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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Goa and the Blue Mountains, by Richard
-Francis Burton
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Goa and the Blue Mountains
- or, Six months of sick leave
-
-Author: Richard Francis Burton
-
-Release Date: December 9, 2022 [eBook #69510]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOA AND THE BLUE
-MOUNTAINS ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-GOA, AND THE BLUE MOUNTAINS; OR, SIX MONTHS OF SICK LEAVE.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Printed by Hullmandel & Walton.
-
-COONOOR. FROM THE TRAVELLER’S BUNGALOW.
-
-London: Richard Bentley, New Burlington Street, 1851.]
-
-
-
-
- GOA,
- AND THE BLUE MOUNTAINS;
- OR,
- SIX MONTHS OF SICK LEAVE.
-
- BY
- RICHARD F. BURTON,
- LIEUT. BOMBAY ARMY.
- AUTHOR OF A GRAMMAR OF THE MOOLTANEE LANGUAGE;
- CRITICAL REMARKS ON DR. DORN’S CHRESTOMATHY OF THE PUSHTOO,
- OR AFFGHAN DIALECT, ETC. ETC.
-
- LONDON:
- RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,
- Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.
- 1851.
-
- LONDON:
- Printed by SAMUEL BENTLEY & CO.
- Bangor House, Shoe Lane.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MISS ELIZABETH STISTED,
- THIS LITTLE WORK,
- WHICH OWES ITS EXISTENCE TO HER
- FRIENDLY SUGGESTIONS,
- IS DEDICATED,
- IN TOKEN OF GRATITUDE AND AFFECTION,
- BY
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- The Voyage 1
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- New Goa 22
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Old Goa as it Was 40
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Old Goa as it Is 58
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Return to Panjim 77
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- The Population of Panjim 96
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Seroda 117
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Education, Professions, and Oriental Studies 136
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Adieu to Panjim 154
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- Calicut 169
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- Malabar 186
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- The Hindoos of Malabar 203
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- The Moslem and other Natives of Malabar 230
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- The Land Journey 246
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- First Glimpse of “Ooty” 269
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- Life at Ooty 287
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- Life outside Ooty 313
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- Inhabitants of the Neilgherries 334
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- Kotagherry.—Adieu to the Blue Mountains 353
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF THE South Eastern & Western COAST of INDIA]
-
-
-
-
-GOA, AND THE BLUE MOUNTAINS; OR, SIX MONTHS OF SICK LEAVE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE VOYAGE.
-
-
-What a glad moment it is, to be sure, when the sick and seedy, the tired
-and testy invalid from pestiferous Scinde or pestilential Guzerat,
-“leaves all behind him” and scrambles over the sides of his Pattimar.
-
-His what?
-
-Ah! we forget. The gondola and barque are household words in your English
-ears, the budgerow is beginning to own an old familiar sound, but you
-are right—the “Pattimar” requires a definition. Will you be satisfied
-with a pure landsman’s description of the article in question. We have
-lost our edition of “The Ship,” and to own humbling truth, though we
-have spent many a weary month on the world of waters, we never could
-master the intricacies of blocks and braces, skylights and deadlights,
-starboards and larboards. But if we are to believe the general voice of
-the amphibious race, we terrestrial animals never fail to mangle the
-science of seamanship most barbarously. So we will not expose ourselves
-by pretension to the animadversions of any small nautical critic, but
-boldly talk of going “up-stairs” instead of “on deck,” and unblushingly
-allude to the “behind” for the “aft” and the “front” instead of the
-“fore” of our conveyance.
-
-But the Pattimar—
-
-_De suite_: you shall pourtray it from our description. Sketch a very
-long boat, very high behind, and very low before, composed of innumerable
-bits of wood tied together with coir, or cocoanut rope, fitted up with a
-dark and musty little cabin, and supplied with two or three long poles
-intended as masts, which lean forward as if about to sink under the
-weight of the huge lateen sail. Fill up the outline with a penthouse
-of cadjans (as the leaves of that eternal cocoanut tree are called) to
-protect the bit of deck outside the cabin from the rays of a broiling
-sun. People the square space in the middle of the boat with two nags
-tethered and tied with halters and heel ropes, which sadly curtail the
-poor animals’ enjoyment of kicking and biting; and half-a-dozen black
-“tars” engaged in pounding rice, concocting bilious-looking masses of
-curry, and keeping up a fire of some unknown wood, whose pungent smoke
-is certain to find its way through the cabin, and to terminate its
-wanderings in your eyes and nostrils. Finally, throw in about the same
-number of black domestics courting a watery death by balancing themselves
-over the sides of the vessel, or a fever by sleeping in a mummy case of
-dirty cotton cloth—
-
-And you have a pattimar in your mind’s eye.
-
-Every one that has ever sailed in a pattimar can oblige you with a
-long list of pleasures peculiar to it. All know how by day your eyes
-are blinded with glare and heat, and how by night mosquitos, a trifle
-smaller than jack snipes, assault your defenceless limbs; how the musk
-rat defiles your property and provender; how the common rat and the
-cockchafer appear to relish the terminating leather of your fingers and
-toes; and, finally, how the impolite animal which the transatlantics
-delicately designate a “chintz,” and its companion, the lesser
-abomination, do contribute to your general discomfort. Still these are
-transient evils, at least compared with the permanent satisfaction of
-having “passed the Medical Board”—a committee of ancient gentlemen who
-never will think you sufficiently near death to meet your wishes—of
-having escaped the endless doses of the garrison surgeon, who has
-probably, for six weeks, been bent upon trying the effects of the whole
-Materia Medica upon your internal and external man—of enduring the
-diurnal visitation of desperate duns who threaten the bailiff without
-remorse; and to crown the climax of your happiness, the delightful
-prospect of two quiet years, during which you may call life your own,
-lie in bed half or the whole day if you prefer it, and forget the very
-existence of such things as pipeclay and parade, the Court Martial and
-the Commander-in-chief. So if you are human, your heart bounds, and
-whatever its habits of grumbling may be, your tongue involuntarily owns
-that it is a joyful moment when you scramble over the side of your
-pattimar. And now, having convinced you of that fact, we will request you
-to walk up stairs with us, and sit upon the deck by our side, there to
-take one parting look at the boasted Bay of Bombay, before we bid adieu
-to it, with a free translation of the celebrated Frenchman’s good bye,
-“_Canards, canaux, canaille_,”—adieu ducks, dingies, drabs, and duns.[1]
-
-Gentlemen tourists, poetical authors, lady prosers, and, generally, all
-who late in life, visit the “palm tasselled strand of glowing Ind,” as
-one of our European celebrities describes the country in prose run mad,
-certainly are gifted with wonderful optics for detecting the Sublime
-and Beautiful. Now this same bay has at divers and sundry times been
-subjected to much admiration; and as each succeeding traveller must
-improve upon his predecessors, the latest authorities have assigned to
-its charms a rank above the Bay of Naples—a bay which, in our humble
-opinion, places every other bay in a state of abeyance. At least so
-we understand Captain Von Orlich—the gentleman who concludes that the
-Belochees are of Jewish origin, _because_ they divorce their wives.
-To extract Bombay from the Bay of Naples, proceed thus. Remove Capri,
-Procida, Ischia, and the other little picturesque localities around
-them. Secondly, level Vesuvius and the rocky heights of St. Angelo
-with the ground. Thirdly, convert bright Naples, with its rows of
-white palazzi, its romantic-looking forts, its beautiful promenade,
-and charming background into a low, black, dirty port, _et voici_ the
-magnificent Bombahia.[2] You may, it is true, attempt to get up a little
-romance about the “fairy caves” of Salsette and Elephanta, the tepid
-seas, the spicy breeze, and the ancient and classical name of Momba-devi.
-
-But you’ll fail.
-
-Remember all we can see is a glowing vault of ultramarine-colour sky,
-paved with a glaring expanse of indigo-tinted water, with a few low hills
-lining the horizon, and a great many merchant ships anchored under the
-guns of what we said before, and now repeat, looks like a low, black,
-dirty port.
-
-We know that you are taking a trip with us to the land flowing
-with rupees and gold mohurs—growing an eternal crop of Nabobs and
-Nawwábs[3]—showing a perpetual scene of beauty, pleasure and excitement.
-
-But we can’t allow you to hand your rose-coloured specs. over to us. We
-have long ago superseded our original “greens” by a pair duly mounted
-with sober French grey glasses, and through these we look out upon the
-world as cheerily as our ophthalmic optics will permit us to do.
-
-Now the last “nigger,” in a manifest state of full-blown inebriation, has
-rolled into, and the latest dun, in a fit of diabolical exasperation,
-has rolled out of, our pattimar. So we will persuade the Tindal, as our
-Captain is called, to pull up his mud-hook, and apply his crew to the
-task of inducing the half acre of canvas intended for a sail to assume
-its proper place. Observe if you please, the Tindal swears by all the
-skulls of the god Shiva’s necklace, that the wind is foul—the tide don’t
-serve—his crew is absent—and the water not yet on board.
-
-Of course!
-
-But as you are a “griff,” and we wish to educate you in native
-peculiarities, just remark how that one small touch of our magic slipper
-upon the region of the head, and the use of that one little phrase “Suar
-ka Sala” (_Anglicè_, “O brother-in-law of a hog!”) has made the wind
-fair, the tide serve, the crew muster, and the water pots abound in
-water. And, furthermore, when you have got over your horror of seeing a
-“fellow-creature” so treated—and a “fellow subject” subjected to such
-operation, kindly observe that the Tindal has improved palpably in manner
-towards us;—indeed, to interpret his thoughts, he now feels convinced
-that we are an “Assal Sahib”—a real gentleman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Evening is coming on, the sea-breeze (may it be increased!) is freshening
-fast, and Dan Phœbus has at last vouchsafed to make himself scarce. After
-watching his departure with satisfaction—with heartfelt satisfaction, we
-order our hookah up, less for the pleasure of puffing it, than for the
-purpose of showing you how our servant delights to wander through heaps
-of hay and straw, canvas, and coir rope, with that mass of ignited rice
-ball, rolling about on the top of our pipe. You are looking curiously
-at our culinary arrangements. Yes, dear sir, or madam, as the case
-may be, that dreadful looking man, habited in a pair of the dingiest
-inexpressibles only, excepting the thick cap on his furzy head—that is
-our cook. And we dare say you have been watching his operations. If not,
-you must know that he prepared for our repast by inserting his black claw
-into that hencoop, where a dozen of the leanest possible chickens have
-been engaged for some time in pecking the polls of one another’s heads,
-and after a rapid examination of breast-bone, withdrew his fist full of
-one of the aforementioned lean chickens, shrieking in dismay. He then
-slew it, dipped the corpse in boiling water to loosen the feathers, which
-he stripped off in masses, cut through its breast longitudinally, and
-with the aid of an iron plate, placed over a charcoal fire, proceeded to
-make a spatchcock, or as it is more popularly termed, a “sudden death.”
-After this we can hardly expect the pleasure of your company at dinner
-to-day. But never mind! you will soon get over the feeling _nolens_, if
-not _volens_. Why, how many Scinde “Nabobs” have not eaten three hundred
-and sixty-five lean chickens in one year?
-
- * * * * *
-
-We will not be in any hurry to go to bed. In these latitudes, man lives
-only between the hours of seven P.M. and midnight. The breeze gives
-strength to smoke and converse; our languid minds almost feel disposed
-to admire the beauty of the moonlit sea, the serenity of the air, and
-the varying tints of the misty coast. Our lateen sail is doing its
-duty right well, as the splashing of the water and the broad stripe
-of phosphoric light eddying around and behind the rudder, prove. At
-this rate we shall make Goa in three days, if kindly fate only spare
-us the mortification of the morning calms which infest these regions.
-And we being “old hands” promise to keep a sharp look out upon the
-sable commander of the “Durrya Prashad,” the “Joy of the Ocean,” as
-his sweetheart of a pattimar is called. Something of the kind will be
-necessary to prevent his creeping along the shore for fear of squalls,
-or pulling down the sail to ensure an unbroken night’s rest, or
-slackening speed so as not to get the voyage over too soon. As he is a
-Hindoo we will place him under the _surveillance_ of that grim looking
-bushy-bearded Moslem, who spends half his days in praying for the
-extermination of the infidel, and never retires to rest without groaning
-over the degeneracy of the times, and sighing for the good old days of
-Islam, when the Faithful had nothing to do but to attack, thrash, rob,
-and murder, the Unfaithful.
-
-Now the last hookah has gone out, and the most restless of our servants
-has turned in. The roof of the cabin is strewed with bodies anything but
-fragrant, indeed, we cannot help pitying the melancholy fate of poor
-Morpheus, who is traditionally supposed to encircle such sleepers with
-his soft arms. Could you believe it possible that through such a night as
-this they choose to sleep under those wadded cotton coverlets, and dread
-not instantaneous asphixiation? The only waker is that grisly old fellow
-with the long white mustachios flourishing over his copper coloured
-mouth like cotton in the jaws of a Moslem body. And even he nods as he
-sits perched at the helm with his half-closed eyes mechanically directed
-towards the binnacle, and its satire upon the mariner’s compass, which
-has not shifted one degree these last two years. However there is little
-to fear here. The fellow knows every inch of shore, and can tell you to
-a foot what depth of water there is beneath us. So as this atmosphere of
-drowsiness begins to be infectious, we might as well retire below. Not
-into the cabin, if you please. The last trip the Durrya Prashad made was,
-we understand, for the purpose of conveying cotton to the Presidency.
-You may imagine the extent of dark population left to colonise her every
-corner. We are to sleep under the penthouse, as well as we may; our
-servants, you observe, have spread the mats of rushes—one of the much
-vaunted luxuries of the East—upon our humble couches, justly anticipating
-that we shall have a fair specimen of the night tropical. Before you
-“tumble in” pray recollect to see that the jars of cold water have been
-placed within reach, for we are certain to awake as soon after our first
-sleep as possible, suffering from the torments of Tantalus. And we should
-advise you to restore the socks you have just removed, that is to say, if
-you wish the mosquitos to leave you the use of your feet to-morrow.
-
-“Good night!”
-
-The wish is certainly a benevolent one, but it sounds queer as a long
-grace emphatically prefixed to a “spread” of cold mutton or tough
-beefsteak, for which nothing under a special miracle could possibly make
-one “truly thankful.” However, good night!
-
- * * * * *
-
-From Bombay southwards as far as Goa, the coast,[4] viewed from the sea,
-merits little admiration. It is an unbroken succession of gentle rises
-and slopes, and cannot evade the charge of dulness and uniformity. Every
-now and then some fort or rock juts out into the water breaking the line,
-but the distance we stand out from land prevents our distinguishing the
-features of its different “lions,” such as Severndroog “the Golden
-Fortress,” Rutnageree “the Hill of Jewels,” and the Burnt Islands,[5]
-or Vingorla Rocks. The voyage, therefore, will be an uninteresting
-one—though at this season of the year, early spring, it will not be
-tedious.
-
-The ancient Hindoos have a curious tradition concerning the formation
-and population of this coast. They believe that Parasu Rama, one of
-their demigods, after filling the earth with the blood of the offending
-Kshatriya, or regal and military caste, wished to perform an expiatory
-sacrifice. As, however, no Brahmin would attend, his demigodship found
-himself in rather an awkward predicament. At length, when sitting on the
-mountains of Concan (_i.e._ the Sayhadree Range, or Western Ghauts), he
-espied on the shore below, the putrefied corpses of fourteen Mlenchhas
-(any people not Hindoos), which had floated there borne by the tides
-from distant lands to the westward. Rama restored them to life, taught
-them religious knowledge, and, after converting them into Brahmins,
-performed his sacrifice. He afterwards, by means of his fiery darts,
-compelled Samudra, the Indian Neptune, to retire several miles from the
-foot of the Ghauts, and allotted to his _protégés_ the strip of land thus
-recovered from the sea. From these fourteen men sprang the Kukanastha,
-or Concanese tribe of Maharattas, and the pious Hindoo still discovers
-in their lineaments, traces of a corpse-like expression of countenance
-inherited from their forefathers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We remarked that it was a glad moment when we entered the pattimar. We
-will also observe that it was another when our sable Portuguese “butler,”
-as he terms himself, ecstasied by his propinquity to home—sweet home,
-and forgetting respect and self-possession in an _élan_ of patriotism,
-abruptly directed our vision towards the whitewashed farol, or
-lighthouse, which marks the north side of the entrance to the Goa creek.
-And now, as we glide rapidly in, we will take a short military _coup
-d’œil_ at the outward defences of the once celebrated Portuguese capital.
-
-The hill, or steep, upon which the farol stands, is crowned with
-batteries, called the Castello de Agoada, as ships touch there to water.
-There are other works, _à fleur d’eau_, all round the point. These
-defences, however, are built of stone, without any embankments of earth,
-and suggest uncomfortable ideas of splinters. In fact, a few gun-boats
-would drive any number of men out of them in half an hour. The entrance
-of the creek is at least two miles broad, and the southern prong, the
-“Cabo de Convento,” is occupied, as its name shows, by a monastery
-instead of a fort. Moreover, none but a native general would ever think
-of thrusting an invading force through the jaws of the bay, when it might
-land with perfect safety and convenience to itself a few miles to the
-north or south.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“What are we pulling up for?”
-
-The Tindal informs us that we may expect a visit from the “Portingal
-Captain,” who commands the Castello, for the purpose of ascertaining our
-rank, our wealth, and our object in visiting Goa. He warns us to conceal
-our sketch-book, and not to write too much; otherwise, that our ardour
-for science may lead us into trouble. But, mind, we laugh him to scorn;
-natives must have something mysterious to suspect, or expect, or affect.
-
-But here comes the officer, after keeping us waiting a good hour. He
-is a rhubarb-coloured man, dressed in the shabby remains of a flashy
-uniform; his square inch of blackish brown mustachio, and expression of
-countenance, produce an appearance which we should pronounce decidedly
-valiant, did we not know that valour here seldom extends below or beyond
-the countenance. How respectfully our butler bows to him, and with what
-fellow-feeling the same valuable domestic grasps the hand of that orderly
-in shell jacket, but not in pantaloons, who composes the guard of his
-superior officer! Behold! he has a bundle of _cigarettos_, made of the
-blackest tobacco, rolled up in bits of plantain leaf; and he carries his
-“weeds” in a very primitive cigar-case, namely, the pouch formed by the
-junction of his huge flap of an ear, with the flat and stubby poll behind
-it. As the favourite narcotic goes round, no Portuguese refuses it. The
-Hindoos shake their heads politely and decliningly, the Moslems grimly
-and with a suspicion of a curse.
-
-But we must summon our domestic to mediate between us and our
-visitor, who speaks nothing but most Maharatta-like Portuguese and
-Portuguese-like Maharatta.
-
-We begin by offering him a glass of wine, and he inquires of Salvador,
-our acting interpreter,—“Why?” Being assured that such is the practice
-among the barbarous Anglo-Indians, he accepts it with a helpless look,
-and never attempts to conceal the contortions of countenance produced by
-the operation of a glass of Parsee sherry, fiery as their own divinity,
-upon a palate accustomed to tree-toddy and thin red wine. However, he
-appears perfectly satisfied with the inspection, and after volunteering
-an introductory epistle to one Ioaõ Thomas—_i.e._ John Thomas, a cicerone
-of Goanese celebrity—which we accept without the slightest intention of
-delivering, he kindly gives us permission to proceed, shakes our hand
-with a cold and clammy palm, which feels uncommonly like a snake, and
-with many polite bows to our servants, disappears over the side, followed
-by his suite. Whilst the anchor is being re-weighed, before we forget
-the appearance of the pair, we will commit them to the custody of the
-sketch-book.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The old lateen creeps creaking crankily up the mast once more, and the
-Durrya Prashad recommences to perambulate the waters as unlike a thing of
-life as can be imagined. Half an hour more will take us in. Perched upon
-the topmast angle of our penthouse, we strain our eyes in search of the
-tall buildings and crowded ways that denote a capital: we can see nought
-but a forest of lanky cocoa-nut trees, whose stems are apparently growing
-out of a multitude of small hovels.
-
-Can this be Goa?
-
-Rendered rabid by the query our patriotic domestic, sneering as much as
-he safely can, informs us that _this_ is the village of Verim, _that_ St.
-Agnes, and proceeds to display his store of topographical lore by naming
-or christening every dirty little mass of hut and white-washed spire that
-meets the eye.
-
-Bus, Bus,—enough in the name of topography! We will admire the view
-to-morrow morning when our minds are a little easier about John Thomas, a
-house, &c.
-
-We turn the last corner which concealed from view the town of Panjim, or
-as others call it, the city of New Goa, and are at last satisfied that we
-are coming to something like a place. Suddenly the Tindal, and all his
-men, begin to chatter like a wilderness of provoked baboons; they are
-debating as to what part of the narrow creek which runs parallel with the
-town should be selected for anchor ground. Not with an eye to our comfort
-in landing, observe, but solely bearing in mind that they are to take in
-cargo to-morrow.
-
-At length our apology for an anchor once more slides down the old side of
-the Durrya Prashad, and she swings lazily round with the ebb tide, like
-an elephant indulging in a solitary roll. It is dark, we can see nothing
-but a broken line of dim oil-lamps upon the quay, and hear nought save
-the unharmonious confusion of native music with native confabulation.
-Besides the wind that pours down the creek feels damp and chilly, teeming
-with unpleasant reminiscences of fever and ague. So after warning our
-domestics, that instant dismissal from the service will follow any
-attempt to land to-night, a necessary precaution if we wish to land
-to-morrow, we retire to pass the last of three long nights in slapping
-our face in the desperate hope of crushing mosquitos, dreaming of De Gama
-and Albuquerque, starting up every two hours with jaws glowing like those
-of a dark age dragon, scratching our legs and feet, preferring positive
-excoriation to the exquisite titillation produced by the perpetual
-perambulation, and occasional morsication (with many other -ations left
-to the reader’s discrimination) of our nocturnal visitations, and in
-uttering emphatic ejaculations concerning the man with the rhinoceros
-hide and front of brass who invented and recommended to his kind the
-pattimar abomination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-NEW GOA.
-
-
-Early in the morning, rudely roused by curiosity, we went on deck to
-inspect the celebrated view of the Rio de Goa.
-
-The air was soft and fragrant, at the same time sufficiently cool to be
-comfortable. A thin mist rested upon the lower grounds and hovered half
-way up the hills, leaving their palm-clad summits clear to catch the
-silvery light of dawn. Most beautiful was the hazy tone of colour all
-around contrasted with the painfully vivid tints, and the sharp outlines
-of an Indian view seen a few hours after sunrise. The uniformity of the
-cocoa-nut groves, which at first glance appeared monotonous, gradually
-became tolerable. We could now remark that they were full of human
-habitations, and intersected by numbers of diminutive creeks. Close by
-lay Panji, Panjim, Panjem or New Goa, with its large palace and little
-houses, still dark in the shadow of the hill behind it. As for Goa Velha
-(the Old Goa) we scarcely ventured to look towards it, such were our
-recollections of Tavernier, Dillon, and Amine Vanderdecken, and so strong
-our conviction that a day at least must elapse before we could tread
-its classic ground. An occasional peep, however, discovered huge masses
-of masonry—some standing out from the cloudless sky, others lining the
-edge of the creek,—ruins of very picturesque form, and churches of most
-unpicturesque hue.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Precisely at six A.M. appeared Mr. John Thomas, whose aristocratic proper
-name, by the by, is the Señor Ioaõ Thomas de Sonza. After perpetrating
-a variety of congees in a style that admirably combined the Moorish
-salaam with the European bow, he informed us in execrable English that
-“he show de Goa to de Bombay gentlemens.” We rapidly pass over the
-preliminary measures of securing a house with six rooms, kitchen, stable
-and back court, for fourteen shillings _per mensem_—a low rate of rent
-for which the owner was soundly rated by his compatriots, who have
-resolved that treble that sum is the minimum chargeable to Englishmen—of
-landing our bag and baggage, which were afterwards carried to our abode
-by coolies[6]—the primitive style of transportation universally used
-here,—and finally of disembarking our steeds by means of a pigmy crane,
-the manipulation of which called together a herd of admiring gazers.
-
-Then the Señor began to take command. He obligingly allowed us to
-breakfast, but insisted upon our addressing a note to the aide-de-camp in
-waiting to ascertain the proper time for waiting upon his Excellency the
-Governor of Goa. This the Señor warned us was _de rigueur_, and he bade
-us be prepared to face the burning sun between eleven and twelve, such
-being the hour usually appointed. Then with our missive between his sable
-fingers he performed another ceremonious bow and departed for a while.
-
-Just as the Señor disappeared, and we were preparing to indulge in our
-morning meal _en deshabille_, as best suits the climate, an uncomely
-face, grinning prodigiously, and surmounted by a scampish looking cap,
-introduced itself through the open window, and commenced a series of
-felicitations and compliments in high-flown Portuguese.
-
-Who might our visitor be? A medical student, a poet, or a thief? Confused
-in mind, we could only look at him vacantly, with an occasional
-involuntary movement of the head, respondent to some gigantic word, as it
-gurgled convulsively out of his throat. He must have mistaken the sign
-for one of invitation, for, at the close of his last compliment to the
-British nation, he withdrew his head from the window, and deliberately
-walked in by the door, with the usual series of polite bows.
-
-Once in the house, he seemed determined to make himself at home.
-
-We looked up from our breakfast with much astonishment. Close to
-our elbow stood our new friend in the form of a tall ugly boy about
-seventeen, habited in a green cloth surtout, with plaited plaid
-unmentionables, broad-toed boots, and a peculiar appearance about the
-wrists, and intervals between the fingers, which made us shudder at the
-thought of extending to him the hand of fellowship. Rapidly deciding
-upon a plan of action, we assumed ignorance of the _lingoa Baxa_,[7] and
-pronounced with much ceremony in our vernacular,
-
-“Whom have I the honour to address?”
-
-Horror of horrors! Our visitor broke out in disjointed English, informed
-us that his name was the Señor Gaetano de Gama, son of the collector
-of Ribandar, and a lineal descendant from the Gran Capitaõ; that he
-had naturally a great admiration for the British, together with much
-compassion for friendless strangers; and finally, that he might be of
-the utmost use to us during our stay at Goa. Thereupon he sat down, and
-proceeded to make himself comfortable. He pulled a cigar out of our box,
-called for a glass of water, but preferred sherry, ate at least a dozen
-plantains, and washed down the sherry with a coffee-cup full of milk. We
-began to be amused.
-
-“Have you breakfasted?”
-
-Yes, he had. At Goa they generally do so betimes. However, for the
-sake of companionship he would lay down his cigar and join us. He was
-certainly a good trencher-companion, that young gentleman. Witness his
-prowess upon a plate of fish, a dish of curry, a curd cheese, a water
-melon, and half-a-dozen cups of _café au lait_. Then after settling the
-heterogeneous mass with a glass of our _anisette_, he re-applied himself
-to his cheroot.
-
-We were in hopes that he had fallen into a state of torpor. By no means!
-The activity of his mind soon mastered the inertness of the flesh. Before
-the first few puffs had disappeared in the thin air, our friend arose,
-distinctly for the purpose of surveying the room. He walked slowly and
-calmly around it, varying that recreation by occasionally looking into
-our bed, inspecting a box or two, opening our books, addressing a few
-chance words to us, generally in the style interrogative, trying on our
-hat before the looking-glass, defiling our brushes and combs with his
-limp locks, redolent of rancid cocoa-nut oil, and glancing with fearful
-meaning at our tooth-brushes.
-
-Our amusement now began to assume the form of indignation. Would it
-be better to disappear into an inner room, send for Salvador to show
-our _bête noire_ the door, or lead him out by the ear? Whilst still
-deliberating, we observed with pleasure the tawny face of John Thomas.
-
-The Señor Ioaõ Thomas de Sonza no sooner caught sight of the Señor
-Gaetano de Gama than his countenance donned an expression of high
-indignation, dashed with profound contempt; and the latter Señor almost
-simultaneously betrayed outward and visible signs of disappointment and
-considerable confusion. The ridiculous scene ended with the disappearance
-of the unsuccessful aspirant to ciceronic honours, a homily from John
-Thomas upon the danger of having anything to do with such rabble, and an
-injunction to Salvador never to admit the collector’s son again.
-
-“His Excellency the Governor General of all the Indies cannot have the
-exalted honour of receiving your Excellency this morning, on account of
-the sudden illness of Her Excellency the Lady of the Governor General of
-all the Indies; but the Governor General of all the Indies will be proud
-to receive your Excellency to-morrow—if Heaven be pleased!” said John
-Thomas, tempering dignity with piety.
-
-Thank Goodness for the reprieve!
-
-“So, if the measure be honoured with your Excellency’s approval, we will
-now embark in a covered canoe, and your servant will have the felicity
-of pointing out from the sea the remarkable sites and buildings of New
-Goa; after which, a walk through our celebrated city will introduce your
-Excellency to the exteriors and interiors of its majestic edifices, its
-churches, its theatre, its hospital, its library, and its barracks.”
-
-Very well!
-
-A few minutes’ rowing sufficed to bring our canoe to the centre of
-the creek, along side and in full view of the town. Around us lay the
-shipping, consisting of two or three vessels from Portugal and China,
-some score of native craft, such as pattimars, cottias, canoes, and
-bunderboats, with one sloop of war, composing the Goanese navy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Panjim is situated upon a narrow ledge, between a hill to the south, and,
-on the north, the Rio de Goa, or arm of the sea, which stretches several
-miles from west to east. A quay of hewn stone, well built, but rather too
-narrow for ornament or use, lines the south bank of the stream, if we may
-so call it, which hereabouts is a little more than a quarter of a mile
-in breadth. The appearance of the town is strange to the Indian tourist.
-There are many respectable-looking houses, usually one story high,
-solidly constructed of stone and mortar, with roofs of red tile, and
-surrounded by large court-yards overgrown with cocoa-nut trees. Bungalows
-are at a discount; only the habitations of the poor consist solely of
-a ground floor. In general the walls are whitewashed,—an operation
-performed regularly once a year, after the Monsoon rains; and the result
-is a most offensive glare. Upon the eminence behind the town is a small
-telegraph, and half-way down the hill, the Igreja (church) de Conceição,
-a plain and ill-built pile, as usual, beautifully situated. The edifices
-along the creek which catch the eye, are the Palacio, where the Governor
-resides, the Archbishop’s Palace, the Contadorin or Accomptant’s Office,
-and the Alfandega or Custom House. All of them are more remarkable for
-vastness than neatness of design.
-
-“We will now row down the creek, and see the Aldeas or villages of St.
-Agnes and Verim,” quoth our guide, pointing towards a scattered line of
-churches, villas, and cottages, half concealed from view by the towering
-trees, or thrown forward in clear relief by the green background.
-
-To hear was to obey: though we anticipated little novelty. On landing
-we were surprised to find the shore so thickly inhabited. Handsome
-residences, orientally speaking, appeared here and there; a perfect
-network of footpaths ramified over the hills; in a word, every yard of
-ground bore traces of life and activity. Not that there was much to
-be seen at St. Agnes, with its huge, rambling old pile, formerly the
-archiepiscopal palace, or at Verim, a large village full of Hindoos, who
-retreat there to avoid the places selected for residence by the retired
-officers, _employés_ of government, students, and Christian landed
-proprietors.
-
-“And now for a trip to the eastward!”
-
-“What!” we exclaimed, “isn’t the lionizing to stop here?”
-
-“By no means,” replied John Thomas, solemnly; “all English gentlemen
-visit Ribandar, Britona, and the Seminary of Chorão.”
-
-Ribandar is about two miles to the east of Panjim, and is connected
-with it by a long stone bridge, built by the viceroy Miguel de Noronha.
-It seems to be thriving upon the ruins of its neighbour, San Pedro
-or Panelly, an old village, laid waste by the devastator of Velha
-Goa—intermittent fever. From some distance we saw the noble palace,
-anciently inhabited by the archbishops, and the seat of the viceroys and
-governors, called the Casa de Polvora, from a neighbouring manufactory
-of gunpowder. Here, however, we became restive, and no persuasion could
-induce us to walk a mile in order to inspect the bare walls.
-
-Being somewhat in dread of Britona, which appeared to be a second edition
-of St. Agnes and Verim, we compounded with John Thomas, and secured an
-exemption by consenting to visit and inspect the Seminary.
-
-Chorão was formerly the noviciate place of the Jesuits.[8] It is an
-island opposite Ribandar, small and thinly populated, the climate being
-confessedly most unwholesome. We were informed that the director was
-sick and the rector suffering from fever. The pallid complexion of the
-resident pupils told a sad tale of malaria.
-
-The building is an immense mass of chapels, cloisters, and apartments
-for the professors and students. There is little of the remarkable in
-it. The walls are ornamented with abominable frescoes and a few prints,
-illustrating the campaigns of Napoleon and Louis Quatorze. The crucifixes
-appear almost shocking. They are, generally speaking, wooden figures
-as large as life, painted with most livid and unnatural complexions,
-streaked with indigo-coloured veins, and striped with streams of blood.
-More offensive still are the representations of the Almighty, so common
-in Roman Catholic countries.
-
-In the sacristy, we were shown some tolerable heads of apostles and
-saints. They were not exactly original Raphaels and Guidos, as our black
-friends declared, but still it was a pleasure to see good copies of
-excellent exemplars in India, the land of coloured prints and lithographs
-of Cerito and Taglioni.
-
-[Illustration: R. Burton delᵗ. Printed by Hullmandel & Walton.
-
-THE CATHEDRAL OF GOA.
-
-London: Richard Bentley, New Burlington Street, 1851.]
-
-Ah! now we have finished our peregrinations.
-
-“Yes,” responded John Thomas; “your Excellency has now only to walk about
-and inspect the town of Panjim.”
-
-Accordingly we landed and proceeded to make our observations there.
-
-That Panjim is a Christian town appears instantly from the multitude and
-variety of the filthy feeding hogs, that infest the streets. The pig
-here occupies the social position that he does in Ireland, only he is
-never eaten when his sucking days are past. Panjim loses much by close
-inspection. The streets are dusty and dirty, of a most disagreeable brick
-colour, and where they are paved, the pavement is old and bad. The doors
-and window-frames of almost all the houses are painted green, and none
-but the very richest admit light through anything more civilized than
-oyster-shells. The balcony is a prominent feature, but it presents none
-of the gay scenes for which it is famous in Italy and Spain.
-
-We could not help remarking the want of horses and carriages in the
-streets, and were informed that the whole place did not contain more than
-half a dozen vehicles. The popular conveyance is a kind of palanquin,
-composed of a light sofa, curtained with green wax cloth, and strung to
-a bamboo pole, which rests upon the two bearers’ heads or shoulders.
-This is called a _mancheel_, and a most lugubrious-looking thing it is,
-forcibly reminding one of a coffin covered with a green pall.
-
-At length we arrived at the Barracks, a large building in the form of
-an irregular square, fronting the Rio, and our British curiosity being
-roused by hearing that the celebrated old thief, Phonde Sawunt,[9] was
-living there under surveillance, we determined to visit that rebel on a
-small scale. His presence disgraces his fame; it is that of a wee, ugly,
-grey, thin, old and purblind Maharatta. He received us, however, with not
-a little dignity and independence of manner, motioned us to sit down with
-a military air, and entered upon a series of queries concerning the Court
-of Lahore, at that time the only power on whose exertions the agitators
-of India could base any hopes. Around the feeble, decrepit old man stood
-about a dozen stalworth sons, with naked shoulders, white cloths round
-their waists and topknots of hair, which the god Shiva himself might
-own with pride. They have private apartments in the barracks, full of
-wives and children, and consider themselves personages of no small
-importance; in which opinion they are, we believe, by no means singular.
-Their fellow-countrymen look upon them as heroes, and have embalmed, or
-attempted to embalm their breakjaw names in immortal song. They are, in
-fact, negro Robin Hoods and Dick Turpins—knights of the road and the
-waste it is true, but not accounted the less honourable for belonging
-to that celebrated order of chivalry. The real Maharatta is by nature a
-thorough-bred plunderer, and well entitled to sing the Suliot ditty—
-
- “Κλεφτες ποτε Παργαν,”[10]
-
-with the slight variation of locality only. Besides, strange to say,
-amongst Orientals, they have a well-defined idea of what patriotism
-means, and can groan under the real or fancied wrongs of the “stranger”
-or the “Sassenach’s” dominion as loudly and lustily as any Hibernian or
-Gael in the land.
-
-We now leave Phonde Sawunt and the Barracks to thread our way through
-a numerous and disagreeable collection of yelping curs and officious
-boatmen.
-
-“Would your Excellency prefer to visit the hospital, the churches of St.
-Sebastian and Conceição, the jail, the library, the printing-house, and
-the bazaars now or to-morrow morning?”
-
-“Neither now nor ever—thank you—we are going to the promenade.”
-
-After a few minutes’ walk we came to the west end of Panjim, where lies a
-narrow scrap of sea-beach appropriated to “constitutionals.” On our way
-there we observed that the Goanese, with peculiar good taste, had erected
-seats wherever a pretty _point de vue_ would be likely to make one stand
-and wish to sit awhile.
-
-Had we expected a crowded _corso_, we should have been disappointed;
-half-a-dozen mancheels, two native officers on horseback, one carriage,
-and about a dozen promenaders, were moving lazily and listlessly down the
-lugubrious-looking strand.
-
-Reader, has it ever been your unhappy fate to be cooped up in a wretched
-place called Pisa? If so, perhaps you recollect a certain drive to the
-Cascine—a long road, down whose dreary length run two parallel rows
-of dismal poplars, desolating to the eye, like mutes at a funeral. We
-mentally compared the Cascine drive and the Panjim corso, and the result
-of the comparison was, that we wished a very good evening to the Señor,
-and went home.
-
-“Salvador, what is that terrible noise—are they slaughtering a pig—or
-murdering a boy?”
-
-“Nothing,” replied Salvador, “nothing whatever—some Christian beating his
-wife.”
-
-“Is that a common recreation?”
-
-“Very.”
-
-So we found out to our cost. First one gentleman chastised his spouse,
-then another, and then another. To judge by the ear, the fair ones
-did not receive the discipline with that patience, submission, and
-long-suffering which Eastern dames are most apocryphally believed to
-practise. In fact, if the truth must be told, a prodigious scuffling
-informed us that the game was being played with similar good will, and
-nearly equal vigour by both parties. The police at Goa never interfere
-with these little domesticalities; the residents, we suppose, lose
-the habit of hearing them, but the stranger finds them disagreeable.
-Therefore, we should strongly advise all future visitors to select
-some place of residence where they may escape the martial sounds that
-accompany such _tours de force_ when displayed by the lords and ladies of
-the creation. On one occasion we were obliged to change our lodgings for
-others less exposed to the nuisance. Conceive inhabiting a snug corner of
-a locality devoted to the conversion of pig into pork!
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Sahib,” exclaimed Salvador, “you had better go to bed, or retire into
-another room, for I see the Señor Gaetano coming here as fast as his legs
-can carry him.”
-
-“Very well,” we whispered, slipping rapidly through the open door, “tell
-him we are out.” And behind the wall we heard the message duly delivered.
-
-But the Señor saw no reason in our being out why he should not
-make himself at home. He drew two chairs into the verandah, called
-for cigars and sherry, fanned himself with his dirty brown cotton
-pocket-handkerchief, and sat there patiently awaiting our return.
-
-We did not forcibly eject that Señor. The fact is, memory began to be
-busily at work, and dim scenes of past times, happy days spent in our
-dear old distant native land were floating and flashing before our
-mental eye. Again we saw our neat little rooms at ⸺ College, Oxford,
-our omnipresent dun, Mr. Joye—what a name for a tailor!—comfortably
-ensconsed in the best arm-chair, with the best of our regalias in his
-mouth, and the best of our Port wine at his elbow, now warming his
-lean hands before the blazing coal fire—it was very near Christmas—now
-dreamily gazing at the ceiling, as if £ _s._ _d._ were likely to drop
-through its plaster.
-
-And where were we?
-
-Echo cannot answer, so we must.
-
-Standing in the coal-hole—an aperture in the wall of our
-bedchamber—whence seated upon a mass of coke, we could distinctly discern
-through the interstices of the door, Mr. Joye enjoying himself as above
-described.
-
-Years of toil and travel and trouble had invested that coal-hole with
-the roseate hue which loves to linger over old faces and old past times;
-so we went quietly to bed, sacrificing at the shrine of Mnemosyne the
-sherry and the cheroots served to us, and the kick-out deserved by the
-Señor Gaetano de Gama, son of the Collector of Ribandar, and a lineal
-descendent of the Gran Capitaõ.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-OLD GOA AS IT WAS.
-
-
-“Señor,” said our cicerone, entering unannounced, at about ten A.M.,
-“it is time for your Excellency to prepare for an interview with his
-Excellency the Governor-General of all the Indies; and if it meet with
-your approbation, we can see the library, and the celebrated statue of
-Alfonso de Albuquerque on our way to the palacio.”
-
-The horses were soon saddled, and the Señor was with some difficulty
-persuaded to mount. _En route_ his appearance afforded no small amusement
-to his fellow townsmen, who grinned from ear to ear seeing him clinging
-to the saddle, and holding on by the bridle, with his back hunched, and
-his shoulders towering above his ears like those of an excited cat.
-The little Maharatta “man-eater”[11] was dancing with disgust at this
-peculiar style of equitation, and the vivacity of his movements so
-terrified the Señor, that, to our extreme regret, he chose the first
-moment to dismount under pretext of introducing us to Albuquerque.
-
-The statue of that hero stands under a whitewashed dome, in a small
-square opposite the east front of the Barracks. It is now wrapped up
-in matting, having lately received such injuries that it was deemed
-advisable to send to Portugal for a new nose and other requisites.
-
-The library disappointed us. We had heard that it contained many volumes
-collected from the different religious houses by order of the government,
-and thus saved from mildew and the white ants. Of course, we expected a
-variety of MSS. and publications upon the subject of Oriental languages
-and history, as connected with the Portuguese settlements. The catalogue,
-however, soon informed us that it was a mere ecclesiastical library,
-dotted here and there with the common classical authors; a few old books
-of travels; some volumes of history, and a number of musty disquisitions
-on ethics, politics, and metaphysics. We could find only three Oriental
-works—a Syriac book printed at Oxford, a manuscript Dictionary, and a
-Grammar of the Concanee dialect of Maharatta.
-
-Arrived at the palace, we sent in our card, and were desired to walk up.
-We were politely received by an aide-de-camp, who, after ascertaining
-that we could speak a few words of Portuguese, left the room to inform
-the Governor of that prodigious fact, which, doubtless, procured us the
-honour of an interview with that exalted personage. It did not last
-long enough to be tedious, still we were not sorry when his Excellency
-retired with the excuse of public business, and directed the aide-de-camp
-to show us about the building. There was not much to be seen in it,
-except a tolerably extensive library, a private chapel, and a suite
-of lofty and spacious saloons, with enormous windows, and without
-furniture; containing the portraits of all the Governors and Viceroys
-of Portuguese India. The collection is, or rather has been, a valuable
-one; unfortunately some Goth, by the order of some worse than Goth, has
-renewed and revived many of the best and oldest pictures, till they have
-assumed a most ludicrous appearance. The handsome and chivalrous-looking
-knights have been taught to resemble the Saracen’s Head, the Marquis
-of Granby, and other sign-post celebrities in England. An artist
-is, however, it is said, coming from Portugal, and much scraping and
-varnishing may do something for the De Gamas and de Castros at present so
-miserably disfigured.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now, thank Goodness, all our troubles are over. We can start as soon
-as we like for the “ruin and the waste,” merely delaying to secure a
-covered boat, victual it for a few days, and lay in a store of jars of
-fresh water—a necessary precaution against ague and malaria. Salvador
-is to accompany us, and John Thomas has volunteered to procure us a
-comfortable lodging in the Aljube, or ecclesiastical prison.
-
-A couple of hours’ steady rowing will land us at old Goa. As there is
-nothing to be said about the banks which are lined with the eternal
-succession of villages, palaces, villas, houses, cottages, gardens, and
-cocoa-nut trees; instead of lingering upon the uninteresting details,
-we will pass the time in drawing out a short historical sketch of the
-hapless city’s fortunes.
-
-It is not, we believe, generally known that there are two old Goas.
-Ancient old Goa stood on the south coast of the island, about two miles
-from its more modern namesake. Ferishteh, and the other Moslem annalists
-of India allude to it as a great and celebrated seaport in the olden
-time. It was governed by its own Rajah, who held it in fief from the
-Princes of Beejanugger and the Carnatic. In the fifteenth century it
-was taken by the Moslem monarchs of the Bahmani line. Even before the
-arrival of the Portuguese in India the inhabitants began to desert their
-old seaport and migrate to the second Goa. Of the ancient Hindoo town no
-traces now remain, except some wretched hovels clustering round a parish
-church. Desolation and oblivion seem to have claimed all but the name
-of the place, and none but the readers of musty annals and worm-eaten
-histories are aware that such a city ever existed.
-
-The modern old Goa was built about nineteen years before the arrival of
-Vasco de Gama at Calicut, an event fixed by the historian, Faria, on 20th
-of May, 1498. It was taken from the Moors or Moslems by Albuquerque,
-about thirty years after its foundation—a length of time amply sufficient
-to make it a place of importance, considering the mushroom-like rapidity
-with which empires and their capitals shoot up in the East. Governed by
-a succession of viceroys, many of them the bravest and wisest of the
-Portuguese nation, Goa soon rose to a height of power, wealth, and
-magnificence almost incredible. But the introduction of the Jesuits,
-the Holy Tribunal, and its fatal offspring, religious persecution;
-pestilence, and wars with European and native powers, disturbances
-arising from an unsettled home government, and, above all things, the
-slow but sure workings of the short-sighted policy of the Portuguese
-in intermarrying and identifying themselves with Hindoos of the lowest
-castes, made her fall as rapid as her rise was sudden and prodigious.
-In less than a century and a half after De Gama landed on the shore of
-India, the splendour of Goa had departed for ever. Presently the climate
-changed in that unaccountable manner often witnessed in hot and tropical
-countries. Every one fled from the deadly fever that raged within the
-devoted precincts, and the villages around began to thrive upon the decay
-of the capital. At last, in 1758, the viceroy, a namesake of Albuquerque,
-transferred his habitual residence to Panjim. Soon afterwards the
-Jesuits were expelled, and their magnificent convents and churches were
-left all but utterly deserted. The Inquisition[12] was suppressed when
-the Portuguese court was at Rio Janeiro, at the recommendation of the
-British Government—one of those good deeds with which our native land
-atones for a multitude of minor sins.
-
-The descriptions of Goa in her palmy days are, thanks to the many
-travellers that visited the land, peculiarly graphic and ample.
-
-First in the list, by seniority, stands Linschoten, a native of Haarlem,
-who travelled to the capital of Portuguese India about 1583, in company
-with the Archbishop Fre Vincent de Fonçega. After many years spent in
-the East, he returned to his native country, and published his travels,
-written in old French. The book is replete with curious information.
-Linschoten’s account of the riches and splendour of Goa would be judged
-exaggerated, were they not testified to by a host of other travellers.
-It is described as the finest, largest, and most magnificent city in
-India: its villas almost merited the title of palaces, and seemed to be
-built for the purpose of displaying the wealth and magnificence of the
-erectors. It is said that during the prosperous times of the Portuguese
-in India, you could not have seen a bit of “iron in any merchant’s house,
-but all gold and silver.” They coined an immense quantity of the precious
-metals, and used to make pieces of workmanship in them for exportation.
-They were a nation of traders, and the very soldiers enriched themselves
-by commerce. After nine years’ service, all those that came from Portugal
-were entitled to some command, either by land or sea; they frequently,
-however, rejected government employ on account of being engaged in
-the more lucrative pursuit of trade. The viceroyalty of Goa was one
-of the most splendid appointments in the world. There were five other
-governments, namely—Mozambique, Malacca, Ormus, Muscat, and Ceylon, the
-worst of which was worth ten thousand crowns (about two thousand pounds)
-per annum—an enormous sum in those days.
-
-The celebrated Monsieur Tavernier, Baron of Aubonne, visited Goa twice;
-first in 1641, the second time seven years afterwards. In his day the
-city was declining rapidly,[13] and even during the short period that
-elapsed between his two voyages, he remarked that many whom he had
-known as people of fashion, with above two thousand crowns revenue,
-were reduced to visiting him privately in the evening, and begging for
-alms. Still, he observed, “they abated nothing, for all that, of their
-inherent pride and haughtiness.” He pays no compliment to the Portuguese
-character: “They are the most revengeful persons, and the most jealous of
-their wives in the world, and where the least suspicion creeps into their
-saddles, they rid themselves of them either by poison or dagger.” The
-baron had no cause for complaint in his reception at Goa by the viceroy,
-Don Philip de Mascaregnas, who “made him very welcome, and esteeming
-much a pistol, curiously inlaid,” which the traveller presented to him,
-sent for him five or six times to the Powder-house, or old palace. That
-viceroy seems, however, to have been a dangerous host. He was a most
-expert poisoner, and had used his skill most diligently, ridding himself
-of many enemies, when governor of Ceylon. At Goa he used to admit no
-one to his table—even his own family was excluded. He was the richest
-Portuguese noble that ever left the East, especially in diamonds, of
-which he had a large parcel containing none but stones between ten and
-forty carats weight. The Goanese hated him, hung him in effigy before
-his departure, and when he died on the voyage, reported that he had been
-poisoned in the ship—a judgment from Heaven.
