farm implements take entire possession of the
-narrow streets. The low, thatched mud houses
-are without doors, windows, or chimneys. The
-floor is generally plastered with cow dung, which,
-when dry, leaves a hard shellac-like polish, considered
-by the natives most sanitary. It has to
-be redone every two weeks, and to Western eyes
-is a most unsightly operation, as it is done with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>the hands of the housewife. It is said that when
-the Salvation Army sent its first volunteers to
-India, they required them to live the life of the
-Indian, and that this smearing of the earthen
-floors with the national substitute for varnish
-was one of the chief causes why women were
-not always ready to volunteer for service in the
-East.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is virtually no furniture in the homes.
-The stove consists of three or four bricks, around
-which the fuel, consisting of dried cakes of mud
-and cowdung, are broken, and which smoulder
-rather than burn. A few earthenware pots
-and a large dish in which to serve the food, some
-brass utensils, and a large jar for carrying water,
-complete the culinary arrangements. For plates,
-banana or plantain leaves are used, or, lacking
-these, small leaves are sewn together. This saves
-the drudgery of washing dishes, as the leaves
-are thrown away after each meal, and the fingers
-are used in place of the knives and forks of the
-more aesthetic races. Chairs and tables are not
-needed, as the Indian squats upon his haunches,
-as only an Oriental can; and in silence, regarding
-only his own food, to which he helps himself
-from the central dish, he eats his meal. When
-the lord of the household has finished, he
-graciously allows his wife to eat from the same
-leaf. No Indian woman who conforms to the
-customs of her race ever eats at the table with
-the men of her household, yet this is not confined
-to the women of India. The separation of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>men from the women at the dinner-table is practised
-by all Orientals. The women of China and
-Japan eat with the younger children when the
-master of the house has finished, and no Egyptian
-husband, unless one of the small class who have
-become thoroughly Westernized, would think of
-inviting his wife to share with him his evening
-meal.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the village homes the man shows his
-superiority also in the fact that the only bed in
-the house of the peasant or workman is that for
-the master, if bed it can be called—simply a rough
-framework of wood with coir ropes strung across
-it. The extra wardrobe of the family, if they
-are so fortunate as to possess more than the one
-garment which they wear, is hung on a pole in
-a corner of the room, and need not take much
-space, as the clothing of India’s poor is scant—a
-loin-cloth, a sheet for the shoulders, and a
-long piece of cotton for the head suffices him.
-His wife will only possess a tight-fitting little
-bodice, and six yards of cloth which she will
-drape gracefully around her body, making it
-serve both as dress and head covering. Yet the
-woman’s arms are covered often with bracelets,
-anklets tinkle as she walks, and as she draws her
-sari across her face when passing the stranger,
-the glint of a nose-ring is seen, or the light flashes
-from a necklace that rests against her brown
-skin. This jewellery may be of gold, silver,
-brass, or even of glass, but the woman of the
-village loves these aids to feminine charms as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>well as does her city sister. In the olden time
-the peasant had no trust in banks, and when he
-accumulated a few extra rupees, he added a
-bangle to his wife’s arm, or bought a nose or ear-ring.
-It served the double purpose of saving
-money which might be foolishly spent at the
-autumn fair, and also was easy to take to the
-moneylender in times of stress. There are many
-thousands of pounds of gold that go into India
-each year and disappear. The officials say it
-is turned into jewellery for these wives and
-daughters of India’s great middle class, who seem
-never too poor to have a touch of gold or silver
-upon the persons of their womenfolk.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The village wife is relieved of the necessity of
-providing clothing for the children, because until
-they are seven or eight years old an amulet
-string or a silver anklet completes their wardrobe.
-There are many of these little brown
-bodies around every doorway, looking like
-dark-skinned cupids. One rarely sees a child
-in India with a bad skin, which perhaps is due
-to the oil-baths which they receive in early childhood.
-Mothers bathe their babies in oil, then
-wash it off with a vegetable soap, leaving the
-skin soft and shining as satin. This is a luxury
-indulged in by older people also, and the giving
-of oils for the bath is a favourite present among
-friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the shade of the porch is often seen a cradle,
-a very simple affair made of four pieces of wood
-with a hammock of cloth held between them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>Around the top of the cloth is arranged baby’s
-toys so that he may lie and amuse himself, which
-is quite necessary where the mother has as many
-household duties to attend to as the Indian
-farmer’s wife. In places where the woman is
-working in the field, the baby may be seen
-wrapped in a hammock-like affair and tied to
-the limb of a tree; and it is a common practice
-among labouring women, I am told, to give the
-babies a drug to keep them quiet while the
-mothers work. Opium is very generally used
-in India, especially among the higher classes,
-although forbidden by both Hindu and the
-Mohammedan religion. It is supposed to invigorate
-the aged, and an Indian told me that he
-thoroughly believed that all men after they pass
-the age of fifty were better for the moderate use
-of opium.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The wife of the village man or peasant is not
-“purdah nashim,” or secluded, as is the wife
-of the rich man. She takes her share in the
-agricultural work, besides carrying water from
-the village well, making the cakes of fuel and
-plastering them against the side of the house to
-dry, grinding the meal, husking the rice, washing
-the clothing, and cooking the meals. Yet with
-all her work the monotony of her life is broken
-by many feasts and ceremonies in which she takes
-a part. Each district and temple has its own
-particular fête day, and there are many family
-feasts where work is given up at the time of
-special rejoicing. Relatives and friends meet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>together, the houses are decorated, bright saris
-are brought forth, and the time is spent in
-pleasure and merry-making. There are eighteen
-obligatory feasts in the year for the orthodox
-Hindu, but only a few of the principal ones are
-celebrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many of the ceremonies in the home originated
-in sanitary laws, which would not have been
-obeyed unless the people were made to believe
-that they were of divine origin. At a certain
-time of the year when smallpox is rife, and the
-epidemic has passed, there is a worship of the
-“Mother,” which requires the house to be
-thoroughly cleaned and purified, all the old
-vessels broken, all old clothing burned or placed
-in the sun for a certain time, before the women
-are permitted to go to the temple to worship
-their favourite goddess. There is another spring
-feast, when the women go down to the water
-dressed in yellow, and send small lighted lamps
-down the stream to the spring goddess. At the
-feast of the serpents the villagers take offerings
-to the sand-hills, and pour milk and honey into
-the holes where the snakes are supposed to dwell,
-asking protection of these gods of wisdom, who
-especially guard the eyes of their worshippers.
-At another feast the women take red water and
-sprinkle it upon each other, rejoicing over the
-slaying of the giant god of evil. The girls take
-part in a pretty feast in the fall, when they
-decorate their little brothers with flowers and
-garland the houses, and at night light innumerable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>little lamps, making a village look like a
-miniature fairyland.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The village women appear rather sullen, but
-when known they are found to be as happy as is
-the wife of the average working man. If there
-is no drought drying up the crops, if no disease
-comes to the cattle, if the moneylender is not
-too avaricious, if a few pennies can be saved
-to buy bracelets from the bangle-man at the
-annual festival, and if the gods do not disgrace
-her by sending too many daughters, she is happy.
-Yet the village woman and her family are always
-but half a step in advance of the waiting wolf;
-famine comes with swiftness, and quick deaths
-from plagues to hundreds of thousands of these
-peasant people, who constitute nine-tenths of the
-population of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The life of the women in the small towns and
-villages is like life in another world compared to
-that led by the women in the large cities of
-Calcutta or Bombay or Madras. Here the Indian
-lady seems to be trying to lose her national
-characteristics, and Indian society is very disappointing
-to a visitor from the West who wishes
-to see something of the life lived by the lady of
-India. It seems to be merely a copy of the life
-of the English society woman, and her day is
-filled with teas, society concerts, and receptions.
-Their homes are thoroughly English in every
-department, their drawing-rooms are filled with
-English bric-à-brac, they go to the entertainments
-in most luxurious motors; their children,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>dressed in European clothes, are brought down
-to see the guest by an English governess, and
-English is the language of the home. Many of
-the Indian women are members of clubs, musical
-societies, and are taking active part in the
-charities for the benefit of their people.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Indian woman wields a strong influence
-over her husband, and has more of a place in
-the life around her than we imagine, from the
-stories we hear of unhappy days spent “Behind
-Zenana Bars.” We are apt to consider the
-secluded, shut-in Eastern woman as a cowed,
-frightened creature, afraid to say her soul is her
-own, while among the better class, at least, it is
-quite the contrary. It takes a brave man to go
-absolutely against the wishes of his womenfolk,
-as they have the advantage of numbers in their
-favour. In every great household there are
-innumerable women relatives, satellites, and
-servants revolving around the personality of the
-mistress. These Eastern women have been
-schooled in the art of intrigue and understand
-thoroughly the efficacy of passive resistance. If
-the wife wishes to accomplish a certain object,
-and is able to enlist the women of the household
-on her side, the man will be compelled sooner or
-later to submit to her wishes.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The older, conservative women are very tyrannical,
-and try their best to combat the newer
-ideas brought to the zenanas by their sons and
-daughters. Many of the younger generation
-are trying to break from the patriarchal custom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>of all the family living under one roof. They
-say it is very fine in theory, and has worked with
-good results in the villages, but that it has many
-bad points, the chief of which is that it allows
-no expression of individuality. The personality
-must be sunk in the family. When all the men
-will work and become producers and contributors
-to the family fund, it makes for harmony
-in the home, but when some are drones and live
-on the toil of others, it makes the burden too
-heavy for the few and causes quarrels and
-dissensions.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Women are helpless in India in the earning of
-a living for themselves, and if widowhood comes
-they must depend for support on some male relative
-of their own or of the family of their
-deceased husband. I know a boy of eighteen
-who is the only support of his wife, his aunt, a
-widow, his widowed mother, and his young sister.
-He was compelled to leave school and take a
-position in an office in order to take care of all
-these women, as he was the responsible head
-of the family. It is hard for a boy who is
-ambitious and anxious to obtain an education,
-when there are many women in his household, as
-they care more for the immediate necessities than
-for a prospective successful future. They feel
-that his father and his father’s father were able
-to provide for the wants of the family, so why
-should the boys of to-day spend years in studying
-books when they might be adding to the
-family exchequer?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>It is the women who are compelling the
-younger boys and girls to conform to the old
-usages and traditions in regard to marriage.
-Many a boy leaves school and would like a
-chance to find a place for himself in life before
-burdening himself with a wife. But this he is
-not allowed to do. His mother believes that
-all boys should be married early in life, consequently
-the boy is saddled with a family at about
-the age when the American boy is taking his
-first shy look at the girl across the aisle in the
-schoolroom. These modern young men would
-also like to have a voice in the selection of their
-wives, but that also is denied them. They must
-conform to the traditions of their caste and the
-customs of their family. I know a boy who was
-compelled to marry his niece, although his education
-had taught him that these intermarriages
-were not for the good of his race; still, he was
-helpless, and could not successfully oppose the
-combined wishes of the women of his family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Side by side with these Indian women who
-guard jealously the customs and traditions of
-other days are the Westernized society women,
-who seem to share with their husbands in the
-spirit of imitation that has entered into the very
-soul of the Indian people who have come into
-contact with the English. The Indian gentleman
-feels that he must talk “sport,” the schoolboy
-prides himself upon the knowledge of cricket
-and football and talks the jargon of Eton and
-Rugby. Because the meat-eating Englishmen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>from cold, dreary England must exercise in order
-to live, the Indian also devotes himself to a
-strenuous regime that is absolutely alien to his
-habits and the requirements of his climate. The
-Indian lady, with her exaggerated English accent,
-and her costume that is neither of the East nor
-of the West, is a paradox. She may well be
-zealous in borrowing what she needs from the
-English, but it seems hard for her to assimilate
-what she takes and make it a part of herself.
-The affectations which she uses to show her
-cosmopolitanism are palpably grafted upon her
-tree of knowledge, and we who wish to see the
-real India are only consoled in the thought that
-these unusual conditions which prevail in the
-large cities are only the graftings, and that the
-tree itself is not affected by them. The real
-woman of India is bound to grow in knowledge
-brought by education and experience, but deep
-down in her heart she will be essentially the same
-for years to come. She will not try to exchange
-her personality for another’s, even in outward
-appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The dawn of consciousness that has been preceded
-by long twilight is now awakening in the
-soul of the Eastern woman, and she will see
-by its light that she has a strength and individuality
-of her own and that she need not mortgage
-her birthright to borrow alien charms from
-the women of other lands.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER VII<br /> <span class='large'>MARRIAGE—THE GOAL OF WOMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>There are three great events in a Hindu
-woman’s life: first, her marriage; second, the
-birth of her son; and third, if she should be so
-unfortunate, her widowhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These three events are of immense importance
-to all women, but as a woman of the Far East is
-supposed to be created for one purpose only,
-the rearing of sons to her husband’s house,
-marriage and birth of children assume a larger
-place in her life than in the life of the
-Western woman, where these two events are often
-merely incidents. Also when a Hindu woman
-marries she expects to stay married, as she cannot
-divorce her husband, and he can only divorce
-her for infidelity. Even death will not open for
-her the doorway to remarriage, because if her
-husband should die before her, she must remain
-true to his memory for life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The woman’s inclinations are seldom consulted
-in regard to the choice of a husband, because,
-quite likely, when she is not much more than
-a child, her parents begin to look around for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>suitable alliance for her. Their choice must fall
-upon a man of the same caste, a relative if
-possible. The prospective bridegroom may be
-a young boy, or he may be an old man, a
-widower. The girl <em>must</em> be married. There are
-no reasons in the Hindu philosophy which allow
-a girl to pass the marriageable age without a
-husband being chosen for her. Men may
-become “sanyassis,” that is, renounce the world
-and remain bachelors, but this is not allowed
-women under any circumstances, as they must
-fulfil their destiny, which is to be the mothers
-of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If a girl passes the marriageable age, if she
-should be twelve or thirteen without being
-settled in life, her family would feel that they
-were disgraced, and she would have slight opportunity
-for marriage in any respectable family.
-Therefore, it is incumbent upon her parents to
-find for her a husband as soon as possible, which
-leads to one of the greatest crimes against Indian
-womanhood—child marriages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are many preliminaries to be arranged
-before the final choice of a bridegroom is decided,
-but when he is found at last, the important question
-of the dowry arises. In some places the
-father of the bride gives a dowry with his
-daughter, in others the groom’s father pays a
-certain sum to the parents of the little bride,
-practically buying her. Nearly every caste has
-a different mode of procedure regarding the
-exchange of presents and money.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>The girl’s personal jewellery and everything
-she receives from her future father-in-law, or
-that she takes with her to her new home, are
-most clearly set down, article by article, in a
-document, and constitute her own personal
-property, which she may claim if she becomes
-a widow.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Marriage is a most ruinous operation financially
-for the parents, especially for the father of
-the bride. He must give a feast lasting for five
-days to all friends and relatives, presents to all
-the contracting parties, and great liberality must
-be shown the Brahmans and priests who assist in
-the ceremony. If his new son-in-law is an
-educated youth, he will demand a much larger
-dowry with his bride, in these days when
-Western education is meaning so much in the life
-of the Indian youth. If he is a “failed B.A.,”
-he may only demand, we will say, one thousand
-rupees from his father-in-law. If he successfully
-passed his examinations and is a full B.A.,
-he quite likely would feel that those letters added
-to his name were worth at least two thousand
-rupees; and if he should by chance be a Doctor
-of Laws, his demands might be limited
-only by the knowledge of the amount of
-gold the father of his bride has stored for this
-emergency.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After the preliminary ceremonies have been
-concluded and the family priest has decided upon
-the most propitious day for the nuptials, the
-family begin to make preparations for the wedding.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>Invitations are taken to friends and
-relatives who are within visiting distance by the
-women of the household, who make upon the
-forehead of the invited female guest the round
-red caste mark, and leave a small bundle of
-pan leaves and betel-nut for the other members of
-the family. Often a little sandalwood paste is
-touched to the chin and between the shoulders
-by the bearer of the invitation. Mohammedan
-ladies send a tiny mica box with a cardamom seed
-in it and a piece of confectionery, which is given
-with the verbal invitation by the messenger, who
-must, if possible, be some member of the family
-instead of a servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the case of rich people the strong box is
-opened and the hoarded rupees brought forth
-with which to buy the gold and silver jewellery
-for both bride and groom, the elaborate wedding
-garments, and the saris, which are given as
-presents to the women guests, and shawls for
-the men; the store-rooms are examined to
-make sure that there is rice in plenty, also wheat
-flour, butter, oil of sessaman, peas, vegetables,
-fruits, pickles, curries, in fact, all the many
-foodstuffs necessary in the preparation of
-the elaborate feasts which are the main events
-of the wedding. Sandalwood powder is bought
-in great quantities, antimony for the eyes, incense,
-the red paste which wives use on the forehead,
-and innumerable numbers of the beautiful flower
-wreaths with which the guests are garlanded after
-the entertainments. Plenty of new earthen dishes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>are selected from the potters’ store, for these
-vessels may never be used the second time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the case of the poor man, now is the time
-when the visits are made to the moneylender,
-because, rich or poor, prince or peasant, there
-must be no question of stint at this time of
-rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A wedding is a very gorgeous affair, being
-limited only by the means of the contracting
-parties, but it is generally conceded that all
-Indians, of whatever class of society they may be
-members, spend far too much upon the nuptials
-of their children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Each one of the five days has its especial
-religious rite. One ceremony typifies the giving
-of the girl by the father to the husband and the
-renunciation of his parental authority. On
-another day the husband fastens the tali
-around his young wife’s neck, which is practically
-the same as placing the marriage-ring
-upon the finger of the new bride. This
-tali is a small gold ornament strung on a little
-cord composed of one hundred and eight very
-fine threads closely twisted together and dyed
-yellow with saffron. Before tying the tali it
-is taken to the guests, both men and women,
-who bless it. Old ladies whose husbands are
-alive are specially requested to bless the tali,
-in order to insure the couple a long married
-life. This symbol of wifehood is tied with three
-knots, thus trebly ensuring the marriage tie,
-and is never to be removed unless the wearer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>is so unfortunate as to become a widow,
-when the cord is cut. The most unkind thing
-one woman can say to another is, “May your
-tali be cut!”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After the tying of this emblem the newly
-married couple walk three times around a lighted
-fire, which is the ultimate binding of the marriage
-contract, for there is no more solemn engagement
-than that which is entered into in the
-presence of fire. Rice is thrown over the pair,
-and they throw it upon each other, signalling that
-they hope to enjoy an abundance of this world’s
-goods and a fruitful union. Rice is used at
-weddings in nearly all Eastern countries as
-typifying prosperity and fruitfulness, and it is
-perhaps from the Far East that we borrow our
-custom of throwing rice upon the newly married
-pair.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many Hindu women wear, in addition to the
-tali, an iron bracelet to indicate their marriage
-state. Among the rich it is gilded and,
-consequently, not easily distinguished from the
-many bracelets that always cover the Indian
-lady’s arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A young Hindu boy is not supposed to chew
-betel-nut nor put flowers in his hair until he is
-married. On the fourth day of the marriage
-festivities the groom is given his first betel-nut
-by his brother-in-law, and his head is wreathed
-with flowers. In a few castes the bride has her
-left nostril bored on the fifth day of the marriage
-and an ornament placed therein. After marriage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>in some parts of India the woman wears a streak
-of red powder in the parting of her hair, and in
-practically all provinces she wears the little round
-mark of wifehood between the eyes, which, as age
-comes, is elongated, until gradually, by the time
-that children and grandchildren cluster around
-her knee, the little red mark has grown into a
-straight line, losing itself in the whitening locks.
-In Mysore and in some of the southern provinces
-a woman does not tuck up her dress in the back
-until she is married. Then an end of the
-long sari, which is twisted several times around
-the body, is brought from the front to the back
-and tucked into a belt, forming a sort of trousers,
-and incidentally exposing more brown leg than
-we women of the Western world think consistent
-with modesty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the final feast the bride and groom eat
-together from the same leaf to show their complete
-union. This is the first and last time
-that the wife will eat in company with her
-husband, if he is an orthodox Hindu and not
-imbued with the new Western ideas. Always,
-in the future, she will serve him his meal, and
-after he has finished she will eat with the other
-women of the household and the smaller children,
-using the same leaf which has done service for
-her lord and master.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When all the religious rites are finished and the
-festivities have come to an end, there is a final
-procession, when the wife and husband, gorgeously
-arrayed in all their jewellery, are carried
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>round the town to the accompaniment of music,
-the explosion of fire crackers, the shooting of
-rockets, and the shouting of friends. Then, if
-the bride is still a child, she returns home with
-her parents, who keep her secluded until the
-time arrives for her to return to her husband’s
-home and fulfil the duties of a wife. The day
-the husband and mother-in-law come to take
-the wife to their home is made another time
-of rejoicing. She remains with them for a month
-when she revisits her old home, and often for the
-first few years, or until she has children, she
-lives alternately in her husband’s house and in
-that of her parents. If she finds herself ill-treated
-by her husband and tormented by her
-mother-in-law, the young girl often seeks her
-father’s home for shelter and protection, and
-remains with them until the husband or his
-mother come in person to persuade her to return
-home. Nearly always her family add their persuasions,
-if not their force, to compel the wife to
-return to her husband’s roof, as it is a great
-disgrace to all concerned to have a wife leave
-her husband. After the children come, the
-wife rarely leaves her house and devotes her
-time and energies to the rearing of the little
-ones that fill all homes, from the mansions of
-the rich to the huts of the poor peasants. There
-seem to be more little brown bodies in India
-than in any place I have visited, unless I except
-China, where the staple articles are rice and
-babies.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>The new wife has to accommodate herself to
-the customs of her husband’s family, and much
-of her future happiness depends upon the women
-members of the household. If it is a very aristocratic
-family, she may have all the luxuries of
-life, beautiful gold-embroidered saris, jewels,
-servants, and slaves, but very little liberty. There
-is a saying that you can tell the degree of a
-family’s aristocracy by the height of the windows
-in the home. The higher the rank, the smaller
-and higher are the windows and the more
-secluded the women. An ordinary lady may
-walk in the garden and hear the birds sing and
-see the flowers. A higher grade lady may only
-look at them from her windows, and if she is a
-very great lady indeed, this even is forbidden
-her, as the windows are high up near the ceiling,
-merely slits in the wall for the lighting and
-ventilation of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are many rules of etiquette prescribed
-for the young girl-wife if she would show that
-she has been properly trained by her parents.
-For example, she must never speak of her
-husband by name, nor may she use a word with
-the same syllable as her husband’s first name.
-A friend of mine has a husband whose name
-begins with the same syllable as that used in the
-word sugar. She always speaks of sugar as “the
-substance you put in your tea,” and she generally
-refers to her husband as “he.” Nor would the
-man say “my wife,” but “my house,” or some
-word denoting the home. A man in Hyderabad
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>met his doctor on the street and said, “I wish
-you would come and see me. My house has
-a boil on its neck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This same wife would not sit in the presence
-of her mother-in-law or her husband if others
-were present. It would show extreme lack of
-respect; nor would she speak if her husband
-were in the room. We called upon the wife of
-a high official of Bangalore, who came into
-the room with her daughter-in-law and her
-young daughter, an extremely pretty girl. The
-daughter-in-law would not sit down in the
-presence of her husband’s mother, nor did she
-speak, and looked extremely awkward and self-conscious,
-as she stood with her sari drawn across
-her mouth and watched us with her big black
-eyes. The little daughter played the veena, the
-national instrument, and as she sat upon the rug,
-gorgeously arrayed in an elaborate red and gold
-sari, with jewellery on arms, neck, ankles, toes,
-and with diamonds in each tiny nostril, she made
-a picture never to be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In some of the big households where the sons
-bring their wives to live beneath the family roof-tree,
-the married quarters are not large enough to
-allow a separate room for each couple, and the
-women sleep in one room and the men in another.
-The mother has the right of assigning the couples
-who are to inhabit the married quarters for the
-week. But even the eagle eye of the mother-in-law
-cannot always watch the young people, and
-many a girl-wife steals across the courtyard to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>find her husband, who is waiting for her in the
-shadows. A crowd of young men in a school
-were asked to give their idea of what was the
-most beautiful music in the world. One
-answered, “The song of the bul-bul,” another,
-“The plaintive strains of the zither,” a third,
-“The cry of the night bird,” but a young bridegroom
-said, “The music of my wife’s anklets
-as she tries to suppress their sound when she
-steals to meet me in the moonlight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One is amazed at the amount of jewellery worn
-by the Indian women, yet this vanity is not confined
-solely to the women, as in some of the
-provinces nearly every man has a jewel in his
-ear, and many of them wear most expensive
-finger-rings. The women excel in the artistic
-use of jewellery that on other people would seem
-tawdry and barbaric, but on these dainty little
-women is most becoming to their rich, dark
-beauty. Jewellery is not only worn by the lady,
-but women of every class are covered with it.
-The village woman will have perhaps but one
-cotton sari, and her home would be merely a
-mud hovel, but she will clink as she walks, and
-you know she wears silver anklets, and as she
-moves her sari to peep at you, you see the glisten
-of a bracelet. It may be of brass or it may be
-of silver, or, if she be very poor, coloured glass
-bangles will satisfy her cravings for the beautiful,
-and her arms will be covered with these ornaments
-from the wrist to the elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At a railway-station near Baroda I saw women
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>whose legs to the knee were covered with huge
-brass bands that must have been most inconvenient
-and heavy to carry. In Poona we
-stopped to watch a merchant of toe-rings place
-his wares upon his patron’s toes which were held
-out to him for the purpose. The rings were so
-tight that soap had to be used to force them
-over the twinging toes. The operation was most
-painful to vanity, judging from the faces of the
-victims, but evidently the sight of the shining ring
-as they trudged down the dusty road repaid them
-for the suffering they had undergone. In this
-same market were innumerable booths for the
-sale of the glass bracelets that are worn by all
-the women of India, with the exception of
-widows. I watched an old woman in the bangle
-bazaar working them over the hands of the
-women who sat on the ground in front of her,
-prepared to spend unlimited time in acquiring
-these articles of adornment. The purchaser made
-her choice from the green or gold or red bangles
-piled carelessly upon the trays in front of her,
-then the bangle-seller squeezed and manipulated
-the hand, slowly working, pushing,
-coaxing the bangle over the hand, until finally
-it was on the arm, where evidently it would
-remain.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>My husband and I dined with a Mohammedan
-who, after dinner, asked me into the
-zenana to meet his wife. The bareness of my
-arms shocked her, and she insisted upon presenting
-me with three bracelets for each arm,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>working them on so skilfully that it did not pain
-me, but on arriving at the hotel I found I could
-not remove them. I tried to persuade the Indian
-servant to break them for me, but he was horrified
-and said it would bring me very bad luck,
-as only widows had them broken on the arm.
-I feared I would be compelled to wear them
-all my life as my husband would not break them,
-having overheard the remarks about the widow.
-Finally I broke them myself, much to the detriment
-of my arms, which carried the scars for
-many days.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is an immense amount of money going
-into India each year that never gets into circulation,
-as the gold coins are strung upon chains or
-melted to make the bracelets for the women and
-children. Life could be made much more comfortable
-for the Indian peasant if he would turn
-the money invested in jewellery for his womenfolk
-into comforts for the home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Hindu woman has few legal rights. Any
-property which her husband wishes to leave her
-must be given to her in his lifetime, as she cannot
-inherit his estate, but she may claim maintenance
-from his heirs, and if she should survive
-her son, she may become his legal heir. The
-male relatives are supposed to provide maintenance
-for the women of the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>An outsider looking upon the Hindu home
-does not see where real union can possibly exist
-between a husband and wife. This is especially
-true at the present time, when nearly all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>better class of India’s sons are being educated,
-and are reading, listening, touching hands with
-the outside world. The women of the middle
-and lower classes, except in rare cases, are practically
-without education, few being able to read
-or write. The signs point to the fact that they
-will not long remain in this ignorant state,
-because the young men are demanding educated
-wives, and a desire for education is abroad in the
-land, although an old proverb says that to
-educate a woman is like placing a knife in the
-hands of a monkey. The English Government
-is establishing schools for girls in every town
-and village, and in Baroda enforced schooling is
-demanded for girls as well as for boys. But
-because of the early marriage of the girl, she has
-little opportunity of becoming a real companion
-to her husband, as he may continue his studies
-for years, while, when she becomes a wife, her
-schooldays are over.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I met a gentleman of about fifty years of age
-in the South of India who asked me to call upon
-his wife, a young girl of seventeen years, who
-became his bride at the age of twelve. She
-was not at all what the average girl of seventeen
-years would be in England or America. She was
-the polite hostess, with no trace of self-consciousness
-or gaucherie, graceful in her every movement.
-She was exquisitely dressed and covered
-with jewels. Large diamond clusters were in her
-ears, diamonds in each nostril, and around her
-neck a chain of rubies with a large pendant of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>pearls. Her manners were charming, and as we
-were parting she excused herself for a moment
-then returned to the room with a small tray on
-which was the red powder for the caste mark,
-betel-nut, fruit, and a small bouquet of flowers.
-She came to each of us and bowed, then with her
-right hand made the mark of wifehood upon our
-foreheads, and handed us the betel-nut and
-flowers. This gracious and pretty service is one
-of the many little kindly acts that are always
-performed by the hostess herself, as it would not
-be polite to delegate it to a servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I was charmed with this dainty little woman,
-yet I could not help thinking that she might be
-a pretty toy, but not a companion to the man
-with whom I had been conversing a few hours
-previous, and in whose library I had seen
-Emerson’s “Essays,” Farrar’s “Life of Christ,”
-“Pilgrim’s Progress,” the works of Tolstoy,
-Epictetus, and lying upon the desk, as if just
-left by the master, Maeterlinck’s “Life and
-Death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>According to the ethical, moral, and religious
-standards of the Hindus, man and woman are
-equal. The Vedas teach—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>Before the creation of this phenomenal world, the first
-born Lord of all creatures divided his own self in two halves
-so that one half should be male and the other half female.
-Just as the halves of fruit possess the same nature, the same
-attributes and the same properties in equal proportion, so man
-and woman, being the equal halves of the same substance,
-possess equal rights, equal privileges, and equal power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>This sounds very well in print, and learned
-Hindus quote us the Vedas to show that in their
-country women and men are considered equal.
