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Presented to Princeton Theological Seminary
By the t^cv. Wendell Prime, D.D.
To be Kept Always as a Separate Collection.
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9
AROUND THE WORLD:
SKETCHES OF TRAVEL
THROUGH MANY LANDS and OVER MANY SEAS.
By E. D. G. prime, D.D.
IVITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS.
JV£IV YORK:
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
FRANKLIN SQUARE.
1872.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1872, by
Harper & Brothers.
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
TO
MY BELOVED AND VENERABLE
MOTHER,
WHO, BEYOND THE GATE OF FOURSCORE, GAVE ME HER PARTING
BLESSING, AND WATCHED FOR MY RETURN ;
WHO NOW CALMLY AWAITS HER SUMMONS TO THE BETTER
COUNTRY,
THIS VOLUME
IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED.
PREFACE.
The journey of whicli the following pages contain a
running account was undertaken by the writer mainly for
the recovery of health, but also for the general purposes
of travel and observation. The volume was designed, not
in any measure as an exhaustive account of what is to be
seen, and learned, and enjoyed in such a tour (a score of
volumes would not contain the record), but to give to the
intelligent reader suggestive glimpses of the world of in-
terest which such a journey affords. The time devoted to
it, a single year, may seem short when the great extent of
land and sea is taken into account, but the facilities of
travel are so great at the present day that more may now
be compressed into a year than formerly into two or three.
Nor was the tour made so rajndly as might be supposed.
The actual traveling time in going round the world has
been reduced to seventy-five days, distributed as follows :
From New York to San Francisco, by rail, six days ; from
San Francisco to Yokohama and Hong Kong, by steam-
ship, twenty-seven days (this voyage might be made with
perfect ease, at a little more expense of coal, in twenty-two
days) ; from Hong Kong to Calcutta, by steam-ship, twelve
days ; from Calcutta. to. Bombay, via Allahabad, by contin-
uous rail, a journey of 1450 miles through the heart of
India, three days ; from Bombay to Suez, by steam-ship,
eleven days ; from Suez to Paris or London, by steam-ship
and rail, six days ; fi'om London to New York, ten days.
This is taking the most direct route, and does not include
y{{[ PREFACE.
excursions in various directions to and through different
countries on the way, but it leaves between nine and ten
months of the year to be spent where and in what way the
inclination of the traveler may suggest. Having previous-
ly become familiar, by travel, with many of the countries
of Europe, the writer devoted the greater part of his time
to more eastern lands, spending two months in Japan and
China, the same in India, and a portion of the remainder
in Egypt and Western Asia. Taking a single year, and
starting at the right time, enables the traveler to be in
each country, and on every sea, at the most favorable sea-
son ; whereas a longer period would inevitably bring him
into some Oriental region in midsummer, when the heat is
almost intolerable even for residents, or among the typhoons
and cyclones of the tropical seas.
For the same reason he must needs travel westward, or
he will as inevitably find himself in some part of the world
at the season when he would wish to be any where else.
The natural order, with the sun, is the only practicable
course, excepting at great expense of comfort, and no little
exposure of health and life.
The journey detailed in this volume was arranged, with
regard to these contingencies, so accurately, that the high-
est range of the thermometer occurring in its whole extent
was in crossing our own continent at starting, and in land-
ing at New York on the return; and yet, in different
parts of Asia that were visited, the degree of heat during a
large part of the year varies from 100° to 130° Fahrenheit
in the shade. In India, the thermometer often stands in
summer at 120° and 130° during the day, and does not fall
below 100° at night; but we neither saw frost during the
entire year, nor a higher degree than 89 of the thermom-
eter.
The precision with which such a journey can be ar-
PREFACE.
IX
ranged beforehand, with the present facilities and regular-
ity of travel, may be gathered from the writer's experience.
He had planned his entire excursion several months before
setting out, with the times of arrival and departure for
each country that he expected to visit ; and until reaching-
Europe, where his plans were intentionally left uncertain,
he was scarcely a day out of time at any stage of the jour-
ney. He had arranged to be at Calcutta on the 1st of De-
cember, to spend that month and the following (the onh-
two months suitable for traveling) in India, and was there
on the 3d, having accomplished his plans of travel in Ja-
pan and China with equal precision. Nearly six months
before leaving home he had appointed to spend the first
week of January, 1870, in the north of India, to be pres-
ent at the religious anniversary of the Week of Prayer.
He crossed the first range of the Himalaya Mountains the
last day of the old year, and about an hour before the new
year commenced alighted at the home of a friend in the
beautiful valley of the Dehra Doon. He had engaged to
meet at Cairo, on the 15 th of February, his brother, Wil-
liam C. Prime, who had started eastward the week before
he started west, and was there at the appointed time. His
brother was detained by head winds up the Nile, and they
did not meet ; but on reaching home and comparing notes,
they had the satisfaction of learning that they had spent
two days together in Venice at different hotels, a few
squares apart, without knowing it. He had arranged to be
in Paris on the 1st of June, and was there on that day, and
at home again punctually at the end of the year, the last
of July.
The pleasure of the excursion was greatly enhanced to
the writer by the presence of the one who is making with
him the voyage of life, without whom it would not have
l)een undertaken. Although an invalid, she accomplished
PREFACE.
the journey witli far less fatigue than was anticipated.
They enjoyed, during the greater part of the time, the vey
pleasant company of B. B. Atterbury, Esq., his daughter
and son, Miss Mary Parsons, and Mr. Kilian Yan Eensse-
laer, all of New York, who also made the entire circuit.
Many agreeable traveling companions, of numerous nation-
alities, were met with by the way. To speak of all the
pleasures and courtesies received from friends resident in
the countries visited would require a separate volume. It
is already written in our hearts — but not to be published.
For the encouragement of future travelers around the
world, it is well to state that the journey was made with-
out accident of any kind ; without the occurrence of se-
rious illness to any of the party ; without missing a steam-
er or a train ; without detention for a single day, scarcely
for an hour ; and without the loss of the most trifling arti-
cle of baggage. More than once were we in peril on the
land and on the sea, but under the care of a kind and
watchful Providence we made the circuit of the earth and
returned to our home in safety, all the objects of our jour-
ney attained — health, pleasure, instruction — and a world of
information concerning many lands and people gathered,
which will be a life-long source of enjoyment.
CONTENTS.
A* PAGE
NEW YORK TO SALT LAKE 17-24
Early Voyages arouud the M'orld.— Magellan, Drake.— Pacific Railroad.— Palace
Cars.— The Mississippi. — The Missouri. — Omaha. — Meeting a Train. — Indians.
—Prairie-dog Villages.— Cheyenue.—Laramie City.— Sabbath on the Plain.-
Rocky Mountains.— Echo and Weber CaQous. — Devil's Gate.
Illustkation : Prairie-dog Village, 22.
IL
THE MORMONS 25-35
Uintah Station.— Stage Ride.— Salt Lake Valley.— Wonderful Fertility Irriga-
tion. — Salt Lake City. — Brigham Young. — Mormon System.— The People. — Con-
dition of the Women.— Joe Smith's Sons United States Troops.— Tabernacle.
— Temple.— Fugitives.
Illustration : View on Salt Lake, 25.
III.
CALIFORNIA , 35-45
Sierra Nevada Mountains.— Union Pacific Railroad.— Cape Horn.— Importance
of Pacific Railroad. — Darien Canal. — Reaching San Francisco on Time. — Review
of Journey.— A magnificent City. — Furs in August.— Seal Rock. — Climate of
California.— No Rain in Summer.— Fruits: Grapes, Figs, and Pomegranates.
Illustration : On the Sierra Nevadas, 36.
IV.
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES 46-68
Few Visitors from California. — Severe Journey. — How to go. — San Joaquin Valley.
— Garrote.— Horseback Ride Mrs. Gobin.— Descent into the Yosemite Valley.
— Mr. Colfax.— Hutchings's Hotel.— Yosemite Fall. — Sentinel Rock. — Domes. —
Bridal Veil. — Mirror Lake. — Vernal and Nevada Falls. — Trout Fishing. — Inspi-
ration Point. — The Big Trees. — Fruit-ranches.
Illusteations : View of the Yosemite, 46.— Yosemite Fall, 53.— Fall of the Bridal
Veil, 55.— Cathedral Rocks, 56.— Mirror Lake, 57.— Vernal Fall, 58.
V.
ON THE PACIFIC 69-85
Steam-ship Japan.— Sabbath Services.— Not meeting the Steamer.— Flying Fish.
—Lunar Rainbow.— "The Ocean Wave" Newspaper.— Chinese Concert.— Trial
of the Purser.— Dropping a Day.— Where does the Day begin ?
Illustration : Flying Fish, 72.
Xii CONTENTS.
V 1. PAGE
EXCURSIONS IN JAPAN 85-109
First View of Japan.— Gulf of Yeddo.— Typhoon.— Yokohama — Coolies.- Excur-
sion to Daiboots.— Kanagawa.— The Bamboo.— Japanese Ponies.— Beautiful
Scenery.— Statue at Daiboots.— Going to Yeddo.— The Yakonius.— Bettoes.-
The Tokaido.— Yeddo.— Niphon Hotel.— Japanese Guard.— Temples.— Rev. Mr.
Verbeck.— Book-stores.— Atangoreama.— Tycoon's Palace.— Shiba.
Ili-ustkationb : Entrance to the Gulf of Yeddo, 86.— Japanese Temple, 91.— Vil-
lage Life in Japan, 93.— Statue at Daiboots, 95.— Bettoes, 99.— Japanese Kango,
101. —Japanese Resting, 102.— Tea-garden near Yeddo, 103.— Belfry in Court-
yard of Temple, 106.
VII.
JAPAN AND THE JAPANESE 110-125
Territory.— Mikado.— Daimios.—Kinsats and Niboos.— Foreign Intercourse.—
Character of the People.— Politeness.— Ladies' Dress.— Obi. — Dyeing Teeth
black.— Shaving Heads.— Sandals.— Peculiar Customs.— Painting and Drawing.
—Porcelain and Lacquer-ware.— Inlaying of Metals.— Beggars.— Saki.— Execu-
tions.— Burial.— Religions.— Shintooism.— Buddhism.— Confucianism.— Chris-
tiauity. —Prospects.
Illustrations: Japanese Saluting, 115.— Female Hair - dresser, 116.— Japanese
Horse-shoe and Saddle, 119.— Group of Horses, 119.— Athletes, 120.— Behead-
ing, 122.
VIII.
INLAND SEA OF JAPAN 126-132
Suwonada. — Three Thousand Islands. — Cones. — Hiogo.— Osaka. — Tokaido.—
Straits of Simoni-saki.— Panorama of Islands.— Pappenberg — Nagasaki.— Gale
in Eastern China Sea.— Yanktse-kiang River.
Illustrations : View in the Inland Sea, 126.— Entering the Inland Sea, 128.—
Pappenberg Island, 130.
IX.
SHANGHAI TO HONG KONG 132-144
Approaching Shanghai.— Woosung River.— Chinese Forts.— War-junks,— City of
Shanghai.— Taeping Rebels.— Foreign Town.— Wheelbarrows.— Chinese City.
—Filth and Smells.— Chinese Criminals.— Modes of Punishment.— Duke of Ed-
inburg.— International Boat-race; Americans victorious. — Pekin.— Nankin. —
Suwonada Steamer.— Hong Kong.— Happy Valley.— Victoria Peak.— Schools —
Pigeon English.— Colonial Prison.— Motto on Post-oflBce.
Illustrations; Chinese Ti-ading-junk, 133.— Chinese Punishment, 137.— Chinese
Temple, 139.— Hong Kong, 141.
X.
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS 144-159
Early Commerce. — Steamer. —Bogue Forts. — Pearl River. — Villages. — Pawn-
brokers. — Pagodas. — Whampoa. — River - population. — Boats. — Streets. — Shah-
Min. — Streets of Canton.— Fan - kwai.— Puntinqua Garden. — Temples. — Mer-
maid.— Five Hundred Gods. — Priests.— Honam. — Chinese Dress.— Processions.
— Funeral.
Illustrations : Chinese Pagoda, 146. — Fort near Canton, 149.— Sedan Chair, 150.
XL
CHINESE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS 160-172
What they eat. — Birds' Nests.— Dog-markets. — Rats. — Porkers.— Frnits.—Small
Feet.— Tea; Growth.— Black and Green, how prepared.— Contrarieties of the
CONTENTS. ^jjj
jShinese.— Dress.— Language.— Coflans.— Competitive Examinations a Key to
Chinese Character.
Illustkation : Chinese Small Foot, 163.
^11- PAGE
RELIGIONS OF CHINA : 173-183
Confucianism. — Buddhism. — Tauism. — Superstition Ancestral Worship. —
Cheating the Gods.— Inferior Gods.— Christianity in China.— Effect of Opium
War.— Example of irreligious Foreigners.— Difficulty of acquiring the Language.
— What Christian Missionaries have accomplished Medical Missionaries.- Dr.
Kerr.— Oliphant & Co.
Illustrations : Casting Lots before a God, 175.— Prince Kung, 177.
XIII.
MACAO, SINGAPORE, AND PENANG 183-203
Stories of Pirates. — Portuguese at Macao. — Assassination of Amiral. — Churches.
—Our Lady of Sorrow. — Camoens's Garden.— Captain Endicott.— Hon. Caleb
Cushing Leaving for Calcutta. — Steamers.— The Hindostan.— Captain, Crew,
and Passengers. — The Monsoon.— A Storm.— Walter M. Lovvrie.— ISOth Degree.
— Singapore a Paradise.— Cocoanuts, Nutmegs, Cinnamon, etc. — Gardens.— Mr.
P. Yoakim. — Rev. Mr. Keasbury. — Rev. Mr. Grant Major Malan. — Straits of
Malacca. — Penang. — Rev. Mr. Macdonald. — Chinese. — Mahomet Noordiu. —
Tropical Vegetation Boa Constrictors.— Bay of Bengal. — Turtles.— Snakes.—
East Indiamen.
Illustrations : Macao, 185.- Coolie Barracoous at Macao, 187.
XIV.
CALCUTTA 203-221
Hoogly River. — Lady seized by Tiger. — Palms and Acacias. — Banyan Tree. —
Palace of ex-King of Oude.— Scene at Lauding. — Spence's Hotel. — Hindoo Serv-
ants.— Aroused by Jackals. — Crows, Kites, and Adjutants. — "City of Palaces.''
— Maidan. — Gay Scene. — Residences. — Public Buildings. — Tanks. — Watering
Streets. — lustitutions.—Colleges.— Asiatic Society. — American Zenana Mission.
Serampore.— Carey, Ward, Marshman,Judson, Henry Martyu, Dr. George Smith.
— Hindoo Festival.
Illustration : Entrance to the Hooglj', 204.
XV.
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA ; EUROPEANS, ETC 221-234
Antiquity of the Nation. — Alexander the Great. — East India Company. — Present
Rulers. — Viceroy. — Education. — University, Colleges, and Schools.— Complicity
vyith Idolatry.— European Population.— Eurasiaus.—Heat.— Punkas.— Living.
—Rainfall.— Sand-storms.— American Ice.
Illustration • A Sand-storm, 233.
XVI.
PUBLIC WORKS, PRODUCTIONS, ETC 234-243
Roads.— Canals.— Telegraph.— Railways.— Opium.— The Poppy.— Preparing the
Drug.— Opium Market.
XVII.
THE NATIVES OF INDIA ; CASTE, ETC 244-254
Native Society. — Hindoos. — Mohammedans. — Sikhs. — Parsees. — Costumes —
Jewels. — Women of India. — Native Wealth. —Food. —Caste. — Brahmins. —
Kshatryas.—Vaishyas.—Sudras.— Breaking Caste.— Pariahs.
Xiv CONTENTS.
XVIII.
CALCUTTA TO BENARES 254-2T0
Leaving Calcutta. — Graud Durbar. — Howrah.— East ludia Kailway.— Cold Nights.
—Scenery. — Plain of India.— Mogul-Serai.— The Hindoo Holy City.— Monkey
Temple. — The Ganges.— Man Mandil. — Grand Mosque. — Ghauts. — Brahminy
Bulls.— Burning the Dead. — Rajah of Benares.— Elephant Ride Golden Tem-
ple. — The Ancient City.
Illhsteations : The Grand Mosque, 262.— Burning the Dead, 263.— A Hindoo
Temple, 268.— Ruins near Benares, 2T0.
XIX.
BENARES TO ALLAHABAD 271-2S1
Crossing the Ganges by Moonlight.— Chunar.-Goddess Kali. — Thugs.— Discov-
ery and Suppression. —Major Sleeman's Narrative. — The Jumna at Allahabad.—
Railroad Bridge.— Rev. Mr. Walsh.— The City of God.— Fortress.— Great Mela.
— Pilgrims Faquirs. — Government Connection with Idolatry.
XX.
THE MUTINY ; CAWNPORE AND LUCKNOW 281-296
Diversity of Opinions. — Anniversary of Battle of Plassey.— Greased Cartridges. —
Chupatties. — Outbreak at Dundum. — Meerut. — Delhi. — Allahabad. — Agra.—
Cawnpore. — Nana Sahib. — General Wheeler. — Massacre of Soldiers.— Massacre
of Women and Children.— Well at Cawnpore. — Memorial Garden. — Monument.
— Massacre of Missionaries. — Suttee Chowra Ghaut. — Lucknow. — King of Oude.
— Residency. — The Siege.— Havelock. — Sir Henry Lawrence. — Persian News-
paper. — "Voyage round the World."
XXI.
AGRA AND THE TAJ 296-310
Only Rain in India.— East Indian Hotel.— Bed and Bedding.— Fort and Palace.—
Heavy Cannon. — Pearl Mosque.— The Taj.— Gateway.— Park.— Shah Jehau.—
Noor Mahal.— Mosque and Jowab.— Cost of Building. — Terraces.— Mi uarets.—
Description.— luterior.—Sarcophagi Inscriptions.— Song and Echo.— Chri.«-
tian Village at Secundra. — Tomb of Akbar.— His Palaces and Wealth. — Arrested
for Stealing.
Illustration: The Taj {Frontispiece), ZOl.
XXII.
DELHI 311-320
Old Delhi.— Shah Jehan.— Gates.— Chandnee Chowk.— Fortress.— Diwan-a-im.—
Diwan-i-khas. — Peacock Throne. — The Palace. — Jumma Musjid. — Kootub-
Miuar.— Iron Pillar.— Divers.— Ruins.— Rev. James Smith.— Blowing up the
Magazine. — Post-office at Delhi.
XXIII.
AMONG THE HIMALAYAS 320-328
Saharunpur — Presbyterian Mission.— Government Stud.— Omnibuckus.— Horses.
—Road over Sewalic Range.— Drawn by Coolies.— Leopards. — Tiger-hunting. —
Doctor Fayrer.— Duke of Edinburg.— Wild Elephant8.—Snakes.— Valley of
Dehra Doon.— Rev. Mr.Woodside.
XXIV.
ON THE HIMALAYAS • 328-330
Ascending the Mountain.— Jhanpan.— Monkeys.— Wild Peacocks.- Mussoorie.—
CONTENTS.
Landour.— View from the Summit.— Thibet and Cashmere.— Dr. Kellett.— The
Sabbath — Meneely's Bell.— Tea Plantations.— Praying Machine.— Pacific Kail-
road. — Week of Prayer. — Amballa. — Rev. Dr. Morrison. — Lodiana Cabool
Princes. — The Koh-i-noor Diamond : its History.
Illustrations: A Gorge in the Himalayas, 320.— A Praying Machine, 333.
-'^-^»- » • PAGE
LODIANA TO BOMBAY 336-343
Suttee at Cawnpore. — Jubbulpore.— Colony of Thugs.— Journey by Dak-gharry.
— The Nerbudda. — Wild Horses. — Night Journey. — The Jungle. — Tigers
Loading Revolver. —An Accident. — Dak - bungalows. — Nagpore. — Mahratta
Country.— Cotton.— Egutpoora.— Tunnels.
XXVI.
BOMBAY 343-350
Island of Bombay. — Portuguese Colony. —Harbor. — Population. — Varieties of
Races.— Buildings.— Parsees.— Towers of Silence.— Malabar Hill Burning the
Dead.— Caves of Elephanta.— Mr. Kittredge.— Buddhist Monastery at Kenhari.
—Dr. Bhau Daji. — Indian Jugglers.— Cocoanut Grove.— Hospital for Animals.
Illustration : A Bullock Carriage, 346.
XXVII.
BOMBAY TO CAIRO 350-361
Leaving India. — British Rule. — Fearful Scene at Sea : two Men overboard. — Aden.
—Broad-tail Sheep.— Red Sea.— Straits of Bab-el-Mandeb.— Constellation of the
Southern Cross. — Mocha. — Abyssinian Hero.— Djiddah, Port of Mecca.— Gale.—
Suez Crossing of the Israelites. — Dr. Robinson.— The Suez Canal Chartering
a Steamer.— Ismailia. — Reaching Cairo. — Shepheard's Hotel Strange Cham-
bermaid.
Illdstbations : Suez, 355. — Night on the Canal, 359.
XXVIII.
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM 362-375
The Citadel.— Caliphs and Mamelukes.— Old Cairo.— Memphis.— The Nile.— Pyra-
mids and Sphinx.— Backshish.— Leaving Cairo.— Meeting Friends.- Alexan-
dria.— Catacombs. — Ponipey's Pillar.— Alexandrian Library. — Light-house of
Pharos.- Bound for the Holy Land.— Port Said.— Englishmen.— Experience in
London.— Americans abroad.— Effects of our War.— Reaching Jafla.— Orange
Groves.— Russian Convent at Ramleh.— Muezzin's Call to Prayer.— The Sab-
bath. — Going up to Jerusalem.— Mediterranean Hotel.
Illusteations: The Pyramids, 364.— A Street in Cairo, 365.
XXIX.
THE HOLY CITY 375-388
The Road to Calvary. — Pilate's House.— Via Dolorosa.— Chapel of the Flagella-
tion. — Arch of Ecce Homo.— Houses of Dives and Lazarus. — Church of Holy
Sepulchre.— Stone of Unction.— The Sepulchre.— Hill of Calvary.— Chapel of Sr.
Helena.— Invention of the Cross. — Latin Chapel. — Vesper Service.— Father An-
tonio.— Mount Zion.— Bishop Gobat.— Jews' Wailing Place.— Mosque of Omar.
— Temple of Solomon.— Gate called Beautiful.— Gethsemane.— Mount of Olives.
—King David's Plight.— Bethlehem.— Bethany.— Valley of the Jordan.— At-
tacked by Bedouins. — Sabbath in Jerusalem.
Illustrations: Via Dolorosa, 376.— Chnrch of the Holy Sepulchre, 377.— The
Beautiful Gate, 3S3. — Jerusalem and Gethsemane, 384.
xvi CONTENTS.
XXX.
PAGE
TO DAMASCUS AND CONSTANTINOPLE 389-iOl
Desolation of the Holy Land. — Leaving Jerusalem.— Robberies.— Eamleh.—Jafla.
— Mount Carmel. — Beyrout. — Messrs. Goodell and Bird.— Druses. — Army expect-
ed from China. — Massacre of 1860. — Grandeur of Lebanon.- Leaving for Damas-
cus. — Diligence. — French Road. — Valley of Ccelo-Syria. — River Abana.— Damas-
cus. — Street called Straight. — Rev. Mr. Crawford.— Abd- el- Kader. — Khans.-
Mohammed. — Mount Hermon. — Sturza.— Cloud of Locusts. — Leaving Beyrout. —
Cyprus.— Rhodes.— Patmos.— Smyrna.— Polycarp.—Mytilene.—Tenedos.— Dar-
danelles.— Gallipoli.—Stamboul.
Illusteationb : Beyrout, 392.— Damascus, 398.— Patmos, 400.
XXXL
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES 402-417
Storms at Constantinople; Snow, Rain, Mud.— Political State of Turkey. — Prog-
ress among the People. — Armenians. — Bibles. — Dr. Hamlin. — Robert College.
— Leaving Stamboul. — Sea of Marmora. — Turkish Naval Officers.- Landing at
Night. — The Piraeus. — Athens. — The Acropolis. — Mars Hill. — The Pnyx. — Mar-
athon. — Party murdered by Brigands. — Syra. — Cape Matapan. — Navarino. —
Cephalonia. — Zante. — Gulf of Corfu. — Brindisi. — Banditti. — Entering Naples. —
Beggars. — Bay of Naples ; Vesuvius, Sorrento, Pozzuoli, Baise, Cnmse, Lake
Avernus, River Styx, Elysian Fields. — Herculaneum and Pompeii.— National
Museum. — Cemeteries of Naples.
iLLrsTKATioN: Friczc of the Parthenon, 407.
XXXII.
ROME TO FLORENCE 418-430
Old Route to Rome. — Terracina.— Roman Frontier.-Passports.— Illumination at
Rome.— Present at two Councils. — Pius IX. and Herod.— Arch of Titus. — Sacred
Vessels of the Jewish Temple.— The Pantheon. — Anecdote of Charles V. — Bar-
berini.— Raphael's Skull. — The Tiber.— Overflow. — Catacombs: Origin; St. Se-
bastian and St. Agnese; Bodies; Inscriptions.— Sun shining on Rome. — Flor-
ence. — View from San Miniato. — Ufflzi and Pitti Palaces. — Pisa, Leaning Tower,
Galileo. — Chandelier. — Victor Emanuel. — Waldeuses. — Religious Liberty.
Illustratious: Ground-plan of the Catacombs, 428 Florence, from San Min-
iato, 434.
XXXIII.
VENICE HOMEWARD 436-455
Piercing the Apennines. — City of the Sea. — How to enjoy Venice. — Moonlight and
Midnight. — Bell of San Marco Vienna. — Change in Government. — Mausoleum
of Capncin Church.— Duke of Reichstadt-Maximilian.— Prague.— "The Bo-
hemian Fashion." — Tycho Brahe. — Huss. — Jerome. —Dresden. — Berlin. — Char-
lottenberg. — Wittenberg. — Luther and Melancthon. — Ninety-five Theses. — Pots-
dam.— Frederick the Great.— Cologne.— Cathedral.— The Rhine.— Worms. —
Weissenberg.— Strasbourg.— The Siege.— The War.— Nancy, Bar le Due, etc.—
Paris. — London. — Isle of Wight. —England. — Scotland. — Ireland. — Atlantic
Ocean. — Home again.
iLt.usTKATiON : Biugeu on the Rhine, 448.
AROUND THE WORLD.
I.
NEW YORK TO SALT LAKE.
A jorKNEY around the world is a very different under-
taking to-day from what it was when Magellan set his prow
toward the setting sun, and sailed onward — onward — until,
with the rising sun, his ships returned to the harbor of Se-
ville. It does not appear to have been well established,
even among scientific men of that day, that the earth was
round, and those who admitted the truth seem to have had a
strong apprehension that it would not be safe for naviga-
tors to venture too far over the other side ; they might not
be able to make their way up again. The ships, too, in
which tlies& early voyagers ventured out into unknown seas
were mere shallops compared with those which now trav-
erse every ocean. The vessels in which Columbus first
crossed the Atlantic are said to have been not more than a
hundred tons burden — less than half the tonnage of the
pleasure yachts whose safe passage over the same ocean
within a few years has been accounted a great nautical ex-
ploit. The ships of Magellan, which were the fii-st to com-
pass the globe, were two of 130 tons, two of 90, and one of
60. When, nearly half a century later, Sir Francis Drake
left the shores of England to sail around the world, the five
ships that composed his fleet numbered respectively 100.
80, 50, 30, and 15 tons. To attempt to cross any ocean at
the present day in snch vessels, much more to brave all the
B
13 AROUND THE WORLD.
pei'ils of the Eastern Seas, would be accounted a piece of
reckless hardihood. The heroism of those earlj navigators
of unexplored seas is beyond all praise.
For two centuries after it was iirst accomplished, the
voyage around the world was not made within less than
three years. This was the time consumed by the ships of
Magellan. He, unfortunately, did not live to share in the
linal glory of the achievement due to his genius and hero-
ism, having fallen in a conflict with the natives of the Phil-
ippine Islands the second year out. Sir Francis Drake was
three years in sailing round. Captain Cook was three
years in making each of his voyages ; and the last, in which
he also fell by the hands of savages, extended to four years.
Now the circuit is a mere holiday excursion, and may be
made in less than three months.
It was to me a coincidence of some interest that the day
(August 1, 1869) on which I had completed all my arrange-
ments for the journey of which some account is given in
the pages following was precisely three hundred and fifty
years from that on which the first circumnavigator of the
globe left the harbor of Seville. My plans for the journey had
been definitely made several months before, and a complete
programme of the entire tour prepared, including every
country that I expected to visit, and almost every day of
the year. I was desirous to leave immediately on the open-
ing of the Pacific Railroad, but I delayed in order to reach
the Japan and China Seas at a period of the year when
they are free from the typhoons which sweep over them
with destructive violence during the summer months, and
also to reach India just at the beginning of winter, the
only season in which a stranger can travel there with com-
fort or safety. The appointed time having arrived, we left
New York by the New Jersey Central Railroad, and on the
evening of the following day were in Chicago, where we
spent the night. I had telegraphed in advance for accom-
modations in the Pullman Pacific cars, which at that time
were running regularly no farther east than Chicago. On
NEW YORK TO SALT LAKE. 19
reaching the station of the Northwestern Road the next
morning, I was most agreeably surprised to find that Mr.
Pullman had set apart for the exclusive use of our party
one of his finest palace cars — the " Promontory," then en-
tirely new ; and that, to add still farther to the pleasure of
the excursion, the secretary of the company, Mr. Charles W.
Angell, in whom I recognized a former friend, had made
his arrangements to accompany us as far as Omaha, five
hundred miles on the way, to see us safely across the Mis-
souri River and out on the broad prairie. These moving
palaces have now become familiar to the traveling world,
but at the time we entered the " Promontory" it was an
event to find on wheels and to take with us a luxurious
home — a parlor by day, and ample staterooms by night, in
which we lived and slept with as much comfort as in a ho-
tel. And I may here add that in no other part of the
world did we find, either on land or on sea, such luxurious
accommodations, or travel in so much ease. We would
gladly have taken the same mode of conveyance all the
way round.
We crossed the Mississippi by the high bridge at Fulton,
and entered what then appeared to be the granary of the
West. The summer of 1869 had been so wet that from
the time of leaving New Jersey we did not see one fine
field of Indian corn until we entered Iowa, and the wheat
crop had also been severely affected ; but almost immedi-
ately after we crossed the Mississippi the corn-fields of the
West assumed their traditional grandeur, and the whole
country had a new face. In the evening we had an
illumination of our car, which was abundantly supplied
with lamps, concealed in the day by mirrors. Two Har-
vard students, bound westward on a hunting expedition
upon the prairies, called, and spent the evening with us,
and it passed away as rapidly as the train. Our first night
on the palace car was one of quiet repose, and the morning
brought us to Council Bluffs, on the Missouri, where we
were ferried over to Omaha, the bridge at this point being
20 AROUXD THE WORLD.
then in course of erection. Here M'e bade farewell to our
escort, and struck out into the wide regions of the West,
speeding onward and onward — one hundred miles after an-
other — never ascending a perceptible elevation, and scarce-
ly ever deviating from a straiglit line.