-
-Monsieur Tavernier visited the Inquisition, where he was received with
-sundry “searching questions” concerning his faith, the Protestant. During
-the interview, the Inquisitor “told him that he was welcome, calling
-out at the same time, for some other persons to enter. Thereupon, the
-hangings being held up, came in ten or twelve persons out of a room hard
-by.” They were assured that the traveller possessed no prohibited books;
-the prudent Tavernier had left even his Bible behind him. The Inquisidor
-Mor[14] discoursed with him for a couple of hours, principally upon the
-subject of his wanderings, and, three days afterwards, sent him a polite
-invitation to dinner.
-
-But a well-known practice of the Holy Tribunal—namely, that of
-confiscating the gold, silver, and jewels of every prisoner, to defray
-the expenses of the process—had probably directed the Inquisitor’s
-attention to so rich a traveller as the baron was. Tavernier had,
-after all, rather a narrow escape from the Holy Office, in spite of
-its civilities. When about to leave Goa, he imprudently requested and
-obtained from the Viceroy, permission to take with him one Mons. de
-Belloy, a countryman in distress. This individual had deserted from the
-Dutch to the Portuguese, and was kindly received by them. At Macao,
-however, he lost his temper at play, and “cursed the portraiture of some
-Papistical saint, as the cause of his ill-luck.” For this impiety he was
-forthwith sent by the Provincial Inquisitor to Goa, but he escaped the
-stake by private interest with the Viceroy,[15] and was punished only by
-“wearing old clothes, which were all to tatters and full of vermin.” When
-Tavernier and his friend set sail, the latter “became very violent, and
-swore against the Inquisition like a madman.” That such procedure was a
-dangerous one was proved by Mons. de Belloy’s fate. He was rash enough
-to return some months afterwards to Goa, where he remained two years in
-the dungeons of the Holy Office, “from which he was not discharged but
-with a sulphured shirt, and a St. Andrew’s cross upon his stomach.”
-The unfortunate man was eventually taken prisoner by the enraged
-“Hollanders,” put into a sack, and thrown into the sea, as a punishment
-for desertion.
-
-[Illustration: R. Burton delᵗ. Printed by Hullmandel & Walton.
-
-VIEW OF OLD GOA FROM THE MANDOVA OR CREEK.
-
-London: Richard Bentley, New Burlington Street, 1851.]
-
-About twenty-five years after Tavernier’s departure. Dellon, the French
-physician, who made himself conspicuous by his “Relation de l’Inquisition
-de Goa,” visited the city. By his own account, he appears to have excited
-the two passions which burn fiercest in the Portuguese bosom—jealousy
-and bigotry. When at Daman, his “innocent visits” to a lady, who was
-loved by Manuel de Mendonça, the Governor, and a black priest, who was
-secretary to the Inquisition, secured for him a pair of powerful enemies.
-Being, moreover, an amateur of Scholastic Theology, a willing disputer
-with heretics and schismatics, a student of the Old as well as the
-New Testament, and perhaps a little dogmatical, as dilettanti divines
-generally are, he presently found himself _brouillé_ at the same place
-with a Dominican friar. The Frenchman had refused to kiss the figure
-of the Virgin, painted upon the lids of the alms boxes: he had denied
-certain effects of the baptism, called “flaminis,” protested against
-the adoration of images, and finally capped the whole by declaring that
-the decrees of the Holy Tribunal are not so infallible as those of
-the Divine Author of Christianity. The horror-struck auditor instantly
-denounced him with a variety of additions and emendations sufficient to
-make his case very likely to conclude with strangling and burning.
-
-Perceiving a storm impending over him, our physician waited upon the
-Commissary of the Inquisition, if possible to avert the now imminent
-danger. That gentlemanly old person seems to have received him with
-uncommon urbanity, benevolently offered much good advice, and lodged him
-in jail with all possible expedition.
-
-The prison at Daman is described as a most horrible place; hot, damp,
-fetid, dark, and crowded. The inmates were half starved, and so miserable
-that forty out of fifty Malabar pirates, who had been imprisoned there,
-preferred strangling themselves with their turbans to enduring the
-tortures of such an earthly Hades.
-
-The first specimen of _savoir faire_ displayed by the Doctor’s enemies
-was to detain him in the Daman jail till the triennial Auto da Fé at
-Goa had taken place; thereby causing for him at least two years’ delay
-and imprisonment in the capital before he could be brought to trial.
-Having succeeded in this they sent him heavily ironed on board a boat
-which finally deposited him in the Casa Santa.[16] There he was taken
-before the Mesa, or Board, stripped of all his property, and put into the
-_chambrette_ destined for his reception.
-
-Three weary years spent in that dungeon gave Dellon ample time to
-experience and reflect upon the consequences of amativeness and
-disputativeness. After being thrice examined by the grand Inquisitor,
-and persuaded to confess his sins by the false promise of liberty held
-out to him, driven to despair by the system of solitary imprisonment,
-by the cries of those who were being tortured, and by anticipations of
-the noose and the faggot, he made three attempts to commit suicide.
-During the early part of his convalescence he was allowed the luxury of
-a negro fellow-prisoner in his cell; but when he had recovered strength
-this indulgence was withdrawn. Five or six other examinations rapidly
-succeeded each other, and finally, on the 11th of January, 1676, he was
-fortunate enough to be present at the Auto da Fé in that garb of good
-omen, the black dress with white stripes. The sentence was confiscation
-of goods and chattels, banishment from India, five years of the galleys
-in Portugal, and a long list of various penances to be performed during
-the journey.
-
-On arriving at Lisbon he was sent to the hulks, but by the interest of
-his fellow-countrymen he recovered his liberty in June, 1677. About
-eleven years afterwards he published anonymously a little volume
-containing an account of his sufferings. By so doing he broke the oaths
-of secrecy administered to him by the Holy Tribunal, but probably he
-found it easy enough to salve his conscience in that matter.
-
-The next in our list stands the good Capt. Hamilton, a sturdy old
-merchant militant, who infested the Eastern seas about the beginning of
-the eighteenth century.
-
-The captain’s views of the manners and customs of the people are more
-interesting than his description of the city. After alluding to their
-habits of intoxication he proceeds to the subject of religion, and terms
-both clergy and laity “a pack of the most atrocious hypocrites in the
-world;” and, at the same time, “most zealous bigots.” There were not
-less than eighty churches, convents, and monasteries within view of the
-town, and these were peopled by “thirty thousand church vermin who live
-idly and luxuriously on the labour and sweat of the miserable laity.”
-Our voyager then falls foul of the _speciosa miracula_ of St. Francis de
-Xavier. He compares the holy corpse to that of “new scalded pig,” opines
-that it is a “pretty piece of wax-work that serves to gull the people,”
-and utterly disbelieves that the amputated right-arm, when sent to Rome
-to stand its trial for sainthood, took hold of the pen, dipped it in ink
-and fairly wrote “Xavier” in full view of the sacred college.
-
-The poverty of Goa must have been great in Capt. Hamilton’s time, when
-“the houses were poorly furnished within like their owners’ heads, and
-the tables and living very mean.” The army was so ill-paid and defrauded
-that the soldiers were little better than common thieves and assassins.
-Trade was limited to salt and arrack, distilled from the cocoa-nut. The
-downfall of Goa had been hastened by the loss of Muscat to the Arabs, a
-disaster brought on by the Governor’s insolent folly,[17] by an attack
-made in 1660 upon the capital by a Dutch squadron, which, though it
-failed in consequence of the strength of the fortifications, still caused
-great loss and misery to the Portuguese, and finally by the Maharatta
-war. In 1685, Seevagee, the Robert Bruce of Southern India, got a footing
-in the island, and would have taken the city had he not been—
-
- “Foiled by a woman’s hand before a broken wall.”
-
-The “Maid of Goa” was one Donna Maria, a Portuguese lady, who travelled
-to Goa dressed like a man in search of a perfidious swain who had been
-guilty of breach of promise of marriage. She found him at last and
-challenged him to the duello with sword and pistol, but the gentleman
-declined the invitation, preferring to marry than to fight Donna Maria.
-
-A few years afterwards the Maharatta war began, and the heroine excited
-by her country’s losses, and, of course, directed by inspiration, headed
-a sally against Seevagee, took a redoubt, and cut all the heathen in
-it to pieces. The enemy, probably struck by some superstitious terror,
-precipitately quitted the island, and the Donna’s noble exploit was
-rewarded with a captain’s pay for life.
-
-We conclude with the Rev. Mons. Cottineau de Kleguen, a French
-missionary, who died at Madras in 1830. His “Historical Sketch of Goa”
-was published the year after his death. It is useful as a guide-book to
-the buildings, and gives much information about ecclesiastical matters.
-In other points it is defective in the extreme. As might be expected
-from a zealous Romanist, the reverend gentleman stands up stoutly for
-the inquisition in spite of his “entire impartiality,” and displays much
-curious art in defending the Jesuits’ peculiar process of detaching the
-pagans from idol worship, by destroying their temples and pagodas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-OLD GOA AS IT IS.
-
-
-The setting sun was pouring a torrent of crimson light along the Rio as
-the prow of our canoe bumped against the steps of the wharf, warning
-us that we had at length reached our destination. The landing-place is
-a little beyond the arsenal, and commands a full view of the cathedral
-and other conspicuous objects. The first glance around convinced us that
-we were about to visit a city of the dead, and at once swept away the
-delusion caused by the distant view of white-washed churches and towers,
-glittering steeples and domes.
-
-As such places should always, in our humble opinion, be visited for
-the first time by moonlight, we spent an hour or two in ascertaining
-what accommodations the Aljube, or ecclesiastical prison, would afford.
-Dellon’s terrible description of the place had prepared us for “roughing
-it,” but we were agreeably disappointed.[18] The whole building, with
-the exception of a few upper rooms, had been cleaned, plastered, and
-painted, till it presented a most respectable appearance. Salvador, it
-is true, had ventured into the garrets, and returned with his pantaloons
-swarming with animal life. This, however, only suggested the precaution
-of placing water-pots under the legs of our “Waterloo,” and strewing the
-floor with the leaves of the “sacred grass,” a vegetable luxury abounding
-in this part of the world.
-
-When the moon began to sail slowly over the eastern hills, we started
-on our tour of inspection, and, as a preliminary measure, walked down
-the wharf, a long and broad road, lined with double rows of trees, and
-faced with stone, opposite the sea. A more suggestive scene could not be
-conceived than the utter desolation which lay before us. Everything that
-met the eye or ear seemed teeming with melancholy associations; the very
-rustling of the trees and the murmur of the waves sounded like a dirge
-for the departed grandeur of the city.
-
-A few minutes’ walk led us to a conspicuous object on the right hand
-side of the wharf. It was a solitary gateway, towering above the huge
-mass of ruins which flanks the entrance to the Strada Diretta.[19] On
-approaching it we observed the statue of Saint Catherine,[20] shrined in
-an upper niche, and a grotesque figure of Vasco de Gama in one beneath.
-Under this arch the newly-appointed viceroys of Goa used to pass in
-triumphal procession towards the palace.
-
-Beyond the gateway a level road, once a populous thoroughfare, leads
-to the Terra di Sabaio, a large square, fronting the Se Primaçial or
-Cathedral of Saint Catherine, and flanked by the Casa Santa. Before
-visiting the latter spot we turned to the left, and ascending a heap
-of ruins, looked down upon the excavation, which now marks the place
-where the Viceregal Palace rose. The building, which occupied more than
-two acres of ground, has long been razed from the very foundations, and
-the ground on which it stood is now covered with the luxuriant growth
-of poisonous plants and thorny trees. As we wandered amidst them, a
-solitary jackal, slinking away from the intruder, was the only living
-being that met our view, and the deep bell of the cathedral, marking the
-lapse of time for dozens, where hundreds of thousands had once hearkened
-to it, the only sound telling of man’s presence that reached our ear.
-
-In the streets beyond, nothing but the foundations of the houses could
-be traced, the tall cocoa and the lank grass waving rankly over many a
-forgotten building. In the only edifices which superstition has hitherto
-saved, the churches, convents, and monasteries, a window or two, dimly
-lighted up, showed that here and there dwells some solitary priest. The
-whole scene reminded us of the Arab’s eloquent description of the “city
-with impenetrable gates, still, without a voice or a cheery inhabitant:
-the owl hooting in its quarters, and birds skimming in circles in its
-areas, and the raven croaking in its great thoroughfare streets, as
-if bewailing those that had been in it.” What a contrast between the
-moonlit scenery of the distant bay, smiling in all eternal Nature’s
-loveliness, and the dull grey piles of ruined or desolate habitations,
-the short-lived labours of man!
-
-We turned towards the Casa Santa, and with little difficulty climbed to
-the top of the heaps which mark the front where its three gates stood.
-In these remains the eye, perhaps influenced by imagination, detects
-something more than usually dreary. A curse seems to have fallen upon it;
-not a shrub springs between the fragments of stone, which, broken and
-blackened with decay, are left to encumber the soil, as unworthy of being
-removed.
-
-Whilst we were sitting there, an old priest, who was preparing to perform
-mass in the cathedral, came up and asked what we were doing.
-
-“Looking at the Casa Santa,” we answered. He inquired if we were
-Christian, meaning, of course, Roman Catholic. We replied in the
-affirmative, intending, however, to use the designation in its ampler
-sense.
-
-“Ah, very well,” replied our interrogator. “I put the question, because
-the heretics from Bombay and other places always go to see the Casa Santa
-first in order to insult its present state.”
-
-And the Señor asked us whether we would attend mass at the cathedral; we
-declined, however, with a promise to admire its beauties the next day,
-and departed once more on our wanderings.
-
-For an hour or two we walked about without meeting a single human being.
-Occasionally we could detect a distant form disappearing from the road,
-and rapidly threading its way through the thick trees as we drew near.
-Such precaution is still deemed necessary at Goa, though the inducements
-to robbery or violence, judging from the appearance of the miserable
-inhabitants, must be very small.
-
-At last, fatigued with the monotony of the ruins and the length of
-the walk, we retraced our steps, and passing down the Strada Diretta,
-sat under the shade of a tree facing the Rio. Nothing could be more
-delicately beautiful than the scene before us—the dark hills, clothed
-with semi-transparent mist, the little streams glistening like lines
-of silver over the opposite plain, and the purple surface of the creek
-stretched at our feet. Most musically too, the mimic waves splashed
-against the barrier of stone, and the soft whisperings of the night
-breeze alternately rose and fell in unison with the voice of the waters.
-
-Suddenly we heard, or thought we heard, a groan proceeding from behind
-the tree. It was followed by the usual Hindoo ejaculation of “Ram!
-Ram!”[21]
-
-Our curiosity was excited. We rose from our seat and walked towards the
-place whence the sound came.
-
-By the clear light of the moon we could distinguish the emaciated form
-and features of an old Jogee.[22] He was sparingly dressed, in the
-usual ochre-coloured cotton clothes, and sat upon the ground, with his
-back against the trunk of the tree. As he caught sight of us, he raised
-himself upon his elbow, and began to beg in the usual whining tone.
-
-“Thy gift will serve for my funeral,” he said with a faint smile,
-pointing to a few plantain leaf platters, containing turmeric, red
-powder, rice, and a few other similar articles.
-
-We inquired into what he considered the signs and symptoms of approaching
-dissolution. It was a complaint that must have caused him intense pain,
-which any surgeon could have instantly alleviated. We told him what
-medical skill could do, offered to take him at once where assistance
-could be procured, and warned him that the mode of suicide which he
-proposed to carry out, would be one of most agonising description.
-
-“I consider this disease a token from the Bhagwán (the Almighty) that
-this form of existence is finished!” and he stedfastly refused all aid.
-
-We asked whether pain might not make him repent his decision, perhaps too
-late. His reply was characteristic of his caste. Pointing to a long sabre
-cut, which seamed the length of his right side, he remarked,
-
-“I have been a soldier—under your rule. If I feared not death in fighting
-at the word of the Feringee, am I likely, do you think, to shrink from it
-when the Deity summons me?”
-
-It is useless to argue with these people; so we confined ourselves to
-inquiring what had made him leave the Company’s service.
-
-He told us the old story, the cause of half the asceticism in the East—a
-disappointment in an _affaire de cœur_. After rising to the rank of
-_naick_, or corporal, very rapidly, in consequence of saving the life of
-an officer at the siege of Poonah, he and a comrade obtained leave of
-absence, and returned to their native hamlet, in the Maharatta hills.
-There he fell in love, desperately, as Orientals only can, with the wife
-of the village Brahman. A few months afterwards the husband died, and it
-was determined by the caste brethren that the relict should follow him,
-by the Suttee rite. The soldier, however, resolved to save her, and his
-comrade, apprised of his plans, promised to aid him with heart and hand.
-
-The pyre was heaped up, and surrounded by a throng of gazers collected
-to witness the ceremony, so interesting and exciting to a superstitious
-people.
-
-At length the Suttee appeared, supported by her female relations, down
-the path opened to her by the awe-struck crowd. Slowly she ascended the
-pile of firewood; and, after distributing little gifts to those around,
-sat down, with the head of the deceased in her lap. At each of the four
-corners of the pyre was a Brahman, chaunting some holy song. Presently
-the priest who stood fronting the south-east, retired to fetch the sacred
-fire.
-
-Suddenly a horseman, clad in yellow clothes,[23] dashed out of a
-neighbouring thicket. Before any had time to oppose him, his fierce
-little Maharatta pony clove the throng, and almost falling upon his
-haunches with the effort, stood motionless by the side of the still unlit
-pyre. At that instant the widow, assisted by a friendly hand, rose from
-her seat, and was clasped in the horseman’s arms.
-
-One touch of the long Maharatta spur, and the pony again bounds, plunging
-through the crowd, towards the place whence he came. Another moment and
-they will be saved!
-
-Just as the fugitives are disappearing behind the thicket, an arrow shot
-from the bow of a Rankari,[24] missing its mark, pierces deep into the
-widow’s side.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The soldier buried his paramour under the tree where we were sitting.
-Life had no longer any charms for him. He never returned to his corps,
-and resolved to devote himself to futurity.
-
-It was wonderful, considering the pain he must have been enduring, to
-hear him relate his tale so calmly and circumstantially.
-
-The next morning, when we passed by the spot, three or four half-naked
-figures, in the holy garb, were sitting like mourners round the body of
-the old Jogee.
-
-Strange the contempt for life shown by all these metempsychosists. Had
-we saved that man by main force—an impossibility, by the by, under the
-circumstances of the case—he would have cursed us, during the remnant
-of his days, for committing an act of bitter and unprovoked enmity.
-With the Hindoo generally, death is a mere darkening of the stage
-in the mighty theatre of mundane life. To him the Destroyer appears
-unaccompanied by the dread ideas of the Moslem tomb-torments, or the
-horror with which the Christian[25] looks towards the Great Day; and
-if Judgment, and its consecutive state of reward or punishment, be not
-utterly unknown to him, his mind is untrained to dwell upon such events.
-Consequently, with him Death has lost half his sting, and the Pyre can
-claim no victory over him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Old Goa has few charms when seen by the light of day. The places usually
-visited are the Se Primaçial (Cathedral), the nunnery of Santa Monaca,
-and the churches of St. Francis, St. Gaetano, and Bom Jesus. The latter
-contains the magnificent tomb of St. Francis Xavier. His saintship,
-however, is no longer displayed to reverential gazers in mummy or
-“scalded pig” form. Altogether we reckoned about thirty buildings. Many
-of them were falling to ruins, and others were being, or had been,
-partially demolished. The extraordinary amount of havoc committed
-during the last thirty[26] years, is owing partly to the poverty of the
-Portuguese. Like the modern Romans, they found it cheaper to carry away
-cut stone, than to quarry it; but, unlike the inhabitants of the Eternal
-City, they have now no grand object in preserving the ruins. At Panjim,
-we were informed that even the wood-work that decorates some of the
-churches, had been put up for sale.
-
-The edifices, which are still in good repair, may be described in very
-few words. They are, generally speaking, large rambling piles, exposing
-an extensive surface of white-washed wall, surmounted by sloping roofs
-of red tile, with lofty belfries and small windows. The visitor will
-admire the vastness of the design, the excellence of the position, and
-the adaptation of the architecture to the country and climate. But there
-his praise will cease. With the exception of some remarkable wood-work,
-the minor decorations of paintings and statues are inferior to those of
-any Italian village church. As there is no such thing as coloured marble
-in the country, parts of the walls are painted exactly in the style of
-a small _cabaret_ in the south of France. The frescoes are of the most
-grotesque description. Pontius Pilate is accommodated with a huge Turkish
-turban; and the other saints and sinners appear in costumes equally
-curious in an historical and pictorial point of view. Some groups, as
-for instance the Jesuit martyrs upon the walls of Saint Francis, are
-absolutely ludicrous. Boiled, roasted, grilled and hashed missionaries,
-looking more like seals than men, gaze upon you with an eternal smile.
-A semi-decapitated individual stands bolt upright during the painful
-process which is being performed by a score of grim-looking heathen. And
-black savages are uselessly endeavouring to stick another dart in the
-epidermis of some unfortunate, whose body has already become more
-
- “Like an Egyptian porcupig”
-
-than aught human. One may fancy what an exhibition it is, from the
-following fact. Whenever a picture or fresco fades, the less brilliant
-parts are immediately supplied with a coating of superior vividness by
-the hand of a common house-decorator. They reminded us forcibly of the
-studio of an Anglo-Indian officer, who, being devotedly fond of pictorial
-pursuits, and rather pinched for time withal, used to teach his black
-servants to lay the blue, green, and brown on the canvas, and when he
-could spare a leisure moment, return to scrape, brush, and glaze the
-colour into sky, trees, and ground.
-
-Very like the paintings is the sculpture: it presents a series of
-cherubims, angels, and saints, whose very aspect makes one shudder, and
-think of Frankenstein. Stone is sometimes, wood the material generally
-used. The latter is almost always painted to make the statue look as
-unlike life as possible.
-
-Yet in spite of these disenchanting details, a feeling not unallied to
-awe creeps over one when wandering down the desert aisles, or through
-the crowdless cloisters. In a cathedral large enough for a first-rate
-city in Europe, some twenty or thirty native Christians may be seen
-at their devotions, and in monasteries built for hundreds of monks, a
-single priest is often the only occupant. The few human beings that
-meet the eye, increase rather than diminish the dismal effect of the
-scene; as sepulchral looking as the spectacle around them, their pallid
-countenances, and emaciated forms seem so many incarnations of the curse
-of desolation which still hovers over the ruins of Old Goa.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We felt curious to visit the nunnery of Santa Monaca, an order said to
-be strict in the extreme. The nuns are called madres (mothers) by the
-natives, in token of respect, and are supposed to lead a very correct
-life. Most of these ladies are born in the country; they take the veil at
-any age when favoured with a vocation.
-
-Our curiosity was disappointed. All we saw was a variety of black
-handmaids, and the portress, an antiquated lay sister, who insisted
-upon our purchasing many rosaries and sweetmeats. Her garrulity was
-excessive; nothing would satisfy her desire for mastering the intricacies
-of modern Portuguese annals but a long historical sketch by us fancifully
-impromptued. Her heart manifestly warmed towards us when we gave her the
-information required. Upon the strength of it she led us into a most
-uninteresting chapel, and pointed out the gallery occupied by the nuns
-during divine service. As, however, a close grating and a curtain behind
-it effectually conceal the spot from eyes profane, we derived little
-advantage from her civility. We hinted and hinted that an introduction to
-the prioress would be very acceptable—in vain; and when taking heart of
-grace we openly asked permission to view the cloisters, which are said
-to be worth seeing, the amiable old _soror_ replied indignantly, that it
-was utterly impossible. It struck us forcibly that there was some mystery
-in the case, and accordingly determined to hunt it out.
-
-“Did the Sahib tell them that he is an Englishman?” asked Salvador, after
-at least an hour’s hesitation, falsification, and prevarication produced
-by a palpable desire to evade the subject.
-
-We answered affirmatively, and inquired what our country had to do with
-our being refused admittance?
-
-“Everything,” remarked Salvador. He then proceeded to establish the truth
-of his assertion by a variety of distorted and disjointed fragments of an
-adventure, which the labour of our ingenious cross-questioning managed to
-put together in the following form.
-
-“About ten years ago,” said Salvador, “I returned to Goa with my master,
-Lieut. ⸺, of the — Regt., a very clever gentleman, who knew everything.
-He could talk to each man of a multitude in his own language, and all of
-them would appear equally surprised by, and delighted with him. Besides,
-his faith was every man’s faith. In a certain Mussulmanee country he
-married a girl, and divorced her a week afterwards. Moreover, he
-chaunted the Koran, and the circumcised dogs considered him a kind of
-saint. The Hindoos also respected him, because he always eat his beef
-in secret, spoke religiously of the cow, and had a devil, (_i.e._, some
-heathen image) in an inner room. At Cochin he went to the Jewish place of
-worship, and read a large book, just like a priest. Ah! he was a clever
-Sahib that! he could send away a rampant and raging creditor playful as a
-little goat, and borrow more money from Parsees at less interest than was
-ever paid or promised by any other gentleman in the world.
-
-“At last my master came to Goa, where of course he became so pious
-a Christian that he kept a priest in the house—to perfect him in
-Portuguese—and attended mass once a day. And when we went to see the
-old city, such were the fervency of his lamentations over the ruins of
-the Inquisition, and the frequency of his dinners to the Padre of Saint
-Francis, that the simple old gentleman half canonized him in his heart.
-But I guessed that some trick was at hand, when a pattimar, hired for a
-month, came and lay off the wharf stairs, close to where the Sahib is
-now sitting; and presently it appeared that my officer had indeed been
-cooking a pretty kettle of fish!
-
-“My master had been spending his leisure hours with the Prioress of
-Santa Monaca, who—good lady—when informed by him that his sister, a
-young English girl, was only waiting till a good comfortable quiet
-nunnery could be found for her, not only showed her new friend about the
-cloisters and dormitories, but even introduced him to some of the nuns.
-Edifying it must have been to see his meek countenance as he detailed
-to the Madres his well-digested plans for the future welfare of that
-apocryphal little child, accompanied with a thousand queries concerning
-the style of living, the moral and religious education, the order and the
-discipline of the convent. The Prioress desired nothing more than to have
-an English girl in her house—except, perhaps, the monthly allowance of a
-hundred rupees which the affectionate brother insisted upon making to her.
-
-“You must know, Sahib, that the madres are, generally speaking, by no
-means good-looking. They wear ugly white clothes, and cut their hair
-short, like a man’s. But, the Latin professor—”
-
-“The who?”
-
-“The Latin professor, who taught the novices and the younger nuns
-learning, was a very pretty white girl, with large black eyes, a
-modest smile, and a darling of a figure. As soon as I saw that Latin
-professor’s face, I understood the whole nature and disposition of the
-affair.
-
-“My master at first met with some difficulty, because the professor did
-not dare to look at him, and, besides, was always accompanied by an elder
-sister.”
-
-“Then, how did he manage?”
-
-“Hush, sir, for Santa Maria’s sake; here comes the priest of Bom Jesus,
-to return the Sahib’s call.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-RETURN TO PANJIM.
-
-
-Once more the canoe received us under its canopy, and the boatmen’s oars,
-plunging into the blue wave, sounded an adieu to old Goa. After the last
-long look, with which the departing vagrant contemplates a spot where he
-has spent a happy day or two, we mentally reverted to the adventure of
-the Latin professor, and made all preparations for hearing it to the end.
-
-“Well, Sahib,” resumed Salvador, “I told you that my master’s known skill
-in such matters was at first baffled by the professor’s bashfulness,
-and the presence of a grim-looking sister. But he was not a man to be
-daunted by difficulties: in fact, he became only the more ardent in the
-pursuit. By dint of labour and perseverance, he succeeded in bringing
-the lady to look at him, and being rather a comely gentleman, that was
-a considerable point gained. Presently her eternal blushings gave way,
-though occasionally one would pass over her fair face when my master’s
-eyes lingered a little too long there: the next step in advance was the
-selection of an aged sister, who, being half blind with conning over her
-breviary, and deaf as a dead donkey, made a very suitable escort.”
-
-“Pray, how did you learn all these particulars?”
-
-“Ah, Sahib,” replied Salvador, “my master became communicative enough
-when he wanted my services, and during the trip which we afterwards made
-down the coast.
-
-“I was now put forward in the plot. After two days spent in lecturing me
-as carefully as a young girl is primed for her first confession, I was
-sent up to the nunnery with a bundle of lies upon my tongue, and a fatal
-necessity for telling them under pain of many kicks. I did it, but my
-repentance has been sincere, so may the Virgin forgive me!” ejaculated
-Salvador, with fervent piety, crossing himself at the same time.
-
-“And, Sahib, I also carried a present of some Cognac—called European
-medicine—to the prioress, and sundry similar little gifts to the other
-officials, not excepting the Latin professor. To her, I presented a
-nosegay, containing a little pink note, whose corner just peeped out of
-the chambeli[27] blossoms. With fear and trembling I delivered it, and
-was overjoyed to see her presently slip out of the room. She returned
-in time to hear me tell the prioress that my master was too ill to wait
-upon them that day, and by the young nun’s earnest look as she awaited my
-answer to the superior’s question concerning the nature of the complaint,
-I concluded that the poor thing was in a fair way for perdition. My reply
-relieved their anxiety. Immediately afterwards their curiosity came into
-play. A thousand questions poured down upon me, like the pitiless pelting
-of a monsoon rain. My master’s birth, parentage, education, profession,
-travels, rank, age, fortune, religion, and prospects, were demanded
-and re-demanded, answered and re-answered, till my brain felt tired.
-According to instructions, I enlarged upon his gallantry in action,
-his chastity and temperance, his love for his sister, and his sincere
-devotion to the Roman Catholic faith.”
-
-“A pretty specimen of a rascal you proved yourself, then!”
-
-“What could I do, Sahib?” said Salvador, with a hopeless shrug of the
-shoulders, and an expression of profound melancholy. “My master never
-failed to find out a secret, and had I deceived him—”
-
-“Well!”
-
-“My allusion to the sister provoked another outburst of inquisitiveness.
-On this subject, also, I satisfied them by a delightful description of
-the dear little creature, whose beauty attracted, juvenile piety edified,
-and large fortune enchanted every one. The eyes of the old prioress
-glistened from behind her huge cheeks, as I dwelt upon the latter part of
-the theme especially: but I remarked the Latin professor was so little
-interested by it, that she had left the room. When she returned, a book,
-bound in dirty white parchment, with some huge letters painted on the
-back of the binding, was handed over to me for transmission to my master;
-who, it appears, had been very anxious to edify his mind by perusing the
-life of the holy Saint Augustine.
-
-“After at least three hours spent in perpetual conversation, and the
-occasional discussion of mango cheese, I was allowed to depart, laden
-with messages, amidst a shower of benedictions upon my master’s head,
-prayers for his instant recovery, and anticipations of much pleasure in
-meeting him.
-
-“I should talk till we got to Calicut, Sahib, if I were to detail to you
-the adventures of the ensuing fortnight. My master passed two nights in
-the cloisters—not praying, I suppose; the days he spent in conversation
-with the prioress and sub-prioress, two holy personages who looked rather
-like Guzerat apes than mortal women. At the end of the third week a
-swift-sailing pattimar made its appearance.
-
-“I was present when my master took leave of the Superior, and an
-affecting sight it was; the fervour with which he kissed the hand of
-his ‘second mother,’ his ‘own dear sister’s future protectress.’ How
-often he promised to return from Bombay, immediately that the necessary
-preparations were made! how carefully he noted down the many little
-commissions entrusted to him! And, how naturally his eyes moistened as,
-receiving the benediction, he withdrew from the presence of the reverend
-ladies!
-
-“But that same pattimar was never intended for Bombay; I knew THAT!
-
-“My master and I immediately packed up everything. Before sunset all the
-baggage and servants were sent on board, with the exception of myself,
-who was ordered to sit under the trees on the side of the wharf, and
-an Affghan scoundrel, who went out walking with the Sahib about eleven
-o’clock that night. The two started, in native dresses, with their
-turbans concealing all but the parts about their eyes; both carried naked
-knives, long and bright enough to make one shake with fear, tucked under
-their arms, with dark lanterns in their hands. My master’s face—as usual
-when he went upon such expeditions—was blackened, and with all respect,
-speaking in your presence, I never saw an English gentleman look more
-like a Mussulman thief!”
-
-“But why make such preparations against a house full of unprotected
-women?”
-
-“Because, Sahib,” replied Salvador, “at night there are always some men
-about the nunnery. The knives, however, were only in case of an accident;
-for, as I afterwards learned, the Latin professor had mixed up a little
-datura[28] seed with the tobacco served out to the guards that evening.
-
-“A little after midnight I felt a kick, and awoke. Two men hurried me on
-board the pattimar, which had weighed anchor as the clock struck twelve.
-Putting out her sweeps she glided down the Rio swiftly and noiselessly.
-
-“When the drowsiness of sleep left my eyelids I observed that the two men
-were my master and that ruffian Khudadad. I dared not, however, ask any
-questions, as they both looked fierce as wounded tigers, though the Sahib
-could not help occasionally showing a kind of smile. They went to the
-head of the boat, and engaged in deep conversation, through the medium of
-some tongue to me unknown; and it was not before we had passed under the
-guns of the Castello, and were dancing merrily over the blue water, that
-my officer retired to his bed.
-
-“And what became of the Latin professor?”
-
-“The Sahib shall hear presently. In the morning I was called up for
-examination, but my innocence bore me through that trial safely. My
-master naturally enough suspected me of having played him some trick. The
-impression, however, soon wore off, and I was favoured with the following
-detail of his night’s adventure.
-
-“Exactly as the bell struck twelve, my Sahib and his cut-throat had
-taken their stand outside the little door leading into the back-garden.
-According to agreement previously made, one of them began to bark like
-a jackal, while the other responded regularly with the barking of a
-watch-dog. After some minutes spent in this exercise they carefully
-opened the door with a false key, stole through the cloisters, having
-previously forced the lock of the grating with their daggers, and made
-their way towards the room where the Latin professor slept. But my
-master, in the hurry of the moment, took the wrong turning, and found
-himself in the chamber of the sub-prioress, whose sleeping form was
-instantly raised, embraced, and borne off in triumph by the exulting
-Khudadad.
-
-“My officer lingered for a few minutes to ascertain that all was right.
-He then crept out of the room, closed the door outside, passed through
-the garden, carefully locked the gate, whose key he threw away, and ran
-towards the place where he had appointed to meet Khudadad, and his lovely
-burthen. But imagine his horror and disgust when, instead of the expected
-large black eyes and the pretty little rosebud of a mouth, a pair of
-rolling yellow balls glared fearfully in his face, and two big black
-lips, at first shut with terror, began to shout and scream and abuse him
-with all their might.
-
-“‘Khudadad, we have eaten filth,’ said my master, ‘how are we to lay this
-she-devil?’
-
-“‘Cut her throat?’ replied the ruffian.
-
-“‘No, that won’t do. Pinion her arms, gag her with your handkerchief, and
-leave her—we must be off instantly.’
-
-“So they came on board, and we set sail as I recounted to your honour.”
-
-“But why didn’t your master, when he found out his mistake, return for
-the Latin professor?”
-
-“Have I not told the Sahib that the key of the garden-gate had been
-thrown away, the walls cannot be scaled, and all the doors are bolted and
-barred every night as carefully as if a thousand prisoners were behind
-them?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The population of Goa is composed of three heterogeneous elements,
-namely, pure Portuguese, black Christians, and the heathenry. A short
-description of each order will, perhaps, be acceptable to the reader.
-
-The European portion of Goanese society may be subdivided into two
-distinct parts—the officials, who visit India on their tour of service,
-and the white families settled in the country. The former must leave
-Portugal for three years; and if in the army get a step by so doing.
-At the same time as, unlike ourselves, they derive no increase of pay
-from the expatriation, their return home is looked forward to with great
-impatience. Their existence in the East must be one of endurance. They
-complain bitterly of their want of friends, the disagreeable state
-of society, and the dull stagnant life they are compelled to lead.
-They despise their dark brethren, and consider them uncouth in manner,
-destitute of _usage_ in society, and deficient in honour, courage,[29]
-and manliness. The despised retort by asserting that the white Portuguese
-are licentious, ill-informed, haughty, and reserved. No better proof
-of how utterly the attempt to promote cordiality between the European
-and the Asiatic by a system of intermarriage and equality of rights
-has failed in practice can be adduced, than the utter contempt in
-which the former holds the latter at Goa. No Anglo-Indian Nabob sixty
-years ago ever thought less of a “nigger” than a Portuguese officer
-now does. But as there is perfect equality, political[30] as well as
-social, between the two colours, the “whites,” though reduced to the
-level of the herd, hold aloof from it; and the “blacks” feel able to
-associate with those who despise them but do so rarely and unwillingly.
-Few open signs of dislike appear to the unpractised observer in the
-hollow politeness always paraded whenever the two parties meet; but when
-a Portuguese gentleman becomes sufficiently intimate with a stranger
-to be communicative, his first political diatribe is directed against
-his dark fellow-subjects. We were assured by a high authority that the
-native members of a court-martial, if preponderating, would certainly
-find a European guilty, whether rightly or wrongly, _n’importe_. The
-same gentleman, when asked which method of dealing with the natives he
-preferred, Albuquerque’s or that of Leadenhall Street, unhesitatingly
-replied, “the latter, as it is better to keep one’s enemies out of
-doors.” How like the remark made to Sir A. Burnes by Runjeet Singh, the
-crafty old politician of Northern India.
-
-The reader may remember that it was Albuquerque[31] who advocated
-marriages between the European settlers and the natives of India.
-However reasonable it might have been to expect the amalgamation of the
-races in the persons of their descendants, experience and stern facts
-condemn the measure as a most delusive and treacherous political day
-dream. It has lost the Portuguese almost everything in Africa as well as
-Asia. May Heaven preserve our rulers from following their example! In our
-humble opinion, to tolerate it is far too liberal a measure to be a safe
-one.
-
-The white families settled in the country were formerly called Castissos
-to distinguish them from Reinols. In appearance there is little
-difference between them; the former are somewhat less robust than the
-latter, but both are equally pallid and sickly-looking—they dress alike,
-and allow the beard and mustachios[32] to grow. This colonist class is
-neither a numerous nor an influential one. As soon as intermarriage
-with the older settlers takes place the descendants become Mestici—in
-plain English, mongrels. The flattering term is occasionally applied to
-a white family which has been settled in the country for more than one
-generation, “for although,” say the Goanese, “there is no mixture of
-blood, still there has been one of air or climate, which comes to the
-same thing.” Owing to want of means, the expense of passage, and the
-unsettled state of the home country, children are very seldom sent to
-Portugal for education. They presently degenerate, from the slow but sure
-effects of a debilitating climate, and its concomitant evils, inertness,
-and want of excitement. Habituated from infancy to utter idleness, and
-reared up to consider the _far niente_ their _summum bonum_, they have
-neither the will nor the power of active exertion in after years.
-
-There is little wealth among the classes above described. Rich families
-are rare, landed property is by no means valuable; salaries small;[33]
-and in so cheap a country as Goa anything beyond 200_l._ or 300_l._
-a-year would be useless. Entertainments are not common; a ball every six
-months at Government House, a few dinner parties, and an occasional
-_soirée_ or _nautch_, make up the list of gaieties. In the different
-little villages where the government _employés_ reside, once a week there
-is quadrilling and waltzing, _à l’antique_, some flirting, and a great
-deal of smoking in the verandah with the ladies, who are, generally
-speaking, European. Gambling is uncommon; high play unknown. The theatre
-is closed as if never to open again. No serenades float upon the evening
-gale, the _guitarra_ hangs dusty and worm-eaten against the wall, and
-the _cicisbeo_ is known only by name. Intrigue does not show itself so
-flauntingly as in Italy, and other parts of Southern Europe. Scandal,
-however, is as plentiful as it always is in a limited circle of idle
-society. The stranger who visits Goa, persuaded that he is to meet with
-the freedom of manners and love of pleasure which distinguish the people
-of the Continent, will find himself grievously mistaken. The priesthood
-is numerous, and still influential, if not powerful. The fair sex has not
-much liberty here, and their natural protectors are jealous as jailers.
-
-The ancient Portuguese _costume de dame_, a plain linen cap, long white
-waistcoat, with ponderous rosary slung over it, thick striped and
-coloured petticoat, and, out of doors, a huge white, yellow, blue, or
-black calico sheet, muffling the whole figure—is now confined to the
-poor—the ladies dress according to the Parisian fashions. As, however,
-steamers and the overland route have hitherto done little for Goa,
-there is considerable grotesqueness to be observed in the garments of
-the higher as well as the lower orders. The usual mode of life among
-the higher orders is as follows:—They rise early, take a cold bath, and
-make a light breakfast at some time between seven and nine. This is
-followed by a dinner, usually at two; it is a heavy meal of bread, meat,
-soup, fish, sweetmeats, and fruits, all served up at the same time, in
-admirable confusion. There are two descriptions of wine, in general
-use; the _tinto_ and _branco_,[34] both imported from Portugal. About
-five in the evening some take tea and biscuits, after awaking from the
-siesta and bathing; a stroll at sunset is then indulged in, and the
-day concludes with a supper of fish, rice, and curry. Considering the
-little exercise in vogue, the quantity of food consumed is wonderful. The
-Goanese smoke all day, ladies as well as gentlemen; but cheroots, cigars,
-and the hookah are too expensive to be common. A pinch of Virginia
-or Maryland, uncomfortably wrapped up in a dried plantain leaf, and
-called a _cannudo_, is here the poor succedaneum for the charming little
-_cigarita_ of Spain. The talented author of a “Peep at Polynesian Life”
-assures us, that, “strange as it may seem, there is nothing in which a
-young and beautiful female appears to more advantage than in the act
-of smoking.” We are positive that nothing is more shocking than to see
-a Goanese lady handling her _biree_,[35] except to hear the peculiarly
-elaborate way in which she ejects saliva when enjoying her weed.
-
-The reader who knows anything of India will at once perceive the
-difference between English and Portuguese life in the East. The former
-is stormy from perpetual motion, the latter stagnant with long-continued
-repose. Our eternal “knocking about” tells upon us sooner or later. A
-Portuguese lieutenant is often greyheaded before he gets his company;
-whereas some of our captains have scarcely a hair upon their chins. But
-the former eats much and drinks little, smokes a pinch of tobacco instead
-of Manillas, marries early, has a good roof over his head, and, above
-all things, knows not what marching and counter-marching mean. He never
-rides, seldom shoots, cannot hunt, and ignores mess tiffins and guest
-nights. No wonder that he neither receives nor gives promotion.
-
-An entertainment at the house of a Goanese noble presents a curious
-contrast to the semi-barbarous magnificence of our Anglo-Indian “doings.”
-In the one as much money as possible is lavished in the worst way
-imaginable; the other makes all the display which taste, economy, and
-regard for effect combined produce. The balls given at the palace are,
-probably, the prettiest sights of the kind in Western India. There is
-a variety of costumes, which if not individually admirable, make up
-an effective _tout ensemble_; even the dark faces, in uniforms and
-ball dresses, tend to variegate and diversify the scene. The bands are
-better than the generality of our military musicians, European as well
-as Native, and the dancing, such as it is, much more spirited. For the
-profusion of refreshments,—the ices, champagne, and second suppers, which
-render a Bombay ball so pernicious a thing in more ways than one, here we
-look in vain.
-
-The dinner parties resemble the other entertainments in economy and
-taste; the table is decorated, as in Italy, with handsome China vases,
-containing bouquets, fruits, and sweetmeats, which remain there all
-the time. Amongst the higher classes the cookery is all in the modified
-French style common to the South of Europe. The wines are the white
-and red _vins ordinaires_ of Portugal; sometimes a bottle of port, or
-a little bitter beer from Bombay, are placed upon the table. The great
-annoyance of every grand dinner is the long succession of speeches which
-concludes it. A most wearisome recreation it is, certainly, when people
-have nothing to do but to propose each other’s healths in long orations,
-garnished with as many facetious or flattering platitudes as possible.
-After each speech all rise up, and with loud “vivas” wave their glasses,
-and drain a few drops in honour of the accomplished _caballero_ last
-lauded. The language used is Portuguese; on the rare occasions when the
-person addressed or alluded to is a stranger, then, probably, Lusitanian
-French will make its appearance. We modestly suggest to any reader who
-may find himself in such predicament the advisability of imitating our
-example.
-
-On one occasion after enduring half an hour’s encomium delivered in a
-semi-intelligible dialect of Parisian, we rose to return thanks, and
-for that purpose selecting the English language, we launched into that
-inexhaustible theme for declamation, the glories of the Portuguese
-eastern empire, beginning at De Gama, and ending with his Excellency
-the Governor-General of all the Indies, who was sitting hard by. It is
-needless to say that our oratory excited much admiration, the more,
-perhaps, as no one understood it. The happiest results ensued—during our
-stay at Goa we never were urged to address the company again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE POPULATION OF PANJIM.
-
-
-The black Christians, like the whites, may be subdivided into two orders;
-first, the converted Hindoos; secondly, the mixed breed of European and
-Indian blood. Moreover, these latter have another distinction, being
-either Brahman Christians, as they ridiculously term themselves, on
-account of their descent from the Hindoo pontifical caste, or common
-ones. The only perceptible difference between them is, we believe, a
-moral one; the former are justly renowned for extraordinary deceitfulness
-and treachery. They consider themselves superior to the latter in point
-of dignity, and anciently enjoyed some peculiar privileges, such as the
-right of belonging to the orders of the _Theatins_, or regular clerks,
-and Saint Philip Nerius.[36] But in manners, appearance, customs, and
-education, they exactly resemble the mass of the community.
-
-The Mestici, or mixed breed, composes the great mass of society at Goa;
-it includes all classes, from the cook to the government official. In
-1835 one of them rose to the highest post of dignity, but his political
-career was curt and remarkably unsuccessful. Some half-castes travel in
-Europe, a great many migrate to Bombay for service and commerce, but the
-major part stays at Goa to stock professions, and support the honour of
-the family. It would be, we believe, difficult to find in Asia an uglier
-or more degraded looking race than that which we are now describing.
-The forehead is low and flat, the eyes small, quick, and restless;
-there is a mixture of sensuality and cunning about the region of the
-mouth, and a development of the lower part of the face which are truly
-unprepossessing, not to say revolting. Their figures are short and small,
-with concave chests, the usual calfless Indian leg, and a remarkable want
-of muscularity. In personal attractions the fair sex is little superior
-to the other. During the whole period of our stay at Goa we scarcely
-ever saw a pretty half-caste girl. At the same time we must confess that
-it is difficult to pronounce judgment upon this point, as women of good
-mixed family do not appear before casual visitors. And this is of course
-deemed a sign of superior modesty and chastity, for the black Christians,
-Asiatically enough, believe it impossible for a female to converse
-with a strange man and yet be virtuous. The dark ladies affect the old
-Portuguese costume, described in the preceding chapter; a few of the
-wealthiest dress like Europeans. Their education is purposely neglected—a
-little reading of their vernacular tongue, with the Ave and other prayers
-in general use, dancing, embroidery, and making sweetmeats,[37] are
-considered _satis superque_ in the way of accomplishments. Of late years,
-a girls’ school has been established by order of government at Panjim,
-but a single place of the kind is scarcely likely to affect the mass of
-the community. The life led by the fair sex at Goa must be, one would
-think, a dull one. Domestic occupations, smoking, a little visiting, and
-going to church, especially on the _ferie_, or festivals, lying in bed,
-sitting _en deshabille_, riding about in a mancheel, and an occasional
-dance—such are the blunt weapons with which they attack Time. They marry
-early, begin to have a family probably at thirteen, are old women at
-twenty-two, and decrepit at thirty-five. Like Indians generally, they
-appear to be defective in amativeness, abundant in philoprogenitiveness,
-and therefore not much addicted to intrigues. At the same time we must
-record the fact, that the present archbishop has been obliged to issue
-an order forbidding nocturnal processions, which, as they were always
-crowded with lady devotees, gave rise to certain obstinate scandals.
-
-The mongrel men dress as Europeans, but the quantity of clothing
-diminishes with the wearer’s rank. Some of the lower orders, especially
-in the country, affect a full-dress costume, consisting _in toto_, of
-a cloth jacket and black silk knee breeches. Even the highest almost
-always wear coloured clothes, as, by so doing, the washerman is less
-required. They are intolerably dirty and disagreeable:—verily cleanliness
-ought to be made an article of faith in the East. They are fond of
-spirituous liquors, and seldom drink, except honestly for the purpose
-of intoxication. As regards living, they follow the example of their
-white fellow-subjects in all points, except that they eat more rice
-and less meat. Their characters may be briefly described as passionate
-and cowardly, jealous and revengeful, with more of the vices than the
-virtues belonging to the two races from which they are descended. In
-early youth, especially before arriving at years of puberty, they evince
-a remarkable acuteness of mind, and facility in acquiring knowledge.