-They are most indignant at the conception by the
-Western people of the treatment accorded the
-Indian woman by her husband. They say that
-books are filled with the stories of the brutality
-of husbands who marry these girl-wives without
-love on either side, yet they point out that it is a
-well-known fact that there are fewer wife-beaters
-in India than there are in England. Manu, the
-great law-giver, says, “A woman’s body must
-not be struck hard even with a flower, because it
-is sacred.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the olden time we are told that women
-were well versed in the Vedas, although it
-is now claimed that they are forbidden to
-read them or to be taught their truths. It is
-known that two of the famous songs of the
-Rig Veda were revealed by women, and
-when Sankaracharya, the great commentator of
-the Vedanta, was discussing this philosophy
-with another savant, a Hindu lady well versed
-in the Hindu scriptures was requested to act as
-umpire.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Whatever may have been her position in former
-times, at present there is no woman on earth who
-reveals more true attachment and devotion to
-her husband than does the Hindu wife. There is
-a beautiful saying, “Man is strength, woman is
-beauty; he is the reason that governs and she
-is the wisdom that moderates.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>In the Mahrabarata we find this definition of
-a woman—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A man’s wife is his truest friend;</div>
- <div class='line'>A loving wife is a perpetual spring</div>
- <div class='line'>Of virtue, pleasure, wealth; a faithful</div>
- <div class='line'>Wife is his best aid in seeking Heavenly bliss.</div>
- <div class='line'>A sweetly speaking wife is a companion</div>
- <div class='line in2'>In solitude, a father in advice,</div>
- <div class='line'>A mother in all seasons of distress,</div>
- <div class='line'>A rest in passing through life’s wilderness.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER VIII<br /> <span class='large'>INDIAN MOTHERHOOD</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>When it is known that the girl-wife is to fulfil
-her destiny by giving her lord a child, she
-becomes a person of importance in her home
-circle, and there are endless ceremonies to be
-observed. Feasts are given friends, and many
-days are passed in rejoicing. One of the
-earliest celebrations is given the children of
-all friends and relatives, when the glass-bangle
-man comes with his wares, which
-are bought and freely distributed to the
-guests. About two months before the baby is
-expected the mother takes the daughter to her
-home, where she remains until after the formal
-purification, which is forty days after the birth
-of a girl, and thirty should she be so fortunate
-as to give a man-child to the world. At the end
-of that time her husband or his mother must
-come and take her home again. It would be
-an insult to send a lesser person, unless it were
-absolutely impossible for either of them to be the
-messenger. This custom of the young mother
-giving birth to her first child under her own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>family roof-tree is followed by Mohammedans
-as well as by Hindus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The midwife in the villages is generally the
-wife of the barber, and naturally her knowledge
-of medicine is very much limited. She is ruled
-entirely by superstition and old-time custom.
-Her chief knowledge consists in different prayers,
-and a woman who is an expert in this field of
-obstetrics is always in demand, because there is
-no time when prayers are a greater necessity
-than at the birth of a child. Both the baby and
-its mother are peculiarly susceptible to the evil
-eye, to the influences of lucky and unlucky days,
-and a thousand other superstitions that make
-this time of a woman’s life one of great danger.
-Happily for Indian women, the Marchioness of
-Dufferin, and the wives of other viceroys, have
-taken the cause of Indian womanhood to heart,
-and have established hospitals for women and
-supply nurses for the home. There are nearly
-two hundred and fifty hospitals and dispensaries
-throughout India, and women doctors with
-degrees from the highest institutions in Europe
-are giving their life to help the women of
-India. These doctors, with their assistants, their
-native students, and trained nurses, during the
-year 1903 took care of a million and a half of
-girls and women. Yet there is a vast opportunity
-for the enlarging of the work, as I was told that
-there are still a hundred million people who have
-no knowledge of the blessings to be obtained
-from European medicine and surgery, but who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>depend entirely upon the native doctors and
-midwives.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many hospitals are maintained by missionaries,
-who have always been the forerunners in work
-to help the helpless, and it will only be a question
-of time when the mothers of India will not be
-compelled to be sacrificed to the superstition and
-ignorance of the women who are the only ones
-allowed near them in their time of travail. Even
-the most advanced men in India to-day would
-hardly allow a man doctor to attend his wife
-at the birth of a child. He would rather lose
-the life of the wife than so violate the customs of
-his class.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When the child is born, the date of the month,
-the hour of the day, and the star that is in the
-ascendant are carefully noted in order that the
-guru, or family priest, may cast the horoscope.
-Many of these astrologers are astute humbugs,
-and impose upon the credulity of their patrons
-to an enormous degree.</p>
-
-<div id='i_132' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_132.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CRADLE IN VILLAGE, BARODA.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>The house where a child has been born, as
-well as those who live in it, are considered impure
-for ten days, unless it is a rented house,
-when only the room in which the mother lies is
-unclean, and into which no one can enter except
-the midwife. The room is kept extremely warm,
-and incense is burned in it every day, and leaves
-are hung in front of the door to ward off evil
-spirits. On the eleventh day the linen and
-clothing is sent to the washman, and the mother,
-taking the child in her arms and with the husband
-sitting beside her, goes through the ceremony
-of purification by the family priest, after which
-he purifies the entire household and the rooms.
-Still the mother is not supposed to receive her
-friends, and must keep apart from the rest of
-the family until the thirty or forty days are
-passed, when she passes through another purification
-ceremony, and then goes to the temple
-to offer sacrifice. Even the little baby is considered
-impure for twenty days, and must not
-be touched unless clothed in silk or woollen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The new-comer has a succession of ceremonies
-to celebrate his arrival into this world of sorrows.
-On the twelfth day he is named; on a later day
-the first bracelets are put upon his arms and
-tiny anklets upon his ankles. When he is six
-months old he is given his first food. Five
-kinds of syrup are made, and the baby is given
-a taste of each one, and rice is put into his mouth.
-The father offers sacrifice to the household gods,
-the first loin-cloth is tied on the little man, the
-women sing, music is played, and feasting is
-indulged in by all. Each event is made the
-occasion of an elaborate feast, to which friends
-and relatives are invited and presents are given
-to the guests and to the priests. In fact, the
-priests seem to be omnipresent at all occasions in
-a Hindu family. A woman whom I was visiting
-was complaining of the many ceremonies that
-had taken place in her family during the past
-year, and she said that she was thoroughly tired
-of the worry and expense connected with them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>I said: “But who benefits by these elaborate
-feasts and rituals that give so much trouble and
-cause such an outlay in presents and money?”
-She said wearily: “Who benefits? Why, the
-priests and the Brahmans. They always reap
-their harvest, whether we are born, marry, or
-die. If we are wicked, we must ask them to
-intercede for us; if we are good, we must ask
-them to thank the gods for us; and if we die,
-they must help us across the river of fire. We
-can do nothing of ourselves; they are our taskmasters
-with ever-open palm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the newborn son survives the first two
-years—and the mortality of babies is frightful,
-especially in the cities—he will quite
-likely have the opportunity of having the
-tonsure made for the first time, and this
-event is only rivalled by the entertainment
-given when, whether boy or girl, the ears
-are pierced by the goldsmith and it is
-announced that babyhood is passed. These endless
-feasts would be ruinous to the poor Hindu
-were it not for the fact that it is practically the
-only time when he entertains his friends. There
-is no promiscuous dinner-giving as among the
-Western people; friends are invited only in connection
-with some religious rite or to inaugurate
-a special event in the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If a member of one of the higher castes, the
-mother who has watched her baby grow from
-babyhood into boyhood, looks forward to the
-most solemn and important event in his life, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>ceremony called “the introduction to knowledge,”
-when he is invested with the sacred cord. This
-ceremony lasts from four to five days and is
-nearly as expensive as a wedding. The father
-must provide many pieces of cotton cloth and
-small gold and silver coins to be given as presents
-to the guests. He must have unlimited food
-and a great collection of pottery, because, as at a
-marriage feast, the dishes are broken after their
-first use.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This cord may be seen on all Brahmans and
-on the members of a few of the higher castes,
-hanging from the left shoulder to the right hip.
-It is composed of three strands of cotton, each
-strand formed by nine threads. The cotton with
-which it is made must be gathered from the
-plant by the hand of a Brahman, and corded and
-spun by persons of the same caste, in order that
-it may not be defiled by passing through the
-hands of persons who are ceremonially unclean.
-For a young boy the cord has only three strands,
-but after he is married it is composed of six
-strands and may have nine. It is symbolical of
-the body, speech, and mind, and when the knots
-are tied, means that the man who wears the
-thread has gained control over these three organs
-that cause all worldly troubles.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At the end of the ceremony the guests accompany
-the boy, who is elaborately dressed and
-seated in an open palanquin, through the streets
-to the sound of singing, music, and merry-making.
-On his return to his home, he, for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>first time, performs the sacrifice of fire, showing
-that he is now a member of his caste and
-a twice-born son of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the mother belongs to a poor family, quite
-likely her boy will work to earn a few annas
-to add to the family exchequer, or if they are
-farmers, his days will be passed in the fields
-frightening the greedy crows from the ripening
-crops or driving away the animals that infest
-the fields which are near the jungles. In
-Baroda, education is compulsory; but many a
-mother gets around the law by paying the fine
-of two rupees a month, and selling her small
-boy’s labour for five rupees, thus gaining a
-livelihood.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>England has established free schools in every
-town and village, and there is little excuse even
-for the boy or girl of poor parents not to have an
-education. Even members of the depressed
-classes, or, as they are called, the pariahs, have
-their schools. The question that is agitating
-the minds of the educators is what form of education
-should be given these sons of a people who
-have been practically slaves for many centuries.
-Many contend that they should have only a
-technical education, that the sons of the carpenter
-caste should be made better carpenters, and that
-they should not be made barristers. A lady said
-to me: “Said, my sweeper’s son, goes to school,
-and after getting an education he naturally feels
-himself better than his father, a sweeper, or his
-uncle, who is my groom. He cannot affiliate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>himself with a higher caste than that into which
-he was born, as they will not accept him, and he
-has outgrown his own caste. What is he to do?
-He puts on a foreign hat and leaves his home,
-and in the next census, drops his name of Said
-Faruki and becomes John James Jones, a half-caste,
-and the census-taker wonders why there
-has been such an increase in half-castes. The
-population of half-castes grows from the lower
-castes who wish to raise themselves, but it is
-kept down in the census returns by the half-castes
-who wish to better themselves socially,
-and call themselves Portuguese or subjects of
-some other dark-skinned race of Europeans.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This question of the education of the Indian
-youth is a very serious problem with which those
-who have the welfare of India at heart have to
-contend. Many a boy when he returns to his
-home and his people says: “Why did they educate
-me?” There are few avenues of livelihood
-open to the Indian boy, as there is no Army or
-Navy or Church in which to enlist so many of
-the younger sons as in England or America.
-The main prizes are the Government offices, and
-failing these, the chief desire of all Indians is to
-be a lawyer. There are few places in the Government
-employ now, and the country is flooded with
-impecunious barristers.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Indian feels that he has a real grievance
-in the question of the Civil Service examinations.
-For the higher positions in this service it is
-necessary for the student to go to England and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>obtain his degree at an English university. The
-question of expense is a bar to the great majority.
-One often hears of parents mortgaging their
-homes and practically selling themselves to the
-moneylender for life, that the boy may have this
-one great opportunity. If he wins, they have
-not struggled in vain, but if he fails, life will be
-very grey and grim, because quite likely his life
-and his son’s, and his son’s son’s life will be given
-in a vain attempt to get rid of the burden of debt
-which seems to always hang over the heads of
-India’s poor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The question of the education of the daughter
-is not so much a matter of thought to the middle-class
-Mohammedan or Hindu mother, because
-at the time when, if she were in Western lands,
-she would be taking her books under her arm
-and starting for her first day at school, in India
-she is getting married. She may, if in a village,
-attend the school with her brothers until she
-is eight or nine years old, but rarely, except
-in the highest classes, does the little girl
-have a longer opportunity for study. In the
-cities the rich families are sending their daughters
-to private schools, and the Oriental home is the
-happy hunting ground for the English governess,
-who is engaged to teach, not only the knowledge
-to be found in books but also the etiquette to
-be observed in English society, as it seems to be
-the main object in life of the educated Indian,
-both man and woman, to be more English in
-manner than are the English themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>In all the better class homes the piano is seen,
-and seldom now does the daughter of the house
-play upon the veena or any instrument of Indian
-music. In Calcutta I went to a reception given
-by a great Indian lady. With the exception of
-the costumes worn by the pretty dark-eyed Bengalis,
-and the absence of men, I would have
-thought I was in an English house at an afternoon
-tea. English was spoken by nearly every
-one, the music was European, the refreshments
-were from an English caterer, and there was no
-distinct note of India in all the afternoon’s ceremonies.
-Most of the ladies wore high-heeled
-French slippers, and many of them had their
-beautifully draped saris twined around bodies
-held in place by the French corset, which must
-have been most uncomfortable for these people,
-used to untrammelled freedom in regard to their
-dress.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Times are changing so fast in India that it is
-hard to say “This is a custom” or “That is a
-custom.” Education is opening the eyes of the
-younger generation of Indian women to the
-fallacy of many of the old-time rites and superstitions.
-Still, many of the mothers are conservative
-and feel keenly their daughter’s departure
-from the beliefs of her day, yet the pressure is
-so strong that many of these conservative mothers
-are sending their daughters to the schools, both
-mission and Government, where in the former
-they avail themselves eagerly of the education,
-but are not influenced by the religious teaching.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>One devout Mohammedan mother said to me:
-“Yes, I send my daughter to a mission school,
-as it is the best in our town. I feel that they
-cannot hurt her, as she has had a good religious
-training in the home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A great many of the mothers feel that the
-present system of education for women in India
-is wrong, and that the text-books are not the
-ones that should be adopted for the use of Indian
-children. The stories have little to do with
-Indian life, and the children do not understand
-them. For instance, stories of snowstorms, ice,
-and things that are to be seen in a foreign land,
-are far above the understanding of the average
-Indian girl. It is also said that the girl is taught
-of Joan of Arc and of English heroines, but
-nothing is said of the heroines of Indian history,
-nor is anything taught of Indian history before
-the English occupation. There is nothing given
-the child to inspire a feeling of patriotism, nor
-is she given any moral training except in the
-mission schools. She is given a certain amount
-of book knowledge, which quite likely she cannot
-assimilate, and is considered educated. I
-remember visiting a girls’ school where the
-teacher asked a class of girls to recite Wordsworth’s
-poetry, extracts from Shelley and Keats;
-they could tell the place of birth and give the list
-of English poets and chronology of the English
-kings most glibly, but what actual good it
-afforded the Indian girl to have all these interesting
-facts in her little head I could not see.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>The Indian girl learns easily and is often
-most eloquent. There are no better public
-speakers than are the Bengali women, who seem
-to share with their men in the alertness of their
-brain. A prominent educator of India said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>I have come in contact with people from all over the world
-in my capacity as educator, but I believe there are no men of any
-country who can compare with the Indian in quickness of thought
-and in capacity to learn. Within the small round head of the
-Bengali is a dynamo of resistless energy, that is for ever working,
-either for good or bad, but which ever way it turns, we of
-England must recognize its power.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The crying need of India is the great teacher,
-both man and woman; the teacher who will
-really take an interest in his pupils and not
-feel the bar of race. This is the fault of the
-average man who comes to India, and if he does
-not have it when he arrives he soon acquires a
-pride in being one of the ruling race. The Indian
-boy and girl are extremely clever, and feel instantly
-this racial prejudice of the Englishman,
-and consequently resent his attitude of superiority.
-Tennyson’s indictment of English
-schoolmasters could be justly applied to many
-of the teachers in India to-day:—</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>Because you do profess to teach, and teach us nothing,
-feeding not the heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are wanted teachers who will give the
-Indian boy and girl the true value of an education
-other than its advantages from an economic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>standpoint. That must be considered also, and
-in a land where the crowds are great and famines
-many, it assumes even a larger importance in
-the lives of the boys who must become the wage-earners,
-than it does in Western lands, where life
-is not such a fierce struggle for the necessities.
-But along with the training for the making of
-a livelihood should be given another training.
-These boys and girls of India who are just starting
-on the road that their Occidental brothers and
-sisters have been treading for many generations
-should be given the broader view of education,
-its worth and meaning. They should be taught
-by loving teachers the true knowledge of which
-so beautiful a definition is given by Bishop
-Mant:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>What is true knowledge! Is it with keen eye</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of Lucre’s sons to thread the mazy way?</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Is it of civil rights, and royal sway,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wealth political, the depths to try?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is it to delve the earth, to soar the sky?</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To marshal nations, tribes in just array;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To mix and analyze, and mete and weigh</div>
- <div class='line'>Her elements, and all her powers descry?</div>
- <div class='line'>These things, who will may know them, if to know</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Breed not vainglory; but, o’er all, to scan</div>
- <div class='line'>God in his works and Word shown forth below,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Creation’s wonders and Redemption’s plan;</div>
- <div class='line'>Whence came we, what to do, and whither go:</div>
- <div class='line in2'>This is true knowledge, and the whole of man.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER IX<br /> <span class='large'>WOMAN’S SORROW</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Abbe Du Bois says: “The happiest death for
-a woman is that which overtakes her while she
-is still in a wedded state. Such a death is looked
-upon as a reward of goodness extending back
-for many generations; on the other hand, the
-greatest misfortune that can befall a wife is to
-survive her husband.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Death is a tragedy in all lands, but with the
-Hindus it is made doubly tragical because of
-superstition and the endless ritual connected with
-their religion. The idea of mourning is not so
-much sorrow as it is uncleanness, defilement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When death seems imminent the family priest
-is summoned to administer the last sacrament.
-The dying person is lifted from the couch and
-laid upon the ground, which has been made ceremonially
-pure by smearing it with cowdung and
-by placing the sacred dharba grass upon it. It
-is said that if a man dies upon a bed he must
-carry it through eternity. It is most important
-that a man should breathe his last upon the earth,
-and not within the house, as there are certain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>phases of the moon when it would be a serious
-annoyance for all within the house to have a
-death beneath the roof. In fact, it pollutes the
-whole neighbourhood to have a death in the
-vicinity, and the neighbours share in the unclean
-state of the family until the corpse is
-carried to the burning-ground. Often if a death
-occurs in a house in an unpropitious phase of
-the moon, the dwelling must be vacated until such
-time as the priest shall permit it to be purified;
-sometimes the ban cast upon the place lasts
-from three to six months.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The duration of the state of ceremonial impurity
-varies according to the age of the
-deceased. In the case of mere infants the time
-is about one day. In the case of a boy who
-has not been invested with the sacred cord, or
-a girl not married, the time is three days; and
-after that, in either case, the time is ten days.
-In the case of a married girl, whether or not
-she has gone to live with her husband, her own
-people must observe the ceremonial for three
-days. During these periods the near relatives
-of the dead are unclean and their touch would
-defile any person or thing. They must not enter
-their own kitchen nor touch any cooking utensil.
-The food must be cooked by some one not personally
-connected with the dead, but of equal
-caste. If for some reason the mourning family
-cannot get any one of their own caste to cook
-for them, they must procure kitchen utensils and
-cook their food in some place other than the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>usual kitchen, not using the utensils again. If
-a person in mourning went into a kitchen or
-storehouse, everything would have to be thrown
-away immediately.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The wailing of the women tells the story of
-a death, as they abandon themselves completely
-to their sorrow, tearing their hair, striking their
-foreheads, and uttering shrill cries to show their
-desolation. As soon as the breath leaves the
-body preparations are made at once for its disposal,
-as a corpse is never kept longer than
-twenty-four hours in this hot climate. The eldest
-son, if there is one of suitable age, or the father
-or eldest brother in order of nearest relationship,
-or the husband if the deceased is a woman, must
-conduct the funeral ceremonies. The body is
-washed and shaven and adorned with the marks
-of his caste, and placed in a sitting position,
-with the head uncovered, and the son or heir
-performs a sacrifice before it. Then the two
-thumbs and the great toes are tied together and
-the body is enveloped in a new white cloth and
-placed upon a bier, formed of two long poles
-with seven cross-pieces. With the heir at the
-head, carrying a pot of fire, the procession starts
-for the burning-ground. This bier must always
-be carried by relatives or members of the same
-caste. When a man is ill and it is necessary to
-tell him that he will soon depart from this world,
-it is broken to him gently by some one saying,
-“You will soon ascend a palanquin carried by
-bearers of your own caste.” On the way to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>cemetery the procession is stopped three times
-and the bier placed on the ground, the face uncovered,
-and a prayer is said. If, as sometimes
-occurs, the person is not really dead and he
-revives, it is most unfortunate for all concerned,
-the revived man included, as he is considered as
-dead and not allowed to return to his home or
-to his caste.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Arrival at the burning-ground, where the
-funeral pile has been prepared by men whose
-profession it is to attend to the dead, and who
-are always of the pariah class, the untouchables,
-the body is put on the pyre and the sacred thread
-and loin-cloth are removed with the winding-sheet,
-as the body must depart from the world in the
-state in which it entered it, completely naked. The
-head should be placed towards the south and the
-legs towards the north. If near a sacred river,
-like the Ganges, the body is laid for a few
-moments with the feet in the sacred water, and
-water is sprinkled over it. The heir performs the
-sacrifices, and it is he who sets the pile alight,
-while the priests repeat the prayers for the dead.
-After the pyre is lighted the family retire to a
-distance and leave the body to the administrations
-of the men in charge. In some places the heir
-is supposed to break the skull so that the gases
-may escape and the body may not explode. I was
-told of one woman who wished to establish her
-right to a rich man’s property; consequently
-at the critical moment she dashed from the arms
-of her friends and with one blow of a stick
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>broke the head of her late liege lord, thus clearly
-showing her heirship, as only the legal heir is
-entitled to perform this last kind office for the
-dear departed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I heard one rather peculiar story while in India
-in regard to the cremation of the dead. I sat
-at dinner beside an English official who had been
-many years in the Government service of India.
-In the course of the conversation I asked him
-what he thought about cremation. He said, with
-a smile: “Well, I am perhaps a little prejudiced
-in regard to the cremation of the dead.
-I had rather a peculiar experience.” I settled
-back in my chair, hoping I was to hear one of
-the many stories of Indian life which these old
-officials have to tell us if they find we are interested
-in the lives of the people amongst whom
-they work. He said: “I had an acquaintance
-once, a Scotchman, who died here in India,
-and asked in his will that I and another
-friend would cremate him, and not allow an
-Indian hand to touch him, but that we should
-personally attend to all the details. We were
-young then in things Indian, and made our first
-mistake in buying the wood for the pyre. Unfortunately
-for our friend, the wily wood-merchant
-sold us green wood, and for the first
-day he only smoked. By the second day the
-wood had dried out, and all would have been
-well if we had known that the skull of a person
-burned should be broken in order to allow the
-gases to escape. We did not know this—our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>friend blew up. We spent the remainder of the
-second day in gathering his remains and replacing
-them upon the fire. The third day the
-work was fully accomplished; his ashes were
-collected and now repose in a beautiful urn in
-his family chapel near Edinburgh.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Ceremonies are held and sacrifices are made
-for ten days by the members of a family in which
-there has been a death. If the deceased was
-a married man, it is on the tenth day that the
-widow is degraded into her state of widowhood.
-This rite is called “the cutting of the cord,”
-because then the tali, the symbol of wifehood,
-is cut, and the woman has no more place in
-Hindu society. The relatives and friends come
-to the house and deck the poor woman in all
-her festive clothing; jewels are put upon her,
-flowers, and sandal paste. Her friends mourn
-with her for a time, then her bright clothing is
-removed, her beautiful black hair is cut, and she
-must remain for ever close-shaven and clothed in
-a garment of white. She may attend no feast, is
-permitted to eat only one meal a day, and that
-should be prepared by her own hands, may not
-partake of meat, and if she is so unfortunate
-as to be poor in this world’s goods she becomes
-the drudge and servant of her husband’s family.
-She is considered unclean, a thing of ill-omen,
-so unlucky that if a man were starting on some
-business venture and on leaving his doorway
-should by chance meet a widow he would return
-to his house and say a few prayers to counteract
-his bad luck.</p>
-
-<div id='i_148' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_148.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>INDIAN WOMEN SPINNING.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>When the widow is a child, not yet arrived
-at the age of living with her husband, the only
-ceremony at the death is the cutting of the tali
-cord. The other ceremonies and degradations
-are reserved for the time when she arrives at
-the full age of wifehood, when the whole ceremony
-is enacted as though the wife had been a
-real wife, and the little girl-widow is compelled
-to join that great army of women in India, nearly
-twenty million strong, of whom a million are
-child-widows.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I met a great many widows in India, and even
-among the Brahmo Samaj, which sect is now
-trying to break the tyrannical yoke of custom,
-I never heard of one who dared to brave public
-opinion and remarry. I knew one charming
-widow—I think the most beautiful woman I saw
-in India—who had practically broken all class
-restrictions except this last. It was said that
-she had been in love with a man for many years,
-and he had repeatedly tried to persuade her to
-undergo the censure of her people by marrying
-him, but she dared not do it. She was only
-thirty years old, but she must remain until the
-end of her life a widow, almost an outcast.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the cities and among the modernized people
-of India this state does not hold such sorrow for
-women as in the villages and country districts,
-where the people have not come into contact with
-Western civilization. In these purely Hindu
-towns, where all social life is controlled by
-custom and the influences of superstition and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>religion, when the woman can no longer wear
-the red mark of wifehood upon her forehead,
-her case is pitiable.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Indian Government has made laws
-legalizing the remarriage of widows, but even
-when it has the Government sanction, custom and
-tradition are too strong, and practically no woman
-will take advantage of it. It would mean not
-only lifelong disgrace for her, but also would
-reflect so severely upon her relatives and the
-members of her caste that they would be involved
-in endless disgrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are many homes scattered throughout
-India for these helpless women. Pundita
-Ramabai has a place near Poona where she
-has nearly eight hundred widows in her charge,
-and they are a sad sight as they go in squads
-of from two to three hundred to their work at
-the printing press or at the looms attached to
-the mission. Some widows had been with her
-for years, and quite likely will remain for life,
-as no one will marry a widow, and they do not
-seem to be acquiring a practical education with
-which they could earn their living in the world.
-The Gaekwar of Baroda is solving the widow
-question by educating them as teachers at the
-Government expense, only asking that in return
-for his care they devote a certain number of
-years as school-teachers in his State.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Pundita Ramabai’s home for widows is a very
-remarkable institution, and well repays one for
-a visit. It is a faith mission—that is, its members
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>do not receive a salary, but depend upon donations
-for their support. What remains after the
-expenses of the establishment have been met is
-divided among the workers according to their
-needs. They are a very devoted band, with an
-orthodox, old-fashioned brand of religion that
-holds the wrath of God and the terrors of hell
-over these emotional women, whose only outlet
-for their emotions is their prayers, and at noon
-they are permitted to pray aloud and express
-their desires and their states of feeling. One
-day we heard a great buzzing, sounding from
-the distance like an immense swarm of bees,
-and found it was the 1,350 widows, rescued street
-women, and children having their noonday
-prayer. Some of them worked themselves into
-a veritable ecstasy of religious emotion, swaying
-their bodies, the tears running down their faces
-as they prayed for the forgiveness of their sins,
-real or imaginary.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The business manager was more interested in
-the practical than the religious aspects of the
-mission, and looked at the whole question with
-the eye of the man who has to provide for all
-these people who give nothing to the common
-good. When asked the outcome of it all, he
-said he could not see what good was being
-accomplished except in the actual saving of the
-lives. They could not marry, they could not
-support themselves, they were helpless, and would
-be a burden on others’ shoulders so long as they
-lived. He said: “Now look! There go four
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>hundred women who should be married to-morrow;
-but who will marry them? No Hindu
-would dare break his caste by marrying one of
-them. It would completely ostracize him from
-his community. And again, we would not want
-to marry a Christian girl to a Hindu or a
-Mohammedan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I asked: “Are there no Christian boys to
-marry them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He replied: “There are not enough to go
-around, and even a Christian does not marry a
-widow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Do you ever have any offers?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He laughed. “Yes, once in a while some man
-takes courage and comes here to find a wife,
-but he generally goes away without one. We
-seem here rather to go on the principle of getting
-rid of the speckled apples first, and if there is
-a girl with a hare lip, or only one eye, she is
-the one trotted out for inspection. Naturally,
-the boy beats a hasty retreat, saying he believes
-he does not want to get married to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The lot of the widowed woman in India is
-not so pitiable if she has been so fortunate as
-to have borne sons. In India, as in all Eastern
-countries, filial piety, the respect for parents, is
-bred into the very fibre of the man’s soul. When
-the mother becomes a widow and dons the gown
-of white, her son cares for her and cherishes
-her all her days. She is still the ruler of his
-household, and it would be a most unfilial son,
-on whom his world would soon cry shame, if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>he did not ask the advice of his mother on
-matters of importance, nor heed her warnings
-in times of stress. Her whole life is given for
-others, as this world is supposed to have no
-joys for her except the joy of service. For
-her “this world is but a dream: God alone is
-real”; and her days are passed in caring for
-the many lives around her and in prayers and
-religious rites that will help her to more swiftly
-pass the time ere she may join her lost one.
-The woman of India who has lost her mate turns
-instinctively to the gods for solace, because she
-has been taught from childhood that “the
-religion of the wife lies in serving her husband:
-the religion of the widow lies in serving God.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER X<br /> <span class='large'>HYDERABAD AND THE MOHAMMEDAN WOMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The city of Hyderabad seems to have been
-dropped to the earth from an Oriental dream.
-It is the most Eastern city in this most Eastern
-land, and you are filled with a sense that it is not
-at all real, but especially staged and set for your
-amusement, and when you leave, it will all disappear.