At North Bend, on the Platte River, we spoke a train
from San Francisco bound east. It was like meeting a
ship in mid-ocean. There was no little excitement as we
descried each other in the distance across the prairie ; and
when we halted at the station I displayed the Stars and
Stripes, which I carried not so much for protection as for
dear remembrance in the many and far-distant lands that
we were to visit. We had a few moments of hasty con-
versation and inquiry for the news from either direction,
and when the passengers by the other train learned that we
also were bound for New York, but by way of the setting
sun, they sent up three hearty cheers for the old flag and
for the party that was to bear it around the world. Amid
our answering cheers the trains moved off, east and west,
and were soon lost to each other in the distance.
Late in the day, after dining at Grand Island, I went
out on the engine to enjoy the excitement of scudding over
the wide ocean of land. We M'ere then beyond the sight
of homes, and the stations on the road were few and far
between. We overtook a troop of horses that were roam-
ing wild over the prairie. As they saw the train approach-
ing they selected the track for a race-course, and started for
the Pacific Ocean at the top of their speed. But the iron
horse was too much for them. Every now and then we
overhauled the coursers, when the shrill whistle of the en-
gine, instead of driving them from the track, only inspired
them with new vigor, and imparted fresh speed. A stern
chase is usually a long chase, but we I'an them down, and
they struck out into the prairie right and left. Then we
came upon a flock of pi-airie birds, which seemed possessed
with the idea that they could not escape from the lines of
telegraph poles and wires on either side of the railroad
NmV YORK TO SALT LAKE.
21
track, and for a long time we kept them company ; but at
length they also disappeared, and we had the coui-se all to
ourselves, and improved it well. The ride was excitino-
without fear of danger on the level plain, and as we haul-
ed up at the next station, the engineer took out his watch,
and, turning to me, said, " One hour and five minutes." On
my asking how many miles we had run between the two
stations, he said " Forty." And yet, so perfectly level, and
straight, and smooth was the road, that I had sat upon the
engine with as much ease as in the car.
At Plum Creek, where we were detained half an hour
by a heated axle, we found 150 United States soldiers sta-
tioned to guard the road against the Indians. I called on
the commanding officer at his tent near by, and learned
from him that a band of hostile Indians had crossed the
track a few nights before, about four miles below. Of
course I communicated the pleasing intelligence to the la-
dies, whose chief terror in undertaking the journey had
been the wild Indians on the Pacific Eailroad. But, to re-
assure them (as none of us had any extra hair that we wish-
ed to lose), I got out my revolvei', and, lest some one should
be hurt, took the precaution not to load the dangerous weap-
on, and no hostile savages made their appearance that night.
The next morning broke upon us nearly 500 miles west
from Omaha. We were then ascending the Black Hills,
the highest elevation on the Pacific Road, the station at
Sherman being 8264 feet above the sea level. The coun-
try was beginning to assume the air of desolation which
marks the Great American Desert. On all sides were roll-
ing hills, to which the antelopes that we scared up in great
numbers bounded off with the fleetness of the wind, after
pausing for a moment to examine the cars. They were
frequently within rifle-shot. Whole counties of prairie-dog
villages skirted the road, the curious little animals usually
sitting bolt upright on their haunches, like statues, on the
tops of their houses, or scampering away as we passed their
towns.
22
AROUND THE WORLD.
rKAIlllK-noU VILLAGE,
Cheyenne was at that time the most populous city on the
line of the road west of Omaha, although it was less than
two years old. On account of its relative importance, we
had selected it as the most desirable place for stopping to
spend the Sabbath. After breakfasting, I asked one of
the oldest inhabitants, an intelligent-looking youth, what
was the population of their city. He replied very serious-
ly that about a year ago it was 12,000, but they had shot,
and hung, and killed so many it now numbered only 4000.
We congratulated ourselves that we had concluded to go
farther on, and accordingly, about noon on Saturday, we
left the train, and found comfortable quarters at the hotel
at Laramie City.
This place is situated on the table-land known as Lara-
mie Plains — an immense plateau 7134 feet above the level
of the sea, without a mountain or hill in sight, looking north
A'-mV YORK TO SALT LAKE.
23
or south, but with tlie Black Hills on the east, and tlie
Kocky Mountains, with their perpetual snow, on the west.
From our windows we looked across the vast plain direct-
ly out into the deep ether, just as one looks across the ocean
into the sky, the rotundity of the earth being as distinct iu
the one case as the other. The view of the Rocky Moun-
tains, on the west, was grand beyond description. They
seemed to come almost to our feet, although they were in
reality some 60 miles distant, and in that perfectly clear
atmosphere it was a calm delight just to sit and gaze upon
the mighty chain with which the Almighty had bound to-
gether this vast continent. I had heard it said on the way
that it never rains on Laramie Plains, but we had not been
there more than two hours before the rain commenced
jwuring in torrents, and it continued to come down as abun-
dantly for at least an hour, giving us a supply of wholesome
water, which can not be found for a thousand miles on the
Pacific Railroad.
The Sabl)ath passed pleasantly. In the morning we at-
tended the service of the Rev. Mr. Cornell, an Episcopal
missionary, and in the evening I addressed an assembly of
residents and miners, who filled the largest public room in
the town. At the close of the evening service, many whom
we had met as perfect strangers gathered round us, and we
were detained long by our mutual expressions of interest
in finding that we had common sympathies and hopes,
though belonging to many diiferent branches of the Chris-
tian family. The place, we were assured, was not what it
was a year before. It had been thinned out by the process
resorted to in the neighboring city of Cheyenne. We heard
accounts of summary executions having taken place in the
streets, but a more orderly or quiet town of two thousand
inhabitants on a Sunday I have never seen in any part of
the country.
Taking the train again at noon on Monday, we crossed
the Plains, and commenced the ascent of the Rocky Moun-
tains, if ascent it could be called when we passed up and over
24 AROUND THE WORLD.
them so gradually that we did not know it. We had been
in sight of the distant peaks for two days while stopping
at Laramie City ; but there were no lofty ranges to cross,
and no mountains towering above us, until long after we
began the descent on the other side. It was simply a scene
of wild desolation — utter barrenness, as if the soil had been
cursed that it should not bring forth. There was only an ^
occasional bunch of wild sage, almost as dreary looking as
the barren soil. One who has not seen this portion of the
Pacific Eailroad, and other portions of the Great American
Desert for nearly a thousand miles in extent, can form no
idea of the dreary waste that stretches on and on, until the
eye longs to rest on something fresh and green, or even upon
a rock ; for, contrary to all our ideas of the Rocky Moun-
tains, not a rock was to be seen in this portion of the route.
It was not until we entered the Echo Caiion that the
mountains assumed any grandeur ; but here, and in the
Weber Canon, a scene of wonderful magnificence opened
upon us. On one hand (the left in passing westward) all
is smooth — not a rock to be seen, although the mountains
rise to a sublime height from the bed of the Weber Hi ver;
but the opposite side of the narrow defile is composed of
towering rocks, assuming all forms of magnificent pi-opor-
tions, sometimes towering up in vast precipices toward the
skies, and at others stretching out over the road, or assum-
ing grotesque shapes. It was in the Echo Canon that Brig-
ham Young threatened to destroy the army of General
Sidney Johnston by rolling rocks down upon them as they
marched through the narrow causeway, when the army
was sent to look after the Mormons. The passage of the
river and the railroad out of this weird region into the Salt
Lake Yalley is called the Devil's Gate. The name was
given on account of the fearful wildness of the scenery to
which it leads, but it is equally appropriate as leading to
the moral scene to which it introduces the traveler as he
enters the Salt Lake Valley. Echo City is the border town
of tlie Moi'mon Territory of Utah.
THE M0R3I0NS.
25
VIEW ON SALT LAKE.
II.
THE MOKMONS.
At Uintah Station, about a mile from the " Devil's
Gate," we left the cars and took stage for Salt Lake City,
thirty-five miles distant. The branch railroad was not
then completed. The stage-road was rough and stony for
a few miles, but the greatest inconvenience arose from the
innumerable little streams which crossed it, as the means
of irrigating the whole eastern j^ortion of the valley. Many
of these water- courses are natural, but others have been
made by divisions and subdivisions, in order to carry the
water to parts which could not otherwise be irrigated. The
streams are seldom bridged, and the gullies made in the
loose soil were a great source of discomfort to the stage
traveler, to whom they prove too decidedly anti-dyspeptic
for a pleasure excursion. But the stages and horses were
26 AROUND THE WORLD.
good, and the ride, whicli was accomplished within about
live hours, I would not have lost, even at the cost of a more
severe shaking than we received. It gave us a fine oppor-
tunity for seeing the marvelous transformation of a desert
into fruitful fields. Compared with what it was when the
Mormons entered it twenty-one years before, the valley
was more like a creation than the result of human skill
and labor, and yet the change has been wrought almost ex-
clusively by irrigation. The vast mountain barrier which
stretches along the eastern portion of the valley is an im-
mense fountain, streams of the purest water issuing from
its sides at every point, and furnishing the means by which
this once arid desert has been converted into one of the
most fertile plains to be found on the face of the continent.
When the Mormons entered this valley, it was like the des-
olate mountains over wdiich we had passed for hundreds of
miles — a perfect waste of sand and wild sage, or devil's
bush; but, within a little more than twenty years from
their first immigration, they had extended a line of farms
along the eastern shore of the lake, sixty miles in extent —
farms that equal in fertility the finest prairies in the East.
We traversed thirty -five miles of these cultivated fields,
and every mile only increased our admiration of the re-
sults of this system of utilizing pure mountain water. The
most beautiful crops of wheat formed the staple produc-
tion — beautiful not alone because they were abundant, but
because ripened and harvested, so far as they had been
gathered, without a drop of rain, the straw and the ear so
bright that they shone like silver in the sun. The fields of
Indian corn and sorghum were standing up more luxuriant
and taller than any we had seen east of the Mississippi,
and equal to any we had seen in Iowa. The orchards on
every fsCrm were loaded with fruit, some of it ripening, but
the most in about the same stage as at the East in the same
latitude. The roadside, for the greater part of the way
from Uintah to Salt Lake City, was a succession of apple,
and plum, and peach orchards; the fruit, especially the
THE MORMONS.
27
apples, of large size, and the trees literally bending to the
ground with their burdens.
A.t Salt Lake City, Governor Durkee, in speaking of the
wonderful fertility of the valley under Mormon tillage,
said he could point out to me a lot of ten acres which had
produced 900 bushels of wheat at a single crop ; and Mr.
Hooper, the delegate to Congress from Utah, also stated to
me that there were in the agricultural bureau of the Terri-
tory records of the production of wheat at the rate of 93
bushels to the acre. These, of course, were exceptional
cases, and were the result of manuring as well as irrigation,
and the most careful cultivation. By the same system of
irrigation. Salt Lake City, which had not a tree or shrub
when it was first settled by the Mormons, is now a park of
locust and cottonwood-trees, the former raised entirely
from the seed, and the latter transplanted from the canons
in the mountains. Every street has its stream of water,
and every garden in its turn is regularly w^atered under
the direction of commissioners. This is certainly a won-
derful change for a score of years. One can not but ad-
mire the enterprise which has created a garden out of a
vast desert, but the amount of labor expended in preparing
the soil for cultivation has been small compared with the
toil of the early pioneers at the East, who had dreary for-
ests to clear away before they could go to work upon the
soil itself. Here the settlers had only to turn the water
uj^on the soil, and the work was almost done.
This is the outside of Mormonism, and fair enough it is.
The plague-spot, the corrupt system, of imposture and delu-
sion, is in the homes of the Salt Lake City and Valley. I
went to Salt Lake City to learn upon the spot what Mor-
monism is ; and having had the best opportunities for ac-
quiring the information desired, I came away thoroughly
convinced that it is a system of the grossest iniquity, and,
on the part of the leaders, an arrant imposture upon a
poor deluded people. There is much to admire in the ma-
terial prosperity of the Territory, in the industry, order, and
28 AROUND TEE WORLD.
public spirit of the people, and even in tlie administration
of affairs by the Mormon leaders ; but one needs only to
examine with a careful eye, and to reflect upon what he
learns, in order to be convinced that the spirit and purposes
of the whole thing are selfish and wicked. I have never
met with any person, man or woman, who, having been at
Salt Lake City, wishes to go there again. The feeling of
disgust which comes over a stranger on entering the place
increases every hour ; and when once the city is left be-
hind, a sense of relief springs uj) as if a load were taken off
the shoulders. The very atmosphere seems loaded with a
moral pestilence, and an indescribable feeling of shame
comes over the mind as we walk the streets and meet with
men and women who are living lives which ought to be
lives of shame to them. I did not call to pay my respects
to Brigham Young simply because I had no respects to
pay to such a man, in such a house as he keeps. Immedi-
ately upon reaching Salt Lake City I received from a Mor-
mon high in position a polite invitation to call upon " the
President," which I as politely declined. I could learn
nothing from him tliat I could not learn more satisfactorily
and more reliably elsewhere, and I had no mawkish curios-
ity to gratify. I became satisfied, from what I heard while
there, that great injury lias been done to the Mormons
themselves, and that tliere has been much compromise of
dignity, if not of principle, by visitors of all ranks, and
among them Christians and Christian ministers, who have
shown an eagerness to be presented to the arch-leader of
Mormonism. The inference which the Mormon people
draw is, that he must be a great and good man when the
great and the good wish to pay him reverence ; and Brig-
ham Young himself is puffed up by the attentions which
are shown him by persons from the outer world.
The Mormon people generally are sincere, devout be-
lievers in the system of religion which they have adopted,
and in the men who rule over them. They are an igno-
rant class, gathered from the lowest walks of life, and have
THE MORMONS.
29
no means of acquiring knowledge but through Mormon
sources. The schools which they sustain do not afford the
mea,ns of real education, although one or two of them have
been greatly improved of late. The sale of books and of
all sorts of literature, standard and periodical, at the book-
stores in the city, is made almost exclusively to " Gentiles,"
and it would be very difficult to diffuse light among the
Mormons. They have, almost without exception, implicit
confidence in their spiritual rulers, who, they are taught to
believe, are divinely commissioned to exercise authority
over them, and whose integrity it would be a sin to call in
question. The leaders, on the other hand, I believe to be
as unscrupulous a set of men as can be found. There
doubtless are some exceptions, but these exceptional cases
are not among those who are admitted to the councils of
the actual rulers of the community. The system of Mor-
monism, as now administered, has three foundation stones
— Love of Power, Avarice, and Lust : on these it I'ests,
and it has no better basis, as facts patent to every intelli-
gent visitor will show.
The system, to begin with, was an arrant imposture, not
having even the redeeming feature of fanaticism to excuse
those who concocted it. It has been kept up by impostors,
who pretend to have received divine revelations to carry
out their plans. And w^iat are their purposes % Here is
a large community, gathered from all parts of the world,
living under an absolute despotism. The people have no
share in the government, although living under the protec-
tion of a republic. The form of voting is a mere sham, as
the rulers know just how every man votes, and he must
needs vote one way. The acts of the rulers, especially in
their financial affairs, are sometimes submitted to the ap-
proval of the people in public assembly, but in such a man-
ner that they can form no judgment, and they are all vir-
tually compelled to liold up their hands together. Every
thing is under the control of a few men who pretend to a
divine commission to rule the people. No ideas of repub-
30 ABOUND THE WORLD.
lican freedom, of personal responsibility and rights, are
permitted to enter the minds of the community; and the
whole police system is so perfect that it is next to impossi-
ble for them to acquire such ideas. The leaders, too, are
perfectly unscrupulous in the exercise of their power. I
could give instances, which I have received on the best au-
thority, in which they have not hesitated to instigate crime
and to authorize acts which no man would dare to execute
on his own responsibility, but in the performance of which
the willing tools are found in an obedient jDeople, who are
taught that the voice of the tyrants is the voice of God.
Can any one doubt that these men, the rulers, are keeping
up this delusion for the sake of perpetuating their own
power ?
Again, we find a large, industrious, frugal community
toiling on their farms, paying into the public treasury one
tenth of all their productions, often called upon to con-
tribute to public improvements, and, besides this, heavil}^
mortgaged in person and property to pay off all the ex-
penses of emigration and settlement. I have heard a great
deal said about the benevolence of the Mormon authorities
in bringing these poor people from distant parts of the
world and settling tliem upon comfortable farms, but lib-
erality is one of the last ideas that have been entertained
in connection with the matter. Every cent is charged to
the emigrant, and must be paid with enormous interest, so
that it is, in reality, a grand money-making system. This
is proved from the fact that the rulers of this people are
rolling up large fortunes. A great portion of the people's
money goes into the public treasury, but not one of the
people knows what becomes of it after that. There are
pretended financial reports, but no auditors. Brigham
Young snaps his fingers in the face of his inferior officers,
and asks them if tliey have confidence in him ; and when
they reply, as they must, that they have confidence, he tells
them tliat is enough. Faith is all that is necessary. Brig-
liam Young is immensely wealthy, and lives like a prince,
THE MORMONS.
31
and the rulers, as a general thing, are rapidly acquiring
wealth. While these men are preaching to the people self-
denial and devotion to the public interest, and calling for
their money without stint, no one can doubt that they them-
selves are governed by the greed of gold.
There is another foundation stone to the system. Al-
most every man who is able to support more than one wife
has more, but any person who visits the Territory, and
learns what every one can learn, and yet imagines that re-
ligion, or any thing but the basest passions of man's ani-
mal nature had or has any thing to do w^ith this part of the
system, must be very credulous. For instance, I saw and
conversed with one man, now more than seventy years of
age, who formerly lived in a New England town, and mar-
ried, in his early life, a New England woman. He joined
the Mormons with his w^ife, and when she was getting
somewhat in years he took another wife, of course a young
one; and now that the second is getting older, he has just
taken a young girl of eighteen. Can any one doubt his
motives ? Brigham Young's wives are differently enumer-
ated from thirty-five to forty. Ileber Kimball had four-
teen when he died a short time since. The pretense that a
woman can not be saved, in the highest sense, without be-
ing married, and other like impostures connected with this
part of the system, only add a darker, fouler stain to the
character of these men, who are living to fulfill the lusts of
the flesh.
The condition of the women is deplorable. They liave
adopted the system of Mormonism as a religion ; they con-
fide in their rulers, believing them to be honest, but they
regard polygamy as a cross, and speak of it as such; a
cross which they are bound to bear, while, with scarcely
an exception, every woman would prefer to be an only
wife. Many wear this cross in deep sorrow, such as the
circumstances would naturally produce. From extensive
inquiry of those who had every opportunity to be well in-
formed, I became satisfied that the women of the Mormon
32 AROUND THE WORLD.
community are far from being satisfied with their state,
whatever representations to the contrary may have been
made. I was told by a gentleman who had conversed
with some of Brigham Young's daughters, who are com-
paratively well educated, that they declared positively they
would never marrj^ a man who had another wife.
The future of Mormonism — what is to come of it, and
what is to come out of it — are questions of no little mo-
ment to the American people. We have among us a com-
munity aspiring to be a sovereign state ; until the opening
of the Pacific Railroad, isolated by its position from tlie
rest of our country, but now brought into direct communi-
cation with all parts of the land ; a thriving people, con-
stantly increasing by emigration from other countries ;
with social institutions not only opposed, but abhorrent to
the great mass of the nation ; the leaders, and the people
with them, contemning the authority of the general gov-
ermnent, and resisting it when they dare ; and all this dis-
loyalty sustained and intensified by fanaticism. What is
to come of it ?
After studying the subject upon the ground, my appre-
hensions of any real difiiculty in dealing with the matter,
either by moral means or by governmental authority, have
subsided. There are no signs of relenting or of voluntary
submission on the part of the rulers, nor will there be while
they can in security retain power and make money out of
the people as they are now doing, and living in the unre-
strained indulgence of their lusts. There are no signs of
any extensive disaffection on the part of the people. They
are an ignorant class, have little opportunity of becoming
better informed; they have adopted the system from re-
ligious motives, and have given themselves up to it with
blind devotion.
But there are elements at work which I have no doubt
will, ei'e long, lead to an explosion, so that the whole thing
shall go to pieces of itself, even without the employment
of military or extra-judicial force. Were there no other
THE 2I0BM0NS.
33
ground of discord, it is not to be expected that the people,
who are now getting into communication with the rest of
the world by means of the Pacific Railroad, will long re-
main blind to the character of the despotism that is exer-
cised over them, or that they will continue to pour their
money into the coffers of a few rapacious men who are
rolliug up wealth. Some of the more successful have al-
ready declined paying their tithes, and have been cut off
from the Church. There were pointed out to me at Salt
Lake City the elegant residences of four brothers, together
worth half a million of dollars or more, w^ho came some
time since to the point at which, in their opinion, compli-
ance with the increasing demands of Brigham Young and
his apostles ceased to be a virtue. One of them sent five
hundred dollars in payment of tithes. Brigham sent it
back, saying it was not enough. Tlie man coolly put the
money into his pocket, telling the avaricious rulers that he
would henceforward do his own tithing and administer
his own charities. They are all now independent of the
Church. Some men must acquire intelligence ; this will
extend, and it is not in the nature of man, especially in this
age of the world, to submit to such absolute tyranny as is
exercised by the Mormon rulers.
Then, again, these rulers, governed alike by selfish mo-
tives, are likely to fall out among themselves. There is
already more or less jealousy of Brigham's power and in-
creasing wealth, and the world will ere long have another
illustration of the adage, " When rogues fall out, honest
men will get their dues." At the time of my visit at Salt
Lake a cloud was rising which threatened no good to
Brigham Young and his fellows. Two of Joe Smith's sons
had appeared on the stage, and were preaching a reforma-
tion to crowded houses. Where a corrupt hierarchy de-
pend on divine revelations for their authority, it is easy to
get up counter-revelations. The legend which these young
Smiths had just brought to Salt Lake was that, previous to
his death, Joe Smith, the original pi-ophet and leader of tlie
C
34 AROUND THE WORLD.
Mormons, had predicted the birth of a son by a favorite
wife, who should be his successor in the Church. This he
had by revelation. Five months after the death of Joseph
the son was born, was named David, and now, at the age
of twenty-three, he comes, with his brother Alexander, to
claim the headship of the Church and the leadership of
the people. lie denounces polygamy, as opposed to the
principles and revelations of his father, inculcates loyalty
to the government of the United States, and does not hesi-
tate to reflect upon the despotism and avarice of the pres-
ent rulers. He could not stay in Salt Lake City a day but
for the protection of the United States authorities and
arms, especially the latter (nor, indeed, would any Gentile's
life be worth insuring for a single night were it not for
the big guns of the United States troops on the hill over-
looking Salt Lake City) ; but he M^as fearlessly holding
forth to crowded assemblies on the abuses of Mormonism,
and the apostles and elders were replying to his statements
and strictures. There are so many indications of dissen-
sion in tlie Mormon community that I feel confident it will
go to pieces by its own rottenness, and I trust that its disso-
lution is not very far distant.
I do not attempt any description of Salt Lake City ; of
its remarkable growth in the desert from nothing to a well-
built town of twenty or twenty-five thousand inhabitants ;
of the Tabernacle (which is complete), and of its great or-
gan, one of the largest in the world, which has been years
in building ; of the Temple, the foundations of which only
were laid. These were not what I went to see so much as
Mormonism itself. I studied it to my satisfaction, and
hailed the morning on which I took my leave of the place,
even though the daylight had not dawned when I took my
seat in the stage. When it came light I noticed among
our fellow-passengers a lady and gentleman whom I had
seen alight from the stage only the evening before. I aft-
erward learned that they had come with the expectation of
spending a week, but the lady was so disgusted with all she
CALIFORNIA.
35
saw and heard that slie entreated her husband to take her
away at once, and before daylight they were outward
bound.
Soon after daylight, when we were a few miles out of
Salt Lake City, we picked up two passengers who were on
foot. I was seated on the top of the coach, and, as one of
them took a seat below me, something heavy in his coat-
flap fell upon my toes. I thought I recognized a revolver,
and said to him, " I perceive that you are prepared to take
care of yourself." He turned, and looked me in the face
in order to scan my motive in speaking to him, and then
gave me his history. He had been in business in Salt Lake
City, and, becoming obnoxious to the Mormons, learned
that his life was in danger, and fearing assassination, had
left in the night, prepared to sell his life dear if attacked.
At a safe distance from the Cit}' of the Saints he mounted
the coach, with the intention of looking out for a part of
the country more conducive to longevity than he had rea-
son to fear Salt Lake City or Valley would prove.
III.
CALIFORNIA.
After this episode at Salt Lake City we resumed oui-
journey by the Pacific Railroad at Uintah, and soon reach-
ed the western half of the great thoroughfare, the Central
Pacific ; not the half in distance, but much more than half
in the boldness of the undertaking and in the grandeur of
achievement. Leading over the al)rupt heights of the Sier-
ra Nevada Mountains (which might, with great propriet}",
exchange names with the Rocky Mountains, for rocky ele-
vations and precipices abound far more in the former than
in the latter), the work to be accomplished on the Central
Pacific was far more forbidding than any thing upon the
36
AROUND THE WORLD.
Union Pacific. By the force of a mighty engine, and oc-
casionally with a double team of iron horses, we climbed
the dizzy heights, and wormed our way along the sides of
the mountains. At different points we could look from
the car window down the precipitous rocks into the ravine,
more than fiften hundred feet below. Cape Horn, a bold
promontory, around which the road makes a sharp curve at
this elevation, is as famous among Pacific Pailroad travel-
ers, and almost as much of a terror, as the cape from which
it takes its name is to navigators. The twenty-five miles
of close snow-sheds through which we passed (since in-
creased, I l)elieve, to thirty or forty), were a more curious
Jilfcfe:...
ON TUE 8IEKKA NEVADA8.
CALIFORNIA.
37
than pleasing portion of the passage. We could only now
and then, through the interstices of the sheds, catch a
glimpse of the wild and grand scenery which marks this
part of the road. Before we commenced the ascent of the
Sierra Nevadas the thermometer which I carried with me
stood at 89 degrees in the Salt Lake Yalley. When we
reached the summit, early the next morning, the same ther-
mometer indicated 34: degrees. We were then at an ele-
vation of 7000 feet, and it was August 14th. When we
reached the California plain in the afternoon of the same
day the mercury was again at 88.
My views of the importance of the Pacific Railroad to
the country and to the world have been greatly enlarged,
not only by passing over it, but still more by observing in
foreign countries, and even in the very heart of Asia, the
influence which it is already exerting upon the intercourse
and the ideas of the world at large. There was no enter-
prise connected with our country that awakened such inter-
est in the East as this. All over India it was the theme of
earnest incpiiry ; and, when I had crossed the Sewalic range
of the Plimalaya Mountains, and reached the beautiful and
fertile valley of Dehra Doon, I was earnestly entreated by
the English and American residents to deliver a public
lecture on the Pacific Railroad, of which they had heard
much, and wished to hear still more. On my return south
from the Himalayas I met at Allahabad the report of the
commission appointed by the East India government to
visit this country and examine our railroads, and especially
the Pacific Road. Their report was quite as enthusiastic
and laudatory as one emanating from the companies them-
selves could be. In my opinion, tlie value of the road as
an immediate channel of commerce has been overestima-
ted. No railroad — not all the railroads in the world can
carry on the commerce of the world. They are limited in
capacity, and a great passenger route can never become a
great channel for the transportation of freight. This is
especially true of a single track road, and more especially
38 ABOUND THE WORLD.
true of a road of such immense length as the Pacific, on
which passenger trains are liable to be detained, and must
have the precedence over freight. It will be as impossible
to carry on the commerce of the world over one or more
railroad tracks as to carry on the entire correspondence of
the world over a single telegraph wire. The passenger
business of the Pacific Road must nearly, if not altogether,
absorb its capacity of locomotion ; but its vast importance,
even in a commercial point of view, will be enhanced rath-
er than diminished by this result. It is to be the great me-
dium of communication between the different parts of the
world ; and while actual commerce — the transportation of
the products of the earth, and of the skill of different na-
tions — must liave a channel of greater capacity, the com-
mercial intercourse of the world will receive from the com-
pletion of this and similar works a stimulus which has nev-
er been fully estimated, and the value of the road to its
enterprising proprietors, as well as to the world at large,
will be increased instead of being diminished by this very
restriction.
The grand enterprise of the century is to be the ship
canal across the Isthmus of Darien. Commerce must have
water for its channel ; it must have a channel of such ca-
pacity that there will be no occasion for breaking up car-
goes ; and the nearest approach to a natural union of the
two oceans will be a canal of sufficient depth and breadth
to allow the largest ordinary steamers and sailing vessels
to pass through without transshipment of goods. It has
been a matter of surprise that our government and om*
capitalists have not taken hold of this great scheme with
more determination to have it carried through to comple-
tion. I know many of the difficulties wliich lie in the
way, international and economical, but it is an enterprise
of such vast importance to the country and to the world
that it ought to be begun at once, and completed as soon
as it can be done, if a practical route can be found.
It was late Saturday evening when \ce reached San Fran-
CALIFORNIA.
39
CISCO. More than two weeks before I had written to the
proprietor of the Lick House engaging rooms for 10 o'clock
of that evening, and I note it as one of the many indica-
tions of precision in modern travel that, although I was
nearly a fortnight on the way from New York to the Pa-
cific, including different pauses of a day or two at a time,
I was never an hour behind time on the Pacific Railroad,
and I reached the hotel at San Francisco within an hour
of the time I had named some weeks before. The entire
journey around the world was marked by nearly the same
exactness, of which I may have occasion to speak from
time to time.
A week passed in the city of the Golden Gate, and I
found myself still in a maze. I did not lose my conscious-
ness during the long journey from the Atlantic to the Pa-
cific. It was all a reality when, after spending two or
three days in traversing the older states, we crossed the
Missouri and swept out upon the broad prairies of Ne-
braska, and over the Black Hills, and then over the Rocky
Mountains, and through the Great Salt Lake Pasin, and
over the Sierra Nevadas. All this was real. Neither the
time nor the way seemed long, although it was not difficult
to comprehend that we were actually spanning the conti-
nent.
Seven days and seven nights of steady travel upon a
smooth road, behind a locomotive, will tell upon any dis-
tance ; and when, early on the morning of the seventh day
of actual journeying, we crossed the summit of the Sierra
Nevada Mountains, we strained our eyes to catch a glimpse
of the broad Pacific, although it lay a long day's journey
out of sight. As we descended the magnificent slope we
felt sure that we were coming into the Golden State, and
when we saw the wheat-fields, and vineyards, and the abun-
dance of luscious fruits at the railway stations greeted our
eyes and then our palates, we became more and more
pleasantly assured that we were within the borders of Cal-
ifornia, the cornucopia of the country.