-They are equally quick at learning languages, and the lower branches of
-mathematical study, but they seem unable to obtain any results from their
-acquirements. Goa cannot boast of ever having produced a single eminent
-literato, or even a second-rate poet. To sum up in a few words, the
-mental and bodily development of this class are remarkable only as being
-a strange _mélange_ of European and Asiatic peculiarities, of antiquated
-civilization and modern barbarism.
-
-We before alluded to the deep-rooted antipathy between the black and
-the white population: the feeling of the former towards an Englishman
-is one of dislike not unmingled with fear. Should Portugal ever doom
-her now worse than useless colony to form part payment of her debts,
-their fate would be rather a hard one. Considering the wide spread of
-perhaps too liberal opinions concerning the race quaintly designated as
-“God’s images carved in ebony,” they might fare respectably as regards
-public estimation, but scarcely well enough to satisfy their inordinate
-ambition. It is sufficiently amusing to hear a young gentleman, whose
-appearance, manners, and colour fit him admirably to become a band-boy to
-some Sepoy corps, talk of visiting Bombay, with letters of introduction
-to the Governor and Commander-in-chief. Still more diverting it is when
-you know that the same character would invariably deduct a perquisite
-from the rent of any house he may have procured, or boat hired for a
-stranger. Yet at the same time it is hard for a man who speaks a little
-English, French, Latin, and Portuguese to become the lower clerk of
-some office on the paltry pay of 70_l._ per annum; nor is it agreeable
-for an individual who has just finished his course of mathematics,
-medicine, and philosophy to sink into the lowly position of an assistant
-apothecary in the hospital of a native regiment. No wonder that the black
-Indo-Portuguese is an utter radical; he has gained much by Constitution,
-the “dwarfish demon” which sets everybody by the ears at Goa. Hence it is
-that he will take the first opportunity in conversation with a foreigner
-to extol Lusitanian liberty to the skies, abuse English tyranny over,
-and insolence to, their unhappy Indian subjects, and descant delightedly
-upon the probability of an immediate crash in our Eastern empire. And,
-as might be expected, although poverty sends forth thousands of black
-Portuguese to earn money in foreign lands, they prefer the smallest
-competence at home, where equality allows them to indulge in a favourite
-independence of manner utterly at variance with our Anglo-Indian notions
-concerning the proper demeanour of a native towards a European.
-
-The native Christian is originally a converted Hindoo, usually of the
-lowest castes;[38] and though he has changed for centuries his manners,
-dress, and religion, he retains to a wonderful extent the ideas,
-prejudices, and superstitions of his ancient state. The learned _griff_,
-Bishop Heber, in theorizing upon the probable complexion of our First
-Father, makes a remark about these people, so curiously erroneous, that
-it deserves to be mentioned. “The Portuguese have, during a three hundred
-years’ residence in India, become as black as Caffres; surely this goes
-far to disprove the assertion which is sometimes made, that climate
-alone is insufficient to account for the difference between the Negro
-and the European.” Climate in this case had nothing whatever to do with
-the change of colour. And if it had, we might instance as an argument
-against the universality of such atmospheric action, the Parsee, who,
-though he has been settled in the tropical lands of India for more than
-double three hundred years, is still, in appearance, complexion, voice,
-and manners, as complete an Iranian as when he first fled from his native
-mountains. But this is _par parenthèse_.
-
-The native Christians of Goa always shave the head; they cultivate an
-apology for a whisker, but never allow the beard or mustachios to grow.
-Their dress is scanty in the extreme, often consisting only of a dirty
-rag, worn about the waist, and their ornaments, a string of beads round
-the neck. The women are equally badly clothed: the single long piece of
-cotton, called in India a saree, is their whole attire,[39] consequently
-the bosom is unsupported and uncovered. This race is decidedly the lowest
-in the scale of civilized humanity we have yet seen. In appearance they
-are short, heavy, meagre, and very dark; their features are uncomely
-in the extreme; they are dirtier than Pariahs, and abound in cutaneous
-diseases. They live principally on fish and rice, with pork and fruit
-when they can afford such luxuries. Meat as well as bread[40] is holiday
-diet; clarified butter, rice, water, curry, and cocoa-nut milk are
-every-day food.
-
-These people are said to be short lived, the result of hard labour,
-early marriages, and innutritious food. We scarcely ever saw a man
-that looked fifty. In disposition they resemble the half-castes, but
-they are even more deficient in spirit, and quarrelsome withal, than
-their “whitey-brown” brethren. All their knowledge is religious, and
-consists only of a few prayers in corrupt Maharatta, taught them by their
-parents or the priest; these they carefully repeat three times _per
-diem_—at dawn, in the afternoon, and before retiring to rest. Loudness
-of voice and a very Puritanical snuffle being _sine quâ nons_ in their
-devotional exercises, the neighbourhood of a pious family is anything
-but pleasant. Their superiority to the heathen around them consists in
-eating pork, drinking toddy to excess, shaving the face, never washing,
-and a conviction that they are going to paradise, whereas all other
-religionists are emphatically not. They are employed as sepoys, porters,
-fishermen, seamen, labourers, mancheel bearers, workmen and servants, and
-their improvident indolence renders the necessity of hard labour at times
-imperative. The carpenters, farriers, and other trades, not only ask an
-exorbitant sum for working, but also, instead of waiting on the employer,
-scarcely ever fail to keep him waiting for them. For instance, on Monday
-you wanted a farrier, and sent for him. He politely replied that he was
-occupied at that moment, but would call at his earliest convenience.
-This, if you keep up a running fire of messages, will probably be about
-the next Saturday.
-
-The visitor will not find at Goa that number and variety of heathen
-castes which bewilder his mind at Bombay. The capital of Portuguese India
-now stands so low amongst the cities of Asia that few or no inducements
-are offered to the merchant and the trader, who formerly crowded her
-ports. The Turk, the Arab, and the Persian have left them for a wealthier
-mart, and the only strangers are a few Englishmen, who pass through the
-place to visit its monuments of antiquity.
-
-The Moslem population at Panjim scarcely amounts to a thousand. They
-have no place of worship, although their religion is now, like all
-others, tolerated.[41] The distinctive mark of the Faithful is the long
-beard. They appear superior beings by the side of the degenerate native
-Christians.
-
-Next to the Christians, the Hindoos are the most numerous portion
-of the community. They are held in the highest possible esteem and
-consideration, and no office unconnected with religion is closed to
-them. This fact may account for the admirable ease and freedom of
-manner prevalent amongst them. The Gentoo will enter your room with his
-slippers on, sit down after shaking hands as if the action were a matter
-of course, chew his betel, and squirt the scarlet juice all over the
-floor, in a word, make himself as offensive as you can conceive. But at
-Goa all men are equal. Moreover, the heathens may be seen in Christian
-churches,[42] with covered feet, pointing at, putting questions
-concerning, and criticising the images with the same quite-at-home
-_nonchalance_ with which they would wander through the porticoes of
-Dwarka or the pagodas of Aboo. And these men’s fathers, in the good old
-times of Goa, were not allowed even to burn their dead[43] in the land!
-
-In appearance the Hindoos are of a fair, or rather a light yellow
-complexion. Some of the women are by no means deficient in personal
-charms, and the men generally surpass in size and strength the present
-descendants of the Portuguese heroes. They wear the mustachio, but not
-the beard, and dress in the long cotton coat, with the cloth wound round
-the waist, very much the same as in Bombay. The head, however, is usually
-covered with a small red velvet skullcap, instead of a turban. The
-female attire is the saree, with the long-armed bodice beneath it; their
-ornaments are numerous; and their caste is denoted by a round spot of
-kunkun, or vermilion, upon the forehead between the eyebrows.
-
-As usual among Hindoos, the pagans at Goa are divided into a number
-of sub-castes. In the Brahman we find two great subdivisions, the
-Sashteekar, or inhabitants of Salsette, and the Bardeskar, or people of
-Bardes. The former is confessedly superior to the latter. Both families
-will eat together, but they do not intermarry. Besides these two, there
-are a few of the Chitpawan, Sinart, Kararee and Waishnau castes of the
-pontifical order.
-
-The Brahmans always wear the tika, or sectarian mark, perpendicularly,
-to distinguish them from the Sonars, or Goldsmiths, who place it
-horizontally on the forehead. They are but superficially educated, as
-few of them know Sanscrit, and these few not well. All read and write
-Maharatta fluently, but they speak the inharmonious Concanee dialect.
-
-Next to the Brahmans, and resembling them in personal appearance, are
-the Banyans, or traders. They seem to be a very thriving portion of the
-population, and live in great comfort, if not luxury.
-
-The Shudra, or servile class of Hindoos, is, of course, by far the most
-numerous; it contains many varieties, such as Bhandan (toddy-makers),
-Koonbee (potters), Hajjam (barbers), &c.
-
-Of mixed castes we find the goldsmith, who is descended from a Brahman
-father and servile mother, and the Kunchanee, or Εταιρη, whose maternal
-parent is always a Maharatta woman, whatever the other progenitor may
-chance to be. The outcasts are principally Chamars, or tanners, and
-Parwars (Pariahs).
-
-These Hindoos very rarely become Christians, now that fire and steel, the
-dungeon and the rack, the rice-pot and the rupee, are not allowed to play
-the persuasive part in the good work formerly assigned to them. Indeed,
-we think that conversion of the heathen is almost more common in British
-than in Portuguese India, the natural result of our being able to pay the
-proselytes more liberally. When such an event does occur at Goa, it is
-celebrated at a church in the north side of the creek, opposite Panjim,
-with all the pomp and ceremony due to the importance of spoiling a good
-Gentoo by making a bad Christian of him.
-
-We were amused to witness on one occasion a proof of the high importance
-attached to Hindoo opinion in this part of the world. Outside the church
-of St. Agnes, in a little chapel, stood one of the lowest orders of black
-priests, lecturing a host of naked, squatting, smoking, and chattering
-auditors. Curiosity induced us to venture nearer, and we then discovered
-that the theme was a rather imaginative account of the birth and life
-of the Redeemer. Presently a group of loitering Gentoos, who had been
-strolling about the church, came up and stood by our side.
-
-The effect of their appearance upon his Reverence’s discourse was
-remarkable, as may be judged from the peroration, which was very much in
-these words:—
-
-“You must remember, sons, that the _avatár_, or incarnation of your
-blessed Lord, was in the form of a rajah, who ruled millions of men. He
-was truly great and powerful; he rode the largest elephant ever trapped;
-he smoked a hookah of gold, and when he went to war he led an army the
-like of which for courage, numbers, and weapons was never seen before. He
-would have conquered the whole world, from Portugal to China, had he not
-been restrained by humility. But, on the last day, when he shall appear
-even in greater state than before, he will lead us his people to most
-glorious and universal victory.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the sermon concluded, and the listeners had wandered away in
-different directions, we walked up to his Reverence and asked him if he
-had ever read the Gospel.
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Then where did you find the historical picture you so graphically drew
-just now about the rajahship?”
-
-“Where?” said the fellow, grinning and pointing to his forehead: “here,
-to be sure. Didn’t you see those Gentoos standing by and listening to
-every word I was saying? A pretty thing it would have been to see the
-pagans laughing and sneering at us Christians because the Founder of our
-Blessed Faith was the son of a Burhaee.”[44]
-
-Such reasoning was conclusive.
-
-If our memory serve us aright, there is a story somewhat like the
-preceding in the pages of the Abbé Dubois. Such things we presume must
-constantly be taking place in different parts of India. On one occasion
-we saw an unmistakable Lakhshmi[45] borne in procession amongst Christian
-images, and, if history be trusted, formerly it was common to carry as
-many Hindoo deities as European saints in the palanquins. On the other
-hand, many a Gentoo has worn a crucifix for years, with firm faith in
-the religious efficacy of the act, yet utterly ignorant of the nature of
-the symbol he was bearing, and we have ourselves written many and many a
-charm for ladies desirous of becoming prolific, or matrons fearful of
-the evil eye being cast upon their offspring.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On our return from old Goa to Panjim we visited an establishment, which
-may be considered rather a peculiar one. It is called the Caza de
-Misericordia, and contains some forty or fifty young ladies, for the most
-part orphans, of all colours, classes, and ages. They are educated by
-nuns, under the direction of a superior and a committee, and when grown
-up, remain in the house till they receive and accept suitable offers of
-marriage.
-
-Hearing that it was not unusual to propose oneself as a suitor; with a
-view of inspecting the curiosities of the establishment, we repaired to
-the Caza, and were politely received by the old lady at the gate. After
-showing us over the chapel and other public portions of the edifice,
-she perceived that we had some other object, and presently discovered
-that we were desirous of playing the part of Cœlebs in search of a
-wife. Thereupon she referred us to another and more dignified relic
-of antiquity, who, after a long and narrow look at our outward man,
-proceeded to catechise us in the following manner.
-
-“You say, señor, that you want a wife; what may be your name?”
-
-“Peter Smith.”
-
-“Your religion?”
-
-“The Christian, señora.”
-
-“Your profession?”
-
-“An ensign in H. E. I. Company’s Navy.”
-
-Not satisfied with such authentic details, the inquisitive old lady began
-a regular system of cross-questioning, and so diligently did she pursue
-it, that we had some difficulty to prevent contradicting ourselves. At
-length, when she had, as she supposed, thoroughly mastered the subject,
-she requested us to step into a corridor, and to dispose of ourselves
-upon a three-legged stool. This we did, leaning gracefully against the
-whitewashed wall, and looking stedfastly at the open grating. Presently,
-a wrinkled old countenance, with a skin more like a walnut’s than a
-woman’s, peered through the bars, grinned at us, and disappeared. Then
-came half-a-dozen juveniles, at the very least, tittering and whispering
-most diligently, all of which we endured with stoical firmness, feeling
-that the end of such things was approaching.
-
-At last, a sixteen-year old face gradually drew within sight from behind
-the bars. That was clearly one of the young ladies. Now for it.—
-
-“Good day, and my respects to you, senorita!”
-
-“The same to you, sir.”
-
-Hem! It is rather a terrible thing to make love under such circumstances.
-The draw upon one’s imagination in order to open the dialogue, is alone
-sufficient to frighten Cupid out of the field. It was impossible to talk
-of the weather, in that country where it burns, deluges, and chills with
-the regularity of clock-work. So we plunged at once _in medias res_.
-
-“Should you like to be married, senorita?”
-
-“Yes, very much, señor.”
-
-“And why, if you would satisfy my curiosity?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-Equally unsatisfactory was the rest of the conversation. So we bowed
-politely, rose from our three-legged stool, and determined to seek an
-interview with the Superior. Our request was at last granted, and we
-found a personage admirably adapted, in point of appearance, to play
-dragon over the treasures committed to her charge. She had a face which
-reminded us exactly of a white horse, a body answerable, and manners
-decidedly repulsive. However, she did not spare her tongue. She
-informed us that there were twelve marriageable young ladies then in the
-establishment, named them, and minutely described their birth, parentage,
-education, mental and physiological development. She also informed us
-that they would receive a dowry from the funds of the house, which, on
-further inquiry, proved to be the sum of ten pounds.
-
-At length we thought there was an opportunity to put in a few words about
-our grievance—how we had been placed on a three-legged stool before a
-grating—exposed to the inquisitiveness of the seniors, and subjected to
-the ridicule of the junior part of the community. We concluded with a
-modest hint that we should like to be admitted within, and be allowed a
-little conversation with the twelve marriageable young ladies to whom she
-had alluded.
-
-The old lady suddenly became majestic.
-
-“Before you are admitted to such a privilege, señor, you must be kind
-enough to address an official letter to the mesa, or board, explaining
-your intentions, and requesting the desired permission. We are people
-under government, and do not keep a naughty house. Do you understand me,
-señor?”
-
-“Perfectly, madam.”
-
-Upon which we arose, scraped the ground thrice, with all the
-laboriousness of Indo-Portuguese politeness, promised compliance in our
-best phraseology, and rapidly disappeared, resolving never to near the
-Caza de Misericordia again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-SERODA.
-
-
-After an unusually protracted term of isolation and friendlessness, we
-were agreeably surprised by meeting Lieutenants L⸺ and T⸺, walking in
-their shooting-jackets, somewhat slowly and disconsolately, down the
-dusty wharf of New Goa.
-
-It is, we may here observe, by no means easy for a stranger—especially
-if he be an Englishman—to get into Goanese society: more difficult still
-to amuse himself when admitted. His mother tongue and Hindostanee will
-not be sufficient for him. French, at least, or, what is more useful,
-Portuguese should be well understood, if not fluently spoken. As the
-generality of visitors pass merely a few days at Panjim, call at the
-palace, have a card on the secretary, rush to the ruins, and then depart,
-they expect and receive little attention. There are no messes to invite
-them to—no public amusements or places of resort, and private families
-do not easily open their doors. Besides, as might be expected, the
-Goanese have occasionally suffered severely from individuals terming
-themselves “British Officers.” It were well too, had the offenders been
-always of the male sex: unfortunately for our national reputation, such
-is by no means the case. However, a stranger may be sure that with his
-commission, some knowledge of languages, and any letter of introduction,
-he will be most hospitably received in society, such as it is.
-
-The unlearned in such matters may be disposed to inquire whether there
-are no resident Englishmen at Goa.
-
-Certainly, there are a few; but they are, generally speaking, of that
-class who have made Bombay too hot for them. Once in the Portuguese
-territory, they may laugh at the bailiff, and fearlessly meet the
-indignant creditor. The cheapness of the locality is, to certain
-characters, another inducement; so that, on the whole, it is by no means
-safe to become acquainted with any compatriot one may chance to meet at
-Goa.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now it so happened that all three of us had been reading and digesting a
-rich account of Seroda, which had just appeared in one of the English
-periodicals. We remembered glowing descriptions of a village, inhabited
-by beautiful Bayaderes, governed by a lady of the same class—Eastern
-Amazons, who permitted none of the rougher sex to dwell beneath the
-shadow of their roof-trees—high caste maidens, who, having been
-compelled to eat beef by the “tyrannical Portuguese in the olden time,”
-had forfeited the blessings of Hindooism, without acquiring those of
-Christianity,—lovely patriots, whom no filthy lucre could induce to quit
-their peaceful homes: with many and many etceteras, equally enchanting to
-novelty-hunters and excitement-mongers.
-
-We unanimously resolved to visit, without loss of time, a spot so
-deservedly renowned. Having been informed by our old friend John Thomas,
-that we should find everything in the best style at Seroda, we hired a
-canoe, cursorily put up a few cigars, a change of raiment, and a bottle
-of Cognac to keep out the cold; and, a little after sunset, we started
-for our Fool’s Paradise.
-
-Our course lay towards the south-east. After about an hour’s rowing along
-the coast, we entered a narrow channel, formed by the sea and innumerable
-little streams that descend towards the main, winding through a dense
-mass of bright green underwood. It was a lovely night, but the thick
-dew soon compelled us to retreat under the mats destined to defend our
-recumbent forms. The four boatmen that composed the crew must have been
-sadly addicted to sleeping on duty, for, although the distance was only
-fifteen miles, the sun appeared high in the heavens next morning before
-we arrived at the landing-place. A guide was soon procured, and under
-his direction we toiled up two miles of a steep and rocky path, through
-a succession of cocoa groves, and a few parched-up fields scattered here
-and there, till at last we saw, deep in a long narrow hollow, surrounded
-by high hills, the bourne of our pilgrimage.
-
-The appearance of Seroda is intensely that of a Hindoo town. Houses,
-pagodas, tombs, tanks, with lofty parapets, and huge flights of steps,
-peepul trees, and bazaars, are massed together in chaotic confusion. No
-such things as streets, lanes, or alleys exist. Your walk is invariably
-stopped at the end of every dozen steps by some impediment, as a loose
-wall, or a deep drop, passable only to the well practised denizens of
-the place. The town is dirty in the extreme, and must be fearfully hot
-in summer, as it is screened on all sides from the wind. The houses
-are raised one story above the ground, and built solidly of stone and
-mortar: as there is no attempt at order or regularity, their substantial
-appearance adds much to the strangeness of the _coup d’œil_.
-
-To resume our personal adventures. Descending the slope which leads
-through the main gate we wandered about utterly at a loss what to do, or
-where to go, till a half-naked sample of the Hindoo male animal politely
-offered to provide us with a lodging. Our hearts felt sad at witnessing
-this practical proof of the presence of _man_kind, but sleepy, tired, and
-hungry withal, we deferred sentimentalizing over shattered delusions and
-gay hopes faded, till a more opportune moment, and followed him with all
-possible alacrity. A few minutes afterwards we found ourselves under the
-roof of one of the most respectable matrons in the town. We explained our
-wants to her. The first and most urgent of the same being breakfast. She
-stared at our ideas of that meal, but looked not more aghast than we did
-when informed that it was too late to find meat, poultry, eggs, bread,
-milk, butter, or wine in the market—in fact, that we must be contented
-with “kichree”—a villanous compound of boiled rice and split vetches—as
-a _pièce de resistance_, and whatever else Providence might please to
-send us in the way of “kitchen?”
-
-Rude reality the second!—
-
-We had left all our servants behind at Panjim, and not an iota of our
-last night’s supper had escaped the ravenous maws of the boatmen.—
-
-Presently matters began to mend. The old lady recollected that in days
-of yore she had possessed a pound of tea, and, after much unlocking and
-rummaging of drawers, she produced a remnant of that luxury. Perseverance
-accomplished divers other feats, and after about an hour more of half
-starvation we sat down to a breakfast composed of five eggs, a roll of
-sour bread, plantains, which tasted exactly like edible cotton dipped
-in _eau sucrée_, and a “fragrant infusion of the Chinese leaf,” whose
-perfume vividly reminded us of the haystacks in our native land. Such
-comforts as forks or spoons were unprocurable, the china was a suspicious
-looking article, and the knives were apparently intended rather for
-taking away animal life than for ministering to its wants. Sharp
-appetites, however, removed all our squeamishness, and the board was
-soon cleared. The sting of hunger blunted, we lighted our “weeds,” each
-mixed a cordial potion in a tea-cup, and called aloud for the nautch, or
-dance, to begin.
-
-This was the signal for universal activity. All the fair dames who had
-been gazing listlessly or giggling at the proceedings of their strange
-guests, now starting up as if animated with new life rushed off to don
-their gayest apparel: even the grey-haired matron could not resist the
-opportunity of displaying her gala dress, and enormous pearl nose-ring.
-The tables were soon carried away, the rebec and kettledrum sat down in
-rear of the _figurantes_, and the day began in real earnest. The singing
-was tolerable for India, and the voices good. As usual, however, the
-highest notes were strained from the chest, and the use of the _voix
-de gorge_ was utterly neglected. The verses were in Hindostanee and
-Portuguese, so that the performers understood about as much of them as
-our young ladies when they perform Italian bravura songs. There was
-little to admire either in the persons, the dress or the ornaments of the
-dancers: common looking Maharatta women, habited in the usual sheet and
-long-armed bodice, decked with wreaths of yellow flowers, the red mark
-on the brow, large nose and ear-rings, necklaces, bracelets, bangles,
-and chain or ring anklets, studded with strings of coarsely made little
-brass bells. Some of them were very fair, having manifestly had the
-advantage of one European progenitor: others showed the usual dark yellow
-hue; the features were seldom agreeable, round heads, flat foreheads,
-immense eyes, increased by the streaks of black dye along the thickness
-of the eyelid, projecting noses, large lips, vanishing chins, and a huge
-development of “jowl,” do not make up a very captivating physiognomy. A
-few, but very few, of quite the youngest _figurantes_, were tolerably
-pretty. They performed in sets for about four hours, concluding with the
-_pugree_, or turban dance, a peculiar performance, in which one lady
-takes the part of a man.
-
-Our matron informed us that Seroda contains about twenty establishments,
-and a total number of fifty or sixty dancing-girls. According to
-her account all the stars were at the time of our visit engaged at
-Panjim, or the towns round about: personal experience enabled us to
-pronounce that the best were in her house, and, moreover, that there
-is scarcely a second-rate station in the Bombay Presidency that does
-not contain prettier women and as good singers. The girls are bought in
-childhood—their price varies from 3_l._ to 20_l._ according to the market
-value of the animal. The offspring of a Bayadere belongs of right to
-her owner. When mere children they are initiated in the mysteries of
-_nautching_,—one young lady who performed before us could scarcely have
-been five years old. Early habit engenders much enthusiasm for the art.
-The proportion of those bought in distant lands to those born at Seroda
-is said to be about one to five. Of late years the nefarious traffic has
-diminished, but unhappily many are interested in keeping it up as much as
-possible.
-
-Several of these _nautch_ women can read and write. Our matron was
-powerful at reciting Sanscrit shlokas (stanzas), and as regards Pracrit,
-the popular dialect, she had studied all the best known works, as the
-“Panja Tantra,” together with the legends of Vikram, Rajah Bhoj, and
-other celebrated characters. Their spoken language is the corrupt form of
-Maharatta, called the Concanee,[46] in general use throughout the Goanese
-territory; the educated mix up many Sanscrit vocables with it, and some
-few can talk a little Portuguese. Their speaking voices are loud, hoarse,
-and grating: each sentence, moreover, ends in a sing-song drawl, which
-is uncommonly disagreeable to a stranger’s ear. These ladies all smoke,
-chew betel-nut, drink wine and spirits, and eat fowls and onions, an
-unequivocal sign of low caste. They do not refuse to quit Seroda, as is
-generally supposed, but, of course, prefer their homes to other places.
-Living being extremely cheap most of the money made by _nautching_ is
-converted into pearl and gold ornaments; and these are handed down
-from generation to generation. Some of the coins strung together into
-necklaces are really curious. An old English five-guinea-piece may be
-found by the side of a Portuguese St. Thomas, a French _Louis d’or_, and
-a Roman medal of the Lower Empire. We should be puzzled to account for
-how they came there, did we not know that India has from the earliest
-ages been the great sink for Western gold. Many of the matrons have
-collected a considerable stock of linen, pictures, and furniture for
-their houses, besides dresses and ornaments. Our countrymen have been
-liberal enough to them of late, and numerous, too, as the initials upon
-the doors and shutters prove. Each establishment is violently jealous of
-its neighbour, and all appear to be more remarkable for rapacity than
-honesty. In spite of the general belief, we venture to assert that a
-chain, a ring, or a watch, would find Seroda very dangerous quarters. As
-a stranger soon learns, everything is done to fleece him; whether he have
-five or five hundred rupees in his pocket, he may be sure to leave the
-place without a farthing. This seems to be a time-honoured custom among
-the Bayaderes cherished by them from immemorial antiquity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the rising shades of evening allowed us to escape from the house of
-dancing, we sallied forth to view the abode in which Major G⸺ passed his
-last years. The matron soon found a boy who preceded us to the place,
-threading his way through a multitude of confused dwellings, climbing
-over heaps of loose stones, walking along the walls of tanks, and groping
-through the obscurity of the cocoa groves. At the end of this unusual
-kind of walk, we found ourselves at the house, asked, and obtained leave
-to enter it. There was nothing to attract attention in the building,
-except a few old books; the peculiar character of its owner will,
-perhaps, plead our excuse to the reader, if we dwell a little upon the
-circumstances which led him to make Seroda his home.
-
-Major G⸺ was an officer who had served with distinction for many years
-in a Native Regiment. He was a regular old Indian, one of the remnants of
-a race which, like its brethren in the far west, is rapidly disappearing
-before the eastward progress of civilisation in the shape of rails,
-steamers, and overland communication. By perpetual intercourse with the
-natives around him he had learned to speak and write their language
-as well as, if not better than, his own. He preferred their society
-to that of his fellow-countrymen: adopted the Hindoo dress; studied
-their sciences, bowed to their prejudices, and became such a proficient
-in the ritual of their faith as to be considered by them almost a
-fellow-religionist. Having left England at an early age, with a store of
-anything but grateful reminiscences, he had determined to make India his
-country and his home, and the idea once conceived, soon grew familiar
-to his mind. Knowing that there is no power like knowledge amongst a
-semi-civilised people, and possibly inclined thereto by credulity, he
-dived deep into the “dangerous art,” as the few books preserved at Seroda
-prove. Ibn Sirin,[47] and Lily, the Mantras,[48] and Casaubon, works
-on Geomancy, Astrology, Ihzar or the Summoning of Devils, Osteomancy,
-Palmistry, Oneiromancy, and Divination. The relics of his library still
-stand side by side there, to be eaten by the worms.
-
-Late in life Major G⸺ fell in love with a Seroda Nautch girl living under
-his protection; not an usual thing in those days: he also set his mind
-upon marrying her, decidedly a peculiar step. His determination gave rise
-to a series of difficulties. No respectable Hindoo will, it is true, wed
-a female of this class, yet, as usual amongst Indians, the caste has at
-least as much pride and prejudice as many far superior to it. So Sita
-would not accept a _mlenchha_ (infidel) husband, though she was perfectly
-aware that she had no right to expect a _dwija_, or twice born one.
-
-But Major G⸺’s perseverance surmounted every obstacle. Several times the
-lady ran away, he followed and brought her back by main force at the
-imminent risk of his commission. At last, finding all opposition in vain,
-possibly thinking to prescribe too hard a trial, or, perhaps, in the
-relenting mood, she swore the most solemn oath that she would never marry
-him unless he would retire from the service to live and die with her in
-her native town.
-
-Major G⸺ at once sold out of his regiment, disappeared from the eyes
-of his countrymen, bought a house at Seroda, married his enchantress,
-and settled there for the remainder of his years. Many of the elder
-inhabitants recollect him; they are fond of describing to you how
-regularly every morning he would repair to the tank, perform his
-ablutions, and offer up water to the manes of his _pitris_, or ancestors,
-how religiously he attended all the festivals, and how liberal he was in
-fees and presents to the Brahmans of the different pagodas.
-
-We were shown his tomb, or rather the small pile of masonry which marks
-the spot where his body was reduced to ashes—a favour granted to him
-by the Hindoos on account of his pious munificence. It is always a
-melancholy spectacle, the last resting-place of a fellow-countryman
-in some remote nook of a foreign land, far from the dust of his
-forefathers—in a grave prepared by strangers, around which no mourners
-ever stood, and over which no friendly hand raised a tribute to the
-memory of the lamented dead. The wanderer’s heart yearns at the sight.
-How soon may not such fate be his own?
-
-The moonlight was falling clear and snowy upon the tranquil landscape,
-and except the distant roar of a tiger, no noise disturbed the stillness
-that reigned over the scene around, as we slowly retraced our steps
-towards Seroda. Passing a little building, whose low domed roof, many
-rows of diminutive columns, and grotesque architectural ornaments of
-monkeys and elephants’ heads, informed us was a pagoda, whilst a number
-of Hindoos lounging in and out, showed that some ceremony was going
-on, we determined to attempt an entrance, and passed the threshold
-unopposed. Retiring into a remote corner we sat down upon one of the
-mats, and learned from a neighbour that the people were assembled to
-hear a Rutnageree Brahman celebrated for eloquence, and very learned
-in the Vedas. The preacher, if we may so call him, was lecturing his
-congregation upon the relative duties of parents and children; his
-discourse was delivered in a kind of chaunt, monotonous, but not rude
-or unpleasing, and his gesticulation reminded us of many an Italian
-Predicatore. He stood upon a strip of cloth at the beginning of each
-period, advancing gradually as it proceeded, till reaching the end of
-his sentence and his carpet, he stopped, turned round, and walked back
-to his standing place, pausing awhile to take breath and to allow the
-words of wisdom to sink deep into his hearers’ hearts. The discourse was
-an excellent one, and we were astonished to perceive that an hour had
-slipped away almost unobserved. However, the heat of the place, crowded
-as it was with all ages and sexes—for the ladies of Seroda, like the
-frail sisterhood generally in Asia, are very attentive to their _dharma_,
-or religious duties—the cloud of incense which hung like a thick veil
-under the low roof, and the overpowering perfume of the huge bouquets and
-garlands of jessamine with which the assembly was profusely decorated,
-compelled us to forfeit the benefit we might have derived from the
-peroration of the learned Brahman’s discourse.
-
-Our night was by no means a pleasant one; the Seroda vermin, like the
-biped population, were too anxious to make the most of the stranger.
-Early the next morning we arose to make our exit; but, alas! it was not
-destined to be a triumphant one. The matron and her damsels, knowing us
-to be English, expected us to be made of money, and had calculated upon
-easing our breeches pockets of more gold than we intended to give silver.
-Fearful was the din of chattering, objurgating, and imprecating, when the
-sum decided upon was gracefully tendered to our entertainers, the rebec
-and the kettle-drum seemed inclined to be mutinous, but _they_ were more
-easily silenced than the ladies. At length, by adding the gift of a pair
-of slippers adorned with foil spangles, to which it appeared the company
-had taken a prodigious fancy, we were allowed to depart in comparative
-peace.
-
-Bidding adieu to Seroda, we toiled up the hill, and walked dejectedly
-towards the landing-place, where we supposed our boat was awaiting us.
-But when we arrived there, the canoe, of course, was not to be found. It
-was breakfast time already, and we expected to be starved before getting
-over the fifteen miles between us and Panjim. One chance remained to
-us; we separated, and so diligently scoured the country round that in
-less than half an hour we had collected a fair quantity of provender;
-one returning with a broiled spatchcock and a loaf of bread; another
-with a pot full of milk and a cocoa-nut or two, whilst a third had
-succeeded in “bagging” divers crusts of stale bread, a bunch of onions,
-and a water-melon. The hospitable portico of some Banyan’s country-house
-afforded us a breakfast-room; presently the boat appeared, and the crew
-warned us that it was time to come on board. It is strange that these
-people must tell lies, even when truth would be in their favour. This we
-found to our cost, for wind and tide proved both against us.
-
-Six hours’ steaming and broiling under a sun which penetrated the matting
-of our slow conveyance, as if it had been water within a few degrees
-of boiling heat, brought us on towards evening. Seeing some difficulty
-in rowing against every disadvantage, we proposed to our rascally
-boatmen—native Christians, as usual—to land us at the most convenient
-place. Coming to a bluff cape, the wretches swore by all that was holy,
-that we were within a mile’s walk of our destination. In an evil hour,
-we believed the worse than pagans, and found that by so doing we had
-condemned ourselves to a toilsome trudge over hill and dale, at least
-five times longer than they had asserted it to be. Our patience being now
-thoroughly exhausted, we relieved our minds a little by administering
-periodical chastisements to the fellow whom our bad luck had sent to
-deceive and conduct us, till, at length, hungry, thirsty, tired, and
-sleepy, we found ourselves once more in the streets of Panjim.
-
-Reader, we have been minute, perhaps unnecessarily so, in describing
-our visit to Seroda. If you be one of those who take no interest in a
-traveller’s “feeds,” his sufferings from vermin, or his “rows about the
-bill,” you will have found the preceding pages uninteresting enough. Our
-object is, however, to give you a plain programme of what entertainment
-you may expect from the famed town of the Bayaderes, and, should your
-footsteps be ever likely to wander in that direction, to prepare you for
-the disappointment you will infallibly incur.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-EDUCATION, PROFESSIONS, AND ORIENTAL STUDIES.
-
-
-Panjim and Margao (a large town in the province of Salsette, about
-fifteen miles south-east of Goa), are the head-quarters of the
-Indo-Portuguese muses. The former place boasts of mathematical and
-medical schools, and others in which the elements of history, and a
-knowledge of the Portuguese, Latin, English, French, and Maharatta
-languages are taught gratis. The students are, generally speaking,
-proficients in the first,[49] tolerable in the second, and execrable in
-the third and fourth dialects above specified. As regards the Maharattas,
-the study of its literature has been rendered obligatory by government,
-which however, in its wisdom, appears to have forgotten, or perhaps
-never knew, that certain little aids called grammars and dictionaries
-are necessary to those who would attain any degree of proficiency in any
-tongue. For the benefit of the fair sex there is a school at Panjim.
-Dancing and drawing masters abound. Music also is generally studied, but
-the Portuguese here want the “furore,” as the Italians call it, the fine
-taste, delicate ear, and rich voice of Southern Europe.
-
-At Panjim there is also a printing office, called the Imprensa Naçional,
-whence issues a weekly gazette, pompously named the _Boletim do Governo
-do Estado da India_. It is neatly printed, and what with advertisements,
-latest intelligence borrowed from the Bombay papers, and government
-orders, it seldom wants matter. At the Imprensa also, may be found a
-few Portuguese books for sale, but they are, generally speaking, merely
-elementary, besides being extravagantly dear.
-
-Physic as well as jurisprudence may be studied at Margao. The same town
-also has schools of theology, philosophy, Latin, Portuguese, and the rude
-beginnings of a Societade Estudiosa, or Literary Society. The latter is
-intended for learned discussion: it meets twice a week, does not publish
-but keeps MS. copies of its transactions, and takes from each member an
-annual subscription of about 1_l._
-
-Upon the whole, education does not thrive in the Indo-Portuguese
-settlement. It seldom commences before the late age of nine or ten, and
-is very soon ended. After entering some profession, and coquetting a
-little with modern languages and general literature, study is considered
-a useless occupation. Moreover, if our observation deceive us not,
-the description of talent generally met with at Goa is rather of the
-specious and shallow order. A power of quick perception, an instinctive
-readiness of induction, and even a good memory, are of little value when
-opposed to constitutional inertness, and a mind which never proposes to
-itself any high or great object. Finally, the dispiriting influence of
-poverty weighs heavy upon the student’s ambition, and where no rewards
-are offered to excellence, no excellence can be expected. The romantic,
-chivalrous, and fanatic rage for propagating Christianity which animated
-the first conquerors of Goa, and led their immediate descendants to
-master the languages and literature of the broad lands won by their sharp
-swords, has long since departed, in all human probability for ever.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The religion of Goa is the Roman Catholic. The primate is appointed
-from home, and is expected to pass the rest of his life in exile. In
-the ceremonies of the church we observed a few, but not very important
-deviations from the Italian ritual. The holy week and other great
-festivals are still kept up, but the number of _ferie_ (religious
-holidays) has of late been greatly diminished, and the poverty of
-the people precludes any attempt at display on these occasions. All
-ecclesiastical matters are settled with the utmost facility. By
-the constitution lately granted, the clergy have lost the power of
-excommunication. The Papal see, who kept so jealous and watchful an eye
-upon Goa in the days of her wealth and grandeur, seems now almost to
-have forgotten the existence of her froward daughter.[50] As regards the
-effect of religion upon the community in general, we should say that the
-mild discipline of the priesthood has produced so far a happy result,
-that the free-thinking spirit roused by ecclesiastical intolerance in
-Europe, is all but unknown here.
-
-The priests always wear out of doors the clerical cap and cassock.
-They are now very poorly provided for, and consequently lead regular
-lives. The archbishop’s prison is almost always empty, and the amount of
-profligacy which in Rome would be smiled at in a polite young abbate,
-would certainly incur the severest penalty at Goa. It is said that the
-clergy is careful to maintain the reputation of the profession, and
-that any little peccadilloes, such as will and must occur in a warm
-climate, and an order of celibataires, are studiously concealed from
-public observation. As might be expected, the ecclesiastical party
-prefers Don Miguel to Donna Maria, the favourite of the laity, the more
-so as that “excellent son of Don John of Portugal,” were he even to
-set his august foot on the floors of the Adjuda, would probably humour
-them in such trifles as readmitting the Jesuits, and reestablishing the
-Inquisition. The only objection to the holy profession at Goa is, that
-the comparatively idle life led by its members offers strong inducements
-to a poor, careless, and indolent people, who prefer its inutility to
-pursuits more advantageous to themselves, as well as more profitable to
-the commonweal.
-
-The ecclesiastical education lasts about seven years, three of which
-are devoted to studying Latin, one is wasted upon moral philosophy,
-dialectics and metaphysics, and the remainder is deemed sufficient for
-theology. On certain occasions, students at the different seminaries
-are taught the ceremonies of the church, and lectured in the Holy
-Scriptures. There are two kinds of pupils, the resident, who wear the
-clerical garb, and are limited in number, and the non-resident, who
-dress like the laity, unless they intend to take orders. In this course
-of education much stress is laid upon, and pride taken in, a knowledge
-of Latin, whose similarity to Portuguese enables the student to read
-and speak it with peculiar facility. Many authors are perused, but the
-niceties of scholarship are unknown, good editions of the poets and
-orators being unprocurable here. Few Goanese write the classical language
-well; and though all can master the words, they seldom read deeply
-enough to acquire the idiom. And lastly, the strange pronunciation of
-the consonants in Portuguese is transferred to Latin, imparting to it
-an almost unrecognisable sound. The clergy belonging to the country,
-of course understand and speak the Concanee Maharattas. Sermons are
-sometimes preached, and services performed in this dialect: it boasts of
-a printed volume of oraçoens (prayers) dated 1660, for the benefit of
-the lowest and most ignorant classes.
-
-The military profession is by no means a favourite one, on account of
-poor pay and slow promotion. The aspirante, or cadet, enters the service
-as a private, wears the uniform of that rank, and receives about 10s.
-_per mensem_ for attending lectures. After learning Portuguese, the
-course of study is as follows:—
-
-1st Term. Geometry, Trigonometry (plane and spherical), Geodesy and
-Surveying.
-
-2nd Term. Algebra, differential and integral calculus.
-
-3rd Term. Mechanics, Statics, Dynamics, Hydrodynamics, Hydrostatics,
-Hydraulics, &c.
-
-4th Term. Gunnery, Mining, Practice of Artillery.
-
-5th Term. Navigation and the Use of Instruments.
-
-6th Term. Fortification and Military Architecture.
-
-Infantry cadets study geometry and field-fortification during two or
-three years. Those intended for the Artillery and Engineers, go through
-all the course above mentioned, except navigation. Drawing, in all its
-branches, is taught by professors who are, generally speaking, retired
-officers superintended by a committee. After passing their examinations,
-the names of the cadets are put down in the Roster, and they are
-promoted, in due order, to the rank of alferez, or ensign.
-
-The total number of the Goanese army may be estimated at about two
-thousand[51] men on actual duty, besides the Mouros, or Moors, who act as
-police and guards at Panjim. The regiments are—two of infantry, stationed
-at Bicholim and Ponda; two battalions of caçadores (chasseurs not
-mounted), at Margao and Mapuca; a provincial battalion, and a corps of
-artillery at Panjim. In each regiment there are six companies, composed
-of between sixty and seventy men: a full band reckons thirty musicians.
-The officers are about as numerous as in a British corps on foreign
-service.
-
-The army is poorly paid;[52] the privates receive no salary when in sick
-quarters, and the consequence is that they are frequently obliged to beg
-their bread. We cannot therefore wonder that the European soldiery is
-considered the least respectable part of the whole community. Most of the
-officers belong to some family resident in India; consequently, they do
-not live upon their pay. Moreover, they have no expensive establishments
-to keep up, and have little marching or change of stations.
-
-The corps are seldom paraded; once every two days is considered ample
-work during the cold season. Except on particular occasions, there are no
-mounted officers on the ground, a peculiarity which gives a remarkably
-“National Guard” like appearance to the field. They are well dressed, but
-very independent in such movements as in carrying the sword, or changing
-flanks: after a few manœuvres, which partake more of the character of
-company than battalion exercise, the men order arms, and the captains,
-lieutenants, and ensigns all fall out for a few minutes, to smoke a
-leaf-full of tobacco, and chat with the commanding officer. They then
-return to their places, and the parade proceeds. The appearance of
-the privates on the drill-ground is contemptible in the extreme. The
-smallest regiment of our little Maharattas would appear tolerable sized
-men by the side of them; and as for a corps of Bengalees, it ought to be
-able to walk over an equal number of such opponents, without scarcely
-a thrust of the bayonet. Europeans and natives, in dirty clothes, and
-by no means of a uniform colour—some fiercely “bearded like the pard,”
-some with moustachios as thick as broomsticks, others with meek black
-faces, religiously shaven and shorn—compose admirably heterogeneous
-companies which, moreover, never being sized from flanks to centre, look
-as jagged as a row of shark’s teeth. Drill is the last thing thought
-of. The sergeant, when putting his recruits through their manual and
-platoon, finds it necessary to refer to a book. When the pupils are not
-sufficiently attentive, a spiteful wring of the ear, or poke between the
-shoulders, reminds them of their duty. To do justice to their spirit,
-we seldom saw such admonition received in silence; generally, it was
-followed by the description of dialogue affected by two irritated
-fishwives. So much for the outward signs of discipline. As regards the
-effects of drill, the loose, careless, and _draggling_ way in which the
-men stand and move, would be the death of a real English martinet. We
-could not help smiling at the thought of how certain friends of ours who,
-after a march of fifteen miles, will keep an unhappy regiment ordering
-and shouldering arms for half an hour in front of their tents, would
-behave themselves, if called to command such corps.
-
-Till lately, no books of tactics have been published for the instruction
-of the Goanese army. At present there are several, chiefly elementary,
-and translated from the English and French. The manual and platoon, the
-sword exercise, and other small works were prepared by Major G⸺n, an
-officer and linguist of some talent. We saw few publications upon the
-subject of military law. Courts-martial are rare compared with the absurd
-number yearly noted in the annals of the Indian army, where a boy of
-eighteen scarcely ever commits a fault for which he would be breeched at
-school, without being solemnly tried upon the charge of “conduct highly
-unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.”
-
-To conclude the subject of the Goanese army, it is evident that there
-are two grand flaws in its composition. The officers are compelled to
-be scientific, not practical men, and the soldiers are half-drilled.
-This propensity for mathematics is, of course, a European importation.
-Beginning with France, it has spread over the Western Continent till at
-last, like sundry other new-fangled fashions, it has been seized upon
-and applied to the British army. Why a captain commanding a company, or
-a colonel in charge of a battalion, should be required to have Geometry,
-History, and Geography at his fingers’ ends, we cannot exactly divine.
-With respect to drill, it may be remarked that, when imperfectly taught,
-it is worse than useless to the soldier. We moderns seem determined to
-discourage the personal prowess, gymnastics, and the perpetual practice
-of weapons in which our forefathers took such pride. We are right to
-a certain extent: the individual should be forced to feel that his
-safety lies in acting in concert with others. At the same time, in our
-humble opinion, they carry the principle too far who would leave him
-destitute of the means of defending himself when obliged to act singly.
-How many good men and true have we lost during the late wars, simply in
-consequence of our neglecting to instruct them in the bayonet exercise!
-And may not this fact in some wise account for the difficulty experienced
-of late by disciplined troops in contending with semi-civilised tribes,
-whose military studies consist of athletic exercises which prepare the
-body for hardship and fatigue, and the skilful use of weapons that
-ensures success in single combat? The English, French, and Russians
-have, within the last fifteen years, all suffered more or less severely
-from the undrilled valour, and the irregular attacks of the Affghans,
-Arabs, and Circassians.
-
-Young aspirants to the honours which Justinian gives, have no public
-schools to frequent, nor can they study gratis. In a community which so
-decidedly prefers coppers to knowledge, this is perhaps one of the most
-judicious measures imaginable for limiting the number of this troublesome
-order. The law students frequent private establishments at Margäo, and a
-course of two years is generally considered sufficient to qualify them
-for practice. After a very superficial examination in the presence of a
-committee composed of two judges and a president, they receive, if found
-competent, a diploma, and proceed to seek employment in one of the courts.
-
-Justice at Goa, as in British India, seems to have adapted herself to the
-peculiarities of the country much better than one might have expected
-from a character so uncompromising as hers is generally represented to
-be. The great difference between us and the Portuguese is, that whereas
-we shoot and hang upon the authority of our civil and military courts,
-no Goanese can be brought to the gallows till the death-warrant,
-bearing her majesty’s signature, arrives from Europe,—a pleasant state
-of suspense for the patient! Murder and sacrilege are the only crimes
-which lead to capital punishment; for lesser offences, criminals are
-transported to the Mozambique, or imprisoned in the jail—a dirty
-building, originally intended for a Mint—or simply banished from Goa.
-
-Those covetous of the riches which Galen is said to grant, are prepared
-for manslaughter—to use a Persian phrase—by a course of five years’
-study. They are expected to attend lectures every day, except on
-Thursdays and Sundays, the principal religious festivals, and a long
-vacation that lasts from the fifteenth of March to the middle of June.
-On the first of April every year, the students are examined, and two
-prizes are given. The professors are four in number, three surgeons
-and one physician, together with two assistants. The course commences
-with Anatomy and Physiology; during the second year Materia Medica
-and Pharmacy are studied; the surgical and chemical branches of the
-profession occupy the third; and the last is devoted to Pathology and
-Medical Jurisprudence. The hospital must be visited every day during the
-latter half of the course. It is a large edifice, situated at the west
-end of the town, close to the sea, but by no means, we should imagine,
-in a favourable position for health, as a channel of fetid mud passes
-close under the walls. The building can accommodate about three hundred
-patients and is tolerably but not scrupulously clean. It contains two
-wards, one for surgical, the other for medical cases, a chapel, an
-apartment for sick prisoners and a variety of different lecture-rooms.