-The gaily painted shops will be pulled
-down and put in the property-room, the goldsmiths
-who make the bracelets, nose-rings, and
-necklaces for the pretty, dark-eyed women within
-the zenanas is only waiting for his cue to leave
-the stage. The men on the corners with their
-great wreaths of white flowers, with their marigolds
-and garlands to be hung about the necks of
-friends, or to curtain the doorways at some feast
-or wedding, are there only for show, to add
-colour to the picture. These women passing by
-with saris of purple or crimson, with gleaming
-bracelets and tinkling anklets, with kohl-blackened
-eyes that stare at you wonderingly
-from above the closely drawn sari, or, what is
-more peculiar to visitors from the West, the
-women draped in long white cloaks like winding-sheets,
-which cover them completely from the
-view of the passer-by, seem part of the chorus;
-and the sheen of knives and guns and huge silver
-chains hanging over the shoulder of the man from
-the North, the elephant swaying slowly down the
-street, looking with keen, twinkling eyes at the
-people who make way for him, are all a part of
-the pantomime, or a mirage caused by the
-brilliant sunshine of this Southland.</p>
-
-<div id='i_154' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_154.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A CARRIAGE FOR WOMEN.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>We are told that Hyderabad is the oldest and
-greatest native State in the Indian Empire, and
-we have heard from childhood of the magnificence
-of the Nizam of Hyderabad, the man who
-seemed to outrival Solomon with his palaces, his
-jewels, and his wives. His hospitality was given
-with Oriental lavishness. Those who were fortunate
-enough to be his guests at the great Durbar
-at Delhi, when King George was proclaimed
-Emperor of India, will never forget the gorgeousness
-and prodigality of his entertainment. For
-sixteen months he had an army of workmen clearing
-the ground, making the lawns and flower-gardens,
-and erecting the tents that were to
-accommodate his guests and the four thousand
-people he took with him from Hyderabad. His
-women were lodged in an old palace at a distance
-from the tents of the guests and were unseen,
-viewing the spectacle from afar.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Even those of the immediate circle surrounding
-the Nizam at Hyderabad knew nothing of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>private life within the zenana, and only conjectures
-were made in regard to the number of
-women within its walls. Gossip says that when
-the late Nizam died there was a cartload of
-broken glass bracelets (the bangles that are worn
-by wives, but that are broken on their wrists
-when they become widows) taken away from
-the palace. This fortunate man was credited with
-a great many more wives than he actually
-possessed. Hyderabad is a feudal country, with
-many of the customs that prevailed in France
-under the old feudal régime. The Nizam is the
-overlord. His feudal princes when possessing
-a pretty daughter are always anxious to give her
-as wife to the Nizam. He perhaps may accept
-her and send her to his women’s quarters, never
-seeing her again. But her people are satisfied,
-as they have the honour of having a daughter in
-the Imperial zenana, consequently a friend at
-Court, as she will naturally remember her family
-when Imperial offices or gifts are being distributed.
-She receives a stated income, said to
-range from sixty dollars to four hundred dollars
-a month, according to her status, number of
-children, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Nizam was planning to give his first ball
-while I was in Hyderabad, and every one was on
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">qui vive</span></i> regarding those who should be asked
-and those who should not. It is remarkable how
-everything seems to revolve around the ruler of
-one of these principalities. His Highness is an
-absolute autocrat concerning the life and actions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>of his people, and the foreigners seem to have
-caught the infection, because in every State we
-visited the name of the ruler was on all tongues.
-“His Highness thinks so and so,” or “His Highness
-does not think so and so,” was the ultimate,
-final word for everything. His greatness and his
-Oriental splendour seem to overpower the people
-and make them subservient. Yet it is not from
-any personal contact, as few of even the Nizam’s
-ministers have seen him, and his people never
-have that honour, unless at some great Durbar,
-where, arrayed in royal magnificence, he permits
-them to view him upon his throne, or when, as
-he is being swiftly whirled along in his motor,
-four shrill blasts from the whistles of the police
-notify the populace that their ruler is passing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A native ruler seems to attract a genuine
-admiration and respect from his subjects. He
-appeals to their instincts with his display. They
-love to hear the glories of his magnificence, to
-see his elephants, his guards, and his foreign
-motors. He can understand his people and his
-people understand him; and even if the taxes are
-oppressive and he grinds the faces of the people
-into the dust to get money to squander upon his
-favourites and to build great palaces, the peasant
-will bear it all and not complain, as he feels it
-is ordained, and his Rajah is the child of the
-gods and entitled to his very life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is no fear in the State of Hyderabad
-that the present race of rulers will become extinct.
-When a child is born to the Nizam there is a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>public holiday in the State, the schools are closed,
-cannon are fired, and every one is supposed to
-rejoice with the happy father. While we were
-there the people enjoyed four public holidays
-within eight days arising from this fact, and
-nine more were expected the following week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While we were in this State there arose a case
-that was causing a great deal of comment. The
-son of a woman was killed and the murderer
-was condemned to death. In this Mohammedan
-country the law “a life for a life” prevails, and
-the death penalty cannot be revoked unless the
-heir of the dead man demands it. In some
-Hindu communities, where the saving of life is
-a meritorious performance, the village or city
-will often raise a certain sum and offer it to the
-heir in exchange for the life of the condemned
-prisoner. Men, I was told, will sometimes take
-the money, but women, especially if it was their
-son or husband who was killed, will practically
-always demand the life. In this instance the
-woman, who was a devout Mohammedan, took
-the money and sent it to help her fellow-Mohammedans
-in their war with the infidel Italians.
-Her religious zeal overcame the instinct for
-revenge, so deeply planted within the breast
-of all followers of the Arabian prophet.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At tea at the home of a Mohammedan I met
-several ladies, who willingly discussed with me
-the difference between the social customs of our
-Western land and those governing the life of the
-woman of the East. I was told that there is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>no society life as we know it, no calling, nor
-promiscuous making of new acquaintances. The
-social life centres around the three great events
-of Indian life—births, weddings, and deaths. If
-a wedding occurs in a family, the mother will
-send invitations to all the ladies of the same
-social standing as herself, and, dressed in their
-most gorgeous saris and jewels, they come to the
-house, where elaborate refreshments are served
-with much gossiping and merry-making. The
-guests stay hours or days, according to their
-relationship to the family. Also at times of
-death they go and offer their condolences to
-the bereaved family, and although colours are
-much more subdued at the time of sorrow than
-at the time of rejoicing, it is often another place
-in which to show off new finery. These secluded
-women feel like the little girl who stopped to
-see a friend on her way to a funeral. She was
-dressed in a bright pink sari, and when remonstrated
-with on wearing such a gay dress on
-such a mournful occasion, said, “Why, how can
-I be sure that I will get another chance to
-show it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I said to my hostess in the course of the
-conversation: “If I were a Mohammedan or a
-Hindu lady and came here to live, would the
-ladies whose husbands perhaps had business
-associations with my husband come to call upon
-me?” She said: “No, not at all. You would
-never meet the ladies unless at the time of some
-festivity you were invited.” I asked the reason
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>for this, and they answered, “Custom”—the
-word that rules the whole Eastern world. This
-lack of exchange of courtesies between new
-people is traced in some cases to the attitude of
-the husbands, who seem afraid to allow their
-wives to make new acquaintances. They must
-decide whom the wife shall visit. They must
-know that the house visited is strictly secluded,
-that the hostess has no advanced ideas, and that
-the husband is a man of standing before they
-allow their women to make new friends. They
-say that it is the desire of protection, not
-deprivation of liberty, that causes them to take
-such care of their dear ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>An Englishwoman ten years ago tried to meet
-the Indian ladies, and sent sixty invitations for
-a tea. Only three of the invited guests put in
-an appearance. She persisted, convinced the
-husbands that no male eyes would gaze upon
-their secluded treasures, and now the original
-sixty have come with nearly every high-class
-lady in Hyderabad, so that on her reception days
-the house is crowded.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a club where the Mohammedan and
-Hindu ladies meet once a month and play badminton,
-and eat much cake and gossip. Still,
-they are not as yet taking any active interest in
-social work, nor in what is going on in the
-world outside. Mme. Sarojinni Naidu, the
-Indian poetess whose charming poems have been
-so well received in England, and who is herself
-a social favourite in that country, has been trying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>to interest the ladies of Hyderabad in social
-work among women. She has been specially
-interested in reviving the old industry of silk-weaving,
-and the weavers through her efforts
-have been encouraged to do their best work.
-She has sold thousands of rupees worth of the
-beautiful silks to her friends within the zenanas,
-but it is rather discouraging work, as it has caused
-her to be looked upon with suspicion by many of
-the officials, who fear that she may be using her
-influence with the people for some Socialistic
-movement.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While in Hyderabad I saw a great deal of
-this wonderfully attractive woman, who looks like
-a young girl, but who is the mother of children
-nearly as big as herself. She herself is not
-“purdah,” and she has violated the customs of
-her caste by marrying a man of another caste.
-She goes to public entertainments and lives the
-life of an Englishwoman. I went with her to
-see the “sports,” that form of entertainment
-which always follow the English wherever they
-go. They were held at the race track, and in the
-grand stand were the entire foreign community,
-with a mixture of Indian gentlemen. We
-watched the riders in the field below, and I must
-confess the Indian gentlemen easily carried the
-honours. They are wonderful horsemen, and
-are most picturesque. I think there is no handsomer
-man in the world than the high-class
-Indian gentleman. With his clear brown skin,
-his large black eyes, his stately carriage, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>magnificent physique, accentuated by the pugaree
-or turban on his head, he is a picture that,
-once seen, cannot easily be forgotten. The
-average Englishman looks either too fat or too
-thin, does not hold himself well, has generally, if
-a resident in the East, a most unhealthy complexion,
-and in comparison with his Indian neighbour
-makes a very poor showing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Mme. Naidu was the only Indian woman in the
-grand stand, and after tea was served, she asked
-me if I would like to visit the Indian women.
-We went upstairs to an enclosed room, which was
-filled with Indian ladies, who could see all that
-was going on in the grounds below, but were
-protected from view by the carved woodwork
-enclosing the room. They came to a side
-entrance in their carriages or motors; a screen
-of canvas was made from their carriage to the
-entrance so that they could pass immediately
-from their carriage to a covered stairway, themselves
-unseen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There were about twenty ladies, dressed in
-most brilliant colours and decked with an
-immense amount of jewellery. One woman had
-seven piercings in her ears, in four of which were
-set small buttons of turquoises, and in the others
-great hoops of gold in which were hanging pearls
-about the size of a pea. In her right nostril was
-a diamond and in her left a ruby. Her arms
-were covered with bracelets, and there were five
-necklaces of diamonds around her neck. Her
-trousers, the ugly trousers of the Mohammedan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>lady, were of bright pink brocade, the tunic was
-of white, and over it all was a long veil of light
-blue gauze. One would imagine a glaring
-clash of colours, but all this riot of colour
-blends and makes the right setting for the dark
-beauty of these Indian women. They are extremely
-pretty, with the colouring of an Italian
-or Spaniard from the South; their big black eyes
-are shaded by long silky lashes, their noses are
-most delicate, and they have exquisitely shaped
-mouths. I do not think that I saw an ugly woman
-all the time I was visiting the “purdah” women
-of India. Some of them with age become a little
-too stout, but their dress disguises the figure if
-too well blessed with flesh, and softens harsh
-outlines if too thin.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The women in this secluded enclosure seemed
-to be enjoying themselves much more than the
-conventional Englishwomen below them. There
-was a table with a varied assortment of non-alcoholic
-drinks, and many kinds of cakes and
-sweets. Each lady had her silver pan-box,
-and made pan for her friends, all chatting
-and laughing with the utmost freedom and good-fellowship.
-They do not seem to feel it a deprivation
-at all to be compelled to pass their lives with
-women. I am sure they would feel very ill
-at ease if they thought that they could be seen
-by any man except their husband, brother, or
-immediate relative.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I had an example of what instinct will do in
-the fear of being seen by some one outside of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>family circle. Mme. Naidu and I called upon
-a Mohammedan lady who was strictly “purdah.”
-We were taken into a drawing-room furnished
-in European fashion, where the father-in-law
-of our hostess was chatting with another gentleman.
-The stranger left immediately, but the
-father-in-law remained to talk with me while
-Mme. Naidu went in search of the mistress of
-the house. She returned soon, and said to the
-man, “You must leave,” and after his departure
-the lady entered. When she sat down she
-noticed that one of the blinds of the window was
-open, and she drew her sari across her face and
-spoke to Mme. Naidu, who went to the window
-and closed the blind. Even that did not satisfy
-her, and a servant was called, who saw that all
-the windows were securely closed and that no
-one could possibly look into the room from the
-outside. It seemed a useless precaution to me, as
-the windows opened on to a garden, and no one
-could pass unless some member of the household.
-She laughed apologetically and said: “I know
-what you think, but I cannot sit here with any
-degree of comfort if I think some one, a servant
-or one of my husband’s guests, might pass by.
-It is instinct; my mother and my mother’s
-mother were ‘purdah’ women, and it is in the
-blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>She asked us to come to her rooms and look
-at some new clothing. Her rooms were big and
-rather bare, as are most rooms in this hot country,
-but the furniture was all European. Bed, dressing-table,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>and chairs all looked as if made in
-England or France. She had a servant bring
-her pan-box. This giving of pan is the first
-thing offered to a guest on arrival and the
-last thing on going away. Her pan-box was
-of silver, about nine inches wide by twelve long.
-It had a shallow tray in the top, in which was
-kept in tiny compartments the betel-nut and
-spices. In the bottom of the box, covered with
-a damp cloth, were the leaves. The hostess takes
-a leaf, covers it with a thin layer of lime, and with
-a pair of scissors breaks a betel-nut into small
-pieces, puts it with half a dozen different spices
-into the leaf, folds it up, sticking a clove through
-the leaf as a fastener, and hands it to the guest.
-The guest removes the clove and places the leaf
-in the mouth, where it makes a huge bunch on
-the side of the face until it is slowly masticated.
-It gives forth a juice which colours the inside
-of the mouth and the teeth a dark red, but not
-permanently, as it rinses quite easily. The
-pan has a spicy taste, and leaves the mouth
-feeling deliciously clean, I presume owing to the
-lime in it. Many of the great houses have a
-servant or slave whose only duty is to make
-pan for the inmates of the zenana. One such
-servant said she made five hundred a day and
-her wrist became quite lame from time to time
-caused by cutting the betel-nut.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our hostess had a box of clothing put in front
-of her on the floor, and she showed us a beautiful
-collection of saris of woven gold cloth made in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>Benares, long tunics of embroidered chiffon-like
-gauze, and trousers of heavy gold and silver
-goods, almost like tapestry.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I asked them to tell me the duties of a high-class
-lady of Hyderabad. Mme. Naidu laughed
-and said—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“About eight o’clock in the morning my lady
-yawns, and a slave-girl will say, ‘Will not the
-Begum rise?’ and the Begum will slowly get out
-of bed and allow her slave to brush her teeth with
-powdered charcoal and wash her face and hands.
-Then she would sit down upon a mat and have
-her hair dressed, while other slaves came in with
-articles of dress or of the toilet. Soon the other
-women of the household would join her, and
-they would chew betel-nut and talk and gossip
-until about ten o’clock, when a large tray would
-be brought in with breakfast, consisting of rice
-and curry and sweets. After breakfast, more
-friends or relatives come in, and the sewing
-women and higher servants, and they all talk
-and laugh together. In the afternoon the silk
-merchants may send their wares or the jewellers
-their bracelets and rings and precious stones,
-which are brought into the zenana by women.
-These shopwomen are great gossips, and tell all
-the news from other zenanas—who is engaged
-and who married and what presents were given,
-etc. The women shop and haggle, and perhaps
-buy and perhaps do not, and by the time the
-merchants leave it is time to eat again. In the
-evening the husband or the sons visit the women’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>quarters and brings the Begum the news of the
-world of men outside, and then it is time to
-sleep again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A great many women—nearly all Indian
-women, in fact—attend personally to their households.
-For instance, I went with one of my
-friends, who belonged to a very rich and powerful
-family, to call upon her mother, and found her
-and her daughter-in-law sitting in the courtyard
-preparing the vegetables for dinner. All ladies
-know how to cook, and think it no disgrace to
-prepare the dinner with their own hands. If a
-guest is to be especially honoured, the mother or
-wife will prepare the meal for him. In a Hindu
-community, where the food must be cooked by
-a person of their own or a higher caste, where
-no one of a lower caste is even allowed to look
-into the kitchen, it might cause great annoyance
-if the women of the household did not know how
-to cook, as even in India the mistress has the
-servant question with which to contend from time
-to time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In these old families in Hyderabad there are a
-great many people under the one roof. The
-patriarchal family life prevails—that is, the sons
-bring their wives to their father’s home, and a
-large house shelters many families. The mother
-is the head of the women’s quarters and her word
-is law. Innumerable servants and poor relations
-are ever present, and to our Western eyes
-disorder and chaos seem to reign. There are
-some old families in this city that keep up the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>state of princes or petty kings. There is one
-great lady who is surrounded by a bodyguard of
-amazons, women dressed as soldiers, who salute
-and present arms with military precision when
-her courtyard is entered by a visitor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We went from the house of our young hostess,
-loaded down with pan and fruit, to the home
-of a colonel in the Nizam’s bodyguard. His
-wife is “purdah,” but his daughter is allowed
-to be seen in public. In the drawing-room was
-a man tuning the piano, and Mme. Naidu said to
-the daughter, “Your mother cannot come here.
-There is a man.” The daughter replied: “Oh,
-it is all right, he is blind.” The mother had
-travelled extensively in Europe, Egypt, and
-Turkey. While abroad she went about freely
-as any European, only becoming the secluded
-Indian wife while in her own country. Her
-daughter was to be married and she showed me
-the clothes for the trousseau. There were about
-fifty complete outfits, made of gorgeous Benares
-cloth, heavy with gold. This clothing lasts a
-lifetime, and is handed down from daughter to
-daughter, as styles do not radically change. The
-mother told me that the custom of giving so much
-clothing is dying out, and money is given instead,
-allowing the daughter to buy from time to time,
-according to her fancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While we were talking the husband came in.
-He was dressed in English riding clothes, and
-was a very up-to-date man-of-the-world. The
-moment he entered, the mother and daughter,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>who up to this time had been chatting affably
-and freely, became silent. They virtually did
-not speak a word while he was in the room, but
-became at once true Indian women, silent before
-that superior being—the man.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XI<br /> <span class='large'>MOHAMMEDANISM WITHIN THE ZENANA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>We are often told that Mohammedan women are
-not religious, that they leave all devotional exercises
-for their lords and masters, who are
-accountable to Allah for their salvation, and to
-whom they must look for permission to enter the
-abode of the blessed. It is a fact that the women
-followers of the Arabian prophet are not seen in
-the mosques, because no Mohammedan woman
-appears in a public place where she may come in
-contact with the other sex. Mohammed discouraged
-the worship of women in public by
-saying, “The presence of women in the mosques
-inspires men with feelings other than those purely
-devotional.”</p>
-
-<div id='i_170' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_170.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>MOHAMMEDAN WOMEN, HYDERABAD.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Although restricted to the home in which to
-say her prayers, the Mohammedan woman is very
-religious, and often more narrow and bigoted
-than her husband, who has the opportunity of
-broadening his religious views by contact with
-those of other faiths. The Mohammedan
-religion, like those of Western lands, has its
-divisions and subdivisions, differing from each
-other on the subject of ritualism and the different
-interpretations of the Koran. The two most
-important branches of El Islam are the Shiahs
-and the Sunnis. At the death of the prophet,
-Abu Bekr was elected to take his place—wrongfully,
-as many believe. They feel that the mantle
-of prophethood should have fallen upon the
-shoulders of his son-in-law, Ali, who was one of
-his first disciples and his cousin. The coterie
-who adhered to the election of the caliph instead
-of the hereditary descent are called the Sunnis.
-All of the Egyptians, the Turks, and many Indians
-are followers of this party. Those who think
-that Ali was deprived of his just rights are called
-the Shiahs; the Persians, many Arabs, and a
-few Indians compose the main body of this
-division. Ali was finally made caliph, but was
-murdered, the caliphate passing out of his family
-instead of descending to his grandsons, Hossain
-and Hassan, who rebelled against the ruling
-caliph and were killed in battle. They are considered
-the great martyrs of the Mohammedan
-faith, and their deaths are mourned annually by
-the Shiahs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We were in Hyderabad, the great Mohammedan
-State of India, at the time of mourning, and
-I was fortunate enough to be asked to a
-“mourning party,” given by the women of one of
-the old Mohammedan families. It was most
-exceptional, as outsiders are never asked to these
-homes during this time of religious emotion.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Even their Sunni friends and their acquaintances
-in the Hindu faith, know that intruders are
-not looked upon kindly during the days set apart
-for sorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We arrived at the home, which was surrounded
-by a great wall, in which was a massive wooden
-door studded with iron nails. In the olden time
-these homes were used as fortresses, and were
-made strong enough to repel an invasion by the
-enemy. Within an embrasure by the side of
-the gate was a man on guard, with a gun beside
-him. It is true that the gun was of an obsolete
-pattern, that would quite likely do the user more
-damage than any one else, if the guard had been
-called upon to act, but it looked picturesque.
-The guard immediately turned his back when
-he saw that the carriage contained ladies, and
-our servant went ahead to see that all men-servants
-were out of sight before my Mohammedan
-friends would enter the courtyard. We
-drove into what seemed an immense stable-yard.
-Bullocks were standing by the side of great
-lumbering carts, horses were in their stalls, and
-stable accessories were scattered about in great
-disorder. A curtain was raised by a woman-servant,
-disclosing a short stone stairway,
-ascending which we found ourselves in the
-women’s quarters. It was a courtyard, with
-rooms opening upon it from the four
-sides. These rooms were more like large
-alcoves, being separated from the court only
-by arches.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>At one end was a large room, where about
-sixty ladies were sitting on the floor in front of
-a strip of white cloth, that served as table and
-tablecloth combined. They were seated on the
-three sides of the room, leaving the open space
-in the middle for the servants to pass while
-serving the food. We left our shoes at the
-entrance and were taken to a servant, who poured
-water over our hands from a brass ewer, allowing
-it to fall into a basin in which was some
-finely chopped straw to conceal the water. Our
-hostess seated us opposite her, and an old servant
-dipped from a central bowl of rice a generous
-helping for me, and then various curries, unknown
-to me, were passed. I watched my friend,
-and took from the dishes she favoured, mixing
-it with the rice upon my plate, making rather a
-sticky mess, that was conveyed to my mouth
-with difficulty. Eating with the fingers is not
-so easy as it may appear to a casual observer,
-but evidently practice makes perfect, because all
-seemed most adept, using only the thumb and
-three fingers of the right hand. No food must
-be touched with the left hand, as it is, religiously,
-unclean.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After my feet had so thoroughly gone to sleep
-that they ceased from paining me, I took the
-opportunity of looking around and trying to
-become acquainted with my neighbours. The
-ladies wore no jewellery, and their dresses were
-supposed to be of a subdued hue, yet every
-colour of the rainbow was represented except
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>red, which is the colour of joy and associated
-with festive occasions. The Mohammedan dress
-is not so graceful as is the Indian sari. The
-women wear a pair of tight trousers, made of
-satin, silk, or brocade, coming to the tops of
-their embroidered slippers. Over the chest is
-a small sleeveless jacket, then a tunic of white
-or embroidered gauze, and over all a chiffon-like
-drapery which is drawn over the head. All
-of these outer draperies were of so diaphanous
-a material that they did not disguise the outlines
-of the figure.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Down the centre of the strips of cloth which
-served as table were great dishes of rice and
-sweets, many curries, fruits, and an elaborate
-assortment of cakes. Servants were everywhere,
-and it was hard for a stranger to distinguish
-between some of the servants and their mistresses,
-as many of the former were very well dressed
-and covered with jewellery. They wore bracelets,
-anklets, nose-rings, ear-rings, and necklaces,
-mainly of silver or glass; but one often saw the
-glint of gold upon the neck of a serving-woman,
-and found she was the personal slave of some
-member of the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Slavery exists still in Hyderabad, although in
-a modified form. No person of good family
-would think of selling a slave, and the slaves
-themselves feel the honour of belonging to one
-of the old families. In a quarrel with a servant
-a slave will draw herself up proudly and say,
-“You are only a servant—<em>I</em> belong to the family.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>Both servants and slaves are treated with a
-familiarity unknown in the West. They take
-part in the conversation, enter the rooms without
-knocking—in fact, I don’t believe there is such a
-thing as a locked door in all India—and talk to
-the mistress on terms of equality. While at
-dinner a small boy, very prettily dressed, came
-to the hostess and snuggled his head against her,
-while he stared at the peculiar-looking foreign
-woman opposite. I asked if he was her son.
-She turned his face up to study it more carefully,
-then said, “No; he is the son of one of my
-sister’s slaves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Resisting all the importunities of my hostess
-to have my plate refilled with the curry and rice,
-we rose and went again to the servants in charge
-of the ewer and basin, and our hands were
-washed. We then adjourned to a courtyard,
-where many of the guests had preceded us.
-There appears to be no etiquette in regard to
-leaving the table; when a guest has eaten her
-dinner she rises and leaves, not asking to be
-excused, nor feeling that it is necessary to wait
-for her hostess.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The ladies were sitting on the floor of the
-alcoves in groups of six or seven, and pan
-boxes were much in evidence. Our hostess went
-into the open courtyard and mounted a low,
-square table, over which was thrown a rug. We
-sat down opposite her and she proceeded to make
-pan for us, and we remained there for perhaps
-half an hour, waiting for the servants to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>finish their dinner. There were at least fifty
-servants and slaves, all running around aimlessly,
-doing whatever they found to do at the time,
-with what seemed no system nor order governing
-their work. The mistress had rather a shrill
-voice, and her orders could be heard very distinctly
-as she called to some one in another part
-of the court. I asked my friend if Indian ladies
-generally had such loud voices and commanding
-tones, and she laughed and said: “Well, if they
-have not to begin with they soon acquire them,
-as they must be heard above the confusion always
-reigning in one of these great houses, where
-there are innumerable servants, slaves, and
-poor relations. It takes a strong-minded
-woman, and one with no mean executive ability,
-to keep peace and harmony in an Eastern
-zenana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After every one had gossiped to her heart’s
-content, we went to a large room at the end of
-the courtyard, which was fitted up as a chapel.
-In front of an altar were three pieces of wood
-wreathed with flowers to represent the tombs of
-Ali, Hossain, and Hassan. Facing the tombs
-were ten girls, and the guests grouped themselves
-around them on the floor. When we were all
-seated they began to chant. One would sing
-a line, then the rest would join their voices and
-sing four or five lines; then a short pause, and
-the leader would again start the chant. The
-listeners were absolutely quiet, and the music
-rose and fell in weird, minor strains that sounded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>tragic even to ears that could not understand
-the words. The whole story of the slaying of
-the martyrs was told, and this recital of their
-passion play moved the hearers deeply. From
-one part of the room I heard a sob, then from
-another, and soon there was not a dry eye in the
-place. At a certain strain in the music all rose,
-preceded by the women carrying the miniature
-tombs, and marched slowly into an outer courtyard,
-where incense was waved over the flower-wreathed
-pieces of wood, after which a return
-was made to the room and the chanting commenced
-again. We did not sit down, and the
-most dramatic part of the performance began.
-All stood and beat their breasts in time with the
-music, and, as chorus to the verses, would cry,
-“Hossain, Hassan! Hossain, Hassan!” The
-servants beat their breasts so severely that it
-seemed they would seriously hurt themselves, and
-it is considered a great mark of piety to severely
-chastise themselves at this time, but the ladies
-were more conservative and kept time with light
-taps.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This continued, with slight intermissions, for
-half an hour, some sobbing, others crying quietly.
-At the end each one dropped to her knees with
-her face towards Mecca, and from outside the
-wall the voice of a man from the mosque chanted
-a benediction. It was most exquisitely sung,
-and added the final touch to a weirdly beautiful
-scene—the moon shining down into the courtyard,
-the flickering lights before the tiny flower-wreathed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>tombs, the dark-faced women in their
-pretty gowns, with the tears glistening on their
-eyelashes, kneeling, while the unseen voice cried
-softly, “Salaam! Peace be with you! There
-is no God but God.”</p>
-
-<div id='i_179' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_179.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>HUSKING RICE IN A BURMESE VILLAGE.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XII<br /> <span class='large'>BURMAH</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Passing from India to Burmah is in many ways
-like going from darkness to sunlight, from tears
-to gaiety. India is a land of tragedy; Burmah
-is a land of comedy. In India you see faces
-sad, worried, harassed, and life seems a bitter
-struggle for the great masses in their endeavour
-to keep the hungry wolf from the door. But
-in Burmah you are greeted with smiles, no one
-is serious, and no one except the Chinese seem
-to be really working. The women in the little
-booths within the bazaars, smoking their long
-cheroots, gossiping with their neighbours, and
-flirting with the youth passing by, give one the
-impression that it is not business in which they
-are interested, but that they are there for their
-amusement and to pass a few hours with their
-friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The dress also shows the difference in the
-temperaments of the people. In India the
-women’s saris are made of dark reds, dark blues,
-and heavy purples. In Burmah the colours are
-light and gay; you rarely see a darkly clad
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>person. The long piece of silk wound tightly
-around the woman’s body is always of light
-blue, or pink, or yellow, or else a gay
-check composed of all three colours. The loose
-cotton or linen jacket is spotlessly white, and
-around the neck is thrown carelessly a piece of
-silk or a handkerchief of contrasting colour to
-the skirt. The hair, of ebony blackness, is well
-oiled and twisted high upon the head and twined
-with flowers. Their toes are tucked into small
-heelless slippers, which take a certain amount
-of dexterity to keep in place; but all young girls
-learn early in life to give that flirtatious outward
-jerk of the heels which keep the slipper from
-falling, and also prevents the folds of the skirt
-from opening in front. The city belle when she
-starts forth upon the street has well powdered
-her nose and often touched her lips with carmine,
-and goes forth boldly to claim the admiration
-of all, not like the Indian woman, who is compelled
-to hide her charms behind the sari.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The man of Burmah also dresses in gaily
-coloured silks. He wears a long silk cloth
-around his body, tucks it in with a twist in front,
-and the remaining portion he allows to hang
-in folds or throws jauntily over his shoulder.
-He wears a short white cotton jacket, over which
-another one of darker cloth is worn for street
-wear. The old and wealthy when they are paying
-visits of ceremony or going to worship at
-the pagoda wear long white coats, closed only
-at the neck and reaching to the knee. Men of
-all classes wear flowered silk handkerchiefs
-around their heads as turbans, but when age
-comes these are exchanged for simple ones of
-white muslin.</p>
-
-<div id='i_180' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_180.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>BURMESE GIRL.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>The women of Burmah have unlimited freedom
-as compared with the women of other
-Eastern countries. Unlike the women of India,
-China, or Egypt, they may choose their own
-husbands and have a courtship such as we of
-the Western world so thoroughly understand.