40 AROUND THE WOULD.
Darkness had gathered over ns before we crossed the
bay and entered San Francisco, so that we could form little
conception of the city. But when, the next morning, on
going out into the streets on our way to church, instead of
a mushroom city of twenty years, made up of rough boards
and canvas, like the new cities throngh which we had
passed along the line of the Pacific Road, we found our-
selves in an old established town, with broad streets and
magnificent stone buildings, as substantial and imposing in
appearance as those of cities which have been built for
centuries, I could not make it real that this was San Fran-
cisco, a city not yet twenty-one years of age. It was more
like one of the creations of Aladdin's Lamp. The oldest
inhabitants were those that came in 1849, and it was not a
little curious to find in so large a city so many who came
a7ino torhis conditm. To the inquiry, "How long have you
been in California ?" the answer seemed almost invariably
"Twenty years ; I came in 1849." These old settlers have
a sort of pre-emption right, of which they are not a little '
proud, as well they may be.
San Francisco is something to be proud of, but of one
thing I should never boast, and that is of its chmate. Dur-
ing the month of August we had not one day of genial or
even moderately comfortable weather. Cold fogs in the
morning, and cold winds during nearly all of the twenty-
four hours, made np our experience. With the winds from
the ocean, wliich sweep over the sand-hills, come storms of
sand and dust that are excessivelj'^ annoying, and from
which there is no escape. The weather at that season of
the year is so cold that ladies wear their furs, and gentle-
men go clad or armed with heavy overcoats. Winter is
said to be the real summer of San Francisco, and I would
fain believe it is so ; yet Californians speak in terms of
admiration of the very weather that penetrated our bones.
But the old proverb, de gustihus etc., I presume, is as ap-
plicable to the gusts of San Francisco as to any others.
A few miles from the coast the weather is mild and de-
CALIFORNIA.
41
lightful ; farther inland it becomes intensely hot, and a^-ain
upon the high lands it becomes delightfully cool.
Of the sights and scenes in and around San Francisco I
mention but one. Between the city and the ocean there is
a neck of land, a high promontory of sand six or seven
miles wide. The great drive of the town is across this
promontory to the shore, where the waves come rolling in
to rest after their long journey from Japan and China.
About three hundred yards from the land two rugged rocks
rise abruptly out of the water to the height of seventy-five
feet, covering an area of perhaps an acre each. These
rocks are the property and the habitations of an immense
colony of sea-lions, as they are called, or seals, who hold un-
disturbed possession, and who are protected in their right
of property and from all injury by statute law. Some of
these sea-lions are of enormous size ; and it is an arausino-
sight, which never loses its interest, to watch them in their
clumsy efforts to climb to the very pinnacles of the rocks
by means of their tins and tails. They often come in con-
flict struggling for \\\e high places, and then we are sure to
hear the loud disputation, nnlike any controversy which I
have ever heard before, their fierce growls and barks being
heard above the noise of old Ocean, whose waves are con-
stantly breaking on the shore. There are seals of all sizes,
from the tiny cubs to the strong old settlers, who look as if
they might have been masters of the rock for a hundred
years. I doubt if there is another such scene to be witness-
ed any where upon the earth or sea ; and the great curiosi-
ty is, that these undomesticated denizens of two elements
are living in a community of their own, almost within
stone's throw of a frequented shore, in as wild a state as
when the continent was discovered, constantly within the
sound of human voices, and yet as apparently unconscious
of the vicinity of man as if they were a thousand miles
from land.
California is a great state. I have been informed of that
fact rej^eatedly, and by those who have lived in it long
42 AROUND THE WORLD.
enough to know whereof they aflh-ni ; but it is, in truth, a
great state. In territory it is equal to all New England,
New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and a part
of Delaware. It is not only large enough, north and south,
to constitute several climes, but it has a remarkable variety
of climate within a narrow compass. If variety is the spice
of life, California is the spiciest country to live in that I
have found in all my wanderings. I have never before
been where chills and fever were so prevalent. I. do not
mean the terrible disease bearing that name, of which I
have a greater dread than of the yellow fever, but the al-
ternate shakings and warmings which one gets in passing
from one part of the state to another. The morning that
I came into it (August 15th, at 5 o'clock) the thermometer,
as I have already stated, stood in the car window on the
Pacific Railroad at 34°, only two degrees above freezing.
At 2 o'clock the same clay, farther west, the same thermom-
eter stood at 88. This, it is true, was on different planes ;
but one may "shiver and shake" day after day at San
Francisco, and an hour's sail will take him into the bland-
est atmosphere. In going up to Stockton, we left San
Francisco August 23d, at 3 o'clock P.M., wrapped up in
our warmest winter cloaks and overcoats, and stopping at
Benicia, only thirty miles distant and on the same plane.
we cast off our wraps and stepped into the most delightful
summer weather, and saw the sun go down in a sea of gold
— a sensation and a sight w^hich we had not enjoyed since
our arrival. During the same journey the weather would
be intensely warm during the da}^, and, in the same locali-
ty, by midnight we would find ourselves searching, half
awake, for all the stray clothes within reach, and in the
morning the thermometer would indicate frost. The same
diversity and variations of temperature prevail in almost
every portion of the state, and in some places that I have
visited I have been informed that the thermometer rises
frequently as high as 110, and even 120 in the shade.
One of the wonders of this great state is that every
CALIFORNIA.
43
thing does not die out utterly in the summer, and leave the
valleys ever after as barren as the granite rocks of the walls
of the Yosemite. Not a drop of rain falls in the summer
in the great valleys which are the agricultural regions of
the state. In passing through these valleys in the montli
of August, they do not give the slightest signs of vegeta-
tion, excepting the trees, which are sparse. The ground is
apparently as dry as an ash-heap fresh from the burning.
You may travel all day long and never see a blade of
grass, nor even a green weed ; but, as soon as the fall rains
commence, the hills and valleys are clothed with the rich-
est verdure, another year's crop of grass and grain comes
on, and the once arid slopes and plains are burdened with
the harvest. Vegetation must have some strange power of
lying dormant and then springing into life, or there must
be latent moisture in the soil which preserves it from per-
ishing, for, while the surface of the earth is without the
least evidence of vegetable life, the fruit and ornamental
trees, whose roots strike deeper into the soil, are as luxuri-
ant in their growth and in their foliage as if rain had fall-
en every day in the year. It is no uncommon thing to see
a vineyard or plantation of fruit-trees in full and green
leaf, and loaded with the richest fruit, standing in the midst
of a perfectly arid tract of country, and this, too, without
irrigation. My partial examination of California has satis-
tied me that agriculture in all its branches is to be the great
interest of the state, and, indeed, it is so now.
The fruits of California have not equaled my expecta-
tions. It is true, the rage for mammotli productions, mam-
moth vegetables and fruits, of wliich we heard so much in
the early settlement of the state, has given place to a more
sensible attention to quality ; but, even with this improve-
ment, the fruits generally are not equal in flavor to those
of the Eastern States. They grow in a profusion that is
without any parallel within the range of my observation,
and with so little cultivation that they seem almost to be
spontaneous ; they have a smoothness and perfection of
44 AROUND THE WORLD.
form whicli gives them the beauty of flowers ; I have seen
trees loaded with fruits of the largest size on which an im-
perfect specimen could scarcely be found, and yet, when
they come to be eaten, they do not fulfill their bright prom-
ise. The first, and, as it was said, the finest of the peaches
had disappeared before we arrived ; but those which we
have eaten, although magnificent in appearance and rich in
color, have been without the flavor that the peaches at the
East preserve throughout the season. It is, perhaps, too
early to form a judgment of the apples ; but I have tried
many varieties, and, while they are fair to look upon — ex-
ceeding in size and smoothness all the productions of the
Eastern States, so that, to judge merely from their external
appearance, one might suppose that this fruit, as well as
many others, had taken a new lease of life for the Pacific
coast, and had entered upon an entirely new career — I have
not tasted a good apple in California. This fruit, even
more than others, is without flavor and witliout juice. Such
quinces as I have seen growing in various parts of the state,
among the mountains as well as in the valleys and on the
plains, I never even imagined before. They grow to an
enormous size, and are as smooth as an orange — quite dif-
ferent, taking a whole tree together, from any thing with
which I have been familiar, and there can be little fear
that this fruit is not sufficiently highly flavored.
But the glory of California fruit is its pears and grapes.
The former grow with a luxuriance and rapidity, and with
such abundance of large and luscious-looking fruit bending
the trees to the earth, that, on entering any of the fruit-
orchards, a stranger is compelled to break out continually
in astonishment. All varieties of pears, if not actually in-
digenous to the soil, have found in Calif oi'nia their true
home, and many of them, at least, are as delicious as they
are finely developed. Some specimens of this fruit, in
years past, have been a wonder at the East ; but there are
a few more left. Pears have become so abundant — even
the choicest varieties — that they have actually become a
CALIFORNIA.
45
drug in the market; and Jjartletts which will weigh a
pound, and which blush when you simply look at them,
will scarcely jmy for sending them to market. I was at a
ranch not an hour's distance from San Francisco, contain-
ing all kinds of fruit and pears of every variety, hundreds
of bushels of such fruit as was never seen in any other
country, the owner of which said he should leave it all to
rot upon the trees, as it would not pay for the picking.
Grapes grow every where in the state with the greatest
luxuriance, and spontaneously. They requn-e no sort of
training ; they are trimmed annually almost to the level of
the soil, leaving a small stump, and, before the season is
over, such a burden of the Unest of fruit is seen, and in
clusters like the grapes of Eshcol, as can now scarcely be
found any where else on earth. The choicest of foreign
grapes, which at the East are matured only in graperies by
artificial heat, here revel in the open air. I believe all vis-
itors in California, if not the citizens, unite in pronouncing
the grapes the finest of its fruit, and they grow in such pro-
fusion that all classes may have them at this season as an
article of daily diet. Figs and pomegranates grow with
the same luxuriance ; the former, as in Oriental countries,
producing three crops in a season. The fig-tree grows with
astonishing rapidity. 1 have seen, even among the moun-
tains, and still more in the broad valleys, fig-trees twenty or
twenty-five feet in height, that could not be more than ten
or twelve years old, and covered with the second crop of the
largest and finest figs. It is surprising to see so little ac-
count made of this fruit, which, in other countries, is an im-
portant article of food, and which is more nourishing than
any of our native fruits. But the taste for it must be ac-
quired, and it is evident that it has not been extensively ac-
(juired in California.
46
AROUND THE WORLD.
VIEW OF THE TOfSEMITE.
IV.
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES.
I WAS surprised, on reaching the Pacific coast, to learn
liow few Californians have ever been to the Yosemite Val-
ley. On making inquiry of one and another of the old
residents, who would be most likely to ^ive me informa-
tion in regard to the most desirable route to the valley, I
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES. 47
could scarcely find one who had been there. It was not
because " a prophet is not without honor save in his own
country," for the Californians generally have a very high
appreciation of the attractions of the wonderful cleft, as
indeed they have of every thing included within the wide-
stretching borders of their magnificent state. Scarcely five
thousand persons have visited the Valley since it was first
discovered and brought to notice, and of these a large pro-
portion, if not the largest, have been persons from other
states and countries. There are several reasons for this
practical indifference, on the part of the neighbors, to this
wonder of the world. One is, that the Californians are a
practical people ; and though they do not seem to have a
very strong attachment to their gold, they are very fond of
making it, whether in the mines, or on Montgomery and
California Streets of San Francisco. The trip also re-
quires time — a longer time than I had supposed — and time
is money in California as well as elsewhere. But the
chief reason I presume is, that the Californians know more
of the difficulties of the journey than strangers who come,
often with this as the main attraction, and who, having
come so far, will not be deterred by the terrors of the way.
It is, in truth, about the most severe expedition that I have
ever accomplished, and, at this dry season of the year, be-
yond all comparison the dirtiest. Dust does not express
the idea, although for days, in going and returning, you
are enveloped in clouds, the dirt covering and penetrating
every thing that you have on, entering your eyes and ears,
and all the avenues to your throat, and so begriming ev-
ery thing that, when one gets back into the region of baths
and clean clothes, he will be sure to cast behind him all
that he has had on, and never look back to see what be-
comes of it, only too thankful that it is his no longer. We
met some travelers just returned from the Valley, who, like
the spies on the way out of the Promised Land, attempted
to dissuade us from going in, but we concluded that "what
has been done can be done," and determined to see it for
48 AROUND THE WORLD.
ourselves. And, in very truth, no other excursion that I
have ever made, in any other part of the world, has been
so- remunerative in interest. Nowhere else have I seen so
much of grandeur and beauty in natural scenery combined.
Two weeks are required for a satisfactory visit, includ-
ing the journey to and from the Yalley. It may be ac-
complished in ten days, but the excursion will be hurried
and more fatiguing. There are three routes from Stock-
ton, one by Bear Valley and Mariposa, another by Centre-
ville, and a third by Big Oak Flat. The last has become
the easiest route by the extension of the stage -road, and
we chose it on going into the Valley for the saving of time
and fatigue. Leaving San Francisco in the afternoon by
boat, we reached Stockton — 117 miles — in the course of
the night. We were roused early the next morning to take
the stage at six o'clock. The road, on the first day, was
smooth and perfectly level the greater part of the way, but
fearfully dusty. No rain had fallen, not a drop for many
months, as is the case every summer ; but all day long our
route lay through a succession of wheat-fields, covering
what is called the Valle}^ of the San Joaquin (pronounced
San Waukeen), which is an extended plain, once regard-
ed as waste land, but in reality one of the most fertile
wheat regions in the world. The grain had been put in
sacks and stacked on the ground, where it was threshed,
and where it is suffered to lie for weeks without fear of
injury from the weather.
The first day's staging brought us to Garrote at 10 o'clock
in the evening, weary enough to lie down and rest until
noon of the next day, but at 3 o'clock in the morning we
were roused to resume our journey by stage. The name
of the place was not at all pleasantly suggestive, and al-
though we did not meet witli the fate of some of the early
settlers, from which the name was derived, we were most
unpleasantly reminded in the morning of a comparison of
Dickens, that being called up before daylight to go off in a
stage is very much like being called up to be hanged. But
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BLO TREES.
49
we were in for the war, and, stiff and still weary, we again
took our seats and rode through the woods to Hardin's
Eanch, which we reached at 10 o'clock in the day. Here
we were to take horses, and, after a hasty lunch, were in
the saddle. Two of our horses were donkeys, of no mao--
nificent proportions, which fell to the lot of those of our
party who were not least in stature, and altogether we
formed a cavalcade that the Knight of La Mancha mio-ht
have been proud to lead. Our guide, who, with the care
of horses, and saddles, and riders, had no mean responsibil-
ity, was William Bourne, a name somewhat ominous. Be-
fore committing ourselves to his direction, however, I dis-
tinctly inquired if he were that bourne of which I had
read "from which no traveler returns." He assured me
he was not ; that scores of travelers had fallen into his
hands, and had come out safe and sound ; and I desire to
add my testimony to his faithfulness, and my belief that
there is not a more trusty guide in all the Valley.
The ride of that day and evening — for we were ten
hours in the saddle — was one which made its impress upon
our memories in more ways than one. All unused as we
were to the exercise, we carried with us for many days
the most tender recollections of its severity, but we shall
carry with us while we live the most pleasing recollections
of its romantic and sublime interest. Hour after hour we
wound our way through the magnificent forest, its grand
old trees growing upon us as we passed along, from those
of ordinary proportions to sugai'-pines of ten and twelve
feet in diameter, and then to the Big Trees, of which I
shall speak hereafter.
About 3 o'clock M^e reached the hospitable mansion of
Mrs. Gobin, at Crane's Flat, which I desire to commend to
the special regard of all travelers toward the Yosemite.
Mrs. G. is a native of the Emerald Isle, but she is proud
to speak of New York as " her adopted city," and New
York may well be proud to count her among its numerous
adopted daughters. She occupies a little shantv on the
D
50 ABOUND THE WORLD.
flat, and while her liege lord looks after his sheep on the
surrounding mountains and green flats, she entertains trav-
elers to and from the Valley in a truly magnificent style.
Nowhere after leaving San Francisco did we find such
fare, such delicious bread and butter, coffee and rich cream,
canned fruits of all kinds, mutton, ham, etc. She made
many apologies for being taken unawares, and not having
a dinner in readiness for us ; when we rode up she was j ust
in the midst of the blanc mange which she was preparing
for Mr. Colfax's party, who were then in the Valley, and
who were to pass her ranch the next day ; she would have
a good dinner ready for us on our return from the Valley,
etc., etc., w^iich promise she fulfilled to our perfect satisfac-
tion a few days after. But we were fii special need of a
good lunch just at that time, and on my assuring her that
1 would make it all right with Mr. Colfax, whom I expect-
ed to meet in the evening, she spread for us, there in the
wilderness, on rough boards, a repast the memory of which
will long linger in our thoughts, and which was all the
more grateful, in oui: hunger and fatigue, because it was so
unexpected. Mrs. Gobin deserves tins tribute for her ge-
nial manners and her generous fare. Her native modesty
is such a striking trait in her character that I have no
doubt her ruddy face will assume a deeper blush should
she chance to see her name in print; but she is one of
those public benefactors that can by no means escape a
measure of Immortality, and 1 take pleasure m handing
her down to the notice of coming generations.
Before descending, let us take a bird's-eye view of tlie
Valley. It is a cleft in the Sierra Kevada Mountains, vary-
ing from half a mile to a mile in width, six miles in length,
with two branches at the head of the Valley running one
or two miles farther in opposite directions, the walls on
both sides and throughout its whole extent being nearly
perpendicular, and from three to six tliousand feet in height.
The brow of El Capitan, the guardian promontory, actually
projects ove." the Valley, which lies three thousand feet be-
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES. 5 j^
low. The River Merced, a large stream of the purest wa-
ter, flows through it, connecting it in a way with the outer
world, although the course of the stream as it enters or
leaves the Valley affords no ingress or egress for the trav-
eler. It enters by two successive perpendicular falls of
six hundred and four hundred feet, and leaves the Valley
by such a rugged channel, between such lofty walls, that
no foot can follow it. The Valley throughout its whole
extent is a plain, with only sufficient descent for the flow
of the river, the bottom having an elevation of four thou-
sand feet above the level of the sea, and its sides from half
a mile to more than a mile additional height. Whether it
was formed when the world was made, or by some great
throe of nature long afterward ; whether the Valley itself
was made by the sinking of the bottom several thousand
feet, or by the slow action of ordinary causes ; whether it
was once the bed of a glacier or of a seething caldron,
geologists will probably discuss as long as geology remains
such an uncertain science. But the solution of such ques-
tions is not at all material to the appreciation of the won-
ders and beauties of this remarkable place -, and I prefer,
as most travelers will, to take the Valle}- just as it is now,
rather than as it might ha\'e been in remote ages of the
past ; nor shall 1 attempt to solve the problems connected
with this wonderful phenomenon.
There ai'e only two practicable routes into or out of the
Valley. They are both near the lower extremity and on
opposite sides, and lead by narrow, zigzag pathways down
the precipitous sides. There are numerous places in the
descent where the turning of a saddle, or the misstep of a
horse, or the sliding of the horse's foot on the rock might
hurl the rider a thousand feet upon the rocks. Knowing
some of the difficulties, not to say dangers, of the passage,
I had all day added my exertions to those of the guide in
urging the party onward, that we might have daylight for
descending, but it was near sunset when we reached the
brow of the mountain.
52 ABOUND THE WORLD.
Our guide, having adjusted and secured every saddle,
took the lead, the ladies taking position next, and in solemn
silence we followed, single file. I would not, for all the
gold in California, have made the descent an hour later on
a moonless night, although it has been done in the dark.
As it was, tlie 'Sun had actually set before we had taken
one hasty look up and down the Valley and commenced
the passage. Committing ourselves, step by step, to the
care of the great Guide, who has said, " He shall give his
angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways ; they
shall bear thee up in their hands, lest thou dash thy foot
against a stone," we rode on, the curtains of night gather-
ing closer and closer about us, until before we reached the
plain the last rays of daylight had vanished, and we could
only look up to the night-lamps of heaven for the glimmer
that guided us. But the skies were perfectly clear, and
the hosts of heaven came out in unwonted numbers to
watch us as we slowly wound our way down the moimtain.
The descent occupied considerably more than an hour,
and on reaching the foot we were still five miles from the
hotel, which was higher up the Valley. After a few mo-
ments' rest and a refreshing draught from a brook, we re-
sumed our ride. Four miles on we forded the Merced,
where, getting some idea of the locality of the hotel from
the guide, and leaving the rest to follow on under his care
at a walking gait, 1 gave the reins to my horse, and, trust-
mg altogether to his knowledge of the trail, dashed off at
full gallop through the wood. About half a mile from
Hutchings's, as I came out upon a clearing, an immense
bonfire almost blinded me. A large company was assem-
bled at Leidig's to give a sort of barbacue to Mr. Colfax,
who, with a large party, including Lieutenant Governor
Bross, of Illinois, and Mr. Bowles, of the Springfield Re-
publican^ was at Hutchings's. Reining in my horse merely
to ask for the trail, I dashed again into the thicket, and
after another half mile dismounted at the celebrated but
not very splendid house of Mr. J. M. Hutchings, the genius
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES.
53
of the Valley, who first brought it into public notice. Never
was a place of rest more welcome to weary travelers than
was this rude hotel.
Awakened early in the morning by the noise of depart-
ing guests, and by the conversation of those who remained,
which, as the house is a mere shell, could be heard by all
in common, Ave came out to take our first look by daylight
at the Valley, its gigantic walls and lofty waterfalls. Di-
rectly in front of the hotel the Yosemite Fall meets the eye,
VOSE.MITi: FALL.
the water dropping gently over the brow of the opposite
cliff 1500 feet, then striking the rock, and flowing on in a
cascade 620 feet farther, when it makes a final leap of 400
feet, and is gathered up in the basin below. In the course
of the morning we walked to the foot of the fall, half a mile
54 AROUND THE WORLD.
distant, and sat and listened to the story of the stream whicli
had fallen from the dizzy height, and drank of the pnre wa-
ter as it flowed quietly away toward the Merced. The vol-
mne of water at this season of the year is not large, but no
accumulation could add to the gracefulness of this highest
of the falls. The height is so great that the stream is some-
times turned aside from the perpendicular by the wand sway-
ing it to and fro like a sheet of gauze, and occasionally it is
almost lost in mist in making the long descent in air.
From the hotel, or its immediate vicinity, may be seen
several other points of interest. Almost overhanging it is
Sentinel Rock, 3043 feet high, on whicli a flag is still flying
that w^as long ago fastened there by some adventurous
youth. On the opposite side of the Valley, and about a
mile farther up, is the North Dome, a perfectly bald moun-
tain of gray granite, the side presented to the Valley glis-
tening in the sunlight as if it iiad been polished by hand.
This is 3568 feet above the Valley. A much finer view of
it may be had from the trail leading to the Vernal Falls,
from which point the dome is as perfect as that of St. Pe-
ter's at Eome. Directly across one of the branches of the
Valley is another rock of much greater height, being 4737
feet above tlie Valley, the Half Dome, having the appear-
ance of being cleft from another half, but without any cor-
responding portion to complement it. These mountains of
rock, which have been hewn into their present state with
consummate skill, are composed of the adamantine granite,
which has left but few marks of the passage of time in any
thing like debris at their base. The small amount of de-
bris at the foot of the cliffs, in some cases its entire absence,
is one of the most remarkable characteristics of these rocky
walls. I noticed one spot where the rock was 3000 feet in
perpendicular height, and the greensward came square up
to its base.
After the ride of j^esterday -we were content to spend the
greater part of the day in the quiet study of what could be
seen from our quarters, but at 4 o'clock we mounted our
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES.
55
horses for a ride down the Yalley to El Capitaii and the
Fall of the Bridal Veil, about five miles distant. The af t-
FALL OF THE BUIDAL VEIL.
ernoon was beautiful ; the golden light of the descending
sun was streaming up the Valley, gilding the mountain sides
and rocky peaks, and when we reached the fall lighting it
up as for a bridal. This is the most delicate of all the
falls, the line of w^ater in its clear descent being woven by
the wind into thin lace. After fastening our horses we took
our seats upon the rocks, and sat, and gazed, and talked of
its wondrous beauty until our guide reminded us that night
was coming on. A little higher up the Valley are the Ca-
56
AROUND THE WORLD.
CATUEDRAL KOCKS.
tliedral Rocks, the most varied group of the Valley, while
just opposite stands the guardian, El Capitan, one mighty
mass or shaft, rising up from the river's edge 3300 feet, un-
til its brow appears to lean over its base.
Another morning found us early in the saddle, and on
our way to Mirror Lake, which lies ever slumbering be-
tween the North and Half Dome. The reflection from its
surface is not only perfect, but absolutely surprising. In
Watkins's photographic gallery at San Francisco (a collec-
tion, by the way, which every one who goes to the Yalley
should see) are several views of this remarkable lake, and
no one could distinguish in the photographs the reflection
from the mountains themselves by any difference in the
distinctness of tlie pictures, and the views above and below
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES.
57
are equally extensive. The famed upright reflection, pre-
senting the trees on one side of the mountain in their nat-
ural position, I satisfied mvself, was a mere delusion caused
by the shape of the trees, and not any remarkable phenom-
enon.
The grand feature in our visit to the lake was the sun-
rise above, or rather below, the brow of the Half Dome,
4700 feet down in the depths of the water. We watched
for it half an hour or more ; at length the edge of the cliff,
reflected almost directly beneath our feet, was touched with
gold — in a moment more the brilliant edge of the sun fell
below the cliff, and all the glory of a sunrise in the moun-
tains, inverted and beneath the waters of an apparently
fathomless lake, burst upon us. The sun sailed down into
-B?^ Vr'^m'^os/^^\
.MIKKUK LAKE.
58
AROUND TUE WORLD.
the deep ether, instead of rising as it was wont. The effect
was so singular and striking that I fear my description will
give no idea of it as it appeared to our wondering eves.
The sun now being fairly up, or rather down in the lake,
we remounted, and galloped over the rough trail and up
the other branch of the Valley to the Yernal and the Ne-
vada Falls. These are both upon the same stream, which
is one of the main branches of the Merced, and a stream of
large volume. Access to the falls is not without difficulty,
■nor altogether without danger, owing to the rudeness of
the pathway which lies along the rocky chasm. One lady
in our company, though not of our own party, actually gave
out and was left behind, while we pressed forward. We
were a thousandfold repaid for all our toil, and forgot all
VERNAL FALL.
THE YO SEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TBEES. 59
danger as we stood in the spray, first of the A^ernal Fall,
400 feet in height, and without a break. The rainbow
which covered it like a promise was as perfect and brilliant
as the sun itself ; in some directions of the wind, blowing
the spray toward the spectator, it becomes a circular bow,
and sometimes a double circle. Ascending the dizzy height
l)y the ladders which were placed against the wall, and
which were by no means an inviting pathway, we found a
rocky parapet directly over the fall, and the sight from
above was equal to that from below, although the reverse
of it. The river seemed a mass of falling crystals instead
of a stream of water.
Following the stream half a mile farther up, along a
succession of cascades and race-courses not unlike the rap-
ids at Niagara, although more picturesque, we took our
seats on the rocks near the foot of the Nevada Fall, by
many considered the most striking, if not the most beauti-
ful of all the falls. It is 600 feet in height. We could
have spent the day at this spot watching the stream as it
fell in vast masses over the brow of the cataract, occasion-
ally holding back as if to gather courage for the terrific
plunge, and then with accumulated force falling into the
deep basin at its foot. There was a constant vibration, a
pulsation of one or two seconds' interval in the falling mass,
which was now less, and now greater,
Near the upper or Nevada Fall rises the loftiest peak
about the Valley, called the Cap of Liberty, from its close
resemblance in shape to this ancient emblem of our nation-
ality, and also known as Mt. Broderick. It is a lofty rock
of granite rising 4600 feet above the Valley, smooth as a
helmet, and yet quite accessible. The view from its sum-
mit of the whole region which it overtops is said to be mag-
nificent, and I should have made the expedition but for the
want of another day to devote to it. The ascent can be
made with ease in a day, in connection with a visit to the
Vernal and Nevada Falls, by taking an early start in the
morning, and omitting for the day the visit to Mirror Lake,
QQ AROUND THE WORLD.
but no one who has not strong powers of endurance should
undertake it.
After dinner, the last day of my visit, mine host proposed
to me to go out and persuade some of the beautiful deni-
zens of the Merced, whom I had seen disporting themselves
in its crystal waters, to join us at breakfast the next morn-
ing. I had been from boyhood on intimate terms with their
speckled cousins east of the Kocky Mountains, and, nothing
loth, accepted the invitation. In a little more than an hour
we returned with a string of trout, many of them half a
pound each, which together weighed precisely ten pounds.
Deponent did his full share in hooking them, but Emanuel,
a Mexican muleteer boy, who had gone with us to carry our
fish, and who had provided himself with a line and a rude
pole, was the hero of the hour. Hearing a violent struggle
going on a short distance from us, and running to see what
the fight might be, I found he had just landed a. trout that
weighed at the hotel two pounds and five ounces. The
trout of the Western slope are very similar to our own, with
the exception of the gold and vermilion spots, which are
entirely wanting. How they have lost them, or whether
they ever had any, I am not informed.
In the course of the evening, when my hook and line
went by the board, I gave myself up to the admiration of
the heavens, the glory of which, in the perfect clearness of
the atmosphere, was indescribable. There was no moon,
but the stars seemed multiplied, if not magnified, tenfold,
and shone with a splendor which I have never seen equaled
elsewhere. Looking up into the bright heavens from out
the deep valley, whose walls on both sides were more than
half a mile in perpendicular height, was like looking at
them through a telescope, and there was a strange fascina-
tion in the scene. Eecalling the impressions which the
long vision made upon my mind, I can scarcely tell which
transfixed me most with admiration, the perfect, positive
purity of the air, or the intense brilliancy of the myriad
lamps of the skies.
THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES. Q\
The Yosemite Valley, being a part of the public lands of
the United States, was ceded to the State of California by
act of Congress in 1864, " upon the express condition that
the premises shall be held for public use, resort, and rec-
reation, and shall be inalienable for all time," It is in the
hands of commissioners appointed by the state, but nothing
is done to make it more accessible, or to make the routes
to the various parts of the Yalley more practicable and less
dangerous. There are some private claimants to lands in
the Valley which ought in some way to be disposed of, and
then a liberal annual appropriation should be made by tlie
State of California, or by the United States, for the improve-
ment of the trails to and through and around the Valley.
It is a shame that this wonder in the world's scenery, hav-
ing such a proprietor as the Golden State, should be suf-
fered to lie in such a condition, when a few thousand dol-
lars a year would make it comparatively easy of access, and
greatly facilitate the approach to its various objects of in-
terest and of wonder.