-After his four years of study, the pupil is examined, and either rejected
-or presented with a diploma and permission to practise.
-
-The elementary works upon the subjects of Anatomy and Materia Medica are,
-generally speaking, Portuguese; the proficient, however, is compelled
-to have recourse to French books, which have not been translated into
-his vernacular tongue. The English system of medicine is universally
-execrated, and very justly. Dieting, broths, and ptisanes, cure many a
-native whose feeble constitution would soon sink beneath our blisters,
-calomel, bleeding, and drastic purges. As might be expected, all the
-modern scientific refinements, or quackeries, are known here only by
-name. We were surprised, however, by the general ignorance of the
-properties of herbs and simples—a primitive science in which the native
-of India is, usually speaking, deeply read.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The principal Oriental tongues studied by the early Portuguese in their
-mania for converting the heathens were the Malabar, Maharatta, Ethiopic,
-and Japanese, the dialects of Congo, and the Canary Isles, the Hebrew,
-and the Arabic. The Portuguese Jews, in the fifteenth century, were
-celebrated for their proficiency in Biblical, Talmudic, and Rabbinical
-lore; and the work of João de Souza, entitled, “Documentos Arabios de
-Historia Portugueza copiades dos originaes da Torre do’ Tombo,” is a
-fair specimen of Orientalism, considering the early times in which it
-was composed. Of late years, Portuguese zeal for propagating the faith,
-depressed by poverty, and worn out by the slow and sure spiritual _vis
-inertiæ_, which the natives of the East have opposed to the pious efforts
-of Modern Europe, appears to have sunk into the last stage of decline,
-and with it their ancient ardour for the study of so many, and, in some
-cases, such unattractive languages.
-
-Our case is very different from theirs. In addition to religious
-incentives, hundreds of our nation have more solid and powerful
-inducements to labour held out to them. We fondly hope and believe
-that the days are passed when Oriental study and ruin were almost
-synonymous. Within the last few years we have more or less facilitated
-the acquisition, and rifled the literature of between thirty and
-forty eastern dialects—a labour of which any nation might be proud.
-Our industry, too, is apparently still unabated. Societies for the
-translation and publication of new works, Oriental libraries, and,
-perhaps, the most useful step of all, the lithographic process, which has
-lately supplanted the old and unseemly moveable types, are fast preparing
-a royal road for the Oriental learner. It may be observed that the true
-means of promoting the study is to diminish its laboriousness, and
-still more its expense. So far we have been uncommonly successful. For
-instance, an excellent and correct lithograph of Mirkhond’s celebrated
-history, the “Rauzat el Safa,” may now be bought for 3_l._ or 4_l._; a
-few years ago the student would have paid probably 70_l._ or 80_l._ for a
-portion of the same work in the correct MS.
-
-At the same time we quite concur in the opinion of the eminent
-Orientalist,[53] who declared, _ex cathedrâ_, that our literary
-achievements in this branch bear no flattering proportion to the
-vastness of our means as a nation. It is true, to quote one of many
-hard cases, that we must send to Germany or Russia for grammars and
-publications in the Affghan language, although the country lies at
-our very doors. But the cause of this is the want of patronage and
-assistance, not any deficiency in power or ability. There are many
-unknown D’Herbelots in India, unfortunately England has not one
-Ferdinand.[54]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-ADIEU TO PANJIM.
-
-
-At a time when public attention is so deeply interested in the twin
-subjects of colonization and conversion, some useful lessons may be
-derived from the miserable state of the celebrated Portuguese settlement;
-even though our present and their past positions be by no means parallel
-in all points, and though a variety of fortuitous cases, such as the
-pestilence and warfare which led to their decadence, cannot or may not
-affect our more extended Indian empire.
-
-The Portuguese, it must be recollected, generally speaking, contented
-themselves with seizing the different lines of sea-coast, holding them
-by means of forts, stations, and armed vessels, and using them for the
-purpose of monopolising the export and import trade of the interior.
-In the rare cases when they ventured up the country they made a point
-of colonising it. We, on the contrary, have hitherto acted upon the
-principle of subjugating whole provinces to our sway, and such has been
-our success, that not only the Christian, but even the heathen, sees the
-finger of Providence directing our onward course of conquest.
-
-Of late years, climates supposed to be favourable to the European
-constitution, such as the Neilgherry hills and the lower slopes of the
-Himalayas, have been discovered, tested, and approved of. Determined
-to make use of them, our legislators have taken the wise step of
-establishing barracks for the British soldiery in places where they may
-live in comparative health and comfort during peaceful times, and yet
-be available for immediate active service, whenever and wherever their
-presence may be required.
-
-But we are not willing to stop here, we argue that such salubrious and
-fertile tracts of country would form excellent permanent settlements for
-half-pay officers, pensioners, worn-out soldiers, and others, who prefer
-spending the remainder of their days in the land of their adoption. Here,
-then, we have the proposed beginning of a colony.
-
-To the probability of extensive success, or public utility in such a
-scheme, there are two important objections.
-
-In the first place, supposing the offspring of the colonists to be of
-pure European blood, we must expect them to degenerate after the second
-generation. All who have sojourned long in the southern parts of Europe,
-such as Italy or Spain, must have remarked the deleterious effects of a
-hot and dry climate upon a race that thrives only in a cold and damp one.
-An English child brought up in Italy is, generally speaking, more sickly,
-more liable to nervous and hepatic complaints, and, consequently, more
-weakened in mind as well as body, than even the natives of the country.
-If this remark hold true in the South of Europe, it is not likely to
-prove false in tropical latitudes.
-
-But, secondly, if acting upon Albuquerque’s fatal theory, we encourage
-intermarriage with the natives of the country, such colony would be
-worse than useless to us. We cannot but think that the Hindoos are the
-lowest branch of the Caucasian or Iranian family; and, moreover, that,
-contrary to what might be expected, any intermixture of blood with the
-higher classes of that same race produces a still inferior development.
-Some have accounted for the mental inferiority of the mixed breed by a
-supposed softness or malformation of the brain, others argue that the
-premature depravity and excess to which they are prone, enervate their
-bodies, and, consequently, affect their minds. Whatever may be the cause
-of the phenomenon its existence is, we humbly opine, undeniable. Neither
-British nor Portuguese India ever produced a half-caste at all deserving
-of being ranked in the typical order of man.
-
-Our empire in the East has justly been described as one of opinion, that
-is to say, it is founded upon the good opinion entertained of us by the
-natives, and their bad opinion of themselves. In the old times of the
-Honourable East India Company, when no Englishman or Englishwoman was
-permitted to reside in India, without formal permission, the people
-respected us more than they do now. Admitting this assertion, it is not
-difficult to account for the reason why, of late years, a well-appointed
-British force has more than once found it difficult to defeat a
-rudely-drilled Indian army. We are the same men we were in the days of
-Clive and Cornwallis; the people of India are not; formerly they fought
-expecting to be defeated, now they enter the field flushed with hopes of
-success. We cannot but suspect that the lower estimate they have formed
-of their antagonists has more to do with their increased formidableness,
-than any other of the minor causes to which it is usually attributed.
-But if not contented with exposing individuals to their contempt, we
-offer them whole colonies, we may expect to incur even greater disasters.
-Every one knows that if the people of India could be unanimous for a
-day they might sweep us from their country as dust before a whirlwind.
-There is little danger of their combining so long as they dread us. Such
-fear leads to distrust; every man knows himself, and, consequently,
-suspects his neighbour, to be false. Like the Italians in their late war
-of independence the cry of _tradimento_ (treachery) is sufficient to
-paralyse every arm, however critical be the hour in which it is raised.
-So it is in India. But their distrust of each other, as well as their
-respect for us, is founded entirely upon their fear of our bayonets.
-
-In whatever way, then, we propose to populate our settlement, we place
-ourselves in a position of equal difficulty and danger. Such colonies
-would, like Goa, be born with the germs of sure and speedy decline, and
-well for our Indian empire in general, if the contagious effects of their
-decay did not extend far and wide through the land.
-
-The conversion of the natives of India to Christianity has of late years
-become a species of excitement in our native country, and, consequently,
-many incorrect, prejudiced and garbled statements of the progress and
-success of the good work have gone forth to the world. Not a few old
-Indians returned home, have been very much surprised by hearing authentic
-accounts and long details of effectual missionary labour which they
-certainly never witnessed. Our candour may not be appreciated—it is so
-difficult for the enthusiastic to avoid running down an opinion contrary
-to their own—we cannot, however, but confess that some years spent in
-Western India have convinced us that the results hitherto obtained
-are utterly disproportionate to the means employed for converting the
-people. Moreover, study of the native character forces us to doubt
-whether anything like success upon a grand scale can ever reasonably be
-anticipated. We have often heard it remarked by those most conversant
-with the deep-rooted prejudices and the fanatic credulity of the Hindoos
-that with half the money and trouble we have lavished upon them they
-could have made double the number of converts to their heathenism in
-Europe.
-
-The splendid success of the Portuguese in converting the Hindoos,
-was owing to two main causes, the first, their persecution,[55] which
-compelled many natives to assume European names, adopt the dress,
-manners, and customs of the West, and gradually to lapse, if we may use
-the expression, into Christianity. After once entering a church, the
-proselytes were under the strict surveillance of the Inquisition, who
-never allowed a “new Christian” to apostatize without making a signal
-example of him. In the second place, the Portuguese sent out in all
-directions crowds of missionaries, who, as Tavernier informs us, assumed
-the native dress, and taught under the disguise of Jogees and other
-Hindoo religious characters, a strange, and yet artful mixture of the two
-faiths. That these individuals sacrificed the most vital points of their
-religion to forward the end they proposed to themselves, we have ample
-proof; at the same time that they were eminently successful, is equally
-well known. The virulent animosity that existed between the Jesuits
-and Jansenists disclosed to astonished Europe the system of adaptation
-adopted by the former, and Benedict XIV., by a violent bull, put an end
-at once to their unjustifiable means, and their consequent successfulness
-of conversion.[56]
-
-We by no means mean to insinuate that our holy faith is unfavourable to
-the development or progression of the human species. Still it cannot be
-concealed that, generally speaking, throughout the East the Christian
-is inferior, as regards strength, courage, and principle to the average
-of the tribes which populate that part of the world. His deficiency of
-personal vigour may be accounted for by the use of impure meats, and
-the spirituous liquors in which he indulges. The want of ceremonial
-ablutions, also, undoubtedly tends to deteriorate the race. It may be
-observed, that from Zoroaster and Moses downwards, no founder of an
-Eastern faith has ever omitted to represent his dietetic or ablusive
-directions as inspired decrees, descending from Heaven. Care applied to
-public health, ensures the prosperity of a people, especially amongst
-semi-barbarous races, where health engenders bodily vigour, strength
-begets courage, and bravery a rude principle of honour.
-
-What Goa has done may serve as a lesson to us. She compelled or induced
-good Hindoos and Moslems to become bad Christians. The consequence
-has been the utter degeneracy of the breed, who have been justly
-characterized by our House of Commons as “a race the least respected and
-respectable, and the least fitted for soldiers of all the tribes that
-diversify the populous country of India.”
-
-In conclusion, we have only to inform our reader that the opinions thus
-boldly proposed to him are, we believe, those entertained by many of the
-acutest judges of native character and native history. It is easy to
-understand why they are not more often offered to public attention.
-
- * * * * *
-
-After addressing a note to the Secretary for permission to leave Goa, we
-set out in quest of a conveyance; and deeply we had to regret that we did
-not retain our old pattimar. The owners of vessels, knowing that we must
-pay the price they asked, and seeing that we were determined to migrate
-southwards, became extortionate beyond all bounds. At last we thought
-ourselves happy to secure a wretched little boat for at least double the
-usual hire. After duly taking leave of our small circle of acquaintances,
-we transferred ourselves and luggage on board the San Ignacio awaiting
-the pleasure of the Tindal—a hard-featured black Portuguese—to quit the
-land of ruins and cocoa trees. Before preparing for rest we went through
-the usual ceremony of mustering our crew, and ascertaining the probable
-hour of our departure: we presently found, as we might have guessed,
-that they were all on shore except a man and a diminutive boy, and that
-consequently we were not likely to weigh anchor before 2 A.M., at least
-five hours later than was absolutely necessary. As we felt no desire to
-encounter the various Egyptian plagues of the cabin, we ordered a table
-to be placed under the awning, and seated ourselves upon the same with
-the firm determination of being as patient and long-suffering as possible.
-
-The night was a lovely one—fair and cool as ever made amends for a
-broiling and glaring April day in these detestable latitudes. A more
-beautiful sight, perhaps, was never seen than the moon rising like a
-ball of burnished silver through the deep azure of the clear sky, and
-shedding her soft radiance down the whole length of the Rio. The little
-villages almost hidden from view by the groves of impending trees, whose
-heads glistened as if hoar-frost had encrusted them; the solemn forms
-of the towering churches, the ruins of Old Goa dimly perceptible in the
-far distance, and nearer, Panjim, lying in darkness under the shadow of
-the hills, all looked delightfully tranquil and peaceful. Besides, we
-were about to bid adieu to scenes in which we had spent a pleasant hour
-or two, and they are epochs in the traveller’s life, these farewells to
-places or faces we admire. Will then the reader wonder if we confess
-that, under the circumstances of the case, we really had no resource but
-to feel poetically disposed? And, as happens in such cases, the Demon
-of Doggrel emboldened by the presence of those two kindred spirits, the
-naughty Herba Nicotiana and the immodest “Naiad of the Phlegethontic Rill
-Cogniac,” tempted us so long and sorely, that he at last succeeded in
-causing us to perpetrate the following
-
- LINES.
-
- Adieu, fair land, deep silence reigns
- O’er hills and dales and fertile plains;
- Save when the soft and fragrant breeze
- Sighs through the groves of tufted trees;
- Or the rough breakers’ distant roar,
- Is echoed by the watery shore.
- Whilst gazing on the lovely view,
- How grating sounds the word “adieu!”
- What tongue⸺
-
-Aye, what tongue indeed? In an instant the demon fled, as our crew, in
-the last stage of roaring intoxication, scaled the side of what we were
-about poetically to designate our “bark.” A few minutes’ consideration
-convinced us that energetic measures must be adopted if we wished to
-restore order or quiet. In vain were the efforts of our eloquence;
-equally useless some slight preliminary exertions of toe and talon. At
-last, exasperated by the failure, and perhaps irritated by thinking
-of the beautiful lines we might have indited but for the inopportune
-interruption, we ventured to administer a rapid succession of small
-double raps to the Tindal’s shaven and cocoanut-like pericranium. The
-wretch ceased his roaring, rose from off his hams, and after regarding
-us for a minute with a look of intense drunken ferocity, precipitated
-himself into the water. Finding the tide too strong for him he began
-to shriek like a dying pig; his crew shouted because he shouted,
-sympathetically yelled the sailors in the neighbouring boats, and the
-sentinels on shore began to give the alarm. Never, perhaps, has there
-been such confusion at Goa since the Maharatta rode round her walls. Up
-rushed the harbour master, the collector of customs, the military, and
-the police—even his Excellency the Governor General of all the Indies,
-did not deem it beneath his dignity to quit the palace for the purpose of
-ascertaining what had caused the turmoil. The half-drowned wretch, when
-hurried into the high presence, declared, in extenuation of his conduct,
-that he had imprudently shipped on board the San Ignacio, an Inglez or
-Englishman, who had deliberately commenced murdering the crew the moment
-they came on board. The Governor, however, seeing the truth of things,
-ordered him immediately to be placed in the nearest quarter guard till
-midnight, at which time it was calculated that, by virtue of the ducking,
-he might be sober enough to set sail.
-
-As we rapidly glided by the Castle of Agoada, all our crew stood up, and
-with hands reverentially upraised, said their prayers. They did not,
-however, pay much respect to the patron saint of the boat, whose image, a
-little painted doll, in a wooden box, occupied a conspicuous position in
-the “cuddy.” A pot of oil with a lighted wick was, it is true, regularly
-placed before him every night to warn the vermin against molesting so
-holy a personage: the measure, however, failed in success, as the very
-first evening we came on board, a huge rat took his station upon the
-saint’s back and glared at us, stretching his long sharp snout over the
-unconscious San Ignacio’s head. One evening, as the weather appeared
-likely to be squally, we observed that the usual compliment was not
-offered to the patron, and had the curiosity to inquire why.
-
-“Why?” vociferated the Tindal indignantly, “if that chap can’t keep the
-sky clear, he shall have neither oil nor wick from me, d—n him!”
-
-“But I should have supposed that in the hour of danger you would have
-paid him more than usual attention?”
-
-“The fact is, Sahib, I have found out that the fellow is not worth his
-salt: the last time we had an infernal squall with him on board, and if
-he doesn’t keep this one off, I’ll just throw him overboard, and take to
-Santa Caterina: hang me, if I don’t—the brother-in-law!”[57]
-
-And so saying the Tindal looked ferocious things at the placid features
-of San Ignacio.
-
-The peculiar conformation of our captain’s mind, recalled to memory a
-somewhat similar phenomenon which we noticed in our younger days. We were
-toiling up a steep and muddy mountain-road over the Apennines, on foot,
-to relieve our panting steeds, whom the vetturino was fustigating, _con
-amore_, at the same time venting fearful imprecations upon the soul of
-Sant’ Antonino Piccino, or the younger.
-
-At length, tired of hearing the cadet so defamed, we suggested that our
-friend should address a few similar words to the other Sant’ Antonino—the
-elder.
-
-“The elder!” cried the vetturino, aghast with horror. “Oh, _per Bacco che
-bestemmia_—what a blasphemy! No, I daren’t abuse His Sanctity; but as
-for this little _rufiano_ of a younger, I’ve worn his portrait these ten
-years, and know by this time that nothing is to be got out of him without
-hard words.”
-
-On the fourth day after our departure from Panjim, a swarm of canoes full
-of fishermen, probably the descendants of the ancient Malabar pirates,
-gave us happy tidings of speedy arrival. They were a peculiar-looking
-race dressed in head-gear made of twisted palm leaves, and looking
-exactly as if an umbrella, composed of matting, had been sewn on to the
-top of a crownless hat of the same material.
-
-And now we are in the Malabar seas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-CALICUT.
-
-
-Can those three or four bungalows, with that stick-like light-house
-between them and the half-dozen tiled and thatched roofs peeping from
-amongst the trees, compose Calicut—the city of world-wide celebrity,
-which immortalised herself by giving a name to calico?
-
-Yes; but when we land we shall find a huge mass of huts and hovels, each
-built in its own yard of cocoas with bazaars, vast and peculiar-looking
-mosques, a chapel or two, courts and cutcherries, a hospital, jail,
-barracks, and a variety of bungalows. Seen from the sea, all the towns on
-this coast look like straggling villages, with a background of distant
-blue hill,[58] and a middle space of trees, divided by a strip of sand
-from the watery plain.
-
-Calicut is no longer the
-
- Cidade—nobre e rica[59]
-
-described by Camoens’ tuneful muse. Some, indeed, declare that the
-present city is not the one alluded to in the Lusiad. There is a
-tradition amongst the natives of the country, that the ancient Calicut
-was merged beneath the waves; but in the East, tradition is always a
-terrible romancer. So we will still continue to believe that here old De
-Gama first cast anchor and stepped forth from his weather-beaten ship, at
-the head of his mail-clad warriors, upon the land of promise.
-
-D’Anville assigns two dates to the foundation of Calicut, the earlier
-one[60]—A.D. 805—will suit historical purposes sufficiently well. There
-is nothing to recommend the position selected. During the monsoon, no
-vessel can approach the anchorage-ground with safety, and even in the
-fine season many have been wrecked upon the reefs of rocks which line
-the coast. Very little wind suffices to raise the surf: Nature has made
-no attempt at a harbour, and the ships lying in an open roadstead, are
-constantly liable to be driven on the sand and mud-banks around them.
-Tippoo Sultan—a very long-headed individual, by the bye—saw the defects
-of the situation, and determining to remove the town about six miles
-southward to the mouth of the Beypoor, or Arricode river, where a natural
-port exists, adopted the energetic measure of almost destroying the old
-city, that the inhabitants might experience less regret in leaving their
-homes. The Moslem emperor regarded Calicut with no peculiar good-will.
-He and his subjects were perpetually engaged in little squabbles, which
-by no means tended to promote kindly feeling between them.[61] On one
-occasion, offended by the fanaticism of the Nair and Tiyar Hindoos, their
-ruler pulled down almost every pagoda in the place, and with the stones
-erected a splendid tank in the middle of the large open space where the
-travellers’ bungalow now stands. Tippoo unfortunately failed in this
-project of removal, and when the British became supreme in Malabar, the
-natives all returned to their ancient haunts. Calicut, for many reasons,
-is not likely to be deserted under the present rule: it is the point to
-which all the lines of road which intersect the country converge; besides
-it would now scarcely be worth our while to bring about so violent a
-change for the purpose of eventual improvement.
-
-When old Nelkunda began to decline, Calicut rose to importance, probably
-in consequence of its being in very early times the metropolis of the
-Samiry Rajah (the Zamorin of Camoens), lord paramount of Malabar. Shortly
-after the origin of Islam, it was visited and colonised by thousands of
-Arabs,[62] who diffused energy and activity throughout the land. As
-trade increased, Calicut throve because of its centrical position between
-the countries east and west of Cape Comorin. Even in the present day,
-although Goa, and subsequently Bombay, have left the ancient emporium of
-Western India but little of its former consequence, commerce[63] still
-continues to flourish there. The export is brisker than the import trade:
-the latter consists principally of European piece goods and metals, the
-former comprises a vast variety of spices, drugs, valuable timber and
-cotton cloths.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We will now take a walk through the town and remark its several
-novelties. Monuments of antiquity abound not here: the fort erected
-by the Portuguese has long since been level with the ground, and
-private bungalows occupy the sites of the old Dutch, French, and Danish
-factories. We shall meet few Europeans in the streets: there are
-scarcely twenty in this place, including all the varieties of civilians,
-merchants, missionaries, and the officers belonging to the two seapoy
-companies detached from the neighbouring station—Cananore. Most of the
-residents inhabit houses built upon an eminence about three miles to the
-north of the town; others live as close as possible to the sea. A dreary
-life they must lead, one would suppose, especially during the monsoon,
-when the unhappy expatriated’s ears are regaled by no other sounds but
-the pelting of the rain, the roaring of the blast, and the creaking of
-the cocoa trees, whilst a curtain of raging sea, black sky, and watery
-air, is all that meets his weary ken.
-
-The first thing we observe during our perambulation, is the want of
-the quadruped creation: there are no horses,[64] sheep, or goats,
-and the cows are scarcely as large as English donkeys. Secondly, the
-abundance of sore eyes, produced, it is supposed by the offensive glare
-and the peculiar effect of the sun’s rays, which in these regions
-are insufferable even to the natives of other Indian provinces. The
-population apparently regards us with no friendly feeling, Moslem and
-Hindoo, all have scowls upon their faces, and every man, moreover,
-carries a knife conveniently slung to his waistband. Those dark-faced
-gentlemen, in imitation European dresses, are familiar to our eyes: they
-are Portuguese, not, however, from Goa, but born, bred, and likely to be
-buried at Calicut. A little colony, of fifty or sixty families of the
-race is settled here; they employ themselves either in commerce, or as
-writers in the different government offices.
-
-The bazaars appear to be well stocked with everything but vegetables
-and butcher’s meat, these two articles being as scarce and bad as the
-poultry; fish and fruit are plentiful and good. The shops are poor;
-there is not a single Parsee or European store in the town, so that all
-supplies must be procured from the neighbouring stations. Everywhere the
-houses are much more comfortably and substantially built than in the
-Bombay presidency; the nature of the climate requires a good roof, and
-as much shade on and around it as possible: the streets and roads, also,
-look civilised compared with the narrow and filthy alleys of our native
-towns in general. But we shall find little amusement in inspecting the
-mass of huts and hovels, mosques and schools, gardens and tanks, so we
-might as well prolong our stroll beyond the town, and visit the venerable
-pagoda of Varkool.
-
-It is, you see, a building by no means admirable in point of outward
-appearance; the roof is tiled, and there is little to excite your
-curiosity in the woodwork. Its position is remarkable—perched upon the
-summit of a pile of laterite rock rising abruptly from a level expanse
-of sand. But it is great, very great, in its historical importance.
-That edifice was one of the hundred and eight Maha Chaitrum, or temples
-of the first order, built by the demigod Parasu Rama, upon this coast,
-and dedicated to the Hindoo Triad. Equally notable it is for sanctity.
-Early in the month of October, water appears bubbling from a fissure of
-the rock, and this, learned Brahmans, by what test we know not, have
-determined to be the veritable fluid of the Ganges, which, passing under
-ground,[65] _viâ_ Central India, displays itself regularly once a year
-to the devotees of Rama. Kindly observe that there is a crowd of Nairs
-gathered round the temple, and that some petty prince, as we may know
-by his retinue of armed followers, is visiting the shrine. We will not
-venture in, as the Hindoos generally in this part of the world, and
-the Nairs particularly, are accustomed to use their knives with scant
-ceremony. Besides, just at present, they are somewhat in a state of
-excitement: they expect a partial eclipse of the moon, and are prepared
-to make all the noise they can, with a view of frightening away the
-wicked monster, Rahu, who is bent upon satisfying his cannibal appetites
-with the lucid form of poor Luna.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The present Samiry Rajah is a proud man, who shuns Europeans, and
-discourages their visiting him on principle. Wishing, however, to see
-some sample of the regal family, we called upon a cadet of the house
-of Yelliah, an individual of little wealth or influence, but more
-sociable than the high and mighty Mana Vikram.[66] After a ride of
-about three miles, through lanes lined with banks of laterite, and over
-dykes stretching like rude causeways along paddy fields invested with
-a six-foot deep coating of mud, we arrived at the village of Mangaon.
-The Rajah was apparently resolved to receive us with all the honours: a
-caparisoned elephant stood at the gate of the “palace,” and a troop of
-half-naked Nairs, armed as usual, crowded around to receive us. We were
-ushered through a succession of courts and gateways—the former full of
-diminutive, but seemingly most pugnacious cows—and at last, ascending
-a long flight of dark and narrow steps, suddenly found ourselves in the
-“presence.” Our Rajah was a little dark man, injudiciously attired in
-a magnificent coat of gold cloth, a strangely-shaped cap of the same
-material, and red silk tights. The room was small, and choked with
-furniture; chairs, tables, clocks, drawers, washing-stands, boxes,
-book-shelves, and stools, were arranged, or rather piled up around it,
-with all the effect of an old curiosity-shop. The walls exhibited a
-collection of the cheapest and worst of coloured prints—our late gracious
-queen dangling in dangerous proximity to the ferocious-looking Beau
-Sabreur, and La Belle Americaine occupied in attentively scrutinising
-certain diminutive sketches of Richmond Hill, and other localities,
-probably torn out of some antiquated Annual. Our host met us _à
-l’Anglaise_—that is to say, with a warm, moist, and friendly squeeze of
-the hand: he was profuse in compliments, and insisted upon our sitting on
-the sofa opposite his chair. With the assistance of an interpreter—for
-the Rajah understands little Hindostani, and we less Malayalim—some
-twenty minutes were spent in conversation, or rather in the usual
-exchange of questions and answers which composes the small-talk of an
-Oriental visit. Presently we arose and took polite leave of our host,
-who accompanied us as far as the door of his little den: the regal rank
-and dignity forbidding him to pass the threshold. Not a little shuffling
-and shrieking was caused by our turning a corner suddenly and meeting
-in the gateway a crowd of dames belonging to the palace. They and their
-attendants appeared as much annoyed as we were gratified to catch a sight
-of Nair female beauty. The ladies were very young and pretty—their long
-jetty tresses, small soft features, clear dark olive-coloured skins, and
-delicate limbs, reminded us exactly of the old prints and descriptions
-of the South Sea Islanders. Their _toilette_, in all save the ornamental
-part of rings and necklaces, was decidedly scanty. It was the same
-described by old Capt. Hamilton, who, when introduced at the Court of the
-Samorin, observed that the queen and her daughters were “all naked above
-the waist, and barefooted.”
-
-People are fond of asserting that native prejudices are being rapidly
-subjugated by the strong arm of English civilization. We could instance
-numerous proofs of the contrary being the case. Two hundred years ago
-the white man was allowed to look upon a black princess in the presence
-of her husband. How long will it be before such privilege will ever be
-extended to him again in India?
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the way homewards our guide pointed out what he considered the great
-lion of Calicut. It is a square field, overgrown with grass and weeds and
-surrounded by a dense grove of trees. Fronting the road stands a simple
-gateway, composed of one stone laid horizontally across two of the same
-shape, planted perpendicularly in the ground. Not detecting instantly
-any great marvel about the place we looked our curiosity for further
-information.
-
-“In days of old a strong fort, and a splendid palace adorned that
-spot—their only remains now those two mounds”—said the guide, pointing at
-what appeared to be the ruins of bastions—“and that raised platform of
-earth at the other end. Upon the latter a temporary festive building is
-erected whenever a Rajah is invested with the turban of regal dignity, in
-memory of the ancient dwelling-place of his ancestors, and the city which
-is now no more.”
-
-We had half an hour to waste, and were not unwilling to hear a detailed
-account of old Calicut’s apocryphal destruction. So we asked the man
-to point out its former site. He led us towards the shore, and called
-our attention to a reef of rocks lying close off the mouth of the little
-Kullai River; they were clearly discernible as it was then low water.[67]
-
-“There,” said the guide,—a good Hindoo, of course—“there lies the
-accursed city of Cherooman Rajah!”
-
-Our escort did not require much pressing to ease himself of a little
-legendary lore. After preparing his mouth for conversation by disposing
-of as much betel juice as was convenient, he sat down upon the ground
-near the log of wood occupied by ourselves, and commenced.
-
-“When Cherooman Rajah, the last and most powerful of our foreign
-governors, apostatizing from the holy faith of his forefathers, received
-the religion of the stranger, he went forth as a pilgrim to the land of
-the Arab, and dwelt there for several years.[68]
-
-“Our ruler’s return was signalized by a determination to propagate the
-new belief throughout Malabar, and unusual success attended upon the
-well-planned system of persuasion and force adopted by him. Thousands of
-the slaves, the cultivators and the fishermen, became Moslems, many of
-the Nairs, some of them men of high rank, and even a few of the Brahmans
-did not disdain to follow their prince’s example. But the _Numboory_[69]
-stood firm in his refusal to turn from the law of Brahma; he not only
-toiled to counteract the monarch’s influence, but on more than one
-occasion in solemn procession visited the palace, and denounced a curse
-upon the Rajah and people of Calicut if the proselytising continued.
-
-“At length the chieftain, irritated by the determined opposition of the
-priesthood, and urged on by his Arab advisers, swore a mighty oath that
-he would forcibly convert his arch enemies. The person selected to eat
-impure meat as a warning to his brethren was the holy Sankaracharya, the
-high Brahman of the Varkool pagoda.
-
-“Slowly the old man’s tottering frame bowed, and trembling with
-age, moved down the double line of bearded warriors that crowded
-the audience-hall. At the further end of the room, upon the cushion
-of royalty, and surrounded by a throng of foreign counsellors, sat
-Cherooman, looking like a Rakshasa or Spirit of Evil.
-
-“Few words passed between the Brahman and the ruler. The threats of the
-latter, and the scoffs of his myrmidons, fell unheeded upon the old
-priest’s ears.
-
-“‘It is said that a Rajah is a sword in the hand of the Almighty—but
-thou, Cherooman, art like the assassin’s knife. Since thou art thus
-determined upon thine own destruction accompany me to the beach, and
-there, unless before sunset the dread Deity I adore vouchsafe to show
-thee a sign of his power, I will obey thine unhallowed orders.’
-
-“The Rajah mounted his elephant, and followed by his mufties, his
-wuzeers, and guardsmen, moved slowly towards the brink of the briny
-wave. On foot and unattended, propping his faltering footsteps with a
-sandal wand, the Brahman accompanied the retinue. And all the people
-of Calicut, whose leaning towards the new faith made them exult in the
-prospect of conversion being forced upon so revered a personage as the
-old priest, informed of the event, hurried down in thousands to the
-shore, and stood there in groups conversing earnestly, and sparing
-neither jest nor jibe at the contrast between the champions of the two
-rival faiths.
-
-“Sankaracharya sat down upon the sand where the small waves swelled and
-burst at his feet. Muffling his head in a cotton sheet removed from
-his shoulders, he drew the rosary bag over his right hand, and after
-enumerating the Deity’s names upon his beads, proceeded to recite the
-charm of destruction.
-
-“Presently, a cloud no bigger than a man’s hand rose like a sea-bird
-above the margin of the western main. It increased with preternatural
-growth, and before half an hour had elapsed it veiled the mid-day light
-of heaven, and spread over the sky like the glooms of night. A low
-moaning sound as of a rising hurricane then began to break the drear
-stillness of the scene, and fierce blasts to career wildly over the
-heaving bosom of the waters.
-
-“Still the Brahman continued his prayer.
-
-“Now huge billowy waves burst like thunder upon the yellow sands, the
-zig-zag lightning streaking the murky sky blinded the eyes, whilst the
-roar of the elements deafened the ears of the trembling crowd. Yet they
-stood rooted to the spot by a mightier power than they could control. The
-Rajah, on his elephant, and the beggar crawling upon his knees, all had
-prepared for themselves one common doom.
-
-“Before the bright car of Surya,[70] the Lord of Day, borne by its
-flaming steeds with agate hoofs, had entered upon their starry way, the
-wavelet was rippling, and the sea-gull flapping his snowy wing over the
-city of Cherooman the Apostate.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-MALABAR.
-
-
-The province, now called Malabar, is part of the Kerula Rajya, the
-kingdom of Kerula, one of the fifty-six _deshas_, or regions, enumerated
-in ancient Hindoo history as forming the Bharata Khanda or Land of
-India. It is supposed to have been recovered from the sea by the sixth
-incarnation of Vishnu, who in expiation of a matricidal crime gave over
-to the Brahmans, particularly to those of the Moonsut tribe, the broad
-lands lying between Go-karna[71] and Kanya Kumari, or Cape Comorin. The
-country is also known by the names of Malayalim, the “mountain land;”
-Malangara and Cherun,[72] from the Rajahs, who governed it at an early
-period. It is probably the kingdom of Pandion, described in the pages of
-the classical geographers.
-
-By Malabar we now understand the little tract bounded on the north by
-Canara, to the south by the province of Cochin, having Coorg and Mysore
-to the east, and washed by the waves of the Indian Ocean on the west.
-Marco Polo (thirteenth century)[73] speaks of it as a “great kingdom,”
-and Linschoten (sixteenth century) describes it as extending from Comorin
-to Goa. The natives assert that the old Kerula Rajya was divided into
-sixty-four _grama_ or districts, of which only eight are included in the
-present province of Malabar.[74]
-
-The whole of this part of the coast acquired an early celebrity from
-the valuable exports[75] which it dispersed over the Western World.
-Nelkunda, the chief port, is mentioned by Ptolemy and Pliny: and the
-author of the “Periplus” places it near Barake or Ela Barake, the
-roadstead where vessels lay at anchor till their cargoes were brought
-down to the sea. Major Rennell has identified the ancient Nelkunda with
-the modern Nelisuram, as the latter place is situated twelve miles up
-the Cangerecora River—a distance corresponding with that specified in
-the “Periplus.” Vincent acutely guesses Ela Barake to be the spot near
-Cananore, called by Marco Polo “Eli,” and by us Delhi[76]—the “Ruddy
-Mountain” of the ancients.
-
-Malabar, from remote times, has been divided into two provinces, the
-northern and the southern: the Toorshairoo or Cottah River forming the
-line of demarcation. The general breadth of the country, exclusive of the
-district of Wynad, is about twenty-five miles, and there is little level
-ground. The soil is admirably fertile; in the inland parts it is covered
-with clumps of bamboos, bananas, mangoes, jacktrees, and several species
-of palms. Substantial pagodas, and the prettiest possible little villages
-crown the gentle eminences that rise above the swampy rice lands, and
-the valleys are thickly strewed with isolated cottages and homesteads,
-whose thatched roofs, overgrown with creepers, peep out from the masses
-of luxuriant vegetation, the embankments and the neat fences of split
-bamboo interlaced with thorns, that conceal them. Each tenement has
-its own croft planted with pepper, plantains, and the betel vine, with
-small tufts of cocoas, bamboos, and that most graceful species of the
-palm, the tall and feathery areca. These hamlets are infinitely superior
-in appearance to aught of the kind we have ever seen in India; the
-houses are generally built of brick or hewn stone and mortar, and those
-belonging to the wealthy have been copied from the Anglo-Indian bungalow.
-As the traveller passes he will frequently see the natives sitting at
-their doors upon chairs exactly as the rustics of Tuscany would do. The
-quantity of rain that annually falls[77] covers the ground with the bloom
-of spontaneous vegetation; cocoa-trees rise upon the very verge where
-land ends, and in some places the heaps of sand that emerge a few feet
-from the surface of the sea, look bright with a cap of emerald hue. In
-consequence of the great slope of the country the heaviest monsoon leaves
-little or no trace behind it, so that lines of communication once formed
-are easily preserved. Generally speaking the roads are little more than
-dykes running over the otherwise impassable paddy fields, and, during
-wet weather, those in the lower grounds are remarkably bad. Some of the
-highways are macadamised with pounded laterite spread in thin layers upon
-the sand; the material is found in great quantities about Calicut, and
-it makes an admirable monsoon road, as the rain affects it but little on
-account of its extreme hardness. The magnificent avenues of trees,[78]
-which shade the principal lines, are most grateful to man and beast in a
-tropical climate. On all of them, however, there is one great annoyance,
-particularly during the monsoon, namely, the perpetual shifting to and
-from ferries[79]—an operation rendered necessary by the network of
-lakes, rivers, and breakwaters, that intersects the country. A great
-public use could be made of these inconvenient streams: with very little
-cutting a channel of communication might be run down the coast, and
-thus the conveyance of goods would remain uninterrupted even during the
-prevalence of the most violent monsoons. Water transit, we may observe,
-would be a grand boon here, as carts are rare, cattle transport is
-almost unknown, and the transmission of merchandise by means of coolies
-or porters is the barbarous, slow, and expensive method at present
-necessarily in general use.
-
-The practical husbandry of Malabar is essentially rude, and yet in few
-countries have we seen more successful cultivation. The plough is small,
-of simple form, and so light, that it merely scratches the ground; a pair
-of bullocks, or a bullock and a woman or two, are attached to the log,
-and whilst the labourer dawdles over his task, he chaunts monotonous
-ditties to Mother Earth with more pious zeal than industry. The higher
-lands produce the betel vine, cocoa, areca, and jack-trees,[80] together
-with hill rice: the latter article is sown some time after the setting
-in of the heavy rains, and reaped about September or October. The lower
-rice-fields, lying in the valleys between the acclivities, are laid out
-in little plots, with raised footpaths between to facilitate passage and
-regulate the irrigation. They generally bear one, often two, and in some
-favoured spots, three crops a year; the average is scarcely more than six
-or seven fold, though a few will yield as much as thirty. The south-west
-monsoon, which lasts from June to September, brings forward the first
-harvest: the second is indebted to the south-east rains which set in
-about a month later. The Sama (Panicum Miliaceum) requires the benefit of
-wet weather; it is therefore sown in May, and reaped in August. The oil
-plant Yelloo (Sesamum Orientale) and the cooltie or horsegram cannot be
-put into the ground till the violence of the monsoon has abated.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The annual revenue of Malabar is about thirty lacs of rupees
-(300,000_l._), land is valuable, the reason probably being that it is for
-the most part private, not government property.
-
-When the Hindoo law authorizes a twelfth, an eighth, or a sixth, and
-at times of urgent necessity even a fourth of the crop to be taken,
-specifying the Shelbhaga, or one-sixth, as the rulers’ usual share, it
-appears extraordinary that this province was exempted from all land-tax
-till 913,[81] or A.D. 1736-7. We may account for the peculiarity,
-however, by remembering that the country belonged, properly speaking,
-to the Brahmans, who were, in a religious point of view, the owners of
-the soil. Moreover, the avowed and legitimate sources of revenue were
-sufficient for the purposes of a government that had no standing army,
-and whose militia was supported chiefly by assignments of land. The
-rulers, however, were anything but wealthy: many of their perquisites
-were, it is true, by a stretch of authority, converted into the means
-of personal aggrandisement, but the influence of the Brahmans, and the
-jealousy of the chiefs, generally operated as efficient checks upon
-individual ambition.
-
-Malabar has been subjected to three different assessments.
-
-1st. That of the Hindoo Rajahs.
-
-2dly. In the days of the Moslems, and,
-
-3dly. Under the British Government.
-
-We propose to give a somewhat detailed account of the chief items
-composing the curious revenue of the Hindoo rajahs and chiefs in the
-olden time.
-
- 1. _Unka_, battle-wager, or trial by single combat. Quarrels
- and private feuds were frequent amongst the Nairs, especially
- when differences on the subject of the fair sex, or any of
- their peculiar principles of honour aroused their pugnacity.
- It was not indispensable that the parties who were at issue
- should personally fight it out. Champions were allowed by law,
- and in practice were frequently substituted. The combatants
- undertook to defend the cause they espoused till death, and
- a term of twelve years was granted to them that they might
- qualify themselves for the encounter by training and practising
- the use of arms. Before the onset both champions settled all
- their worldly matters, as the combat was _à l’outrance_. The
- weapons used were sword and dagger: a small shield and a thick
- turban being the only articles of defensive armour. This system
- of duelling was a source of considerable revenue to the Rajah,
- as he was umpire of the battle, and levied the tax in virtue
- of his office. The amount of the fee varied according to the
- means of the parties. Sometimes it was as high as one thousand
- fanams.[82]
-
- 2. _Poorooshandrum_—a word literally meaning the “death of
- the man”—a relief or sum of money claimed by the ruler from
- Nadwallees,[83] Deshwallees, heads of guilds, holders of land
- in free gift or under conditional tenure, and generally from
- all persons enjoying Sthanum or official position in the state,
- whenever an heir succeeded to a death vacancy. The chiefs of
- provinces and districts, like the private proprietors, were
- exclusively entitled to receive Poorooshandrum from their
- own tenantry, as a price of entry paid upon the decease of
- either party, lessor or lessee. Sometimes the chiefs claimed
- the privilege of levying this tax from the Rajah’s subjects
- living under their protection. It is supposed that the Hindoo
- rulers were entitled, under the head of Poorooshandrum, to a
- certain share of the property left by deceased Moslems, but the
- prevalent opinion seems to be that in such cases there was no
- fixed sum payable, and, moreover, that it was not claimed from
- all, but only from those individuals who held situations or
- enjoyed privileges dependent upon the will and favour of the
- Rajah. This tax, so similar to one of our feudal sources of
- revenue in the West, often reached the extent of one thousand
- two hundred fanams.
-
- 3. _Polyatta Penna_, or degraded women, were another source
- of profit to the Rajah, who exacted various sums from Brahman
- families for the maintenance of such females, and for saving
- them from further disgrace. These persons became partial
- outcastes, not slaves in the full sense of the word; and
- yet the rulers used to sell them to the Chetties, or coast
- merchants. Their offspring always married into families of the
- same degraded class, and, after a few generations, the memory
- of their origin was lost in the ramifications of the race into
- which they had been adopted.
-
- 4. _Kaleecha_—another feudal tax, answering to the Nuzzuranah
- of Mussulman India. It consisted of presents made by all ranks
- of people to the ruler on such occasions of congratulation and
- condolence as his ascending the throne, opening a new palace,
- marrying, and dying. The amount expected varied from two to one
- thousand fanams.
-
- 5. _Chungathum_, or protection. Whenever a person wished to
- place himself under the safeguard of a man of consequence,
- he paid from four to sixty-four fanams annually for the
- privilege. He might also make an assignment on particular lands
- for the payment. The sum was devoted to the maintenance of a
- kind of sentinel, similar to the belted official Peon of the
- Anglo-Indian settlements, furnished by the protector to his
- dependent. In cases of necessity, however, the former was bound
- to aid and assist the other with a stronger force.
-
- 6. _Recha-Bhogum_—a tax differing from Chungathum only in one
- point, viz., that the engagement was a general one, unlimited
- to any specific aid in the first instance.
-
- 7. Under the name of _Uttudukum_, the Rajah was entitled to
- the property of any person who, holding lands in free gift,
- died without heirs; moreover, no adoption was valid without his
- sanction. The feudal chiefs had similar privileges with respect
- to their tenants.
-
- 8. _Udeema punum_—the yearly payment of one or two fanams,
- levied by every Tumbooran[84] or patron from his Udian (client).
-
- 9. _Soonka_—customs upon all imports and exports by land or
- sea. The amount is variously specified as two-and-a-half,
- three, and even ten per cent.
-
- 10. _Yela_—the systematic usurpation of territory belonging to
- the neighbouring rulers or chiefs, whom poverty or other causes
- incapacitated from holding their own. The Hindoo Scripture
- affirms that territorial aggrandisement is the proper object
- and peculiar duty of a king.
-
- 11. _Kola_ or _Charadayum_—forced contributions levied
- by Rajahs on occasions of emergency, according to the
- circumstances of their subjects.
-
- 12. _Tuppa_—mulcts imposed upon those who were convicted of
- accidental and unintentional offences.
-
- 13. _Pala_—fines taken in the same manner for intentional
- crimes, according to their magnitude and the circumstances of
- the criminal. They sometimes extended to a total confiscation
- of property.
-
- 14. _Ponnarippa_—the sifting of gold. Gold dust generally was
- a perquisite belonging to the Rajah or Nadwallee, as the case
- might be.
-
- 15. _Udeenya Oorookul_, or shipwrecked vessels, which became
- crown property.
-
- 16. _Chaireekul_, or private domains, which the Rajahs
- possessed in proprietary right, acquired either by purchase,
- lapses, or escheats.
-
- 17. _Aeemoola_ } Cows with three and five dugs.
- 18. _Moomoola_ }
-
- 19. _Chengkomba_, or cattle that had destroyed life, human or
- bestial.
-
- 20. _Kunnuda poolee_—beeves born with a peculiar white spot
- near the corner of the eye.
-
- 21. _Ana-pidee_—elephants caught in the jungles.
-
- 22. _Poowala_—buffalos with a white spot at the tip of the tail.
-
- 23. _Koomba_—the tusks of dead elephants.
-
- 24. _Korawa_—the leg of a hog, deer, or any other eatable
- animal killed in the jungles.
-
- 25. _Wala_ } The tail and skin of a tiger.
- 26. _Tola_ }
-
- 27. _Kennutil punne_—a pig that had fallen into a well.[85]
-
-This system of aid and perquisites, rather than of taxes and assessments,
-continued, as we have said before, till A.D. 1736. At that time the
-invasion of the Ikkairee, or Bednore Rajah, to whom the Canara province
-was then in subjection, obliged some of the rulers of Northern Malabar
-to levy twenty per cent. on Patum, or rent. The part of the Palghaut and
-Temelpooram districts, which belonged to the Calicut house, was subjected
-to a land tax, under the name of Kavil, or compensation for protection.
-With these exceptions,[86] Malabar was free from any land rent or regular
-assessment proportioned to the gross produce before Hyder’s invasion in
-A.D. 1777.
-
-Some are of opinion that, during Hyder’s life, the land-tax assumed, in
-the Southern division of Malabar, the shape which it now bears in the
-public records. Others attribute the principles of the assessment to
-Arshad Beg Khan, the Foujdar, or commander of Tippoo Sultan’s forces in
-Malabar, about A.D. 1783. His system was carefully examined by Messrs.
-Duncan, Page, Bodham, and Dow, who, in 1792 and 1793, were appointed
-commissioners to inspect and report upon the state and condition of the
-country. To their laborious work[87] we must refer the curious reader, as
-the subject is far too lengthy and profound to suit such light pages as
-these.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE HINDOOS OF MALABAR.
-
-
-When Parasu Rama, the demigod, departed this transitory life, he left,
-as we said before, the kingdom of Malabar as a heritage to the priestly
-caste. For many years a hierarchy of Brahmans governed the land.[88] At
-length, finding themselves unable to defend the country, they established
-Nair chiefs in each Nad (province), and Desha (village),[89] called
-from their places of jurisdiction Nadwallee and Deshwallee. The main
-distinction between them seems to have been, that whereas the latter
-could not command more than a hundred fighting men, the Nadwallee never
-went to battle with a smaller number than that under his banner; some few
-led as many as twenty thousand vassals to the field. Both were bound to
-conduct the affairs of their feofs, to preserve the peace of the country,
-and to assemble and head their respective forces at the summons of the
-Rajah. There does not appear to have been any limitation to the power
-of settling disputes vested in these feudal superiors, nor were they
-prohibited from taking fines and costs of suit;[90] parties appearing
-before them had, however, a right of appeal to the Rajah. These dignities
-were hereditary; still they may be considered political offices,—for, in
-case of demise, the heir did not succeed without a formal investiture by
-the ruler, and a relief, or fine of entry, taken in token of allegiance.