-From the time of the first great event in a young
-girl’s life, the boring of her ears, which
-announces to her world that she is no longer
-a child but a woman, until her betrothal, the
-Burmese girl looks forward to the finding of a
-husband as the one aim of her life. Until her
-ears are bored she is a child and may run and
-play with her brothers upon the village street,
-but finally the day arrives when her friends and
-relatives bring with them the ear-borer and the
-soothsayer, and the frightened girl must pay the
-price of gaining maidenhood. Her cries are
-drowned by the music and the talk and laughter
-that seem so heartless; but the pain is soon
-over, and she herself will make the hole
-larger by every means in her power, because
-until the hole is large enough to receive the
-great round tube, nearly half an inch in diameter,
-she does not feel that she is indeed a woman. It
-is her initiation into womanhood, it corresponds
-to the entrance into the monastery or the tattooing
-of his legs of her brother, the sign that he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>is no longer a boy, but may sit with men and
-chew betel-nut and discuss affairs of the world
-with wondrous wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After the ear-boring ceremony each man our
-maiden sees may be a possible husband, and she
-copies the coquettish sway of the hips that is so
-effective in her older sister as she walks down the
-street with mother, aunt, or married friend, who
-carefully guards her from all improprieties now
-that she has arrived at marriageable age.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When all these arts have had the desired effect
-and her roving eye has alighted upon the man
-of her choice, the Burmese girl may have her
-days of courtship. She can meet her sweetheart
-at pwés, those festive parties that seem
-to occur every night in Burmah, at which she
-may have a stall for selling tobacco, or long
-cheroots, or flowers. This keeping of a stall
-is not lowering to a woman’s social status, and
-numbers of well-to-do women set them up at
-all places where crowds are liable to congregate.
-There may be a reason for this besides
-the economic one, as it is said a stall or shop
-or booth within the bazaar is the quickest way
-of attracting a desirable husband. In the
-smaller towns there is scarcely a house where
-the women have not arranged a small shop for
-sale of betel-nut, coco-nuts, little looking-glasses,
-toilet articles, or cotton goods from Manchester.
-The profits of this little trade are given as pin-money
-to the wife or daughters. The English
-say that the Burmese woman is a better businessman than her husband, and that in driving a
-sharp bargain her successes are far in advance
-of those of her less aggressive husband.</p>
-
-<div id='i_183' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_183.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>DANCING AT A VILLAGE FESTIVAL, BURMAH.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>Pagoda feasts offer exceptional opportunities
-for lovelorn swains, and many young couples
-have found their future happiness when gazing
-into Buddha’s eyes. Evening-time is courting-time
-in all the world, especially in this country,
-which is too hot during the day to permit of
-any useless expenditure of energy, even by an
-ardent lover. They also say that the men of
-Burmah are influenced by the proverb that says:
-“In the morning women are cross and peevish,
-in the middle of the day they are testy and
-quarrelsome, but at night they are sweet and
-amiable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the lover does not expect to meet his sweetheart
-at a festival or a theatrical entertainment,
-he waits around until he thinks the old people
-have retired for the night, and then with a friend
-or two as chaperons he calls upon his adored
-one, and finds her with powdered face and pretty
-dress awaiting him in the moonlit veranda. There
-is little privacy in this courtship, because divisions
-between the rooms are often only made of
-matting, and mothers in Burmah are proverbial
-for the quickness of hearing when it concerns
-the courtship of their daughters. There is no
-lovemaking as we know it—kissing, and holding
-of hands, and embracing—which would be
-most shocking to the modest instincts of the
-Burmese maiden. Yet love has signs, and finally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>father’s and mother’s consent is asked, the dowry
-fixed, and the astrologer consulted, who will tell
-them if a boy born on Monday and a girl on
-Wednesday may wed. No matter how ardently
-the match is desired by the interested parties,
-some unions, judged according to their birthdays,
-would be most unlucky. For example:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Friday’s daughter</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Didn’t oughter</div>
- <div class='line'>Marry with a Monday’s son;</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Should she do it</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Both will rue it,</div>
- <div class='line'>Life’s last lap will soon be run.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>Each day of the week is guarded by an animal,
-and it naturally follows that if a man was born
-on a day that was ruled by a serpent and a
-woman on a day ruled by a mongoose, the
-serpent’s deadly enemy, they would surely not
-live happily together. But if the parent’s consent
-is given, the combination of birthdays are
-lucky, the dowry is satisfactory to all concerned,
-then the propitious day must be found from the
-horoscope for the actual wedding to take place.
-During June, July, August, and September, the
-Buddhist Lent, all marriages are barred to the
-strict followers of Buddha, and it would be a
-very unregenerate son or daughter who would
-shock his old father and mother by daring to
-ask to marry during this time. Marriage is a
-very precarious proceeding, because if it takes
-place in certain months the couple will be rich,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>in other months they will always love each other,
-while there are unfortunate months that bring
-sickness and death to those tempting Hymen at
-this time. Nevertheless, notwithstanding all the
-obstacles that seem to be placed in the way of
-marriage, there are few spinsters in Burmah, and
-virtually every man over twenty years of age
-has a wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The marriage ceremony is a strictly civil
-affair, no religious rite entering into the performance.
-The friends meet at the house of
-the bride’s parents, where a great feast has been
-prepared at the expense of the bridegroom’s
-father, and the eating and drinking and publicity
-of the affair make the marriage as binding as
-are any marriages in Burmah. Contrary to all
-Eastern usages, the young couple take up their
-abode with the bride’s parents instead of going
-to the home of the groom’s people, which is
-the custom in India, China, and Japan. If the
-home roof is too small to shelter the new family,
-they may build a new home for themselves. This
-is not an expensive affair, as the houses are
-extremely simple. They are practically all of
-one story, because of the Burman’s aversion to
-any one walking over his head. The house is
-built on posts, thus raising the floor seven or
-eight feet from the ground, which is very desirable
-in rainy weather. It consists of two or
-three rooms and an open balcony, where the
-family may sit of an evening or where the
-daughter of the house may receive her lover,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>and not interrupt the slumbers of father and
-mother, who have spread their sleeping-mats
-upon the floor of the main living-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the rainy season the cooking is done in
-one of the rooms, but in the long, dry months
-the yard at the back of the house serves as
-kitchen. In the smaller towns the roofs are
-thatched with palm-leaves or with grass, but in
-the cities the ugly iron roofs are now seen, with
-here and there a more pretentious roof of tiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Moving is not a laborious process, as there
-is little necessary furniture in a Burmese home.
-A few rush mats, which serve for beds, some
-rugs and blankets for use when nights are cold,
-which during the day are rolled up and placed
-in an unused corner of the room, a cooking-range,
-which is simply a square box filled with
-earth on which the wood is lighted, some earthen
-pots for making curries and the cooking of the
-rice, a water-jar, ladles made of the half of a
-coconut placed on a handle, the huge round
-lacquer tray, which serves as table, and the bowls
-for the curries and deserts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>With nearly every house there is a small yard,
-in which are found flowers if the wife is inclined
-to love the beautiful; but if she is more practically
-inclined chickens hold sway within the
-small domain, until the evil day arrives for them
-when they pass into the curry-pot. The strict
-Buddhist does not utilize the eggs, believing that
-they hold the germ of life which it would be
-sinful to destroy. These Burmese roosters can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>take the place of clocks, as it is said that they
-crow regularly four times a day—at sunrise, noon,
-sundown, and at midnight. The story goes that
-in the olden time there was a great fire made of
-books that contained unlawful teaching. Among
-these books were those of a famous astrologer,
-and after the fire the cocks came and ate the
-ashes, thus taking into their very being the knowledge
-of the stars and the actions of the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If the wife lives in the city, she does not have
-the weary task of husking the rice, as it is bought
-ready for cooking, nor does she need waste much
-thought in planning the menu for the day. The
-two meals are practically the same—the plain
-boiled rice upon the table-tray, around which
-sit the household, squatting upon their heels.
-No knives or forks are needed, as each takes
-upon his plate from the central dish the rice,
-pours over it curry, arranges on the top the
-vegetables and condiments that he loves, and eats
-it with the forks with which Nature has provided
-him—his fingers. The food is very good
-if too much dried fish, which is a delicacy loved
-by Burmans, or garlic has not been incorporated
-in the curries. Only water is drunk at mealtime.
-If the husband has acquired the habit
-of tippling, which has come to Burmah with
-other foreign customs, he must go to the shop
-where it is sold to indulge in what, to every good
-householder, is still a thing of which to be
-ashamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After meals every one smokes—father, mother,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>and children. It is said that baby learns while
-at his mother’s breast to take the long cigar
-from between her lips and puff it between alternate
-draughts at Nature’s font; but Burmese
-deny this most indignantly, and say that smoking
-is forbidden the children until they have learned
-to walk. I can quite believe this, because it
-would take a strong baby to manage the enormous
-cheroot smoked by all Burmans, although
-they are so mild that they would not affect the
-nerves even of a child. The cigar seen in the
-homes is from six to eight inches in length and
-about an inch in diameter. It is made of the
-pith of a plant mixed with chopped tobacco-leaves,
-wrapped in the leaf of the teak-tree, the
-ends tucked in and tied by a piece of red silk,
-where stiff pieces of pith keep the loose tobacco
-from the mouth. It splutters and scatters its
-fine fire in all directions, and cannot be smoked
-by an amateur without danger to himself and
-all about him. These are often made within
-the home by the wife and daughters, yet they
-may be seen in tiny booths at all festivities,
-where pretty girls sell them to admiring
-swains who are too lazy to roll them for
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Chewing betel-nut is also indulged in by both
-man and wife, and the stain it leaves upon the
-lips and tongue is not an addition to the beauty
-of the mouth; yet it can be easily cleansed,
-as witness the pretty teeth and rosy lips of the
-women one meets in the street. There is no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>furniture to dust, few dishes to wash, and little
-clothing to be sewn, and small care expended
-upon the children. Their daily bath consists in
-throwing a few buckets of water over their naked
-bodies, which they learn early to do for themselves,
-and often around a village well the tiny
-babies, dressed in only an amulet string, may
-be seen with coconut ladle throwing the cooling
-water over their bodies and shrieking with
-delight. The children of the poor go naked
-until about eight or nine years old, and those
-of the better class dress practically as do their
-fathers and mothers while in the street, although,
-even in houses of the rich, clothing is considered
-a useless luxury for the young.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The simple life leaves much time for the wife,
-which she employs in gossiping with friends, in
-attending pagoda festivals and pwés until that
-happy event arrives, the birth of the first child.
-From the moment it is known that the wife is
-to become a mother she is the recipient of much
-care and attention and presents from her family
-and from her friends, and when she can say,
-“I am the mother of a son,” then, like all
-Oriental women, she has attained the great crown
-of womanhood. But because of the lack of
-medical skill in Burmah she has to face a most
-dreadful ordeal. As soon as her child is born
-the mother is rubbed all over with saffron, a
-fire lighted near her, and all the blankets that
-can be begged or borrowed are heaped upon
-her. She is given a drink prepared by the midwife
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>for the purpose of making her perspire.
-This is given her many times a day, and together
-with the large bricks that are heated and wrapped
-in damp cloths and placed in her bed conspire
-to have the desired effect, and the poor mother
-passes seven days in a Turkish bath. Then on
-the seventh day, as a finish to this trying ordeal
-which she has undergone, she is forced to go
-through a most elaborate steaming process, and
-if this does not smother her completely, she is
-pronounced well. The midwife receives her mats,
-her allotment of rice and her shilling, and the
-woman returns to her household duties. In the
-larger towns now the Burmese woman may call
-in the European-trained doctor, and there are
-hospitals which answer the great need that the
-women have for proper care at this critical time
-of their lives. Yet I am told that the mortality
-at child-bearing is not so great as that in India
-and other Eastern countries. The main effect
-upon the woman is to age her greatly; at the
-birth of her first child she changes from the
-pretty girl-wife to the middle-aged woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>About two weeks after the birth of the child
-a great feast is given to celebrate the naming
-of the new arrival, and on this day also the young
-man’s head is washed for the first time. All
-the friends of the family and the neighbours are
-invited, and they come, bringing presents with
-them to help pay for the feast. The mother
-sits down with her child in her arms, then some
-elder or relation of the parents suggests the name,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>and everybody accepts it at once, whereupon all
-adjourn to the feast, where they eat, chew betel,
-and smoke cheroots until nightfall. If the
-people have sufficient means, there is a pwé,
-which lasts until morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is a rule amongst families that a child’s
-name must begin with one of the letters belonging
-to the day on which it was born, and they
-all believe that the stars which were in evidence
-at the hour of birth decide a man’s character.
-A man born on Monday will be jealous, on Tuesday
-honest, on Wednesday bad-tempered, on
-Thursday quiet, on Friday garrulous, on Saturday
-quarrelsome, and on Sunday stingy. Each
-day also has a particular animal which represents
-it. Monday is represented by a tiger,
-Tuesday, a lion, etc., and in temples one sees
-yellow and wax candles made in the form of
-these animals, representing his birthday, placed
-before the god by the man who wishes special
-benefits from lord Buddha.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Swinging by a couple of ropes from the roof
-is a rude home-made basket, which is used for
-baby’s cradle. Even this useful article of furniture
-in which the Burmese baby passes his
-sleeping hours is subject to the actions of
-belligerent spirits, and must be hung in such a
-manner as not to tempt the nats to use it for a
-resting-place. Burmese mothers, like mothers
-all over the world, croon lullabies to their babies
-as they swing them back and forth while waiting
-for the sand-man to come. I give a verse
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>of one of the popular lullabies known generally
-to all babies in Burmah—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Nasty, naughty, noisy baby,</div>
- <div class='line'>If the cat won’t, nats will maybe</div>
- <div class='line'>Come and pinch and punch and rend you—</div>
- <div class='line'>If they do I won’t defend you.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Oh, now please,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Do not tease,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Do be good,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>As babies should,</div>
- <div class='line'>Just one tiny little while;</div>
- <div class='line'>Try to sleep, or try to smile.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>When the son is eight or nine years of age
-he goes as a matter of course to the monastery
-school, which is open to all alike, the poor and
-rich, and which is practically the only thing that
-the priests, which flood this country, afford the
-people in return for the food which is placed
-in their begging-bowls each day. Every
-Buddhist boy is taught to read and write, and
-he learns many of the formulas connected with
-the tenets of his religion and the stories relating
-to the existence and teachings of Buddha. Until
-the English came, all little boys went to the
-monastery schools, but now there are Government
-schools and Burmese laymen schools and many
-private schools, to which the more advanced
-Burmans are sending their sons; yet the schoolrooms
-in the monasteries are not vacant. The
-young Burmese are not so forced by the economic
-conditions to acquire the foreign education as
-is the Indian boy, where life is much more difficult
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>and the Government certificate simply a
-means to an end—Government employment.
-Until lately it was not thought necessary to
-educate the girls. To be pretty, to know how
-to take care of her household, to smile
-sweetly, and be of a gay disposition were
-sufficient for a woman; and as book knowledge
-would not help her in those accomplishments,
-book knowledge was, therefore, dispensed with.
-But now the larger towns provide educational
-facilities for girls, and in Rangoon and Mandalay
-there are many private schools for the daughters
-of the better class.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Until a Buddhist has entered the monastery,
-joining the noble order of the yellow robe, if
-for no longer than a day, he is nothing more
-than a mere animal. He has a name given
-him for worldly purposes, so has a dog, a horse,
-or a cow; but until he has shown himself ready
-to leave the world by retiring into the quiet and
-peace of the monasteries, he cannot expect to
-reap the good that he has sown in the past
-life, nor would it be possible for him to look
-forward to a happy future. At the beginning
-of the Buddhist Lent, all Buddhist boys from the
-age of twelve to fifteen don the yellow robe
-and carry the begging-bowl before the priest
-on his daily rounds. On this most important
-day in his life his parents give a feast, where
-the young novice, dressed in finest clothes, loaded
-with all the family jewels, goes slowly through
-the village, preceded by a band of music and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>his friends and relatives dressed in their gayest
-clothing. He calls at the houses of his friends
-and pays respects to the officials of his village.
-Returning to his home, he finds, seated upon a
-raised daïs, several priests from the monastery
-to which he is soon to retire. They hold before
-their faces the large lotus-leafed-shaped fans, so
-as not to see the row of pretty women, dressed
-in their pinks and blues and yellows, flowers
-in their hair, jewels and chains on necks, and
-bracelets on arms, and pearl powder softening
-smiling faces. The solemnity of the ceremony
-commences when the boy throws off his fine
-clothing, and, binding a piece of white cloth
-around his loins, sits down before the barber
-and permits that glory of his boyhood, his long
-black hair, to be cut off close to his head. After
-he has been carefully shaved, water is poured
-over his body, and, dressed again in his bright
-clothing, he prostrates himself three times before
-the monks, begging in Pali, which quite likely
-he does not understand, that he may be admitted
-to the holy assembly. Then the yellow garments
-are given him, the begging-bowl is hung around
-his neck, and he is formally a member of the
-monastery. With the departure of the priests
-and the novice feasting begins, which, according
-to many Burmese festivities, lasts until dawn.</p>
-
-<div id='i_194' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_194.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A BUDDHIST SCHOOL, MANDALAY (SHOWING BEGGING-BOWL).<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>In many cases, if the boy is working and his
-services are needed, he remains in the monastery
-only long enough to enable him to go once
-around the village begging from door to door in
-the train of the priests. Some stay seven days,
-some a fortnight, and others, if they are able,
-remain throughout the four months of Lent. Of
-course many of them enter the monastery for
-life, and there is no country in the world where
-there are so many priests as in Burmah. The
-monasteries offer a refuge for men in trouble,
-for those who desire to leave the cares of the
-world and lead a life of meditation and repose.
-And it is said that this departure from the world
-is made by many a man in this country, where
-women are noted for the strength of their
-characters and the length of their tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Burmese boy does not consider he has
-attained manhood until he has been tattooed.
-When I was first in Burmah, being rather nearsighted,
-I thought all Burmese men of the lower
-class wore short, dark, skin-tight drawers, but
-when I became more courageous and examined
-them more closely I found what I considered
-underclothing was the man’s own skin. This
-had been tattooed from the waistline down to
-the kneecap with a series of pictures so closely
-set together that they could not be distinguished
-one from the other, and melted into a background
-of blue and black, with here and there
-a softened red to accentuate the fading colours
-of the darker dye. This is a sign of manhood,
-which, the Burmese say, will probably not die
-out, because a Burman would be as ashamed to
-have a spotless white skin without a mark of
-the tattooer’s needle as would the American boy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>to find no manly hairs upon his chin at the age
-when other boys begin to shave. And woe to
-the hapless youth if a wind-blown paso should
-show the girl he was courting a white and
-spotless leg; she would tell him that his place
-was in the women’s quarters and offer him a
-woman’s dress! Each figure in this mosaic has
-a meaning, and there are charms for protection
-of the body, for the gaining of a loved one, thus
-assuring the wearer great riches, and, mixed with
-these, are figures of all kinds—lizards, birds,
-and pictures of the Buddha. Sometimes women
-who wish to ensnare the object of their affection
-endure the pain of having a love charm
-tattooed upon the tongue or upon the lips. Often
-a few round spots tattooed with the prescribed
-formula repeated over it and placed between the
-eyes will be enough to bring back a wandering
-lover to her side. If this is not effectual or
-if the maiden sees herself drifting towards a
-lonely middle age with no lover in her view, she
-cuts off the locks of hair hanging over her ears,
-announcing to all the world that she is looking
-for a lover. They say in Rangoon that if a
-woman is tattooed it means that she desires an
-Englishman for her husband.</p>
-
-<div id='i_196' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_196.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>BURMESE BOY WITH TATTOOED LEGS.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>In olden days Burmah shared with Japan in
-the number of its women given in marriage <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à
-la mode</span></i> to men of alien races. Nearly every
-English official and merchant had his house presided
-over by a little native maiden. These
-arrangements were very happy and tragedies did
-not occur until the Englishman, longing for
-home sights and sounds, and the dignity of an
-English wife, went back home and returned to
-his station with the woman of his choice. Then
-there was sorrow, and even the English gold
-could not repay the little Burmese woman for
-the loss of the love of the kindly, careless man
-who had been her master for the many years.
-Often attempts were made to regain that master’s
-love, and many a time the attempts succeeded,
-because in the formality and dignity of his
-English home and the coldness of his English
-wife, the man remembered the happy days and
-nights spent under the Burmese roof and the
-pretty little Burmese girl who shyly slipped her
-hand in his and called him master, lord of all
-her days and nights.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a story told of an English official in
-Upper Burmah who, when time for leave of
-absence came, closed up his Burmese home,
-giving to its little hostess money sufficient to
-make her rich for life. On his return to Burmah
-he brought with him the girl from Devonshire
-to whom he had been betrothed for many years.
-At dinner their first night soft steps were heard
-upon the verandas, and curtains moved as if
-in the swaying of an evening breeze, but nothing
-could be seen. The next morning when starting
-for his office the frightened horse shied madly
-at a little mound of silk lying by the side of
-the gateway. It was the little Burmese wife,
-with a dagger through her heart. Pinned upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>her pretty dress was a letter for her lord, in
-which she said: “I have looked upon thy
-newly wedded wife and found her good. If I
-had seen within her eyes—and love would quick
-have told me—that she were not the worthy one,
-that she were not fitted to be thy mate through
-all these years to come, I would have plunged
-my knife deep in her heart, but now I know
-it is better for me to go, as life without thee
-has no joy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One can understand the charm that these
-happy, smiling, care-free little women have for
-the men who come from homes where levity
-and <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez-faire</span></i> are things to be condemned.
-The Burmese wife makes no demands upon her
-lord and master; she is obedient, attendant to
-his every want, and never scolding and discontented.
-As far as material wants are concerned,
-the native woman of any Eastern country makes
-an ideal wife for the average European, yet they
-can never be real companions one with the other.
-There is more than the bar of language between
-them; there is the bar of instincts, customs, and
-traditions. The entire life of each has been
-passed in different environments. Practically
-always the woman has little or no education,
-and knows nothing of the world outside the town
-where she was born. There is never any question
-of equality between the foreign husband and
-the native wife; he is always her lord, she is
-always his slave. To the light-hearted Burmese
-woman, to whom the marriage tie even with a
-man of her own race is not a binding cord,
-these “marriages for a day” are not always
-things of tragedy, but the curse falls heavily
-upon the child if there should be one. In all
-Eastern countries—Egypt, India, Burmah, China,
-and Japan—the half-caste is a being set apart.
-Ostracized by the members of his father’s race,
-unrecognized by his mother’s people, he is a
-social pariah, and one almost feels that, if society
-could enforce it, he would be compelled to call
-out, “Unclean, unclean!” as did the lepers in
-the olden time.</p>
-
-<div id='i_198' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_198.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>EN ROUTE TO A FESTIVAL, BURMAH.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XIII<br /> <span class='large'>BURMESE RELIGION AND SUPERSTITION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Judging from appearances, the Burmese woman
-is deeply religious. We see her offering her
-flowers before the many shrines scattered
-throughout the country, and hear the deep-toned
-bell hanging before the lord of light as she strikes
-it three times to call the attention of the spirits
-of the air to her piety. On days of festival the
-pagoda is thronged with gaily dressed women,
-and at the greatest of all pagoda feasts, that
-of the Shwe Dagon in Rangoon, women pilgrims
-from every part of Burmah come to lay their
-tribute before the greatest shrine in Buddha-land.
-They come by train and boat and bullock-cart,
-and to many it is the most important event
-of the whole year. Girls look forward to the
-chance it offers to show their charms to the male
-world, old ladies count on the meeting of friends
-and the discussion of the events of the past
-year, while to all it offers a chance to lay up
-merit for themselves and advance a step on the
-long road that leads to Neban.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Near the temple are marionette shows, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>theatrical companies make these festivals their
-place of greatest profit, while the merchants offer
-their wares for sale, and the sellers of incense,
-candles, flowers, and offerings for the different
-shrines reap their harvest. Yet over the whole
-joyous occasion, which would strike the casual
-observer as simply a holiday for these happy
-people, is thrown the veil of a deep religious
-motive. In the fascination of the secular gaieties
-around them, these spiritual women do not forget
-the real object of their pilgrimage, and the
-prayers and protestations before the altars, and
-the constant booming of the deep-toned bells,
-show that praise of the Lord of lords is not forgotten
-amidst the excitement and pleasures of
-the world outside.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Burmese woman may go to the pagoda
-on the duty days of each month, of which there
-are four, or she may stay at home. The only
-force upon her is that of public opinion, yet she
-generally goes, as it is the meeting-place of all
-her world, and the care-free Burmese, both men
-and women, are always looking for a chance of
-amusement and a meeting with friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Whether or not she attends these duty days
-once a week is solely dependent upon her piety,
-or her love of companionship; but deeply ingrained
-within her soul is a daily duty that no
-Burman, unless of the very advanced class,
-neglects—the propitiation of the nats, those spirits
-inhabiting the air, the ground, the water, and all
-things, both animate and inanimate. Even the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>stones upon the roadside may be the home of
-spirits who may prove destructive or hostile at
-any time. To guard against the evils that might
-come with neglect of such powerful enemies to
-his happiness, the Burmese erects a shrine at
-the extremity of his village, sometimes no larger
-than a bird house built in the pipul-tree. There
-he may offer food, and light his tiny lamps, and
-pour his offerings of water, and burn his incense.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He leaves the nats of the household to the
-especial care of his wife, who covers all the
-posts within the rooms with white cloth, so that
-they may be comfortable while sitting in their
-favourite places. To counteract the effect of the
-evil spirits who may wish to take up their dwelling
-within the home, the careful housewife keeps
-near at hand a jar of water that has been blessed,
-and daily sprinkles floor and roof for the protection
-of her family. It is believed that people
-who have been executed for their crimes or who
-have met a violent death become nats and haunt
-the place where they so suddenly departed from
-this world, and this belief led to many cruel
-practices in former times. The burial of men
-and women alive under the gates of a city originated
-in this desire to protect its inhabitants, as
-these spirits wander around the place of their
-death, and bring disaster upon strangers who
-may come with evil intent. It is said that under
-the palace gates fifty men and women were buried
-alive to protect those within the Imperial residence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>This belief in spirits leads to many evils, and
-the woman’s life is one of constant fear for
-herself and for her loved ones. She naturally
-consults in time of trouble with those who have
-a knowledge of spirit lore, or who have power to
-control them and make of no avail their wrong
-intentions. Consequently Burmah abounds in
-astrologers, necromancers, wizards, and witch-doctors,
-who impose upon the fears of the women
-to a marvellous extent. These charlatans vie
-with the doctors in their ignorance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A man of medicine in this land ruled by superstition
-needs no diploma, and he administers a
-mixture of herbs and nasty tasting condiments
-in such strong doses that they are bound to cure
-or kill. Quantity, not quality, is what the sick
-Burmese requires; and if after a medicine is
-administered five times she is not better, another
-kind is tried, and if the desired effect is not produced,
-another doctor is called, who perhaps
-makes a distinctly different diagnosis of the case,
-and the dosing is commenced all over again with
-another set of medicines. It is well known by
-all that the body is composed of four elements—earth,
-water, fire, and air—and derangement of
-these four properties may cause the illness.
-Before medicine is administered, the horoscope
-must be consulted in order to learn the proportions
-of the elements within the body, when perhaps
-it is found that the sickness is caused by an
-evil act committed in a former life, or the seasons
-may be the cause of her misfortune. It is always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>a most complicated affair, and perhaps the doctor
-finds that the sufferer must refuse all food whose
-initial letter begins with the same letter as that
-of the day of her birth. There are ninety-six
-diseases that afflict mankind, and it often takes
-many doctors and much medicine to decide with
-which one of the ninety-six ailments the woman
-is contending.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If she should die, it is believed that the soul,
-in the shape of a black butterfly, issues from the
-mouth, and dies at the same time as that of the
-body which it inhabited. Although the Buddhists
-do not believe in the actuality of the soul as we
-know it, this black butterfly is the real spirit of
-the woman, and is with her constantly except at
-times of sleep, when it may leave the earthly
-body and go roaming over the world. It can
-never visit places strange to its owner, as it might
-lose its way and not come back again, when both
-would die—the body because its spirit was gone,
-the butterfly because it had lost its earthly home.
-One reason why a Burman will not rouse one
-suddenly from a deep slumber is because he is
-afraid that the butterfly might be on a visit and
-unable to return to its home upon the man’s
-awakening, which, of course, would be most fatal.
-This roaming spirit takes many chances, as there
-are goblins and evil genii who desire nothing
-better than to eat black butterflies, and often they
-become so frightened that they return home in a
-great panic, which throws the owner of the soul
-into a fever. It sometimes happens that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>spirit is kept prisoner, and then the witch doctors
-are brought in and many incantations are gone
-through to induce the evil gnomes to release
-their hold upon the poor butterfly before it is too
-late.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Two souls who deeply love each other often
-wish to leave the world together, or a mother
-dies and wishes her loved one, perhaps her only
-child, to join her in the other land, and her spirit
-calls for her baby’s butterfly, who will follow
-that of the mother unless frustrated by the
-machinations of some wise woman who understands
-the way of spirits. This woman comes
-to the house, and placing a mirror on the floor
-by the dead mother or wife who is calling for her
-child or husband, entreats the dead not to demand
-the soul of the living. As she pleads with her
-she allows a piece of down to slip slowly on to
-the face of the mirror and catches it in a handkerchief,
-which is then gently placed on the
-breast of the living, and the spirit comes back to
-its resting-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Superstition dominates the life of the Burmese
-woman as much as it does her Indian sister.
-She believes in love potions and philtres to bring
-a longed-for lover to her side. She consults with
-wise men, who tell her whether the waning love
-of husband is caused by the nat or guardian of
-the house; or if she is not yet wedded, she finds
-that the horoscopes of herself and lover are not
-propitious and that he is not intended for her
-mate. She also uses this man of science to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>revenge herself upon a hated rival, and will cause
-an image to be made of clay, over which are
-chanted devilish rituals which will cause death or
-madness to fall upon the unsuspecting person.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Not only do the spirits of all worlds influence
-her, but each act of the things around her has
-its meaning. If a hen should lay an egg upon a
-cloth, the lucky owner will receive a present; and
-if she is going on a journey and a snake should
-cross her path, her misfortune would be certain.
-If a dog should carry a bone into the house, she
-blesses him, as great riches and honour will come
-to all beneath her roof. But she is hampered in
-her actions by the number of lucky and unlucky
-days that control her destiny. There are days
-unfortunate for all the world, and others that
-apply only to her, when she must act with exceeding
-care, and understand the lore of the
-stars which were in the ascendant at her birth.