I have been often asked since visiting the Valley whether
it equaled my expectations, and my answer is that of every
one whom I have met who has made the pilgrimage : it is
far grander and more wonderful than any thing I had con-
ceived. Pictui'es and photographs give the outlines, but
convey no idea of the lofty sublimity of those walls of
granite which inclose you on every side, and which reach
far up into the blue ether by day and toward the stars by
night. So complete is the isolation, and so perfect this in-
closure, that many persons on getting into the Valley are
seized with a kind of apprehension that they shall never be
able to get out, as if they had been let down from the clouds
into some deep chasm far remote from human abodes.
Bright and beautiful was the morning that we were to
take our leave of the Valley of Wonders, as, indeed, was
every morning. Only once during the days and nights of
our sojourn had we seen a cloud against the sky, and this
was in keeping with the rest of the scene. It was while
Q2 AROUND THE WOULD.
we were seated at the foot of the Nevada Falls, looking up
at its summit, that a bank of cloud, whiter than the driven
snow, rolled over the brow of the mountain and hung there
for a long time, as if it belonged to the mountain instead
of the air.
We rose early to leave the Yalley. The trout were
waiting for ns at the breakfast table, and, these dispatch-
ed, our train of prancing steeds (diminutive mustangs and
donkeys) were brought up to the door. The process of ar-
ranging and rearranging the saddles over, no momentary-
prelude to the journey, we mounted, and presently were
galloping single file down the Valley. In the morning
suidight we passed the Cathedral E,ocks and El Capitan,
stretching our eyes once more to reach their tops and com-
prehend the dizzy height. We paused once again before
the Bridal Yeil to see it woven afresh into fleecy lace, and
then wafted into thin mist, and then dissipated into thin
air. We reached, at length, the foot of the mountain,
and prepared for the ascent. It appeared by no means as
perilous as when, in the gathering darkness, we had slowly
wound our way down its precipitous sides. Slowly we
wound our way up again, often pausing to suffer our faith-
ful and patient animals to gather breath, and at lengtli
reaching the top and taking our stand together upon the
bald summit which looks into and far up the Yalley, the
perils and the chief fatigue of the excursion over, we join-
ed in singing, to the tune of Old Hundred,
" Praise God from whom all blessings flow."
The sound of our voices died away long before it reached
the deep valley above which we were standing, but it
went up, we trust, into the ear of Him who shaped this
wonderful Yalley, and set these mountains fast by the
word of his power.
Inspiration Point, which is on the Mariposa route, just
before making the descent into the Yalley, affords the
finest comprehensive view of tlie whole scene to be liad
THE TOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES. (53
from any point. This route should be taken either in go-
ing into or in leaving the Yalley, not merely on account of
the commanding view which the point affords, but to vafy
the route, and to afford an opportunity for visiting the sev-
eral groves of the gigantic trees of the Sierra Nevada
range, among the greatest wonders of California, which
all lie in the vicinity of the Yosemite Valley.
The first strong desire to visit the California coast that I
ever felt was excited by reading the accounts of the Big
Trees, as they are usually called, the great marvel of the
vegetable world, and the longing to behold them with my
own eyes never subsided until, tape in hand, I took their
proportions. I am satisfied, but disappointed. Tliey are
just as large as they have been represented, the same num-
ber of feet in diameter and in circumference. I made my
measurement with an accurate line, and found every thing
right, but, on comparing my anticipations wdth what I saw,
I find that I was expecting to see each tree covering about
an acre of ground with the area of its trunk, to say nothing
of its top extending slightly above the clouds. The truth
is, no one at first sight can appreciate, or even comprehend
the greatness of these giants of the forest, and this for sev-
eral reasons. Our conceptions of magnitudes, or heights
and distances, are seldom accurate. Very few persons
ever found the Falls of Niagara one half as high as they
expected. These trees, too, are so symmetrical in shape, so
perfectly, well-proportioned, and so like other trees in their
general aspect, that it is difficult to take into one's mind
the simple element of greatness by itself. But I imagine
that the main reason why they do not at first impress the
beholder with their immensity is, that they stand in the
midst of giants. To visit the groves where they are found,
the traveler passes through a regular gradation, from a
treeless plain and small oaks, to firs and pines which swell
out into larger dimensions, until trees of ordinary size be-
come the exceptions, and great trees the general rule. For
miles before reaching the giants themselves I saw scores
(54 AROUND THE WORLD.
and then hundreds, and then, 1 may say, thousands of sug-
ar-pines that would measure thirty or forty feet in circum-
fll'ence ; trees of this; size shooting up 150 feet in a shaft
as straight as an arrow, and with scarcely any perceptible
diminution in size, and then branching out and rising 100
feet hi2!:her. One man, who had long occupied a ranch in
the vicinity, told me he had measured sugar-pines that
were fifteen feet in diameter, or forty-five feet in circum-
ference. After traveling through such a forest for half a
day, one is really not in the best state to j udge of big trees,
and when he comes upon those that are a little larger, he
may be excused if he can not open his eyes much wider,
and exclaim Oh!
These wonders of the forest were discovered in 1852 by
a hunter, whose story met with no credence until others
had penetrated the same wilds and had seen for themselves.
They have now a name and celebrity throughout the wide
world ; and although they are not indigenous in any other
country, or any part of this country excepting the small
tract in which they were first found, they are now growing
in almost every land, propagated from seeds taken in the
cone from California. The tree grows rapidly and vigor-
ously in almost any climate, and although few will live to
see the result of their experiments in the production of
trees of equal size with the parent stems, yet its character
may be studied now in almost every country. The generic
name of the tree — Sequoia — perpetuates the memory of
George Guess, the ingenious Cherokee half-breed who in-
vented an alphabet that was for a long time in use among
that nation. His Indian name — Sequoyah — was given to
the newly-discovered Redwood of California by the learn-
ed botanist Endlicher, who first defined the genus, calling
the tree Sequoia Semjyervirens. The leaf of the Redwood
is fiat, like that of the Arbor Vitce.
When the great trees were discovered, the classification
became the subject of much discussion in different coun-
tries, and different names were given ; but it has at length
THE YOtSEMlTE VALLEY AND THE BIO TREES. (55
been established that they are of the same genus, and an-
other honor is attached to the memory of the Cherokee ge-
nius whose name is now associated with the grandest pro-
duction of the vegetable kingdom. It is called Sequoia
Gigantea. It is very similar in form and in the general
appearance of the trunk to the Redwood. One not famil-
iar with both would scarcely distinguish them as they stand
in the forest ; but the leaf of the Gigantea is branching,
like the cedar of the Eastern States, although much longer
and stronger, and not flat, like the Sempervirens and the
Arhor Vitce. The Redwood, which is the common tree of
the Pacific slope, furnishing a large portion of its timber,
also attains to gigantic size, trees having been found, ac-
cording to authentic reports, of little less circumference
than the Big Trees themselves. Professor Whitney, in his
scientific report of the state, speaks of Redwood trees hav-
ing been found all the way fi-om twenty to thirty feet in
diameter, and great numbers are now" standing in the for-
est of fifteen or twenty feet in diameter. The wood of the
two species is the same — dark red, much darker than any
cedar that I have seen, and almost as light as cork. From
one of the prostrate monarchs, quite removed from the rest,
and giving evidence of having been among the largest of
its tribe, I took a sliver and had it made into a fiagstaff.
It is as dark in color as old mahogany.
There are several groves of the Sequoia Gigantea, but
they are all in the vicinity or the direction of the Yosemite
Valley, the principal trails to the Valley leading through
the groves. The Mariposa Grove, although not the first
discovered, is perhaps the most celebrated, and will afford
the most satisfaction to those who have not time to visit all.
This is the grove which was ceded, in connection w^ith the
Yosemite Valley, by act of Congress, to the State of Cali-
fornia for ])reservation. It is situated about fifteen miles
south of the Valley, is 5500 feet above the level of tlie sea,
and has 125 trees which are more than forty feet in circum-
ference. They run down to this diminutive size from nine-
E
(36 AROUND THE WORLD.
ty-two, ninety-one, eighty-seven, eighty-two feet. One tree
in this grove, now partially burned at the base, was origin-
ally more than 100 feet in circumference. Since I was in
the Valley I have received an account of a tree more re-
cently discovered that measures forty feet four inches in
diameter, or 121 feet in circumference. It is melancholy
to see how many of the larger trees have been felled by the
lire, and in a great measure consumed. Before seeing
them I imagined their destruction to have been the result
of mere vandalism, but a ride through the forest afforded
a more satisfactory explanation of the disasters which had
befallen the giants. Every dense forest that is visited by
man, either civilized or savage, is liable to the ravages of
fire, and this is peculiarly the case in this part of the coun-
try, where no rains fall during several months of the year.
The embers of a camp-fire or the wad of a hunter's gun
may kindle a fire which will spread over a wide tract, and
burn for weeks or months. On our return from the Valley
we passed through one of these conflagrations for more
than a mile, at times almost suffocated by the smoke, and
not without apprehension that the immense pines which
were blazing at their base, and for fifty feet up the trunk,
might chance to fall very inconveniently at the moment of
our passing. The Sequoia is peculiarly exposed to the rav-
ages of fire. The bark of the large trees is some eighteen
inches thick, is as fibrous in its texture as a bale of cotton,
and, being perfectly dry, invites the raging element to a
contest of strength. Some of the trees have conquered,
coming out of the contest with diminished proportions, but
others, and these apparently the proudest monarchs of the
grove, have bowed their lofty heads and measured their
length upon the soil. It is to be hoped that those which
have been placed under the protection of the State of Cali-
fornia will be guarded against the approach of fire, as well
as against all mutilation from any other cause.
The Calaveras Grove, situated in another county, w\as the
one first discovered. It is composed of about 100 trees of
TEE TOSEMITE VALLEY AND THE BIG TREES. Q^
large size, one of which, twenty-seven feet in diameter, was
felled several years since by boring at its base, and the
stump, smoothed off about six feet from the ground, has
been made the scene of festivities in which a large compa-
ny has taken part. It was then sheltered by the erection
of a building over it. A friend has given me a statement
of the amount of house-room which is afforded upon the
surface of the stump of one of the trees. A circle of thirty
feet diameter contains TOT square feet. If this could be
had in squares, it would give for a single floor a parlor six-
teen feet by twelve ; a dining-room fifteen feet by ten ; a
kitchen twelve feet by ten ; two bedrooms, each ten feet
by ten ; a pantry eight feet by four ; and a closet four feet
by two. Quite a roomy house for a small family might
thus be constructed on a single stump. This will give a
good idea of the magnitude of the trees ; or, if any one
wishes to know what space the tree would cover on the
ground, let him strike a circle with a radius of fifteen feet,
and he will have it before him. The tree in the Calaveras
group which was felled was carefully examined some dis-
tance from the ground to ascertain its age, and 1255 con-
centric circles, indicating as many years, were counted.
There was, of course, a gradual increase in the thickness of
the circles. The first hundred measured only three inches,
the second hundred nearly four inches, the tenth hundred
nearly eight inches, and the twelfth hundred thirteen inch-
es, showing great rapidity of growth, and the comparative
youth of the trees considering their size. Another tree, of
seventy-six feet circumference, was carefully sawed, and
the rings counted to the number of 1935. Whether others
will yet be found of still more gigantic size is doubtful, as
the forests have already been extensively explored ; but it
is not at all impossible. The height of these trees is not so
great as has sometimes been represented, but 300 or 325
feet, which some of them attain, is no mean height. There
are taller trees in Australia, where the Eucalyptus has been
known to reach the height of 480 feet; but, taking 'them
gg AROUND THE WORLD.
all in all, there are no vegetable wonders elsewhere that
equal the Big Trees of California.
On the return to San Francisco we stopped for half an
hour at Keith's gardens, near Garrote, an extensive planta-
tion of fruit on the edge of the mountain, and in the very
midst of a region which, being dug over and over for gold,
is now the picture of desolation. The fruits raised in the
mountain region — peaches, grapes, pears, etc. — are consid-
ered finer than those produced in the low country. I vis-
ited also the extensive fruit-ranch of Dr. Strentzel, at Mar-
tinez, directly opposite Benicia, which is considered one of
the finest in the state. He has nearly a hundred acres of
the choicest trees and vines, which were loaded with the
fairest and finest fruits — pears and apples, peaches and
plums, figs and pomegranates, etc. — such as no other clime
can excel. It was the finest exhibition of fi'uit that I have
ever seen. Dr. S. has exhibited in its cultivation a discrim-
ination and taste which was too much neglected in the ear-
ly days of the state.
While waiting on the wharf at Benicia for a steamer, my
attention was attracted to a placard painted on a board and
placed on a high post, as if containing important directions
for travelers. The same is posted all over the state, and
the following story respecting it was related to me by a
Californian. Out among the mountains, a miner, traveling
alone, came to a fork in the road, and, doubtful which
course to take, saw, to his great delight, what he took to be
a guide-board. It was too dark for him to read it from
the ground, and with great difliculty and many slides he
at length succeeded in reaching the top. Holding on with
one hand, he struck a match with the other, and by the dun
light read the following important announcement : " Fifty-
five miles to Sacramento, eighty miles to Stockton, and 175
miles to the wholesale and retail store of H. H. -iSr I
VIEW IN THE INLAND SEA.
VIII.
INLAND SEA OF JAPAN.
The most beautiful sea-voyage in the -u-orld is the pas
sage of the Inland Sea of Japan. Between three of the
four largest islands — Niphon, Kiusiu, and Sikoke — there is
an expanse of water five hundred miles in extent from
east to west, and varying greatly in breadth, connected at
different points with the ocean, but forming a great land-
locked sea. The name, like most Japanese names, is singu-
larly beautiful — Suwonada. Into this wide expanse have
been sprinkled more than three thousand islands, which, by
volcanic action, have been moulded into all the forms of
beauty imaginable. Some of them are lofty cones, rising
directly from the water to the height of several hundred
feet. One of these cones I found, by referring to the ship's
chart as we were passing it, is nine hundred feet high.
Others are rounded off with more variety of outline, and
stretch away for miles with constantly changing profiles.
INLAND SEA OF JAPAN.
127
and with shores, and hill-sides, and valleys as green as an
emerald. I have found nothing to compare with it in any
other sea, and this is the testimony of every traveler that
I have met who has made the passage. We were two days
and one night — a briglit, beautiful, moonlight night — in
steaming through the sea, and, as I recall the voyage, the
scene rises up before me like the vision of some fairy
scene. During the whole passage the water had scarcely
a ripple upon its surface, and an ever-changing panorama
of green islands, and narrowing straits, and expanding
bays, and picturesque landscapes, hills and valleys, with
cities scattered along the shore, rolled by us with constant-
ly varying beauty.
This sea lies in the direct route from Yokohama to the
north of China, whither we were bound. Passengers for
Hong Kong go by the steamer we had left, which, after
touching at Yokohama, lays its course south of the large
islands. A corresponding steamer takes the passengers
who are bound for Shanghai, and passes through the In-
land Sea, stopping for a day at each of the ports of Iliogo
and Nagasaki, and so arranging the time of leaving these
ports as to have the finest parts of the voyage by daylight.
After we had completed our stay of two weeks at Yokoha-
ma, we took the steamer Costa Rica, bound for Shanghai.
Sailing down the Gulf of Yeddo, out into the open sea, we
coasted for a day along the green shores of Nij^hon, and
the second evening entered the Inland Sea by the south,
the rolling billows at once subsiding and leaving us to en-
joy a night's repose. Early the next morning we anchored
in the harbor of Iliogo, one of the open ports, and the most
beautifully situated town in Japan. Osaka, of which Ili-
ogo is in reality the port, is fifteen miles distant, and is the
site of the fortified castle of the Tycoons, destroyed by fire
when the Tycoon left it in the late revolution. It is a city
of great wealth, its silk-houses surpassing those of any oth-
er city of the empire. The morning was rainy, and we did
not go to Osaka to spend the day, as we had intended; but
128
AROUND THE WORLD.
the clouds soon cleared off, and we went ashore at Hiogo to
enjoy the hospitality of Colonel Stewart, the United States
consul, and to make an excursion to a cascade in a cleft far
up the mountain. Colonel Stewart was occupying the res-
idence and grounds which formerly belonged to the gov-
ernor of the place, and it was enough to verify the visions
of the Arabian Nights just to enter the grounds. It is in
the heart of the Japanese town, but so arranged that, on en-
tering the gate, '■'Presto, agrameiito, change^'' and you find
yourself apparently a thousand miles from any other habi-
tation, in some new creation. Bamboo and plantain groves
surround you; a lotus pond, covered with magnificent
leaves, and alive with large goldfish ; grottoes and shaded
walks invite you to forget the outer world, which is ex-
cluded by a high wall and by dense shade.
Leaving this beautiful spot, we mounted the horses and
made the ascent of the mountain, having a view not only
of the falls, but of the extended rice plains before us, of
the magnificent harbor, and of Osaka, with the fine sur-
rounding country in the distance. Hiogo gives promise of
becoming an important place in the commerce of Japan.
It certainly has great attractions as a residence.
IXLAND SEA OF JAPAN.
129
At four o'clock the next morning the ship's gun resound-
ed througli the harbor, reverberating among the moimtains
which overlook the town, and at five we weighed anchor
and were soon steaming through the beautiful sea. All
day long our course lay through islands succeeding islands,
all of which seemed as smooth as if shapen by hand, round-
ed off or carved in graceful shapes, and clothed with the
velvety green of Japan, making the passage one of un-
broken beauty. In the afternoon we sailed along a shore
on which the Tokaido — the imperial highway — lined with
double rows of trees, wound along, over hill and dale, as
far as the eye could reach. The day was clear and calm,
and as it drew near its close the sun poured a flood of
rosy and purple light over islands and sea — such a light as
painters put upon canvas when they are thought to exag-
gerate. The evening, with a bright moon, was equally
beautiful, but we had to fill out the landscapes in imagina-
tion, and when we retired we had passed again into the
open sea.
We rose next morning at six, in time to see the gates of
the East opened, the same flood of purple light pouring
over the mountains as we were entering the Straits of
Simoni-saki, the most beautiful passage of the two days'
sail. Islands, with charming little bays, were around us,
the country under more perfect cultivation than any por-
tion of the coast that we had seen, the terraces running far
up the hill-sides, and trees and shrubbery indicating the
taste of the inhabitants. On either side of this strait was
a large city, well fortified. Two war-steamers, ofiicered,
engineered, and manned by Japanese, lay at anchor in the
harbor, while great numbers of sailing vessels were bound
hither and thither. All that day we had the same calm
sea and fine weather, with the constantly-shifting panorama
of islands, many of them not more than an acre in extent,
but stretching themselves up in all sorts of beautiful shapes.
The shores were so bold that a vessel can almost sail along
and touch the sides without touching bottom. The Inland
I
130
AROUND THE WORLD.
Sea of Japan is said, I know not on what authority, to
have the deepest soundings of any water on the globe.
Just at dusk we came upon the arched rock, a small island
jutting out from the sea, united at the top, but with a wide
arch some thirty or forty feet in height, under which boats
can sail with ease. As the last rays of daylight were van-
ishing, we entered the harbor of Nagasaki, on the extreme
west of Japan, which is completely concealed from the sea,
running back around high headlands. At the mouth of
the harbor lies an island called by the Japanese Takaboko,
and by the Dutch Pappenberg, which has a melancholy
rAPPENUERG ISLAND.
history. At the close of the sixteenth century, when the
introduction of Christianity by the Jesuits excited the ap-
prehension of the Japanese government, and the order was
given to exterminate the foreign religion by a bloody per-
secution, many thousands of Christians fled to this island
for a last refuge. They were pursued by tlie autliorities.
INLAND SEA OF JAPAN.
131
and those who escaped the sword were driven into the sea
and perished in the waters. The precipice over which
they were driven is still pointed out. These were the mar-
tyrs who were recently canonized, en masse, at Rome, whose
fate forms one of the fearful chapters of Japanese history.
Our ship lay for two nights and a day in the harbor of
Nagasaki, affording us an opportunity to visit the town, and
to enjoy the beautiful scenery, which, were it not on such a
limited scale, would rival the grandeur of Hiogo. The
harbor, and the mountains which inclose it on all sides save
the narrow entrance, form a perfect amphitheatre, the sides
rising gradually, and, as it were, by tiers of seats or steps,
to a great height, the beauty of the sight being diversified
by the Japanese town, the foreign settlement, the temples,
and other edifices. Notwithstanding the multiplied charm-
ing features of the scene, we fancied that those who contin-
ued to reside here must, ere long, feel secluded from the
rest of the world by the very walls of green which, to a
stranger, are so lovely.
About midnight the last night of our stay, 1 heard a
wliistling in the rigging of our ship, which assured me that
the calm we had enjoyed for so many days preceded, if it
did not presage, a storm ; and I was not disappointed. Soon
after daylight we steamed out of the quiet and well-pro-
tected harbor into the Eastern China Sea, only to meet the
northeast monsoon, which for eighteen hours blew with
fearful violence. Our ship was not a small one (some 2000
tons), but she was tossed upon the uneasy sea as a thing of
no account. We prepared ourselves as well as we could
to withstand the blast, but we could not long keep the
deck, and were forced to go below. The ladies were com-
pelled to take their berths, and even there they were not
safe. One of them, for whom I can testify, b}^ a lurch of
the ship, which threatened to roll entirely over, was tossed
from her berth to the opposite side of a wide state-room,
when I sent for the ship's carpenter and had her boarded
up to prevent her being dashed to pieces. At short inter-
132 AROUND THE WORLD.
vals, all day long, one crash after another was heard as a
table broke loose or the steward's crockery went into a
heap. I was lying on the locker in the main cabin when
a heavy swell tossed the ship upon her side, throwing the
large marble slab of the heater from its fastenings. It
struck near me on the floor, and was dashed into a dozen
pieces. Though in a stanch and mighty ship, we felt, as
we had not had occasion to feel before, how weak are the
proudest works of man in contending with the breath of
the Almighty. We could only commit ourselves to His
care during the long, dark night, while the tempest raged
and the great waves tossed us up and down. With the
morning came a change. Early in the day we entered
the broad mouth of the Yanktse-kiang Eiver, and quietly
steamed toward Shanghai, thankful that we had reached
another continent in safety, and that for a little while our
tossings upon the deep were over. A more perfect contrast
than our experience upon the Inland Sea of Japan and that
upon the Eastern China Sea could not well be imagined.
IX.
SHANGHAI TO HONG KONG.
We entered the Yanktse River, as the Amazon is cross-
ed, far out at sea. Long before we were in sight of the
low shores the water became as yellow as that of the Tiber,
taking its color from the soil of the country, which is con-
stantly washing down the river, filling up the wide mouth,
and making the navigation more and more difficult. One
shore only was visible at first, and then the low sand-banks
of the opposite shore appeared, but nowhere was any eleva-
tion in sight. The whole region is upon a level with the
sea, and is protected against an occasional overflow by em-
bankments. The country far up the Yanktse was under
SHANGHAI TO HONG KONG.
133
water, the river spreading itself out in immense lakes.
Thousands of lives had been lost by drowning, and by the
loss of food which such a calamity always occasions in this
densely populated country.
We soon entered the Woosung, a small river on which
Shanghai is situated, about twelve miles from its mouth.
At the entrance is a long range of earthworks — one of the
supposed impregnable forts which the Chinese, in their
self-sufficiency and contempt of foreigners, erected at vari-
ous points, and which have proved equally efficient with
the paper fortifications recommended in Salmagundi. They
were easily battered to pieces by the English fleet in the
war of 1841. Near these fortifications was a laro-e fleet of
Chinese war-junks, built, doubtless, after the model that
was most approved a thousand years ago. The prow of
each vessel was provided with two large eyes, one on each
side, to enable the ship to see its course in a dark night.
Without these eyes a vessel is considered as unsafe as a
blind man walking the streets of a strange city. The ves-
sels liave great high poops, ornamented with carvings and
CHINESE TRADING JUNK.
j^34 ABOUND THE WORLD.
other fixtures, making them a curiosity to a stranger just
coming into the empire. The junk which visited the har-
bor of New York many years ago was a fair type of the
swarms which fill the rivers of China, although not so high-
ly ornamented as many I have seen. These junks are no
mean sea-boats. They are exceedingly clumsy looking
above water, but their keels are often beautiful models,
and they ride out a storm in safety when many a fine yacht
would go down.
Shanghai is one of the four ports first opened by the
. treaty of 1842. It was little visited by foreigners previous
to that time, but, being admirably situated to secure the
commerce of the great valley of the Yanktse and of the
whole of the north of China, it sprang at once into impor-
tance, and has become the chief foreign commercial city of
the empire. Canton has lost its former pre-eminence, and
Hono- Kong alone rivals this city of the north. The old
Chinese city of Shanghai, which is near the foreign settle-
ment, one of the large towns of China, is inclosed within
a high wall, which in the growth of the place proved insuf-
ficient to contain the population, and they have spread
themselves over the surrounding plain. It was captured
l)y the Taeping rebels in 1853, and held until 1855, when
they retreated from this part of the country. During sev-
eral subsequent years, while the rebels were overrunning
the surrounding region, there was a large influx of people,
who came to this city for protection and residence, and it
enjoyed great prosperity in consequence. Foreigners who
held the land in the vicinity of the new town made im-
mense fortunes on paper ; but after the rebellion was quell-
ed, and the Chinese who had come to Shanghai returned
to their homes, a great and disastrous revolution occurred,
and the fortunes which had been made in haste vanished
still more rapidly. The city has not entirely recovered
from this shock, and, in common with the other ports, it is
suffering from the general depression of the China trade.
The foreign settlement makes a fine appearance as we
SHANGHAI TO HONG KONG. 135
approach it by water. It stretches along the river nearly
two miles, being divided into what are called the American,
Eno-lish, and French settlements, the two former being un-
der one municipality, and the latter under French rule. A
wide " bund" or quay, which serves equally as a place of
commerce, promenade, and drive, occupies the river front,
the finest buildings of the city— the hongs of merchants
and public buildings— being situated on the bund, and
giving a very imposing appearance to the place. Several
streets run back from the river, and contain numerous fine
residences and business houses. The climate is very trying
in winter. Tlie malaria of the low country was formerly
productive of fevers, but at great expense a system of drain-
age and of street construction was carried out, by which the
health of the place has been improved. The cost of these
improvements was so great that the Chinese say Shanghai
is paved with dollars.
The first thing that arrests a traveler's attention on land-
ing is the novel mode of conveyance peculiar to Shanghai.
The popular carriage is a wheelbarrow. The streets of the
old city are narrow and rough, and so much broken up by
bridges that this vehicle can not be used ; but in the foreign
settlement you find the Chinese men and women every
where riding on wheelbarrows. The wheel is much larger
than those in use in our country, and the passengers are
seated one on each side of it. When two are riding, if
they are of equal weight, the carriage is evenly balanced ;
but when two persons of unequal weight are carried, or
only one, the wheel is turned up at an angle, so that the
weight shall come upon the point in its circumference that
strikes the ground. This, I think, must be a modern inven-
tion or adaptation, for no real Chinese city that I have seen
will admit of its being used, and the roads leading into the
country are not favorable for such a mode of conveyance,
especially in wet weather.
The Chinese part of the town has a population of nearly
a million, including that portion built around the walls for
136 ABOUND THE WORLD.
want of room within. During the rebellion the mimber
was almost twice as great. The city proper is entered by
several gates, which are narrow passages, admitting only
what goes on foot. Every thing in the shape of merchan-
dise, and every stone and timber for building, is carried in
on the shoulders of coolies, as in most parts of the East.
The burdens which these coolies carry suspended between
them by a bamboo pole are sometimes enormous, but they
stand up manfully under them, and shout continually as
they go through the throng to those ahead to make way for
them. All classes in the crowded city show the utmost
consideration for each other. The streets of the city are
never more than six or seven feet wide, and yet through
these narrow passages a crowd is constantly surging, with-
out ever coming in contact or interfering with each other's
burden or business.
The city within the walls is exceedingly filthy, so much
so that I would not think of taking a lady into it, not even
in a sedan chair, the ordinary mode of conveyance for for-
eigners ; for, although she might be protected from coming
in contact w^ith its filth, few have the strength of constitu-
tion to endure the smells of the place. I have more than
once tested the " two-and-seventy stenches" in the streets of
Cologne which Coleridge enumerates, but they are outnum-
bered and overpowered in the streets of almost any Chinese
city. The little canals wliich run through the town are the
most disgusting of all, and it is a mystery how human be-
ings can swarm in such a place and human life continue.
I should imagine that the heat of every summer would
bring a pestilence, and the place be depopulated. But the
Chinese not only live, they multiply and thrive amid these
elements of disease and death.
One will not be inclined to linger long in his walks
through the native city, although he may see much at any
step that is both novel and interesting. The Chinese cos-
tumes, tlie Chinese shops, the Chinese sights and smells of
all kinds, are perfectly new, and the most of them, as he
SHANOHAI TO HONG KONG.
137
has never met with them before, he will never wish to meet
again.
At several points as 1 was passing along I came upon
police-stations, where criminals of different grades were
undergoing different degrees of punishment. Some were
simply confined in large cages, the sport of the passers-by.
Others wore immense collars made of two wide boards
brought together at their edges, with a hole large enough
for the neck. The collar is so wide that the prisoner can
not reach his head with his hands, and is dependent upon
]iis friends or upon charity not only for his food, but for
getting it to his mouth.
Others had their heads jut-
ting out of the tops of cages
which were so high that
they could not sit down, and
so low that they could not
stand up, or in which they
stood on tip-toe, and they
were condemned to pass
days and nights in tliis un-
comfortable and even tor-
turing position.
A short time before, sev-
eral criminals who had been
guilty of a capital offense
were condemned to death,
and placed in these cages,
where they died from starv-
ation before the eyes of the
people, no one being al-
lowed to furnish them with food. Torture, as I subse-
quently learned by witnessing it at Canton, enters largely
into the idea of punishment among the Chinese, and is
freely resorted to for the purpose of extorting confession
from the accused.
There is very little to detain an ordinary ti'aveler in
CniNESE PUNISHMENT.
l^g ABOUND THE WORLD.
Shanghai. Its sights, if there are any, are soon seen. No
one will wish to make more than a passing visit to the Chi-
nese city, and the foreign part derives its only importance
from its commerce. The town was all agog while I was
there with the visit of the Duke of Edinburg, Prince Al-
fred of England. One of the entertainments was an inter-
national boat-race between four-oared boats — American,
English, Scotch, and German. It was no little gratification
to US, as Americans, to join in the rousing cheers which'
welcomed the Stars and Stripes as they came in four
lengths ahead of all competitors, and our pleasure was all
the more enhanced by the fact that the victors were friends
whose hospitalities we were enjoying at the house of Oli-
phant & Co.
It was too late in the season to visit Pekin and the great
wall of China. We were advised not to undertake the
journey, as we might be frozen up, which would make a
complete derangement of our plans of travel for the year
to come. We regretted not being able to reach the cap-
ital of the Flowery Kingdom, but it is just as well to see
a few Chinese cities as many. With the exception of Pe-
kin, they are all built pretty much after the same imin-
teresting model, the chief difference consisting in the de-
grees of filth. There is less of the beautiful in scenery
in the country at large than in almost any country I have
visited.