-Like the feudal landowners of England, both the Nadwallee and the
-Deshwallee were dependent upon the prince to whom they swore the oath
-of fidelity. Neither of these dignitaries was necessarily owner of
-all the landed property within his province or village boundaries: in
-fact he seldom was so, although there was no objection to his becoming
-proprietor by purchase or other means. They were not entitled to a share
-of the produce of the lands in their jurisdiction, nor could they claim
-the seignoral privileges, which the heads of villages on the eastern
-coast, and many other parts of India, enjoy. Under the Deshwallee of
-each village were several Turravattakara,[91] or chief burgesses. They
-possessed a certain hereditary dignity, but no controlling authority. In
-them, however, we may trace the germ of a municipal corporation, as their
-position entitled them to the honour of being applied to on occasions
-of marriages, deaths, religious ceremonies, and differences amongst the
-vassals. When their mediation failed the cause went before the Deshwallee.
-
-The anarchy introduced by this complicated variety of feudalism soon
-compelled the hierarchy to call in the aid of the Bejanuggur, or, as
-it is commonly termed, the Anagundy government, and the latter, at the
-solicitation of the Brahmans, appointed a Peroomal, or Viceroy, whose
-administration was limited to the term of twelve years, to rule the
-fair lands of Malabar. These governors, who are also known by the name
-of Cherun,[92] were first appointed in the 3511th year of the Kali
-Yug,[93] about A.D. 410. Seventeen of them, curious to say, followed each
-other in regular succession. The last, however, Cherooman Peroomal,[94]
-so ingratiated himself with his temporary subjects, that he reigned
-thirty-six years, and, at the head of a numerous army, defeated the home
-government, which attempted to dispossess him of his power, in a pitched
-battle fought near the village of Annamalay.[95] Afterwards, becoming a
-convert to Islam, he made a pilgrimage to Mecca. Before leaving India,
-he divided the province among the seventeen chiefs[96] to whose valour
-he was indebted for his success in war. These were the ancestors of the
-present race of Rajahs.
-
-Malabar was soon torn with intestine feuds, arising from the power and
-ambition of its host of rulers, and the Samiry, Samoory, or Calicut
-Rajah, soon became _de facto_—if not _de jure_—the lord paramount. He was
-a native of Poontoora, in the Coimbatore province, and derived his name,
-Mana Vikram, from Manicham and Vikram—the two brothers present on the
-occasion when Cherooman conferred dominion upon the head of the house.
-His superiority was acknowledged until Hyder’s time, by all the chiefs
-from the north point of Malabar to the south extremity of Travancore.
-
-After that Hyder had become regent of Mysore, he made use of the
-following pretext for invading Malabar. The Palghaut Rajah, a descendant
-from the Pandian sovereigns of Madura, terrified by the power of the
-Samiry, had, in early times, sought the alliance of the Mysore state,
-then governed by its Hindoo princes, and constituted himself a client
-of the same by paying a certain annual sum for a subsidiary force to
-be stationed in his territory. The ambitious Moslem, under colour of
-avenging his ally and protecting him against the oppressions of the
-Samiry and other princes, forthwith attacked them on their own ground.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The manner in which the Calicut house is and has been, from the days of
-hoar antiquity, broken and divided, appears curious in the extreme. It
-may be supposed that the Brahmans, jealous of the overgrown power of
-one individual, in the person of the Samiry, endeavoured to temper its
-force by assigning to the other members of the family certain official
-dignities, together with concomitant privileges. It is also possible
-that this partition might have taken place at the solicitation of the
-princes, who naturally would wish to secure for themselves a settled and
-independent subsistence. They were appointed to act as a council to the
-reigning sovereign; they could check his authority as well as aid him in
-his wisdom; and, finally, they were his principal officers, each having
-separate and particular duties to perform. By this arrangement, in case
-of the ruler’s demise, his heir would succeed to the throne without
-any of the harassing disturbances and sanguinary contentions so common
-amongst Asiatic nations.
-
-Where rank and property descend from father to son, there is little
-difficulty in settling the succession. But when families remain united
-for years under the Murroo-muka-tayum, or inheritance by the nephew
-or sister’s son—the strange law which prevails among the Rajahs and
-Nairs of Malabar—it becomes by no means an easy matter to ascertain who
-is the senior in point of birth. The crafty Brahmans provided against
-this difficulty by establishing a system of intermediate dignities,
-which acted as a register, and by requiring a long interval of time,
-during which each individual’s rights might be frequently discussed and
-deliberately settled, to elapse between promotion from the inferior to
-the superior grades.
-
-The head of the Calicut house, who may be supposed to occupy the position
-of the first Samiry’s mother, is called the Vullia Tumbooratee,[97] or
-principal queen. She resides in the Kovilugum, or palace of Umbadee.
-Priority of birth gives a claim to this dignity, and the eldest of all
-the princesses is entitled to it, no matter what be her relationship to
-the reigning sovereign. The Umbadee is the only indispensable palace;
-but, for the sake of convenience, an unlimited number of private
-dwellings have been established for the junior princesses. Thus we find
-the “new palace,” the “eastern palace” (relatively to the Umbadee), the
-“western palace,” and many others.[98] The queen and princesses are
-compelled to occupy the residences allotted to their several ranks; they
-are also prohibited from holding any commerce with men of their own
-family, as their paramours must either be of the Kshatriya[99] (military)
-caste, or Numboory Brahmans, and may not be changed without the consent
-of the Samiry and that of the whole body of near relations.
-
-The princes are taken according to their seniority out of the
-above-mentioned Umbadees, and the eldest of all, when a death occurs,
-becomes the Samiry. There are five palaces of state allotted to the
-different princes—namely, the Samotree Kovilugum, or palace of the First
-Rajah; the Yeirumpiree Kovilugum, or palace of the Yellia Rajah—the heir
-apparent to the Samiry-ship; and three others, which are respectively
-termed the “Governments of the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Portions.” After
-that a prince has been once established in any of these dignities,
-his order of rank may be considered finally settled: he cannot be
-superseded, but must, if he lives, rise step by step—each time with
-formal investiture—till he attains the highest dignity. Whenever a
-superior palace becomes vacant, he is duly installed in it, and succeeds
-to the revenue arising from the landed property belonging to it. But he
-cannot remove any of the furniture, or the gold and silver utensils, from
-the inferior residence which he formerly occupied, as these articles
-are considered public goods, and, as such, are marked with distinctive
-stamps. Under all circumstances, however, the prince retains the right of
-private property.
-
-The principles of the arrangement which we have attempted to describe,
-not only exist in the Calicut house but pervade all the families of the
-different Rajahs in Malabar.
-
-In the intercourse between the princes there is much ceremony, and, as
-might be expected, little affection. No one is allowed to sit down in
-the presence of a superior; all must stand before the Samiry, and do
-obeisance to him with folded hands.
-
-According to a census taken in 1846, the different castes were enumerated
-as follows in round numbers:—
-
- 1. Numboory Brahmans 5,500
- 2. Puttur, or foreign Brahmans 15,200
- 3. Nairs 370,000
- 4. Tiyars 340,000
- 5. Moplahs 315,000
- 6. Fishermen 15,300
- 7. Chermur, or serfs 160,000
- 8. Christians and other strangers 9,000
- ---------
- Total 1,230,000[100]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Even in India, the land of ethnologic marvels, there are few races so
-strange and remarkable in their customs as the people of Malabar. The
-soil or the climate seems to have exercised some peculiar effect upon
-its inhabitants: Hindoos as well as Moslems abound in peculiarities
-unknown to their tenets and practices in other parts of the world. The
-correctness of our observation will appear in the following sketches of
-the different castes.
-
-The priesthood of Malabar is at present divided into two great classes;
-the Numboory, Numoodree or Malabar Brahmans, and the Puttur, or families
-of the pontifical stock that do not originally belong to the country.
-
-The Numboory is the scion of an ancient and celebrated tree. The well
-known polemic Sankaracharya belonged to this race; he was born in the
-village of Kaludee, in the 3501st, or, according to others, the 3100th
-year of the Kali Yug. His fame rests principally upon his celebrated
-work, the sixty-four _anacharun_, or Exceptions to Established Rules,
-composed for the purpose of regulating and refining the customs of his
-fellow religionists.[101] No copy of the institutes which have produced
-permanent effects upon the people exists in Malabar. There is a history
-of the saint’s life called Sankaracharya Chureedun, containing about
-seven hundred stanzas, written by a disciple.
-
-The Numboory family is governed by several regulations peculiar to it:
-only the eldest of any number of brothers takes a woman of his own caste
-to wife. All the juniors must remain single except when the senior fails
-in having issue. This life of celibacy became so irksome to the Brahmans
-that they induced the Nair caste to permit unrestrained intercourse
-between their females and themselves, it being well understood that
-the priesthood was conferring an especial honour upon their disciples.
-Probably in order to please the compliant Shudras the more, the Numboory
-in many parts of the country changed their regular mode of succession
-for the inheritance by nephews practised amongst the Nairs. As might be
-supposed, the birth of female children is considered an enormous evil
-by these Brahmans; their daughters frequently live and die unmarried,
-and even when a suitable match has been found for them, their nuptials
-are seldom celebrated till late in life, owing to the extraordinary
-expense of the ceremony. Throughout India the marriage of a girl is
-seldom delayed after her twelfth year; in Malabar, few Numboory women
-are married before they reach the age of twenty-five or thirty. They
-are most strictly watched, and all _faux pas_ are punished by a sort of
-excommunication pronounced by the hereditary Brahman, with the consent of
-the Rajah. The relations of the female delinquent are also heavily fined,
-and such mulcts in ancient times formed one of the items of the ruler’s
-revenue.
-
-There is nothing striking in the appearance of the Numboory. He is,
-generally speaking, a short, spare man, of a dark olive-coloured
-complexion, sharp features, and delicate limbs. His toilette is not
-elaborate; a piece of white cotton cloth fastened round the waist, and a
-similar article thrown loosely over the shoulders, together with the cord
-of the twice-born, compose the _tout ensemble_. These Brahmans are solemn
-in their manners and deportment, seldom appear in public, and when they
-do, they exact and receive great respect from their inferiors in caste. A
-Nair meeting a Numboory must salute him by joining the palms of the hands
-together, and then separating them three successive times.[102]
-
-The Nairs[103] are a superior class of Shudra, or servile Hindoos, who
-formerly composed the militia,[104] or landwehr, of Malabar. Before the
-land-tax was introduced they held estates rent free; the only prestation
-required from them was personal service; to attend the rajah, or chief,
-on all official and religious occasions, and to march to battle under
-his banner. When absent from their homes, they were entitled to a daily
-subsistence, called Kole. Their arms were sword and shield, spear and
-matchlock, with a long knife or dagger suspended behind the back by
-a hook attached to a leathern waistband. Being now deprived of their
-favourite pastimes—fighting and plundering—they have become cultivators
-of the soil, and disdain not to bend over the plough, an occupation
-formerly confined to their slaves. And yet to the present day they retain
-much of their old military character, and with it the licentiousness
-which in Eastern countries belongs to the profession of arms. In fact,
-“war, wine, and women” appear to be the three ingredients of their
-_summum bonum_, and forced abstinence from the first, only increases the
-ardour of their affection for the last two. Although quite opposed to the
-spirit of Hindoo law, intoxication and debauchery never degrade a Nair
-from his caste.
-
-Wedlock can hardly be said to exist among the Nairs. They perform,
-however, a ceremony called _kulleanum_, which in other castes implies
-marriage, probably a relic of the nuptial rite. The Nair woman has a
-Talee, or necklace, bound round her throat by some fellow-caste man,
-generally a friend of the family; a procession then ambulates the town,
-and by virtue thereof the lady takes the title of Ummah, or matron.
-But the gentleman is not entitled to the privileges of a husband, nor
-has he any authority over the said matron’s person or property. She is
-at liberty to make choice of the individual with whom she intends to
-live—her Bhurtao, as her protector is called, she becoming his Bharya.
-The connection is termed Goonadoshum, words which literally signify
-“good and bad,” and imply an agreement between the parties to take each
-other for better and worse; it cannot be dissolved without the simple
-process of one party “giving warning” to the other. In former times, the
-lady used always to reside in her mother’s house, but this uncomfortable
-practice is now rapidly disappearing.
-
-Another peculiar custom which prevails among the Nairs, is the
-murroo-muka-tayum,[105] hereditary succession by sisters’ sons; or in
-case of their failing, by the male nearest in consanguinity from the
-father’s grandmother. The ancient ordinances of Malabar forbade a Nair
-to leave his property by will to his offspring, and it was considered
-unbecoming to treat a son with the affection shown to a nephew. Of late
-years some heads of families have made a provision for their own children
-during life time, but it has been necessary to procure the assent of the
-rightful heirs to bequests thus irregularly made. When property is left
-to sons, the division follows the general Hindoo law, with two essential
-points of difference. In the first place, children inherit the estate of
-the mother only; and, secondly, a daughter is, in certain cases, entitled
-to preference to a son. Thus, a female can, a male cannot, mortgage or
-sell land inherited from his maternal progenitor: after his death it must
-revert to those who were co-heirs with him; and though a man is entitled
-to the same share as his sister, his right to it continues only as long
-as they live in the same house.
-
-The origin of this extraordinary law is lost in the obscurity of
-antiquity. The Brahmans, according to some, were its inventors; others
-suppose that they merely encouraged and partially adopted it. Its
-effects, politically speaking, were beneficial to the community at
-large. The domestic ties, always inconvenient to a strictly military
-population, were thereby conveniently weakened, and the wealth,
-dignity, and unbroken unity of interests were preserved for generations
-unimpaired in great and powerful families, which, had the property been
-divided among the several branches, according to the general practice
-of Hinduism, would soon have lost their weight and influence. As it was
-unnecessary that a woman should be removed from her home, or introduced
-into a strange family, the eldest nephew on the sister’s side, when he
-became the senior male member of the household, succeeded, as a matter of
-course, to the rights, property, and dignity of Karnovun.[106]
-
-We suspect that the priesthood—those crafty politicians whose meshes
-of mingled deceit and superstition have ever held the Hindoo mind “in
-durance vile”—were the originators of the murroo-muka-tayum and the
-goonadoshum. Both inventions, like many of the laws of Lycurgus, appear
-the result of well-digested plans for carrying out the one proposed
-object. They are audacious encroachments upon the rights of human nature;
-and we cannot account for their existence by any supposition except that
-the law-givers were determined to rear a race of warriors—no matter by
-what means. As a corroboration of our theory, we may instance the fact
-that these strange and now objectless ordinances are gradually giving way
-to the tide of truer feeling. Already the succession of nephews has been
-partially broken through, and in the present day the control of the heads
-of families is nothing compared with what it was.
-
-There is a tradition among the Nairs, that anciently, the Samiry Rajah
-was, by the law of the land, compelled to commit suicide by cutting
-his throat in public at the expiration of a twelve-years’ reign. When
-that ceremony became obsolete, another and an equally peculiar one
-was substituted in its stead. A jubilee was proclaimed throughout the
-kingdom, and thousands flocked from all directions to the feasts and
-festivals prepared for them at Calicut. On an appointed day, the Rajah,
-after performing certain religious rites, repaired to the shore, and sat
-down upon a cushion, unarmed, bare-headed, and almost undressed, whilst
-any four men of the fighting caste, who had a mind to win a crown, were
-allowed to present themselves as candidates for the honour of regicide.
-They were bathed in the sea, and dressed in pure garments, which, as well
-as their persons, were profusely sprinkled over with perfumes and water
-coloured yellow by means of turmeric. A Brahman then putting a long
-sword and small round shield into each man’s hand, told him to “go in and
-win” if he could. Almost incredible though it may appear, some cases are
-quoted in which a lucky desperado succeeded in cutting his way through
-the thirty or forty thousand armed guards who stood around the Rajah, and
-in striking off the sovereign’s head. This strange practice has of late
-years been abolished.
-
-The Nairs are rather a fair and comely race, with neat features, clean
-limbs, and decidedly a high caste look. They shave the head all over,
-excepting one long thin lock of hair, which is knotted at the end, and
-allowed to lie flat upon the crown. Neither cap nor turban is generally
-worn. Their dress consists of the usual white cotton cloth fastened round
-the loins: when _en grande tenue_, a similar piece hangs round their
-necks, or is spread over the shoulders. We have alluded to the appearance
-of their females in our account of Calicut, and may here observe that
-we were rather fortunate in having accidentally seen them. The Nair
-is as jealous as he is amorous and vindictive: many travellers have
-passed through the country without being able to catch one glimpse of
-their women, and the knife would be unhesitatingly used if a foreigner
-attempted to satisfy his curiosity by anything like forcible measures.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Tian[107] of Malabar is to the Nair what the villein was to the
-feoffee of feudal England. These two families somewhat resemble each
-other in appearance, but the former is darker in complexion, and less
-“castey” in form and feature than the latter. It is the custom for
-modest women of the Tiyar family to expose the whole of the person
-above the waist, whereas females of loose character are compelled by
-custom to cover the bosom. As this class of Hindoo, generally speaking,
-provides the European residents with nurses and other menials, many of
-our countrymen have tried to make them adopt a somewhat less natural
-costume. The proposal, however, has generally been met pretty much in the
-same spirit which would be displayed were the converse suggested to an
-Englishwoman.
-
-In writings the Tiyar are styled Eelavun. They are supposed to be a
-colony of strangers from an island of that name near Ceylon. An anomaly
-in the Hindoo system they certainly are: learned natives know not
-whether to rank them among the Shudras or not; some have designated
-them by the term Uddee Shudra, meaning an inferior branch of the fourth
-great division. Their principal employments are drawing toddy, dressing
-the heads of cocoa and other trees, cultivating rice lands, and acting
-as labourers, horse-keepers, and grass-cutters; they are free from all
-prejudices that would remove them from Europeans, and do not object
-to duties which only the lowest outcastes in India will condescend to
-perform. Some few have risen to respectability and even opulence by
-trade. They will not touch the flesh of the cow, and yet they have no
-objection to other forbidden food. They drink to excess, and are fond
-of quarrelling over their cups. Unlike the Nairs, they are deficient in
-spirit; they are distinguished from the natives of Malabar generally by
-marrying and giving in marriage. Moreover, property with them descends
-regularly from father to son.
-
-Throughout the province a sort of vassalage seems to have been
-established universally among the Tiyar, occasionally among the Nair
-tribes.[108] The latter would sometimes place himself in a state of
-dependency upon some Rajah, or powerful chief, and pay Chungathum,[109]
-or protection-money, for the advantage derived from the connexion. The
-Tiyar willingly became the Udian[110] of any superior whose patronage
-would guarantee him quiet possession of his goods and chattels. This
-kind of allegiance by no means amounted to slavery. The Tumbooran
-could not dispose of the person or property of his vassal, nor did the
-private tie acquit an individual of any public duty to the Rajah or his
-representatives upon emergent occasions. The patron was on all occasions
-bound to defend, protect, and procure redress for his client—favours
-which the latter acknowledged by yearly tribute, and by affording
-personal service to his superior in private quarrels. To the present
-day the Tian will immediately say who his Tumbooran is: the annual
-offerings are still kept up, and though British law entitles all parties
-to equality of social rights, it must be an injury of some magnitude
-that can induce the inferior to appear against his patron in a court of
-justice. Some individuals became vassals of the Pagoda, which, in its
-turn, often subjected itself to fee a Rajah for the maintenance of its
-rights and the defence of its property.
-
-The reader will remark how peculiarly characteristic of the nation
-this state of voluntary dependency is. In European history we find the
-allodialist putting himself and his estate in a condition of vassalage,
-but he did so because it was better to occupy the property as a fief
-incident to certain services than to lose it altogether, or even to
-be subjected to pillage and forced contributions. But the Asiatic is
-not comfortable without the shade of a patron over his head; even if
-necessity originally compelled him to sacrifice half his freedom, habit
-and inclination perpetuate the practice long after all object for its
-continuance has ceased to exist.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chermur,[111] or serfs of Malabar, amongst the Hindoos, were entirely
-prædial or rustic. The system of slavery is said to have been introduced
-by Parasu Rama, as a provision for agriculture when he gave the country
-to the Brahmans. We may account for it more naturally by assigning
-its origin and referring its subsequent prevalence to the operation
-of the ancient Indian laws. The rules of caste were so numerous and
-arbitrary that constant deviations from them would take place in a large
-community; and for certain offences freeborn individuals became Chandalas
-(outcastes), and were liable to disenfranchisement.
-
-Servitude in Malabar offered few of the revolting, degrading, and
-horrible features which characterized it in the ancient, mediæval, and
-modern annals of the Western World. The proprietor never had the power of
-life or death over a slave without the sanction of the feudal chief, or
-more generally of the sovereign; he could inflict corporeal punishment
-upon him, but old established custom limited the extent as effectually
-as law would. Moreover, in this part of the globe serfs were born and
-bred in subserviency, they had no cherished memories of rights and
-comforts once enjoyed,—no spirit of independence conscious of a title
-to higher privileges and indignant at unjust seclusion from them. In
-their case slavery did not begin with the horrors of violent separation
-from country and home, the cruelties of a ship-imprisonment, forcible
-introduction to new habits and customs, food and dress, languages and
-connections. They were not degraded to the level of beasts, nor were they
-subjected to treatment of the worst description by strange masters, who
-neither understood their natures, nor sympathized with their feelings.
-
-A proprietor in Malabar could always sell[112] his serfs with or
-without the soil, but to remove them far from their homes would have
-been considered a cruel and unwarrantable measure sufficient to cause
-and almost justify desertion. Only in some castes the wives of slaves
-might be sold to another master, and, generally speaking, parents were
-not separated from their children.[113] They might, however, be let out
-in simple rent, or mortgaged under certain deeds. The proprietors were
-bound to feed their slaves throughout the year. The allowance on work
-days was double the proportion issued at other times, but it was never
-less than two pounds of rice to a male, and about three quarters of that
-quantity to a female. In Malabar there have been instances of a Chermun’s
-holding land in lease, and being responsible to government for paying its
-taxes. In Canara it was by no means uncommon for slaves to have slips of
-rice-fields, and small pieces of land given to them by their masters for
-growing fruit and vegetables. When a slave possessing any property died,
-his owner was not entitled to it, except in the cases when no lawful
-heir could be found. In some places on the coast,[114] and near large
-towns, the serfs were permitted, when not labouring for their proprietor,
-to employ themselves in carrying grass, firewood, and other articles
-to market. On great occasions they expected presents of clothes, oil,
-grain, and small sums of money whenever the owner was wealthy enough to
-distribute such _largesse_. And at harvest time they were entitled to a
-certain portion of the produce, as a compensation for watching the crop.
-
-There are several castes of serfs who do not intermarry or eat with
-each other. The Poliur is considered the most industrious, docile,
-and trustworthy. Proprietors complained loudly of the pilfering
-propensities displayed by the others. With the exception of the Parayen
-and Kunnakun tribes, they abstain from slaying the cow, and using beef
-as an article of food. All are considered impure, though not equally so.
-For instance, slaves of the Polyan, Waloovan, and Parayen races must
-stand at a distance of seventy-two paces from the Brahman and Nair: the
-Kunnakuns may approach within sixty-four, and other servile castes within
-forty-eight paces of the priestly and military orders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE MOSLEM AND OTHER NATIVES OF MALABAR.
-
-
-We are informed by the Moslem historians that their faith spread wide
-and took deep root in the southern parts of Western India, principally
-in consequence of the extensive immigration of Arabs. It may be observed
-that the same cause which provided the Hindoos with serfs, supplied the
-stranger with proselytes: a Rajah would often, when in want of money,
-dispose of his outcastes to the Faithful, who, in such cases, seldom
-failed to make converts of their purchasers.
-
-The Moplahs, or Mapillahs,[115]—the Moslem inhabitants of Malabar—are a
-mixed breed, sprung from the promiscuous intercourse that took place
-between the first Arab settlers and the women of the country. Even to
-the present day they display in mind and body no small traces of their
-mongrel origin. They are a light coloured and good looking[116] race of
-men, with the high features, the proud expression, and the wiry forms
-of the descendants of Ishmael: their delicate hands and feet, and their
-long bushy beards,[117] show that not a little Hindoo blood flows in
-their veins. They shave the hair, trim the mostachios according to the
-Sunnat,[118] and, instead of a turban, wear a small silk or cloth cap
-of peculiar shape upon their heads. The chest and shoulders are left
-exposed, and a white or dyed piece of linen, resembling in cut and
-colour the “lung” or bathing cloth of Central Asia, is tied round the
-loins. The garment, if we may so call it, worn by the males, does not
-reach below the calves of the legs, whereas the fair sex prolongs it to
-the ankles. Unlike the Hindoo inhabitants of Malabar, the upper portion
-of the female figure is modestly concealed by a shift buttoned round the
-neck, with large sleeves, and the opening in front: according to the
-custom of the Faithful a veil is always thrown over the head.
-
-The only peculiarity in the Moplah lady’s costume is the horrible
-ornamenting of the ear. At an early age the lobe is pierced, and a bit
-of lead, or a piece of Shola wood[119] is inserted in order to enlarge
-the orifice. After a time the lobe becomes about the size of a crown
-piece, and a circle of gold, silver, or palm-leaf, dyed red, white, or
-yellow, is inserted into it—the distended skin of the lobe containing
-and surrounding the ring. There is something peculiarly revolting to a
-stranger’s eye in the appearance of the two long strips of flesh instead
-of ears, which hang down on each side of the head in old age, when
-ornaments are no longer worn.
-
-The countenance of the Moplah, especially when it assumes the expression
-with which he usually regards infidels and heretics, is strongly
-indicative of his ferocious and fanatic disposition. His deep undying
-hatred for the Kafir[120] is nurtured and strengthened by the priests and
-religious instructors. Like the hierarchy of the Moslem world in general,
-they have only to hold out a promise of Paradise to their disciples as a
-reward, and the most flagrant crimes will be committed. In Malabar they
-lie under the suspicion of having often suggested and countenanced many a
-frightful deed of violence. The Moplah is an obstinate ruffian. Cases are
-quoted of a culprit spitting in the face of a judge when the warrant of
-execution was being read out to him. Sometimes half a dozen desperadoes
-will arm themselves, seize upon a substantial house, and send a message
-of defiance to the collector of the district. Their favourite weapon
-on such occasions is the long knife that usually hangs from the waist:
-when entering battle they generally carry two, one in the hand, and the
-other between the teeth. They invariably prepare themselves for combat
-by a powerful dose of hemp or opium, fight to the last with frenzied
-obstinacy, despise the most dreadful wounds, and continue to exert
-themselves when a European would be quite disabled—a peculiarity which
-they probably inherit from their Arab[121] ancestors. Like the Malay when
-he runs a-muck, these men never think of asking for, or giving quarter,
-they make up their minds to become martyrs, and only try to attain high
-rank in that glorious body by slaying as many infidels as they can. At
-times they have been eminently successful. On one occasion we heard of
-a rencontre in which about a dozen desperate robbers, dropping from the
-window of a house into the centre of a square, inopportunely formed by a
-company of seapoys, used their knives with such effect upon the helpless
-red-coats’ backs, that they ran away with all possible precipitation. The
-result of a few such accidents is, that the native soldier cannot always
-be trusted to act against them, for, with the usual Hindoo superstition
-and love of the marvellous, he considers their bravery something
-preternatural, and connected with certain fiendish influences.
-
-In former days, the Moplas played a conspicuous part among the pirates
-who infested the Malabar coast. Marco Polo mentions that there issued
-annually “a body of upwards of one hundred vessels,[122] who captured
-other ships and plundered the merchants.” He alludes to their forming
-what they called a ladder on the sea, by stationing themselves in
-squadrons of twenty, about five miles from each other, so as to command
-as great an extent of water as possible. But in the old Venetian’s
-day, the corsairs appear to have been by no means so sanguinary as
-they afterwards became. He expressly states, that when the pirates
-took a ship, they did no injury to the crew, but merely said to them,
-“Go and collect another cargo, that we may have a chance of getting it
-too.” In later times, Tavernier describes them as blood-thirsty in the
-extreme. “The Malavares are violent Mahometans and very cruel to the
-Christians.[123] I saw a barefoot Carmelite friar, who had been taken by
-the pirates, and so tortured, in order to obtain his ransom,[124] that
-his right arm and one leg were shorter by one half than the other.” He
-alludes to their audacity in attacking large armed vessels with squadrons
-composed of ten or fifteen barques, each carrying from two hundred to two
-hundred and fifty men, and describes their practice of boarding suddenly
-and setting fire to the ship with pots of artificial fire. The style of
-defence usually adopted was to prepare for them by closing the scuttles,
-and swamping the deck with water, to hinder the fire-pots from doing
-execution.
-
-The Moplahs being now deprived of their old occupation, have addicted
-themselves, in some places, to gang-robbery and smuggling. The principal
-contraband articles are tobacco and salt, both of which are government
-monopolies.[125] To strengthen their bands, they will associate to
-themselves small bodies of Nairs and villains of the lowest Hindoo
-castes, who shrink from no species of cruelty and outrage. But, generally
-speaking, especially in the quieter districts of Malabar, the Moplahs and
-the Nairs are on terms of deadly enmity. The idolaters, who have been
-taught to hate the Faithful by many a deed of blood, would always act
-willingly against them, provided that our rulers would ensure subsistence
-to their families, according to the ancient custom of the country.[126]
-Both are equally bigoted, violent, and fond of the knife. In few parts of
-the world there are more deadly feuds than in this province; and whenever
-a Nair is killed by a Moplah, or _vice versâ_, the relations will steep
-a cloth in the dead man’s blood, and vow never to lose sight of it till
-they have taken revenge upon the murderer.
-
-Near the coast, the Moplahs are a thriving race of traders, crafty,
-industrious, and somewhat refined by the influence of wealth. Those of
-the interior cultivate rice and garden lands. Some few of the latter
-traffic, but as they do not possess the opportunities of commerce
-enjoyed by their maritime brethren, their habitations and warehouses
-are not so comfortable, substantial, and spacious. Both of them have a
-widely diffused bad name. Among the people of Southern India generally,
-the word Moplah is synonymous with thief and rascal. All are equally
-celebrated for parsimony, a Hindoo, as well as an Arab, quality, and for
-rigid observance of their religious rites and ceremonies. The desire of
-gaining proselytes is one of their ruling passions; consequently Islam is
-steadily extending itself. The zeal of its followers is well supported by
-their means, and the willingness with which they admit new converts, even
-of the lowest and most despised classes, to perfect social equality with
-themselves, offers irresistible attractions to many wretched outcastes of
-Hinduism. They transgress the more laudable ordinances of their faith,
-and yet cling fondly to its worse spirit. They will indulge to excess in
-the forbidden pleasures of distilled waters and intoxicating drugs, in
-immorality and depravity; at the same time they never hesitate to protect
-a criminal of their own creed, and, to save him, would gladly perjure
-themselves, in the belief that, under such circumstances, false oaths and
-testimony are not only justifiable, but meritorious in a religious point
-of view.[127]
-
-The faith professed by the Moplahs is the Shafei form of Islam. All
-their priests and teachers are of the same persuasion; and such is their
-besotted bigotry, that they would as willingly persecute a Hanafi[128]
-Moslem as the Sunni of most Mussulman countries would martyr a heretic or
-schismatic. No Sheah dare own his tenets in Malabar. We doubt whether the
-mighty hand of British law would avail to save from destruction any one
-who had the audacity to curse Omar or Usman at Calicut. They carefully
-cultivate the classical and religious branches of study, such as Sarf
-o Nahv, grammar, and syntax; Mantik, or logic; Hadis, the traditions
-of the Prophet; and Karaat, or the chaunting of the Koran. They seldom
-know Persian; but as they begin the Arabic language almost as soon as
-they can speak, and often enjoy the advantage of Arab instructors, their
-critical knowledge of it is extensive, and their pronunciation good.
-The vernacular dialect of the Moplah is the Malayalim, into which, for
-the benefit of the unlearned, many sacred books have been translated.
-The higher classes are instructed by private tutors, and appear to be
-unusually well educated. The priest has charge of the lower orders, and
-little can be said in praise of the schoolmaster or the scholar.
-
-As regards testaments and the law of inheritance, the Moplahs have
-generally adhered to the Koran; in some families, however, the succession
-is by nephews, as amongst the Nairs.[129] This custom is palpably of
-Pagan origin, like many of the heterogeneous practices grafted by the
-Mussulmans of India upon the purer faith of their forefathers. Of course
-they excuse it by tradition. When Cherooman Rajah, they say, became a
-convert to Islam, and was summoned by Allah in a vision to Mecca, he
-asked his wife’s permission to take his only son with him. She refused.
-The ruler’s sister then offered to send her child under his charge.
-The Rajah adopted the youth, and upon his return from the Holy City he
-instituted the custom of murroo-muka-tayum, in order to commemorate the
-introduction of Islam into the land of the Infidel.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Mokawars, Mokurs, or as we call them, the Mucwars, are an amphibious
-race of beings, half fishermen, half labourers:[130] generally speaking
-Moslems, sometimes Hindoos. Very slight is the line of demarcation drawn
-between them, and they display little or no fanaticism. It is common for
-one or two individuals in a family to become Poothoo Islam, or converts
-to the faith of Mohammed, and yet to eat, sleep, and associate with the
-other members of the household as before.[131]
-
-In appearance these fishermen are an uncommonly ill-favoured race; dark,
-with ugly features, and forms which a developist would pronounce to
-be little removed from the original orang-outang. Their characters, in
-some points, show to advantage, when contrasted with those of their
-superiors—the Nairs and Moplahs. They are said to be industrious,
-peaceful, and as honest as can be expected. A Mucwa village is usually
-built close to the sea; the material of its domiciles consisting of
-wattle or matting, roofed over with thatch; the whole burned to blackness
-by the joint influence of sun, rain, wind, and spray.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Servitude amongst the Moslems partook more of the nature of social
-fraternity, and was dissimilar in very essential points, to that of
-the Hindoos. The slaves were always domestic, never prædial: instead
-of inhabiting miserable huts built in the centre of the paddy fields,
-they lived in the houses of their proprietors. They were efficiently
-protected by law, for in case of ill-treatment, duly proved before the
-Kazee, the complainant was either manumitted or sold to some other
-master, and so far from being considered impure outcastes, they often
-rose to confidential stations in the family. This is the case generally
-throughout the Moslem world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The native Christians do not constitute a large or influential portion
-of the community in this part of India, although the Nestorians in very
-early times settled and planted their faith on the western coast of the
-peninsula. About the towns of Cannanore and Tellichery, there are a few
-fishermen and palanquin bearers, called Kolakar and Pandee, said to have
-migrated from the Travancore country. The other “Nussuranee (Nazarene)
-Moplahs,” as the Christians are styled by the Heathen, are almost all
-Catholics, either the descendants of the Portuguese, or converted by
-them to Romanism. They reside principally in the large towns upon the
-coast: unlike their brethren in Canara, they imitate the European
-costume, and occupy themselves either with trade, or in the government
-courts and cutcherries. They are notorious for dishonesty and habitual
-intoxication.[132]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Amongst the many social usages and customs peculiar to the natives of
-Malabar, the two following deserve some mention. There is a kind of
-general meeting, called Chengathee koree, or the “Society of friends,”
-established for the purposes of discussing particular subjects, and for
-inquiring into the conduct of individuals. It is supported by the monthly
-subscriptions of the members, and all must in regular turn—the order
-being settled by lots—give an entertainment of rice, flesh, and fruit to
-the whole party. As the entertainer is entitled to the amount of money
-in deposit for the month, and the feast does not cost half that sum,
-each member is anxious to draw the ticket with his name upon it as soon
-as possible. In some places these convivial meetings are heterogeneously
-composed of Nairs, Moplahs, and Tiyars; when such is the case, the master
-of the house provides those of the other faith with raw food, which they
-cook and serve up for and by themselves.
-
-The way in which “dinner parties” are given show some talent in the
-combination of hospitality with economy. A feast is prepared, and all
-the guests are expected to present a small sum of money, and a certain
-number of cocoa-nuts, plantains, betel-nuts or pepper-vine leaves to the
-master of the house. An account of each offering is regularly kept, and
-a return of the invitation is considered _de rigueur_. Should any member
-of society betray an unwillingness to make the expected requital, or to
-neglect the gifts with which he ought to come provided, they despatch a
-little potful of arrack, and the bone of a fowl, desiring the recusant
-in derision to make merry upon such small cheer. The taunt is, generally
-speaking, severe enough to ensure compliance with the established usages
-of society.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE LAND JOURNEY.
-
-
-Being desirous of seeing as much as possible of the country we preferred
-the route which winds along the sea-shore to Poonanee, and then striking
-westward ascends the Blue Hills, to the short mountain-cut up the Koondah
-Range. Our curiosity, however, more than doubled the length of the
-march.[133]
-
-No detailed account of the ten stages[134] will be inflicted upon the
-peruser of these pages. The journey as far as Poonanee was a most
-uninteresting one: we have literally nothing to record, except the
-ever-recurring annoyances of being ferried over backwaters, riding
-through hot sand fetlock deep, enduring an amount of glare enough
-to blind anything but a Mucwa or a wild beast; and at the end of our
-long rides almost invariably missing the halting place. Arrived at
-the head-quarter village of Paulghaut, the victims of its deceptive
-nomenclature,[135] we instituted a diligent inquiry for any objects of
-curiosity the neighbourhood might offer; and having courted deceit we
-were deceived accordingly. A “native gentleman” informed us that the
-Yemoor Malay Hills, a long range lying about ten miles to the north
-of the town, contains a variety of splendid _points de vue_, and a
-magnificent cataract, which every traveller is in duty bound to visit.
-Moreover, said the Hindoo, all those peaks are sacred to Parwati, the
-mountain deity, who visited them in person, and directed a number of
-small shrines to be erected there in honour of her goddesship.
-
-So after engaging a mancheel we set out in quest of the sublime and
-beautiful. After winding for about three quarters of the total distance
-through a parched-up plain, the road reaches the foot of a steep and
-rugged hill overgrown with bamboos, and studded with lofty trees, whose
-names and natures are—
-
- ⸺To ancient song unknown,
- The noble sons of potent heat and floods.
-
-As we advanced, the jungle became denser and denser: there were evident
-signs of hog and deer in the earths of those animals which strewed the
-ground. Tigers and elephants, bisons and leopards, are said to haunt the
-remoter depths, and the dry grass smouldering on our path proved the
-presence of charcoal burners—beings quite as wild as the other denizens
-of the forest.
-
-The difficulty of the ascent being duly overcome we arrived at the
-cascade, and stood for a while gazing with astonishment at the prospect
-of⸺a diminutive stream of water, trickling gently down the sloping
-surface of a dwarf rock. Remembering Terni and Tivoli, we turned our
-bearers’ heads homewards, not however forgetting solemnly to enjoin them
-never to let a tourist pass by that way without introducing him to the
-Prince of all the Cataracts.
-
-We were curious to see the fort of Paulghaut, once the key of Malabar,
-the scene of so many bloody conflicts between the power of Mysore and
-British India in the olden time.[136] A square building, with straight
-curtains, and a round tower at each angle, with the usual intricate
-gateway, the uselessly deep fosse, and the perniciously high glacis that
-characterize native fortifications—such was the artless form that met
-our sight. In the present day it would be untenable for an hour before a
-battery of half-a-dozen mortars.
-
-Passing through the magnificent and most unhealthy Wulliyar jungle,[137]
-celebrated at all times for teak and sport, and during the monsoon for
-fever and ague, and dangerous torrents even more dangerously bridged,
-we arrived by a rough and rugged road at Coimbatore, a place which every
-cotton student and constant reader of the Indian Mail familiarly knows.
-A most unpromising looking locality it is—a straggling line of scattered
-houses, long bazaars, and bungalows, separated from each other by wide
-and desert “compounds.” The country around presented a most unfavourable
-contrast to the fertile region we had just quitted, and the high fierce
-wind raising clouds of gravelly dust from the sun-parched plain, reminded
-us forcibly of similar horrors experienced in Scinde and Bhawalpore.
-
-A ride of twenty miles along a dry and hard highway, skirted with
-numerous and, generally speaking, ruinous villages, led us to Matypolliam
-at the foot of the Neilgherry Hills—our destination. And now as we
-are likely to be detained here for some time by that old offender the
-Bhawany River, who has again chosen to assault and batter down part of
-her bridge, we will deliberately digress a little and attempt a short
-description of land travelling in the “land of the sun.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-For the conveyance of your person, India supplies you with three several
-contrivances. You may, if an invalid, or if you wish to be expeditious,
-engage a palanquin, station bearers on the road, and travel either with
-or without halts, at the rate of three or four miles an hour: we cannot
-promise you much pleasure in the enjoyment of this celebrated Oriental
-luxury. Between your head and the glowing sun, there is scarcely half an
-inch of plank, covered with a thin mat, which ought to be, but never is,
-watered. After a day or two you will hesitate which to hate the most,
-your bearers’ monotonous, melancholy, grunting, groaning chaunt, when
-fresh, or their jolting, jerking, shambling, staggering gait, when tired.
-In a perpetual state of low fever you cannot eat, drink, or sleep; your
-mouth burns, your head throbs, your back aches, and your temper borders
-upon the ferocious. At night, when sinking into a temporary oblivion of
-your ills, the wretches are sure to awaken you for the purpose of begging
-a few pice, to swear that they dare not proceed because there is no oil
-for the torch, or to let you and your vehicle fall heavily upon the
-ground, because the foremost bearer very nearly trod upon a snake. Of
-course you scramble as well as you can out of your cage, and administer
-discipline to the offenders. And what is the result? They all run away
-and leave you to pass the night, not in solitude, for probably a hungry
-tiger circumambulates your box, and is only prevented by a somewhat
-superstitious awe of its general appearance, from pulling you out of it
-with claw and jaw, and all the action of a cat preparing to break her
-fast upon some trapped mouse.
-
-All we have said of the palanquin is applicable to its humble
-modification. The mancheel in this part of the world consists merely of
-a pole, a canvas sheet hung like a hammock beneath it, and above it a
-square moveable curtain, which you may draw down on the sunny or windy
-side. In this conveyance you will progress somewhat more rapidly than you
-did in the heavy wooden chest, but your miseries will be augmented in
-undue proportion. As it requires a little practice to balance oneself in
-these machines, you will infallibly be precipitated to the ground when
-you venture upon your maiden attempt. After that a sense of security,
-acquired by dint of many falls, leaves your mind free to exercise its
-powers of observation, you will remark how admirably you are situated for
-combining the enjoyments of ophthalmic glare, febrile reflected heat,
-a wind like a Sirocco, and dews chilling as the hand of the Destroyer.
-You feel that your back is bent at the most inconvenient angle, and
-that the pillows which should support your head invariably find their
-way down between your shoulders, that you have no spare place, as in the
-palanquin, for carrying about a variety of small comforts, no, not even
-the room to shift your position—in a word, that you are a miserable being.
-
-If in good health, your best plan of all is to mount one of your horses,
-and to canter him from stage to stage, that is to say, between twelve
-and fifteen miles a day. In the core of the nineteenth century you may
-think this style of locomotion resembles a trifle too closely that of
-the ninth, but, trust to our experience, you have no better. We will
-suppose, then, that you have followed our advice, engaged bandies[138]
-for your luggage, and started them off overnight, accompanied by your
-herd of domestics on foot. The latter are all armed with sticks, swords,
-and knives, for the country is not a safe one, and if it were, your
-people are endowed with a considerable development of cautiousness. At
-day-break, your horse-keeper brings up your nag saddled, and neighing his
-impatience to set out: you mount the beast, and leave the man to follow
-with a coolie or two, bearing on their shoulders the little camp-bed, on
-which you are wont to pass your nights. There is no danger of missing
-the road: you have only to observe the wheel-ruts, which will certainly
-lead you to the nearest and largest, perhaps the only town within a day’s
-march. As you canter along, you remark with wonder the demeanour of the
-peasantry, and the sensation your appearance creates. The women veil
-their faces, and dash into the nearest place of refuge, the children
-scamper away as if your countenance, like Mokanna’s, were capable of
-annihilating a gazer, the very donkeys and bullocks halt, start, and
-shy, as you pass them.[139] In some places the men will muster courage
-enough to stand and gaze upon you, but they do so with an expression of
-countenance, half-startled, half-scowling, which by no means impresses
-you with a sense of your individual popularity.
-
-Between nine and ten A.M. you draw in sight of some large village, which
-instinct suggests is to be the terminus of that day’s wandering. You
-had better inquire where the travellers’ bungalow is. Sign-posts are
-unknown in these barbarous regions, and if you trust overmuch to your own
-sagacity, your perspiring self and panting steed may wander about for
-half an hour before you find the caravanserai.
-
-At length you dismount. A horse-keeper rising grumbling from his morning
-slumbers, comes forward to hold your nag, and, whilst you are discussing
-a cup of tea in the verandah, parades the animal slowly up and down
-before you, as a precautionary measure previous to tethering him in the
-open air. Presently the “butler” informs you that your breakfast, a
-spatchcock, or a curry with eggs, and a plateful of unleavened wafers,
-called aps—bread being unprocurable hereabouts—is awaiting you. You find
-a few guavas or plantains, intended to act as butter, and when you demand
-the reason, your domestic replies at once, that he searched every house
-in the village, but could procure none. You might as well adopt some
-line of conduct likely to discourage him from further attempts upon your
-credulity, otherwise you will starve before the journey’s end. The fact
-is, he was too lazy to take the trouble of even inquiring for that same
-butter.
-
-We must call upon you to admire the appearance of the travellers’
-bungalows in this part of the country. You will see in them much to
-appreciate if you are well acquainted with Bombay India. Here they are
-cleanly looking, substantially built, tiled or thatched tenements, with
-accommodation sufficient for two families, good furniture, at least as
-far as a table, a couch, and a chair, go, outhouses for your servants,
-and an excellent verandah for yourself. There you may remember, with a
-touch of the true _meminisse juvat_ feeling, certain dirty ill-built
-ruinous roadside erections, tenanted by wasps and hornets, with broken
-seats, tottering tables, and populous bedsteads, for the use of which,
-moreover, you were mulcted at the rate of a rupee a day. The result of
-the comparison will be that the “Benighted Land,”[140] in this point at
-least, rises prodigiously in your estimation.
-
-A siesta after breakfast, and a book, or any such _passe-temps_, when you
-awake, bring you on towards sunset. You may now, if so inclined, start
-for an hour’s constitutional, followed by a servant carrying your gun,
-and keep your hand in by knocking down a few of the old kites that are
-fighting with the Pariah dogs for their scanty meal of offals, or you
-may try to bag one or two of the jungle cocks, whose crowing resounds
-from the neighbouring brakes.
-
-Dinner! lovely word in English ears, unlovely thing—hereabouts—for
-English palate. The beer is sure to be lukewarm, your vegetables
-deficient, and your meat tough, in consequence of its having lost
-vitality so very lately.
-
-You must take the trouble, if you please, of personally superintending
-the departure of your domestics. And this you will find no easy task. The
-men who have charge of the carts never return with their cattle at the
-hour appointed, and, when at last they do, there is not a box packed,
-and probably half your people are wandering about the bazaar. At length,
-with much labour, you manage to get things somewhat in order, witness
-with heartfelt satisfaction the first movement of the unwieldy train, and
-retire to the bungalow for the purpose of getting through the evening,
-with the assistance of tea, and any other little “distractions” your
-imagination may suggest.
-
-Before retiring to rest you might as well look to the priming and
-position of your pistols. Otherwise you may chance to be visited by
-certain animals, even more troublesome than sand-flies and white ants.
-A little accident of the kind happened to us at Waniacollum, a village
-belonging to some Nair Rajah, whose subjects are celebrated for their
-thievish propensities. About midnight, the soundness of our slumbers was
-disturbed by the uninvited presence of some half-a-dozen black gentry,
-who were gliding about the room with the stealthy tread of so many wild
-cats _in purissimis naturalibus_, with the exception of an outside
-coating of cocoanut oil. One individual had taken up a position close to
-our bedside, with so very long a knife so very near our jugular region,
-that we judged it inexpedient in the extreme to excite him by any display
-of activity; so, closing our eyes, we slept heavily till our visitors
-thought proper to depart.
-
-Our only loss was the glass shade of a candlestick, which the thieves,
-supposing to be silver, had carried into the verandah, where, we presume,
-after discovering that it was only plated, they had thrown it upon the
-ground and abandoned it as a useless article. We had, it is true, pistols
-in the room, but as the least movement might have produced uncomfortable
-results; and, moreover, we felt uncommonly like Juvenal’s poor traveller,
-quite reckless of consequences as regarded goods and chattels, we
-resolved not to be blood-thirsty. At the same time we confess that such
-conduct was by no means heroic. But an officer of our own corps, only
-a few weeks before, was severely wounded, and narrowly escaped being
-murdered, not fifty miles from the scene of our night’s adventure, and we
-had little desire to figure among the list of casualties recorded in the
-bimonthly summaries of Indian news.
-
-You would scarcely believe the extent of benefit in a sanitary point of
-view, derived from riding about the country in the way we have described.