-Thursday is generally a good day for all, but if
-a woman was so foolhardy as to commence a
-work on Tuesday it might be fatal and she would
-lose her life. Friday is the day of days on which
-to commence a new enterprise, as success is
-bound to follow. The hair should be washed
-once a month, if possible, but never on Monday,
-Friday, or Saturday. A good mother on sending
-her son into the monastery would see that the
-rite of cutting the hair did not fall upon Monday,
-Friday, or his birthday, and it limits the choice
-of days, as this latter event, the birthday, occurs
-once a week. There are also a few months
-especially unlucky for a woman born under
-certain stars, and no undertaking should be
-commenced in those months. In fact, the Burmese
-woman is ruled by signs and omens from
-her birth to her death, and when the necromancers,
-the wizards, the doctors, and the witches
-are unable longer to keep the spirit, the little
-black butterfly, within the body, and she is
-gathered to her fathers, rules and traditions
-govern her laying away to her last resting-place.</p>
-
-<div id='i_206' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_206.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A BURMESE WOMAN AND HER CIGAR.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>In former days the dead were all cremated,
-but now burying has come into general use.
-When death comes to a family it means elaborate
-preparations and feasting from the time that the
-breath has left the body and the coin is put into
-the mouth to pay the ferryman for the last
-journey over the lonely river, until the seven
-days of mourning are over. Yet it is hard to
-speak of these days as days of mourning, for
-music, dancing before the bier, and the feasting
-in the home would cause the onlooker at a Burmese
-funeral to believe that he was witnessing
-a wedding-festival instead of a scene of sorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Burmese, like most Eastern nations, spend
-far too much upon their funeral observances;
-and often a man goes into debt for life to pay
-for the extravagances which custom and tradition
-make necessary to uphold his standing in the
-community when the Angel of Death visits his
-household.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A new custom, or an old custom made more
-elaborate, has increased the cost of living for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>hospitable Burman. When invitations are given
-for any festivity, the invitation is accompanied
-by a present, often a silk handkerchief or a
-turban, but with the rich this present is growing
-more expensive, until it is becoming a burden
-that is causing many of the conservative to
-complain. I was told while in Mandalay that
-when a certain gentleman sent out invitations
-for his daughter’s wedding, he accompanied each
-invitation with a gold sovereign, and as he bade
-more than two hundred guests to the feast, his
-entertainment cost him a goodly sum before the
-actual expense of the festival took place. This
-useless expenditure falls heavily upon the small
-official who is trying to live upon his salary, as
-salaries are not large in Burmah. A gentleman
-with a sense of humour was calling upon us, and
-in the course of conversation we touched upon
-the servant question. He asked us what a
-Chinese butler received for his services in
-America. I told him ten pounds a month. He
-gasped, and then he laughed and a twinkle came
-to his black eyes as he said: “I am an official
-of the city of Mandalay, and I receive just that
-amount. I think I will go to America.”</p>
-
-<div id='i_208' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_208.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>BURMESE WORKING WOMAN.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>The Burmese woman in her home is allowed
-much more liberty than any other Oriental
-woman. She is her husband’s equal, although
-she is taught to look upon man as a superior
-being; still, that is only theoretical. In actual
-life she is one with him in business, his amusements,
-and in his religious life. He consults
-her upon matters of importance, and she has
-proved worthy of trust and confidence, because
-she has a good mind and has been allowed to use
-her judgment in matters of business as well as
-in her own particular realm—the home. She has
-domestic troubles with which to contend, but
-public opinion is helping her, especially in the
-case of polygamy. This destroyer of woman’s
-happiness is sometimes practised, but sentiment
-is against it, and it is a very brave man who cares
-to run counter to the general opinion of his village
-or city in regard to the number of women he
-shelters beneath his roof-tree. But if the Burman
-may not marry more than one woman at a time,
-he may divorce as many wives as he wishes. As
-the woman also shares in this prerogative, the
-law is not so one-sided as it is in Mohammedan
-countries. Manu, the ancient law-maker, allowed
-women to divorce their husbands if they were
-too poor to support them; if they were lazy and
-would not work; or if they were incapacitated
-by reason of old age, or became cripples after
-marriage. The husband may send his wife away
-if she bears him no male children; if she is not
-loving; or if she is disobedient. Divorce is
-purely a personal affair, and the marriage tie
-may be dissolved at any time the parties concerned
-think fit, without calling in priest or
-lawyer.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are very definite provisions in the laws
-in regard to the property of the separating couple.
-In the event of divorce each party takes with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>them the property brought by them to the new
-home, and what they accumulated since marriage
-is either divided by mutual agreement or by a
-decision of the village elders who sanction the
-separation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I am told that divorce is not so common as
-one would believe, considering the ease with
-which it may be obtained. The Burman is a
-very easy-going man, the Burmese wife a clever
-woman who makes it her business to understand
-her lord and master, and consequently she
-generally rules him. “Burmah is the land of
-henpecked husbands,” one Burman told me,
-“all the world knows our shame”—and then he
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Education is coming more slowly to the
-Burmese woman than it is to the Indian or the
-Egyptian. She has not seen its need, consequently
-has not demanded it. But it will come
-in time, and the intellectual broadening will free
-her from the cloud of superstition that now
-surrounds her and controls her actions to a
-great extent.</p>
-
-<div id='i_210' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_210.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>GOLDEN PAGODA, MANDALAY.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XIV<br /> <span class='large'>THE LADY OF CHINA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is not easy for the woman of the Occident to
-understand the life of the woman of the Orient.
-The woman of the West, in her freedom, her
-complex social life, her husband’s love, looks
-pityingly upon the Eastern woman in what
-appears to be a seemingly restricted sphere—the
-home. It is known that she is practically a
-prisoner, not by force but by custom and convention;
-that the wall of the compound are the walls
-of the world to her. It is not realized, however,
-that there she is supreme, and from within those
-compound-walls, she sways to a great extent the
-thought and life of China.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese lady does not lead a life of leisure
-or indolence. The picture of the Eastern woman
-sitting upon divans and eating sweetmeats does
-not apply to the women of this country. If she
-is the wife of an official or of a man of wealth,
-she has a large household over which she must
-preside. If the husband has a mother living the
-mother is the head of the house, and her will is
-absolute. This was shown rather forcibly a few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>years ago in Peking. The son of a Chinese
-official while abroad married a European woman.
-She returned to Peking with her husband, and
-within a few months fled to a foreign embassy
-and asked protection, as she believed her life
-in danger. The mother-in-law had said:
-“While I was in Europe with you I was powerless,
-but here I am absolute. I could even kill
-you and no one would question the act. It is
-my right to do with you as I wish.” The
-minister could do nothing, as by her marriage the
-girl had become a Chinese subject and was under
-the laws of China, which gave the mother of her
-husband absolute control over her life and
-person.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Often there are an incredible number of people
-living under one roof-tree, as all the sons bring
-their wives to their father’s home instead of
-establishing separate households. Sheng, the
-director of railways, told me that there were
-250 people who took rice each day within his
-compound. The walls of his garden enclosed a
-small village. There was a large building containing
-his office and residence. Radiating from
-this there were rows of smaller houses, where
-his brothers and married sons lived with their
-numerous families.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A Chinese house, even of the very rich, is
-a shabby affair, judged from Western standards.
-It is always surrounded by a wall, generally
-painted white. Within the entrance gate is a
-large wooden screen, placed to insure privacy,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>and also to guard the doorways from evil spirits,
-which are known to travel only in straight lines
-and to abhor corners. If the family is large the
-home consists of a series of houses built around
-courtyards. Across the first court are the
-master’s rooms and offices; then come the houses
-of the different families, as each wife has a suite
-of rooms for herself and her children. Some of
-the wives of the more wealthy Chinese occupy
-an entire building. The kitchen and the
-servants’ quarters are at the end of the last
-courtyard.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The floors of all the rooms are of rough
-boards, with great cracks between them, sometimes
-covered with a rug but more often bare.
-The walls are composed of the same wide boards,
-with here and there an embroidered hanging
-or a scroll bearing the words of some honoured
-sage. The furniture of the reception-room consists
-of small tables alternating with straight-backed
-chairs, arranged with mathematical
-precision around the three sides of the room.
-Opposite the doorway is the seat of honour, or an
-opium-couch. Often the furniture is elaborately
-carved or inlaid with mother-of-pearl, but it looks
-formal and precise. The chairs, with their red
-embroidered cushions, are very uncomfortable for
-the Westerner, because of their straight, low
-backs and high, narrow seats, that make one
-long for a footstool. There are no buffets nor
-sideboards in the dining-rooms, and stools are
-used in place of chairs. The tables are square,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>seating eight, and neither tablecloths nor napkins
-are considered necessary adjuncts to dining.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The bedrooms are small, and filled wellnigh
-to overflowing by an enormous carved bed, with
-red embroidered curtains hanging from the heavy
-canopy and long silken tassels draping the four
-posts. The Chinese do not indulge in mattresses
-nor springs, sheets, nor pillow-cases. The pillows
-are small bolsters, and the bedclothing consists
-of a series of wadded “comfortables” made of
-silk or cotton. Their dislike of springs is very
-intense. A hospital for the Chinese was opened
-in one of the interior towns, and the doctors,
-wishing to do the very best they could to make
-their patients comfortable, bought, at great
-expense, foreign beds with springs. They found,
-to their disgust, that the patients, as soon as the
-nurse turned her back, insisted on placing the
-bedclothing upon the floor and lying there,
-instead of in the nice comfortable beds that had
-been provided for them. They claimed that the
-springs made them “seasick.” When Chinese
-ladies are calling upon a foreign woman, one of
-the chief ways to amuse them is to take them
-over the house and permit them to see the
-furnishings of the homes of the people from
-over the sea. They are always intensely interested
-in the beds and look at the springs from all
-sides, sitting on them and pressing them down
-with their hands, finally shaking their heads, as
-much as to say, “It is past all belief what these
-strange people will have in their houses.”</p>
-
-<div id='i_214' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_214.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CHINESE WOMEN WARMING HANDS AND FEET WITH BRAZIERS.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>The chief article of furniture in the kitchen is
-the stove, a huge affair made of brick. This
-stove has generally three holes, in which are
-set the iron cooking-pots, shaped like large washbowls
-and made of very thin metal, in order
-that the ingredients may cook with the smallest
-amount of heat necessary, as the question of fuel
-is a serious one in China. In the country around
-Shanghai, rice-straw and faggots are the main
-fuel, while on every hillside in the country one
-sees women and children cutting the dried grass
-and gathering every available thing that may be
-burned. Because of the lack of body in the fuel
-it keeps one person busy feeding the fire while
-another attends to the cooking.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The food served at a feast, and which the
-average foreigner sees, is quite different from that
-eaten every day. At a feast there are often twenty
-or thirty courses. Swallow’s-nest soup, shark-fins,
-pigeon eggs cooked with nuts, ducks prepared
-in many ways, fowl, fish, and innumerable
-sweets. Rice is served as the last course, while
-at the ordinary dinner it is the principal dish.
-It is to the Chinese what bread is to the European
-or potatoes to the Irish. The food is cooked in
-vegetable oil, made from beans or cabbages, or,
-for the richer class, from peanuts. The chief
-meat is pork, which is cut into little bits and
-cooked with a vegetable. Beef is not used by
-the average Chinese. The cow is a beast of
-burden, and none of her products are eaten. I
-have seen a great official, on being told that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>ice-cream he was eating was made of milk,
-deposit upon his plate the contents of his mouth
-with more haste than grace. One receives the
-impression from pictures that the Chinese politely
-picks up a few grains of rice with his chopsticks
-and carries them slowly to his mouth. This is a
-picture of Occidental imagination rather than
-Oriental reality. He takes with his chopsticks
-some vegetables from the dishes in the centre of
-the table, to which all have access, and, after
-depositing the chosen morsel on the top of his
-rice, he lifts the bowl to his face and uses his
-chopsticks to shovel as much of the rice into
-the opening as its capacity will permit. The
-Chinese are supposed to be a slow and phlegmatic
-race, but if one were to judge by the
-rapidity with which a bowl of rice will disappear,
-one would easily give them a place among the
-most rapid and progressive races of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Food used by the Chinese is very cheap. The
-Viceroy at Nanking, a man of unlimited wealth
-and power, told me that the food for himself
-did not cost more than twenty cents a day. The
-servants in the American Consulate had their
-food bought by the second cook, paying him
-five shillings each per month, which sum
-included food, cooking, and service. On board
-a foreign houseboat the captain is paid four
-shillings per day for the hire of six men, and
-they are fed by him out of this sum. It is made
-possible by the cheapness of the vegetables. I
-have seen him buy three bushels of a curly-leaved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>vegetable resembling spinach for twopence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The lady of China takes no part in her husband’s
-business or social life. Much of the
-business in China among the official and rich
-class is transacted socially, and the dinners are
-generally given at a tea-house or restaurant, or
-on the pleasure-boats kept for that purpose.
-Even the very finest of these entertainment-places
-are very shabby affairs, from a Western standpoint.
-They are also extremely dirty. The
-floors are made of unmatched boards that have
-never seen the scrubbing-brush, and the guests
-throw their fish-bones, cigarette-ends, etc., under
-the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese understand the art of dining, and
-we who simply go to eat cannot appreciate the
-social side of this form of entertainment as does
-the Eastern man. He eats a few courses, sheds
-a jacket, loosens a belt, talks to a singing girl,
-smokes, then eats a few more courses, gambles
-a while, and really enjoys himself for four or
-five hours. When he enters the room for the
-feast he is given a slip of paper, on which
-he writes the name of his favourite singing girl
-and her place of residence. When all the guests
-arrive the slips are taken by a servant to the
-different places, and at intervals during the
-dinner the girls arrive. These girls are owned
-by men or women who bought them when
-they were very young, and have trained them
-for singing girls or professional amusers. They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>sway in on their tiny bound feet, beautifully
-dressed, painted and powdered, and take their
-place behind the man who sent for them. They
-sit on a narrow stool, chat with the man, have
-a few puffs from a water pipe, eat melon-seeds
-(they never eat or drink anything from the
-table); then their maid brings them their musical
-instrument, and they sing, in a high falsetto voice,
-a song or two. If the song and the singer are
-admired, the guests show their approval by loud
-“Hah, hah’s.” After her song the girl arises,
-says good-bye to her patron, and leaves for her
-next engagement. The girl’s owner receives from
-four to sixteen shillings, according to the fame
-of the girl; she receives nothing, unless a present
-is given her by some admirer. Many of them
-have beautiful bracelets and hair ornaments of
-pearls and jade, and many own gold water pipes
-that are very costly. They all carry little makeup
-boxes, and powder their noses whenever the
-desire seizes them. To Western eyes they are
-not pretty, with their red and white faces. They
-paint their forehead, nose, and around their
-mouth white, the cheeks and under-lip bright
-red, and to obtain the proper willow-leaf pattern
-for the eyebrows their own are shaved and others
-more slanting are painted in their place. It is
-hard to see any charm in these little women.
-They sing through their noses, talk very little,
-and that the most inane gossip, powder themselves,
-then bow and go away. They seem to
-have neither ideas, expression, nor figure.</p>
-
-<div id='i_218' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_218.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CHINESE WOMEN AND CHAIR-BEARERS.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>With each one of these entertainers is a maid,
-who supports her as she sways along on her little
-feet, and who sees that she does not try to run
-away from her master. If the girl is popular and
-in much demand she has a sedan chair and two
-bearers; if a very young girl, she is carried on
-the shoulders of a strong, husky coolie. Many
-of them lead pitiful lives, and a singing girl’s
-only hope of escape is to become the secondary
-wife or concubine of a rich man; then, if she
-should be so fortunate as to bear a son for her
-husband she would hold an honourable position,
-and nothing could be said against her because of
-her former life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A Chinese gentleman is out to dinner practically
-every night, or else he is entertaining
-friends. He sleeps until noon, goes to his particular
-club for amusement and to meet his
-friends in the afternoon, and returns to his home
-in the wee sma’ hours of the night. The wife
-or wives stay at home and take care of the house
-and children. No Chinese lady ever dines at
-a restaurant; in fact, no Chinese lady ever eats
-at the same table with her husband; he would
-“lose face” if he ate with a woman. Although
-a lady is never seen dining in public, she frequently
-gives dinner parties to her friends and
-relatives. The courtyards are then filled with
-the chattering chair-bearers, who, squatting on
-their haunches as only an Eastern servant can,
-drink innumerable cups of tea served by the
-servants of the hostess. The guests are met at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>the entrance to the women’s quarters by the lady
-of the house, and a great many bows are made,
-varying in depth according to the rank of the
-guest.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Each guest has a maid, who from time to time
-brings her mistress a vanity box, from which is
-extracted powder and rouge; and she, like her
-frailer sister, the sing-song girl, applies a little
-more white to her already whitened nose, or
-rouges her cheeks, or touches a little red paint
-to the lower lip. Paint and powder are not confined
-to the women of the amusement class, as
-the Chinese lady (that is, the younger ones;
-older women do not make up at all) paints her
-face more than is beautiful to foreign eyes. Even
-the hands are not forgotten, and within the palms
-the rouge brush is used. The hands of a Chinese
-lady are beautiful—long, slender, and delicate,
-looking as helpless as a flower. In the olden
-time long fingernails were worn as a mark of
-ladyhood, and were often covered with jade or
-gold, telling plainly that the wearer belonged
-to the leisured class and did not need to toil. In
-fact, the whole expression of a Chinese lady is
-helplessness. From her exquisitely coiffured
-head, with its mass of pearl and jade, to her
-tiny feet, on which she sways instead of walks,
-she impresses one as a dainty piece of jewellery,
-too fragile for real life. The small feet accentuated
-this, but now they are passing, and the
-new woman of China is not binding her
-daughter’s feet.</p>
-
-<div id='i_221' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_221.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>BOUND FEET OF CHINESE WOMAN.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>The curse of footbinding does not fall so
-heavily upon women who may sit and embroider,
-or if needs must travel can be borne upon the
-shoulders of their chair-bearers; but it is upon
-the poor girl, whose parents hope to have one
-in the family who may better their fortunes by a
-rich marriage, and, hoping thus, they bind their
-feet. If this marriage fails and she is forced
-to work within her household, or, even worse, if
-poverty compels her to work in the fields, or add
-her mite gained by most heavy labour to help fill
-the many eager mouths at home, then she should
-have our pity. We have seen the small-footed
-woman pulling heavy boats along the tow-paths,
-or leaning on their hoes to rest their tired feet
-while working in the fields of cotton. To her
-each day is a day of pain, and this new law forbidding
-the binding of the feet of children will
-come as a blessing from the gods. But it will
-not pass at once, as so many now loudly proclaim;
-it will take at least three generations:
-the children of the present children will quite
-likely all have natural feet. The people in
-the country, far from the noise of change and
-progress, will not feel immediately that they can
-wander so far afield from the old ideas of what
-is beautiful in their womenkind.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The most noticeable thing about a Chinese
-woman, poor as well as rich, is her hair: it is
-jet-black, and made shiny and smooth with a
-paste until not a strand is out of place. At
-certain times of the year small wreaths are made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>from tiny yellow flowers and placed around the
-knot at the back. The hair is never untidy, and
-the artistic disorder of the hair of the foreign
-woman is secretly much disliked by the Chinese.
-The late Empress-Dowager once gave the wife of
-a foreign Minister a set of combs as a present.
-The Minister’s wife was delighted, as the gift
-was enclosed in an elaborate silver box, and she
-did not see the subtle suggestion in the present,
-over which the Chinese of the province chuckled
-for many a day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A party of Chinese ladies presents a very gay
-appearance. They wear silk or satin, nearly
-always brocaded and often heavily embroidered.
-In the winter, as the houses are not heated, many
-furs are worn, but almost entirely, except in the
-case of sable, as linings for the silken coats.
-One garment is put on over the other until the
-right degree of warmth is obtained. Instead
-of speaking of degrees of cold, the Chinese say
-it is three-coat weather or five-coat weather. The
-children are clothed in wadded garments, so thick
-that the overdressed babies look like little round
-balls and can scarcely move. In the summer the
-ladies wear delicate gauzes over their undergarments
-of grass-linen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Nearly every province in China has its own
-customs and peculiarities in dress as well as in
-everything else, but they all agree on the rich
-reds and blues, the purples and mauves for the
-making of their jackets, while their wide, skirt-like
-trousers are often of a much deeper colour
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>than the jacket and trimmed with a wide band of
-black. The mixture of tints sounds most incongruous
-to foreign ears, but Chinese women have
-the faculty of weaving the most clashing hues
-into a work of harmonious art. Except in the
-case of an old lady, black is seldom worn, and as
-white is the colour of mourning, it is seen only
-on occasions of sorrow. A Chinese lady can
-never understand why European babies are
-dressed in white. Children are the symbols of
-happiness, and it seems to them most inappropriate
-to garb them in sorrow’s colours. All the
-gayest and brightest colours of China’s dye-pots
-are made to produce the clothing for China’s
-children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The dress of the Chinese woman, rich or poor,
-is very modest, fastening close around the neck,
-with sleeves coming to the hands and the loose
-jacket formed so as to disguise the lines of the
-body. European women are severely censured
-in China because of their <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">décoletté</span></i> gowns and
-tight dresses, which seem to the Chinese the
-height of vulgarity. When one of the Imperial
-princes was <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</span></i> to England, he attended
-his first foreign dinner in Shanghai. About
-twenty-five of the guests were English and
-American ladies, dressed in their most elaborate
-gowns, which means extreme <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">décoletté</span></i>. The
-attachés of the prince had tried to prepare his
-highness for the sight he was to witness; but
-they had evidently underestimated its startling
-qualities, because when the prince arrived and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>gave one amazed look at his hostess and the line
-of waiting ladies he was nonplussed. He looked
-pitifully for his interpreter, and, not receiving
-aid from him, put down his head, shut his eyes,
-and bravely stumbled around the room, groping
-blindly for each lady’s hand, as he had been
-informed that he should shake hands with them.
-This was another serious breach of Chinese
-etiquette, as no Chinese man must ever touch
-a woman. The Chinese views in regard to
-modesty connected with the dress of women has
-caused the missionaries in the interior to expurgate
-from the magazines that may by chance fall
-into the hands of Chinese visitors all pictures
-of lightly clad ladies who are used to advertise
-soaps and powders and the underwear of our
-American markets.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese are very fond of their children.
-They say, “In the children our parents return
-to us; in the children we live again.” When
-ladies visit each other they always ask for the
-children, who are brought in by the nurses. With
-their jackets of red, their trousers of bright green
-or purple, their baby-caps with its rows of tiny
-brass Buddhas that shine and glitter like gold,
-and the mark of red paint on the forehead or on
-the tip of the tiny nose, they look like brilliant
-little elfs. The girls are dressed quite as richly
-as the boys, and it is to the interest of the nurse
-to make the children as attractive as possible,
-because the pleased visitor generally gives her
-a small present of money wrapped in red paper.</p>
-
-<div id='i_224' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_224.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>AN OLD-FASHIONED CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>Visiting a high-class Chinese lady, one is impressed
-with the number of children and servants
-that seem to be swarming over the place. When
-one of a family has distinction or wealth, all the
-poor relatives come to dwell with him. Li Hung-chang
-built a home in Shanghai in which to
-live when he should retire from private life.
-When asked why he built so far from his home
-province, which was contrary to Chinese custom,
-he said he built as far as possible from his
-native town, hoping that his poor relations could
-not obtain the money with which to come to
-Shanghai.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The servants in a Chinese family are not
-expensive, so far as wages are concerned,
-but they cost a great deal in perquisites. They
-rarely receive more than eight shillings a month,
-but they are given their food, and they help
-themselves lavishly to anything they may desire.
-They dress themselves from the old clothing of
-the family, freely take the hairpins and the toilet
-articles of the mistress, clothe their children from
-the common wardrobe, and, in fact, are a part
-of the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a peculiar democratic custom which
-servants may claim, but which is seldom used—the
-right of reviling the family when discharged.
-The youngest son of Li Hung-chang lived next
-door to me, and an old serving-woman was discharged
-for a reason that evidently did not appeal
-to her sense of justice. She sat beneath the
-gateway and for three hours called down curses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>upon the Li family at the top of her voice. This
-happened on one of the principal residence streets
-of Shanghai, and the police passed and repassed,
-but no one tried to stop her. The house steward
-made two or three feeble attempts to persuade
-her to leave, but she would turn her facile tongue
-upon him, and he would gather his skirts in his
-hands and start on a most undignified run for the
-house, evidently believing discretion to be the
-better part of valour. At the end of three hours,
-when she was completely exhausted, she was led
-away.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese lady and her servants gossip
-together as friends, rooms are entered without
-warning, conversations interrupted, and suggestions
-offered which, to the foreigner, seem to
-be of the grossest impertinence. This intimacy
-is due partly to the restricted life the lady leads,
-and partly to the fact that many of the servants
-are distant relatives. Practically the only news
-from the outside world that comes to the woman
-behind the walls is brought by her sons or by
-the servants. She makes few visits, and these
-usually at the home of some relative, entering
-her closely covered chair within her courtyard
-and carried swiftly to the courtyard of the house
-where she is to visit. There is no such thing as
-“calling” between the wives of men who are
-mutually interested in affairs or who are business
-associates. The wife of a Treaty Commissioner
-called upon the wives of the Chinese officials
-who were associated with her husband in conducting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>the treaty. They were very polite and
-returned her call, but are still wondering <em>why</em>
-she called.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The wife of a consul wished to give a luncheon
-to the wife of the Mayor of Shanghai. She
-asked the interpreter who was assisting her in
-the arrangements if other Chinese ladies of the
-same rank might be asked. The interpreter said,
-“No; a Chinese lady would rather not meet
-women other than relatives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese wife lives entirely for her family
-and with her family. She rarely goes to a public
-place of amusement, although in some of the
-ports, like Shanghai and Canton, entire families
-are seen at the Chinese theatres. Theatrical
-companies come to the houses of the rich and
-official class for the amusement of guests, and
-story-tellers and musicians, nearly always blind,
-go from door to door asking to be taken into the
-women’s courtyards to help while away the dreary
-hours. Astrologers and fortune-tellers pass
-along the resident streets, striking their little
-gong to attract the notice of the women behind
-the walls. They are extremely clever, and cast
-horoscopes in a manner similar to that of the
-Egyptians of olden times. They are very popular
-among the Chinese women, as are fortune-tellers
-with women of all races.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We are prone to sympathize with the Chinese
-woman because of the plurality of wives, but
-one sees little evidence of the need of our sympathy.
-The Chinese have a saying: “The head
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>wife should cherish the inferior wives as the
-great tree cherishes the creepers that gather
-round it.” I do not know whether this sage
-advice is always followed, but I have seen the
-several wives of many officials, all friendly as
-sisters and all working for the common good of
-the home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I called upon the wife of an official and was
-met at the door by two ladies. One of them
-was a very old Chinese lady, with the smallest
-bound feet that I have ever seen; they could
-not have been more than 2½ inches in length.
-She was partially supported on one side by a
-servant, and on the other by a beautifully dressed
-Manchu woman. After I was seated in the place
-of honour at the left of the elderly lady, and tea
-was brought, I asked the usual question, “What
-is your honourable age?” She replied, “Sixty-two”;
-then, as always follows, I said, “How
-many children have you?” She replied, “Five.”
-I asked their ages, and, to my astonishment,
-heard her say that the eldest was seventeen years
-and the youngest two months. When I could
-find words to continue the conversation, I turned
-to the Manchu lady and asked her practically
-the same questions. She replied that she was
-thirty-five years old, was the mother of five
-children, the eldest being seventeen years and
-the youngest two months. Then I realized that
-the first wife had no children, but, according to
-Chinese custom, claimed as her own all children
-born to the secondary wives.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>The custom was further exemplified by the
-wife of a magistrate who was calling upon me,
-accompanied by the second wife. After the
-usual questions in regard to age and health,
-I asked this lady how many children she
-possessed. She looked at me in a puzzled
-manner for a moment, then turned to the other
-wife and, keeping track of the names by turning
-down a finger at each count, said: “Let me see—how
-many children have I? Tsai-an has three,
-Wo-kee has five—that is eight; Ma-lu has two—ten;
-Sin Yun has four—fourteen; Sih-peh two—sixteen;
-and you have three”; then, turning
-to me, she said, “I have nineteen children.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I have a Chinese friend who lived in Canton
-until he became involved in some political trouble
-that caused him to leave for Shanghai, where
-he would be under the protection of the foreign
-settlements. He left behind him his mother, four
-wives, and sixteen children. He became lonely
-in his exile, and asked his mother to send him
-a couple of his wives. She wrote him that they
-were busy attending to the education of their
-children, and that they did not speak the dialect
-in Shanghai and would feel like strangers;
-consequently it would be better for him to marry
-a couple of women native to the province, who
-would be more contented. He took her
-advice.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is an American woman doctor in
-Shanghai who goes to the homes of the rich
-Chinese in the practice of her profession. I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>asked her one day if she knew the wife of
-Mr. Lu, a prominent merchant who had a most
-beautiful home on the smart drive in Shanghai.
-She replied that she knew a part of her—numbers
-one, four, seven, and eleven. A rich man is
-only restricted in the number of wives he may
-possess by his ability to support them. Gossip
-says—I do not know how true it is—that Yuan
-Shi-kai has the unlucky number of thirteen wives
-beneath the roof-tree of the President’s palace
-in Peking.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One would naturally suppose that endless complications
-of a disagreeable nature, leading to
-quarrels and bitterness, would arise, yet there
-does not seem to be more unhappiness in the
-average Chinese home than in those of any other
-country. The first wife, she who has been chosen
-by the parents, is the head of the household, and
-her word is law, the other wives practically occupying
-the position of servants. That is the
-theory, but in actual practice she who is fortunate
-enough to be the mother of sons, or
-perhaps the last girl-wife, is generally the
-favourite, and wields great influence over the
-master of the household. I said to a woman
-calling upon me one day that I should not feel
-so badly after the first wife was chosen to replace
-me, but that the choice of my immediate
-successor would make me very unhappy. She
-looked astonished, and said: “That depends
-entirely upon the woman. If she is agreeable
-and pleasant, it is a pleasure to have her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>in the family. Often a first wife chooses a
-second.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We of the Western world look upon a great
-many wives as a luxury only to be enjoyed by the
-very rich. I have a friend who is very intimate
-in a Chinese family in which there are five wives.