Before reaching Shanghai we had thought seriously of
going up the Yanktse-kiang River as far as Kang-kow, six
hundred miles, and we found splendid American-built
steamers, with luxurious accgmmodations, making regular
trips. But there is little to be seen. The country, the
whole distance, is fiat and uninteresting, and much of it at
that time was overflowed with water.
Nankin, which has always been famous in the geograph-
ical, if not the historical records of China, is about two
hundred miles above Shanghai, but we were assured that
we should have great difficulty in landing and reaching
SHANGHAI TO HONG KONG.
139
the city, and that when we got there we should find it a
heap of ruins, very much as it was left by the Taeping
rebels. Not a tile of the famous Porcelain Tower re-
mains excepting those which are manufactui*ed for sale as
relics. Many of the great cities of the empire were al-
most wholly destroyed during the rebellion. When the
rebel army occupied a town they used it for fuel, the coun-
try generally being destitute of timber, and in this way
the light wooden houses disappeared, as by a general con-
tlagration, in the hands of such an immense host. Some
of the cities are rebuilt, but others remain a desolation.
CHINESE TEMPLE.
To any traveler who is not able to devote much time to
this country, I would recommend a trip from Shanghai to
Ningpo, a hundred miles distant, which is reached daily or
nightly by steamer, and then to ITang-chow, farther in the
140 AROUND THE WORLD.
interior, wliich will afford an oj^portunity of seeing some
of the finest scenery in this part of China, and of visiting
two of its most interesting cities. He can then take the
steamer down the coast, either stopping at Foo-chow and
Amoy, or going directly to Hong Kong and Canton. Tlie
approaches to Foo-chow up the River Min, on which it is
situated, are very picturesque, but the city itself has the
reputation of being the filthiest in the empire.
Finding the Suwonada, the swiftest and finest steamer
on the coast, ready to leave for Hong Kong, and having
an invalid in my company, I took passage for Plong Kong
direct, intending to return to Amoy. We found the Suwo-
nada every thing that could be desired in navigating this
turbulent China Sea, excepting that she would never lie
still, and when afloat, so tempestuous did we always find
these waters that I almost fancied the rocky islands, if not
the continent itself, must be tossing up and down with the
weaves. The commander of the ship, Captain Clark, is a
graduate of Flarvard College, a thorough seaman, and a
perfect gentleman. Another pleasure in sailing in her
was that she floated the Stars and Stripes — ever a wel-
come sight, and most so when farthest fi'om home.
We reached Hong Kong, 820 miles, at the end of the
third day. Hong Kong is an island about twenty -five
miles in circumference, an English possession, taken as in-
demnity in one of the wars, and ceded to Great Britain in
184:1, from which time it grew rapidl}'^ in commercial im-
portance, until its rival, Shanghai, diverted a large part of
the China trade. Victoria is the name of the town, al-
though abroad it is almost invariably spoken of as Hong
Kong. It is still one of the two chief foreign cities on the
coast, and is ^'isited, probably, by more ships than any oth-
er. It is a sort of posting station for the whole Eastern
world, ships without cargo and ships without orders com-
ing here to await orders from their owners. Having an
English governor, and all the paraphernalia of an English
colony, it is a place of no little court ceremony, and the
SHANGHAI TO HONG KONG.
141
social distinctions which attach even to the most petty
governmental dependencies of Great Britain are peculiar-
ly rife.
UONG KONG.
There is scarcely a level acre upon the whole island.
Indeed, the only spot that I remember to have seen is a
charming little valley about a mile from the town, which
has been appropriated to a race-course — the several cem-
eteries, English, Roman Catholic, and Parsee, occupying
the rising ground around the race-course, and forming a
very incongruous combination of grave-yards and sport-
ing-grounds. This beautiful spot is called Happy Yalley :
whether named before its present occupation, or for what
one of these different purposes it was first occupied, I have
not learned. The island is made up of lofty peaks, one
of which, Victoria Peak, overhanging the town, and from
which you could almost throw a stone into the streets, is
1825 feet high. The view from the peak is as perfect a
panorama as that from the Eighi ; and although by no
means so extensive nor in any measure so magnificent,
142 AROUND THE WORLD.
wanting the elements of grandeur which abound among
the Alps, yet it is a splendid view. We ascended in sedan
chairs, each chair carried by four coolies, and, walking and
riding by turns, were an hour and five minutes in reaching
the summit. The view of the town below ; of the harbor
with its shipping, looking like miniature craft ; of the sur-
rounding waters and islands, abundantly repays for the ex-
ertion and expense. The city is built along the harbor, in
terraces rising one above another, until the upper tier is
some three or four hundred feet in height. The govern-
or's residence is a fine mansion, wdtli large and well-kept
grounds. Many of the hongs of the merchants are pal-
aces, and the public buildings would do honor to any city.
The City Hall, j ust completed and inaugurated by Prince
Alfred, who arrived two or three days after we reached
Hong Kong, is a splendid structure situated on the bund.
The governor has established a system of schools of dif-
ferent grades for the Chinese, who compose by far the
lai-gest part of the population, and it is well administered.
At the invitation of a member of the governor's council,
I spent a morning in the high school, and witnessed, with
great interest and pleasure, the evidences given, by an ex-
temjpore examination, of the progress made by the more
advanced Chinese, not only in the elements of an English
education, but in the sciences. I saw and heard enougli
to satisfy me that the excuse given for the universal cus-
tom among foreign residents of talking W'ith the Chinese
in the miserable " Pigeon" English, namely, that there are
many vocal sounds in English which they can not utter, is
without foundation. There is not a letter or combination
which these youth had not mastered, although, of course,
with some foreign accent. The Pigeon English is a mon-
grel dialect, probabl}' first invented by the Chinese as a
substitute for English, very much as young children in-
vent a language for themselves before learning to speak in
the dialect of older persons. It has been perpetuated by
foreigners for the sake of holding conversation with the
SHANOHAI TO HONG KONG. I43
Chinese wlio have adopted it. Pigeon is said to be the
nearest approximation that the Chinese make to the word
business ; hence Pigeon English means business English.
It is an unnecessary accommodation to the natives, who
are just as able as other nations to acquire the sounds of
our language.
The following version of '' My name is Xorval" is a fail-
specimen of the Pigeon English. It needs a glossary al-
most as much as real Chinese.
My name b'long Norbal, topside that Glampian hillee
My f:\der, you sabee my fader, makee paj' chow-chow he sheepoo
He smallo heartee man, too muchee take care that dolloo, gohi ?
So fashion he wantchee keepee my, counta one piecee chilo, stop he own
side.
My no wantchee, wantchee long that largee mandali, go knockee aUa man :
Littee teem, Joss pay my what thing my fader no likee pay.
That mooni hist nightee teem get up loune, alia same my hat,
No got full up, no got square ; plenty piecie
That lobbel man, too muchee qui-si, alia same that tiger,
Chop-chop come down side that hillee, catchie that sheepoo, long that cow ;
That man, custom take care, too muchee quick lun way.
My one piecie owne spie eye, look see that lallee-loon man what side he
walkee.
Hi-yah ! No good chancie, findie he, lun catchie my flen :
Two piecie loon-choon lun catchie that lobbel man ! he
No can walkee welly quick, he pocket too muchee full up.
So fashion knockee he largee.
He head man no got shutte far
My knockie he head. Hi-yah ! My No. 1 stlong man.
Catchie he jacket, long he t'lousa, gola : You likee look see ?
My go puttee on just now. My go home, largie heart just now
My no likee take care that sheepoo. So fashion my hear you hab got fightee
this side
My take one piecee coolie, come you countlee, come helpie you.
He heart all same cow, too muchie fear, lun away.
Masquie, Joss take care pay my come you housee.
I visited the Colonial Prison, where more than four hun-
dred criminals of all nations were confined, and have never
seen a penitentiary more neatly kept, or apparently undei-
better management. Among the prisoners were several
Chinese women who had been convicted of child-stealing,
a very common crime. The boys are stolen and sold for
boatmen, and the girls either for boat-hands or for the broth-
els, to be educated for a life of infamy. I inquired of the
superintendent if any form of oath was administered to
144 AROUND THE WORLD.
the Chinese when they were called to testify in the courts,
and was informed that none was used in cases of small im-
portance, but that in graver cases they swore by a cock's
head. The cock is taken to a joss-house or temple, the
head cut off with some ceremony, and on this, as the basis
of the most solemn oath that is administered, a Chinaman
gives his testimony in an English court.
I can not refrain from copying just here the beautiful
motto, which every one will recognize as taken from the
book of sacred wisdom, and which I found engraved on
the stone arch in front of the post-office at Hong Kong,
than which nothing could be more appropriate in this dis-
tant part of the world : " As cold waters to a thirsty soul,
so is good news from a far country."
X.
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS.
It is not long since Canton was all of China to the out-
side world. For two centuries before the opening of the
treaty ports it was the only city at which any amount of
foreign commerce was carried on. The East India Com-
pany established a factory (the name for a place of busi-
ness) at this point as early as 1689, and the representatives
of various countries followed their example ; planted them-
selves alongside the city and carried on traffic with the peo-
ple, without being permitted to enter the city itself. The
foreign factories, so celebrated in Eastern commerce, occu-
pied a wide space along the river, just under the walls of
the city, and to this space all " outside barbarians" were
limited, and within it they were, at one time, actually con-
fined as prisoners, living in no little terror of their lives.
It is only within the last twenty-five or thirty years that
the gates of the city have been opened to foreigners. So
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS.
145
recently as 185 6, the Chinese, becoming exasperated against
all foreigners, in the incipiency of one of the wars, attack-
ed the factories, pillaged and burnt them, making the once
beautiful collection of palaces a mere heap of ruins. The
whole city was soon after taken possession of by the Brit-
ish army and held for several years, since which time the
gates have been open to all from every country who choose
to enter.
Canton is situated on the Pearl River, ninety miles from
Hong Kong, which is now the port of Canton, for scarcely
a vessel goes up the river. The business of the place and
the foreign commerce is nearly all transacted at Hong
Kong. An American river steamer leaves the latter place
every morning at eight o'clock, and another returns each
day at the same hour. The first half of the distance, in
going up, is through a wide bay interspersed with islands,
but with nothing striking in its scenery.
At length we reach what are called the Bogue forts, fa-
mous in the China wars. They are extensive fortifica-
tions, and by the Chinese were considered impregnable.
and a perfect protection against all vessels that might at-
tempt to pass up the river. But they stood no chance be-
fore the guns of the British fleet, and are now extensive
lines of ruined fortifications. They form a picturesque
feature of the landscape, as we pass between them through
the Tiger's Mouth (Boca Tigre), from which the forts took
their name.
At this point commences all that is attractive on the voy-
age up. The banks of the Pearl River are flat, but they
are in a high state of cultivation, covered with rice-fields
and plantations of bananas, which were looking green and
fresh, and added much to the beauty of the shores. Far-
ther inland were rows of lychen - trees, and occasionally
clusters of a species of the banian, which is common in
this part of China. Numerous villages could be seen at a
distance from the shore, the piratical tendencies of the Chi-
nese forbidding the people to build near the water, except
K
146
AROUND THE WORLD.
in large and walled cities. In every village one or more
large square stone buildings towered up far above all the
ordinary houses, which are only one story in height. These
buildings, a striking feature in all southern Chinese towns,
are pawnbrokers' establishments, and are also used as places
of deposit for valuable articles that are not in constant use.
The owners of these establishments become responsible for
the safe keeping of all goods and valuables intrusted to
them, the people having generally no safe place in which
to keep them at home. Scores of these square towers may
be seen looming up above the rest of the city all over Can-
ton. Now and then we came upon a five or seven-story
tower, a prominent feature in the scene, which afforded us
CHINESE PAGODA.
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS. \^ij
our first view of the Cliinese pagodas. Tliey are usually
fast going to decay, and most of them are considered too
insecure to be ascended.
Twelve miles below Canton we reached Whampoa, once
a place of some commercial importance, and soon after
came upon the outskirts of the wilderness of boats which
forms one of the most remarkable sights of the great city.
It is estimated that 300,000 of the people belonging to
Canton live on the water in boats, not merely to obtain a
livelihood from the water, but chiefly for the sake of a resi-
dence. The people are born, spend their days, and die in
these boats, the only homes and the only shelter that they
have from the time of their birth until they are committed
to the grave, and yet a happier-looking class of people 1
have not seen any where in China. One morning I saw
under my window, which was on the shore, a family of ten
persons — father, mother, and eight young children — taking
their breakfast of rice, and fish, and a few greens in one end
of their boat, and apparently as well contented as if they
owned a palace. These boats are of all sizes and of all
sorts, the most of them small sampans, about the size of an
ordinary row-boat, with a simple mat or bamboo covering
over one half, while others are large and elaborately orna-
mented with carvings in wood, and gold and paint. Some
of them are occupied as restaurants and places of amuse-
ment, the large boats being usually moored alongside of
each other, with long water-streets running between the
blocks. Besides these there are innumerable craft, junks
of all sizes, sailing or rowing up and down and across the
river, making it exceedingly difficult at times to find an
opening through which to steer a boat. The men who live
on the boats go ashore for employment during the day, and
the women ply the oars, and capital boatmen they are. I
give them a decided preference over men, for they are not
only equally handy with the oar or the scull, but they are
far more polite, and, I may add, more honest than their
other halves who are on shore at work during the day.
148 AROUND THE WORLD.
One would imagine that a boat must be a dangerous
place to bring up a family of children, but the mothers tie
a joint of bamboo to each of their little ones, and if they
tumble overboard it serves as a float, and they are recover-
ed. They do not grieve much if the child never turns up,
especially if it be a girl.
There have been some fearful scenes among this floating
population. The typhoons which sweep over the China
Seas and along the coast, and which are so destructive to
shipping, seldom come so far inland as Canton, but four or
five years since one of the most severe ever kuowm passed
over the city, and it is comparatively easy to imagine the
havoc made with these floating homes of the poorer people,
but impossible to describe, or even to conceive, the scenes
which followed. This wilderness of river craft, which at
ordinary times is so quiet, and only sways hither and thith-
er with the tide, was like a heap of chaff before the tem-
pest. The house-boats, many of which were of large size,
became as dust to the wind, and were carried away no
one knew where ; the heavier boats were sunk in great
numbers, the occupants were hurled into the water as their
homes w'ere torn to pieces, and when the storm had passed,
and an estimate could be made of the loss of life, it was
found that 60,000 persons had perished. For a long time
the river was strewn with the dead bodies.
Just before reaching the city we came upon a small isl-
and fortified in the Chinese style, and having a picturesque
appearance.
Canton is regarded as the first city in the empire for
wealth and elegance. It is the best built, and, what is no
mean praise for a Chinese city, it is the cleanest. There is
no external magnificence in any of the buildings. The
houses, generally combining both shop and residence, are
usually of one story, never more than two, and there is
scarcely such a thing to be imagined here as architectural
taste. It would be wasted if there were such an element
in the composition of the people, for the city, like all otli-
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS.
149
ers, is so compact that nothing could be seen to advantage.
Many of the streets are covered with matting to shut out
the rays of the sun, giving them a sombre, indoor appear-
ance. Indeed, when one enters the gates of this or any
other city that I have seen in China, he bids adieu to the
outer world, and even to the heavens, and wanders on in a
shaded labyrintli until he leaves the city itself.
FOET NEAU OANTON
There are no prominent buildings, with the exception of
the pawnbrokers' towers ; even the temples are low, scarce-
ly rising above the surrounding houses, and altogether the
view of the town from without has nothing that is striking
or interesting. There is one beautiful spot, but not a part
of Canton. When the occupation of the city by the foreign
powers was given up in 1861, the old factory site was a
150 AROUND THE WORLD.
desolation. In place of this, a low, sandy island, directly
on the river bank half a mile higher up, was appropriated
to foreigners, and at great expense was raised some ten or
twelve feet above high-water mark, and surrounded by a
granite wall of hewn stone. The lots were then sold, and
the foreign residences and hongs built upon it. It is now
a small city of palaces, and forms the only beautiful feat-
ure in the view of Canton as one passes it by the river.
There are three longitudinal and several cross streets set
with trees, the compounds being ornamented with plan-
tains, shrubbery, and flowers, a public garden or square
adding to the attractions of the place. The island is called
Shah-Min. It is connected with the city by an iron bridge
100 feet long, which no Chinese is allowed to cross.
In enumerating the sights of Canton I should begin with
the streets themselves, which, notwithstanding their con-
tracted dimensions and great irregularity, are as varying
and entertaining in their aspect as a kaleidoscope. They
are never more than eiglit or ten feet wide ; not a street in
the city will admit of the passage of any kind of wheeled
carriage, the only mode of conveyance for passengers being
the sedan chair, which is carried on the shoulders of coolies,
SEDAN OHAIE.
suspended on poles. All merchandise and every thing else
is carried by coolies in the same way.
The streets do not answer to their high-sounding names
such as " Pure Pearl Street" (not referring to the perfumes
that abound more or less every where), " Street of Benevo-
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS. i^-^
lence and Love," " Couchant Dragon Street," " Court of
Unblemished Rectitude," etc. ; but some of them are per-
fect bazars, the shops on either side being filled with cost-
ly articles well arranged for effect, rich jewelry, silks of all
kinds, curiosities in ivory, and all sorts of ornamental and
fancy work.
The principal streets are hung with gay banners sus-
pended from the tops of the houses and from the fronts of
the shops. The signs, which are gaudy, stand upon the
end, and, with their bright colors, give a showy aspect to
the fronts of the buildings ; while the great variety of
curious articles exposed to public view by the open doors ;
the noisy tide of human beings, which is . all the while
surging through these narrow avenues on foot and in
chairs, with the coolies carrying burdens of all sorts ; the
processions which one often meets, and which take up
the whole street as they pass along, all together make up
such a scene as can be found in no other city in China, and
the like to which is not to be found in any other part of
the world. We were never molested in our peregrinations
through Canton, but were occasionally greeted with the
salutation which the Chinese are fond of bestowing upon
foreigners, Fan-kwai, Fan-Jcwai (foreign devils, foreign
devils). Even the little children caught up the sound and
shouted it after us.
The silk weaving, which is largely carried on at Canton,
is accounted among its curiosities; but it is chiefly inter-
esting, as showing how the most beautiful fabrics can be
wrought in small and dirty hovels and retain their purity.
All the silks of China, for which Canton is most cele-
brated, are woven by hand on the rudest of looms, fre-
quently by mere girls and boys. I watched with no little
surprise the growth of a fine brocade, a little boy mana-
ging the harness, and a girl sitting at the loom and casting
the shuttle. Every figure came out of their hands perfect,
the whole piece looking as if it just came from the fuller,
without spot.
152 AROUND THE WORLD.
We made an excursion one afternoon about two miles
up the river to the celebrated Puntinqua Aquatic Garden,
the only specimen of Chinese gardening that I saw that
exhibited real taste, or that had real beauty. The Chinese
style is exceedingly stiff, and consists, in great measure, in
training plants, and shrubs, and trees in grotesque shapes,
distorting the vegetable kingdom into a supposed resem-
blance to the animal. The Puntinqua Garden is laid out
on a magnificent scale, is chiefly devoted to the cultivation
of aquatic plauts in picturesque lakes, with beautiful sum-
mer-houses and palaces scattered among them, and is pro-
vided with all the requisites for elegant entertainments.
The furniture is of the most costly description. It was
planned, and for years kept in order, by a high officer of
government, who made an immense fortune out of his of-
fice, chiefly by peculation, as it is asserted. His estate of
several millions of dollars had been confiscated, and this
extensive and beautiful monument to his taste was rapidly
going to ruin. No one would probably be found having
either the fancy or the means to invest in such an expen-
sive toy.
The temples of Canton, as of China generally, are very
inferior to those of Japan. There is nothing I have seen
that will bear comparison with the grand old temples of
Shiba at Yeddo. The latter are kept with scrupulous neat-
ness, the surroundings as well as the interiors showing per-
fect taste, while the temples at Canton are simply curious
places, the approaches to them being often obstructed with
rubbish and dirt. One of the most cele])rated is that of
the patron god of the city, better known as the " Temple
of Horrors," from a series of rude representations of the
torment of purgatory and perdition which occupy, but do
not ornament, the square in front of the temple. They are
wooden or clay images, one group representing the several
stages of transmigration through which a human being
passes before he reaches the condition of the lower ani-
mals. They rival the pictures on the walls of the Church
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS.
153
of San Lorenzo, ontside of the walls of Rome. One man
is represented as undergoing the process of boiling in
a caldron of oil ; another is ground between two mill-
stones, his head and body having gone through the purify-
ing process, the lower part of his legs only projecting from
the mill ; another is placed between two planks, which
are closely pressed together, and sawed longitudinally, the
blood oozing out at the sides. But it is all. done in such a
rude style as to make the representation ludicrous instead
of horrible. At the side of a large open square in front
of this temple I saw a small inclosure, with a placard in
front, which read as follows, in plain English : " Mermaid ;
ten cents to go in and see it." AVe went in, and found one
of those curious Japanese manufactures which are known
the world over, a monkey's head so cleverly affixed to the
body of a fish as to conceal the line of junction. I asked
the man who had it in charge if it came from Japan, and
he simply replied " Humbug." I made several inquiries
in regard to it, and the only answer I got was " humbug."
He had evidently got hold of a term the meaning of which
he did not understand, supposing it to be complimentary.
The same square was crowded with groups of persons gam-
bling, consulting astrologers and necromancers, and hav-
ing a good time generally, while the thoughts of religious
worship w^ere among the last that could have entered their
heads. The temple itself is more resorted to by the people
of the city than any other, but there is very little of the
form of worship at any. Every man has his shrine at tlie
door of his liouse or shop, at which he burns his joss-sticks,
and with this vicarious devotion he is probably satisfied.
Another celebrated joss-house is known as the Temple
of the Five Hundred Gods. The Chinese deify their an-
cestors, and it is thus easy to make a large collection of
gods. These five hundred are carved and gilded life-size
images of as many sages, real or imaginary, arranged in
long rows up and down tlie temple. They are a curious
sight, especially in the great variety of faces and forms
154 AROUND THE WOULD.
which they present, all classes of features and all nation-
alities being represented, sometimes with very good effect.
Among the gods was one in Euro23ean dress, tight-bodied
coat and pantaloons ; but how he came to be deified in
China I did not learn.
As we approached this temple we saw half a dozen
priests standing in front of a sort of altar, with their books
open, ready to commence the service, which we afterward
heard them intoning in true ritualistic st^de. One of them,
happening to turn his head, saw us approaching, and the
whole group immediately left their altar and prayer-books
and gathered 'around us, the lady who was with me, as
usual, attracting the chief attention. They at once, as I
judged from their looks, fell to criticising her dress. They
assumed that we could not understand their conversation,
but a gentleman was with me who had been ten years in
China, and was perfectly familiar with their language, and
he informed us in English that they were discussing the
material of which the lady's dress was composed. One
said it was gauze, another maintained it was worsted, and
another silk. One of them spoke with commendation of
her wearing a veil, which they all thought was eminently
proper for a lady. After they had discussed these points
to their satisfaction, they returned to their prayer-books,
and as we walked on through the temple we heard them
drawling out the service.
The most imposing temple, and that which seems most
strictly devoted to purposes of worship, although few of
the people are seen in it, is the Buddhist temple at Honam,
directly across the river. It is reached by a long avenue
of stately trees, with a large archway about half the dis-
tance from the entrance to the grounds. It has some
claims, though not great, to magnificence of structure. It is
well endowed, and supports a large number of lazy priests
with closely-shaven heads, and a considerable number of
that sacred animal known at home as the hog. The ani-
mals (I mean the swine, though the priests have scarcely
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS. ^55
any stronger marks of intelligence in their countenances)
are fed from the funds of the temple, and literally roll in
fat. Whether they die a natural death,- or are made to
contribute to the support of the priests, I do not know, but
the preservation of life is a part of the Buddhist religion.
I attended the service, which is performed daily by the
priests without any worshipers. About twenty officiated,
and the service, which consisted of chanting, intoning, ring-
ing of bells, striking a tom-tom, and various bowings and
genuflections, with marchings up and down the temple, was
very like that which may be witnessed in any Roman Cath-
olic church. The chanting was well done, and had a pleas-
ing effect upon the ear. I have before remarked upon the
similarity between the Buddhist temples and ceremonies
and those of the Romanists, and every where it w^as the
same.
There is nothing picturesque in the ordinary dress of the
Chinese. Like the Japanese, they wear the everlasting
dull blue cotton, all excepting the really wealthy, and, un-
like the blue of the sky, which it is very unlike, it becomes
any thing but pleasing to the eye after one has looked upon
some millions wearing it. The Chinese, too, are the reverse
of neat in their personal habits, and one soon comes to as-
sociate this with the blue cotton clothing which is seen
wherever clothing is used at all. Consequently we came
to doubt whether the grand display of gorgeous attire of
whicl] we had read was not all in the imaginations of the
writers, but we had an opportunity while in Canton to con-
firm all that we had read and heard.
Some of our friends informed us two or three days in
advance of a grand procession which was to take place in
honor of one of the gods, an uncouth image which was to
be taken from the temple and paraded through the streets,
and a friend very kindly made arrangements for us to view
it from the balcony of a large tea-merchant's hong. The
street itself, like the others through which the procession
was to pass, was about eight feet wide — not a very grand
156 AROUND THE WORLD.
theatre for such a display. But they must needs use such
avenues as they have, and there are none much wider. We
went early, in time to see the operations connected with
the assorting, mixing, and flowering of the teas, which last
consists of mingling with the leaves of the tea various flow-
ers, the chief of which is the jessamine, to give it fragrance.
Soon after we arrived the requisite number of cups was
placed before us, the choicest tea of the establishment
placed in each cup, the hot water poured on, and a second
cup or saucer placed over the first to preserve the flavor,
the universal mode of making tea in China. To one wdio
is accustomed to having milk and sugar added, this decoc-
tion is very insipid ; but the hospitality must be accepted,
and it was renewed, on this as on other occasions, as often
as the proprietor, who could not speak or understand a
word of English, imagined we were thirsty.
We waited more than an hour for the procession to ar-
rive, and, in the mean time, were the objects of as much
curiosity as the procession itself. During the two hours
that it was moving, we (especially, if not wholly, the lady
that was with me) fairly divided the honors of the day with
the Dragon god. The Chiiiese, like the Japanese, never be-
come tired of looking at foreign ladies (in the case of Amer-
ican ladies I do not wonder), and while we looked at the
pageant that was passing before us, men, women, and chil-
dren stared into the balcony, as if such a sight as an Amei'-
ican lady had never been seen in Canton. How many of
them bestowed upon us the nsual compliment, Fan-kwai
(foi'eign devils), I could not tell.
After we had waited long, the sound of tom-toms, and
cymbals, and gongs, and triangles, and then of Chinese
flutes and various rude instruments, was heard, and one of
the most gorgeous processions that I ever beheld passed be-
fore us. There was more or less sameness between differ-
ent parts, but there was a gi'eat variety, especially in the
costumes of the persons composing it, and in the richlj^-em-
broidered canopies which were carried along in large num-
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS. ;[57
bers. I made some notes of the component parts of the
procession, and will copy only a specimen. Of course I
am unable to picture the scene as it moved on like a pano-
rama, or like the endless turning of a kaleidoscope in which
the gayest colors and richest combinations appear.
First came a band of police-officers (as in New York) to
drive away the crowd who had assembled in the narrow
street to see the sight ; then men carrying immense Chi-
nese lanterns, ornamented in every conceivable manner
with rich colors ; next a company of small boys elegantly
dressed in silks of various colors, with caps embroidered in
gold, and set off with the featliers of the golden pheasant
three feet in length ; music consisting of a sort of flageolet,
with cymbals and gongs ; coolies bearing vermilion and
gilded tablets with Chinese inscriptions (which I did not
attempt to copy) ; more boys on foot, elegantly dressed as
before ; silk banners in various colors borne aloft ; a boy
on horseback, his own dress of the richest description, and
the housings of his horse richly embroidered (boys thus
dressed and decorated in every imaginable way were dis-
tributed singly through the procession, until in its different
parts there were more than a hundred, in a city where
horses are scarcely ever seen); a rich canopy of silk em-
broidered all over with birds of gay plumage (and such
canopies came along every minute in the long procession) ;
elegant sedan chairs, cases elaborately carved and orna-
mented, carried by the coolies, and containing gifts to the
god ; boy bands of music, and boys on horseback dressed
in ^ancy costumes, representing sages of the empire and
emperors, some with long flowing beards and some with
bows and arrows ; a large white crane pouncing down with
joss-sticks in its mouth as an offering; fruits and confec-
tionery in endless variety for the god to eat ; glass cases
containing jewelry and precious stones, including the Chi-
nese jade-stones, loaned undoubtedly for the show ; com-
panies of men dressed in the most costly silks, crimson, sal-
mon, orange, green, blue, etc., the colors of the dresses and
158 AROUND THE WORLD.
the different parts blended and contrasted with exquisite
taste ; large, lofty embroidered silk canopies passim,, and
so of the Chinese lanterns and Chinese music ; boys richly
dressed and painted, carried on platforms, and girls carried
in a similar manner, resting on rods of iron concealed, and
apparently suspended in air, as if caught up in the act of
dancing or performing some gymnastic feat. Toward the
close of the procession came the public executioner, with
the heavy sword which takes off the head at a blow.
This does not begin to complete the catalogue, but, as
far as it goes, it is a faithful transcript of notes made on
the spot. It was a perfect marvel to see such a pageant
got up by the dull-looking Chinese, and to observe what a
variety of scenes the turns of the kaleidoscope would bring
up as the pageant moved on.
I saw, in the course of my walks, two large wedding pro-
cessions. One I encountered in a narrow street, and was
squeezed into a corner during the time of its passing, but
it was a curious sight, and well worth a squeeze to see it.
The parties did not seem to be present, and the procession
was composed mainly of the presents made, or supposed to
be made, to the bride, which were on their way to her home.
They consisted of all sorts of articles that would be likely
to enter into the outfit, the housekeeping, and living of a
newly-married couple. There were tables, chairs, trunks,
boxes, blankets, etc. ; even fowls in coops, and vegetables in
baskets. I heard it suggested, as the long procession was
passing by, that the Chinese are not behind the more civil-
ized nations in the art of swelling the display of presents
on such occasions, and that a large portion of the articles
that I saw moving in such grand ceremonial, like those
which we sometimes see so ostentatiously displayed on ta-
bles in the Western world, were hired for the occasion, and
might be seen the next day gracing other nuptials.
Another procession of a similar character I met at one
of the ferries between Honam and Canton, and, as the boats
are small, it was a long time in passing over. The boats
CANTON AND ITS SIGHTS. 159
were pljing back and forth for nearly an hour, at the end
of which time, having finished my call and returned, I ob-
served it just leaving the river. This procession was even
gayer and more varied than the one 1 had met in the heart
of the city, and was designed, like all others, to attract at-
tention by its gorgeous character. Nor was it a failure in
this respect. Great numbers of persons were standing
around discussing the value and beauty of the articles, and,
I presume, making their comments upon the parties and
families interested, who obtained their satisfaction in being
talked about by the street-goers. Whether they found a
place in the gazette I am not able to say, as I did not read
the Chinese papers next day.