-Every discomfort seems to do one good: an amount of broiling and wetting,
-which, in a cantonment, would lead directly to the cemetery, on the
-road seems only to add to one’s ever-increasing stock of health. The
-greatest annoyance, perhaps, is the way in which the servants and effects
-suffer; a long journey almost invariably knocks up the former for an
-unconscionable time, and permanently ruins the latter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We are still at Matypolliam, but our stay will be short, as the bridge
-is now nearly repaired. By weighty and influential arguments we must
-persuade the Kotwal[141]—a powerful native functionary—to collect a
-dozen baggage-bullocks and a score of naked savages, destined to act as
-beasts of burden: no moderate inducement will make the proprietors of the
-carts drive their jaded cattle up the steep acclivities of the hills. A
-ridiculous sight it is—the lading of bullocks untrained to carry weight;
-each animal requires at least half-a-dozen men to keep him quiet; he
-kicks, he butts, he prances, he shies: he is sure to break from them at
-the critical moment, and, by an opportune plunge, to dash your unhappy
-boxes on the ground, scattering their contents in all directions. What
-a scene of human and bestial viciousness, of plunging and bellowing, of
-goading of sides, punching of stomachs, and twisting of tails! We must,
-however, patiently sit by and witness it: otherwise the fellows will not
-start till late in the afternoon.
-
-You would scarcely believe that the inmates of that little bungalow which
-just peeps over the brow of the mountain, are enjoying an Alpine and
-almost European climate, whilst we are still in all the discomforts of
-the tropics. The distance between us is about three miles, as the crow
-flies—eleven along the winding road. We must prepare for the change by
-strapping thick coats to our saddle-bows, and see that our servants are
-properly clothed in cloths and flannels. Otherwise, we render ourselves
-liable to the _peine forte et dure_ of a catarrh of three months’
-probable duration, and our domestics will certainly be floored by fever
-and ague, cholera or rheumatism.
-
-It is just nine o’clock A.M., rather an unusual time for a start in these
-latitudes. But the eddying and roaring of Bhawany’s muddy stream warns
-us that there has been rain amongst the hills. The torrents are passable
-now; they may not be so a few hours later. So we will mount our nags, and
-gallop over the five miles of level country, partially cleared of the
-thick jungle which once invested it, to the foot of the Neilgherry hills.
-
-We now enter the ravine which separates the Oolacul from the Coonoor
-range. A vast chasm it is, looking as if Nature, by a terrible effort,
-had split the giant mountain in twain, and left its two halves standing
-separated opposite each other. A rapid and angry little torrent brawls
-down the centre of the gap towards the Bhawany river, and the sides are
-clothed with thick underwood, dotted with tall wide-spreading trees.
-After the dusty flats of Mysore, and even the green undulations of
-Malabar, you admire the view with a sensation somewhat resembling that
-with which you first gazed upon the “castled crag of Drachenfels,”
-when you visited it _en route_ from monotonous France, uninteresting
-Holland, or unpicturesque Belgium. Probably, like certain enthusiastic
-individuals who have indited high-flown eulogies of Neilgherry beauty,
-you will mentally compare the scenery with that of the Alps, Apennines,
-or Pyrenees. We cannot, however, go quite so far with you: with a few
-exceptions the views generally—and this particularly—want grandeur and a
-certain _nescio quid_ to make them really imposing.
-
-Slowly our panting nags toil along the narrow parapetless road up the
-steep ascent of the Coonoor Pass. The consequence of the storm is that
-our pathway appears plentifully besprinkled with earth, stones, and
-trunks of trees, which have slipped from the inner side. In some places
-it has been worn by the rain down to the bare rock, and the gutters or
-channels of rough stone, built at an average distance of fifty yards
-apart to carry off the water, are slippery for horses, and must be
-uncommonly troublesome to wheeled conveyances. That cart which on the
-plains requires a single team, will not move here without eight pair of
-oxen; and yonder carriage demands the united energies of three dozen
-coolies, at the very least. As, however, its too-confiding owner has
-left it to a careless servant’s charge, it will most probably reach its
-destination in a state picturesque, if not useful—its springs and light
-gear hanging in graceful festoons about the wheels.
-
-And now, after crossing certain torrents and things intended for
-bridges—during which, to confess the truth, we did feel a little
-nervous—our nags stand snorting at the side of the stream which forms the
-Coonoor Falls. Its bottom is a mass of sheet rock, agreeably diversified
-with occasional jagged points and narrow clefts: moreover, the water is
-rushing by with uncomfortable rapidity, and there is no visible obstacle
-to your being swept down a most unpleasant slope. In fact it is the kind
-of place usually described as growing uglier the more you look at it, so
-you had better try your luck as soon as possible. Wheel the nag round,
-“cram” him at the place, and just when he is meditating a sudden halt,
-apply your spurs to his sides and your heavy horsewhip to his flanks,
-trusting to Providence for his and your reaching the other side undamaged.
-
-The Burleyar bungalow—a kind of half-way house, or rather an unfinished
-shed, built on an eminence to the right of the road,—informs us that we
-are now within six miles of our journey’s end. The air becomes sensibly
-cooler, and we begin to look down upon the sultry steaming plain below
-with a sensation of acute enjoyment.
-
-We might as well spend a day or two at Coonoor. Ootacamund is at least
-ten miles off, and it is perfectly useless to hurry on, as our baggage
-will certainly not arrive before the week is half over, even if it does
-then. Not, however, at the government bungalow—that long rambling thing
-perched on the hill above the little bazaar, and renowned for broken
-windows, fireless rooms, and dirty comfortless meals, prepared by a
-native of “heathen caste.” We will patronize the hotel kept, in true
-English style, by Mr. Davidson, where we may enjoy the luxuries of an
-excellent dinner, a comfortable sitting-room, and a clean bed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A survey of the scenery in this part of the Neilgherries takes in an
-extensive range of swelling waving hill, looking at a distance as if
-a green gulf had suddenly become fixed for ever. On the horizon are
-lofty steeps, crowned with remnants of forests, studded with patches of
-cultivation, and seamed with paths, tracks, and narrow roads. There is
-little or no table-land: the only level road in the vicinity is scarcely
-a mile long. At the bottom of the hollow lies the bazaar, and upon the
-rising knolls around are the nine or ten houses which compose the first
-European settlement you have seen on the Blue Hills.
-
-Coonoor occupies the summit of the Matypolliam Pass, about five thousand
-eight hundred and eighty feet above the level of the sea. The climate
-is warmer than that of the other stations, and the attractions of an
-occasional fine day even during the three odious months of June, July,
-and August, fill it with invalids flying from the horrors of Ootacamund.
-The situation, however, is not considered a good one: its proximity to
-the edge of the hills, renders it liable to mists, fogs, and a suspicion
-of the malaria which haunts the jungly forests belting the foot of the
-hills. Those who have suffered from the obstinate fevers of the plains do
-well to avoid Coonoor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The day is fine and bright—a _sine quâ non_ in Neilgherry excursions,—if
-the least cloud or mist be observed hanging about the mountain tops,
-avoid trips!—so we will start off towards that scarcely-distinguishable
-object, half peak, half castle, that ends the rocky wall which lay on our
-left when we rode up the Pass.
-
-You look at Oolacul[142] Droog, as the fort is called, and wonder what
-could have been the use of it. And you are justified in your amazement.
-But native powers delight in cooping up soldiery where they may be as
-useless as possible; they naturally connect the idea of a strong place
-with isolated and almost inaccessible positions, and cannot, for the life
-of them conceive, what Europeans mean by building their fortifications
-on level ground. Hyder Ali and his crafty son well knew that the unruly
-chieftains of the plains would never behave themselves, unless overawed
-and overlooked by some military post which might serve equally well
-for a watch-tower and a dungeon. We think and act otherwise, so such
-erections go to ruin.
-
-Starting, we pursue a road that runs by the travellers’ bungalow,
-descends a steep, rough, and tedious hill—where we should prefer a
-mule to a horse—crosses two or three detestable watercourses, and then
-skirting the western end of the Oolacul chasm shows us a sudden ascent.
-Here we dismount for convenience as well as exercise. The path narrows;
-it becomes precipitous and slippery, owing to the decomposed vegetation
-that covers it, and presently plunges into a mass of noble trees. You
-cannot see a vestige of underwood: the leaves are crisp under your feet;
-the tall trunks rise singly in all their sylvan glory, and the murmurs of
-the wind over the leafy dome above, inform you that
-
- This is the forest primæval—
-
-as opposed to a rank bushy jungle. You enjoy the walk amazingly. The
-foot-track is bounded on both sides by dizzy steeps: through the
-intervals between the trees you can see the light mist-clouds and white
-vapours sailing on the zephyr far beneath your feet. After about an
-hour’s hard work, we suddenly come upon the Droog, and clambering over
-the ruined parapet of stone—the only part of it that remains—stand up to
-catch a glimpse of scenery which even a jaded lionizer would admire.
-
-The rock upon which we tread falls with an almost perpendicular drop of
-four thousand feet into the plains. From this eyrie we descry the houses
-of Coimbatore, the windings of the Bhawany, and the straight lines of
-road stretching like ribbons over the glaring yellow surface of the low
-land. A bluish mist clothes the distant hills of Malabar, dimly seen upon
-the horizon in front. Behind, on the far side of the mighty chasm, the
-white bungalows of Coonoor glitter through the green trees, or disappear
-behind the veil of fleecy vapour which floats along the sunny mountain
-tops. However hypercritically disposed, you can find no fault with this
-view; it has beauty, variety, and sublimity to recommend it.
-
-If an inveterate sight-seer, you will be persuaded by the usual arguments
-to visit Castle Hill, an eminence about three miles to the east of
-Coonoor, for the purpose of enjoying a very second rate prospect. Perhaps
-you will also be curious to inspect a village inhabited by a villanous
-specimen of the Toda race, close to Mr. Davidson’s hotel. We shall not
-accompany you.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-FIRST GLIMPSE OF “OOTY.”
-
-
-The distance from Coonoor to the capital of the Neilgherries is about
-ten miles, over a good road. We propose, however, to forsake the
-uninteresting main line, and, turning leftwards, to strike into the bye
-way which leads to the Khaity Falls.
-
-Khaity is a collection of huts tenanted by the hill people, and in no
-ways remarkable, except that it has given a name to a cascade which
-“everybody goes,” &c.
-
-After six miles of mountain and valley in rapid and unbroken succession,
-we stand upon the natural terrace which supports the little missionary
-settlement, and looking over the deep ravine that yawns at our feet,
-wonder why the “everybody” above alluded to, takes the trouble of
-visiting the Khaity falls. They are formed by a thin stream which dashes
-over a gap in the rock, and disperses into spray before it has time to
-reach the basin below. As usual with Neilgherry cascades they only want
-water.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now as our disappointment has brought on rather a depressed and prosy
-state of mind, we will wile away the tedium of the eight long miles which
-still separate us from our destination, with a little useful discourse
-upon subjects historical and geographical connected with the Neilgherries.
-
-The purely European reader will consider it extraordinary that this
-beautiful range of lofty hills should not have suggested to all men
-at first sight the idea of a cool, healthy summer abode. But we
-demi-Orientals, who know by experience the dangers of mountain air in
-India, only wonder at the daring of the man who first planted a roof-tree
-upon the Neilgherries.
-
-From the year 1799 to 1819 these mountains were in the daily view of all
-the authorities from the plains of Coimbatore; revenue was collected from
-them for the company by a native renter; but, excepting Dr. Ford and
-Capt. Bevan, who in 1809 traversed the hill with a party of pioneers, and
-certain deputy surveyors under Colonel Monson, who partially mapped the
-tract, no strangers had ventured to explore the all but unknown region.
-
-In 1814, Mr. Keys, a sub-assistant, and Mr. McMahon, then an apprentice
-in the survey department, ascended the hills by the Danaynkeucottah
-Pass, penetrated into the remotest parts and made plans, and sent in
-reports of their discoveries. In consequence of their accounts, Messrs.
-Whish and Kindersley, two young Madras civilians, availing themselves of
-the opportunity presented by some criminal’s taking refuge amongst the
-mountains, ventured up in pursuit of him, and proceeded to reconnoitre
-the interior. They soon saw and felt enough to excite their own curiosity
-and that of others. Mr. Sullivan, collector of Coimbatore, built the
-first house upon the Neilgherries. He chose a hillock to the east of the
-hollow, where the lake now lies, and after some difficulty in persuading
-the superstitious natives to work—on many occasions he was obliged
-personally to set them the example—he succeeded in erecting a tenement
-large enough to accommodate his family.
-
-In the month of May, 1819, the same tourists from Coimbatore, accompanied
-by Mons. Leschnault de la Tour, naturalist to the King of France,
-repeated their excursion, and published the result of their observations
-in one of the Madras newspapers. They asserted the maximum height of the
-thermometer in the shade to be 74° at a time when the temperature of the
-plains varied from 90° to 100°. Such a climate within the tropics was
-considered so great an anomaly that few would believe in its existence.
-At length the Madras Government determined to open one of the passes,
-and the pioneer officer employed on this service deriving immediate and
-remarkable benefit from the mountain air—he had been suffering from fever
-and ague—hastened to corroborate the accounts of it already published.
-The road was opened in 1821; some families then took up their abode on
-the hills; the inveterate prejudice against them began to disappear,
-and such numbers presently flocked to the region of health, that the
-difficulty was to find sufficient accommodation. As late as 1826, Bishop
-Heber complained that for want of lodgings he was unable to send his
-family to the sanitarium. Incredulity received its _coup de grâce_ from
-the hand of the Rev. Mr. Hough, a chaplain in the Madras establishment,
-who in July, 1826, published in the Bengal Hurkaru, under the _nom de
-guerre_ of Philanthropos, a series of eight letters,[143] describing
-the climate, inhabitants, and productions of the Neilgherries, with the
-benevolent intention of inducing the Government of India to patronize the
-place as a retreat for invalids.
-
-Having “done” the history, we will now attempt a short geographical
-account of the Blue Mountains. _En passant_ we may remark, that the
-native name Nilagiri,[144] limited by the Hindoos to a hill sacred to
-Parwati, has been extended by us to the whole range.
-
-The region commonly known by the name of the Neilgherries, or Blue
-Mountains of Coimbatore, is situated at the point where the Eastern
-and Western Ghauts[145] unite, between the parallels of 11° and 12°
-N. lat., and 76° and 77° E. lon. Its shape is a trapezoid, for though
-quadrilateral, none of its sides are equal or even: it is bounded on the
-north by the table-land of Mysore, on the south and east by the provinces
-that stretch towards the Arabian Sea; another range of hills forms its
-western frontier. Its base covers a surface of about two hundred miles;
-the greatest length from east to west at an elevation of five thousand
-feet, is nearly forty-three, and the medium breadth at the same height,
-is little less than fifteen, miles. The major part of the mass presents a
-superficies of parallel and irregular hill and knoll, intersected by deep
-valleys and precipitous ravines; a loftier chain, throwing off a number
-of minor ridges, runs north-east and south-west, and almost bisects the
-tract. In the loftier parts many small streams, such as the Pykarry, the
-Porthy, and the Avalanche take their rise, and, after winding over the
-surface, sweep down the rocky sides of the mountains, and fall into the
-Moyar,[146] or swell the Bhawany River.
-
-[Illustration: R. Burton delᵗ. Printed by Hullmandel & Walton.
-
-TODA FAMILY AND VILLAGE.
-
-London: Richard Bentley, New Burlington Street, 1851.]
-
-The Neilgherries are divided into four Nads, or provinces: Perunga Nad,
-the most populous, occupies the eastern portion; Malka lies towards
-the south; Koondah is on the west and south-west margin; and Toda Nad,
-the most fertile and extensive,[147] includes the northern regions
-and the crest of the hills. Many lines of roads have been run up the
-easier acclivities; the most travelled upon at present are the Seegoor
-Ghaut,[148] which enters from the Mysore side, and the Coonoor, or
-Coimbatore Pass, by which, if you recollect, we ascended.
-
-Our Government asserts no right to this bit of territory, although the
-hills belonged to Hyder, and what was Hyder’s now belongs to us. The
-peculiar tribe called the Todas,[149] lay claim to the land, and though
-they consent to receive a yearly rent, they firmly refuse to alienate
-their right to the soil, considering such measure “nae canny” for both
-seller and buyer. Chance events have established this superstition on a
-firm footing. When Europeans first settled in the Neilgherries, a murrain
-broke out among the Toda cattle, and the savages naturally attributed
-their misfortune to the presence of the new comers. Sir W. Rumbold lost
-his wife, and died prematurely soon after purchasing the ground upon
-which his house stood—of course, in consequence of the earth-god’s ire.
-
-In August, 1847, there were a hundred and four officers on sick leave,
-besides visitors and those residing on the Neilgherries. The total number
-of Europeans, children included, was between five and six hundred. It
-is extremely difficult to estimate the number of the hill people. Some
-authorities give as many as fifteen thousand; others as few as six
-thousand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now we fall into the main road at the foot of the zigzag, which climbs
-the steep skirt of Giant Dodabetta.[150] Our nags, snorting and panting,
-breast the hill—we reach the summit—we descend a few hundred yards—catch
-sight of some detached bungalows—a lake—a church—a bazaar—a station.
-
-The cantonment of Ootacamund,[151] or, as it is familiarly and
-affectionately termed by the abbreviating Saxon, “Ooty,” is built in a
-punch bowl, formed by the range of hills which composes the central crest
-of the Neilgherries. But first for the “Windermere.”
-
-The long narrow winding tarn which occupies the bottom of Ooty’s
-happy vale, is an artificial affair, intended, saith an enthusiastic
-describer, “like that of Como, to combine utility with beauty.” It was
-made by means of a dam, which, uniting the converging extremities of
-two hills, intercepted the waters of a mountain rivulet, and formed an
-“expansive and delightful serpentine lake,” about two miles in length,
-upon an average six hundred yards broad, in many places forty feet
-deep, generally very muddy, and about as far from Windermere or Como
-as a London Colosseum or a Parisian Tivoli might be from its Italian
-prototype. Two roads, the upper and the lower, wind round the piece of
-water, and it is crossed by three embankments; the Willow Bund, as the
-central one is called, with its thick trees and apologies for arches, is
-rather a pretty and picturesque object. The best houses, you may remark,
-are built as close to the margin of the lake as possible. Turn your eyes
-away from the northern bank; that dirty, irregular bazaar is the very
-reverse of romantic. The beauties of the view lie dispersed above and
-afar. On both sides of the water, turfy peaks and woody eminences, here
-sinking into shallow valleys, there falling into steep ravines, the whole
-covered with a tapestry of brilliant green, delight your eye, after the
-card-table plains of Guzerat, the bleak and barren Maharatta hills, or
-the howling wastes of sun-burnt Scinde. The back-ground of distant hill
-and mountain, borrowing from the intervening atmosphere the blue and
-hazy tint for which these regions are celebrated, contrasts well with
-the emerald hue around. In a word, there is a rich variety of form and
-colour, and a graceful blending of the different features that combine to
-make a beautiful _coup d’œil_, which, when the gloss of novelty is still
-upon them, are infinitely attractive.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The sun is sinking in the splendour of an Indian May, behind the
-high horizon, and yet, marvellous to relate, the air feels cool and
-comfortable. The monotonous gruntings of the frequent palanquin-bearers—a
-sound which, like the swift’s scream, is harsh and grating enough, yet
-teems in this region with pleasant associations—inform us that the fair
-ones of Ootacamund are actually engaged in taking exercise. We will
-follow their example, beginning at “Charing Cross,”—the unappropriate
-name conferred upon those few square yards of level and gravelled ground,
-with the stunted tree boxed up in the centre. Our path traverses the
-half-drained swamp that bounds this end of the Neilgherry Windermere,
-and you observe with pain that those authors who assert the hills to
-be “entirely free from the morasses and the vast collection of decayed
-vegetables that generate miasma,” have notably deceived you. In 1847,
-there is a small swamp, formed by the soaking of some arrested stream, at
-the bottom of almost every declivity. We presume the same was the case in
-1826. Indeed, were the Neilgherries seven or eight hundred feet, instead
-of as many thousands, above the level of the sea, even the Pontine
-marshes would not be better adapted for the accommodation of Quartana
-and Malaria. Before you have been long on the hills, you will witness
-many amusing accidents occurring to new comers, who attempt to urge their
-steeds through the shaking bogs of black mud, treacherously lurking under
-a glossy green coating of grassy turf.
-
-“Probably it is to the local predilections for such diversion that I must
-attribute the unwillingness of the authorities to remedy the nuisance?”
-
-We cannot take upon ourselves to reply, yes or no. The cantonment is by
-no means scrupulously clean. The bazaar is at all times unpleasant, and,
-during the rains, dirty in the extreme. Making all due allowance for the
-difficulty of keeping any place where natives abound, undefiled, still
-we opine, that the authorities might be much more active, in promoting
-the cause of cleanliness, than they are. But, if report speak true, the
-local government is somewhat out of temper with her hill _protégée_, for
-spending her rupees a little too freely.
-
-There go the promenaders—stout pedestrians—keeping step in parties and
-pairs. Equestrians ride the fashionable animals—a kind of horse cut down
-to a pony, called the Pegu, Arabs being rare and little valued here.
-And invalids, especially ladies, “eat the air,” as the natives say, in
-palanquins and tonjons. The latter article merits some description. It
-is a light conveyance, open and airy, exactly resembling the seat of a
-Bath chair, spitted upon a long pole, which rests on the shoulders of
-four hammals, or porters. Much barbaric splendour is displayed in the
-equipments of the “gang.” Your first thought, on observing their long
-scarlet coats, broad yellow bands round the waist, and the green turban,
-or some other curiously and wonderfully made head-gear, which surmounts
-their sooty faces, is a sensation of wonder that the tonjon and its
-accompaniments have not yet been exhibited in London and Paris. Much
-hardness of heart is occasionally shown by the fair sex to their unhappy
-negroes. See those four lean wretches staggering under the joint weights
-of the vehicle that contains the stout daughter and stouter mama, or the
-huge Ayah who is sent out to guard those five or six ponderous children,
-whose constitutional delicacy renders “carriage exercise” absolutely
-necessary for them.
-
-Two things here strike your eye as novel, in India.
-
-There is a freshness in the complexion of the Sanitarians that shows
-wonderfully to advantage when compared with the cadaverous waxy hue which
-the European epidermis loves to assume in the tropics. Most brilliant
-look the ladies; the gentlemen are sunburnt and robust; and the juveniles
-appear fresh and chubby, quite a different creation from the pallid,
-puny, meagre, sickly, irritable little wretches that do nothing but cry
-and perspire in the plains. Another mighty pleasant thing, after a few
-years of purely camp existence, is the non-military appearance and sound
-of Ootacamund. Uniform has been banished by one consent from society,
-except at balls and parties. The cotton and linen jackets, the turbaned
-felt “wide-awake,” and the white jockey’s cap, with its diminutive apron,
-intended to protect the back of the head from the broiling sun, are here
-exchanged for cloth coats and black hats. Morning bugles and mid-day
-guns, orderlies, and order-books, the “Officers’ call” and “No parade
-to-day,” are things unknown. Vestiges of the “shop” will, it is true,
-occasionally peep out in the shape of a regimental cap, brass spurs, and
-black pantaloons, denuded of the red stripe. But such traces rather add
-to our gratification than otherwise, by reminding us of A.M. drills,
-meridian sword exercises, and P.M. reviews in days gone by.
-
-And now, advancing along the gravelled walk that borders the lake, we
-pass beneath a thatched cottage, once a masonic lodge,[152] but now,
-_proh pudor!_ converted into a dwelling-house. Near it, we remark a
-large building—Bombay House. It was formerly appropriated to officers
-of that presidency. At present they have no such luxury.[153] Taking
-up a position above the south end of the Willow-Bund, we have a good
-front view of the principal buildings in the cantonment. On the left
-hand is the Protestant church of St. Stephens, an unpraisable erection,
-in the Saxo-Gothic style, standing out from a grave-yard, so extensive,
-so well stocked, that it makes one shudder to look at it. Close by the
-church are the Ootacamund Free School, the Post-office, the Pay-office,
-and the bungalow where the Commanding officer of the station transacts
-his multifarious business. Below, near the lake, you see the Library,
-the Victoria hotel—a large and conspicuous building—the Dispensary, the
-subordinate’s courts, and the Bazaar. Beyond the church a few hundred
-yards of level road leads to the “palace,” built by Sir W. Rumbold,
-which, after enduring many vicissitudes of fortune, has settled down
-into the social position of a club-house and place for periodical
-balls. Around it, the mass of houses thickens, and paths branch off
-in all directions. In the distance appears the wretched bazaar of
-Kaundlemund—the haunt of coblers and thieves;—a little nearer is the old
-Roman Catholic chapel; closer still, the Union hotel—a huge white house,
-which was once the Neilgherry Church Missionary grammar school,—bungalows
-by the dozen, and several extensive establishments, where youth, male
-and female, is lodged, boarded, and instructed. On the southern side of
-a hill, separated from the Kaundle bazaar, stands Woodcock Hall, the
-locality selected for Government House, and, in 1847 at least, a most
-unimportant place, interiorly as well as exteriorly.
-
-We will conclude our ciceronic task with calling your attention to one
-fact, namely, that the capital of the Neilgherries is growing up with
-maizelike rapidity. Houses are rising in all directions; and if fickle
-fortune only favour it, Ooty promises fair to become in a few years one
-of the largest European settlements in India. But its fate is at present
-precarious. Should the Court of Directors be induced to revise the old
-Furlough and Sick-leave Regulations, then will poor Ooty speedily revert
-to the Todas and jackals—its old inhabitants. On the contrary, if the
-_status quo_ endure, and European regiments are regularly stationed on
-the hills,[154] officers will flock to Ootacamund, the settlers, retired
-servants of Government, not Eurasian colonists, will increase in number,
-schools[155] will flourish and prosperity steadily progress. The “to be
-or not to be” thus depends upon the turn of a die.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The chilly shades of evening are closing rapidly upon us, and we know
-by experience that some care is necessary, especially for the newly
-arrived health-hunter. So we wend our way homewards, remarking, as night
-advances, the unusual brilliancy of the heavenly bodies. Venus shines
-almost as brightly as an average English moon in winter: her light with
-that of the lesser stars is quite sufficient to point out to us the
-direction of “Subaltern Hall.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-LIFE AT OOTY.
-
-
-If a bachelor, you generally begin by depositing your household gods in
-the club buildings, or one of the two hotels[156]—there is no travellers’
-bungalow at Ootacamund—if a married man, you have secured lodgings by
-means of a friend.
-
-The Neilgherry house merits description principally because it is a
-type of the life usually led in it. The walls are made of coarse bad
-bricks—the roof of thatch or wretched tiles, which act admirably as
-filters, and occasionally cause the downfall of part, or the whole of
-the erection. The foundation usually selected is a kind of platform, a
-gigantic step, cut out of some hill-side, and levelled by manual labour.
-The best houses occupy the summits of the little eminences around the
-lake. As regards architecture the style bungalow—a modification of the
-cow-house—is preferred: few tenements have upper stories, whilst almost
-all are surrounded by a long low verandah, perfectly useless in such a
-climate, and only calculated to render the interior of the domiciles as
-dim and gloomy as can be conceived. The furniture is decidedly scant,
-being usually limited to a few feet of drugget, a chair or two, a table,
-and a bedstead. The typical part of the matter is this. If the diminutive
-rooms, with their fire-places, curtained beds, and boarded floors,
-faintly remind you of Europe, the bare walls, puttyless windows and
-doors that admit draughts of air small yet cutting as lancets, forcibly
-impress you with the conviction that you have ventured into one of those
-uncomfortable localities—a cold place in a hot country.
-
-So it is with life on the Neilgherries—a perfect anomaly. You dress like
-an Englishman, and lead a quiet gentlemanly life—doing nothing. Not being
-a determined health-hunter, you lie in bed because it passes the hours
-rationally and agreeably, and you really can enjoy a midday doze on the
-mountain-tops. You sit up half the night because those around you are
-not shaking the head of melancholy, in consequence of the dispiriting
-announcement that “the Regiment will parade, &c., at four o’clock next
-morning” (A.M. remember!). At the same time your monthly bills for pale
-ale and hot curries, heavy tiffins, and numerous cheroots, tell you, as
-plainly as such mute inanimate things can, that you have not quite cast
-the slough of Anglo-Indian life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We will suppose that your first month in the Neilgherry Hills with all
-its succession of small events has glided rapidly enough away. You
-reported your arrival in person to the commanding officer, who politely
-desired your signature to a certain document,[157] threatening you as
-well as others with all the penalties of the law if you ventured to quit
-Ootacamund without leave. The Auditor-General’s bill, which you received
-from the Paymaster, Bombay, authorizing you to draw your salary from him
-of the southern division of the Madras army, was not forwarded before the
-first of the month, or it was forwarded but not in duplicate—something
-of the kind must happen—so you were most probably thrown for a while
-upon your wits, rather a hard case, we will suppose. Then you tried to
-“raise the wind” from some Parsee, but the way in which he received
-you conclusively proved that he has, perhaps for the best of reasons,
-long since ceased to “do bijness” in that line. You began to feel
-uncomfortable, and consequently to abuse the “authorities.”
-
-During your first fortnight all was excitement, joy, delight. You
-luxuriated in the cool air. Your appetite improved. The mutton had a
-flavour which you did not recollect in India. Strange, yet true, the
-beef was tender, and even the “unclean” was not too much for your robust
-digestion. You praised the vegetables, and fell into ecstasy at the
-sight of peaches, apples, strawberries, and raspberries, after years of
-plantains, guavas, and sweet limes. From the exhilarating influence of
-a rare and elastic atmosphere you, who could scarcely walk a mile in
-the low country, induced by the variety of scenery and road, wandered
-for hours over hill and dale without being fatigued. With what strange
-sensations of pleasure you threw yourself upon the soft turf bank, and
-plucked the first daisy which you ever saw out of England! And how you
-enjoyed the untropical occupation of sitting over a fire in June!—that
-very day last year you were in a state of semi-existence, only “kept
-going” by the power of punkahs[158] and quasi-nudity.
-
-The end of the month found you in a state of mind bordering upon the
-critical. You began to opine that the scenery has its deficiencies—Can
-its diminutive ravines compare with glaciers and seas of ice—the
-greenness of its mountain-tops compensate for the want of snow-clad
-summits, and “virgin heights which the foot of man never trod?” You
-decided that the Neilgherries are, after all, a tame copy of the Alps
-and the Pyrenees. You came to the conclusion that grandeur on a small
-scale is very unsatisfactory, and turned away from the prospect with the
-contempt engendered by satiety. As for the climate, you discovered that
-it is either too hot in the sun or too cold in the shade, too damp or
-too dry, too sultry or too raw. After a few days spent before the fire
-you waxed weary of the occupation, remarked that the Neilgherry wood is
-always green, and the Neilgherry grate a very abominable contrivance.
-At last the mutton and pork, peaches and strawberries, palled upon your
-pampered palate, you devoured vegetables so voraciously that pernicious
-consequences ensued, and you smoked to such an extent that—perhaps
-tobacco alone did not do it—your head became seriously affected.
-
-And now, sated with the joys of the eye and mouth, you turn round upon
-Ootacamund and inquire blatantly what amusement it has to offer you.
-
-Is there a hunt? No, of course not!
-
-A race-course? Ditto, ditto!
-
-Is there a cricket-club? Yes. If you wish to become a member you will be
-admitted readily enough; you will pay four shillings _per mensem_ for the
-honour, but you will not play at cricket.
-
-A library? There are two: one in the Club, the other kept by a Mr.
-Warren: the former deals in the modern, the latter in the antiquated
-style of light—extremely light—literature. Both reading-rooms take in
-the newspapers and magazines, but the periodical publications are a very
-exclusive kind of study, that is to say, never at home to you. By some
-peculiar fatality the book you want is always missing. And the absence of
-a catalogue instead of exciting your industry, seems rather to depress it
-than otherwise.
-
-Public gardens, with the usual “scandal point,” where you meet the ladies
-and exchange the latest news? We reply yes, in a modifying tone. The sum
-of about 200_l._, besides monthly subscriptions, was expended upon the
-side of a hill to the east of Ooty, formerly overrun with low jungle, now
-bearing evidences of the fostering hand of the gardener in the shape of
-many cabbages and a few cauliflowers.
-
-Is there a theatre, a concert-room, a tennis, a racket, or a fives-court?
-No, and again no!
-
-Then pray what is there?
-
-We will presently inform you. But you must first rein in your impatience
-whilst we enlarge a little upon the constitution and components of
-Neilgherry society.
-
-Two presidencies—the Madras and Bombay—meet here without mingling.
-Officers belonging to the former establishment visit the hills for two
-objects, pleasure and health; those of the latter service are always
-votaries of Hygeia. If you ask the Madrassee how he accounts for the
-dearth of amusements, he replies that no one cares how he gets through
-his few weeks of leave. The Bombayite, on the contrary, complains loudly
-and bitterly enough of the dull two years he is doomed to pass at Ooty,
-but modesty, a consciousness of inability to remedy the evil, or most
-likely that love of a grievance, and lust of grumbling which nature has
-implanted in the soldier’s breast, prevents his doing anything more.
-Some public-spirited individuals endeavoured, for the benefit of poor
-Ooty, to raise general subscriptions from the Madras Service, every
-member of which has visited, is visiting, or expects to visit, the
-region of health. The result of their laudable endeavours—a complete
-failure—instanced the truth of the ancient adage, that “everybody’s
-business is nobody’s business.” Besides the sanitarians and the
-pleasure-seekers, there are a few retired and invalid officers, who
-have selected the hills as a permanent residence, some coffee-planters,
-speculators in silk and mulberry-trees, a stray mercantile or two from
-Madras, and several professionals, settled at Ootacamund.
-
-With all the material above alluded to, our circle of society, as you may
-suppose, is sufficiently extensive and varied. Among the ladies, we have
-elderlies who enjoy tea and delight in scandal: grass widows—excuse the
-term, being very much wanted, it is _comme il faut_ in this region—and
-spinsters of every kind, from the little girl in bib and tucker, to
-the full blown Anglo-Indian young lady, who discourses of her papa
-the Colonel, and disdains to look at anything below the rank of a
-field-officer. The gentlemen supply us with many an _originale_. There
-are _ci-devant_ young men that pride themselves upon giving ostentatious
-feeds which youthful gastronomes make a point of eating, misanthropes
-and hermits who inhabit out-of-the-way abodes, civilians on the shelf,
-authors, linguists, oriental students, amateur divines who periodically
-convert their drawing-rooms into chapels of ease rather than go to
-church, sportsmen, worshippers of Bacchus in numbers, juniors whose glory
-it is to escort fair dames during evening rides, and seniors who would
-rather face his Satanic Majesty himself than stand in the dread presence
-of a “woman.” We have clergymen, priests, missionaries, tavern-keepers,
-school-masters, and scholars, with _précieux_ and _précieuses ridicules_
-of all descriptions.
-
-But, unhappily, the said circle is divided into several segments, which
-do not willingly or neatly unite. In the first place, there is a line of
-demarcation occasionally broken through, but pretty clearly drawn between
-the two Presidencies. The Mulls[159] again split into three main bodies,
-1, the very serious; 2, the _petit-sérieux_; and, 3, the unsanctified. So
-do the Ducks, but these being upon strange ground are not so exclusive
-as they otherwise would be. Subdivision does not end here. For instance,
-the genus serious will contain two distinct species, the orthodox and
-the heterodox serious. The unsanctified also form numerous little knots,
-whose bond of union is some such accidental matters as an acquaintance
-previous to meeting on the hills, or a striking conformity of tastes and
-pursuits.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A brief account of the Neilgherry day will answer your inquiry about the
-existence of amusement. We premise that there are two formulas, one for
-the sanitarian, the other for the pleasure-hunter.
-
-And first, of Il Penseroso, or the invalid. He rises with the sun,
-clothes himself according to Dr. Baikie,[160] and either mounts his
-pony, or more probably starts stick in hand for a four mile walk. He
-returns in time to avoid the sun’s effects upon an empty stomach, bathes,
-breakfasts, and hurries once more into the open air. Possibly, between
-the hours of twelve and four, his dinner-time, he may allow himself to
-rest awhile in the library, to play a game at billiards, or to call
-upon a friend, but upon principle he avoids tainted atmospheres as much
-as possible. At 5 P.M. he recommences walking or riding, persevering
-laudably in the exercise selected, till the falling dew drives him home.
-A cup of tea, and a book or newspaper, finish the day. This even tenor
-of his existence is occasionally varied by some such excitement as a
-pic-nic, or a shooting-party, but late dinners, balls, and parties, know
-him not.
-
-Secondly of L’Allegro, as the man who obtains two months’ leave of
-“absence on urgent private affairs” to the Neilgherries, and the
-Penseroso become a robust convalescent, may classically and accurately be
-termed. L’Allegro, dresses at mid-day, he has spent the forenoon either
-in bed or _en deshabille_, in dozing, tea-drinking, and smoking, or, if
-of a literary turn of mind, in perusing the pages of “The Devoted,” or,
-“Demented One.” He dilates breakfast to spite old Time, and asks himself
-the frequent question What shall I do to-day? The ladies are generally at
-home between twelve and two, but L’Allegro, considering the occupation
-rather a “slow” one, votes it a “bore.” But there is the club, and a
-couple of hours may be spent profitably enough over the newspapers, or
-pleasantly enough with the assistance of billiards and whist. At three
-o’clock our Joyful returns home, or accompanies a party of friends to
-a hot and substantial meal, termed tiffin, followed by many gigantic
-Trichinopoly cigars, and glasses of pale ale in proportion.
-
-A walk or a ride round the lake, is now deemed necessary to recruit
-exhausted Appetite, who is expected to be ready at seven for another hot
-and substantial meal, called dinner. And now, the labours of the day
-being happily over, L’Allegro concludes it with prodigious facility by
-means of cards or billiards, with whiskey and weeds.
-
-This routine of life is broken only by such interruptions, as a
-shooting-party, an excursion, a pic-nic, a grand dinner, _soirée_, or a
-ball. Short notices of these amusements may not be unacceptable to the
-reader.
-
-There are many places in the neighbourhood of Ooty—such as Dodabetta,
-Fair Lawn, and others—where, during the fine season, the votaries of
-Terpsichore display very fantastic toes indeed, particularly if they wear
-Neilgherry-made boots, between the hours of ten A.M. and five P.M. Much
-innocent mirth prevails on these social occasions, the only remarkable
-characteristic of their nature being, that the gentlemen generally ride
-out slowly and deliberately, but ride in, racing, or steeple-chasing, or
-enacting Johnny Gilpin.
-
-A more serious affair is a grand dinner. This truly British form which
-hospitality assumes, may be divided into two kinds, the pure and the
-mixed. The former is the general favourite, as, consisting of bachelors
-only, it admits of an _abandon_ in the style of conversation, and a
-general want of ceremoniousness truly grateful to the Anglo-Indian mind.
-A dinner where ladies are admitted is, by L’Allegro, considered an
-unmitigated pest; and those who dislike formality and restraint, scant
-potations, and the impossibility of smoking, will readily enter into his
-feelings.
-
-The Ootacamund _soirée_ happens about once every two months to the man of
-pleasure, who exerts all the powers of his mind to ward off the blow of
-an invitation. When he can no longer escape the misfortune, he resigns
-himself to his fate, dresses and repairs to the scene of unfestivity,
-with much of the same feeling he remembers experiencing when “nailed” for
-a Bath musical reunion, or a Cheltenham tea-party. He will have to endure
-many similar horrors. He must present Congo to the ladies, walk about
-with cakes and muffins, listen to unmelodious melody, and talk small—he
-whose body is sinking under the want of stimulants and narcotics, whose
-spirit is fainting under the _peine forte et dure_ of endeavouring to
-curb an unruly tongue, which in spite of all efforts will occasionally
-give vent to half or three-quarters of some word utterly unfit for ears
-feminine or polite. If, as the Allegri sometimes are, the wretch be
-nervous upon the subject of being “talked about in connexion with some
-woman,” another misery will be added to the list above detailed. He has
-certainly passed the evening by the side of the young lady whom he first
-addressed—his reasons being that he had not courage to break away from
-her—and he may rest assured that all Ooty on the morrow will have wooed
-and won her for him. Finally, he observes that several of his married
-friends look coldly upon him, beginning the morning after the _soirée_.
-Probably he endeavoured to compensate for his want of vivacity, by a
-little of what he considered brilliancy, in the form of satire,—quizzing,
-as it is generally called. The person for whose benefit he ventured to
-
- Tamper with such dangerous art,
-
-looked amused by his facetiousness, encouraged him to proceed by
-
- ⸺The smile from partial beauty won,
-
-and lost no time in repeating the substance of his remarks, decked, for
-the sake of excitement, in a richly imaginative garb, to the sensitive
-quizzee.
-
-There are about half-a-dozen balls a year on the Neilgherries, the cause
-of their infrequency being the expense, and the unpopularity of the
-amusement amongst all manner and description of men, save and except the
-“squire of dames” only. This un-English style of festivity is also of two
-kinds, the subscription and the bachelors’: the former thinly attended,
-because 1_l._ is the price of a ticket, the latter much more numerously,
-because invitations are issued gratis. The amusement commences with the
-notes which the ladies indite in reply to their future entertainers, who
-scrutinize all such productions with a severity of censure and a rigidity
-of rule which might gratify a Johnson, or a Lindley Murray. And woe, woe,
-to her who slips in her syntax, or trips in her syllabication! Then the
-members of the club carve out for themselves a grievance, all swear that
-it is a “confounded shame to turn the place into a hop-shop,” and one
-surlier individual than the rest declares that “it shan’t be done again.”
-At the same time you observe they endure the indignity patiently enough,
-as it is a magnificent opportunity for disposing of their condemnable
-though not condemned gooseberry.
-
-And here we pause for a moment in indignation at such a proceeding.
-May that man never be our friend who heedlessly sets a bottle of bad
-champagne before a fellow-creature at a ball! Heated and excited by the
-dancing atmosphere around, the victim’s palate becomes undiscerning,
-he drinks a tumbler when at other times a wine-glass full would have
-been too much, and in the morning—aroynt thee, Description! Well do
-we remember the bitter feelings with which we heard on one of these
-occasions, two gentlemen felicitating each other upon the quantity of
-sour gooseberry disposed of unobserved. Unobserved! we were enduring
-tortures from the too observable effects of it.
-
-At eleven or twelve the ladies muster. The band—a trio of fiddlers, and
-a pianist, who performs on an instrument which suggests reminiscences
-of Tubal Cain—strikes up. The dancing begins—one eternal round of
-quadrilles, lancers, polkas, and waltzes. There is no difficulty in
-finding partners: the “wall-flower,” an ornament to the ball-room
-unknown in India generally, here blooms and flourishes luxuriantly as
-in our beloved fatherland. But if you are not a bald-headed colonel, a
-staff-officer in a gingerbread uniform, or a flash sub. in one of Her
-Majesty’s corps, you will prefer contemplating the festal scene from the
-modest young man’s great stand-by—the doorway. About one o’clock there
-is a break for supper—a hot substantial meal of course:—the dancing that
-follows is strikingly of a more spirited nature than that which preceded
-it. The general exhilaration infects, perhaps, even you. You screw up
-your courage to the point of asking some smiling spinster if she “may
-have the pleasure of dancing with you?” and by her good aid in action as
-well as advice, you find out, with no small exultation, that you have not
-quite forgotten your quadrille.
-
-At three P.M. the ladies retire, apparently to the regret, really to
-the delight of the bachelors, who, with gait and gestures expressive
-of the profoundest satisfaction, repair to the supper-room for another
-hot and substantial meal. The conversation is lively: the toilettes,
-manners, conversation and dancing of the fair sex are blamed or extolled
-_selon_; the absence of the Bombay ladies and the scarcity of the Bombay
-gentlemen are commented upon with a _naïveté_ which, if you happen to
-consider yourself one of them, is apt to be rather unpleasant. Before,
-however, you can make up your mind what to do, the cigars are lighted,
-spirits mixed, and the singing commences. This performance is usually of
-the style called at messes the “sentimental,” wherein a long chorus is a
-_sine quâ non_, the usual accompaniments a little horse-play in different
-parts of the room, and the conclusion a hammering of tables or rattling
-of glasses and a drumming with the heels, which, when well combined,
-produce truly an imposing effect. At length Aurora comes slowly in,
-elbowing her way, and sidling through the dense waves of rolling smoke,
-which would oppose her entrance, but failing therein, content themselves
-with communicating to her well known saffron-coloured morning wrapper a
-rather dull and dingy hue. Phœbus looks red and lowering at the prospect
-of the dozen gentlemen, who, in very pallid complexions, black garments,
-and patent leather boots, wind, with frequent halts, along a common road,
-leading, as each conceives, directly to his own abode. And the Muses thus
-preside over the conclusion, as they ushered in the beginning of the
-eventful _fête_.
-
-“On the — of ⸺ the gay and gallant bachelors of Ootacamund entertained
-all the beauty and fashion of the station in the magnificent ball-room of
-the club. The scene was a perfect galaxy of light and loveliness, etc.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-You have now, we will suppose, almost exhausted the short list of public
-amusements, balls and parties; you have boated on the lake; you have
-ridden and walked round the lake till every nodule of gravel is deadly
-familiar to your eye; you have contemplated the lake from every possible
-point, and can no longer look at it, or hear it named, without a
-sensation of nausea. You have probably wandered “over the hills and far
-away” in search of game; your sport was not worth speaking of, but its
-consequences, the headache, or the attack of liver which resulted from
-over-exertion, _was_—. Perhaps you have been induced to ride an untrained
-Arab at a steeple-chase, and, curious to say, you have not broken an arm
-or even your collar-bone. What are you to do now? You wish to goodness
-that you could obtain leave to visit the different stations in the low
-country, but, unhappily, you forgot to have your sick certificate worded,
-“For the Neilgherries and the Western Coast.” You find yourself cooped up
-in the mountains as securely as within the lofty walls of your playground
-in by-gone days, and if you venture to play truant, you will certainly be
-dismissed the establishment, which is undesirable:—you are not yet over
-anxious to return to “duty,” although you are by no means happy away from
-it.
-
-Suddenly a little occurrence in your household affords you a temporary
-diversion. You dismissed your Bombay servants, first and foremost the
-Portuguese, a fortnight after your arrival at Ootacamund, because the
-fellows grumbled at the climate and the expense:—they could not afford
-to get drunk half as often as in the plains:—demanded exorbitant wages,
-and required almost as many comforts and luxuries as you yourself do.
-So you paid their passage back to their homes, and secured the usual
-number of Madras domestics, men of the best character, according to
-their own account, and provided with the highest, though more than
-dubious testimonials. You found that the change was for the better. Your
-new blacks worked like horses, and did not refuse to make themselves
-generally useful. Presently, they, seeing your “softness,” began
-to presume upon it. You found it necessary to dismiss one of them,
-summarily, for exaggerated insolence. The man left your presence, and
-stepped over to the edifice where sits in state the “Officer Commanding
-the Neilgherries.” About half an hour afterwards you received a note,
-couched in terms quite the reverse of courteous, ordering you to pay your
-dismissed servant his wages, and peremptorily forbidding you to take the
-law into your own hands by kicking him. But should you object to obey, as
-you probably will do, you are allowed the alternative of appearing at the
-office the next day.
-
-At the hour specified you prepare to keep your appointment, regretting
-that you are not a civilian:—you might then have tossed the note into
-the fire:—but somewhat consoled by a discovery, made in the course
-of the evening, that the complainant has stolen several articles of
-clothing from you. You walk into the room, ceremoniously bow and are
-bowed to, pull a chair towards you unceremoniously, because you are not
-asked to sit down, wait impatiently enough,—you have promised to ride
-out with Miss A⸺, who will assuredly confer the honour of her company
-upon your enemy Mr. B⸺ if you keep her waiting five minutes,—a mortal
-hour and a half. When the last case has been dismissed, the Commanding
-officer, after some little time spent in arranging his papers, nibbing
-his pens and conversationizing with a native clerk about matters more
-than indifferent to you, turns towards you a countenance in which the
-severity of justice is somewhat tempered by the hard stereotyped smile
-of polite inquiry. Stimulated by the look, you forget that you are the
-defendant, till reminded of your position in a way which makes you feel
-all its awkwardness. The Commanding officer is a great “stickler for
-abstract rights,” and is known to be high-principled upon the subjects of
-black skins and British law. So you, who expected, as a matter of course,
-that the “word of an officer and gentleman” would be taken against that
-of a “native rascal,” find yourself notably in the wrong box. Indignant,
-you send for your butler. And now Pariah meets Pariah with a terrible
-tussle of tongue. Complainant swears that he was not paid; witness oathes
-by the score that he was. The former strengthens his position by cursing
-himself to Patal[161] if he has not been swindled by the “Buttrel” and
-his Sahib out of two months’ wages. The head servant, not to be outdone,
-devotes the persons of his Brahman, his wife, and his eldest son, to
-a very terrible doom indeed, if he did not with his own hands advance
-complainant three months’ pay,—and so on. At length the Commanding
-officer, who has carefully and laboriously been taking down the evidence,
-bids the affidavits cease, and reluctantly dismisses the complaint.