-Since hearing her talk I have changed my mind
-in regard to the luxury of the plurality of wives.
-In this household the first wife lives with the
-husband’s family at their country place; the
-other four live with him. The husband supplies
-a cook for the common use of the family, and
-this cook provides rice, the staple article of food
-for the household. Each wife is given a servant
-and one pound a month with which to buy her
-luxuries, and once a year she is given a complete
-suit of silk or satin clothing, and if a favourite,
-I presume she receives jewels, etc., from her
-husband. A man told me that in the interior of
-China (Shanghai, Peking, and some of the larger
-cities are much more expensive) he could support
-easily his four wives and fourteen children
-on an income of £200 a year.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are many foolish women who marry
-attachés of the Chinese embassies in England
-and America, or, more foolish still, who marry a
-Chinese merchant. They are, in fact, marrying
-the romance of the East represented to them
-in the person of the suave little almond-eyed
-man, and they pay bitterly for their mistake if
-they ever return to their husband’s country. They
-are recognized by neither Chinese nor foreigners,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>have no social standing in any community, and
-lead an existence that calls for pity.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There lived in Shanghai a man who had once
-been a secretary of the Legation in London. He
-had a great career ahead of him until he married
-an Englishwoman, when he was ordered home,
-degraded, and lived for years as the petty official
-in the office of the mayor of the city, at a wage
-scarcely liveable even for a Chinese. His wife,
-recognized by neither English nor Chinese,
-became addicted to opium and drink, and died
-after a few years of unhappiness. A woman
-doctor told me that she found the body lying
-in an outhouse, on a bundle of straw, waiting
-for burial, where finally it found a resting-place
-in a Chinese cemetery.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A few years ago a woman came to the English
-Consul in Nanking and asked for protection.
-She had married a Chinese merchant in London,
-and on his return to his own country he met with
-business reverses that reduced him practically
-to the position of a coolie. She had been forced
-to go into the paddy-fields transplanting rice.
-It is bad enough to see a Chinese woman
-standing in the mud and water to her knees,
-doing this back-breaking work, but it would be
-heartrending to see a woman of our race toiling
-alongside of the ignorant Chinese peasant, under
-the rays of the tropical sun, which beats down
-so pitilessly upon the exposed rice-fields. The
-Consul was extremely sorry for the woman, but
-could not interfere in the domestic life of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>Chinese subject. When she found nothing could
-be done for her, she took the little round ball of
-sleep with which so many Chinese wives pass
-across the bridge of death—opium.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If these women who think that it would be
-such a wonderful experience to live in the
-glorious East, of which they have read most
-glittering tales, would realize that when the man
-returns to his homeland his parents have the
-right of choosing a wife for him, who is his real
-wife, and the poor foreign woman is reduced to
-the position of a concubine, I think many of
-them would not take a step so fatal to happiness.
-Dr. Barchet, of the Baptist Mission near Ningpo,
-saw an American woman living in a small village
-who was one of four wives, all occupying the
-same peasant’s cottage. When asked why she
-did not return to her homeland, she said that she
-was ashamed to have her people learn of her
-great mistake, as she married against their
-wishes. The bad air and coarse food were
-having their effect upon this delicately raised
-girl, and she was a victim to the great white
-plague that claims so many lives in China.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Suicide is very common among the women of
-China. When the mother-in-law becomes too
-oppressive, or life becomes intolerable from other
-causes, the wife often takes the law into her own
-hands and takes opium or jumps into the well.
-She then not only receives surcease from her
-sorrows, but, according to Chinese superstition,
-her spirit will linger around the home, haunting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>and tormenting the person who was the cause of
-her taking the fatal step.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is very little intercourse between foreign
-and Chinese women. The latter do not seem
-to care about making the acquaintance of the
-women from over the seas. It is only of late
-years that the wives of foreign officials in
-Shanghai have had any intercourse with the
-families of the local officials. Such intercourse
-consists simply in an interchange of calls, and
-a luncheon given once a year by the wife of the
-senior Consul, and returned by the wife of the
-Chinese taotai or mayor. There can never be
-any degree of friendship between the Chinese
-woman and the European. Their lives are
-radically different; the Chinese woman’s ideals
-are not the same as those of her foreign sister.
-Their only common subject of conversation is
-in regard to their children; and even there a
-bar is soon put across the conversation, as the
-Chinese mother has different hopes and ambitions
-for the future of her children than those of the
-woman from England or America. She knows
-nothing of the outside world, and her only subjects
-of conversation relate to household gossip,
-clothes, and the actions of her friends. In
-Shanghai a society is formed that is trying to
-bring the women of all nationalities into touch
-with one another, but it is not a very great
-success so far as the Chinese lady is concerned.
-She feels awkward and ill at ease in the presence
-of these women, who talk so easily on matters
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>of which she knows nothing, and she much
-prefers the quiet of her courtyards, amidst the
-life she understands.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When a Chinese lady is persuaded to go into
-the world she is always most dignified, even
-under embarrassing circumstances. I once gave
-a luncheon for the wife of a Governor of a
-province, to which the wives of the consuls and
-a few other ladies were invited, about twenty
-in all. When the guest of honour arrived all the
-other guests rose to meet her. As she entered
-the doorway her tiny bound feet stepped upon
-a rug, which slipped from beneath her, and
-instead of swaying gently across the room she
-sat down and slid to the feet of her astonished
-hostess. She was helped to rise by the frightened
-guests, and turned and shook hands with them
-gravely, without a flicker of the eyelids to indicate
-that sliding was not the usual mode of entering
-a drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese lady is trained not to show
-emotion of any kind. Her face, to be beautiful,
-must be absolutely placid, care-free, “like
-unto the full moon in its glory.” They consider
-the foreign woman extremely ugly, with their
-long, care-lined faces. They say that if it were
-not for the clothing they could not distinguish
-men from women. Their faces, with their prominent
-noses and deep-set eyes, appear to them
-coarse and unrefined. I have seen children when
-suddenly confronted with a foreign woman
-scream in terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>The Chinese do not impress the casual visitor
-as a nervous people. It is said that they can
-bear without murmuring the most severe punishments,
-and a torture that would reduce a foreign
-man to frenzy will elicit only a groan from a
-member of this phlegmatic race. The women
-seem to share with their menfolk in this lack of
-“nerves.” I once made a visit to the wife of
-the city magistrate, whose home was in the
-official “yamen.” She showed me over her
-house, and on entering her bedroom I went to
-the only window in the room to see what kind of
-a view was to be obtained. What was my horror
-to find that the window looked directly upon
-the punishment courtyard, where a man was then
-being held down upon his face and a bamboo
-vigorously applied by the lictor. The moans
-of the victim could be faintly heard, and what it
-would be in the summer-time, when the windows
-were open, could very well be imagined. I
-turned to my hostess and said, “How frightful!
-How can you stand it?” She shrugged her
-shoulders and said, “Oh, one becomes used
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese woman is very devout, and
-observes all the feast days and days of fasting.
-It is really the woman who keeps up the religion
-of Confucius and Buddha. An official who had
-just returned from sacrificing to the dragon who
-was supposed to have swallowed the sun at the
-time of an eclipse, was asked if he believed in
-this dragon. He laughed and said, “Of course
-not.” “Then,” the curious questioner continued,
-“why do you do it?” He said, “Why do men
-in America go to church? Mainly because their
-wives wish them to go. It is the same here.
-It is the women who are the spiritual force of
-China. It is they who are devout, and it is they
-who keep open the temples and preserve the
-belief in the gods.”</p>
-
-<div id='i_236' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_236.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>WHEELBARROW AND COOLIE—USED IN PLACE OF WAGONS IN TOWNS AND COUNTRY VILLAGES NEAR SHANGHAI.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>The Chinese woman’s religion is difficult of
-definition, but whatever she is, a follower of the
-teachings of Confucius or of the Great Buddha,
-she turns to her gods both in time of trouble
-and in time of thanksgiving. It is a real factor
-in her life. Buddhism has a great festival in
-the spring, about the time of our Easter. Then
-the roads are covered with processions of women
-going or coming from the temples. All ranks
-are seen—the lady borne swiftly along in her
-sedan chair with the spirit money hanging from
-the poles; the middle-class woman riding on
-the passenger wheelbarrows with four or five
-of her friends, with her incense and candles in
-her lap; and the poor woman trudging along the
-stone-covered road, carrying her offerings in a
-basket of rice-straw which she has woven at
-home. When they arrive at the temple they
-are all of one great sisterhood. The spirit money
-of rich and poor alike is placed in the great
-incense-burner in the outer courtyard, where it
-goes up in flames to the gods. Then the temple
-is entered, the candles are lighted, and the
-incense is placed before the particular deity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>whose kind offices they implore; the head is
-touched to the floor, prayers are uttered, and
-the woman returns to the courtyards, where she
-may pass the time with her friends, feeding the
-carp in the ponds or admiring the great trees
-which are found within the courts of many of
-the big temples. If a special boon is to be
-asked, or if there is doubt and trouble, she takes
-a hollow bamboo vase, about the size of a quart
-measure, in which are a couple of dozen sticks
-of slit bamboo. She kneels three times, touching
-her head to the floor each time, then shakes
-the bamboo with a rotary motion until one of
-the sticks detaches itself from the others and
-falls to the floor. This she takes to a priest, who
-reads the number upon it and gives her a slip
-of yellow paper covered with Chinese characters,
-and from it she will find the answer to her
-prayers. It takes considerable imagination to
-obtain solace from one of these pieces of paper,
-as they are made to fit all cases, and carry about
-as much meaning as does the “fortune” on the
-card handed one by the figure in the slot-machine
-for which we pay a penny.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The gods are not only worshipped at the
-temples, but religious adoration plays an important
-part in the home life. Over the kitchen
-stove, in a niche, reposes the household god.
-From that high place he watches all that goes
-on within the household. He knows the sins
-of commission and the sins of omission. Once
-a year he is taken down and with great ceremony
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>burned and sent up to the Great God to report
-upon the actions of the household for the year,
-and a new god is installed in his place. In the
-meantime he is propitiated in various ways. The
-first thing in the morning a small bowl of rice
-and another of water is placed before him, and
-incense and candles are burned daily at his feet
-to gain his favour.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Priests are frequent visitors at the homes, and
-religious ceremonies attend all the great family
-events, like the first shaving of the baby’s head,
-or that most important day when the mother
-attains her fiftieth year. This is a day of general
-rejoicing, when her children unite and buy the
-happy mother the greatest and most precious
-present she can receive—her grave-clothes. They
-are presented amidst much feasting, and chanting
-of prayers, and burning of candles and incense,
-and the mother is congratulated by all her friends
-for the blessing of such filial children.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XV<br /> <span class='large'>THE RED CHAIR OF MARRIAGE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The home must have its basis in marriage, and
-to that important episode in woman’s life the
-greatest attention is given. In China, as in India,
-the betrothal ceremony is as binding as the
-marriage, although I am told that the “new
-woman” of China is rebelling at the child betrothals
-and the lack of freedom granted her in
-the choice of a mate. It is said that in Shanghai
-a couple who have been betrothed in childhood
-by their parents, on arriving at marriageable
-age, may go before a magistrate and repudiate
-the agreement, and in many instances their cases
-have been upheld even against the protests of
-father and mother. This shows the most extreme
-progressiveness of present-day China, as hitherto
-a child, especially a girl, was simply a chattel to
-be disposed of according to the dictates of the
-nearest male relative. Still, with the exception
-of the foreign settlement of Shanghai, the old
-customs of betrothal and marriage prevail, and
-the principals in the marriage have very little
-to say in regard to the disposal of their future.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>Often children are betrothed before their birth
-by parents, who, being good friends and desiring
-to unite the families, agree that if a boy is born
-in one family and a girl in the other, they shall
-marry. Other matches are made by a professional
-“go-between,” who is employed by the
-parents of either the boy or girl to find a suitable
-alliance for their child. This “go-between” is
-so thoroughly recognized that the Chinese have
-a saying, “Without a go-between no happy
-marriage can be effected.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After the search culminates in the discovery
-of the bride and groom of equal social standing
-and endowed with the proper amount of this
-world’s goods, the names of the girl and boy
-are written upon a paper and taken to the necromancer,
-who decides whether the marriage will
-be fortunate. Every child is born under the
-protection of some animal; if the protecting
-animal of the daughter is a sheep and that of her
-fiancé a lion, naturally they should not marry.
-But if the guardian animal of the bride-to-be
-should be a bird, they will live in peace with one
-another. The girl must be thirteen or fifteen
-or seventeen years of age, as an even number
-would be most unlucky. Seventeen years is
-about the average marriageable age of a Chinese
-girl at present, although formerly they married
-when hardly more than children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The marriage customs are essentially the same
-all over China. The husband gives a certain sum
-of money to the bride’s parents, which varies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>with the position of the families. Among the
-poor the girl is practically sold, although the
-money is supposedly used for the purchase of
-the wedding outfit. The bride’s standing in the
-family of the husband often depends largely upon
-the trousseau and the furnishings she takes with
-her to her new home.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The outfit a girl of the middle class should
-take with her, in order that she might command
-the proper respect of her new relatives, should
-include three red trunks, one table, two chairs,
-one wardrobe, three tubs, two buckets, one washstand,
-one dressing-case, a set of scissors, a footstove,
-a teapot, wine-pot, two candlesticks, a
-basin, sugar-bowl, tea-caddy, one set of cups,
-a complete set of bowls and dishes, two wadded
-quilts, two embroidered pillows, embroidered
-curtain for the bed, and a complete outfit of
-clothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This donation of the bride’s parents to the
-formation of a new home is carried before the
-bride in the wedding procession. Often
-musicians herald the coming of a bride, who,
-from her closely covered red chair, watches with
-beating heart the procession taking her to her
-new mother-in-law, who can make of her future
-home a prison or a palace of love. When she
-finally arrives at the house, that is decorated with
-red hangings and long scrolls of red silk and
-flowers, both real and artificial, she sees her
-husband for the first time as she steps over the
-threshold. After the one quick look, they go
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>before the ancestral tablet, and, kneeling, touch
-their heads three times to the floor. Thus she
-shows that she is now one of the family, worshipping
-her husband’s ancestors instead of those
-of her own family; and after prostrating themselves
-before her husband’s parents and drinking
-from the same cup as a symbol of their unity,
-they retire to a room, where they sit upon two
-red chairs and the merry-making begins. Their
-friends come in, and, facing them, try to make
-the bride laugh, showing that she will be a most
-frivolous woman. There is much music, feasting,
-and playing of tricks on this joyous occasion,
-and for this little woman, dressed in red satin
-embroidered in gold, with a big crown upon her
-head and bead-fringe hanging over her face, the
-three days of the wedding festivities are most
-wearying. But she realizes that she must enjoy
-them if she can, because after they have passed
-she settles down into the daughter-in-law, which
-too often proves to be almost the place of a slave,
-or at the most a household drudge. One can
-imagine the discord and strife there is within a
-household where there are several sons who are
-married, each bringing his wife to his parents’
-home. I knew a family of grandparents, parents,
-and children numbering thirty-eight, all living
-in one modest house. We can understand the
-Chinese savant making the character for discord
-a roof with two women under it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Often in a rich girl’s dowry are slave-girls, and
-although it is really against the law to own slaves,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>it is, in fact, one of the great evils of China.
-These helpless people are owned by even the
-poor. The mother of my maid possessed two
-slave-girls whom she had bought when very
-young. She treated them well, and when they
-grew to marriageable age expected to find
-husbands for them, giving them an outfit of
-clothing and a small dowry. In times of famine
-girls are sold for very small amounts of money
-or exchanged for the more precious rice. This
-seems most cruel; but in order that the rest of the
-family may live, one must be sacrificed. When
-everything of value is sold, when the winter
-clothing is in the pawnshop, when there is no rice
-to give to crying children, then there is but one
-thing left for the despairing mother, she must
-sell her daughter. Chinese mothers are the same
-as mothers from all over the world, and she only
-parts with her little girl as a last resort, to the
-merchants who follow the disasters and fatten
-on the misery of the Chinese peasant. When it
-has become known that a famine has made
-desperate the poor of a province, the merchants
-from the tea-houses and the brothels of the great
-cities go to the little towns and villages in the
-track of the famine, and buy the girls from the
-fathers and mothers, who can see nothing but
-death ahead for all unless they sacrifice one. The
-clever, pretty girls are trained for the tea-houses,
-inmates of brothels, or concubines of rich men.
-The ugly, stupid ones are domestics, and often
-are most cruelly treated.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>The owners prefer buying the girl very young,
-from five to seven years of age, when she can be
-more easily trained. If she is a pretty girl, her
-feet must be bound, and if this is a cruel operation
-under the tender hands of a mother, how
-much more dreadful it may become when
-attended to by some one whose only thought is
-to profit by the girl’s beauty!</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The slaves in a rich family fare very well.
-Each child is given one or two personal servants,
-and when the children grow up and marry they
-follow them to the new home. Often a pretty,
-attractive slave-girl becomes the secondary wife
-of her master, and if she should be so fortunate
-as to bear him sons, she ranks with her mistress
-in the honour given her within the household.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a home in Shanghai for the rescue of
-little girls whose mistresses are more than ordinarily
-cruel. There is also a branch of the
-Florence Crittenden work for the rescue of girls
-sold to tea-houses. It is very hard for the people
-who are engaged in this good work to obtain the
-girls unless they are so badly treated that it
-comes to the notice of the magistrate, who may
-send the girl to the home for a given period.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I saw a pitiful case at a hospital at Soochow.
-We were sitting in the clinic when a very pretty
-woman came in and threw herself on her knees
-before the doctor and began to cry. She said
-between her sobs: “Oh, foreign doctor, help me
-to get away, help me, help me!” She was a
-respectable girl from Ningpo who had been sold
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>by her husband to a place in Soochow for four
-years. She loathed the life, and when for the
-first time she had eluded the old woman who
-always goes out with these unfortunates to see
-that they do not get away, she had appealed to
-the only hope she knew. Yet that appeal was
-useless, as nothing could be done for her. She
-was nothing but a chattel of her husband, according
-to Chinese law, and he had a perfect right
-to sell her if he wished. I saw another pretty girl
-of sixteen who had been sold for eighty dollars
-to the same place. She came to the hospital to
-have her back treated, as she had been severely
-beaten with a brick because she would not make
-herself sufficiently pleasing to a guest.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But the average Chinese girl goes to her
-husband’s home quite likely within a short
-distance of her girlhood village, and passes a
-most uneventful life, one day being exactly like
-another unless broken by the ceremonies attending
-the births, weddings, and deaths of her husband’s
-people. Every village is surrounded by
-trees and is exactly like its neighbour, with its
-one-story, thatched-roof houses, or, perhaps, if
-the owner is especially prosperous, the pointed
-roofs may be formed of blue-grey tiling. Part
-of the front yard is beaten and made smooth to
-be used for threshing the rice, the front room
-of the house is used for the storing of the farming
-implements, and the other rooms are given
-to the different members of the family according
-to their needs. There is no light and little ventilation in these rude village homes. Windows are
-expensive and cold, as the houses are not heated
-in the winter. The mothers may be seen sitting
-in their doorways, holding in their hands brass
-hand-warmers, in which are a few burning coals
-of charcoal, and under their feet are the braziers
-which provide the only heat for these poor people
-during the cold months of the year.</p>
-
-<div id='i_246' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_246.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>RAIN-COATS OF CHINESE WORKMEN.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>The life lived by these village people is life
-reduced to its simplest form. The main food is
-rice and a little cabbage. Meat is an unknown
-quantity unless on special feast days. Beef is not
-used, as the cow is a beast of burden, and the
-Chinese have the same feeling in regard to its
-flesh that we have for the flesh of horses. Ducks,
-chicken, eggs, fish, crabs, snails, and clams are
-the poor man’s luxuries. No hole is too muddy
-nor water too filthy for a fish-net to be drawn
-across it, or for the little crowd of boys who
-catch the crabs to help fill the family pot.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The question of clothes is a simple one and
-easily solved. The father wears a pair of blue
-cotton trousers in the summer, while the mother
-wears the same style garment with the addition
-of an apron effect which covers the bust. An
-amulet and a string are sufficient clothing for the
-children during the warm days, but when winter
-comes the wadded clothing must be brought
-forth, often from the pawnshop, where it goes
-in the spring to obtain money to buy the seed
-for planting.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The great prayer which rises from the heart
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>of all Chinese women, rich and poor, peasant
-and princess, is to Kwan-yin for the inestimable
-blessing of sons. “Sons, give me sons!” is
-heard in every temple. A woman is not honoured
-until she has sons to worship at the tablets of
-her husband’s ancestors. One of the chief
-reasons for divorce in China is the lack of sons,
-and if the first wife has no male children, and the
-secondary wife has borne sons to her lord, the
-lot of the first wife is very bitter. In one of the
-foreign hospitals in Shanghai for Chinese women,
-the wife of an official in Tientsin gave birth, much
-to her sorrow, to a girl. She was inconsolable,
-and would not allow the dreadful news to be
-sent to her home, and the doctors feared that
-she would take her life. But through a servant
-the unhappy woman saw a way to regain the
-love and respect of her family. At the same
-time that the daughter was born to her a beggar-woman
-in the charity department gave birth to
-a boy. She bought the boy and telegraphed
-her husband, “Thou art the father of twins.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One of the upper servants in a consulate, growing
-rich on the foreign spoils, took to himself a
-second wife, giving as his excuse that he had
-four daughters and no sons. At the birth of a
-son to the new wife the first wife tried to starve
-herself to death, and failing that, took opium
-and gained her wish. She could not survive
-the ignominy of being only the mother of girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Sons mean so much to a Chinese mother that
-she feels that the gods must be jealous of her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>happiness, consequently she puts an ear-ring in
-one ear of her boy to deceive the god and make
-him think the loved one is a girl. She also calls
-him her “ugly one,” her “stupid one,” or simply
-gives him a number so the gods will not see how
-much he is loved and covet her treasure. There
-is an economic reason behind all this love for
-the man-child. A poor Chinese, a workman,
-cannot save enough money to provide for even
-his simple wants in his old age. Try as he may,
-he can only earn enough to live upon from day
-to day, but if he has sons he knows that when
-old age comes, and he can no longer work, that
-care will be given him and he will not want.
-There is no crime so great as the lack of filial
-piety, and the State punishes severely the son
-who does not provide for his aged parents.
-Indeed, of the five punishments of the criminal
-code directed against three thousand offences,
-disobedience or neglect of parents is the most
-severe.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>An illustration of this occurred not long ago
-in the interior of China. A man arose in the
-night at the sound of a burglar, and in the
-struggle in the dark the robber was killed. On
-bringing a light it was found that the robber was
-the father of the man whose house he entered.
-He was known to be a ne’er-do-well, but the
-unparalleled act of killing one’s own father
-aroused intense excitement in the whole province.
-The case was deemed of such importance that it
-could not be tried by the local magistrate, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>it was transferred to the courts in Peking, which
-condemned the man to death, not because he
-killed the robber, but because his father had
-evidently been compelled to rob for a living.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another similar case came to the notice of the
-foreigners in Shanghai. A man accidentally hit
-his father with a hoe, causing his death. The
-whole village took the man to the city, but while
-on the road they met the magistrate, who asked
-them not to bring the dreadful case before him
-officially, but for the clan or village to mete out
-the punishment and then report to him. They
-buried the son alive.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Missionaries from a town in the interior asked
-the American Consul to intervene in the case of
-a boy nine years old, who, while in play, allowed
-a stool accidentally to slip from his hand, hitting
-his mother on the head and killing her. He was
-condemned to death, but because of his youth was
-to be kept in prison until he was sixteen, when
-he would pay the penalty. The Consul did all
-in his power to save the boy, but, outside of
-friendly arguments, nothing could be done, as
-he was a Chinese subject and came under the
-jurisdiction of Chinese courts of law.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Because of this necessity for the provision for
-the old age of parents, there are no homes for
-the aged nor houses for the poor in China, unless
-one excepts those established through foreign
-influence. Each family must take care of its
-own helpless, and if a person is so unfortunate
-as to have no family, the begging-bowl by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>roadside is the only recourse when the years are
-many and the once strong arms are weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The filial piety and respect for parents that are
-so strongly entrenched in the Chinese character
-causes the son to obey his father until the day
-of his death. I know a man fifty years of age
-who was offered the post of secretary of the
-Embassy in London, but who declined this very
-advantageous position because his mother did
-not want him to go to a foreign land. He gave
-up willingly the chance of a lifetime rather than
-cause sorrow to his mother in her old age.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A mission in a certain town was very desirous
-of buying a certain piece of ground on which to
-erect a church, and the plan was balked by
-the local official. The missionary conducting the
-negotiations could find no suitable reason for the
-official’s action in the matter, and finally asked
-the help of his consul. The taotai was firm
-in his refusal, and offered the mission land in
-another part of the city for their church. When
-pressed for a reason for his refusal he finally
-said: “My mother passes that place each time
-she goes to her favourite temple, and she objects
-to a building holding a foreign god being erected
-there. She thinks it would pollute the good
-spirits of the air. I know it is what you call
-superstition, but she is my mother and I must
-obey her wishes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Family life has been from time immemorial
-the foundation-stone of the Chinese Empire, and
-filial piety is the foundation-stone of the family
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>life. The Chinese is taught that the interest of
-the family is always of greater importance than
-the interest of the individual. This respect and
-veneration is not only for the living, but also
-for the dead. The death days of two generations
-of parents are kept sacred with solemn
-rites, and every home has its family shrine, to
-which all the members must pay due reverence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This respect and worship is paid by the woman
-to the ancestors of her husband’s family, as it is
-her destiny on reaching womanhood to go to a
-new home and live in submission to her new
-parents, and burn incense before the shrines of
-her husband’s people. When she marries she
-practically leaves her home for ever. If she is
-returned to it—that is, if she is divorced—“shame
-shall cover her to her latest hour.” Divorce is
-very rare in China, but there are seven reasons
-given for divorcing a wife. The first is disobedience
-to father- or mother-in-law, barrenness,
-lewdness, leprosy, overmuch talking, and
-stealing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The woman is taught that her lifelong duty
-is obedience. Her husband must be looked upon
-as “heaven itself,” and she must pay all outward
-respect to his parents. Her first duty each morning
-is to bring a cup of tea to the bedside of her
-husband’s mother, and to bow her head before
-her as a sign of submission and respect. She
-is taught that the only qualities that benefit a
-woman are gentle obedience, chastity, quietness,
-and mercy, and that the five worst infirmities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>that may afflict a female are indocility, discontent,
-slander, jealousy, and silliness. Confucius
-says: “These five vices are found in seven or
-eight out of every ten women, and it is from
-these that arise the inferiority of the sex.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Generations of this teaching has made the
-Chinese woman into a modest, quiet, lovable
-woman, to be protected and cared for, appealing
-to all that is chivalrous in her menfolk, her
-very weakness her greatest strength.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XVI<br /> <span class='large'>WHEN CHINESE WOMEN DIE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>In a country where the worship of ancestors
-plays such an important part in the religion, death
-has a greater meaning than it has for those of
-Western lands. The Chinese spend far too much
-upon the ceremonies connected with death, rich
-and poor alike vying with each other in the
-elaborate arrangements for the disposal of their
-dead. I met not long ago the funeral procession
-accompanying the body of a captain of
-labour to his last resting-place. He was many
-times a millionaire, who began life as a boatman.
-The sons boasted that they spent twenty
-thousand dollars on his funeral. There were
-eight native bands in the procession, led by the
-European band of Shanghai, twenty men carrying
-banners and umbrellas, about fifty men
-carrying scrolls, on which were written the name
-and rank of the deceased; there were over two
-hundred Buddhist priests, dressed in their sackcloth
-robes, and the wailing mourners and
-friends in their mourning clothes of white,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>followed in sedan-chairs and carriages. The
-enormous coffin was covered with red
-embroidered satin and carried by thirty chanting
-coolies. Within the home the walls were
-covered with white, and there were long scrolls
-from friends telling of their sympathy and of
-the greatness of the deceased family. At twenty
-tables, seating eight each, feasting was carried
-on day and night for a week.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the summer-time there are hundreds of
-deaths, and the funerals of the poor pass our
-house daily. They are very different from the
-elaborate processions of the rich men. The
-coffins, instead of being made of the finest teak
-or heaviest ebony, are nothing but plain, rough
-boxes, and the mourners either are on wheelbarrows
-or they walk to the place of the dead,
-the weeping wife being supported on each side
-by a friend, who practically carries her as she
-stumbles along in her grief. Paper money is
-always scattered in front of the corpse in order
-to pay his way into the new world; and
-often one sees either a live rooster or an
-imitation one standing on the coffin to bring
-back to his home one of the man’s three
-souls.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The body is often kept months within the
-houses before a suitable day is found by the
-necromancer on which to bury him, but because
-of the manner of preparing for burial it is not
-insanitary to keep a corpse in the house for a
-few months. The coffins are made of hardwood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>of four or five inches in thickness. First a
-certain number of bags of lime are placed in
-the bottom, varying according to the weight of
-the person; over that is laid a wadded blanket,
-if of a rich family it is of silk and often
-embroidered, if the person be poor it is only
-cotton; the body is laid in the coffin, dressed
-in as handsome a suit of wadded clothing as is
-consistent with the means of the family; the
-ancestral tablet is laid upon the breast, paper
-money at the feet; he is covered with the blanket
-and the coffin hermetically sealed. The coffin
-is the most precious possession of the Chinese,
-and is often purchased years before death in
-order that they may be sure of a dignified last
-resting-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We often hear stories told at women’s clubs
-of mothers who throw babies within the “baby
-tower” to die. These baby towers are small,
-round houses, situated on the outskirts of a city
-or a village for the purpose of permitting the
-poor to dispose of their dead children without
-the expense of a coffin or a funeral. The interior
-of the house is partially filled with quicklime,
-and a small door opening on to a slanting chute
-permits the poor mother to give her baby its
-final resting-place. I have never heard of a
-case of a live baby being sent to these baby
-towers, as I found that a mother’s heart is the
-same all over the world. My cook came to me
-one morning with his eyes red from weeping.
-I asked him the cause of his sorrow, and he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>told me that his three-months-old baby had died
-the evening before. He had no money with
-which to pay for its burial, so in the night, when
-the mother had at last fallen into a sleep, he
-softly arose and, wrapping the tiny body in a
-blanket, had laid it upon the table with twenty
-cents beside it in order that the garbage-man
-who came in the early morning might take it
-to the baby tower outside the city. I said to
-him: “But, cook, why did you not bury it
-properly? Does not your wife feel very badly?”