I came once, in the city of Shanghai, upon a long funer-
al procession which was preceded by a powerful band of
music— powerful in amount of noise and not of music.
The mourners, real or professional, in white, were carried
in sedan chairs, and at different intervals in the course of
the procession companies of men in long white garments
filled up the train and kept up a constant wailing, making
the scene mournful even in the midst of the crowd which
always fills the streets of a Chinese city. Not the most
grotesque cei'emonies, nor the most matter-of -business cir-
cumstances, can divest death of its solemnity or bereave-
ment of its touching character. The imagination will al-
ways supply enough that is melancholy.
A much simpler funeral I saw outside the walls of the
same city. It consisted of two common coolies who were
bearing to the grave, slung uj)on a pole, the cofiins of two
children apparently five or six years of age. They were
not attended by a single relative or friend, but were to be
buried like dogs. Children in China are not considered
worth a funeral, or even mourning, unless they have ar-
rived at the age of eight or ten years.
IQQ AROUND THE WORLD.
XI.
CHINESE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
One of the most curious but not the most agreeable parts
of a traveler's experience in going round the world is to be
found in the great diversity of manners and customs in re-
gard to eating and drinking. One can accommodate him-
self readily to many new circumstances in which he finds
himself on stepping into a new country, but he can not al-
ways make his taste agree with the tastes of the people
among whom he is thrown. Happily, in this age of the
world he finds some of the staples of life much the same
the world over, so that he is not obliged practically to put
the most fastidious of the senses to the strong test which it
had to endure, when traveling, as one of the fine arts, was
more in its infancy ; but he can still indulge in observation
and speculation to his heart's content.
The Chinese from time immemorial, at least from the
days when we studied the pictorial geography, have been
celebrated for the range of their animal diet, and for some
of the luxuries of life which are peculiar to the celestial
kingdom. To begin with the first course, soup. All the
world knows that in China they have a delicacy which has
not reached other parts, in birds'-nest soup. One of my
first inquiries, as I got into the streets of Canton, was after
this commodity, or the nests from which it is made, and I
was taken into a fine shop, fitted up in a costly manner,
where it was the only article sold.
Birds'-nests are a great luxury in China, being within the
reach of the wealthy alone. They are sold at prices grad-
uated according to the quality of the article, none of any
value bringing a less price than their weight in silver, and
some bringing almost their -weight in gold. Nests are sold
CHIISfESE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS. \Q\
as high as $30 or $40 a poimd. The nests are simply a
mass of pure gelatine, secreted in some way by a species of
swallow {Hlrundo escule'/ita), and deposited against a wall,
just as the swallows in our country stick a nest of mud
against a beam. Some naturalists maintain that the gela-
tine is formed from a sort of sea-foam which the swallow
gathers, and which is exuded from the mouth of the bird.
It resembles the gelatine known by the name of isinglass,
and the purer sort is almost transparent. There is nothing
repulsive in its appearance, and its origin is just as honor-
able and commendatory as that from which our jellies are
made at home — I am disposed to think more so. The nests
come chiefly from the island of Java, where they are ob-
tained with great labor, and often at much peril, from deej)
caves along the coast. Some of these caves on the southern
coast of the island are approached only by a perpendicu-
lar descent of great depth, by means of ladders, the raging
of the sea below preventing all approach from the water.
When collected they are assorted into different grades,
those w4iich have not been occupied by the birds bringing
the highest price, and the other grades prices according to
cleanliness and quality. From one to two million dollars'
worth are imported every year into Canton. I put a fine
specimen of the nest into my trunk for importation into
America.
The Chinese do not have as great a variety of animal
food as the Western nations, but they make use of some
which most nations reject. I find a great diversity in the
testimony of travelers and residents in regard to the use of
" rats, cats, and puppies," some of the latter (I mean the
residents) stoutly afiirming that such animals are not eaten
at all, or, if so, only in cases of extremity, where nothing
else in the shape of food can be obtained. But I have seen
all these exposed for sale in the markets of Canton in the
very heart of the city.
There are dog markets where nothing else is sold, and
w^iere day after day I have seen dogs dressed and ready
L
1Q2 ABOUND THE WORLD.
cooked. There are several such markets in the city. Rats
also, alive and dead, fresh and dried, are regularly and con-
stantly sold, and I have seen them in all these stages of
preparation as I have been passing. One plump fellow I
saw suspended by his tail from a market-hook waiting for
a purchaser, but all the while struggling to escape, while
the dried specimens hanging around him mocked his ago-
ny, and awaited their destiny with more comjjosure. There
is no more reason for denying that such animals are regu-
larly sold in the markets of Canton for food than that beef
and mutton are sold in the markets of New York. And
yet it is nevertheless true that the mass of the people do
not use them. Their use is coniined to those who are un-
able to obtain flesh meat that is more expensive.
Another staple in the line of animal food is pork. Chi-
nese pigs are celebrated the world over for their excellent
quality, and, as well as Shanghai chickens, have long been
imported into America. They are raised with great care
— as carefully, if not more so, than the children. They are
often kept in little cages in the shops and houses, where
they receive every attention, and are fed w^ith the choicest
food instead of living on what is thrown away. And a
very quiet and well-behaved race they are. They are car-
ried about the streets in baskets just large enough for them
to be slipped into with their legs folded, and in this state
are laid away at the markets and other places, but I do not
remember ever to have heai'd in China a single note of that
dulcet music which is their peculiar forte in other parts.
Perhaps it is out of gratitude that they remain so quiet, for
I have been told that, until the government interfered and
required that they should be carried in baskets, they were
slung by the heels across a pole, a mode of conveyance
which would very naturally develop their musical powers.
The fruits of China are generally poor and destitute of
flavor. We had some fine grapes from the extreme north,
but the only fruit in the south that was in season and real-
ly palatable was the Amoy pumelo, corresponding to the
West India shaddock.
CHINESE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS.
163
The cultivation of small feet is not altogether peculiar to
the higher classes, nor to those
who are exempt from labor. It
is regarded as a mark of distinc-
tion, but only as conformity to
fashion distinguishes its votaries.
In every city great numbers of
women, perhaps a quarter or
more of the female population,
may be seen toddling about the
streets on their pegs, looking very
nnich as if their feet had been
cut off and they were walking on
the stumps. It is difficult to bal-
ance themselves in walking, and
they frequently resort to a third
peg in the shape of a cane to
keep themselves straight. The
custom of closely bandaging the
feet from infancy is not so inju-
rious as might be supposed, but
it greatly interferes with locomotion.
Everj^ one who visits China or reads about it is naturally
curious to learn something about the great staple of the
country, which has become the common beverage of the
world. The tea ]ilant is a shrub which, left to itself, w^ould
grow to the height of twenty feet and more, but as culti-
vated for the production of tea it is cut down and kept
down to four or live feet in height. It is raised chiefly in
the central regions. The leaves are gathered several times
during the season, the earliest, tender leaves being account-
ed the best. The first crop is usually gathered in the third
year from planting, and at the end of about seven years the
plants are renewed or cut down to the ground, new shoots
springing up from the roots. Plants treated in this way
will live for twenty-five or thirty years and produce good
crops.
CHINESE SMALL FOOT.
164: ABOUND THE WORLD.
The difference between hlach and green teas is not a dif-
ference of nature, but of manufacture ; both may be pro-
duced from the same identical shrub, according to the
treatment of the leaves. In preparing green tea the leaves
are dried, or roasted as the process is called in China, by
artificial heat, in pans, almost immediately after being gath-
ered. After about five minutes roasting they become moist
and soft, when they are placed on the rolling table and
rolled with the hands. They are then restored to the pans,
which are kept in motion for about an hour, at the end of
which time they are well dried. The color at first is a dull
green, but it becomes fixed or brighter after a short time.
It is afterward sifted and fired, or heated, before being
packed for market. The high color of green tea is often
imparted to it by drugs, which are not the most wholesome
for a beverage. For hlack tea, the leaves, on being picked,
are spread out in the open air for some time, then tossed
about until they become soft, when they are roasted in pans
for a few minutes, and then rolled, after which they are
exposed to the air for several hours, and finally dried slowly
over the fire until they acquire the color which is perma-
nent. The process of drying produces a chemical change
in the juices of the plant, and tlie difference in the process
of greater or less exposure to the atmospheric air in the
curing accounts for the difference in the color and fiavor
of the two kinds of tea.
In preparing it for market, fragrant fiowers are distrib-
uted through the tea as it is placed in the chest, to add to
its flavor. The jessamine is most commonly used on ac-
count of its fragrance. Tea is unquestionably often adul-
terated, and, perhaps, most fi'equently by the mixing of
spent leaves with those that are fresh. In the vicinity of
Shanghai I saw old leaves revamped in this way in large
quantities. When we remember the immense quantity con-
sumed in the empire, and that the mode of preparing the
beverage is not by thorough steeping, but simply by pour-
ing hot water upon a small quantity of leaves in each cnp.
CHINESE 3IANNEBS AND CUSTOMS. ^65
leaving much of the strength still in the leaves, it does not
appear strange that even the Chinese should resort to this
mode of adulteration. We are sometimes shocked at the
thought tliat barbarous nations should adulterate any thing
designed for market, when adulteration is one of the most
common, if not most refined arts of civilized life.
Who does not remember how he was puzzled, when a
child, with the idea that the Chinese, living on the opposite
side of the globe, must of necessity be standing on their
heads ; and, although the matter was fully explained on the
principle of universal gravitation toward the centre of the
earth, the puzzle never seemed to get entirely out of the
youthful head. Children of larger growth, on coming to
China, find a hundred puzzles where before they had only
one. The Chinese seem to be standing on their heads in
almost every respect ; they reverse the general orders of
society in more ways than I can attempt to enumerate. In
China the mariner's compass does not point to the north,
but to the south ; in other words, the index is placed upon
the opposite end of the needle, a fact which must be kept
in mind by those who follow the compass, as it might make
some difference in laying their course, whether they go
north or south, east or west. So in regard to the different
points of the compass, they reverse the occidental order,
and call northwest westnorth, southeast eastsouth, etc.
When they meet a person whom they wish to salute, in-
stead of taking him by the hand and giving it a hearty
shake, the ordinary salutation with us, they shake their own
hands, putting them together and moving them up and
down. In most civilized countries it is considered a mark
of respect, and even of ordinary politeness, to take off the
hat, unless it be for one with whom we are on the most fa-
miliar terms. But the Chinese, on the contrary, regard it
as showing undue familiarity to uncover the head, and al-
though they may remove their shoes on coming into your
presence, they never think of removing the hat, or cap, or
whatever they may be wearing. The general head-gear
IQQ AROUND THE WORLD.
of the men is a sort of skull-cap. If a Chinaraau wishes
to do you special honor, instead of placing you at his right
hand, you will have a seat or a standing-place on his left.
When invited to a feast or other entertainment, the men
and women, although invited together, do not eat together,
but occupy separate rooms, a custom which is only partially
imitated in strictly English society, where ladies are expect-
ed to retire early by themselves, in order to give the gen-
tlemen an opportunity to smoke and drink to their hearts'
content.
I am sorry to say that the female sex is not regarded
with much respect until it wears the honors of maternity.
Girls in China are of very little account. While at Can-
ton I visited, by invitation, the house of a wealthy and
highly educated man, one of the Howqua family. I found
him in his library, surrounded with books and works of
art, some of which he had executed himself. His house
was an extensive jmlace, and every thing about it, as well
as his manners and conversation, indicated high culture
and refined taste. His little boy coming into the room, I
asked the father how many children lie had, and his reply
was " One, and two daughters ;" as if the daughters were
not desei*ving of the name of children. The lady who ac-
companied me, and who soon afterward was admitted to
the wife's apartments, laughingly attempted to impress
upon his mind the superiority of the feminine portion of
his household, including the two daughters. He took it all
in evident good humor, but it was more than doubtful
whether any impression was made upon his mind in that
direction.
The style of dress in Cliina is not only different, as a
whole, from what we are accustomed to, but there are
some strange transmutations which strike the attention of
a traveler. The men very commonly wear a sort of petti-
coat — a loose, close garment reaching to the feet, while
the women, on the other hand, wear trowsers or pantaloons,
literally and not metaphorically. I may say that the lat-
CHINESE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS. -^Q^
ter wear the pantaloons metaphorically as well as literally,
for, contrary to the general ideas in regard to the position
and influence of woman in these Oriental countries, there
is no part of the world where family authority resides more
in the woman. The wife may not have the same high po-
sition outside of the family, but maternal authority in
China is well nigh supreme, and grand-maternal authority
is sometimes still greater. A mother does not lose her
right to command her son when he marries or becomes the
head of a numerous household of his own, but continues to
hold the sceptre over succeeding generations.
The dress-makers and milliners in China are men in-
stead of women, and the various trades and occupations
are singularly mixed up. Having occasion to order an
Eastern hat, or topee as it is called, as a protection against
the sun, the rays of which often prove fatal, even in the
cool season, I sent my measure through a friend. A day
or two after, w'ord was brought to my room that the tailor
was at the door waiting to see me. On sending for him, I
found it was the tailor who had made my hat, and who
came to see whether it was a fit. In the streets of a Chi-
nese city, almost every man you meet has a fan either in
his hand or tucked in his dress, back of his neck; while, on
the other hand, the women indulge freely in a habit which
in our country is supposed to belong to the other sex — that
of smoking. The men wear their hair as long as it will
grow, longer than any modern reformers that I have ever
seen in America, while the women carefully put theirs up.
In China, when a man gets angry with another and
wishes to be revenged upon him, instead of killing the ob-
ject of his hatred he kills himself. The principle on which
he does it is the supposition that the man whom he hates
will be answerable for his murder, and will be more heavi-
ly punished by evil spirits in this world and in the world
to come than if his life had been taken. It is certainly,
for society, a safer mode of administering vengeance than
that which prevails in civilized countries, where the pistol
IQg ABOUND THE WOULD.
and bowie-knife are made to do their work upon unsus-
pecting victims. The Canton policemen have quite as orig-
inal a mode of performing their services. Instead of look-
ing for marauders, they go about the streets at night sound-
ing a loud rattle or tom-tom, which may be heard at least a
mile, and which seems intended to warn all misdoers that an
officer of justice is at hand, and that they must accomplish
what they have to do and get out of the way before he ar-
rives.
The language of China is another of its contradictions.
The spoken language is never written, and the written lan-
guage is never spoken, so that one may be familiar with
Chinese books, and not understand any thing of the conver-
sation of the people ; or he may be proficient in the collo-
quial tongue, and not understand a word of what he reads.
In reading a book, the Chinese begin at the end (that is, at
our end) and read backward ; they read from top to bot-
tom instead of across the page, the lines running down-
ward, and numbering from right to left. The running title
of the book or page is at the side instead of the top of the
page, and the contents of the chapter at the end instead
of the beginning. The notes, which with us are at the
bottom or in the side margin, in Chinese books are at the
top of the page.
The Chinese have a custom quite peculiar to themselves
of ordering their coffins and having them sent home long
before they have any thought of dying. They take pecul-
iar pride in selecting the best materials, having them made
good and strong, and, when they can afford it, in the most
expensive style, and then they take great pleasure in show-
ing them to their friends, keeping them where they may be
seen by all who call. For the same reason, perhaps a mo-
tive of pride, they preserve the bodies of their friends in
the house sometimes for weeks and months after death,
making a display of the costly receptacle.
I might greatly extend this catalogue of contrarieties by
speaking of tlie manner in wdiich their schools are con-
CHINESE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS. j^gQ
ducted ; of the old men flying kites, and the boys looking
on ; of wearing white instead of black for mourning ; of
all classes whitening their shoes with chalk instead of black-
ing them ; of mounting the offside of the horse when they
ride, etc. But this is enough.
China and the Chinese are a great mystery to the world
at large, and scarcely less of a mystery to tlie dwellers in
China than to those who never set foot within the Flowery
Land. The people of the country are a study, but a study
in which little actual progress is made. I have heard those
who have been here ten years or more confess that they
knew as little of Chinese character, and were almost as un-
able to comprehend the national traits, as when they first
came to this country. The Chinese are a very stolid, in-
communicative, undemonstrative race, so that a foreigner
may be associated with them, or may have them in his
house as servants, and constantly in his presence for years,
and know no more about them at the end of this period
than the first day he saw them.
I have found one key which, if it does not unlock the
mysteries of the Chinese mind, explains the uniform and
stereotype character whicli the nation has maintained for
centuries, and which it seems determined to maintain for
centuries to come. A Chinaman is a Chinaman in every
part of the empire and the world over. He is nothing else,
and can be made nothing else, and he has been the same
for long ages. One explanation of this is to be found in
the fact that the educated and ruling class of the country
are all cast in one mould. The ideas of the nation were
formed more than two thousand years ago ; and the only
system of education which has existed since that time has,
per force, not only compelled the people to adopt these
ideas, but has ground them into their very natures, and
made them a part of the national character, as much so as
the peculiar features of the countenances of the people.
All who have read any thing about China must have
met with frequent i-eferences to the " Competitive Exam-
170 AROUND TEE WOULD.
iuations," which are the great stimulus to education. The
Chinese are eminently a literary people, a large portion of
them being able to read and write, while the highly edu-
cated class is very numerous. But this is not the result
of any such system of general instruction as prevails in
American or European countries. The schools do not com-
prise the mass of the children, nor are they of a high class.
The education of the people is in a great measure volun-
tary, and, such as it is, is secured by its being the only road
to position in society and to political preferment. The
" Competitive Examination" is the ordeal through which
all must pass successfully in order to secure any high stand-
ing, and this examination is a sort of mould in wdiich the
Chinese mind is cast, and from which it comes out uni-
form in shape and character. It is conducted on this wise '•
The empire is divided into provinces and districts, for
each of which there is a separate examination — the dis-
trict, the provincial, and the imperial. No one is required
to go through an examination, but it is open to all, with
the exception of a few classes, such as the children of exe-
cutioners, jailers, prostitutes, etc. Before any one can be
a candidate for the lowest, tlie district examination, he
must have passed through a satisfactory examination be-
fore a magistrate, and must present satisfactory testimo-
nials as to his parentage, character, etc. At the appointed
time, the candidates, who usually number many thousands,
asseml)le at the capital city of the district, and have as-
signed to them subjects for essays and a poem, which
they are required to produce without assistance and with-
in twenty-four hours. The most extensive arrangements
are made for the accommodation of this vast number of
persons, and also to prevent their obtaining any external
aid. The essays are carefully examined by government
officials, and so rigid is the ordeal that usually not more
than one in a hundred passes the test. The successful
competitors receive the degree of B.A. — not Bachelor of
Arts, but " Beautiful Ability." And the point peculiarly
CHINESE 3IANNERS AND CUSTOMS. \^\
noteworthy is, that all the themes are taken from the writ-
ino-s of the Chinese sages. The essays are not only expect-
ed to be a reflection of their teachings, but it is impossible
that it should be otherwise, inasmuch as the previous train-
ing of the candidate has been confined almost exclusively
to their wi-itings. Only those who receive the first degree
in tlie district examination are allowed to compete for the
second in the provincial.
The provincial examination occurs once in three years
at the capital of the province, where a large hall, as it is
called, is devoted exclusively to this purpose. The one at
Canton (the capital of the province of Quang Tung) which
I visited is 1330 feet long, 583 feet wide, and contains cells,
arranged in lone; rows like stalls for horses, for 8653 can-
didates. The whole inclosure is surrounded by a high
wall, and each row of cells is inclosed, and under the su-
pervision of an officer, whose duty it is to prevent all com-
munication between the candidates or with the outer world.
Here they are shut up, after having been carefully search-
ed, to prevent their taking in upon their persons any thing
that might assist them in the preparation of their essays.
Tlieraes, taken as before from the " Classics," or " Four
Books," are then given to them on several successive days ;
the essays and poems, which must be produced within a
given time, are carefully copied in red ink to prevent rec-
ognition by the examiners of the source from which they
come, and they are then subjected to the rigid criticism of
literary men appointed by the imperial government. On
the close of the examination, the names of the successful
competitors are posted upon the outer wall, and are her-
alded throughout the province. They bear about the same
proportion to the whole as before — one to a hundred.
They receive the second degree, A.M. — not Masters of
Arts, but "Advanced Men" — and become candidates for
the third and highest examination, which is held ti-iennial-
ly at Peking, and wliich is equally rigid with the pre-
ceding.
172 AROUND THE WORLD.
Those who pass and receive the last degree become eli-
gible to public offices, and enter into the most honored and
ruling class in the empire. Only two or three hundred
out of the thousands who have passed the lower succeed in
the imperial examination ; but in this, as in the lower, they
liave the privilege of trying again, and thus many present
themselves triennially, term after term. In this way fifty
or a hundred times as many as are successful in obtaining
the prize, receive the training and become educated mem-
bers of the communities to which they belong.
There is no prize presented to the mind of a Chinese
youth which is such a stimulus to unbending effort as the
third degree. It comprises all that his ambition could de-
sire — social position, office, honor, wealth. The successful
candidate, on his return to his home from the capital, is
feasted and feted, and frequently a pagoda or some other
building is erected in his honor, and as a memorial of the
honor which he reflects upon his native city.
I have referred to this subject only as giving something
of an insight into Chinese character, and as showing why
it is that the Chinese remain so much the same, while oth-
er nations are undergoing change. They are educated in
a system of ideas which have been handed down through
twenty centuries ; the hoary-headed antiquity of these ideas
makes them venerable in their eyes, and it is not strange
that they wish future generations to travel in the same
path which they and their fathers have trod so long. The
teachings of the Chinese sages, Confucius, Mencius, and
others, are the fountain of their ideas. Few natives live
up to their own standards, and it is not strange that the
Chinese practically depart from the wise instruction of
those sages ; but this is the moyld into which the educated
minds are all poured, and it appears to account for many
of their national characteristics.
BELIGI0N8 OF CHINA. X^S
XII.
RELIGIONS OF CHINA.
The prevailing forms of religion in China are Confu-
cianism, Buddhism, and Tauism. The former, which is the
faith of the educated and influential classes, is more a sys-
tem of philosophy and of morals than a religion. It is
founded on the teachings of the great Chinese sage who
flourished about five centuries before the Christian era,
whose reputed writings contain a vast amount of practical
wisdom and of pure morality. The Chinese owe much to
Confucius, and they would be a much better people if they
followed his precepts more closely. Buddhism is an im-
portation from India, where it had its rise, and from which
it passed over Eastern Asia and to the adjacent islands. It
is now declining, and the temples devoted to its worship
are in many places going into decay. Tauism lays claim
rather to the vulgar and uneducated classes. It is a mys-
tic sort of religion, deals in incantations and astrology, and,
like spiritualism, pretends to intercourse with the departed
dead as well as with acknowledged evil spirits. The priests
are generally ignorant men, and, through mystic art and by
playing upon the superstition of the people, maintain their
ascendency over them.
There is no more striking or more universal trait of Chi-
nese character than its intense superstition. The religious
element appears to be wanting; they are simply supersti-
tious, and no nation is more so. The spirits of the air, the
earth, and the sea are a constant terror to them, and their
acts of worship are designed to ward off such influences
rather than to pay homage to any exalted being. They
use all sorts of charms to keep off from their persons, and
houses, and farms the world of evil spirits which in their
174 AROUND THE WORLD.
belief are going liither and thither. Ancestral worship is
universal. No matter in what part of the world they live,
the Chinese wish to be brought home when they die, and
buried with the generations that preceded them ; and while
they live they pay great respect, a reverence amounting to
worship, to their departed ancestors, making pilgrimages
to their graves, adorning their tombs, erecting tablets to
their memory in costly ancestral halls, burning incense, joss-
sticks, and candles, and presenting offerings. They rever-
ence their dead grandfathers moi'e than their gods.
One of the most common offerings that the Chinese make
in their worship is exceedingly characteristic — a sort of
counterfeit money, pasteboard dollars covered with tin-foil,
resembling silver dollars, and marked accordingly. This
is sometimes offered to a large amount, counting it at its
nominal value, and a Chinaman will not only pride him-
self on making an offering to his god or his ancestor of
several thousand dollars, which cost him only a trifle, but
he will fairly chuckle over the thought that his stupid god
or his dead ancestor, not knowing the difference between
the counterfeit and the genuine, will give him credit for
the full amount in good money.
They have numberless inferior gods — the God of the
Earth, the God of the Sea, the God of Wealth, the God of
Letters, the God of Thunder, the God of War, the Kitchen
God, etc., etc., which are represented by grotesque images
or pictures. The thieves and the gamblers each have their
god. They make their appeals to the gods by the use of
the lot, every temple being provided with a box of sticks
or straws for the purpose. This superstitious disposition
to rely upon the lot is carried into all the affairs of life.
The Chinese are all gamblers, gambling every where and
for every thing. Even the little boys, as I have often seen,
in going up to a fruit-stand, almost invariably cast the die
to determine whether they shall have double or nothing
for their money.
The efforts to propagate Christianity in China have not
BELIGIOXS OF CHINA.
175
CASTING LOT» BEFOKE A GOr.
met with as much success as in some other countries, but
they are far from being a faikire, and there are manifest
reasons wliich, while they account for the want of enlarged
success thus far, do not in the least degree discourage those
who have undertaken the work. ISTowhere have Christian
missions had greater obstacles to overcome. The opening
of the free ports did not open China to free intercourse
with the rest of the world. The traditional seclusion of its
inhabitants, and tlieir hostility to foreigners and to all for-
eign notions, exist to this day in all their force. The mass
of the people regard all other nations as ontside barbarians,
and it is the interest of the educated class to keep alive this
hatred. They salute missionaries, as well as others, in the
streets with the title of foreign devils, not knowing or not
appreciating the motives with which they come to teach a
new religion.
Foreign intercourse thus far has been carried on by force.
The ports. were opened, not by the free consent of the Chi-
nese, but by the guns of foreign powers. The Chinese
wished to live by themselves, neither interfering with oth-
ers nor interfered with ; but for purposes of gain, and by
176 ABOUND THE WORLD.
force of arms, foreign nations compelled them to admit the
commerce and the merchants of the world. This of itself
was enough to prejudice the nation against missionaries
who come from the same lands with the ships of war that
battered down their forts and their cities. It is not strange
that Christian teachers should find it hard even to gain the
ears of those who have been thus treated. And, further-
more, this force was employed to open China to commerce
for the express purpose of compelling the authorities to ad-
mit one of the greatest curses ever thrust upon any peo-
ple.
The Opium War and the present opium trafiic are a dark
blot upon the history of the British government. No one
can visit the cities of China and witness the debasing and
destructive effects of opium on the multitudes of miserable
victims which it is daily depriving of mental and physical
vigor and consigning to the grave ; no one can read the
piteous words in which the Chinese commissioners have
besought the British representatives not to force this de-
structive drug upon the nation ; no one can recall the heart-
less manner in which such appeals were answered with
threats, and then with broadsides from vessels of war, until
the way was made open for the w^holesale introduction of
opium into all parts of the empire, and wonder, after such
proceedings on the part of a Christian government, that the
Chinese do not seem well disposed to accept the Christian
religion. It is not strange that they should put the two to-
gether, and regard them with the same hostility. When Sir
Rutherford Alcock, the British embassador, was taking his
leave of the government at Pekin to return to England on
a furlough, Prince Kung said to him, " Now that you are
about to return to your own counti-y, we wish you to take
with you your opium and your missionaries." Could any
thing be more natural ? And yet there are those who im-
pute the slow progress of Christian missions in China not
to the obstacles which have been placed in their way, but
to the cause of missions itself.
RELIGIONS OF CHINA.
0Z
177
PKINCE KTJNG.
The Rev. J. R.Wolfe, a Church of England missionary of
long experience in China, writes :
" There is not a particle of truth, as far as my experience
goes, in the statement that the Chinese people are opposed to
the propagation of Christianity, or disUke the missionaries
simply because they are such. There is, however, one thing
which the Chinese people dislike, and which has tended more
than any thing else to produce hatred for foreigners, and cause
misery and ruin to multitudes of the Chinese peojale them-
selves, and that one thing is tlie act of the British government
in compelling the Chinese people at the point of the bayonet
to buy the opium, when they most virtuously and patriotical-
ly protested against it. I have invariably found in my jour-
neys through the country that this act of the British govern-
ment is remembered with deep and lasting hatred bv all class-
es of the people, and is handed down from father to son as
one cause why the English should be held in everlasting ha-
tred and contempt."
While I was at Canton, one of the missionaries with
whom I was crossing the river in a ferry-boat fell into con-
vereation with two or three intelligent Chinese, and tlie first
M
178 AROUND THE WORLD.
reply of the person he addressed was, " You are bringing
opium into the country to destroy ns, and we do not want
to have any thing to do with your religion."
In no other country has the personal example of irrelig-
ious men from Christian lands done more to prejudice the
people against Christianity. Too many of those who go
to foreign parts lay aside even the restraints of morality by
which they are bound at home, and set before the heathen
an example of license in living which becomes a libel upon
the religion of their native lands. The people of those
countries can not make the distinction which is made at
home between those who profess to be governed by the
principles of Christianity and those who do not ; all are
called Christians, and the name and cause of true religion
must bear the burden of those immoralities. I could de-
tail scenes which I have witnessed on these distant shores
that were shocking to my own feelings as they would be
to any Christian mind, and yet they were all laid to the ac-
count of Christianity.
The present attitude of the foreign merchants in China
toward tlie Chinese is another hinderance to the success of
efforts made to promote their conversion to Christianity.
The spirit of the Opium War is still at work. Foreign mer-
chants, with few exceptions, go to China without a thought of
doing the Chinese any good, simply to make money. The
opportunities for maldng large fortunes have gone by. The
Chinese are getting a measure of the foreign trade into their
own hands. Trade with the interior is still restricted. These
and other causes have awakened the hostility of foreigners
toward the Chinese, and now it is difhcult to say where the
greater degree of hostility lies, with the Chinese or the for-
eign traders. While I was in China, the desire for another
war was prevalent among the foreign residents ; I might
say it was almost universal, and the motive was to break
down the restrictions upon trade, and give foreigners great-
er opportunities for making mouey. After all the injuries
the Chinese have sustained in the past, and with the feel-
RELIGIONS OF CHINA.
179
ings cherished toward them at the present time, I do not at
all wonder that they are ready to spew every foreigner,
missionary as well as merchant, ont of the land. I do not
mean to intimate that Christian missionaries share in this
anti-Chinese feeling ; they do not ; but the Chinese do not
comprehend the different motives which actuate the two
classes.