-
-And now for your turn, as you fondly imagine. You also have a charge to
-make. You do so emphatically. You summon your witnesses, who are standing
-outside. You prove your assertion triumphantly, conclusively. You inform
-the Commanding officer, with determination, that you are resolved to do
-your best to get the thief punished.
-
-The Commanding officer hears you out most patiently, urges you to
-follow up the case, and remarks, that the prosecution of the affair
-will be productive of great advantage to the European residents on
-the Hills. You are puzzled transiently: the words involve an enigma,
-and the sarcastic smile of the criminal smacks of a mystery. But your
-mental darkness is soon cleared up; the Commanding officer hints
-that you will find no difficulty in procuring a fortnight’s leave to
-Coimbatore, the nearest Civil station, for the purpose of carrying out
-your public-spirited resolution. As this would involve a land journey
-of one hundred miles—in India equal to one thousand in Europe—with all
-the annoyances of law-proceedings, and all the discomforts of a strange
-station, your determination suddenly melts away, and gentle Pity takes
-the place of stern Prosecution; you forget your injury, you forgive your
-enemy.
-
-You must not, however, lay any blame upon the Commanding officer; his
-hands are tied as well as yours. He is a justice of the peace, but his
-authority is reduced to nothing in consequence of his being subject
-to the civil power at Coimbatore. A more uncomfortable position for a
-military man to be placed in you cannot conceive.
-
-This little bit of excitement concludes your list of public amusements.
-And now, again, you ask What shall you do? You put the question, wishing
-to heaven that Echo—Arabian or Hibernian—would but respond with her usual
-wonted categoricality; but she, poor maid! has quite lost her voice, in
-consequence of the hard-talking she has had of late years. So you must
-even reply to and for yourself—no easy matter, we can assure you.
-
-Goethe, it is said, on the death of his son, took up a new study. You
-have no precise ideas about Goethe or his proceedings, but your mind
-spontaneously grows the principle that actuated the great German. You are
-almost persuaded to become a student. You borrow some friend’s Akhlak
-i Hindi,[162] rummage your trunks till you discover the remnant of a
-Shakespeare’s Grammar, and purchase, at the first auction, a second-hand
-copy of Forbes’s Dictionary. You then inquire for a Moonshee—a
-language-master—and find that there is not a decent one in the place.
-The local government, in the plenitude of its sagacity, has been pleased
-to issue an order forbidding examination committees being held at the
-Sanitarium; so good teachers will not remain at a station where their
-services are but little required. Your ardour, however, is only damped,
-not extinguished. You find some clerk in one of the offices who can
-read Hindostani; you set to—you rub up your acquaintance with certain
-old friends, called Parts of Speech—you master the Verb, and stand in
-astonishment to see that you have read through a whole chapter of the
-interesting ethical composition above alluded to. That pause has ruined
-you. Like the stiff joints of a wearied pedestrian, who allows himself
-rest at an inopportune time, your mind refuses to rise again to its task.
-You find out that Ootacamund is no place for study; that the houses
-are dark, the rooms cold, and the air so exciting that it is all but
-impossible to sit down quietly for an hour. Finally, remembering that you
-are here for health, you send back the Akhlak, restore Shakespeare to his
-own trunk, and, after coquetting about the conversational part of the
-language with your Moonshee for a week or two—dismiss him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-LIFE OUTSIDE OOTY.
-
-
-Speaking seriously, the dearth of diversion or even occupation at
-Ootacamund, considerably diminishes its value as a sanitary station. It
-is generally remarked, that a man who in other places drinks a little
-too freely, here seldom fails to bring on an attack of delirium tremens.
-After the first excitement passes away, it is apt to be succeeded by a
-sense of dreariness and ennui more debilitating to the system than even
-the perpetual perspirations of the plains.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The chief occupations for a visitor outside of Ooty are
-curiosity-hunting, field-sports, and excursionizing.
-
-Of late years, the Neilgherries have been so exposed to the pickaxes
-of indefatigable archæologists, that their huge store of curiosities
-has been almost exhausted. Little now remains but the fixtures. In
-many parts almost every hill is crowned by single and double cairns,
-enclosing open areas, which, when opened, were found to contain numerous
-pottery[163] figures of men and animals. There are some remarkable
-remains which remind us of the Cromlechs[164] and Kistvaens[165] of
-Druidism; all, however, have been rifled of the funeral urns and the
-other relics which they contained. Vases holding burnt bones and
-charcoal, brass vessels, spear heads, clay images of female warriors on
-horseback, stone pestles, pots and covers ornamented with human figures
-and curious animals, have been taken from the barrows that abound in
-different parts of the Neilgherries. The ruins of forts and pagodas,
-traces of buildings and manual labour, may be discovered in the darkest
-recesses of ancient forests. Long and deep fosses, the use of which
-cannot be explained, and diminutive labyrinths still remain the monuments
-of ancient civilization. At St. Catherine’s Falls, near Kotagherry, the
-natives show marks in the rock which they attribute to a certain hill
-Rajah who urged his horse over the precipice to escape the pursuit of
-his foes. The land is rich in such traditions. There is a name for every
-hill;[166] to every remarkable one is attached some cherished legend.
-Here we are shown the favourite seats of the Rishi, or saintly race,
-who, in hoary eld, honoured the green tops of the Blue Mountains with
-their holy presence. There, we are told, abode the foul Rakhshasa (demon)
-tribe, that loved to work man’s mortal woe; and there, dwarfish beings,
-somewhat like our fairies, long since passed away, lived in the dancing
-and singing style of existence usually attributed by barbarians to those
-pretty creatures of their imaginations.
-
-The Toda family—the grand depository of Neilgherry tradition—has
-supplied our curiosity-hunters with many a marvel. But, let the young
-beginner beware how he trusts to their information. The fellows can
-enjoy a hoax. Moreover, with the instinctive cunning of the wild man,
-they are inveterate liars, concealing truth because they perceive that
-their betters attach some importance to extracting it, and yet cannot
-understand the reason why they should take the trouble to do so. For
-instance—we heard of a gentleman who, when walking near one of the
-villages, saw some roughly-rounded stones lying upon the ground, and
-asked a Toda what their use might be. The savage replied extempore,
-that the biggest piece was, according to his creed, the grandfather of
-the gods; another was the grandmother, and so on to a great length. He
-received a rupee for the intelligence given; and well he won it. The
-stones were those used by the young men of the hamlet for “putting” in
-their leisure hours—a slender foundation, indeed, to support so grand a
-superstructure of traditional lore!
-
-Antiquarians are everywhere a simple race: in India, “con tutto rispetto
-parlando,” we are almost tempted to describe them as simpletons. Who does
-not recollect the Athenæum sauce-jar which some wag buried in the ruins
-of a fort, said to have been founded by Alexander the Great at Sehwan
-in Scinde, and the strange theories which the Etruscan images upon that
-article elicited from grave and learned heads?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Game is still plentiful in the Neilgherries. The little woods about
-Ootacamund abound in woodcock, leopard,[167] and ibex. Near Coonoor, elk
-and wild hog are to be met with, and to the east of Kotagherry there is
-excellent bison-shooting. Elephants occasionally ascend the Koondah hills
-to escape the fiery heat of the luxuriant jungles below the mountains.
-Tigers are rare in these parts, and no one takes the trouble to attack
-them: the cold climate ruins them for sport by diminishing their ferocity
-and the chance of one’s being clawed. The wolf is not an aboriginal of
-the hills: he sometimes, however, favours us with a visit, in packs,
-gaunt with hunger and sufficiently fierce, for the purpose of dining
-on the dogs. The small black bear, or rather ant-eater of the plains,
-affords tolerable sport; but this Alpine region does not produce the
-large and powerful brown animal of the Pyrenees and Central Asia.
-
-The peculiarity of Neilgherry hunting is, that nothing can be done by
-means of beaters only—the plan adopted in India generally. Cocks cannot
-be flushed without spaniels, and foxhounds are necessary for tracking
-large game. The canine species thrives prodigiously on the hills, and
-seems to derive even more benefit from the climate than the human dogs.
-The crack sportsman from the plains must here abandon his favourite
-pig-sticking, or exchange it for what he always considered the illicit
-practice of hog-shooting. _En revanche_, he has the elk, the bison, and
-the ibex.
-
-The Neilgherry Sambur, or elk,[168] is the giant of the cervine
-race—often fourteen hands high, with antlers upwards of three feet long,
-spanning thirty-two or thirty-three inches between the extremities.
-In spite of this beast’s size and unwieldiness—some of them weigh
-seven hundred pounds—they are sufficiently speedy to distance any but
-a good horse. They divide their time between the mountain-woods and
-the lower jungles, resorting to the former for the sake of the water,
-and descending to the latter to get at the “salt-licks,” in which they
-abound. Elk are usually met with in pairs, or in greater numbers, and
-when once sighted are easily shot. The neck and the hollow behind the
-shoulder are the parts aimed at, for these animals are extraordinarily
-tenacious of life, and will carry off a most unreasonable number of
-balls, unless hit in a vital region. The flesh is coarse, but makes
-excellent mulligatawny, the shin-bones afford good marrow, the hoofs are
-convertible into jelly, the tongue is eatable, and the skin useful for
-saddle-covers, gaiters, and hunting boots. The head, stuffed with straw
-and provided with eyes, skilfully made out of the bottom of a black
-bottle, is a favourite ornament for the verandah or the mantelpiece.
-Samburs are easily tamed: several of them may be seen about Ootacamund,
-grazing with halters round their necks, almost as tame as cows. There are
-several ways of hunting elk. On the hills skirting the Pykarry river,
-where there is little swamp or bog, attempts have been made to run and
-spear them. Some sportsmen stalk them; but the usual mode is to post the
-guns, and then to make the beast break cover. Dogs are preferred to
-beaters for this purpose, as their giving tongue warns one when the game
-is coming, and the animal will almost always fly from his fourfooted,
-whereas it often succeeds in charging and breaking through the line of
-biped foes. Samburs, when wounded and closely pursued, will sometimes
-stand and defend themselves desperately with tooth and antler; the “game
-thing” then is to “walk into them” with a hunting-knife.
-
-Bison-hunting upon the hills is a most exciting sport, requiring thews
-and sinews, a cool head and a steady hand. A charge of one of these
-animals is quite the reverse of a joke: Venator had better make sure of
-his nerve before he goes forth to stand before such a rush. The bison is
-a noble animal. We have seen heads[169] which a strong man was scarcely
-able to lift, and horns that measured twenty inches in circumference.
-They are usually shot with ounce or two ounce iron or brass balls, and
-plugs made by the hill-people, who cut a bar of metal and file it down
-to the size required with the rudest tools and remarkable neatness. The
-Hindoos, however, do not patronise bison-hunting, as they consider the
-beast a wild species of their sacred animal.
-
-The word “ibex,” like the “jungle sheep”[170] of the Neilgherries, is
-a misnomer: the denominated being the Capra Caucasica, not the Capra
-ibex of Cuvier. It is to these hills what the chamois is to the Alps,
-and the izzard to the Pyrenees. If you are sportsman enough to like
-difficulty and danger, incurred for nothing’s sake, you will think well
-of ibex-hunting. In the first place you have to find your game, and to
-find it also in some place where it can be approached when alive, and
-secured when dead. The senses of these wild goats are extraordinarily
-acute, and often, after many hours of toil, the disappointed pursuer is
-informed by the peculiar whistling noise which they make when alarmed,
-that, warned of his proximity—probably by the wind—they have moved off
-to safer quarters. Secondly, you must hit them—hard, too; otherwise you
-will never bring about a dead stop. And, lastly, as they are addicted to
-scrambling down and rolling over tremendous precipices—especially after
-they have felt lead—you must either lose the beast or risk your neck to
-bag the body. Not for the pot. The flesh is never eaten, but the stuffed
-head is preserved as a trophy of venatic prowess.
-
-The hill people, when not employed in spearing and netting game on their
-own account, will generally act as lookers-out and beaters. We are apt,
-however, to be too generous with our money: the effect of the liberality
-proving it to be ill-advised. Often it will happen to you—especially
-during your first month’s sporting—that some black scoundrel rushes up
-in a frantic hurry to report game trove, in the hope that you will, upon
-the spur of the moment, present him with a rupee. And suppose you do so,
-what is the result? It is sad weather; the clouds rain cats and dogs—to
-use an old phrase—the wind is raw as a south-easter off the Cape; the
-ground one mass of slippery mud. Do you look out of the window, roll your
-head, dismiss the “nigger,” return to your fire, the “Demented,” and your
-cigar. No! emphatically no!! You rush into your room, pull on shoes and
-gaiters, don your hunting-garb with astonishing rapidity, catch up your
-guns, roar for the favourite servant that carries them, and start in the
-middle of the howling storm. Your eagerness to “get a slap at a bison”
-incites you to cruelty: you think nothing of dashing into the first
-village, and compelling a troop of half-naked wretches to accompany you.
-Now mark the consequence of giving away that rupee in a hurry. The head
-beater leads you up and down the steepest, the most rugged, stony, and
-slippery hills he can hit upon, with the benevolent view of preventing
-your making a fool of yourself to any greater extent. But when your stout
-English legs have completely “taken the shine” out of those baboon-like
-shanks which support his body, then he conducts you to some Shola,[171]
-places you and your servant upon the top of an elevated rock commanding
-a thorough enjoyment of the weather, and an extensive view of the ravine
-through which the beast is to break cover, and retires with his comrades
-to the snug cavern, which he held all along in mental view. There he sits
-before a cosy bit of fire, occasionally indulging you with a view-halloo,
-proving how actively the gang is engaged in discovering the game. Half
-an hour has passed; you are wet through, “_jusqu’aux os_,” and the chill
-blasts feel as if they were cutting their way into your vitals: still
-your ardour endures. Another twenty minutes—your fingers refuse to uphold
-the cocked rifle.
-
-“We really must go if they can’t find this beast in another quarter of an
-hour, Baloo!”
-
-“Han, Sahib!—yes, sir,”—quavers forth your unhappy domestic, in a frozen
-treble—“if the Sahib were to—to go, just now—would it not be good? It is
-very cold—and—perhaps—they have been telling the Sahib lies.”
-
-Baloo is right. The head beater appears, followed by his attendant train.
-He swears that it is a case of “stole away.”
-
-You feel that there is something wrong about that bison, by the way in
-which the man’s eye avoided you. But probably a sense of justice prevents
-your having recourse to the baculine discipline which, on any other
-occasion, we should have advised you to administer with no niggardly hand.
-
-Sounders of hog are commonly found at certain seasons about Coonoor
-especially. They are often shot, and more often missed, as their gaunt
-forms boring through the high grass afford a very uncertain mark. If
-Diana favour you, you may have the luck to come upon that beautiful
-variety of the leopard tribe, the black cheeta, and wreak upon him the
-revenge which his brethren’s ravages amongst your “bobbery-pack”[172]
-has roused in your bosom. If you are proud of your poultry yard you will
-never allow a jungle cat to pass without rolling her over: the large
-fierce beasts are so uncommonly fond of ducks and fowls. The jackals[173]
-on the hills are even more daring and impudent than they are in the
-plains. Hares are so numerous and voracious that they will destroy any
-garden, flower or kitchen, unless it is defended by a dwarf-fencing of
-split bamboos. Your careful Malee[174] takes, moreover, the precaution
-of surrounding your cabbages with a deep ditch in order to keep out the
-huge porcupines that abound here. _En passant_ we advise every one who
-has not tasted a _rôti_ of one of those animals to do so _sine morâ_,
-not, however, forgetting to roll up the flesh in a layer of mutton fat,
-and thus to remedy its only defect—dryness. Martins, polecats, mongooses,
-and the little grey gilahri[175] of Hindostan, flourish on the hills;
-there is also a large dark brown squirrel, with a huge bushy tail, but
-the flying species, so common on the western coast, is not an inhabitant
-of the Neilgherries. The woods are tenanted by several kinds of monkeys,
-black and red, large and small: the otter is occasionally met with in the
-fords of the Pykarry river.
-
-There are two varieties of the wild dog, one a large nondescript, with
-a canine head, the body of a wolf, and a brush instead of a tail: the
-other is a smaller beast of similar appearance. They generally hunt
-in large packs, and the skill with which they follow up the game is
-admirable. When pressed by hunger they are very ferocious. It is at no
-time a pleasant sight to see fifty or a hundred of their ill-omened faces
-glaring at you and your horse as you ride by them: especially after
-you have heard certain well-authenticated anecdotes of their cannibal
-propensities. When such rencontre does occur, the best way is to put a
-bold face upon the matter, ride up to them, and use your heavy horsewhip
-as well as you can: if you endeavour to get away they will generally feel
-inclined to follow you, and as for escaping from them on horseback, it is
-morally impossible.
-
-Another animal—though not a wild one—of which we bid you beware, is the
-Neilgherry buffalo, especially the fine fawn-coloured beasts, belonging
-to the Todas. Occasionally, as you are passing along the base of some
-remote hill, you will be unpleasantly surprised by a sudden and impetuous
-charge of a whole herd. Unless you have a gun with you, you must ride for
-it. And _how_ you must ride will probably surprise you. We well recollect
-a kind of adventure which once occurred to ourselves, when quietly
-excursionizing in the vicinity of Ooty. Excited by the appearance of our
-nag’s red saddle-cloth, some twenty huge beasts resolved to dispute with
-us the right of passage through one of the long smooth lawns, which run
-down the centre of the woodlands. At first they looked up curiously,
-then fiercely. Presently they advanced, snorting rabidly, in a rude
-line, a huge black bull the leader of the movement. The walk soon broke
-into a trot, the trot became a gallop, the intention of the gallop, was
-clearly a charge, and the consequences of a charge might have been
-serious. We found little difficulty in escaping the general rush of our
-assailants, by means of a sharp touch with the spur: one by one they
-tailed off, stood looking at our decreasing form in angry disgust, and
-returned to their normal occupation. But Taurus, the ringleader, seemed
-determined upon mischief. He pursued us with the dogged determination
-of a lyme hound: he had speed as well as bottom. Whenever we attempted
-to breathe the pony, the rapidity with which our friend gained ground
-upon us, was a warning not to try that trick too long. Close upon our
-quarters followed the big beast with his curved horns duly prepared: his
-eyes flashing fire, and his grunting snorts indicative of extreme rage.
-We could scarcely help laughing at the agility with which the monstrous
-body, on its four little legs, bowled away over the level turf, or at the
-same time wishing that our holsters contained the means of chastising his
-impudence.
-
-How long the recreation might have lasted, or how it might have ended
-had not a long mud wall got between Taurus and ourselves, we cannot say.
-He followed us for at least a mile, and seemed by no means tired of the
-occupation. We were beginning to anticipate the pleasure of entering
-Ootacamund at the top of our nag’s speed, with a huge buffalo at his
-heels, and though we might have enjoyed seeing a friend in such novel
-predicament, the thing lost all its charms, when we ourselves expected to
-afford such spectacle to our friends.
-
-We should strongly advise all public spirited individuals immediately
-after suffering from such a nuisance to find out the herdsman, and
-persuade him by a judicious application of the cravache, to teach his
-cattle better manners. He will be much more careful the next time he sees
-a stranger ride by.
-
-Among the feathered tribes, the woodcock, probably on account of its
-comparative rarity, is the favourite sport. Three or four brace are
-considered an excellent bag, even with the assistance of good dogs, and
-a thorough knowledge of their covers. Cock shooting lasts from November
-to March. Partridges are rare, not being natives of the hills. Snipe, and
-solitary snipe, abound in the swamps. Quails of both species, red and
-grey,—the former especially—are found in the warmer localities, and when
-properly tamed and trained, they are as game birds as those of the low
-country. Our list concludes with peacocks, jungle[176] and spur fowl.
-
-After perusing our brief sketch of Neilgherry sport, you will easily
-understand that to some ardent minds it offers irresistible attractions.
-Officers have been known to quit the service, or to invalid solely
-with the view of devoting themselves wholly to the _pleasures_ of the
-chase. They separate themselves from their kind, inhabit the jungles
-for weeks together, and never enter a station except for the purpose
-of laying in a fresh store of powder and shot, calomel and quinine.
-Attended by a servant or two, they wander about, rifle in hand, shooting
-their meals—some curried bird—sleeping away the rabid hours of noontide
-heat under some thick brake, and starting with renewed vigour as soon
-as the slanting rays of the sun diffuse a little activity throughout
-the animal creation. Sometimes breakfast is rudely interrupted by an
-angry old tusker, who, in spite of his race’s proverbial purblindness,
-detects the presence of an enemy, and rushes on trumpeting to do a
-deed of violence. A “striped skin” will occasionally invite himself to
-partake of the dinner, and when not treated with all possible ceremony
-walks off with a raw joint in the shape of some unhappy black. There
-is little to be gained by such a life. Government gives, it is true, a
-reward of 7_l._[177] for every slaughtered elephant, and tiger-skins,
-as well as ivory, find a ready sale: but no one can become a Crœsus by
-the favour of Diana. Not much, however, do our adventurous sportsmen
-think of lucre: they go on shooting through existence, only pausing at
-times when the bites of the tree-leeches,[178] scorpions, centipedes,
-and musquitoes, or a low fever, which they have vainly endeavoured to
-master by means of quinine administered in doses sufficient to turn an
-average head, imperiously compel them to lay up, till assailed by a Foe
-against whom the dose and the rifle are equally unefficacious. Many are
-almost blinded by the terrible glare and damp heat of the jungles: the
-fetid swamps breed brain fevers as well as snipe, bisons have horns, and
-cheetahs claws: so that such career, though bright enough in its own way,
-is generally speaking at least as brief as it is brilliant.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before the monsoon sets in, we will “get through,” as our Irish cousin
-expressed himself at the Vatican, “the sight-seeing” in the neighbourhood
-of Ooty.
-
-Maleemund, or, as others write it, Meyni, a favourite spot for pic-nics,
-is a Toda village lying about three miles north of the grand station: it
-affords you a pleasant ride through pretty woodlands, and a very inferior
-view. Beyond it is Billicul, a little Berger settlement surrounded by
-cultivation: here a resident on the hills has built a bungalow, and the
-locality is often visited for the pleasure of contemplating the reeking
-flats of Mysore. Striking across country into the Seegoor Pass, you may,
-if you have any curiosity, inspect the Kulhutty Falls, certain cataracts
-upon a very diminutive scale indeed. You must see the Pykarry river, a
-deep and irregular stream flowing down a winding bed full of rocks,
-rapids, and sand-banks: it supplies your curries with a shrunken specimen
-of the finny tribe—alas! how different from certain fishes which you
-may connect in memory with certain mountain streams in the old country.
-The surrounding hills are celebrated for containing abundance of game.
-An indefatigable excursionist would ride seven miles further on the
-Goodalore road for the sake of the _coups-d’œil_, and to be able to say
-that he has seen Neddiwuttun. All the pleasure he derives from this extra
-stage along a vile path, is a sense of intense satisfaction that he is
-not compelled to pass a night in the damp, dreary, moss-clad bungalow,
-where unhappy travellers must at times perforce abide. Three miles from
-Ooty, in the direction of the Koondah hills, you pass Fair Lawn, the
-bit of turf which Terpsichore loves. Finally, after a long and dreary
-stretch over a tiresome series of little eminences, after fording the
-Porthy river, and crossing its sister stream, the Avalanche, by an unsafe
-bridge, you arrive at the Wooden House,[179] whence sportsmen issue to
-disturb the innocent enjoyments of elk and ibex, bison and elephant.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE INHABITANTS OF THE NEILGHERRIES.
-
-
-There are five different races now settled upon the Blue Mountains:—
-
- 1. _Bergers_, the mass of the population; supposed to be about
- ten thousand.
-
- 2. _Erulars_, } The wild men dwelling on the woody sides of
- 3. _Cooroombars_, } the hills; about two thousand.
-
- 4. _Kothurs_, } The old inhabitants and owners of the land;
- 5. _Todas_, } about three thousand.
-
-The Bergers, Vaddacars,[180] or, as the Todas call them, the Marves,
-are an uninteresting race of Shudra Hindoos, that immigrated from the
-plains in the days of Hyder or Tippoo. They attempt to invest their
-expatriation with the dignity of antiquity by asserting that upwards of
-four centuries ago they fled to the hills from the persecutions of Moslem
-tyrants. This caste affects the Lingait or Shaivya[181] form of Hinduism,
-contains a variety of sub-families, speaks a debased dialect of modern
-Canarese, and still retains, in the fine climate of the Neilgherries, the
-dark skin, the degraded expression of countenance, and the puny figure,
-that characterise the low caste native of Southern India. They consider
-the wild men of the hills as magicians, and have subjected themselves to
-the Todas, in a social as well as a religious point of view, by paying
-a tax for permission to occupy their lands. They have been initiated
-in some of the mysterious practices of the mountaineers, and have
-succeeded in infecting the minds of their instructors with all the rigid
-exclusiveness and silly secrecy of their own faith. It redounds, however,
-to their credit that they have not imitated the debauched and immoral
-habits which their lords have learned by intercourse with strangers.
-There is nothing remarkable in their dress, their manners, or their
-habitations; they employ themselves in cultivating the soil and acting
-as porters, beater labourers, and gardeners.
-
-The Erulars[182] and Cooroombars[183] are utter savages, very much
-resembling the Rankaris of Maharatta Land and the Bheels of Candeish.
-Their language, a kind of Malayalim, proves that they were originally
-inhabitants of the plains, but nothing more is known about them. They
-dwell in caves, clefts in the rocks, and miserable huts, built upon the
-slopes of the mountains, and they support themselves by cultivation and
-selling wax and honey. In appearance they are diminutive, dark men,
-distinguishable from the highest order of Quadrumana by the absence of
-pile upon their bodies, and a knack of walking on their hind legs. Their
-dress is limited to about a palm’s breadth of coarse cotton cloth, and
-their only weapon a little knife, which hangs from a bit of string to
-the side. They are rarely seen. When riding about the wild parts of the
-hills you occasionally meet one of these savages, who starts and stands
-for a moment, staring at you through his bush of matted hair, in wonder,
-or rather awe, and then plunges headlong into the nearest thicket. Man
-is the only enemy the poor wretches have reason to fear. By the Todas,
-as well as the Bergers, they are looked upon as vicious magicians, who
-have power of life and death over men and beasts, of causing disease,
-and conjuring tigers from the woods to assist them; they are propitiated
-by being cruelly beaten and murdered, whenever a suitable opportunity
-presents itself. The way in which this people will glide through the
-wildest woods, haunted by all manner of ferocious foes, proves how fine
-and acute the human senses are capable of becoming when sharpened by
-necessity and habit.
-
-In investigating the origin of the Kothurs, Cohatars,[184] or Cuvs,
-the usual obstacles,—a comparatively unknown language, and the want
-of a written character,—oppose the efforts of inquirers. The palpable
-affinity, however, between the Toda and Kothur dialects, proves that
-both the races were originally connected, and the great change[185] that
-has taken place in the languages, shows that this connection was by no
-means recently dissolved. Why or how the separation took place, even
-tradition[186] does not inform us; but the degraded customs, as well as
-the appearance, dress, and ornaments of the Kothurs point most probably
-to a loss of caste, in consequence of some unlawful and polluting action.
-
-The Kothurs show great outward respect to the Todas, and the latter
-return the compliment more substantially by allowing their dependants
-a part of the tax which they receive from the Bergers. They are an
-industrious and hard-working race; at once cultivators and musicians,
-carpenters and potters, bricklayers, and artizans in metal as well as in
-wood. Their villages composed of little huts, built with rough wattling,
-are almost as uncleanly as their persons. Every considerable settlement
-contains two places of worship, for the men do not pray with the women;
-in some hamlets they have set up curiously carved stones, which they
-consider sacred, and attribute to them the power of curing diseases, if
-the member affected be only rubbed against the talisman. They will devour
-any carrion, even when in a semi-putrid state; the men are fond of opium,
-and intoxicating drinks; they do not, however, imitate the Todas in
-their illicit way of gaining money wherewith to purchase their favourite
-luxuries.
-
-As the Toda[187] race is, in every way, the most remarkable of the
-Neilgherry inhabitants, so it has been its fate to be the most remarked.
-Abundant observation has been showered down upon it; from observation
-sprang theories, theories grew into systems. The earliest observer
-remarking the Roman noses, fine eyes, and stalwart frames of the savages,
-drew their origin from Italy,—not a bad beginning! Another gentleman
-argued from their high Arab features, that they are probably immigrants
-from the Shat el Arab,[188] but it is apparent that he used the subject
-only to inform the world of the length and breadth of his wanderings.
-Captain Harkness discovered that they were aborigines. Captain Congreve
-determined to prove that the Todas are the remnants of the Celto-Scythian
-race, which _selon lui_, inhabited the plains, and were driven up to the
-hills before the invading Hindoo; he even spelt the word “Thautawars,” to
-sound more Scythic. He has treated the subject with remarkable acuteness,
-and displayed much curious antiquarian lore; by systematically magnifying
-every mote of resemblance,[189] and, by pertinaciously neglecting or
-despising each beam of dissimilitude,[190] together with a little of
-the freedom in assertion allowed to system-spinners, he has succeeded
-in erecting a noble edifice, which lacks nothing but a foundation.
-The metaphysical German traced in the irreverent traditions[191] of
-the barbarians concerning the Deity, a metaphorical allusion to the
-creature’s rebellion against his Creator; the enthusiastic Freemason
-warped their savage mystifications into a semblance of his pet mysteries.
-And the grammar-composing Anglo-Indian discovered unknown niceties in
-their language, by desiring any two Todas to do a particular thing, then
-by asking them how they expressed such action, and, lastly, by recording
-the random answer as a dual form of the verb.
-
-When every one theorises so will we. The Todas are merely a remnant
-of the old Tamulian tribes originally inhabiting the plains, and
-subsequently driven up to the mountains by some event,[192] respecting
-which history is silent. Our opinion is built upon the rock of language.
-
-It has been proved[193] that the Toda tongue is an old and obsolete
-dialect of the Tamul, containing many vocables directly derived from
-Sanscrit,[194] but corrupted into
-
- Words so debased and hard, no stone
- Is hard enough to touch them on.
-
-Thus, for a single instance, the mellifluous Arkas-a-pakshi—the winged
-animal of the firmament,—becomes Ha_kh_’sh-pa_kh_’sh, a bird. In grammar
-it is essentially Indian, as the cases of the noun and pronoun, and the
-tenses of the verb demonstrate; the days of the week, and the numerals,
-are all of native, not foreign growth. The pronunciation is essentially
-un-Indian,[195] true; but with grammar and vocabulary on our side, we can
-afford to set aside, even if we could not explain away, the objection.
-A great change of articulation would naturally result from a long
-residence upon elevated tracts of land; the habit of conversing in the
-open air, and of calling aloud to those standing at a distance, would
-induce the speaker to make his sounds as rough and rugged as possible.
-This we believe to be the cause of the Bedouin-like gutturalism, which
-distinguishes the Toda dialect. We may observe that the Kothurs, who
-work in tents, have exchanged their original guttural for a nasal
-articulation; and the Bergers, who originally spoke pure Canarese, have
-materially altered their pronunciation during the last century.
-
-The main objection to our theory is the utter dissimilarity of the
-Toda, in all respects, physical as well as moral, to the races that
-now inhabit the plains. This argument would be a strong one, could the
-objector prove that such difference existed in the remote times, when
-our supposed separation took place. It is, we may remind him, the direct
-tendency of Hinduism to degenerate, not to improve, in consequence of
-early nuptials, the number of outcastes, perpetual intermarriage, and
-other customs peculiar to it. The superiority of the Toda, in form and
-features, to the inhabitants of the lowlands may also partially be owing
-to the improvement in bodily strength, stature, and general appearance
-that would be effected by a lengthened sojourn in the pure climate of the
-Blue Mountains.
-
-The Todas, as we have said before, assert a right to the soil of the
-Neilgherries, and exact a kind of tax[196] from the Bergers. Their
-lordly position was most probably the originator of their polyandry and
-infanticide:[197] disdaining agriculture, it is their object to limit the
-number of the tribe. According to their own accounts, they were, before
-the date of the Berger immigration, living in a very wild state, wearing
-the leaves of trees, and devouring the flesh of the elk, when they could
-get it, and the wild fruits of the hills; this they exchanged for a milk
-diet; they are now acquiring a taste for rice, sweetmeats, and buffalo
-meat.
-
-The appearance of this extraordinary race is peculiarly striking to the
-eye accustomed to the smooth delicate limbs of India. The colour is a
-light chocolate, like that of a Beeloch mountaineer. The features are
-often extraordinarily regular and handsome; the figure is muscular,
-straight, manly, and well-knit, without any of that fineness of hand and
-wrist, foot and ankle, which now distinguishes the Hindoo family, and the
-stature is remarkably tall. They wear the beard long, and allow their
-bushy, curly locks to lie clustering over the forehead—a custom which
-communicates to the countenance a wild and fierce expression, which by
-no means belongs to it. The women may be described as very fine large
-animals; we never saw a pretty one amongst them. Both sexes anoint the
-hair and skin with butter, probably as a protection against the external
-air; a blanket wound loosely round their body being their only garment.
-Ablution is religiously avoided.
-
-There is nothing that is not peculiar in the manners and customs[198] of
-the Todas. Ladies are not allowed to become mothers in the huts: they are
-taken to the nearest wood, and a few bushes are heaped up around them, as
-a protection against rain and wind. Female children are either drowned in
-milk, or placed at the entrance of the cattle-pen to be trampled to death
-by the buffaloes. The few preserved to perpetuate the breed, are married
-to all the brothers of a family; besides their three or four husbands,
-they are allowed the privilege of a cicisbeo. The religion of the Toda
-is still _sub judice_, the general opinion being that they are imperfect
-Monotheists, who respect, but do not adore, the sun and fire that warm
-them, the rocks and hills over which they roam, and the trees and spots
-which they connect with their various superstitions. When a Toda dies, a
-number of buffaloes are collected, and barbarously beaten to death with
-huge pointed clubs, by the young men of the tribe. The custom, it is
-said, arose from the importunate demands of a Toda ghost; most probably,
-from the usual savage idea that the animal which is useful in this world
-will be equally so in the next.
-
-The Toda spends life in grazing his cattle, snoring in his cottage,
-and churning butter. The villages belonging to this people consist of,
-generally speaking, three huts, made with rough planking and thatch; a
-fourth, surrounded by a low wall, stands a little apart from, and forms
-a right angle with the others. This is the celebrated Lactarium, or
-dairy, a most uninteresting structure, but ennobled and dignified by
-the variety of assertions that have been made about it, and the mystery
-with which the savages have been taught to invest it. Some suppose it to
-be a species of temple, where the Deity is worshipped in the shape of
-a black stone, and a black stone, we all know, tells a very long tale,
-when interpreted by even a second-rate antiquary. Others declare that it
-is a masonic lodge,[199] the strong ground for such opinion being, that
-females are never allowed to enter it, and that sundry mystic symbols,
-such as circles, squares, and others of the same kind, are roughly
-cut into the side wall where the monolith stands. We entered several
-of these huts when in a half-ruinous state, but were not fortunate or
-imaginative enough to find either stone or symbols. The former might have
-been removed, the latter could not; so we must believe that many of our
-wonder-loving compatriots have been deceived by the artistic attempts
-made by some tasteful savage, to decorate his dairy in an unusual style
-of splendour. Near each village is a kraal, or cattle-pen, a low line
-of rough stones, as often oval as circular, and as often polygonal as
-oval. The different settlements are inhabited, deserted, and reinhabited,
-according as the neighbouring lands afford scant or plentiful pasturage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ye who would realise the vision of the wise, respecting savage happiness
-and nomadic innocence—a sweet hallucination, which hitherto you have
-considered the wildest dream that ever issued from the Ivory Gate—go,
-find it in the remote corners of Toda land, the fertile, the salubrious.
-See Hylobius, that burly barbarian—robust in frame, blessed with the
-best of health, and gifted with a mind that knows but one idea—how to be
-happy—sunning himself, whilst his buffaloes graze upon the hill side,
-or wandering listlessly through the mazy forest, or enjoying his rude
-meal of milk and rice, or affording himself the lazy luxury of squatting
-away the rainy hours round his primitive hearth. What care has he for
-to-day: what thought of to-morrow? He has food in abundance: his and his
-brothers’ common spouse and dubious children, make up, strange yet true,
-a united family; he is conscious of his own superiority, he claims and
-enjoys the respect of all around him. The use of arms he knows not: his
-convenient superstition tends only to increase his comforts here below,
-and finally, when Hylobius departs this transitory life, whatever others
-may think of his prospects, he steps fearlessly into the spirit-world,
-persuaded that he and his buffaloes are about to find a better climate,
-brighter scenes, and broader grass lands—in a word, to enjoy the fullest
-felicity. Contrast with this same Toda in his rude log hut amidst the
-giant trees, the European _pater-familias_, in his luxurious, artificial,
-unhappy civilized home!
-
-But has not your picture of savage felicity its reverse?
-
-Yes, especially when uncivilized comes into contact with semi-civilized
-or civilized life. Our poor barbarians led the life of hunted beasts,
-when Tippoo Sultan, incensed with them for being magicians and anxious
-to secure their brass bracelets, which he supposed were gold, sent
-his myrmidons into their peaceful hills. They are now in even a worse
-state.[200] The “noble unsophisticated Todas,” as they were once called,
-have been morally ruined by collision with Europeans and their dissolute
-attendants. They have lost their honesty: truth is become almost unknown
-to them; chastity, sobriety, and temperance, fell flat before the strong
-temptations of rupees, foreign luxuries, and ardent spirits. Covetousness
-is now the mountaineer’s ruling passion: the Toda is an inveterate,
-indefatigable beggar, whose cry, Eenam Kuroo, “give me a present!” no
-matter what,—money, brandy, cigars, or snuff—will follow you for miles
-over hill and dale: as a pickpocket, he displays considerable ingenuity;
-and no Moses or Levi was ever a more confirmed, determined, grasping,
-usurer. His wife and daughters have become vile as the very refuse of the
-bazaar. And what can he show in return for the loss of his innocence and
-happiness? True, he is no longer pursued by Tippoo, or the neighbouring
-Polygars: but he is persecuted by growing wants, and a covetousness which
-knows no bounds. He will not derive any benefit from education, nor
-will he give ear to a stranger’s creed. From the slow but sure effects
-of strange diseases, the race is rapidly deteriorating[201]—few of the
-giant figures that abound in the remote hills, are to be found near our
-cantonments—and it is more than probable that, like other wild tribes,
-which the progress of civilization has swept away from the face of the
-earth, the Toda will, ere long, cease to have “a local habitation and a
-name” among the people of the East.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-KOTAGHERRY.—ADIEU TO THE BLUE MOUNTAINS.
-
-
-What a detestable place this Ootacamund is during the rains!
-
-From morning to night, and from night to morning, gigantic piles of
-heavy wet clouds, which look as if the aerial sprites were amusing
-themselves by heaping misty black Pelions upon thundering purple Ossas,
-rise up slowly from the direction of the much-vexed Koondahs; each, as it
-impinges against the west flank of the giant Dodatetta, drenching us with
-one of those outpourings that resemble nothing but a vast aggregation
-of the biggest and highest Douche baths. In the interim, a gentle
-drizzle, now deepening into a shower, now driven into sleet, descends
-with vexatious perseverance. When there is no drizzle there is a Scotch
-mist: when the mist clears away, it is succeeded by a London fog. The
-sun, “shorn of his rays,” spitefully diffuses throughout the atmosphere
-a muggy warmth, the very reverse of genial. Conceive the effects of such
-weather upon the land in general, and the mind of man in particular! The
-surface of the mountains, for the most part, is a rich and reddish mould,
-easily and yet permanently affected by the least possible quantity of
-water. Thus the country becomes impassable, the cantonment dirty, every
-place wretched, every one miserable.
-
-All the visitors have returned to the plains, all the invalids that can
-afford themselves the luxury, have escaped to Coonoor or Kotagherry. You
-feel that if you remain at Ootacamund—the affectionate “Ooty” somehow or
-other now sticks in your throat—you must be contented to sit between the
-horns of a fierce dilemma. If you stay at home you lose all the pleasure
-of life: if you do not, still you lose all the pleasure of life. In the
-former case your eyes[202] will suffer, your digestion become impaired,
-your imagination fall into a hypochondriacal state, and thus you expose
-yourself to that earthly pandemonium, the Anglo-Indian sick bed. But
-should you, on the contrary, quit the house, what is the result? The
-roads and paths not being covered with gravel, are as slippery as a
-_mât de cocagne_ at a French fair; at every one hundred yards your nag
-kneels down, or diverts himself by reclining upon his side, with your
-leg between him and the mud. If you walk you are equally miserable. When
-you cannot find a companion you sigh for one; when you can, you probably
-discover that he is haunted by a legion of blue devils even more furious
-than those that have assailed you.
-
-It is impossible! Let us make up a party—a bachelor party—and hire a
-bungalow for a month or two at Kotagherry. We do not belong to the tribe
-of “delicate invalids,” nor are our “complaints liable to be aggravated
-by internal congestions;” therefore we will go there as visitors, not
-valetudinarians.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Kotagherry, or more correctly, Kothurgherry,[203] stands about six
-thousand six hundred feet above the level of the sea, on the top of
-the Sreemoorga Pass, upon a range of hills which may be called the
-commencement of the Neilgherries. The station contains twelve houses,
-most of them occupied by the proprietors: at this season of the year
-lodgings cannot always be found.
-
-The air of Kotagherry is moister than that of Ootacamund, and the nights
-and mornings are not so cool. We see it to great advantage during the
-prevalence of the south-west monsoon. The atmosphere feels soft and
-balmy, teeming with a pleasant warmth, which reminds you of a Neapolitan
-spring, or an autumn at amene Sorrento. The roads are clean, the country
-is comparatively dry, and the people look comfortable. For the first few
-days you enjoy yourself much: now watching the heavy rain-clouds that
-veil the summit of Dodabetta, and thinking with pleasure of what is going
-on behind the mountain: now sitting in the cool verandah, with spy-glass
-directed towards Coimbatore, and thanking your good star that you are not
-one of the little body of unhappy perspirers, its inhabitants.
-
-But is not man born with a love of change—an Englishman to be
-discontented—an Anglo-Indian to grumble? After a week spent at
-Kotagherry, you find out that it has literally nothing but climate to
-recommend it. The bazaar is small and bad, provisions of all kinds,
-except beef and mutton, must come from Ootacamund. Rich, you complain
-that you cannot spend your money; poor, you declaim against the ruinous
-rate of house-rent and living. You observe that, excepting about half a
-mile of level road, there is no table-land whatever in the place, and
-that the hill-paths are cruelly precipitous. The houses are built at
-considerable distances from one another—a circumstance which you testily
-remark, is anything but conducive to general sociability. You have
-neglected to call upon old Mrs. A⸺, who supplies the station with milk
-and butter from her own dairy, consequently that milk and butter are cut
-off, and therefore the Kotagherryites conclude and pronounce that you are
-a very bad young man. Finally, you are _sans_ books, _sans_ club, _sans_
-balls, _sans_ everything,—except the will and the way, of getting away
-from Kotagherry, which you do without delay.
-
-The determined economist, nothing daunted by the miseries of solitude and
-fleas, finds Dimhutty[204] afford him ample opportunities for exercising
-his craft. The little cluster of huts, from which the place derives its
-name, lies in a deep hollow about a mile north of Kotagherry; it is
-sheltered from the cold southerly winds by a steep hill, and consequently
-the climate is at least three degrees warmer than that of its neighbour.
-Originally it was a small station, consisting of five or six thatched
-cottages belonging to a missionary society: they were afterwards bought
-by Mr. Lushington, then Governor of Madras. That gentleman also built
-a large substantial house, with an upper floor, and spared no expense
-to make it comfortable, as the rafters which once belonged to Tippoo
-Sultan’s palace testify. When he left the hills, he generously placed all
-these tenements at the disposal of government, for the use of “persons
-who really stand in need of lodging on their first arrival.” The climate
-of Dimhutty has been pronounced highly beneficial to hepatic patients,
-and those who suffer from mercurial rheumatism. Dr. Baikie, a great
-authority, recommends it for the purpose of a “Subordinate Sanitarium
-for European soldiers.” The unhappy cottages, however, after having been
-made the subject of many a lengthy Rule and Regulation, have at last been
-suffered to sink into artistic masses of broken wall and torn thatch,
-and the large bungalow now belongs to some Parsee firm established at
-Ootacamund.
-
-Three miles beyond and below Dimhutty stretches a long wide ravine,
-called the Orange Valley, from the wild trees which formerly flourished
-there. The climate is a mixture between the cold of the hills and the
-heat of the plains: and the staple produce of the place appears to be
-white ants.
-
-St. Katherine’s Falls, the market village of Jackanary, Kodanad or the
-Seven Mile Tope,[205] and beyond it the sacred Neilgherry Hill are the
-only spots near Kotagherry, with whose nomenclature Fame is at all
-acquainted. But as one and all of them are equally uninteresting, we are
-disposed to be merciful and to waive description.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The present appears as good as any other time and place for a few remarks
-upon the climate of the Neilgherries, and a list of the travellers whose
-footsteps and pens preceded ours.
-
-The mean annual temperature of Ootacamund is 58° 68´, about 30° lower
-than that of the low country on the Coimbatore and Mysore sides.
-The average fall of water is forty-five inches in the year; there
-are nineteen days of heavy rain; of showers with fair intervals,
-eighty-seven; cloudy, twenty-one; and two hundred and thirty-eight
-perfectly fair and bright.[206] Frost generally appears about the
-beginning of November, and ends with February; in the higher ranges of
-the hills ice an inch and a-half thick is commonly seen.
-
-The first and most obvious effect of the Neilgherry climate on invalids
-is to repel the blood from the surface, and to throw it on the internal
-organs, by constricting the vessels of the skin and decidedly checking
-perspiration and transpiration. The liver, viscera, head and lungs are
-affected by this unequal distribution of the circulation, the effect
-being increased in the case of the respiratory organs by the rarefaction
-of the mountain air. The digestive powers seldom keep pace with the
-increase of appetite which generally manifests itself, and unless the
-laws of diet are obeyed to the very letter, dyspepsia, colic, and other
-more obstinate complaints, will be the retributive punishment for the
-infraction. Strangers frequently suffer from sleeplessness, cold feet,
-and violent headaches.
-
-When no actual organic disease exists, and when the constitutional
-powers are not permanently debilitated, Nature soon restores the balance
-by means of slight reaction. Invalids are strongly advised on first
-arrival to be particularly cautious about their hours, their diet, their
-clothing, and their exercise. They should avoid exposure to the night
-air, and never, indeed, be out after sunset: the reduction of temperature
-which follows the disappearance of the sun must be felt to be understood,
-and no one residing here for the sake of health would expose himself to
-the risk of catching an obstinate cold by quitting a crowded room to
-return home through the nocturnal chills. Medical men advise the very
-delicate to wait till the sun has driven away the cold and moisture of
-the dawn before they venture out, and to return from their morning walks
-or drives in time to avoid the effects of the direct rays, which are
-most powerful about 9 A.M. But in regulating hours regard must of course
-be had to previous modes of life, and the obstinate early riser of the
-plains should gradually, not suddenly, alter his Indian for English
-habits. The diet of valetudinarians on the first ascent ought in a great
-degree to be regulated by circumstances depending on the nature of each
-individual’s complaint. In general, they are told to prefer light animal
-and farinaceous food, eschewing pastry, vegetables, and cheese, and to
-diminish the quantity of such stimulants as wine, spirits, and beer,
-till the constitution has become acclimatized. In all cases, of whatever
-description they may be, warm clothing is a _sine quâ non_: every
-valetudinarian should, as he values his life, be provided with a stock
-of good flannels, worsted socks, stout shoes, and thick, solid boots.
-Exercise is another essential part of regimen at the Sanitarium. Riding
-is considered more wholesome than walking, especially on first arrival,
-as less liable to accelerate the circulation, to produce a feeling of
-constriction in the chest, and to expose the body to chills. The quantum
-of exercise should be increased by slow degrees, and when convalescence
-has fairly set in, the invalid is advised to pass as much of his time in
-the open air, during daylight, as his strength will permit him to do.
-
-To conclude the subject of climate. It cannot be too strongly impressed
-upon the minds of our fellow-countrymen in Southern and Western India,
-that in cases of actual organic disease, or when the debility of the
-constitution is very great, serious and permanent mischief is to be
-dreaded from the climate of these mountains. Many an officer has lost
-his life by preferring the half measure of a medical certificate to
-the Neilgherries to a home furlough on sick leave. The true use of the
-Sanitarium is to recruit a constitution that has been weakened to some
-extent by a long residence in the plains, or to afford a change of
-air and scene when the mind, as frequently happens in morbific India,
-requires some stimulus to restore its normal vigour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Rev. Mr. Hough was, as we said before, the first pen that called
-the serious attention of the Anglo-Indian community to the value of the
-Neilgherry Hills. His letters to the Hurkaru newspaper were published
-in a collected form in 1829. Five years afterwards Captain Mignan, of
-the Bombay army, sent forth a little volume, entitled “Notes extracted
-from a Private Journal written during a Tour through a part of Malabar
-and among the Neilgherries.” The style appears to be slightly tinged
-with bile, as if the perusal of Mr. Hough’s flowery descriptions of the
-mountain scenery had formed splendid anticipations which were by no
-means realised. The _brochure_ is now quite out of date: the bazaar,
-rates, roads, postage, rent, and number of houses—all are changed,
-only remain the wretched state of the police therein chronicled, and
-the “fatal facility” of finding bad servants. In the same year (1834)
-Dr. Baikie’s well known book,[207] entitled “Observations on the
-Neilgherries, including an Account of their Topography, Climate, Soil,
-and Productions,” issued from the Calcutta press. The original edition
-consisted, we believe, of only five hundred copies, and we cannot but
-wonder that the book has not yet enjoyed the honour of a reprint. Lieut.