-He shook his head sorrowfully, and said: “Yes,
-she too muchee cry, but what can we do? We
-must buy rice for live babies.” That is the great
-secret of the stoicism of the Chinese race. They
-must buy rice for the living, and what often
-seems to us as heartlessness and cruelty is
-simply the effect of the great economic pressure
-in a land where millions are on the verge of
-starvation, and where the lack of a day’s work
-means the lack of a day’s food.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In times of great epidemics rich Chinese and
-the guilds or clubs of different forms of industry,
-such as the Bankers’ Guild, the Tea Guild, or the
-Goldsmiths’ Guild, provide coffins for the burial
-of the poor, and in times of famine these same
-guilds are most generous to their less fortunate
-brothers. Near Soochow is a tomb of a man
-who gave his entire fortune to relieving the wants
-of the people of his province during a time of
-famine. He is buried in the most picturesque
-spot in the hills, the road to which is bordered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>by a great many enormous boulders that rise
-straight up from the ground. The Chinese say
-that these stones stood up to show their
-respect for the great man when his body
-was carried to its last resting-place and that
-they are waiting his commands to lie down
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The dead are buried on the family estate; if
-there is not room for all, a spot is leased from
-a neighbour. The interment is not beneath the
-surface except in a few provinces; the coffin
-is set on the ground and the dirt is heaped over
-it. Sometimes the fields are so thickly covered
-with mounds that there is little room left for
-cultivation. Especially is this so in the country
-around Shanghai, which looks to the casual
-passer-by like one vast graveyard. Funeral
-expenses for parents are the most sacred of
-obligations, and it is not uncommon for the sons
-to part with everything they have in the world in
-order to render proper respect to the memory
-of their parents. A son is supposed to mourn
-three years for his father, during which time all
-occupation is to cease. In the case of a son
-holding an important official position, he often
-has to resign his post during the period of mourning,
-or else be called unfilial. Strict mourning
-for the mother only lasts three months, otherwise
-the same honour is paid her memory as given
-to the head of the household.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When a woman is left a widow, she often vows
-that she will not remarry, and she spends her life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>in pious acts that cause her village or her clan
-at her death to erect a memorial to her honour.
-This is generally in the form of an arch, built
-of stone and erected near her village. In the
-country districts one can see many of these concrete
-evidences of the respect which the Chinese
-have for loyal womanhood.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XVII<br /> <span class='large'>CHANGING CHINA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>China is changing so rapidly, and is becoming
-so thoroughly Westernized, especially in the ports
-where the Chinese come in contact with the
-foreigner, that she can scarcely be recognized
-by her old-time friends. We all admit that the
-change is for the better so far as the nation is
-concerned, but whether it makes for the individual
-good is another and more serious question.
-China is flooded with foreign adventurers who
-want her untouched wealth, and who have cast
-their greedy eyes upon her mines of coal and
-iron and gold. These foreigners from all classes
-and grades of society have brought dishonesty
-and corruption in business dealings to the
-merchant of China, whose word in the old time
-was as good as his bond. In those days when
-a Chinaman said, “Can putee book,” it was
-known that the contract was settled and that
-he would live up to his spoken word, whether
-it meant loss or profit to him. But when dealing
-with the foreigner the Chinese found that there
-were no old-time customs to bind the merchant
-from over the seas, except those of bond and
-written agreement. If he had any traditions of
-honour, he evidently left them in the homeland,
-as nothing less than a court of law would hold
-him to his contract if it seemed expedient for
-him to break it.</p>
-
-<div id='i_260' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_260.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>RICE-BOATS ON CANAL, CHINA.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>For years the word “China” meant to the
-adventurer of other lands a place for exploitation,
-where money was to be obtained easily by
-the man with fluent tongue and winning ways.
-Even foreign officials did not scruple to use their
-influence to enter trade. In one of the great
-inland cities there was no water nearer than a
-river several miles away. A foreign official,
-boring an artesian well upon his place and finding
-pure, clear water, conceived the idea of boring
-wells throughout the city and bringing water to
-the doors of the half-million of people who resided
-in its narrow streets. He interested the
-officials and raised a sum of money, and to doubly
-assure the Chinese that their money was safe he
-signed the contracts, not only with his name
-but affixed to them the great seal of his Government.
-After a few months’ trip to his homelands,
-and a few aimless borings in the earth
-in search of the water that never came, he relinquished
-the project, but not the money, and
-the officials could do nothing but gaze sadly into
-the great holes that had taken their silver. They
-learned that wisdom comes with experience and
-now put into practice the proverb: “When a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>man has been burned once with hot soup, he for
-ever afterwards blows upon cold rice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another case in which the Chinese officials
-were duped by clever-tongued foreigners was in
-Ningpo. Three Americans visited that city and
-talked long and loud of the dark streets, the
-continual fires caused by the flickering lamps of
-oil that were being constantly overturned by the
-many children. They showed the officials the
-benefits of electricity, that a light upon
-each corner would make it impossible for
-robbers and evildoers to carry on their work,
-which must be done in darkness. They promised
-to turn night into day, to give poor as well as
-rich the incandescent lamp at no greater cost than
-the bean-oil wick. They were most plausible,
-and raised thirty thousand dollars as contract
-money. They left, ostensibly to buy machinery;
-the years have passed; they never have returned.
-Ningpo still has streets of darkness, men still
-walk abroad with lighted lanterns, the lamp is
-seen within the cottage, and will continue to be
-quite likely until the hills shall fade, if electricity
-depends upon the officials who once dreamed
-dreams of a city lit by a light from Western lands.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This is one of the most serious handicaps of
-the missionary in trying to Christianize China.
-The dissolute white man is in every port, manifesting
-a lust, greed, and brutality which the
-Chinese, who are accustomed to associate the
-citizenship of a person with his religion, attribute
-to Christianity. It is no wonder that it is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>hard for the missionary to make converts among
-the people who have business dealings with men
-from Christian nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But there are other questions besides those of
-business integrity vitally affecting the Chinese
-youth to-day. Along with the slight knowledge
-which they have obtained of the manners and
-customs of the Western world, they have absorbed
-many of its vices. With their rose-wine and their
-samshu the Chinese boy has learned to drink
-champagne and brandy. I know the father of
-five sons who told me that he would give all
-that he possessed in the world if he had not
-brought those sons to Shanghai.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Change is now the order of the day in China,
-educationally as well as politically. We do not
-hear the children shouting their tasks at the top
-of their little voices, nor do they learn by heart
-the thirteen classics. The simple schoolroom,
-with hard benches and earthen floor, with a faint
-light striking through the unglazed windows, is
-no more. The old-time examinations at Peking
-have gone, the degrees which have been the
-nation’s pride have been abolished, the subjects
-of study in the schools have been completely
-changed. The privileges which were once given
-the scholars, the social and political offices which
-were once open to the winners of the highest
-prizes, have been thrown upon the altar of
-modernity. The faults of the old system of
-education lay in the stress it placed upon
-the memorizing of the many books whose contents
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>were not always understood by the young
-mind, and in the lack of original ideas that might
-be expressed by a student, who must give the
-usual interpretation of the classics. Now the
-introduction of free thought and private opinion
-has produced an upheaval in the minds of China’s
-young men, and they say what they think, even
-trying to show that Confucius was at heart a
-staunch Republican, and that Mencius only thinly
-veiled his sentiments of modern philosophy. It
-is generally conceded that the newer education
-leads to the greater individualism which is now
-the battle-cry of China.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese, both men and women, are reaching
-out eager hands to obtain for themselves the
-knowledge that is being brought from other
-lands. Yet this thirst for education is not a
-newly acquired virtue, for in no country is real
-learning held in higher esteem than in China.
-It is the greatest characteristic of the nation that
-in every grade of society education is considered
-above all else. As a race they have devoted
-themselves to the cultivation of literature for a
-longer period by some thousands of years than
-any existing nation. To literature, and to it alone,
-they look for the rule to guide them in their
-conduct. To them all writing is sacred, and the
-very symbols and materials used in the making
-of the written character have become objects of
-veneration. Even the smallest village is provided
-with a scrap-box, into which every bit of
-paper containing printed or written words is carefully
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>placed, to await a suitable occasion when
-it may be burned.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The mission schools have been the pioneers
-in the education of the young people of China,
-and if the teaching of Christianity has not as
-yet made many converts, the effect has been
-great in the spread of higher ideals of education,
-and much of the credit of the progress of
-the modern life of China to-day must be given
-to the mission schools, which have opened new
-pathways in the field of learning and caused
-the youth of China to demand a higher system
-of education throughout the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is said that practically all the officials in
-the new China are men who have been educated
-abroad or who have been in one of the many
-mission schools scattered throughout the country.
-They are the ones who have taken what they
-have learned of foreign lands and adapted it to
-the needs of their country; but there are others
-who have been abroad only long enough to
-acquire the veneer of Western education, and
-they are the young men who become the discontented
-ones of China.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When Chinese boys go to a foreign land they
-have many difficulties to overcome. They must
-receive their information and instruction in a
-language not their mother tongue. They have
-small chance to finish their education by practical
-work in bank or shop or factory. They get
-a mass of book knowledge and little opportunity
-to practise the theories that they learn, and they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>are not clever enough to understand that their
-textbook knowledge is nearly all foreign to their
-country and to the temperament of their race.
-When they return to their home they often find
-that they have grown out of touch with their
-people’s ways and customs. They come back
-looking for employment, for a chance to use
-their new-found knowledge; but they feel that
-they should begin at the top of the ladder instead
-of working up slowly rung by rung, as their
-fathers did before them. They feel that they
-are entitled to be masters, not realizing that
-even with this wonderful foreign education
-acquired, experience is necessary to make them
-leaders of great enterprises or of men. It is
-these boys who are the teashop orators and
-preach the Socialistic dogma for which China
-will not be prepared for many years to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Chinese boys and girls are going too far
-and too fast in their thirst for the broader knowledge
-and teaching of the Western world. It is
-like the clothes that the Chinese girl is wearing,
-trying to imitate her sisters of the Occident. She
-has discarded the soft, clinging silks, the gay
-embroideries, the jade and flowers in her black
-locks, for the straight, dark skirt, the ugly
-coats, and the untidy manner of dressing the
-hair seen with the European women of the
-coast towns. These do not become her, any
-more than the scientific degrees become the
-woman who has been for centuries a woman
-of the home. We do not condemn education
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>for the Chinese woman any more than we
-entirely condemn the change in the style of
-clothing; but they should both be adapted to
-the individual. This new education seems to
-be too general, the personality of the boy or
-girl being entirely left out. The youth are being
-made into a set of jelly-moulds, all looking alike,
-all trying to be formed upon the models brought
-them from England or America.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Three things should be taken into account—who
-the boy or girl is, where he is, and where
-he is going. The mistake should not be made
-in China that has been made in India—that is,
-the turning out of a race of barristers and clerks
-from her schools. China needs technical schools
-for her boys and common sense applied to the
-education of her girls. I have been in a school
-for the education of the daughters of the better
-class of Chinese, where the main accomplishment
-for which the girl was applauded was her
-facility in rendering a piece upon the piano.
-I should have said “executing” a piece upon
-the piano, because that is exactly what is
-done when a Chinese girl attempts to interpret
-foreign music. It is alien to her in every
-way, and generations of study will not make the
-Chinese maiden a musician in the foreign sense,
-nor will they really care for the foreign music.
-These girls who have wasted so many hours
-in the practise of the piano will go to homes
-where they cannot have a piano, or if they did
-have one they would be the only persons in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>the family who would appreciate its music. It
-would be a conglomeration of bad sounds to
-father, mother, husband. Many feel that the
-young girls would be better employed in
-learning a musical instrument understood
-and appreciated by her people and one
-that would give pleasure to her husband at
-night, and perhaps be a factor in keeping
-him from the tea-house, and the singing girls who
-have a monopoly of the musical talent of China.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another thing that causes sorrow to the
-conservative fathers and mothers is the fact that
-as soon as their children receive a smattering
-of the Western civilization they immediately
-begin to scoff at their own modes of acquiring
-knowledge and the text-books which have trained
-their people’s minds for so many years. They
-become proud of the fact that they know nothing
-of the classics, and they quote Shelley, Byron,
-Burns, and Browning instead of their own beautiful
-poets. But, what is more serious for the
-youth of this Eastern land, this worldly knowledge
-seems to have freed his intelligence
-without teaching him self-control, and it has
-taken him away from the gods of his fathers
-without replacing them with others. He, like
-his cousin of Japan, is inclined to become
-agnostic and say, “There are no gods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Whether the religion from the West is the
-religion best suited for the Oriental we cannot
-say, but whatever he receives from us must
-be adapted to fit the needs and conditions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>of his race and country. China must raise
-up leaders from her own people, both men
-and women, as her regeneration will come
-from within, not without. More and more
-the West must see that the East and the
-West may meet, but they can never mingle.
-Foreigners can never enter the inner door of
-Chinese thought or feeling. The door is never
-wholly opened, the curtain never quite drawn
-aside between the two races. They are unlike
-in almost every characteristic. The Westerner
-is much more a materialist than is the cultured
-man of China. To him the taste of the tea
-is not so important as the aroma, and the
-acquiring of wealth and honours is not so much
-to be desired as is the ability to live the leisured
-life, the life of thought and meditation, when
-he may sit apart from the noise and cares
-of the present day.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The rush and worry of the Western world seem
-to have penetrated even to the women’s courtyard,
-and there is no doubt that the new
-China will be Westernized in every department
-of her being. But we who love China
-hope that she will not change too rapidly,
-that she will take what is necessary for her
-happiness from the knowledge and the mode
-of life of the Occident, but that she will
-touch it with her own individuality, making
-it a real part of her and not simply becoming
-an imitation of the alien people by whom she
-is surrounded.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>There is a charm about old China, and there
-is more than a charm about the old-time
-secluded Chinese women, who have been protected
-and guarded from life’s worries and
-battles, until they represent all that is most
-beautiful and feminine and demand the chivalry
-of the men of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Let the West come to China with all its
-modern inventions and its politics and educational
-policies, but let us always be able to
-find within its quiet courtyards the quiet, sweet-faced
-woman of China.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CHAPTER XVIII<br /> <span class='large'>JAPANESE WOMEN AT HOME</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>I have been eight times to Japan, living in the
-big European hotels in Yokohama, Tokio, Kobe,
-and Nagasaki, stopping for days at a time in the
-native inns in the interior, or visiting at the homes
-of friends. I decided that my ninth trip to the
-little island would be different; consequently we
-planned a few months’ stay in some out-of-the-way
-place where we could keep house and live
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la Japonaise</span></i>. We had heard of the beauties of
-Hakodate, the most northern port of any size in
-Japan, and obtaining a letter to the American
-Consul, we wrote him asking if it were possible
-for him to find us a furnished Japanese house for
-the summer months. We were delighted to hear
-a few days later that he had found a place for us,
-the summer home of a rich merchant, situated
-on the mountain-side, overlooking the sea, and
-surrounded by giant cryptomerias and pines.
-Needless to say, we were soon on our way to this
-paradise.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There were only four berths in the sleeping-car
-on the Northern Express, and we engaged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>two, but were not given the opportunity of using
-them. At one of the stations a prince with his
-retinue came on the train and pre-empted the
-entire car. He used only one of the berths, as
-no one could sleep over him, nor evidently near
-him, and on all the long journey he selfishly
-occupied the room by himself, while we, in company
-with the half-dozen men composing his
-suite, had to fit ourselves into a tiny compartment
-that should have only accommodated four. The
-men removed their elaborate outer robes, curled
-themselves into comfortable positions, and
-smoked and chatted or slept until a station of
-any importance was neared, when they donned
-their gowns, threw around their necks a long,
-stiff piece of silk on which was embroidered the
-Imperial chrysanthemum, and prepared to receive
-the delegation of townspeople who were always
-at the station to present an address to his Imperial
-Highness, or to send in an elaborate meal, served
-on beautifully lacquered trays.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I had a good look at the prince on his entrance,
-and found him exactly like the representations
-of the daimios of olden times that we see on the
-fans and tea-boxes. He had the long, slim, pale
-face of the aristocrat, absolutely different from the
-round-faced Japanese who comprise the greatest
-proportion of the island’s population. He looked
-as if he might almost belong to another race.
-I was told by one of his men that he represented
-to many thousands of the people a god, as in his
-branch of the family a certain godhead had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>descended from father to son. When the train
-stopped for any length of time at a station, the
-people came in crowds and knelt, touching their
-heads to the ground, and one old lady kept
-bowing and holding up her hands, with the tears
-streaming down her face at the joy of beholding
-so great a divinity. He looked at them without
-seeing them at all, never showing by any motion
-or sign that there was anything to be seen except
-the distant hills. I do not see how it was possible
-for any human being to look so thoroughly impersonal
-at a crowd of bowing, worshipping
-people, when he knew he was the object of all
-the adoration. Yet he looked at them as if their
-faces were windows and their back hair the
-landscape.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Train travel is interesting in Japan, if one will
-travel in the ordinary day coach and watch the
-people. The Japanese are great travellers, and
-the clack-clack of their wooden clogs makes a
-deafening noise at the stations, especially on the
-bridges leading over the tracks. One sees whole
-families going for an outing or on a visit to a
-distant relative. They come on the train with
-bundles and packages—most mysterious things
-done up in large squares of cloth. They drop
-their shoes before the seat and curl their feet
-under them, and proceed thoroughly to enjoy
-themselves. The seats run lengthwise of the
-cars, and often a little woman gets tired of looking
-out of the windows or at her fellow-passengers
-opposite, and, turning her back on the car
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>and sitting practically upright, will lean her face
-against the side of the window and go to sleep.
-The manner in which they can sit upon their feet
-for hours impresses a foreigner. At the larger
-stations tea in tiny pots, with a little porcelain
-cup, is brought in by the salesmen, and “bento,”
-the lunch of cold rice, pickles, and fish of some
-description, is sold in neat boxes, the dainty lunch
-only costing ten cents, including a pair of new
-wooden chopsticks. The Japanese masses, like
-their prototypes everywhere, enjoy eating in
-public, and the car is filled with the divers and
-sundry odours of fruit, sweets, tea, and food.
-They are not noisy, and always most polite, and
-because of the dainty clothes of the women and
-children, and the variety of their colouring, a
-few hours can be spent quite well in studying
-travelling Japanese close at hand. At one station
-a party of pilgrims came on, dressed in white.
-They belonged to some club in a far northern
-village whose members paid a small assessment
-each week, and each year lots were chosen to
-judge who should benefit by the annual pilgrimage
-to some famous shrine or to Mount Fuji. The
-lucky winners in the lottery joined other pilgrims,
-donned the pilgrim’s dress, and under the direction
-of a guide made the one great visit of their
-lives, the wonders of which they would be able
-to tell their amazed neighbours when they
-returned. These would listen with interest, as
-it might be their good fortune to draw the lucky
-number the coming year.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>At the end of our long train ride, Amorri, we
-went on the small boat bound for Hakodate,
-where we were met by the Consul, a jolly, big,
-whole-hearted man, who took us, metaphorically
-speaking, at once to his bosom and became as a
-long-lost brother. His wife, much to our surprise,
-was a tiny little Japanese woman, no bigger
-than a good-sized doll, and as pretty as a picture.
-They looked so incongruous together that one
-was inclined to smile. He weighed at least
-250 lb., was over six feet tall; and I should
-think that when dressed in all her finery, Mrs.
-Consul might have weighed 85 lb. She was a
-well-educated, well-informed little woman, who
-needed all her charm and tact to keep her unruly
-family in order. It was a big one, the last, a
-boy, being the pride of the father’s heart, and
-as nearly spoiled as the clever mother would
-allow him to be by his worshipping father.
-When I knew them better it was a joy to me to
-see how she managed these children. The father,
-who had been at one time captain of a sailing
-vessel, always spoke to them as if they were at
-the top of a mast on a wintry night with a
-cyclone blowing. Tommy, the irrepressible,
-would get up on the window seat, and his father
-would hail him in a voice that could be heard
-by the boats coming from Kamschatka:
-“Tommy, get out of that window seat; you’ll
-break your neck.” Tommy would not move;
-again his father’s stentorian tone would offend the
-evening air. The quiet little mother would turn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>and give a nod of her pretty head to Tommy,
-and Tommy would immediately climb down from
-his perch and proceed to behave himself as young
-boys should.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Consulate was partly foreign and partly
-Japanese, and the children while at home in the
-morning dressed in kimona and wooden clogs,
-but in the afternoon they were gay in “home”
-dresses and resplendent in hair ribbons, only
-showing by the little turn of the eyes that they
-were members of their mother’s race.</p>
-
-<div id='i_276' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_276.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>JAPANESE CHILDREN PLAYING.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>Soon after our arrival we went to see the place
-that was to be our home for the next few months.
-We did not see the house until we came to the
-great gateway with its pointed roof leading into
-a path shaded by giant cryptomerias, completely
-guarding the house from view of the passer-by.
-This hillside garden contained about five acres
-of land, in which were winding pathways, giant
-pine-trees, terraces of flowers, and here and there
-a tori, a huge bronze stork, a grim stone lantern,
-or a calmly reposing Buddha to show us we were
-in the land of Nippon. We looked out over
-the northern ocean, dotted here and there with
-the sails of fishing-boats, or saw the smoke of
-a steamer coming from Kamschatka, Saghlain,
-or some of those mysterious northern ports, the
-names of which were only places on a map.
-After listening for awhile to the murmur of the
-surf, we visited the interior of the house, which
-contained five rooms. The furniture consisted
-of the matting on the floor, the sliding “shojis,”
-the fire-boxes, the cooking utensils, and dishes
-for the serving of the meals. It was necessary
-for us to buy our “futons”—that is, our bedding;
-but otherwise the home was completely furnished
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la Japonaise</span></i>. The servant problem was easily
-solved, as the daughter of the gardener wished
-to be our maid, the gardener would run our
-errands, and his wife would be the general superintendent
-of the place. I expected to do the
-cooking, as the time would be too short in Hakodate
-to train a man in matters culinary. We
-were soon installed, and then passed pleasant
-days in <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">dolce far niente</span></i>, spending our mornings
-in trips to the seashore, watching the fishermen
-come in with their boatloads of squids. Their
-arrival was the signal for all the women and
-children of the village to flock to the shore and
-unload the boats, then, after cleaning and pressing
-these ugly fish, hang them upon lines to dry,
-making the whole ocean front as far as the eye
-could see a miniature wash-Monday. We were
-not allowed to climb the mountain-sides except
-to a certain distance, as the hills were heavily
-fortified, and at sudden turns we were met by
-great signs which stated plainly in English,
-French, German, Japanese, and Russian that
-further explorations were forbidden. We never
-tried to disobey the laws in Japan, as these little
-people are vigorous in their punishment of offenders,
-to whatever race they may belong, and I
-feel that they have been justified in upholding the
-manhood of their people. In India and in China
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>you see the white man treat the native with barbarous
-cruelty. While travelling once in India
-our servant was making up the bed in the compartment
-we had engaged on the train. A white
-man entered, and without one word of explanation,
-grabbed our man and beat and kicked him
-and nearly threw him out of the car. In reply to
-our indignant demands as to the cause of his
-ill-treatment of our servant, he said that he
-thought the man had made a mistake in the
-berth and was taking one for which he had paid.
-I said afterward to Ali, “Why did you not strike
-him when he treated you so brutally?” Ali
-replied: “Oh, mem-sahib, he was a white man.
-If I had touched him I would have lain many
-long days in prison.” In China also, on one hot
-day in August I saw a rickshaw coolie, naked to
-the waist, with the perspiration running down his
-face in streams, running swiftly with a heavy
-man inside his two-wheeled carriage. In passing
-by a crowded corner, he brushed against
-a white man, who was having his afternoon stroll.
-The white man angrily turned, and, grabbing the
-coolie by his hair, beat him across his bare back
-with his cane until he stopped from sheer exhaustion.
-The panting, perspiring coolie was
-helpless as he could not drop the shafts, and so
-was compelled to take the punishment. His
-patron in the carriage, a richly-dressed Chinese,
-dared not interfere because he also was a native
-and understood there was no court of justice
-when it was a question of a white man’s word
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>against that of the yellow man. They have a
-saying in China, that when a Chinese walks along
-the sidewalk of his own city of Shanghai, he is
-pushed into the middle of the road by the American,
-who only laughs at him, by the Englishman,
-who swears at him, and by the German, who
-kicks him, but—he is pushed into the middle of
-the road. This could not happen in Japan, as
-the Japanese courts punish severely any one who
-dares to lay his hand in violence upon a Japanese,
-however lowly may be his station or however
-strong may be the provocation. While we were
-in Yokohama, an officer of an American ship had
-his hand severely hurt through the carelessness of
-a Japanese longshoreman. In his pain and first
-flush of anger he knocked the Japanese down,
-and for his impatience was compelled to remain
-six months in jail. His captain and his Consul
-tried their best to help him, but it was in vain,
-and he saw his ship sail away without him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I came very near sharing his fate while in
-Hakodate. The fisherman came to our doors each
-morning with his enormous baskets of fish swung
-over his shoulders. The maid, her mother, and
-myself, spent many interesting moments in turning
-over the scaly contents of his baskets in
-order to make our choice amongst the varied
-assortment he had for sale. I paid him by the
-week, and one morning was called to the kitchen
-by an indignant maid, who said the fisherman had
-greatly overcharged me. The amount was far
-too small, it seemed to me, to cause such keen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>excitement, and I intended to dismiss the man,
-saying I would pay him, but employ him no
-more. I went over to a bucket of water, and
-taking up the long-handled dipper to take a
-drink, and not noticing that it was broken, I
-gave it a little shake toward the fisherman, and
-said, “Oh, go away, and don’t make so much
-noise.” The cup part of the dipper flew off and
-hit the indignant fisherman in the eye, whereupon
-he immediately shouldered his baskets and
-started for the magistrate. Needless to say, I
-was frightened, and I immediately donned my
-bonnet and started for the Consulate. The Consul
-heard my story and sadly shook his head:
-“If you really hit that coolie and he has you
-arrested, I can do nothing. It will only make
-matters worse to have me to interfere, so the
-best thing for you to do is to go with me and
-find that fisherman; offer him half of your estate,
-but don’t get mixed up with the law in Japan.”
-For two hours we haunted side-streets, where
-at last we found our man, and, after a small
-money payment and a promise to take fish from
-him for the rest of the season, and practically
-binding myself to listen to his insolence as long
-as I was in Hakodate, he grudgingly assented to
-withdraw his charge.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These itinerant dealers make housekeeping in
-Japan easy. Men clad in blue cotton coats with
-great straw hats on their heads and baskets piled
-high with vegetables, come to the door each
-morning; one passing along the streets both
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>night and day can hear the cries of the
-travelling vendors, selling all that the average
-householder may require.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Hakodate is filled with crows—monstrous,
-black, impertinent thieves, who will come boldly
-into the kitchen and take the fish from out the
-frying-pan. Mornings I would take a pan of
-corn, and in the rear of the house upon the hillside,
-and hitting upon the pan’s side with a spoon,
-would soon be surrounded by hundreds of these
-beady-eyed birds, that are almost considered
-sacred in this province. They were so tame that
-they would fight at my feet for the kernels, and
-I would be compelled to push them from my lap
-and then, much to the maid’s disgust, the greedy
-birds would follow me into the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We used to play a game, the crows and I. I
-would pound on the pan until I had summoned
-fifty or sixty, then I would start the song,
-“Onward, Christian Soldiers,” and rapping on the
-pan for accompaniment, would march solemnly
-at the head of my serious, expectant army, up
-hill and down dale, through the house, out again,
-down the small paths, until even the maid who
-considered the crows her enemies, would be compelled
-to laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Soon I found that if I was to live as
-the Japanese, I certainly should dress in the
-clothes of the country, as European clothes and
-shoes are not comfortable in Japanese houses.
-All my friends were Japanese, and I found I
-must conform to their customs so far as was possible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>if I would be happy and not an object of
-curiosity. Consequently I went with the wife
-of our Consul and passed two delightful hours
-in choosing kimonas, which, if I had been allowed
-to exercise my taste, would have been far too
-gay for one of my years. I always associated
-kimonas with pinks and blues and riotous
-colours, but I found that, being a married
-woman, I must confine my choice of colours
-to greys and browns and soft-toned mauves.
-I could indulge my love for ornamentation in
-the obis, as these may be of stiff brocades in rose
-and gold, or purple and gold, or, in fact, any
-colour one may wish. I found also that the
-Japanese dress itself may not be expensive, but
-the price of the obis is ruinous to a small pocketbook.
-It is in these last articles of adornment
-that the Japanese lady spends her husband’s
-money. She buys obis and puts them away in
-her treasure-chest, only bringing them to the
-light of day on occasions of festivity. The tying
-of the obi is by no means a simple process, and
-I could never learn its intricacies. The end must
-be of a certain length, the big bow must be just
-so correctly arranged or else it shows that one is
-not <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la mode</span></i>. My friends were always lengthening
-an end or tying a little tighter the roll that
-gave the obi the correct tilt at the back. I found
-it necessary to practise privately for several days
-walking in the clogs before I dared try them in
-public. The Japanese have three kinds of clogs—high
-ones raised by two pieces of wood three or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>four inches from the ground and with a piece
-of leather as a mud-guard for use in wet weather;
-another pair of dress clogs were necessary, with
-the plain wooden sole covered with fine matting;
-and still another pair of sandals, which were for
-use around the garden or in places that did not
-necessitate rough walking. The two pieces of
-cord that pass between the great and the first
-toe, and by which the clog is held on the foot,
-compelled me to wear the Japanese sock, which
-is made of white cotton, like a mitten, the great
-toe being separated from the rest of the foot.
-These socks are short, only coming to the ankle,
-and are fastened by two or three metal clasps.
-The shoes are never worn in the house, always
-being left at the doorways, the thick cotton sole
-of the stocking protecting the foot. It would be
-as insulting to walk on the clean matting of a
-Japanese house as it would be to walk on the
-snowy damask of your hostess’s dining-table.