The difficulty of acquiring the language so as to become
familiar with it has been a great obstacle. A single fact
will give some idea of this. Through the instrumentality
of the American Presbyterian Mission, metal types have
come into use in printing Chinese. The Mission Press at
Shanghai is the most extensive printing establishment in
the empire. On entering it, I was confronted with a series
of amphitheatres, in the interior of each of which stood a
compositor, and I saw at a glance the immensity of the
work which every one who learus to read, or write, or print
the language has to encounter. Each of these amphithea-
tres was what printers call a case, containing, not twenty-
six letters, as in English printing offices, but more than
six thousand different characters or types, and, with the
combinations, more than thirteen thousand. The Diction-
ary of Dr. Morrison contained forty thousand separate char-
acters, which must become familiar to the eye, and various
inflections must be given to similar words to express the
ideas associated, or one may fail to express what he means.
In no language are ludicrous errors more apt to be made
by giving a wrong accent or inflection, and thus entirely
changing the sense.
But, notwithstanding all these difficulties, a great work
has been already accomplished. Few even of those who
are familiar with the current work of missions in China
have any adequate idea of what has actually been done.
Protestant missionaries are almost the only persons who
have ever mastered the language. Kot one merchant in a
hundred, scarcely one in a thousand, makes even the at-
tempt to acquire it either for reading or speaking. All
ISO AROUND THE WORLD.
the Chinese Dictionaries for English students have been
made by missionaries. Tlie only writers who have pre-
pared books in Chinese designed to instruct and elevate the
people have been missionaries. I have before me a cata-
logue of nearly a hundred works in Chinese on various
sciences, history, geography, medicine, law, etc., all of which
have been prepared by Protestant missionaries. They have
done more than any and all other men to promote a knowl-
edge of Chinese literature. They have established and
maintained in Chinese cities hospitals which have been a
great blessing to the people, and which are doing much to
prepare the way for the reception of the Gospel of Christ.
At Canton a hospital was established in 1835 by Dr. Peter
Parker, then a missionary, which has been a house of mercy
to hundreds of thousands. During the year that I was at
Canton there had been 26,457 patients, many of whom re-
quired skillful surgical treatment. During my stay in that
city several surgical operations of the most delicate and
difficult nature were performed. The hospital is now in
charge of a slvillful physician and surgeon. Dr. Kerr, of the
American Presbyterian Board.
Nor have the labors of the missionaries been without im-
portant spiritual results. In 1850 all who had professed
themselves Christians did not number four hundred. N^ow
there are about six thousand communicants in the various
mission churciies. The Presbytery of Ningpo has seven
churches and about five hundred communicants. At Foo
Chow there are about one thousand communicants. At
Amoy, a station which was first occupied by Pev. David
Abeel, the devoted missionary whose fervid and eloquent
appeals in behalf of the cause of missions will never be
forgotten by any who heard them in his native land, there
were, when 1 was in China, nearly thirteen hundred com-
municants, with thirty-two stations and twenty-eight chap-
els, chiefly in the country round about. These are only
some of the fruits which have been gathered.
In no part of the world is the medical branch of the mis-
RELIGIONS OF CHINA.
181
sionary work of more importance than in China. There
are many parts of the empire where a missionary, in going
out to preach the Gospel, or to distribute books or tracts,
would be driven away by a mob, if he did not fare worse ;
indeed, this is true of almost the whole interior of the coun-
try, but there is not a single spot, city or country, town or
village, where a medical missionary may not at any time
set himself down, and, within an hour, make himself per-
fectly at home with the people — administering to the sick
and suffering, and, at the same time, preaching the Gospel
with entire freedom. It is simply marvelous, when we re-
member the hostility of the Chinese to foreigners, that
physicians have such ready access to the people, although
there is a reason for it. The Chinese have no thoroughly
educated physicians. Their aversion to handling the dead
is so great that they have no students of anatomy. The
only really educated physician of whom I heard was edu-
cated in America. At the same time, they seem to have
implicit faith in the medical skill of foreign physicians,
and in their presence lay aside their national hatred.
Dr. Kerr gave me an account of a visit he once made, in
company with another missionary, a preacher of the Gos-
pel, to an interior town which had been the scene of violent
demonstrations against the Fan-kwai (the foreign devils).
As soon as he found a place to sit down, and announced
the object of his visit, he was surrounded by an eager
crowd, and all day long he ministered to the sick, who came
to him by hundreds, while his companion preached without
any molestation. But for his being a physician, they would
have been mobbed, if not torn to pieces. When they went
to their boat at night they had a perfect ovation ; the streets
were lined with people who were attracted by the benevo-
lent character of their visit.
The first Sabbath that I spent at Canton I visited in the
morning the chapels and schools of the London "VVesleyan
Missionary Society, and heard a sermon delivered with
great earnestness and solemnity by a native preachei. The
182 AROUND THE WORLD.
whole service was in Chinese. Tlie liymns w^hich were
sung were " Eock of Ages," and " Grace, 'tis a charming
sound." The congregation gave close attention, and the
whole scene was impressive. At the close of the preach-
ing I went into the schools and examined the young chil-
dren in some of tlie general facts of the Old and New Tes-
tament histories, and I am sure that no children of the same
age in America could give more ready or intelligent an-
swers to the inquiries which were made. From there I went
to the Treasury-street Chapel, under the charge of Rev. Mr.
Preston, of the American Presbyterian Board, a neat and
attractive building, situated in the very heart of the old
city, and on one of its great thoroughfares. The front is
always open, and passers-by drop in to hear the Word spo-
ken, some staying through the service, but most moving on
after listening for a while. Some came in with heavy bur-
dens on their heads, and set them down while Ihey listened.
One lad came bringing two cages of birds, which he placed
on the floor. He soon became evidently interested in what
he heard. This service is kept up every day, and thousands
thus hear the message. There are several such places open
in the city in connection with the different missions, and,
although the speakers are sometimes interrupted with ques-
tions and objections, they are never molested.
The foreign merchants, who are absorbed in their com-
mercial enterprises, as a general thing, take little interest
in the missionary work, or in the elevation of the Chinese.
But one honorable exception I desire to name (there are oth-
ers), that of the house of Oliphant & Co. Not only at home,
but in China, have they made large gifts to promote the
cause, and they have more than once placed their vessels at
the disposal of the missionaries. In 1S35 they gave to Mr.
Medlmrst and a companion in his work the use of a vessel
for a missionary voyage of some months among the ports
of China, and the following year they sent out from Amer-
ica another vessel to be employed in the same service.
Their example is one which might better be followed than
3fACA0, SINGAPORE, AND PENANG. ^gS
that of men who seek only to make gain out of this hea-
then people, and do nothing to elevate them, or to make
them acquainted with the Gospel from heaven.
XIII.
MACAO, SINGAPORE, AND PENANG.
The sunniest, brightest spot that I saw on the whole
coast of China is Macao. For this reason I do not regret
reserving a visit to it as the last before leaving for other
Oriental lands. It is but a few hours' sail, in a pleasant
American river steamer, from Hong Kongt
On our way down the bay the captain entertained us
with stories of his encounters with Chinese pirates, which
still infest these rivers and bays. I had seen some speci-
mens — desperate-looking fellows — in the criminal court at
Canton, where they were undergoing torture, a Chinese
mode of examination ; the judges informing us that they
liad been on the rack several hours, and were still unwilling
to confess their crimes. As we were running down the bay
to Macao, the captain informed us that the waters were still
swarming with these desperadoes, who were watching ev-
ery opportunity for seizing vessels, from a steamer down to
a row-boat, and that they would not hesitate to put to death
all on board who stood in the way of their rapine. One
way in which they accomplish their purjiose is for a large
number to take passage on a steamer on which there are
usually very few European passengers, and to seize the
vessel. They have a strong temptation to do this in the
fact that these steamei's often carry treasure back and forth.
We had then on board a large amount of specie ; but the
captain mildly assured us we had nothing to fear from the
crowd of Chinese on deck below, as he had an armed man
at each companion-way, who would instantly give the alarm
184 AROUND THE WORLD.
if any attempt to seize the little steamer should be made.
All this was very assm-iiig ; but I found his stories far more
than confirmed in the records of Hong Kong, which I aft-
erward examined. They contained, for every year, so
many accounts of piracies in the vicinity, that it seemed to
be the commonest of crimes. Some were committed in
the very neighborhood of Hong Kong, and many on the
river between that place and Canton.
One of the regular passenger steamers between Ilong
Kong and Canton, not long before, was the scene of a des-
perate encounter with these river pirates, who had come
on board with the intention of taking the vessel and mur-
dering all its officers. They seized their opportunity, shot
the pilot and several of the oflicers, but the captain, with
the aid of a lady, who handed out to him through a win-
dow one musket after another, kept them at bay until he
had assistance, and the ruffians were overpowered or killed.
There are no people that would plan an enterprise more
remorselessly than the Chinese, or carry it out in colder
blood. Indeed, fi-om all that I have learned of Chinese
character, they appear to me more destitute of that element
of our nature that Ave call conscience than any other peo-
ple I have ever known.
While we were listening to the captain's piratical yarns
the city of Macao hove in sight. It stretches along a beau-
tiful bay and up the hill-sides, and, with its cream-colored
stone buildings, looks very much like an Italian town on
Lake Como or Maggiore. Its whole appearance, as you
approach it, is picturesque. Macao, in reality, is not a Chi-
nese town. It was first occupied by the Portuguese in 1557,
and is said to have been allowed them as a residence and a
trading-place on account of their efforts in destroying the
pirates which infested the coast. During the last century,
while the trade of the East India Company with Canton
was at its height, it enjoyed a high degree of prosperity,
and became the resort and the home of foreigners from all
nations. It has more than once proved a refuge for for-
JfACAO, SINGAPORE, AND PENANG.
185
eign merchants when they have been driven out of the
ports of China, and it was for a long time the resort of
Christian missionaries when they could not be admitted
into the empire itself. It received a fatal blow when, by
the treaty of 1842, the ports of China were thrown open,
and Hong Kong became a British colony. It is now al-
most entirely deserted by foreigners for purposes of trade,
though still resorted to, especially by invalids, on account
of the salubrity of its climate. Its inhabitants are almost
exclusively Chinese and mixed-breed, descendants of the
Portuguese.
Macao M-as never actually ceded to the Portuguese.
They continued ver}' reluctantly to pay tlie imperial gov-
ernment an annual rental of 500 taels until 1846, when an
order was given by the Queen of Portugal that the Chinese
Custom-house on the island should be closed, and the sem-
blance of Chinese authority obliterated. The execution of
this order by the Portuguese governor Amiral awakened
intense hostility on the part of the Chinese population of
186 AROTIXD THE WORLD.
the island, which was no doubt fostered by the officials of
the empire. The governor, soon after, in opening a new
street, removed several tombs — a desecration which, in
their eyes, afforded good cause for visiting their vengeance
upon him. As he was one day riding on the public drive
near the Barrier, attended by an aid-de-camp, several Chi-
namen rushed upon him, dragged him from his horse, and
severed his head and his hand from his body (the other
hand having been lost in battle). The whole thing was
done so instantaneously that, although in open day, no one
could detect the ruffians. The head and hand were sent as
trophies to Canton, whence they were afterward obtained
by negotiation. This transaction led to the assertion by
the Portuguese of exclusive jurisdiction over the island,
but the claim has never been acknowledged by the Chi-
nese. The island has become the chief seat of the coolie
or Chinese slave-trade, great numbers being shipped from
this port.
The European aspect of the town, utterly unlike the
low, dull, gloomy Chinese cities, makes it very pleasing to
the eye after visiting the latter. There are a number of
fine buildings, some of them beautifully situated on hills
embraced within the city limits, and affording charming
views of the town, tlie harbor, and the adjacent waters.
Some of the old Portuguese churches are elaborate speci-
mens of architecture. The fagade and ruins of St. Paul's,
which w^as destroyed by fire many years ago, are very pic-
turesque. The Church of Our Lady of Sorrow, a quaint
old building, occupies the crest of a hill, which affords one
of the finest views of the town and its surroundings. A
large wooden cross, twenty-five or thirty feet in height,
stands in front of the church, and overlooks the bay. A
curious legend is related as its history. A devout (or un-
devout) sailing-master, some time in the last century, in
a violent storm at sea, when he had little hope of again
seeing land, made a vow that, if his vessel should be pre-
served, he would erect a cross out of the mainmast in
MACAO, SINGAPORE, AND FEXANG.
1S7
CKJOLIE l>lEiA0OOMi AT M VC VO
front of tliis church, and he f nlfilled his vow. The chiu'ch
is called the " Sailors' Church," and a gentleman who has
long resided at Macao assured me that it is a common cus-
tom with the sailors to bring various parts of the rigging
of their ships up the steep hill to this church to have them
blessed.
A beautiful though lonely spot is known as Camoens's
Garden, where the great poet, the author of the Lusiad,
walked, and mused, and wrote. The grotto which bears his
name, and a monument to his memoiy, is a curious forma-
tion of rocks in the midst of extensive grounds, that are
laid out with great taste, and shaded with large Oriental
trees. It is just such a spot as a poet would select for the
indulgence of his fancy, and it has probably lost none of
its beauty by the lapse of time. Camoens was born in
1524. lie came to the East in 1553, and for a satire upon
188 AROUND THE WORLD.
the Viceroy of Goa was banislied to Macao. Just at the
entrance to the beautiful grounds of which I have spoken
stands the Enghsh Chapel, and immediately behind it is
the Protestant Cemetery, composed of a series of terraces,
the whole very carefully and neatly kept. It is just such
a quiet and beautiful spot as any one might choose to lie
down in and sleep till the final waking. It is consecrated,
not for, but by the graves of Morrison, the first and one
of the noblest of the band of missionaries to the Chinese,
and several members of his family. Other missionaries
were also buried here.
The last evening of our stay in Macao, Captain Endicott
(a name well known in New York), who had resided here
more than thirty years, and of whose death I have heard
with sorrow since leaving China, drove us out to the Bar-
rier, making the entire circuit of the island, a charming
drive of several miles, much of it along the sea-shore. On
our w^ay we passed the temple in which the treaty with
China was concluded and signed by the United States
Commissioner, the Hon. Caleb Cushing, and the Chinese
Commissioner Keying, the former not being allowed to en-
ter China proper. The Chinese, like the Japanese, have
no special reverence for their temples, and often use them
for secular purposes.
We returned to Hong Kong from Macao, and made our
preparations for another voyage upon the restless, treach-
erous China Sea, the worst of all seas on which I have had
occasion to sail. Before embarking for Calcutta we were
assured that at this season of the year, the last of Novem-
ber, we should have a delightful passage to Singapore,
with only enough of the northeast monsoon to keep the
air from stagnating, and the sea from becoming like mol-
ten glass. But I have learned to put little faith in predic-
tions of the weather, even by sailors, having been obliged
so often to interpret prophecies by contraries. I now wait
for the weather to come before building upon it any sub-
stantial castles. AVe found the predictions in regard to
3fACA0, SINO AFORE, AND PENANG. ^89
this voyage as much at fault as ever. But, before writ-
ing out my log, let me introduce the reader to our ship,
with its passengers and crew.
There is no regular line of mail steamers between Hong
Kong and Calcutta direct. The English Peninsular and
Oriental mail steamer (always called in the East " the P.
and O. Line") leaves Hong Kong once a month, touches at
Singapore, and then runs across to Point de Galle, the
southern cape of the island of Ceylon, where the passen-
gers for Calcutta are transferred to another steamer, which
touches at Madras on its way up to the Hoogly. The
French steamers of the Messageries Imi^eriales also touch
at Singapore and Ceylon, but do not go to Calcutta.
There are large, fine steamers, engaged principally in
the opium trade, which take passengers back and forth,
and, as there is no opium going to India, the voyage in
that direction is made very comfortably. They touch at
Singapore and Penang. In one of these, the Hindostan,
Captain de Smidt, we took passage. Going on board, we
stowed ourselves and our luggage away, and then began to
look around for our fellow-passengers, who, with the crew,
formed sucli a curious commingling of races, that I took
the trouble to ask the captain for liis part of the catalogue,
which I found to be as follows : The captain was a Bel-
gian by parentage, born at the Cape of Good Hope, a Brit-
ish subject, and had spent all his life upon the sea, a true
cosmopolitan. He was, by the way, a noble specimen of
the sailor, well educated and well read, very affable and
communicative. The first ofticer was a Scotchman, the
others Scotch and Englisli ; the quartermasters were Por-
tuguese, the gunner half Malay and half Portuguese, the
carpenter a Chinese, the firemen Chittagong Indians, who
stand the heat better than any others ; the crew, a savage-
looking set of fellows, were Malays, Bengalese, Hindoos,
Persians, Arabians, Bombay, Muscat, and Zanzibar men —
one or two of them real African negroes.
Among the passengers we numbered eight Americans,
190 AROUND THE WORLD.
who took possession of one side of tlie deck, whicli, in an-
ticipation of hot weather, was to be our home day and night
for nearly a fortnight. On the opposite side of the deck
were several wealthy Jews, the ladies in a blaze of dia-
monds as they came on deck ; three Parsees, two of whom,
a gentleman and his wife, were our fellow-passengers on
crossing the Pacific Ocean. Two Armenians subsequently
came on board. The deck-passengers were Chinese, Ben-
galese, Hindoos, Mohammedans, and I do not know what
all. We did not want for variety ; but, strange to say, not-
withstanding the numerous nationalities, and the fact that
the most of our passengers were residents of Oriental coun-
tries, the only language that was ordinarily spoken was En-
glish. This enabled us all — Jews and Gentiles, Parsees,
Hindoos, Mohammedans, and Armenians — to become well
acquainted, and we had a very pleasant time during the
voyage. Kor was religious conversation debarred. Ori-
ental and Western politeness allowed us to speak freely of
eacli other's views without any offense being given. It
would be rare to find so many religions represented where
such freedom of intercourse and of conversation was en-
joyed.
We liad but fairly got out of the harbor and from under
the shelter of the headlands when we caught the monsoon,
blowing fresh and strong. It upset all our calculations in
more senses than one, but the sweet assurance was given us
that the wind would go down as we got farther south. On
the contrary, the farther south we ran the more heavily the
w^ind blew. There was one consolation — it was a fair wind,
but as it increased, the huge waves came chasing us from
behind, threatening all the while to overwhelm us. Not
being able to move about much of the time, we sat or lay
on deck watching the great seas as they towered above the
stern, coming on with all their force, as if determined the
next time to pounce upon us and wash us all from the deck ;
but our ship never failed to obey the law of gra\itation
which gives the highest place to the lighter body, and just
MACAO, SINGAPORE, AND PENANG. 1^\
at the critical moment she would lift her stern gracefully
and allow the swell to pass underneath. This she contin-
ued to do for five days, the monsoon increasing all the
while, and tossing us up and down most inconveniently.
In the evening of tlie fifth day out, when we were with-
in about two degrees of the equator, dark clouds were seen
gathering in tlie west, which soon overspread the sky and
the sea, the blackness of which was relieved only by fierce
fiashes of lightning. Presently the rain came down in a
tropical deluge ; and while the elements were all in wild
commotion, the engine suddenly stopped, the ship swung
round into the trough of the sea as helpless as a log, and
then commenced that awful rolling of the vessel which is
far more terrible than driving before or even facing a
storm. The heat was too great for us to go below, and we
preferred to remain on deck, sheltered only by an awning,
and take the chances of the storm ; but as the ship rolled
heavily from one side to the other, as if about to roll com-
pletely over, we were thrown about or compelled to cling
fast to whatever was within reach. Some of the passengers
were overcome with terror, expecting by the next lurch of
the ship to be pitched into the sea. One poor Jewess, who
came on board with a fortune on her person in the shape
of diamonds and emeralds, shrieked aloud and called upon
God to save her. It was to all of us more or less a scene
of teri'or, aggravated by the absolute blackness of darkness
that surrounded us. As soon as the ship began to recover
herself, a voice by my side commenced singing,
"Tossed upon life's raging billows,
Sweet it is, O Lord, to know
Thou didst press a sailor's pillow,
And canst feel a sailor's woe.
Never slumbering, never sleeping,
Though the night be dark and drear ;
Thou, the faithful, watch art keeping;
'All, all's well,' thy constant cheei". "
The moment that the engine stopped I comprehended
the cause. I had learned from the captain that we were
drawing near a rocky part of the China Sea, in whicli were
192 ABOUND THE WOULD.
several islands, and in the thick darkness and descending
torrents of rain it was impossible to see the course ; we
miglit at any moment strike a rock or run ashore ; it was
safer to let the ship drift than to drive her with the engine.
The storm of rain became so severe that we were at length
compelled to go below, but all night long the ship was start-
ing and stopping, and when the morning came, instead of
being to the west of Bintang Island, as we should have
been, we had drifted with the currents thirty miles to the
east. The morning light was very pleasant to the eyes,
and so was the sight of Singapore, with its beautiful groves
of palm, and its substantial buildings stretching along the
shore for one or two miles.
We did not at all regret to say farewell to the China
Seas. Three times had we tried them, and found them al-
ways turbulent, although we had taken them at the best
season of the year. Often, while tossing on the weaves be-
tween Hong Kong and Singapore, was I reminded of a voy-
age made over the same sea by a beloved friend, Walter M.
Lowrie, who subsequently perished by the hands of pirates
near Shanghai. He came to China in 1842. On the 18th
of June of that year he left Macao for Singapore in a sail-
ing vessel, and, after being driven hither and thither by
tempests for two months, the ship put in to Manilla. On
the 18tli of September he sailed again for Singapore, but
on the 25th of the same month the ship struck a hidden
rock far out at sea, and was wrecked. The crew and pas-
sengers took to the boats, and after spending five days un-
der a burning sun without shelter, and with little hope of
seeing land, they at length reached the island of Luban.
There he found a vessel bound for Hong Kong, in which
he returned almost to the point from which he started, hav-
ing been gone just four months on a fruitless voyage. Five
years afterward, as he was on his way from Shanghai to
Ningpo in a native boat, he was attacked by pirates and
thrown into the sea. While strufffflinff in the water, he cast
the Bible, which he had kept in his hand, into the boat, and
MACAO, SINGAPOEE, AND PENANG. -[93
then sank. This precious relic was saved and restored to
his friends, but his body still sleeps in the sea. He was
one of the noblest of that band who have devoted their
lives to the service of Christ and his Church in the evan-
gelization of China.
A few miles northeast of Singapore we crossed the 180th
meridian west or east of New York, being then precisely
on the opposite side of the globe to our home. Neither
did we fall from the deck of the ship, nor did the ship fall
from the sea, nor did the sea fall off from the land, but all
things continued to gravitate as at home. We were just
twelve hours in time from the friends whom we had left
behind ; it was midnight with us, but high noon with them.
This might have been the proper time to drop a day in our
reckoning; and right glad should we have been to drop
four or five days, if we could have avoided the tossings of
the sea. This part of the voyage over, we sailed at length
on a bright, beautiful morning into the harbor of Singa-
pore.
It was a delightful sensation, after five days and nights
of incessant tossing, to feel once more at rest, and still more
delightful M^ere our sensations when we stepped ashore and
found ourselves in an earthly paradise, the most enchant-
ing spot that I have looked upon in any latitude or in any
clime. As I wandered among the groves of spice, and
palm, and every form of tropical and Oriental vegetation, I
caught myself continually repeating the words of the old
Mogul inscription, " If there be a paradise on earth, it is
this, it is this !"
Singapore is situated on an island of the same name,
just at the extremity of the Malacca peninsula. It is an
English colony, having been ceded to Great Britain in 1824.
Some one has explained the name as meaning " the place
of lions," rather an extraordinary^ name for a place where
lions never were known. The island once abounded in
tigers, which are still occasionally met with. In former
times, it is said, they carried off and ate one man a day on
N
194 AROUXD THE WORLD.
an average. A resident of more than thirty years, who had
made the languages of the East a study, informed me that
the word Singapore means a place to touch at, a very ap-
propriate name. It is, in reality, the touching-place for all
steamers which pass eastward or westward, from whatever
quarter they come. Constant communication is kept up
with the rest of the world, and scarcely a day passes with-
out a visit from one or more of the grand fleet of steamers
which are driving sails from the Eastern waters as they
have driven them from the Atlantic. Singapore is not an
undesirable place for residence, being on the great high-
road of the nations east and west. But its chief attrac-
tions consist in its delightful climate and its rare produc-
tions. Situated only one degree north of the equator, it
enjoys perpetual summer, and the atmosphere being moist
from the vicinity of the sea, and the frequent showers with
which it is visited at all seasons, the heat is never oppress-
ive, the thermometer seldom rising above 90°. I have be-
fore me the meteorological record of an entire year, in
which the greatest heat was 88° and the lowest 73°. In
general attractiveness it is very similar to the island of
Ceylon, just across the Indian Ocean, with this exception^
that while in Ceylon, according to Bishop Ileber, " only man
is vile," in Singapore the horses are equally vile. On going
ashore, we were met by the first crowd of hackmen that we
had seen since leaving the Western continent, and they
seemed, from their exorbitant demands, to be in correspond-
ence with the fraternity in New York ; for when we came
to settle accounts, they always had some plea on which the
original demand was increased. The horses, too, were mere
rats, scarcely able to draw an empty carriage. More than
once, in ascending a slight hill, I was obliged to alight and
assist them np, or leave the carriage and its other occupants
in the interior of the island. But the island itself sur-
passed, in the variety and richness of its vegetable growth,
all that I had conceived of the natural grandeur of the
tropics.
MACAO, SINGAPORE, AND PENANO. ^95
Before reaching the harbor, we saw from the steamer,
first with the glass and then with the naked eye, large plan-
tations of banana, cocoanut, and other varieties of the palm,
stretching along the coast for miles. The cocoanut grows
here with great luxmiance, the fruit of enormous size, and
the leaves attaining the length of twelve or fifteen feet. It
is cultivated for the sake of the oil, which is used for illu-
minating purposes. The bananas, although considered very
fine, are not so large nor so highly flavored than those from
the West Indies. I hesitate not to record the general re-
mark, that the fruits of the East Indies, with very few ex-
ceptions, are much less rich in flavor than those of the West.
It is in spices of all kinds that the East has the superiority,
and of these we had a fine specimen at Singapore.
At the invitation of the proprietor, we took a morning
walk into a grove of nutmegs occupying several acres.
The tree grows to the height of about twenty-five or thirty
feet, resembles a pear-tree in its general appearance, and
bears a fruit about the size and shape of an ordinary
Seckle pear. The grove was in full bearing. Every morn-
ing a man walks through, carefully examining each tree to
see if the fruit has opened, the cracking of the outer shell
being an indication that the nutmeg is fully ripe. This
opening of the shell reveals an inner case of the brightest
vermilion, the ordinary mace of commerce ; and when this
is removed the nutmeg is found inclosed in a third shell,
much harder than the outer one. I gathered several speci-
mens, preserving some of them in their original tri-fold
envelopes.
Mr. P. Yoakim, a wealthy Armenian merchant, who was
our fellow-passenger from Singapore to Calcutta, and to
whom I was indebted for much information in regard to
his beautiful island home, has an extensive spice plantation
a short drive from the town. It will abundantly repay
any one who touches at Singapore, and has the time to
make the excursion, and the gentlemanly proprietor mil
give him a hearty welcome. This plantation has on it
196 AROUND THE WORLD.
12,000 cocoaiiut-trees, 1500 nntmeg-trees, with cinnamon,
clove, and all kinds of spices. The clove grows in large
clusters upon the extremities of the branches of a large
tree, and was in season when we were at Singapore. Mr.
Yoakim has an orchid house of great extent.
The Rev. Mr. Keasbury, who has spent more than thirty
years as a missionary at Singapore, and who, although not
connected with any society, is still prosecuting his work
vigorously — preaching, teaching, and superintending a
printing establishment that is sending out among the va-
rious classes of natives, and into other regions along the
Malacca coast and among the islands, a knowledge of the
Gospel, has reclaimed from the jungle, about two miles
out of town, a small plantation, which yields all the fruits
and spices of the tropics, with a profusion of shade, made
more delightful by its fragrance. Among the trees and
shrubs that I saw in his grounds were the following : pine-
apple, cocoanut, bread-fruit, orange, mango, jack - fruit,
mangostine, durian, custard-apple, coffee, chocolate, nut-
meg, clove, cassia, etc., together with a large variety of
shade and ornamental ti-ees, among which was the banyan.
The drive to Mr. Keasbury's was one of the most beauti-
ful imaginable, the road being lined with bungalows and
plantations laid out with exquisite taste, and adoi-ned with
all the luxuriance of tropical vegetation. One of the most
conspicuous trees upon the island was the fan-palm ; not
the palm from which fans are made, but a large tree hav-
ing the symmetry and shape of a fan, as flat as if it had
been placed in a press, although the circle of the leaves
alone is at least twenty feet in diameter. The tree resem-
bles the tail of a peacock when fully spread. This singu-
lar tree is also called " the traveler's fountain," on account
of the large amount of water secreted by it, which flows
out when the tree is punctured, affording to the traveler
an abundant supply. There is at Singapore a botanical
garden or park, over the entrance to which is an inscrip-
tion," Open only to subscribers and strangers." It is well
3IACA0, SINGAPORE, AND PENANG. ^97
laid out and well kept, with a large variety of trees and
plants from different climes. Houqua's Garden, some
miles from the town, is in the stiff Chinese style, distorting
instead of cultivating nature — a process which neither in
itself nor in its results has any attractions for my eye. One
can not go amiss at Singapore in looking for the beautifid.
The whole island is covered with what seems a spontaneous
growth of all that is graceful and attractive in vegetation,
and animal life is not wanting to enhven the scene. The
jungle and forest abound in birds of the richest plumage,
tribes of monkeys chatter among the branches of the trees,
and occasionally a tiger makes his appearance when hard
pressed for something to eat.
The second morning of our stay we spent in company
with Rev. Mr. Grant, a missionary representing the Plym-
outh Brethren, and Major Malan, of the British army, sta-
tioned here (a grandson of the departed patriarch of Gene-
va, Dr. Ciesar Malan), in visiting the Gospel-house, the
school for young girls established by Miss Cooke, now in
England, which is supported chiefly by the work of the pu-
pils. The embroidery is sold at a public annual fair, and
is quite equal to that found at the Oriental bazars.
Singapore was once a very important missionary station,
not so much in its relation to the permanent population
of the place as on account of its affording an opportunity
to exert an influence upon China and other neighboring
countries. It was ttou cttw, a standing-place on which to
operate while the Celestial Empire was closed against for-
eigners. For a long period there has been a large Chinese
population on the island, so large as really to afford a broad
field for the missionary to Avork. If I am not mistaken,
there M'ere at one time as many as thirty missionaries here ;
l)ut just as soon as the Chinese Empire was thrown open,
the force moved on, and now the station is almost aban-
doned. Mr. Keasbury aud Mr. Grant are the only mission-
aries whom I met. There are in the town of Singapore
four Protestant churches, two of them Chinese ; four Ko-
198 AROUND THE WORLD.
man Catholic, of which two are also Chinese ; one Arme-
nian ; one Jewish synagogue ; three Mohammedan mosques ;
one Hindoo temple; one Chinese Buddhist temple, and
some minor places of worship.