-H. Jervis, of H. M. 62nd regiment, published by subscription, also in
-1834, and dedicated to Mr. Lushington, the governor, a “Narrative of
-a Journey to the Falls of Cavery, with an Historical and Descriptive
-Account of the Neilgherry Hills.”[208] The book contains a curious
-letter from Mr. Bannister, who states that, after a careful analysis
-of the Neilgherry water, he was surprised to find no trace whatever of
-saline, earthy, or metallic substance in it.
-
-In 1844-5, Captain H. Congreve, an officer in the Madras Artillery,
-wrote in the “Madras Spectator,” the Letters upon the subject of the
-Hills and their inhabitants, to which we alluded in our last chapter.
-His pages are, in our humble opinion, disfigured by a richness of theory
-which palls upon the practical palate, but the amount of observation and
-curious lore which they contain makes us regret that the talented author
-has left his labours to lie _perdus_ in the columns of a newspaper. Also,
-in 1844, a valuable Report on the Medical Topography and Statistics of
-the Neilgherry Hills, with notices of the geology, botany, climate and
-population, tables of diseases amongst officers, ladies, children, native
-convicts, etc., and maps of the country compiled from the records of the
-Medical Board Office, were published, by order of Government, at Madras.
-
-In 1847, when we left the Hills, a Mr. Lowry, who had charge of the
-Ootacamund English Free School, was preparing to print a “Guide to, and
-Handbook of, the Neilgherries, containing brief and succinct accounts of
-the same, with statements of the accommodations there to be found, rents
-of houses, expense of living, and other particulars useful to visitors
-and residents.” We were favoured with a sight of the MS., and found that
-it did what it professed to do—no small feat for a Handbook, by the bye.
-
-There is a great variety of papers and reports upon particular topics
-connected with the Neilgherries, published in the different literary
-journals and transactions of learned societies. The principal works
-which elucidate minor details, are those of the Rev. Mr. Schmidt, upon
-the Botany of the Hills, and the language of its inhabitants; the
-“Description[209] of a singular aboriginal race, inhabiting the summit
-of the Neilgherries, or the Blue Mountains of Coimbatore,” by Captain
-Henry Harkness, of the Madras Army; and Notices upon the Ornithology of
-this interesting region, by T. C. Jerdon, Esq., of the Madras medical
-establishment.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now for our valediction.
-
-We found little difficulty in persuading the officer to whose care and
-skill the charge of our precious health was committed, to report that we
-were fit for duty long before the expiration of the term of leave granted
-at Bombay; so we prepared at once for a return-trip per steamer—it would
-require _æs triplex_ indeed about the cardiac region to dare the dangers
-and endure the discomforts of a coasting voyage, in a sailing vessel,
-northwards, in the month of September—“over the water to Charley,” as the
-hero of Scinde was familiarly designated by those serving under him.
-
-We started our luggage yesterday on bullock and coolie back. The morning
-is muggy, damp, and showery: as we put our foot in stirrup, a huge wet
-cloud obscures the light of day, and hastens to oblige us with a farewell
-deluging. Irritated by the pertinacious viciousness of Pluvian Jove, we
-ride slowly along the slippery road which bounds the east confines of
-the lake, and strike off to the right hand, just in time to meet, face
-to face, the drift of rain which sails on the wings of the wind along
-the skirt of that—Dodabetta. Gradually we lose sight of the bazaar, the
-church, the Windermere, the mass of bungalows. Turning round upon the
-saddle, we cast one last scowl upon Ootacamund, not, however, without a
-grim smile of joy at the prospect of escaping from it.
-
-Adieu ...! Farewell ... land of ...! May every ...! May ...! And when
-..., so may ... as thou hast ... ourselves!
-
-To the industry of an imaginative reader we leave the doubtlessly
-agreeable task of filling up the hiatus in whatever manner the perusal of
-our modest pages may suggest to his acuteness and discernment. As some
-clue to the mazy wanderings of our own ideas, we may mention that we
-were, during the solemn moment of valediction, exposed to such weather as
-has rarely been the fate of man with the exception of Deucalion and other
-diluvian celebrities, to experience in this stormy world.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] “Ducks” are the Bombayites in general: “Dingies” is the name
-popularly given to the smaller specimens of native craft. The Dun and the
-Drab are probably familiar to the reader’s ears.
-
-[2] Bombahia, the Portuguese P. N. of the town: it was probably suggested
-by “Momba-devi,” as the place was called by the Hindoos after the patron
-goddess of the spot.
-
-[3] The Nabob is the European, the Nawwáb the Asiatic, grandee.
-
-[4] Note for readers geographically disposed.
-
-This region, the Ariake of the Greeks, Kemkem of the Arabs, Kukan of the
-Hindoos, Concan of the present possessors, and, as Vincent says, “the
-pirate coast of all,” is well adapted for its ancient occupation by a
-multitude of small ports, uninterrupted view along the coast, high ground
-favourable to distant vision, and the alternate land and sea breezes
-that oblige vessels to hug the shore. Moreover, the ports, besides being
-shallow, are defended against large ships by bars; a defect from which
-even Goa is not exempt, although Tavernier calls it “one of the finest
-harbours in the world, rivalling those of Toulon and Constantinople.” The
-pirates were protected by the strength of the inland country, and, like
-the Greeks, had only to lie secure in port until they discovered their
-prey. During the Monsoon they cultivated the ground, or lived peaceably
-at home: when the fine weather set in, they launched their boats, and set
-out in quest of adventure. Pliny notices the depredations they committed
-on the Roman East India trade, and our early travellers are full of
-horrible tales about them.
-
-It is curious to observe that the whole line of coast between the mouth
-of the Euphrates and Cape Comorin, has been infamous for the piratical
-propensities of the many and various tribes that inhabit it. The Persian
-Gulf still requires the presence of our armed cruisers; the ancient
-annals of Scinde enlarge upon its celebrity for robbery; the Coolies
-of Kutch and Guzerat were known as pirates from Marco Polo’s time till
-A.D. 1800; the Angria territory was a nest of thieves till we destroyed
-their fleet; and Tavernier testifies that the natives of Malabar were not
-inferior in enterprise to their northern brethren.
-
-[5] They lie in lat. 15° 52´ 30´´, about thirty-five miles from Goa, and
-seven off the shore, from which they are separated by a deep channel.
-The group consists of more than twenty small rocks, amongst which are
-six or seven about as large as the Sirens Isles in the Gulf of Salerno.
-The Greeks called them Σησεκρειεναι, which Mr. Hamilton understands
-to signify “black rabbits;” and Vincent supposes them to have been so
-termed, because in form they may be fancied to resemble those animals
-crouching.
-
-[6] Porters and labourers.
-
-[7] The Portuguese tongue.
-
-[8] Their other great clerical establishment being the Seminary at
-Rachol, a town which, when the Portuguese first came to India, was the
-capital of the province of Salsette. In Tavernier’s time the Jesuits had
-no less than five religious houses at Goa.
-
-[9] He raised the standard of revolt against the Indian government
-spiritedly but unsuccessfully.
-
-[10] “All thieves at Parga.”
-
-[11] The name given to that breed of ponies on account of their
-extraordinary viciousness.
-
-[12] At that time, however, this horrible instrument of religious tyranny
-seems to have lost much of its original activity. When the dungeons were
-thrown open there was not a single prisoner within the walls, and Mons.
-de Kleguen asserts that no one then living remembered having seen an Auto
-da Fé.
-
-[13] About the end of the sixteenth century the Dutch sent ships round
-the Cape, and soon managed to secure the best part of the Eastern trade,
-formerly monopolized by the Portuguese.
-
-[14] The Grand Inquisitor.
-
-[15] The Holy Office had power over all but the Viceroy and Archbishop,
-and they did not dare openly to interpose in behalf of any prisoner,
-under pain of being reported to the Inquisitor and his Council in
-Portugal, and being recalled. Even the Papal threats were disregarded by
-that dread tribunal.
-
-[16] No description of the building and its accommodations is given.
-Captain Marryat’s graphic account of it in the “Phantom Ship,” must be
-fresh in the memory of all readers. The novelist seems to have borrowed
-his account from the pages of Dellon.
-
-[17] An Arab chieftain sent a civil request to the governor, desiring
-liberty to buy provisions. The answer was a bit of pork wrapped up in
-paper, and a message, that such was the only food likely to be furnished.
-The chieftain’s wife, who was a Sayyideh, a woman of the Prophet’s
-tribe, and a lady of proper spirit, felt the insult so keenly, that she
-persuaded her husband and his tribe to attack Muscat and massacre all its
-defenders. This event took place in 1650.
-
-[18] He calls it the “Aljouvar.” It is probably a corrupted Arabic word
-الجبر Al-jabr, “the prison.”
-
-[19] The Straight Street, so called because almost all the streets of Goa
-were laid out in curvilinear form.
-
-[20] St. Catherine was appointed patron saint of Goa, because the city
-was taken by the Portuguese on her day.
-
-[21] Calling upon the name of the Almighty.
-
-[22] A particular class of Hindoo devotee and beggar.
-
-[23] Yellow is the colour usually chosen by the Hindoo when about to “do
-some desperate deed.”
-
-[24] A “forester,” and generally a regular sylvan or savage man.
-
-[25] This is said particularly of the Eastern Christian, whose terror of
-the tomb is most remarkable.
-
-[26] For a detailed list and description of the buildings, we must refer
-readers to the work of Monsieur de Kleguen, alluded to in the third
-chapter.
-
-[27] The large flowered jessamine.
-
-[28] The _Datura stramonium_, a powerful narcotic.
-
-[29] The European Portuguese can fight bravely enough, as many a bloody
-field in the Peninsular war has testified. Their Indian descendants,
-however, have never distinguished themselves for that quality.
-
-[30] Formerly, only the Reinols, as the Portuguese who came directly from
-Europe were called, could be viceroys, governors of Ceylon, archbishops,
-or grand inquisitors of Goa. Tavernier tells us that all the adventurers
-who passed the Cape of Good Hope forthwith became fidalgos, or gentlemen,
-and consequently assumed the title of Don.
-
-[31] As that “greatest hero of Portuguese Asia” governed for the short
-space of six years a country of which he and all around him were utterly
-ignorant, his fatal measure must have been suggested entirely by theory.
-
-[32] If our rulers only knew what the natives of Central Asia generally
-think of a “clean shaved” face, the growth of the mustachio would soon be
-the subject of a general order. We doubt much if any shaven race could
-possibly hold Affghanistan. In Western Arabia the Turks were more hated
-for shaving the beard than for all their flogging and impaling.
-
-[33] Compared with those of British India. Probably there are not three
-fortunes of 500_l._ per annum amongst the half million of souls that own
-the rule of the successor of the viceroys. A large family can live most
-comfortably upon one-fifth of that sum.
-
-[34] Red and white wine: the latter is the favourite.
-
-[35] The Hindostanee name for the cannudo.
-
-[36] Goez, who travelled in India about 1650, says that he was surprised
-to see the image of a black saint on the altars, and to hear that a black
-native was not thought worthy to be a “religious” in this life, though
-liable to be canonized when he departs it.
-
-[37] Bernier, the traveller, in 1655 remarks, that “Bengala is the place
-for good comfits, especially in those places where the Portuguese are,
-who are dexterous in making them, and drive a great trade with them.” In
-this one point their descendants have not degenerated.
-
-[38] Many tribes, however, are found among them. Some have African
-features.
-
-[39] Without the cholee or bodice worn by Hindoo and Moslem women in
-India.
-
-[40] Leavened bread is much better made here than in any other part of
-Western India; moreover, it is eaten by all those who can afford it.
-
-[41] Anciently, neither Moslem nor Jew could, under pain of death,
-publicly perform the rites of his religion in any Indo-Portuguese
-settlement.
-
-[42] At the same time we were not allowed to pass the threshold of the
-little pagoda to the southward of the town.
-
-[43] Tavernier says of them, “the natives of the country called Canarins
-are not permitted to bear any office but only in reference to the law,
-_i.e._, as solicitors, advocates, and scriveners. If a Canarin happened
-to strike a European, his hand was amputated.”
-
-[44] A carpenter, one of the lowest castes amongst Hindoos.
-
-[45] The Hindoo goddess of plenty and prosperity.
-
-[46] Opposite to the Desha, the pure dialect of Maharatta. They are about
-as different as English spoken in the south of England and Lowland Scotch.
-
-[47] A celebrated Arabic author on the interpretation of dreams.
-
-[48] Magical formula and works on “Gramarye,” generally in the Sanscrit,
-sometimes in the Pracrit, tongue.
-
-[49] As, however, the Maharatta is the mother tongue of the Goanese,
-it communicates its peculiar twang to every other language they speak.
-The difference of their Portuguese from the pure Lusitanian, is at once
-perceptible to a practised ear.
-
-[50] And yet as late as 1840, the Government of Goa was obliged to issue
-an order confiscating the property of all priests who should submit to
-the Vicar-apostolic appointed by the Pope.
-
-[51] Francklin, who visited Goa in 1786, says that the army was about
-five thousand men, two regiments of which were Europeans. Even in his day
-the Home Government was obliged to send large sums of money annually to
-defray the expenses of their Indian possessions.
-
-[52] A colonel receiving about 15_l._, an ensign, 3_l._ _per mensem_.
-
-[53] The translator of Ibn Batuta’s Travels.
-
-[54] Ferdinand, the second Duke of Tuscany, was the munificent patron of
-the father of Western Orientalism.
-
-[55] When Vasco de Gama returned to India, part of his freight was “eight
-Franciscan friars, eight chaplains, and one chaplain major, who were
-instructed to begin by preaching, and, if that failed, to proceed to the
-decision of the sword.”
-
-[56] The curious reader will find the subject of Jesuitical conversion in
-India most ably treated in Sir J. E. Tennent’s late work on “Christianity
-in Ceylon.”
-
-[57] A common term of insult.
-
-[58] The mountains distinctly visible from the sea off Calicut, in clear
-weather, are the Koondah range of the Neilgherries, or Blue Hills.
-
-[59] “Noble and wealthy city.”
-
-[60] The later is A.D. 907.
-
-[61] In 1788, Tippoo was induced by ill-timed zeal or mistaken policy
-to order the circumcision and conversion of the Malabar Hindoos, and
-compelled the Brahmans to eat beef, as an example to the other inferior
-castes. A general insurrection of the oppressed was the natural
-consequence of the oppressive measure.
-
-Tradition asserts that there was a forcible but partial circumcision of
-the natives of Malabar by the people of Arabia long before Hyder’s time.
-So the grievance was by no means a new one.
-
-[62] Who, it may be observed, are the navigators and traders _par
-excellence_ of the Eastern world. The Jews and Phœnicians generally
-confined themselves to the Mediterranean and the parts about the Red Sea.
-The Turks were an inland nation; the Hindoos have ever been averse to any
-but coasting voyages, and the religion of Zoroaster forbade its followers
-to cross the seas. But the Arab is still what he was—the _facile
-princeps_ of Oriental sailors.
-
-As a proof of how strong the followers of Mohammed mustered on the
-Malabar coast, we may quote Barthema, who asserts, that when the
-Portuguese landed at Calicut, they found not less than fifteen thousand
-of them settled there. Camoens also tells us how the friendly and
-disinterested plans of his hero were obstructed and thwarted by the power
-and influence of these infidel Moors.
-
-[63] Between September 1846 and May 1847, no less than eighty ships,
-besides an immense number of pattimars and native craft touched at
-Calicut.
-
-[64] Arab and other valuable horses cannot stand the climate,—a Pegu pony
-is the general _monture_. The sheep intended for consumption are brought
-down from Mysore.
-
-[65] Subterraneous streams are still as common in India as they were in
-heathen Greece and Italy.
-
-[66] The dynastical name of the Samiry.
-
-[67] Captain Hamilton mentions his ship striking in six fathoms at
-the mainmast on some of the ruins of “_the sunken town built by the
-Portuguese in former times_.” But he hesitates to determine whether the
-place was “swallowed up by an earthquake, as some affirm, or undermined
-by the sea.”
-
-[68] A further account of Cherooman will be found in the twelfth chapter.
-Ferishteh, the celebrated Moslem annalist, informs us that the Rajah
-became a Mussulman in consequence of the pious exhortations of some Arab
-sailors who were driven into the port of Craganore. Captain Hamilton
-remarks that, “when the Portuguese first came to India, the Samorin of
-Calicut, who was lord paramount of Malabar, turned Moslem in his dotage,
-and to show his zeal, went to Mecca on a pilgrimage, and died on the
-voyage.” The tradition handed down amongst the Moslems is, that the
-Malabar Rajah became a convert to Islam in consequence of seeing the
-Shakk el-Kamar, or miraculous splitting of the moon by Mohammed, and
-that, warned by a dream, he passed over to Arabia.
-
-[69] See Chapter XII.
-
-[70] _Surya_, the Hindoo Phœbus.
-
-[71] _Go-karna_, the “Cow’s-ear,” a celebrated place of pilgrimage in the
-Canara district.
-
-[72] _Cherun_ or _Chairun_ was one of the three kingdoms contained in
-South India; the other two were Sholum (Tanjore) and Pundium (Madura).
-
-[73] We know not which to admire or to pity the more: this wonderful old
-traveller’s accuracy and truthfulness, or the hard fate which gave him
-the nickname of Messer Marco Milioni. Tardy justice, however, has been
-done to his memory, and a learned Italian Orientalist, M. Romagnosi,
-now asserts, that from his adventurous wanderings “scaturirono tutte le
-speculazioni e teorie che condussero finalmente alla scoperta del Nuovo
-Mondo.”
-
-[74] Paolino observes, that the term Malabar ought _not_ to be deduced
-from the Arabic _mala_, a mountain, and _bahr_, a coast. And Paolino
-is right; neither of those vocables are Arabic at all. The word is of
-Sanscrit origin, derived from _malya_ (मल्य a mountain generally, but
-particularly the ranges called by us the Western Ghauts), and _var_
-(वार, a multitude). The Persian word بار (_bar_), used in compounds, as
-Zang-bar, the region of blacks, or Zanguebar, is palpably a corruption
-of the said _var_. Thus the original Sanscrit term _malaya-desha_, the
-mountain land, became in Persian and Arabic _Malbar_, or _Malibar_, and
-hence our Malabar. A late editor of Marco Polo’s travels might have been
-more cautious than to assert that “the very term is Arabic.”
-
-[75] Anciently described to be pepper, ivory, timber, and pearls. The
-three former articles are still produced in great abundance.
-
-We may here notice that Vincent translates ξυλα σαγαλινα, “sandalwood,”
-and supposes the word to have been originally written σανδαλινα. He is
-wrong: the _tectona grandis_, or teak, called throughout Western India
-_sag_ (σαγ), or _sagwan_, is alluded to. So also φαλαγγες σησαμηναι is
-rendered “ebony in large sticks,” and in a note we are informed that it
-is a corrupt reading, that wood of some sort is meant, but that _sesamum_
-is a herb. The σησαμ of the Greeks is manifestly the Indian _sisam_, or
-black tree.
-
-[76] It is variously and incorrectly written Dely, Delly, D’illi,
-and Dilla. The mountain derives its present name from a celebrated
-Moslem fakir, Mahommed of Delhi, who died there, and is invoked by the
-sea-faring people of the coast. Its Hindoo appellation is _Yeymullay_. No
-stress therefore should be laid upon the resemblance between Mount Delhi
-and the _Ela_ Barake of the Periplus. The identity of the two places
-rests, however, on good local evidence.
-
-[77] Varying from eighty to one hundred and thirty-five inches per annum.
-
-[78] Unhappily the banyan has been selected, a tree which, though
-sufficiently shady when its root-like branches are allowed to reach the
-ground, is comparatively valueless as a protection against the sun, when
-planted by a roadside. Also, it is easily overthrown by high winds, for,
-after a time, the long and tenacious roots that uphold it rot off, and
-the thin branches of young shoots that cling round the parent stem have
-not the power to support its weight. A third disadvantage in the banyan
-is, that in many places the boughs grow low, and a horseman’s head is in
-perpetual danger.
-
-[79] The usual ferry-boat is a platform of planks lashed to two canoes,
-and generally railed round. We know not a more disagreeable predicament
-than half an hour’s trip upon one of these vessels, with a couple of
-biting and kicking nags on board.
-
-[80] The botanical name of this tree is derived from the Malayalim
-_adeka_, a betel nut. The English “jackfruit” is the Portuguese “jacka,”
-a corruption of the native name _chukka_.
-
-[81] Of the Malayalim æra. It is called Kolum, from a village of that
-name, and dates its beginning in A.D. 824, the time when a rich Nair
-merchant adorned the place with a splendid palace and tank. Previous to
-its establishment, the natives used a cycle of twelve years, each called
-after some zodiacal sign. The months were also denoted by the same terms,
-so that the name of the year and the month were periodically identical.
-
-[82] Equal to Cos. Rs. 250, about 25_l._
-
-[83] See Chapter XII.
-
-[84] Tumbooran, in Malayalim, means a lord or prince. If a minor he is
-termed Tumban.
-
-[85] Most of the matter contained in this chapter has been taken from
-old and valuable papers preserved in the Nuzoor Cutcherry at Calicut. By
-the kindness of the collector we were permitted to inspect and make any
-extracts from them we pleased.
-
-[86] The reader must bear in mind that in Malabar, as in all other native
-states, contributions carefully proportioned to the circumstances of the
-parties so mulcted, were called for on every occasion of emergency.
-
-[87] In three vols. Printed at the _Courier_ press, Bombay.
-
-[88] Tradition obscurely alludes to a Rajah called Kerulam (probably from
-his kingdom), who reigned sixty-three years after Parasu Rama.
-
-[89] In Sanscrit the word means a continent, country, or region: it is
-used hereabouts in a limited sense, generally signifying a village.
-
-[90] The Hindoo law lays down five per cent. as the amount to be levied
-from the plaintiff, ten from the defendant if cast in a suit, otherwise
-he is exempt from any tax. Some of the Rajahs were by no means content
-with such a moderate perquisite; the ruler of Cochin, for instance, never
-took less than double the sum above specified.
-
-[91] Sometimes called Prumani and Mookoodee, “principal inhabitants.”
-
-[92] “Ruler of the land of Cherun.” See Chapter XI.
-
-[93] The current æra of the Hindoos.
-
-[94] See Chapter X.
-
-[95] In the present talook of Temelpooram.
-
-[96] Captain Hamilton—no great authority by the bye in such
-matters—relates that the Samiry divided his territories between his four
-nephews, and says that the partition led to long and bloody wars between
-the brothers. He probably confounded a Moslem with the Hindoo tradition.
-
-[97] Tumbooratee, in Malayalim, a lady or princess; if a minor she is
-termed Tumbatee.
-
-[98] The above four are the only recognised palaces.
-
-[99] Some of the present chieftains of Malabar style themselves
-Kshatriyas, but by far the greater number derive their pedigree from the
-intercourse of Brahmans with the royal ladies, who principally belong to
-the Nair caste of Hindoos.
-
-[100] This gives upwards of two hundred souls per mile, estimating the
-extent of Malabar at about six thousand square miles.
-
-[101] It ordained, for instance, that corpses shall be burned within
-private premises, instead of being carried out for that purpose into the
-woods, &c.
-
-[102] There is an abridged form of this salutation, which consists of
-joining the hands and then parting them, at the same time bending the
-fingers at the second joint.
-
-[103] This word generally follows the name of the individual, and seems
-to be the titular appellation of the class. It is probably derived from
-the Sanscrit Nayaka (a chief), like the Teloogoo Naidoo, the Canarese and
-Tamul Naikum, and the Hindoo Naik.
-
-[104] Captain Hamilton makes the number of fighting men throughout the
-province, of course including all castes, amount to one million two
-hundred and sixty-two thousand.
-
-[105] Opposed to muka-tayum, the succession of sons.
-
-[106] The head of the house.
-
-[107] The masculine singular of this word is Tian (fem. Tiatti), in the
-plural Tiyar.
-
-[108] The Moplahs, as strangers, and the merchants, tradespeople, and
-professional men who had no fixed places of residence, did not engage in
-this feudal relationship.
-
-[109] See Chapter XI.
-
-[110] The word Udian, in Malayalim and Tamul, literally signifies a
-slave. Here it is used in its limited signification of vassal or client,
-as opposed to the Tumbooran or patron. The word, however, would be
-considered degrading to a Nair, and is therefore never applied to him.
-
-[111] “Sons of the soil,” from cher, earth, and mukkul, children. In the
-masculine singular the word is chermun (fem. chermee), plural, chermur.
-
-[112] The price of a slave varied from 3_l._ to 8_l._
-
-[113] In the Calicut district, half the children belonged to the mother,
-or rather to her proprietor, and the other half to the father’s master;
-the odd number was the property of the former. When both parents belonged
-to one owner, he of course claimed all the offspring.
-
-[114] Generally speaking, the slaves in the maritime districts were in
-better condition, and far superior in bodily and mental development to
-their brethren in the interior.
-
-[115] There are three different derivations of this word. Some deduce it
-from the pure Hindostani and corrupted Sanscrit word ma (a mother), and
-the Tamul pilla (a son), “sons of their mothers,” the male progenitor
-being unknown. Others suppose it to be a compound of mukkul (a daughter)
-and pilla (a son), “a daughter’s son,” also an allusion to their origin.
-The third is a rather fanciful derivation from Mokhai-pilla “sons of, or
-emigrants from, Mocha,” in Arabia.
-
-[116] This description applies exclusively to the higher orders; the
-labouring classes are dark and ill-favoured.
-
-[117] The genuine Arab, especially in Yemen and Tehamah, is, generally
-speaking, a Kusaj, or scant-bearded man; and his envy when regarding
-the flowing honours of a Persian chin, is only equalled by the lasting
-regret with which he laments his own deficiency in that semi-religious
-appurtenance to the human face.
-
-[118] The practice of the Prophet, whom every good Moslem is bound to
-imitate, even in the most trivial and every-day occasions.
-
-[119] The _Æschynomene paludosa_, a wood of porous texture, which swells
-when water is poured upon it. Lead is sometimes used to distend the flap
-of the ear by its weight.
-
-[120] A name, by no means complimentary, applied to all who are not
-Moslems.
-
-[121] The descendants of the Wild Man have at all times been celebrated
-for obstinate individual valour, and enduring an amount of “punishment”
-which seems quite incredible.
-
-[122] Manned in those days by Hindoos. Marco Polo tells us that the
-people of Malabar are idolaters, and subject to no foreigner.
-
-[123] Who retorted by hanging them upon the spot, or throwing them
-overboard. This style of warfare was productive of great barbarities.
-There is a pile of stone rising above the sea, about seven leagues
-north-west of Calicut, called the Sacrifice Rock, from the slaughter
-of the crew of a Portuguese vessel which was captured by the Cottica
-cruisers shortly after the settlement of the Christians in India.
-
-[124] The sum usually paid was from eight to ten shillings, a portion of
-which went to the Rajah, part to the women who had lost their husbands in
-these predatory encounters, and the remainder was “prize-money.”
-
-[125] Few would be disposed to consider the salt-duty a practical proof
-of the enlightened nature of our rule in the East, and there is no one,
-we believe, except a “crack collector,” who would not rejoice to see it
-done away with, or at least much reduced.
-
-[126] The rajah was expected to grant lands to the families of those who
-heroically bound themselves by solemn vow to fight till death against the
-enemy. If the self-devoted escaped destruction, he became an outcaste,
-and was compelled to leave the country.
-
-[127] This is the universal belief and practice of the more bigoted parts
-of the Moslem world, and so deep-rooted is the feeling, that it acquires
-a degree of power and influence truly formidable, and difficult to deal
-with.
-
-[128] The natives of India generally belong to the Hanafi: the Arabs are
-the principal followers of the Shafei sect. Both are Sunnis, or orthodox
-Moslems, and there is little difference between them, except in such
-trifling points as the eating or rejecting fish without scales, &c.
-
-[129] Except that a Moslem father may always allot a portion of property
-during his lifetime to his children.
-
-[130] Usually they prefer the occupation of carrying the palanquin to any
-other bodily labour.
-
-[131] Intermarriage, however, is not permitted.
-
-[132] The races above described are those settled in the country. The
-fluctuating portion of the community is composed of the Europeans, the
-soldiery and camp followers, Arabs and foreign Mussulmans, Banyans from
-Guzerat, a few Parsees, and some boat loads of the half-starved wretches
-that leave the Maldives and Laccadives in search of employment during the
-cold season.
-
-[133] The Koondah road is about seventy, that _viâ_ Poonanee, one hundred
-and sixty miles in length.
-
-[134] The pages of the Madras directories and road-books give ample
-accounts of all the chief routes in the presidency.
-
-[135] Judging from the name, a stranger would suppose that the place
-was called after some neighbouring Ghaut, or pass, in the hills. The
-uncorrupted native appellation, however, is Palakad, from Kadu, a jungle,
-and Pala, a tree used in dyeing.
-
-[136] For a detailed description of the sieges and captures of Paulghaut,
-we beg to refer to a work entitled, “Historical Record of the H. E. I.
-Company’s First European Regiment; Madras. By a Staff Officer.”
-
-[137] Anciently an excellent forest. The trees were felled, hewn into
-rough planks, and floated down the Poonanee river at very little expense.
-This valuable article has, however, been sadly mismanaged by us in more
-ways than one. All the timber growing near the streams has been cleared
-away, and as the local government will not lay out a few lacs of rupees
-in cutting roads through the forests, its expense has been raised almost
-beyond its value. Considerable losses in the dockyards have been incurred
-in consequence of the old erroneous belief that “teak is the only wood in
-India which the white ants will not touch.” The timber should be stacked
-for at least eight years, three of which would enable it to dry, and the
-remaining five to become properly seasoned.
-
-[138] The common country carts, called garees in other parts of India.
-Here they are covered with matting, for the same reason that compels the
-people to thatch their heads.
-
-[139] In Malabar the horse is perhaps as great an object of horror as the
-rider, the natives are so little accustomed to see such quadrupeds.
-
-[140] The pet name for the Madras Presidency.
-
-[141] It is curious to see the different way in which the kotwals,
-peons, and other such official characters behave towards the Bombay and
-the Madras traveller. The latter escapes their importunity, whereas the
-former, by keeping up his presidency’s bad practice of feeing government
-servants, teaches them incivility to all who either refuse or neglect to
-pay this kind of “black mail.”
-
-[142] Etymologists write the word “Hullicul,” deriving it from cul, a
-rock, and hulli, a tiger, as formerly a stone figure of one of those
-animals that had been slain by a chief single-handed, stood thereabouts.
-There are several forts in other parts of the hills similar to Oolacul
-Droog: some suppose them to have been built by Hyder Ali, others assign
-an earlier date to them.
-
-[143] See Chapter XIX. for a further account of the work.
-
-[144] The “blue hill:” it lies near the Danaynkeucottah Pass, one of the
-first ascended by Europeans. The visitors would naturally ask the natives
-what name they gave to the spot, and when answered Nilagiri, would
-apply the word to the whole range. The sacred mount is still a place of
-pilgrimage, although its pagoda has long been in ruins.
-
-[145] The Eastern Ghauts begin south of the Cavery river, and extend
-almost in a straight line to the banks of the Krishna. The western range
-commences near Cape Comorin, and after running along the western coast as
-far north as Surat, diverges towards the north-east, and is lost in the
-valley of the Tapti.
-
-[146] The Pykarry becomes the Moyar river, and under that name flows
-round the north and north-west base of the hills; it falls into the
-Bhawany, which bounds the south and east slopes, and acts as the common
-drain of every little brook and torrent in the Neilgherries.
-
-[147] Its extent is about twenty miles from east to west, and seven from
-north to south.
-
-[148] The Seegoor Ghaut, which was almost impassable in Captain Harkness
-and Dr. Baikie’s time, is now one of the easiest and best ascents.
-
-[149] See Chapter XVIII.
-
-[150] Dodabetta, or the “Great Mountain,” called by the Todas, Pet-,
-or Het-marz. The summit is eight thousand seven hundred and sixty
-feet above the level of the sea, and forms the apex of the Neilgherry
-range. The vicinity of the giant has its advantages and disadvantages.
-It is certainly a beautiful place for pic-nics, and the view from the
-observatory on the top is grand and extensive. But as a counterpoise, the
-lofty peak attracting and detaining every cloud that rolls up from the
-coast during the rainy season, makes one wish most fervently that the
-Great Mountain were anywhere but in its present position.
-
-[151] Ootacamund, Wootaycamund, or Wotay. “Mund” means a village in the
-language of the hill people. Ootac is a corruption of the Toda vocable
-Hootkh, a word unpronounceable to the Indians of the plain. The original
-hamlet still nestles against the towering side of Dodabetta, but its
-pristine inhabitants, the Todas, have given it up to another race, and
-migrated to the wood which lies behind the public gardens.
-
-[152] It was established at Ootacamund under a warrant of constitution
-from the Provincial Grand Lodge on the coast of Coromandel.
-
-[153] The Bombayites had, moreover, their own medical attendant, with a
-hospital and the usual number of subalterns attached to it. There are
-now but three surgeons on the hills, attending on one hundred and four
-invalids, who are scattered over many miles of country.
-
-[154] The measure was advocated by Mr. Sullivan as early as 1828, but
-financial, not common-sensical or medical, considerations have long
-delayed its being carried into execution.
-
-[155] The principal schools now (1847) to be found at Ootacamund are four
-in number, viz.:—
-
-1. The Ooty free school, established for the purpose of giving education
-gratis to the children of the poor: it is supported by voluntary
-contributions, and superintended by the chaplain of the station. The
-number of scholars on the rolls is generally about thirty.
-
-2. Fern Hill, the Rev. Mr. Rigg’s boarding-school for young gentlemen.
-It contains twenty-six pupils, varying in age from five to fifteen. Of
-these, fourteen are the sons of officers in the service, and the rest are
-youths of respectable families. Terms for boarders, 4_l._ _per mensem_,
-the usual charges on the Neilgherries.
-
-3. An establishment for young ladies, conducted by Miss Hale and Miss
-Millard.
-
-4. Ditto for young ladies and young gentlemen under ten years of age,
-conducted by Mrs. James and Miss Ottley.
-
-Besides those above mentioned, several ladies receive a limited number of
-pupils.
-
-The schools for natives at Ootacamund are—
-
- 1. The Hindostani school } Conducted by the Rev. Bernard Schmidt, D.D.
- 2. The Tamul school }
-
-There are many other similar establishments for native children in
-different parts of the hills.
-
-So that the pedagogue has not neglected to visit this remote corner of
-his wide domains.
-
-[156] The Union and the Victoria. For bed and board the prices usually
-charged are—
-
-For a lady or gentleman, 22_l._ _per mens._
-
-Ditto for any broken period in a month, 16_s._ _per diem_.
-
-For children under ten years of age and European servants, 2_s._ _per
-diem_.
-
-Native ayah or nurse, 1_s._ _per diem_.
-
-The expense of housekeeping is not great at Ootacamund. A single man may
-manage to live for 20_l._ _per mensem_, comfortably for 30_l._ It is
-common for two or more bachelors to take a house together, and the plan
-suits the nature of the place well.
-
-Only be careful who your monsoon “chum” is!
-
-[157] The most stringent measures have been found necessary to prevent
-gentlemen from committing suicide by means of elephant shooting in the
-pestilential jungles below the hills. Besides, there is some little duty
-to be done by the Madrassees on the Neilgherries: a convalescent list is
-daily forwarded to the Commanding officer, reporting those who are equal
-to such labours as committees and courts of inquest.
-
-[158] Large fans, suspended from the ceiling.
-
-[159] As the Madrassees are familiarly called. The cunning in language
-derive the term from mulligatawny soup, the quantity of which imbibed in
-South India strikes the stranger with a painful sense of novelty.
-
-[160] See Chapter XIX.
-
-[161] The region of eternal punishment.
-
-[162] “The ethics of India;” the Cornelius Nepos of Hindostani.
-
-[163] No inscriptions have as yet been discovered. The only coin we have
-heard of was a Roman aureus, whereas in the cairns that stud the plains,
-medals, of the Lower Empire especially, are commonly met with.
-
-[164] Consecrated stones.
-
-[165] The kistvaens, or closed cromlechs of the Neilgherries, are tumuli
-about five feet high. The internal chamber is composed of four walls,
-each consisting of an entire stone seven feet long and five broad,
-floored and roofed with similar slabs. In the monolithe, constituting the
-eastern wall, is a circular aperture large enough to admit the body of a
-child.
-
-[166] The colonists have followed the example of the aborigines. Little,
-however, can be said in favour of our nomenclature. There is a Snowdon,
-without snow; a Saddle-back Hill, whose _dorsum_ resembles anything as
-much as a saddle; an Avalanche Hill, without avalanches, and so on.
-
-[167] Dr. Baikie (in 1834) mentions that one of these animals had held
-possession of a thick wood close to the cantonment for some years. The
-same spot is still tenanted, it is said, by a cheeta, but whether it be
-the original occupant, his ghost, or one of his descendants, men know not.
-
-[168] Not Buffon’s elk. It is the _Cervus Aristotelis_, or black rusa of
-Cuvier; the “Shambara” of classical India; the Gavazn of Persia; and the
-Gav i Gavazn of Affghanistan and Central Asia.
-
-[169] Upon this part Nature has provided the animal with a bony mass,
-impenetrable to anything lighter than a grapeshot, occupying the whole
-space between the horns, and useful, we should suppose, in forcing a way
-through dense and thorny jungle.
-
-[170] This “jungle sheep” is the _Cervus porcinus_, the hog-deer or
-barking-deer of Upper India, which abounds in every shikargah of
-delectable Scinde. In Sanscrit it is called the Preushat (“sprinkling,”
-in allusion to its spotted hide); in Hindostani, Parha; and in Persian,
-the Kotah-pacheh, or “short hoof.”
-
-[171] A shola is a thick mass of low wood, which may be measured by yards
-or miles, clothing the sides, the bottoms, and the ravines of the hills
-and mountains.
-
-[172] _I.e._ ten or twenty dogs and curs, young and old, of high and low
-degree, terriers, pointers, spaniels, setters, pariahs, and mongrels,
-headed by a staunch old hound or two.
-
-[173] There is a large kind of solitary jackal whose cry is never
-answered by the other animals of the same species: the sound somewhat
-resembles the hyæna’s laugh, and has been mistaken for it by many.
-
-[174] Gardener.
-
-[175] A species of squirrel.
-
-[176] We have heard much about the difficulty of taming these birds. Some
-go so far as to assert that they pine away and die when deprived of their
-liberty. The Affghans seem to find nothing hard in the operation, as they
-use the birds for fighting. They show excellent pluck, and never fail to
-fight till death, although steel and silver are things unknown.
-
-[177] Seven pounds for a full grown, 5_l._ for a young animal. When the
-reward is claimed the tusks must be given up. Tuskers, however, are not
-often met with in these days.
-
-[178] Every swamp on and about the hills is full of small leeches,—the
-lake also abounds in them,—which assail your legs, and swarming up the
-trees, drop down your shirt collar to your extreme annoyance. They are
-quite useless for medical purposes, as the bite is highly inflammatory.
-
-[179] The Maroo Bungla, or log-house, as the natives call the Avalanche
-bungalow.
-
-[180] The first name is a corruption of the second, which is derived from
-Vadacu, “the north,” these people having migrated from that direction.
-
-[181] The worship of the terrible and destructive incarnation of the
-Deity.
-
-[182] Signifying the “unenlightened or barbarous,” from the Tamul word
-Erul, darkness.
-
-[183] “Cooroombar,” or “Curumbar,” literally means “wilful, or
-self-willed.” Sometimes the word mulu, a “thorn,” is prefixed to the
-genuine name by way of epithet, alluding to the nature of the race.
-
-[184] So Captain Harkness writes the word, remarking, that “as this tribe
-kill and eat a great deal of beef, it was no doubt intended by their
-Hindu neighbours that they should be called ‘Gohatars,’ from go, a cow,
-and hata, slaying.” “Cuv,” in the Toda dialect, means a “mechanic.”
-
-[185] Many of the words have been corrupted, and the pronunciation has
-become nasal, not guttural, like that of the Todas. The Kothurs can,
-however, express themselves imperfectly in Canarese.
-
-[186] All that we can gather from their songs and tales is, that
-anciently they were the zemindars, or landed proprietors of the hills.
-
-[187] Todawars, Tudas, or Toders. Captain Harkness derives the word from
-the Tamul, Torawar, a herdsman, and this is probably the true name of the
-race.
-
-[188] The north-west parts of the Persian Gulf.
-
-[189] _E. g._ The peaks of the Todas are venerated by the Todas, as they
-were by the Celto-Scythians. The single stone in the sacred lactarium of
-the former, was the most conspicuous instrument of superstition in the
-Druidical or Scythic religion. Captain Congreve asserts that the Toda
-faith is Scythicism, _because_ they sacrifice female children, bulls,
-calves, and buffaloes, as the Scythians did horses; that they adore the
-sun (what old barbarians did not?), revere fire, respect certain trees
-and bunches of leaves, worship the Deity in groves of the profoundest
-gloom, and have some knowledge of a future state. He proves that the
-hills are covered with vestiges of Scythicism, as cairns, barrows, and
-monolithic altars, and believes them to have belonged to the early Todas,
-inasmuch as “the religion of the Todas is Scythicism, and these are
-monuments of Scythicism.” He concludes the exposition of his theory with
-the following recapitulation of his reasons for considering the Todas of
-Scythian descent:—1. Identity of religion (not proved). 2. Physiological
-position of the Todas in the great family race (we are not told how it
-resembles that of the Scythians). 3. The pastoral mode of life among the
-Todas. 4. The food of the Todas, which consisted originally of milk and
-butter (we “doubt the fact”). 5. Their architecture, religious, military,
-and domestic, the yards of the Toda houses, their temples, their sacred
-enclosures, their kraals for cattle, are circular, as were those of the
-Celts, and, indeed, of most ancient people whose divinity was Sun, Light,
-Fire, Apollo, Mithra, &c. 6. Their marriage customs and funeral rites are
-nearly identical (an assertion). 7. Their ornaments and dress closely
-approximate (ditto). 8. Their customs are generally similar (ditto). 9.
-The authority of Sir W. Jones that the ancient Scythians did people a
-mountainous district of India (_quasi_ irrelevant). 10. History mentions
-that India has been invaded by Scythian hordes from the remotest times
-(ditto). 11. Their utter separation in every respect from the races
-around them.
-
-[190] Such as want of weapons, difference of colour, dissimilarity of
-language. With respect to the latter point Captain Congreve remarks,
-that “a comparison with the Gothic, Celtic, and other ancient dialects
-of Europe is a great desideratum; but should no affinity be found to
-prevail, I should not consider the absence detrimental to my views, for
-this reason, that the people of Celto-Scythic origin having various
-languages, have been widely dispersed.” After this, _Quid facias illi?_
-
-[191] In many parts of the Neilgherries there is a large species of
-solitary bee which the Todas declared incurred the displeasure of the
-Great Spirit by stinging him, and was therefore condemned to eternal
-separation from its kind. But as huge combs and excellent honey abound on
-these hills, their savage inhabitants of course superstitionize upon the
-subject of the bee. The Creator, they say, desirous of knowing how honey
-is made, caught the animal, and she proving obstinate and refractory,
-confined her by means of a string tied round the middle; hence her
-peculiar shape! Is not this clearly a psychological allusion to the
-powerful volition for which the fair sex is proverbially famous?
-
-[192] Not, however, by the victory of Brahmanism over Buddhism, as
-some have supposed. The leading tenet of Buddha’s faith was the sin of
-shedding blood, whereas the Todas practise infanticide and eat meat.
-Moreover, there is a bond of union between them and those Anti-Buddhists
-the Lingaits, who adhere to the religion of Shiva pure and undefiled.
-
-This Buddhistic theory rests upon the slender foundation that the Todas
-call Wednesday, Buddhi-aum (Buddh’s day). But the celebrated Eastern
-reformer’s name has extended as far as the good old island in the West.
-It became Fo-e and Xa-ca (Shakya) in China; But in Cochin-China, Pout in
-Siam; Pott or Poti, in Thibet; perhaps the Wadd of Pagan Arabia; Toth in
-Egypt; Woden in Scandinavia; and thus reaching our remote shores, left
-its traces in “Wednesday.” So say the etymologists.
-
-[193] By the Rev. Mr. Schmidt’s vocabulary of the Toda tongue.
-
-[194] Captain Harkness is egregiously mistaken when he asserts that
-the dialect of his aborigines “has not the least affinity in roots,
-construction, or sound, with the Sanscrit.”
-
-[195] In some points. Thus we find the Ain, Ghain, Fa and _Kh_a of the
-Arabs, together with the Zha of the Persians. But the step from the
-Indian अ to the Arabic ع, from घ (g’h) to غ, and from फ (p’h) to ﻑ, is
-easily made; and the kha and zha belong to some Indian dialects as well
-as to Arabic and Persian.
-
-It is supposed that the Toda language is still divided, like the Tamul,
-into two distinct dialects, one the popular, the other the sacred; the
-former admitting foreign words, derived from the Canarese, the latter a
-pure form generally used by the priesthood.
-
-Most Todas can speak a few words of corrupted Canarese.
-
-[196] A share of the land-produce varying from one-third to one-sixth of
-the whole, settled by the eye, and generally paid in kind. The Toda has
-made himself necessary to the Berger; he must sow the first handful of
-grain, and reap the first fruits of the harvest, otherwise the land would
-be allowed to lie fallow, and the crop to rot upon the ground.
-
-[197] The polyandry practised of yore seems at present on the decline.
-Infanticide, though said to have been abolished, probably holds its
-ground in the remote parts of the hills. Near the stations the lives
-of female children are spared with the view of making money by their
-immorality. Old women are still by no means common.
-
-[198] For a more detailed account of them, we refer the reader to the
-amusing pages of Captain Harkness.
-
-[199] A brother mason informs us, that “the Todas use a sign of
-recognition similar to ours, and they have discovered that Europeans have
-an institution corresponding with their own.” Hence, he remarks, “a Toda
-initiated will bow to a gentleman, never to a lady.”
-
-But in our humble opinion, next to the Antiquary in simplicity of mind,
-capacity of belief, and capability of assertion, ranks the Freemason.
-
-[200] What follows alludes particularly to the Todas living in the
-vicinity of Ooty, Coonoor, and Kotagherry.
-
-[201] The habit of intoxication is now so fatally common amongst the
-rising generation, that their fathers will not, it is said, initiate them
-into their mysteries, for fear that the secret should be divulged over
-the cup.
-
-[202] The faculty unanimously assert that the air of the hills is not
-prejudicial to those suffering from ophthalmic disease. We observed,
-however, that a large proportion of invalids complained of sore eyes and
-weakness of sight, produced, probably, by the glare of the fine season
-and the piercing winds of the monsoon.
-
-[203] The “hill of the Kothurs.”
-
-[204] The termination “hutty,” so common in the names of the hill
-villages, is used to denote a Berger settlement, as “mund” means a Toda
-hamlet.
-
-[205] Or tuft: it is so called from a clump of trees which crowns the
-ridge of a high hill.
-
-[206] The Neilgherries are exposed to the violence of both monsoons, the
-south-west and the north-east. The fall of rain during the latter is,
-however, comparatively trifling.
-
-[207] It commences with a _résumé_, of the peculiarities of the hills,
-and accounts of the three great stations; proceeds to a description of
-the geography and geology, soil and productions, botany, zoology, and the
-inhabitants of the Neilgherries, and discusses at some length the effects
-of the climate upon the European constitution, sound as well as impaired.
-The Appendix presents a mass of information valuable enough when the
-work was published, but now, with the exception of the meteorological
-and other tables, too old to be useful. Thirteen or fourteen years work
-mighty changes, moral and physical, in an Anglo-India settlement.
-
-[208] The book contains one hundred and forty-four pages, enlivened with
-a dozen lithographed sketches, and NOT enlivened by descriptions of
-Poonamalee, Vellore, Laulpett, Bangalore, and Closepett.
-
-[209] A little volume of one hundred and seventy-five pages, containing
-graphic sketches of the scenery, excellent accounts of the different
-tribes of hill people, a weather-table from July to December, 1829, the
-height of the principal mountains, and a short and meagre vocabulary of
-the Toda language.
-
- THE END.
-
- LONDON: Printed by SAMUEL BENTLEY and Co., Bangor House, Shoe Lane.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOA AND THE BLUE
-MOUNTAINS ***
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