-After a few falls and many awkward movements
-I found the Japanese foot covering most comfortable,
-the foot being absolutely free; but I soon
-learned that my American stride did not conform
-to the close-fitting dress of the kimona, as with
-it the feet should not be set apart and one should
-slightly “toe in” in order that the folds of the
-kimona do not fly open. In one way Japanese
-dress is not expensive, as the Japanese lady,
-whatever her rank or wealth, does not wear
-jewellery—no necklaces, nor bracelets, nor ear-rings,
-nor brooches; even rings are an innovation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>brought in with foreigners. Her only
-jewels are the clasp of her obi fastener, generally
-a piece of chased gold, and a couple of ornamental
-hairpins or a comb for the hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I did not attempt the hair-dressing, as that is
-a most complicated affair, and must be left to
-the attentions of a hair-dresser, who comes to the
-homes once or twice a week and makes the
-elaborate coiffures that add so much to the beauty
-of a Japanese face. Each age has its coiffure,
-and a woman never tries to disguise her age in
-Japan, because by her dress and style of hair-dressing
-she frankly confesses the stage she has
-reached in life. There is the baby with her
-shaven head, then the little queue tied on the
-crown; afterward the hair is cut square across the
-neck, like the little dolls we see in the London
-shops; then when she is ten years old the hair
-is divided and made into a bow knot tied with a
-piece of ornamental paper. As she arrives at
-young ladyhood there is the elaborate “shimada,”
-which in the case of the young woman is very
-large, and, if Nature has not been generous,
-helped out with tresses bought in the shops. The
-married woman has a special coiffure which
-grows smaller with age, until, when she is a
-matron of forty, the age when the woman of the
-Orient considers herself an old woman, it is quite
-small. If the woman is so unfortunate as to
-lose her husband, she cuts her hair, and thus
-shows all the world that she is a widow. The
-Japanese mature early, and old age comes to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>them sooner than it does to people from the West.
-A Japanese proverb says that man lives but fifty
-years, and rarely does his span exceed seventy
-years. In former days old age began at fifty,
-and a man then considered himself unfit for business
-and made over his name and property to
-his son, passing the rest of his life in ease without
-the cares of business. Old age is not a burden
-to the Japanese woman, but is a paradise to be
-looked for longingly. Then she, who has perhaps
-been subservient to the mother of her
-husband all her married life, knows that she will
-be the head of her household, with her sons and
-daughters ready to obey her, and, because of her
-age and motherhood, respected and holding a
-position in life denied her as a young woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Many of these quiet, soft-voiced mothers of
-Japan were brought to call upon me by Mrs.
-Consul. They taught me how to serve the tea,
-the proper way of bowing, and even tried to
-make of me a good follower of the Law by taking
-me with them to the temples and visiting shrines
-and holy places. One kindly woman brought
-me a tablet for my “august-spirit-dwelling,”
-which she placed in a tiny model of a Shinto
-temple and put above the inner doorway of the
-hall, where I was supposed to burn before it
-each morning candles and incense, and keep the
-little cups for rice and water filled. I was well
-provided with gods, as another friend gave me a
-Buddha for my household shrine, and all the paraphernalia
-of service with which to worship him.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>Below us on the hillside was the swagger tea-house
-of the town, and the tinkle of the samisens
-and the singing of the pretty girls came to us
-faintly until late into the night. This pretty
-music, mingled with the sound of the surf upon
-the shore, was always the last sound we heard at
-night after the maid had placed the night-light,
-the tobacco-box, and the brazier for the tea at
-our head, and then had knelt and said “Goodnight.”
-In the morning we were wakened by
-a softly murmured “O Hayo,” and a tray of
-tea was respectfully slid across the matting to
-give us strength to begin the morning’s work.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>While in Hakodate I made the acquaintance of
-many Japanese ladies and learned their customs
-and the manner of their life, which is controlled
-by thoughts and ideals entirely different from
-those entertained by women of the Western
-world. I think I much prefer the woman of
-the old school, with her charming manners, her
-elaborate bows, and her antiquated superstitions
-and beliefs, to her daughter, who, like her sister
-of China, India, and Egypt, is trying too hard to
-wear clothes not made for her, and to adapt
-customs and usages for which she is not formed
-temperamentally or physically. The customs of
-the modern world will come to the woman of
-Japan, but they must be adapted to her conditions
-and not be taken <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en masse</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>One of the most beautiful characteristics of
-the Japanese is their reverence for old age and
-their intense love for children. Japan has justly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>been called the baby’s paradise, and certainly
-in no country does the home life so thoroughly
-revolve around the children as it does in Japan.
-Like all Eastern women, the desire for children
-is the most ardent wish of the Japanese woman’s
-heart. The childless wife will move heaven and
-earth in her desire to gain the blessing of motherhood.
-She will visit watering-places, offer
-prayers at temples, make long, irksome pilgrimages,
-wear amulets, drink strange decoctions, and
-allow herself to be imposed upon and robbed by
-every charlatan who claims a knowledge that
-will help her gain the craving of her heart—a
-child. It will, therefore, be imagined with what
-eagerness the arrival of a little stranger is
-awaited in the home, and the happiest day in the
-girl-wife’s life is the day on which they tell her
-she is the mother of a son.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As soon as the event takes place, a special
-messenger is dispatched to notify friends and relatives
-while letters of announcement are sent to
-those who are not so closely related in friendship
-to the family. All thus notified must then make a
-visit to the new baby and either send or bring with
-them a present. Toys or clothing, always accompanied
-by eggs or a fish to bring good luck, come
-in great profusion, and when baby is about
-thirty days old, return presents must be made to
-all who remembered him at time of birth. When
-baby is seven days old he receives his name, and
-when he is thirty-one—or if a girl, when she is
-thirty-three—days old, the first important occasion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>of his life must be observed. He is dressed in
-his best and gayest garments, and, accompanied
-by members of his family, is taken to a temple
-and placed under the protection of one of the
-Shinto deities, who is supposed to become the
-guardian of the child through life. This is a
-day for present-giving also, and one especial gift
-must come to the child, a papier mâché dog,
-which is always placed at the head of the child’s
-bed at night as a charm against evil influences.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The infant should not walk until it is a year
-old; but if it is so precocious that it commences
-to toddle before that time, a small bag of rice is
-laid upon its back, and it is made to stumble
-and fall. To walk before its first birthday is
-a sign that it will die young or else become a
-resident of a distant land. There are many superstitions
-connected with the early life of a baby.
-If he sucks his fingers before he does his thumb,
-he will be a help to his parents in their old age.
-If he crawls out of his covers at night, he will
-rise in the world, but if he snuggles down in the
-bed and is inclined to crawl towards the foot,
-it augurs that a downward course is his fate in
-life. If many of the children of a family have
-died in infancy, the nervous mother will make
-for this last gift of the gods a dress composed of
-thirty-three pieces of cloth collected from thirty-three
-different families, or she will shave his head
-until he is seven years old, or give him a girl’s
-name instead of a boy’s, thus deceiving the gods
-who covet her treasure. If baby has prickly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>heat, the first egg plant of the season is hung
-over the door; while suspending the empty rice-pot,
-still hot, over the baby’s head for a few
-moments will make him immune from that affliction
-of childhood, the measles. It passes its
-days tied to the back of little brother or sister or
-nurse until it can walk, then when it is two years
-old the fifteenth of November is a great day for
-all the babies. They are taken to the temple
-and the blessing of the gods is invoked, and the
-priests purify their bodies by waving over them
-a sacred wand. This is the occasion for showing
-new clothes and calling upon all friends, who
-make presents to the child.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>At three or four years children are sent to a
-kindergarten, and at six years they enter the
-Primary Schools, where there is a six-years’ compulsory
-course for both boys and girls. Then
-it only rests with the parents whether the child
-receives a higher education, as there are in all
-towns and villages a Middle School for boys and
-a High School for girls. The average girl stops
-her education with the Primary School, or at most
-with the High School, but there is a University
-in Tokio where the girl may complete her education
-and fit herself for a vocation. But if she
-has been six years at Primary School and four
-years at High School, she is sixteen years old,
-and of a marriageable age, although the average
-girl does not marry until she is eighteen or nineteen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There are a great many accomplishments
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>which it is necessary for a Japanese girl of good
-family to know. The knowledge of needlework
-is so general that it really is not considered an
-accomplishment. But the art of letter-writing
-must be known by all accomplished young ladies,
-and the tea ceremony, which is the strictest
-and most complicated of all the ceremonies
-which surround the cultured Japanese, must be
-thoroughly learned by the daughter of the house.
-Each movement is regulated by custom, and a
-mistake in turn of hand or position of the body
-or the omission of any of the minute details in
-regard to the bows and salutations in offering,
-receiving, and returning the cups would show a
-lack of proper training. The young girl is taught
-the arrangement of flowers, which is an art by
-itself in Japan. In the sitting-room of a
-Japanese home there is a single vase of flowers
-sitting in the tiny alcove, and they would lose
-half of their attraction if they were not in some
-manner symbolical in tone and colour with the
-picture upon the kakemono which hangs above
-them. The young girl is often taught to play
-upon the koto, a kind of zither, although the
-national musical instrument is the samisen, which
-is played everywhere—at home, in story-tellers’
-halls and theatres, and at every tea-house party.
-Girls start to learn this instrument at a very early
-age, because it is necessary to learn it while the
-fingers are still pliant. It takes time to learn
-these instruments, as there are no scores and the
-tunes must be committed to memory. Women
-teachers come to the home to teach the girls in
-all these arts, and often the samisen teacher has
-been a famous geisha, whose support now is
-teaching the music that once made her welcome
-at the dinner-parties of gay Japan.</p>
-
-<div id='i_290' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_290.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>AN OUTDOOR KITCHEN IN JAPAN.<br /><br /><span class='right'>To face p. <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>After mastering the accomplishments, her
-business in life is now to marry, and few Japanese
-maidens think seriously of any other lot in life
-than that of marrying and becoming the mothers
-of future Japanese. Japan is more progressive
-than any other Oriental country, if we except
-Burmah, in that it allows the girl to exercise a
-certain amount of choice in the selection of a
-husband. There are never cases of love matches,
-but if she positively objects to a man who is
-proposed to her, she is seldom forced to marry
-him. It would be thought most immodest if
-she refused to marry a man until she loved him,
-as love is supposed to come with marriage and
-the advent of the children. Only simple toleration
-is expected before the marriage. The offices
-of a go-between are asked to assist in the search
-for a husband or wife, unless the match is made
-by friends of the interested parties. When the
-future husband has been selected, the go-between,
-who must always be a married man, as
-his wife takes an important part in the transactions,
-brings about a meeting of the young couple
-as if by accident. They may be strolling in a
-garden looking at the hanging wistaria, or meet at
-a theatre, where the families are introduced, and
-the two most concerned have a chance to take
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>a good look at each other, and the next day, when
-the anxious match-maker comes to the house to
-learn whether his choice has met with favour,
-they will give their consent, or the match will be
-broken off, and the go-between will start again
-the hunt for an eligible alliance. If everything
-is satisfactory, a lucky day is appointed for the
-formal proposal, presents are exchanged, and
-then all look forward to the wedding. A couple
-of days before the wedding the bride’s trousseau
-and household goods are sent to her new home,
-and its elaborateness is only limited by the
-father’s wealth. Yet there are some things considered
-indispensable in the outfit of a bride,
-such as a bureau, a writing-table, a work-box,
-two of the little trays on which meals are served,
-together with the full dining outfit, and two or
-more complete sets of bed furnishings. If she
-is of a rich family, quite likely the clothing she
-will bring with her will last her entire life, as
-styles do not change so radically as to make
-gowns go so completely out of fashion that
-they cannot be worn. A wedding is a most expensive
-proceeding for the father of the bride,
-as each member of the groom’s family—father,
-mother, brothers, sisters, aunts, and cousins,
-even the servants—must all receive a present to
-mark the joyous occasion. The wedding itself
-is in the presence of only a few witnesses, and
-consists in a few formal acts, the most important
-of which is the drinking “three times three”
-cups of saki together. To make the marriage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>conform to the laws of Japan, the bride’s name is
-removed from her family register and transferred
-to that of her husband’s family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>After the ceremony there are entertainments
-in the new home and at the home of the bride’s
-parents, and then the couple settle down into
-the married state for two or three months, when
-the ultra-smart give a series of entertainments
-to the friends who had no formal announcement
-of the marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The young wife does not have the happiness
-of setting up an establishment of her own, but
-she must go to the home of her husband’s father.
-The mother-in-law question is a very serious one
-in Japan, because she is absolutely the head of
-the household, and the young wife has to
-submit in all things to her mother-in-law’s will.
-This is especially serious for the modern Japanese
-girl, who perhaps has been educated in the
-Government school, if she is compelled to go
-to the home of a conservative old-time woman.
-Naturally, the mother cannot understand why the
-ideas with which she herself was brought up
-should not be good enough for the other, and
-finds fault with, what are in her eyes, outlandish
-ways introduced by the new regime. These conservative
-women are always loud in praise of
-the old state of things, and believe that the
-world is going to ruin, socially, morally, and
-physically, because of the innovations brought
-into their homes by their progressive sons
-and daughters.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>In addition to the parents of her husband,
-the wife has to win the affection of his brothers,
-sisters-in-law, and sisters, and her life is often
-made intolerable by the envies, jealousies, and
-petty faultfindings of the many women beneath
-the new roof-tree. The patriarchal life prevails
-in Japan as in all Eastern countries, and the
-successful man finds he must support a crowd
-of less successful relatives, whose claims are not
-admitted by law, but whose appeals on the score
-of kinship cannot be ignored, as custom allows
-those related by blood or marriage to look for
-help to the least unfortunate among them. The
-new civil code forces the support of parents,
-brothers, sisters, and other near relatives upon
-the head of the household, in addition to that
-of his wife and children. Thus a man is handicapped
-in life and has to spend the money he
-might otherwise use in educating his children
-in the support of uncles, aunts, and cousins, and
-perhaps a host of his wife’s relations. From
-the social point of view this is undoubtedly an
-excellent system, as it relieves the nation of the
-support of its poor, but it bears heavily upon
-the individual, and many a young man’s ambition
-has been shattered and his road to success
-blocked by the sordid cares and petty troubles
-caused by the necessity of maintaining a large
-household.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The great authority on the conduct of women
-who marry was written by a Japanese scholar,
-based on the teaching of the Chinese sages. In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>it the wife is told she must give unconditional
-obedience to her husband, who is in every respect
-her superior and the absolute lord and master
-of her body and soul; whatever he does is right
-and she may not even murmur. She occupies
-a position in her husband’s household practically
-of an upper servant. She must not frequent
-public resorts, nor go sight-seeing with the wealth
-her husband may obtain, and until she is forty
-years old is not to be seen in company, but
-to remain at home attending to her household and
-her children. This sounds very well, but women
-are women the world over; and although
-Japanese wives are gentle, docile, and obedient,
-yet they have a virility and strength of character
-that compel the respect of their husbands, and
-in their own domain their word is law.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the olden time each Japanese girl was supposed
-to know the precepts contained in a book
-called “Greater Learning for Women,” written
-by a famous scholar several hundred years ago.
-For nearly two hundred years it was one of the
-indispensable articles that a bride took with her
-to her new home, but the present modern
-Japanese maiden knows very little of the
-“Greater Learning.” I am afraid, indeed, that
-she is more thoroughly conversant with a
-parody of these famous precepts, which has
-been written by a young man of modern Japan.
-This is so radical that it is forbidden in the
-libraries of the mission schools in the fear
-that the Japanese girl will imbibe too early
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>the tendencies fatal to the happiness of
-the Eastern woman, as she takes her first step
-from her secluded doorway into the path that
-leads to the higher learning of the Western
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Japanese women are womanly, kindly, gentle,
-and pretty, and perhaps they owe this gentleness
-and courtesy to the precepts taught by their
-old sages.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>According to Shingoro Takaishi, in his
-“Wisdom and Women of Japan,” the famous
-moralist left the following instructions to help
-women in their perilous journey through life—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Seeing that it is a girl’s destiny, on reaching
-womanhood, to go to a new home, and live in
-submission to her father-in-law, it is even more
-incumbent upon her than it is on a boy to receive
-with all reverence her parents’ instructions.
-Should her parents, through their tenderness,
-allow her to grow up self-willed, she will infallibly
-show herself capricious in her husband’s
-house, and thus alienate his affection; while, if
-her father-in-law be a man of correct principles,
-the girl will find the yoke of these principles
-intolerable. She will hate and decry her father-in-law,
-and the end of these domestic dissensions
-will be her dismissal from her husband’s
-house and the covering of herself with ignominy.
-Her parents, forgetting the faulty education they
-gave her, may, indeed, lay all the blame on
-the father-in-law. But they will be in error;
-for the whole disaster should rightly be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>attributed to the faulty education the girl
-received from her parents.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“More precious in a woman is a virtuous heart
-than a face of beauty. The vicious woman’s
-heart is ever excited; she glares wildly around
-her, she vents her anger on others, her words
-are harsh and her accent vulgar. When she
-speaks it is to set herself above others, to
-upbraid others, to envy others, to be puffed up
-with individual pride, to jeer at others, to outdo
-others—all things at variance with the way in
-which a woman should walk. The only qualities
-that befit a woman are gentle obedience,
-chastity, mercy, and quietness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“A woman has no particular lord. She must
-look to her husband as her lord, and must serve
-him with all worship and reverence, not despising
-or thinking lightly of him. The great lifelong
-duty of a woman is obedience.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“A woman shall be divorced for disobedience
-to her father-in-law or mother-in-law. A woman
-shall be divorced if she fail to bear children,
-the reason for this rule being that women are
-sought in marriage for the purpose of giving
-men posterity. A barren woman should, however,
-be retained if her heart be virtuous and
-her conduct correct and free from jealousy, in
-which case a child of the same blood must be
-adopted; neither is there any just cause for a
-man to divorce a barren wife if he have children
-by a concubine. Lewdness is a reason for
-divorce. Jealousy is a reason for divorce.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>Leprosy or any like foul disease is a reason for
-divorce. A woman shall be divorced who, by
-talking overmuch and prattling disrespectfully,
-disturbs the harmony of kinsmen and brings
-trouble on her household. A woman shall be
-divorced who is addicted to stealing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“All the ‘Seven Reasons for Divorce’ were
-taught by the sage. A woman once married
-and then divorced has wandered from the
-‘way,’ and is covered with great shame, even
-if she should enter into a second union with a
-man of wealth and position.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It is the chief duty of a girl living in the
-parental house to practise filial piety towards
-her father and mother. But after marriage her
-duty is to honour her father-in-law and
-mother-in-law, to honour them beyond her
-father and mother, to love and reverence them
-with all ardour, and to tend them with practise
-of every filial piety. While thou honourest thine
-own parents, think not lightly of thy father-in-law.
-Never should a woman fail, night and
-morning, to pay her respects to her father-in-law
-and mother-in-law. Never should she be
-remiss in performing any tasks they may require
-of her. With all reverence must she
-carry out, and never rebel against, her father-in-law’s
-commands. On every point must she
-inquire of her father-in-law and mother-in-law,
-and abandon herself to their direction. Even
-if thy father-in-law and mother-in-law be pleased
-to hate and vilify thee, be not angry with them,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>and murmur not. If thou carry piety towards
-them to its utmost limits, and minister to them
-in all sincerity, it cannot be but that they will
-end by becoming friendly to thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There is a sword of Damocles always hanging
-over the head of the Japanese woman—that
-is, the fear of divorce. Among the higher
-classes the dread of scandal and gossip serves
-as a restraint upon the too free use of the
-power of divorce, but even now one meets many
-respectable and respected persons who, some
-time in their life, have gone through such an
-experience. Obtaining a divorce is not such a
-complicated affair as it is in America. It
-is enough that the parties agree to separate and
-make a declaration, witnessed by two reputable
-witnesses, at a local magistrate’s office, and the
-divorce takes place by mutual consent. As in
-the case of marriage the consent of the parents
-or guardians of a girl under twenty-five years
-of age and a man who is under thirty must be
-obtained, so this consent of parents or guardians
-is necessary before a divorce may be granted.
-Then the domicile of the wife is retransferred in
-the books of the registrar from the domicile of
-the family in which she was married to that
-of her original family. If one of the parties
-concerned refuse to give their consent to the
-divorce an application is made to the courts.
-There are several grounds upon which judicial
-divorce is granted—first, for bigamy; secondly,
-the wife may be divorced for adultery, but not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>the husband, unless the crime has been committed
-with a married woman, when the unfaithful
-wife and her lover are liable to penal
-servitude for a term not exceeding two years,
-if the charge is brought by the outraged
-husband. The man cannot be punished alone;
-the woman must share his fate. As in many
-European countries, marriage is forbidden
-between the respondent and the co-respondent
-in a divorce case.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another, and one of the chief causes for
-divorce in Japan, are the complications that
-naturally arise from the many people living in
-one house. Either party may seek divorce if
-ill-treated or insulted by the parents or grandparents
-of the other, and mothers-in-law, with
-their hard tongues and bitter words, are the
-frequent causes of separation of husband and
-wife. One provision of the law which serves
-to make most mothers endure any evil of their
-married life rather than sue for divorce is the
-fact that the children belong to the father, and
-the mother returns childless to her father’s house.
-In this country, where the woman is economically
-dependent upon her menfolk, even if she were
-allowed to take the children, quite likely they
-would not be made welcome in a home where
-there are always too many mouths to feed;
-therefore the Japanese mother puts up with many
-brutalities and heartaches in order to keep with
-her the only bright things she has in life, her
-children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>The Japanese wife leads a very busy life. In
-all but the very wealthiest and most aristocratic
-families the wife and daughters do a large part
-of the housework. In a house with no furniture,
-no carpets, no pictures, no stoves or
-furnaces, no windows to wash, no latest styles to
-be imitated in the making of clothing, there is
-not so much work in the care of a house as
-there is in the Western world, where the rooms
-are filled with a multitude of unnecessary articles
-that seem only made to give toil to women.
-But because of the lack of conveniences it takes
-time to properly care for the rooms in a Japanese
-house. Every morning there are the beds to be
-rolled up and placed in the closets, the mosquito-nets
-to be taken down, the rooms to be swept,
-dusted, and aired; and the veranda floor is
-polished several times a day as if it were a
-precious piece of silver. The cooking and washing
-of the dishes take a great deal of time, as
-the former is done over a tiny charcoal stove
-and the dishes are washed in cold water. There
-is not a moment of time that the wife is idle,
-as there is always the family sewing to be superintended,
-the mats and cushions to be recovered,
-the wadding to be renewed in the bed
-coverings and the winter kimonas. Many of
-the Japanese dresses must be taken to pieces
-whenever they are washed, and the wet breadths
-smoothed upon a board and placed in the sun
-to dry. The careful housewife makes over the
-older daughters’ dresses for the younger
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>daughters, and these clothes are washed,
-turned, dyed, and made over and over again
-so long as there is a shred of the original material
-left to work upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Japanese believe that a woman passes
-through three critical stages in her journey
-through life. If she passes her nineteenth, her
-thirty-third, and her thirty-seventh years safely,
-she has a chance of living to a good old age
-and seeing her children and her grandchildren
-grow up around her. Her most critical year
-is her thirty-third, and not only this year
-itself, but the years immediately preceding
-and following are considered inauspicious.
-Consequently there are three years during
-which period women will refrain as much
-as possible from acts which may appear like
-tempting Providence. When a woman attains
-her sixtieth birthday it is an occasion for great
-festivities, when she invites all her friends to
-a dinner to celebrate this wonderful event. If
-a man or woman should have occasion to celebrate
-their seventieth birthday, they distribute
-among their friends and relatives large red and
-white cakes with the character signifying
-“longevity” written upon them, and with each
-increasing year the old man or woman gain in
-the respect of their community.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When the last illness comes to father and
-mother it would be considered most unfilial for
-any of the children not to be present at the
-parent’s death-bed. When all is over the son
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>or the wife wets his lips with water, and so
-universal is this custom that the expression “to
-wet the dying lips with water” has come to
-signify the tending of a patient in his last
-illness. One of the reasons why the Japanese
-believe that the wife should be younger than
-the husband is that she may be able to fulfil
-this last office for her loved one.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It is known that death is in the room by the
-placing upside down of a screen before the bed,
-and the quilt covering the body is reversed, the
-foot covering the dead man’s breast. A white
-cloth is laid over the face, as its exposure would
-be an obstacle to the soul’s journey on its road
-to the other world. Everything done for the
-dead is the reverse of that done for the living;
-for example, in the tub for the last bath cold
-water is poured first, then hot water added until
-it is of the right temperature. The head is
-shaved by touching it with the razor in small
-patches instead of running it continuously as in
-life. The burial garment is made by two women
-relatives, sewing with the same piece of thread
-in opposite directions, and the kimona is folded
-from right to left instead of from left to right
-as a man would wear it ordinarily. Mittens,
-leggings, and sandals are worn, the sandals being
-tied on the foot with the heel in the place of
-the toe, to signify that the dead must not return,
-drawn back by the love of the world. Around
-the neck is suspended a bag of Buddhist charms,
-and a small coin, or picture of a coin, with which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>to pay the ferryman. If the wife dies, the
-husband does not publicly mourn for her,
-although her children do; but if the husband
-dies the wife should mourn the rest of her life,
-and she often cuts off her long hair and places
-it in the coffin of her husband, showing that
-she resolves to be always faithful to his memory.
-In a child’s coffin a doll is placed to keep the
-child company on its first journey without mother
-or father. The last rite is to cover the body
-with incense-powder or dried aniseed, and then
-it is ready for the funeral ceremonies.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A funeral procession in Japan is an imposing
-affair. The corpse, in its palanquin or in the
-modern hearse, is preceded by men carrying large
-white lanterns on poles, bundles of flowers stuck
-in bamboo pedestals, stands of artificial flowers,
-and birds in enormous cages, which are set free
-at the temples as an act of merit. The priests,
-friends, and relatives move slowly and sadly to
-the temple, in which there is a service, then
-the bier is taken to the crematory by the chief
-mourner and the near relatives. The ashes are
-removed the next day to their permanent home
-in the public crematorium or in the temple
-burying-ground of the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>For fifty days after the death incense and
-lights are kept burning before the tablet of the
-deceased at his late home, and prayers are offered
-at the grave for the same length of time. A
-priest comes from the temple every seventh day
-to offer incense and prayers with the sorrowing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>family, who believe that for forty-nine days the
-spirit of their dead wanders in the dark space
-that lies between this world and the next. Every
-seventh day it makes a step forward and is helped
-by the prayers of loved ones left behind. The
-sorrowing wife is taught that the spirit cannot
-tear itself away from its old home and hovers
-over it, and unless it is absolutely necessary no
-loving woman would remove from her home until
-the forty-nine days were past, for fear of giving
-sorrow to the spirit of her husband, if he did
-not find her in the place where they had passed
-together their years of happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The dead are not quickly forgotten in Japan.
-Memorial services take place the forty-eighth
-day, the hundredth day, and the first anniversary
-of the death, and services are held for even fifty
-years. Lafcadio Hearn expresses the reverence
-which these people give their loved ones
-who have gone before them by saying:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“In this worship we give the dead they are
-made divine. And the thought of this tender
-reverence will temper with consolation the melancholy
-that comes with age to all of us. Never
-in our Japan are the dead too quickly forgotten;
-by simple faith they are still thought to dwell
-among their beloved and their place within the
-home remains holy. When we pass to the land
-of shadows we know that loving lips will nightly
-murmur our names before the family shrine, that
-our faithful ones will beseech us in their pain
-and bless us in their joy. We will not be left
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>alone upon the hillside, but loving hands will
-place before our tablet the fruit and flowers and
-dainty food that we were wont to like, and will
-pour for us the fragrant cup of tea or amber
-rice-wine. Strange changes are coming upon
-this land, old customs are vanishing, old beliefs
-are weakening, the thoughts of to-day will not
-be the thoughts of to-morrow; but of all this
-we will know nothing. We dream that for us
-as for our mothers the little lamps will burn
-on through the generations; we see in fancy
-the yet unborn, the children of our children’s
-children, bowing their tiny heads and making
-the filial obeisance before the tablet that bears
-our family name.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CONCLUSION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The ocean that geographically divides the East
-from the West is not more wide nor deep than
-is that invisible ocean between the minds of the
-woman of the Orient and the woman of the
-Occident. A sympathetic understanding between
-peoples whose ideals have been so differently
-constructed, and who have had such radically
-opposite training, is next to impossible. No
-matter what the Western woman may do in the
-hope of touching the emotional life of the woman
-of the East, she soon finds that further progress
-is barred, that a gate before unseen has closed,
-shutting her out from the inner life.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I knew a very advanced woman in Southern
-India who had broken caste and who went about
-freely, mingling with both Europeans and Indians
-with the same freedom as an American woman
-would. She dressed in a costume partially
-Indian and partially European, wore slippers, and
-arranged her hair in the European fashion. One
-day I went to her house rather earlier than the
-usual hour for calling. I hardly recognized her,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>as she was the Indian woman of the home,
-dressed in a sari, her hair hanging down her
-back in braids, and with heavy anklets over her
-bare feet. She blushed and said: “Oh, I do
-not want you to see me like this,” and she did
-not understand me when I told her that I felt
-that I was seeing the real woman for the first
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I thought many times in my long residence
-in the East that I had really entered into the life
-and understood the thoughts, hopes, and ambitions
-of the Eastern woman, when at some
-thoughtless word or action on my part a wall
-of fog would come between us, with a thick,
-impenetrable, blanket-like mist, made up of
-custom, tradition, and the results of environment,
-and when it would lift we would find our little
-boats far from each other on a sea of mutual
-misunderstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Despite our incapacity to enter into the soul
-life of this ancient East, we find ourselves
-fascinated and bewitched by the charm of these
-secluded women of the Orient, who live a life
-of instinctive unselfishness, their days given to
-the making of happiness for others.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We say: “Must there always remain the width
-of the world between the Eastern woman and
-the woman of the West? Will the education
-which is being grasped so eagerly by the woman
-of the Orient lessen the distance, and will it
-break down the barriers?” Only time will tell.
-The children of the present boys and girls
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>in school and college will have had the
-foundation of the three generations of intellectual
-training, and will have learned to take what
-is best for them from Western knowledge and
-use it as a means of breaking the iron bands of
-ignorance, superstition, and loyalty to old-time
-custom and tradition, which stands an immovable
-mountain in the pathway of true
-friendship between the woman of the West
-and the woman of the East.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='small'>UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='section ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
- <ol class='ol_1 c003'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
- </li>
- <li>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
- </li>
- </ol>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
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