For its size, Singapore has the most conglomerate popu-
lation of any city in the world, almost every nation being
represented. The variety in costume and general appear-
ance strikes the stranger at once. It was the more notice-
able to us, coming from Japan and China, where the ordi-
nary dress of the people is perfectly uniform, a dull blue
cotton. The w^liarf, as we were leaving, was one of the
gayest scenes that we have met with. A large crowd, in
all the colors of the rainbow, occupied the bund. There
were Jews and Jewesses elegantly dressed and glittering
with jewels ; Armenians, the ladies fine-looking and splen •
didly di-essed ; Mohammedans with large red turbans ;
Bengalese ; Malays in all sorts of bright colors, and many
of them in plain dark color, that in which they were born ;
then there were English, and French, and other Europeans
in their own national costumes. Besides the people, there
was a grand display of gay-colored birds for sale — parrots
in green, crimson, scarlet, yellow, white, etc. While we
were waiting for the steamer to be off, boys, who seem to
belong to some amphibious tribe, amused the passengers
by diving from boats for pieces of money thrown into the
water, invariably catching them before they reached the
bottom, w^hich was six or eight fathoms below. In the
midst of this variegated scene the order was given, and we
were once more upon the sea.
We entered the Straits of Malacca, and had a quiet and
pleasant voyage to Penang, w^hich we reached early on the
morning of the second day. As it was Saturday, the Jews
and Jewesses on board had a loiio- discussion in regard to
the propriety of going ashore to spend the da}^, as it was
their Sabbath. Some of them were really conscientious,
but others were disposed to treat the question in a very
Rabbinical way. One Jew maintained that they might go
MACAO, SINOAPOBE, AND PENANG. ^99
asliore, but not go out in carriages, as that would be con-
trary to the command, ^^Seve7i days shalt thou labor," etc.,
this being the form in which he repeated it, and according
to which he had probably been most accustomed to observe
the day. Another thought it right to ride on an elephant
on the Sabbath, but not in a carriage. The result of the
discussion was that some went on shore and spent the day
as they chose, while others, more conscientious, remained
on board and played cards for money.
Having a note of introduction to the Kev. Mr. Macdon-
ald, an Independent missionary at Penang,^ I went ashore
to present it. Calling at the bungalow of the chief com-
missioner of police to make some inquiry, we were very
courteously received. He immediately ordered his car-
riage and sent an officer to take us to the residence of the
missionary, where we spent the morning in very pleasant
intercourse with those whom we had met as strangers. It
was truly delightful to enjoy their Christian society on this
other side of the world, and as pleasant to them, they as-
sured us, to have a call from travelers who felt an interest
in them and in their work for the Master's sake. Mr.
Macdonald is the only missionary now at Penang, and his
labors are distributed among the various races which com-
pose the population of the town, among which, very strange-
ly, the Chinese appear to be the most numerous. They oc-
cupy a separate portion of the city, forming a distinct com-
munity. The Celestials, indeed, are scattered through all
the cities east of India. Even Calcutta has a large Chinese
population. They are possessed of great enterprise, and,
the population of China being so dense, the motive to em-
igration is strong. A few years since a fearful riot oc-
curred among the Chinese at Penang, growing out of some
of their clannish ideas. The whole community became in-
volved in it, and it was not quelled until nearly a thousand
lives were lost.
As our steamer was to lie all day at Penang, Mr. Mac-
donald proposed a drive through the town and into the
200 ABOUND THE WORLD.
country, a proposition which we were nothing loth to ac-
cept. The city itself is even more beantif nl, at least some
portions of it, than Singapore, and the comitry has the
same Inxuriant, tropical appearance, abounding in cocoanut
groves, the cocoanut and betelnut being among the chief
productions. During our drive we called npon a wealthy
Mohammedan, Mahomet Noordin, the head of the Klings,
who owns a large part of the native city of Penang. It
was just after noon, and as we drove up to the doorway
the servant said his master was asleep, and " no man was
so brave as to disturb him between the hours of twelve and
three." We insisted on his announcing our arrival, but he
was resolute until I produced my card, and Mr. Macdon-
ald, writing his owm name on it, told him to take it to his
master.
We waited a few moments, expecting him to return with-
out having presented it, but some one had been brave enough
to present the card, and we were sliown into the private
rooms of the chief, where he received us not only with cor-
diahty, but with Oriental flattery. He expressed great de-
liglit at seeing us, and wdien we apologized for having dis-
turbed his slumbers, he said " it made him very much hap-
py to have a visit fi'om us, but that if the lieutenant gov-
ernor had called at that hour he would not have received
him." He then led us into his public reception-room and
ordered cheroots and wine, of which, being a Mohammed-
an, he could not partake, but he had it placed before us,
each glass on an elegantly-chased silver salver. Mr. Mac-
donald at first declined to take w^ine, saying, " I am very
much like the Mohammedans in one respect — I take very
little wine." Mahomet Noordin immediately retorted with
a hearty laugli at his own wit, "And I am very much like
the Christians — I drink plenty of brandy and water." He
talked very intelligently about America and of different
Europeans whom he had met at Penang. He asked how
long we were expecting to stay, and said if I would come
to Penang and live he would give me a bungalow, with ev-
3IACA0, SINGAPOBE, AND FEXAXG. ' QQl
ery thing that could make us comfortable, and that if I
would stay for only- a week he would have a house made
ready for us, and that his horses and carriages should be
at my command, all of which generous offers I was obliged
to decline.
The old gentleman (for he was quite advanced in years)
took us around his extensive house, pointed out one large
building after another which he had gradually added to his
home, and then pointing to one small house in the centre,
in which he had first received us, a low and comparatively
mean-looking building, said," That was my father's house."
Although he had added house to house, he still retained the
paternal roof for his own home.
A mountain lying back of the city affords a magnificent
view of the town, the country around it, and of the sea ;
l)ut it requires the greater part of a day to make the as-
cent, and we had not time for the excursion. Besides, a
heavy rain came on, in tlie midst of which we were obliged
to make our way back to the steamer in an open boat, the
boatmen embracing the occasion to demand an exoi'bitant
fare. Soon after we had reached the steamer the wund in-
creased, and, as the tide was running with great velocity, it
was with immense difficulty that some of the passengers
reached the steamer and got on board.
These tropical regions are as prolific of animal life as of
vegetable. The most venomous snakes are quite at home
in all these beautiful places, and they do not disdain an in-
viting bungalow for a residence. As we were driving
through the city of Penang a house was pointed out to me
in which the proprietor found, on coming home one day,
two boa constrictors occupying his parlor and waiting to
give him a warm embrace ; but he declined the compli-
ment, and chose to have them put out of the way.
We resumed our sail through the Straits of Malacca. On
the third day out from Penang we passed a chain of islands
which crop out occasionally from the sea, evidently a con-
tinuation into the ocean of the mountains of Bnrmah. This
202 AROUND THE WORLD.
chain runs clown to the island of Sumatra, and separates the
Andaman Sea and the Gulf of Martaban from the Bay of
Bengal, which we presently entered. The Andaman Isl-
ands are a penal settlement, to which the mutineers from
India were sent to the number of several thousands. Some
portions of the islands are said to be inhabited by cannibals,
into whose hands and jaws some of the mutineers fell in
making an attempt at escape.
The Bay of Bengal was like a mirror, and scarcely was
the dying swell from a wave to be seen. The air was de-
lightfully warm, and in the calmness which settled down
over the sea great numbers of flying fish, tempted from
their native element to try their wings in a lighter atmos-
phere, skimmed along the surface in flocks. Immense sea-
turtles also came to the surface to sun themselves, and were
not roused from their slumbers until we were just upon
them. These waters are inhabited by snakes which some-
times reach a large size, veiy inconveniently making their
way into cabin Avindows, or on deck when a stray rope
hangs over the side by which they can work their way on
board. We saw them, but happily had no visit from them
on board. Some of our passengers took the precaution to
close their ports, lest they should find in their cabins these
unwelcome visitors.
While sailing up this sea we were often tantalized like
the travelers in the desert, only they are deceived by what
appears to be water, while we had the promise of land which
never came in sight. I had never before seen a marine
mirage, but for days the state of the atmosphere was such
that we seemed to be approaching shores which loomed up
in the distance. As we sailed on and on, the shores were
ever as far off as at first, and ever as near, and finally they
would fade away into air.
As we were drawing near the mouth of the Iloogly we
began to meet the East Indiamen, homeward bound. Their
occupation will soon be gone, now that steam is monopoliz-
ing not only the passenger, but the carrying trade of the
CALCUTTA. 203
ocean, especially if the Suez Canal shonld prove a success;
but with all the speed and the modern appliances for lux-
ury on the steamers of the present day, I do not doubt that
there was more of comfort in some of the large East India
ships which made the voyage around the Cape. The great
drawback to comfort was the length of the voj^age, but even
this enabled those who had weak stomachs to become ac-
customed to the sea, and as " hanging is nothing when one
gets used to it," so it is of the ceaseless rolling of the sea.
CALCUTTA.
Calcutta is about a hundred miles from the mouth of
the Hoogly, one of the outlets of the Ganges. The greater
part of the distance up from the sea the banks of the river
are a wild jungle, through which are scattered, sometimes
in groves, the cocoanut and other palms, the whole vegeta-
tion having a strictly Oriental aspect. The banks of the
stream are as fiat as those of the Lower Mississippi. Kear
the mouth of the Hoogly stands a monument, sad as a me-
morial, and strikingly suggestive of adventures which ai'C
still to be met with in all parts of India. It marks the
spot where a young lady once disappeared in the grasp of
a tiger. A vessel from home was detained by the tide, and
a number of passengers concluded to go ashore and while
away the time by a stroll among the palms. One of the
party strayed a little from the rest, when a scream was
heard ; they ran to her assistance, but only in time to see
her carried off by one of the tigers that still infest the j un-
gles, even in the vicinity of the towns.
As we approached the city of palaces, the signs of culti-
vation, and at length of Eastern wealth, became more fre-
quent. For several miles the river on either hand was
204
AROUND THE WORLD.
ENTRANCE TO THE IIOOGLY.
lined witli rich plantations and costly residences. The
palms, acacias, and other tropical trees were as fresh and
vigorous as if it were not the third day of winter. About
two miles below Calcutta, among many of the choice trees
of the tropics, stands one of the finest specimens of the
banyan tree in all India. I do not know the number of
its trunks, but one of these trees is described as having
three hundred and fifty large branches that have shot down
and become rooted, forming three hundred and fifty large
trees, and more than three thousand smaller ones, making
from one tree, still joined together by its branches, an im-
mense grove.
On the opposite shore is the palace of the ex-King of
Oude, who M-as dethroned by the East India Company and
CALCUTTA. 205
brought to Calcutta as a sort of prisoner of state. He was
allowed to retain a large portion of his wealth, and still has
a princely, if not a royal revenue. His buildings are very
beautiful, extending a long distance upon tlie river's bank.
Among them was a temple, the dome of which was burn-
ished gold, dazzling the eyes in the bright sunlight. We
were detained several hours opposite his grounds waiting
for orders from the Custom-house, and had abundance of
time to study all the beauties of the place. Nothing in the
ample grounds of the dethroned monarch attracted my at-
tention like a small but beautiful kiosk which stood di-
rectly upon the river's bank. It was about twelve or fif-
teen feet square, with a dome-shaped roof ; its sides were
open, but grated with iron bars, and witliin was a royal
Bengal tiger pacing up and down in all his majesty. I do
not know whether the royal owner of the grounds designed
this as a satire upon the power which had dethroned him
and taken possession of his territory, but if so, it was, in-
deed, a biting satire.
The order from the Custom-house came at length, and
we steamed up to the anchorage directly opposite Fort Wil-
liam, which stands upon a vast open plain, known as the
Maidan, quite to the south of the city. As we approached
the ghaut, or landing-place, we found gathered on the shore
one of the most curious crowds that we ever beheld. All
nations and all costumes appeared to be represented, the
crimson garments of the Bengalese and Hindoo women pre-
dominating, while turbaned, and gowned, and trowsered
men and women of all complexions and styles of dress
filled \\]) the picture. Awaiting us was a large fleet of
native boats, manned by the most voracious cormorants
that we have met with in any part of the world. Their
shoutings and fightings, one with another, to secure the
landing of our persons and our baggage (we were not fifty
yards from the shore), would have silenced the builders of
the towers of Babel. It became necessary for us to shout
and fight as vigorously as they, in order to prevent our bag-
206 AROUND THE WORLD.
gage from being carried off into a score of separate boats ;
but at length we were landed.
Then came another tug of war. Not one of the boat-
men would carry the baggage up the bank to the gharries
or carriages, about fifty feet distant, and the same process
of fighting and shouting was renewed, the army of the
Philistines in the mean while having increased as we
reached the shore. I steadfastly refused, in the most ve-
hement Orientalisms I could command, to pay one of them
a single copper pie until I saw every thing on the gharries,
by which time the number of clamorous creditors had still
farther multiplied, and each one demanded enough for all,
whether he had touched our baggage or not. !Never be-
fore or since have I found it so hard to pay an honest debt,
only because it was impossible to select from a crowd of
rapacious Hindoos, who all looked as much alike as if they
were the same man, those to whom the debt was actually
due. At length, seeing that all was ready, I selected the
one who was most violent in his demonstrations, handed
him what I thought was rio-ht, motioned to the rest to get
their dues from him, and, leaving him to be torn in pieces
by the crowd, sprang into the gharry and was off for the
hotel. I never learned whether the man survived the com-
bined charge, but I could do no better. The longer I par-
leyed in English, the larger and more imperious the crowd
of Hindoos became, and there was neither native nor En-
glish police to whom I could appeal.
Arrived at Spence's Hotel, we were provided with rooms
after stipulating to give them up for the Duke of Edin-
burg and suite, who had engaged them for the following
week. They were immense quarters, Oriental in style and
accommodations. We were abundantly supplied with serv-
ants — four, and sometimes five, who seemed gifted with
omnipresence, were always at hand to wait on two of us.
With their dusky forms clothed from head to foot in white ;
moving about without shoes, noiselessly, and without ut-
tering a word, they were like so many lost spirits, or like
CALCUTTA.
207
Hindoos in grave-clothes. When waiting on ns at our
table they wore white muslin hats, with immense brims
covered with the same material, and, excepting that they
were clothed in white instead of drab, we should have
fancied ourselves served by the spirits of some of the fol-
lowers of George Fox or William Penn. As the shades
of night came on, and we grew anxious to try the effect of
sleeping on shore, we found it next to impossible to relieve
ourselves of their presence. We signified to them, as well
as we could, that their duties for the day were over, and
that we were about to retire. We motioned them out of
our quarters, and fancied that we had seen the last of
them for the night, but scarcely had we turned around
when the same dark ghosts in white stood before us. They
had stolen, without a sound, through another door into the
room, and were waiting for our orders, which were that
they should disappear, and at length they did.
We were enjoying our first sleep on land, after many
days and nights of tossing on the China Sea and the Bay
of Bengal, when, just after midnight, we were roused by
the most hideous screams that ever assailed our ears. The
cries were not altogether human ; they were inhuman, in-
fernal. It seemed as if a legion of demons had broken
loose from their confinement, with a commission to drive
sleep from the pillows of Calcutta. As often as we at-
tempted to quiet ourselves to rest, the same shrieks would
startle us from our incipient dreams, until we gave up in
despair, if not in terror. We could not form a conception
of the nature of the beings from which they proceeded.
In the morning we learned that it was the nightly sere-
nade of jackals, which have the run of the streets after
midnight, and which, if not protected by law, are perfect-
ly safe fi'om all harm, on account of the valuable service
they render as public scavengers. They are quite harm-
less themselves, excepting their cries, which rob all new
comers of sleep. They are never seen by day, skulking
away into sewers and dark recesses, where they lie until
208 AROUND THE WOULD.
thej are summoned to make their round of the city. Nor
was it in Calcutta alone that we heard them, but in everv
city in India that we visited during the winter, with the
single exception of Bombay. Their cries, especially when
a whole pack join together, approximate so near to the hu-
man, tliat I have heard it interpreted thus : A large pack
of jackals start upon their nightly round in search of their
appropriate food. Suddenly one in advance of the rest
breaks out into a shrill, hideous scream, " Here's a dead
Hindoo." The whole pack immediately scream, " Where 'i
where? where?" A score of the ghouls answer with a
short, shrill bark, " Here ! here ! here !" and then the whole
crowd of jackals send up, in the otherwise still night, a
howl over their discovery that may be heard for miles.
This was the serenade that awakened us, and scarcely a
night that we were in the country did they fail to send a
thrill of horror through our souls.
The jackals are the night-scavengers of Calcutta. Those
of the day are the crows, the kites, and the adjutants.
The crows, as in all parts of India that I have visited,
swarm throughout the city by myriads, keeping up an in-
cessant " caw, caw, caw." They spend the night quietly
on the trees, not much less than a thousand sometimes se-
lecting a single tree, and taking an liour of fighting and
shouting in concert before they become fairly settled for
the night. Even after they Jiave become quiet, and you
imagine that at last their noise is over for the day, some
dispute arises among them, and the whole thousand start
up from the tree in violent altercation, and again go
through the same course of figliting before they are settled
again. Nor are they satisfied with the refuse of the city
for a living ; they come boldly into the open windows and
lay their beaks upon any food that is within reach. The
first morning that we were in Calcutta our breakfast had
been set in the anteroom, but before we could lay claim
to it the crows had entered, and, supposing it was intended
for them, had made way with a good share of it. Once
CALCUTTA.
209
they took it before our very eyes, without so much as say-
ing " By your leave." The kites, a species of large hawk,
are not so numerous, but they are numbered by thousands,
or tens of thousands, and are continually sailing over the
city or along the streets, excepting when they see some
tempting provisions, in which case they do not hesitate
to swoop down and bear it off, even from the midst of a
crowd of pedestrians or carriages. They have the free-
dom of the city in common with the crows. The adju-
tant, an immense stork, standing, in his stockings, as high
as a man, belongs to the same army, and enjoys the same
freedom, but he is a gentleman, carrying himself with as
much dignity in his daily walks as if he were a major
general instead of a mere adjutant, and never intruding
where he does not belong. Much of the time he stands
on one leg, with his neck drawn down into his body and
his immense visor closed, in a meditative mood, and so per-
fectly motionless that you might easily mistake him for a
bronze statue. The snakes form a part of his rations. The
residents of Calcutta seem as unconscious of the existence
of the crowds, the kites, and the adjutants, and even of the
jackals, as if such specimens in natural history were never
heard of within a thousand miles of the city.
Calcutta may be called the European capital of Asia.
It has been the seat of British empire for more than a cen-
tury, and the centre of British influence for the whole East.
Its commercial supremacy is probably well-nigh ended since
steam and the opening of the Suez Canal have changed the
route of commerce between Europe and the East. Bom-
bay is now the port of India, as Calcutta is thrown more
than ever off the great highway to China. But no other
city will ever have such a combination of Oriental and Oc-
cidental grandeur as the " City of Palaces," the name it
bears in the East. The name is not unmerited, although
we do not find either the architectural beauty of the West,
or the lavish expenditure of the old dynasties of the East.
It was founded by the East India Companv near tlie close
210 AROUND THE WOULD.
of the seventeenth centniy, on the site of a small village
called Kali-kutta (the village of the Goddess Kali), from
which the present name of the city is derived. A temple
of the goddess, south of the city, is still frequented by mul-
titudes of devotees at the period of the annual worship.
Tlie official name of the city, from which public documents,
I believe, are dated even to the present day, although exe-
cuted at the Government House a mile distant, is Fort Wil-
liam. The fort was erected in the reign of William III.
of England, and named from this sovereign. It is an ex-
tensive fortress, standing in the midst of the Maidan, a vast
open plain extending more than two miles up and down
the Hoogly, south of the city. The northern portion of the
Maidan, known as the Esplanade, is occupied by the gov-
ernment buildings, which front upon a well-kept park
known as the Eden Gardens. The viceroy's palace occu-
pies the most conspicuous site, and, although possessing no
great architectural beauty, is an imposing pile.
The portion of the Maidan bordering on the river for a
mile below the Government House is the great fashionable
drive of Calcutta, answering to the Piater of Vienna, or
Rotton Row in Hyde Park. Every evening, just before
sunset, when the heat of the day has passed, all Calcutta
turns out for an hour's drive up and down the strand. The
sight is one of the gayest to be seen in the suburbs of any
city, and one of the most peculiar. Nowhere in the East
is there any thing to equal it, and nowhere in the West any
thing like it. Europeans with gay equipages, from the vice-
roy's scarlet and gold, with his Sepoy outriders, down to the
unpretending gharry, move on in a steady line, three or four
abreast, until night comes on. Notwithstanding the occu-
pants of the carriages are chiefly Europeans, the scene is
decidedly Oriental. Coachmen and footmen, some of them
splendid specimens of the various tribes of India, are all
in Eastern costume, the colors and style of which are as
\ aried as the races of Hindostan. The wealthy Baboos
Jiave their place in the grand procession, and Avhen we
CALCUTTA.
211
were in Calcutta there was a grand gathering of Rajahs
and native princes from all pai-ts of India, who had come
down to meet the Duke of Edinburg and take part in the
durbar at Government House. One who would study Ori-
ental life should not fail to be on the strand at Calcutta an
hour befoi'e sunset.
The residences of the merchants, and those connected
with the civil and military service, are east of the Maid an,
the whole of this part of Calcutta being known as Chow-
ringee. The dwellings, many of which may in truth be
called palaces, though not architecturally beautiful, are iso-
lated, standing in the midst of squares, and surrounded by
a profusion of the ornamental trees and shrubs of India.
The suburbs of the city toward the south, in the direction
of the palace and grounds of the ex-King of Oude, stretch
out into the region of the palms, acacias, mango, bamboo,
and peepul trees, which grow with great luxuriance of foli-
age. In tropical countries leaves often take the place of
branches. The stately palm', the glory of the tropics, is as
destitute of limbs as the mast of a ship, but a single leaf is
fifteen or twenty feet in length, and each tree is crowned
with a drooping mass. Such a tree has no need of branch-
es. In the palm-clad suburbs of Calcutta stands the coun-
try house of Warren Hastings, where that brilliant though
erring statesman, the governor general of India, maintained
a splendid hospitality. The place is now among the his-
toric scenes of the East ; but one can not recall the events
connected with his rule and conquests, even in the midst
of the prosperity of India, without a long-drawn sigh.
There are few public buildings of much note. The Gov-
ei'nment House, built by the Marquis of Wellesley, and the
new government offices on the Esplanade, are the most im-
posing. The post-office is a lai-ge and fine building, erect-
ed in part on the site of one more memorable in history
than any other within the limits of the city or in this part
of India. It is the " Black Hole of Calcutta." In the year
1756 Fort AVilliam was taken by Surajali Dowlah, Ts'^abob
212 AROUND THE WOULD.
of Bengal, a feeble garrison being left to defend it after
the governor and others had escaped to the ships. The pris-
oners, 146 in number, were thrnst into a room only eighteen
feet square, with two small, obstructed windows, where, in
the intense heat of a Calcutta night, on the 18th of June,
they were shut up without water or any means of relief.
With heat, and thirst, and suffocation, many of them became
maddened, and the horrors of that night never can be de-
picted. Bribes, and prayers, and the raging of despair were
all ineffectual to move the hearts of the guard. In vain
the prisoners, in the agonies of thirst and of suffocation,
entreated to have the nabob informed of their condition ;
they were told that he was asleep, and could not be dis-
turlaed. In the morning twenty-three ghastly forms had
just life enough left to crawl from the room when it was
opened ; the rest, 123, were piled upon the floor, putrid
corpses. No scene connected with Calcutta is more indeli-
bly graven on the memory of the world than this ; but all
traces of it are obliterated from the spot by the erection of
new and stately buildings.
The new Cathedral, the seat of the bishopric which has
been held by such apostolic names as those of Ileber and
Wilson, is a fine building, it may be called elegant, finished
as it is with such admirable taste and in such beauty. It is
already becoming filled with monumental marbles, among
which the statue of Bishop Heber is the most striking.
There are several fine churches, English and Scotch. The
college buildings of the Free Church, and the Scotch Kirk,
are worthy of note for their extent, if not for their beauty.
The Bishop's College, on the right bank of the Hoogly,
two miles below the city, makes more pretension to taste
and elegance.
The native and the European quarters of the town are
distinct, the former having very narrow streets and more or
less of squalor in its whole extent, but the portion occupied
by foreigners (Europeans have no native-born descendants
of pure blood in India) is laid out upon a broad scale, and
built up with appropriate magnificence.
CALCUTTA.
213
The city is supplied with water from immense tanks, res-
ervoirs of one or two hundred feet square sunk into the
ground, but left entirely open. The natives walk down into
them, bathe their bodies and wash their clothes, and then
fill their jars or goatskins with the water for drinking and
other domestic use. This is a specimen of native cleanH-
ness.*
The streets are watered by a truly Oriental method.
Each w^aterman has, instead of a cart, a goatskin taken oft
entire, and forming an immense bottle, left open at the
neck. This is suspended by a strap over the shoulders of
the coolie, who seizes the neck with one hand, and, as he
walks along, deftly throws the w^ater hither and thither.
Large numbers of these coolies are kept constantly em-
ployed spirting the streets, which are as well watered by this
method as by our own.
Of the institutions of Calcutta, one of the first that claim-
* The following, from an India paper, is a specimen of Hindoo metaphys-
ics, and also of the stress that is laid upon ceremonial luicleauness above act-
ual filth.
"At the last meeting of the 8anatana-Dharma Kakshami Sabha, the presi-
dent, Rajah Kali Krishna Deo Bahadoor, read an opinion on the water sup-
plied to the Calcutta residents from the municipal water-works. He says
that the water, being destitute of the sanctity of the Ganges, can not be used
for religious purposes, but can be employed for drinking or domestic use with-
out prejudice to caste. Rice, milk, turmeric, and other things become pure by
boiling, and can be used by virtue of the authority that says that edible arti-
cles become purified by purchase. The water-rate may be considered in the
light of value paid, and the water become drinkable. Besides, it is written
in the Satatapa vackana that articles prepared in a cow- shed by a shopman
or by a machine, though not purified, are not considered unclean ; also that
fluid, as in a running stream, is considered pure. The Shruti says that health
is most important, and that religion comes next ; and as water is called jzra-
na, or life-giver, and as good, pure water preserves health, the fluid can be
used without detriment to caste. The great bulk of water is also a test of
purity in the same way, as a number of persons in a boat does not afl^ect pu-
rity. The president farther states that he visited the water-works in compa-
ny with several respectable Hindoos, and examined the machinery, and found
that India-rubber, and not leather, as was supposed, is used in certain parts of
the machine ; cocoanut oil is used to lubricate the works, and that no forbid-
den substance is used in connection with the pumps. He concludes by sub-
mitting to the other members of the Sabha his opinion that the water is
wholesome, and that it would be unwise to remain in doubt and sustain loss
by not using the same."
214 AROUND THE WORLD.
ed a visit was Dr. Duff's College, as the great Free Church
of Scotland Institution is called. Although it is many
years since Dr. Duff was compelled to leave India by the
failure of his health, his indomitable energy and ardent
spirit having worn out his comparatively feeble frame in
that trying climate, his name still adheres to the college
which he founded and brought to a high state of prosperi-
ty. He came to India in 1830, and began his educational
work with a class of five scholars, which, in a few days, in-
creased to more than a hundred. It soon became neces-
sary to have permanent accommodations for those who
were coming in such numbers to receive instruction in
Western science, wliich is quite as different from (3riental
science as the fact that the earth revolves around the sun
is in advance of the idea that the sun revolves around the
earth, or that the earth stands on a tortoise. A site for a
college was selected on Cornwallis Square, one of the
pleasantest quarters of the city, extensive buildings were
erected, a corps of teachers was supplied by the Church at
home, and as many as eight hundred scholars were going-
through a course of instruction.
When the institution had reached this advanced stage,
the disruption took place in the Church of Scotland, and
the Free Church was organized. The result was that the
missionaries, to a man, decided to go with the Free Church.
They followed the example of the Free Church ministers
at home, who gave up churches and manses, and began
their work anew. They abandoned the mission property,
and every thing connected with the college, to lay another
foundation. It was but a few years before the new col-
lege numbered nearly fourteen hundred pupils, while the
old, which had, in the mean time, been supplied with fresh
men from the Kirk of Scotland, had nearly as many. The
number has fallen off considerably within the last few
years, owing perhaps to the founding of other schools by
the government and by private munificence. These insti-
tutions are open to students of all religions, and the mass
CALCUTTA. 215
of them are Hindoos or Mohammedans. Only in rare in-
stances have they renounced the faith of their fathers,
while fewer still have become real Christians.
It is not the desire to become acquainted with Christian
truth, much less to become Christians, that induces so many
youth to crowd these foreign seminaries of learning. They
are anxious to become qualified to fill the various lucrative
posts which, in connection with the civil service, and the
commerce and business of the country, are open to the na-
tives. This is the great stimulus to study, and a successful
course and an honorable graduation in the missionary, as
well as in the government colleges, is usually a passport to
a good situation. But this army of educated men may yet
be brought into the Church of Christ, ill that great relig-
ious revolution that is to pass over India, the promise of
which we have in the Word of God, and the signs of which
are to be seen all over the land.
The Bishop's College, occupying a fine Gothic building,
beautifully situated on the botanic garden or park, on the
banks of the Ploogly, two or three miles below the city, has
a more limited class of students. It was founded by Bish-
op Middleton in 1820 for the puq^ose of training up, un-
der the discipline of the Clnirch of England, a corps of
preachers and teachers, to be employed by that Church in
disseminating the truths of the Gospel in India. The
number of students is small, but the arrangements for their
education in the languages of the East, and in general liter-
ature and science, are very extensive.
Besides the institutions I have named, there are several
others of a high order. Among these are Doveton College,
founded, I believe, by a man whose name it bears ; the
Martiniere, founded by General Martin, who amassed a
large fortune in the East, and who established a college
at Lucknow ; the Sanscrit College ; the Hundu College ;
the Moliammedan, etc. There is also a medical college,
with a large corps of able professors, at the head of which
is Dr. Joseph Fayrer, a distinguished surgeon of the Britisli
216 AROUND THE WORLD.
army, who was at Lucknow during the memorable siege,
and in whose arms the commanding officer, Sir Henry Law-
rence, breathed his last. A large hospital, which I visited
in company with Mr. Duff, an eminent merchant of Bom-
bay, and son of the Rev. Dr. Duff, is under the charge of
this faculty. Dr. Fayrer has been engaged, by a series of
experiments upon animals, in endeavoring to discover an
antidote to the venom of the snakes that aliound in India,
by which thousands of lives are lost annually, but thus fai-
without success.
The Asiatic Society, located at Calcutta, was originated
and established by that eminent scholar and Christian, Sii-
William Jones, who went out to India in 1783. Having
been appointed to the bench of the Supreme Court of Ben-
gal, he devoted himself with intense ardor to the study of
the languages of the East as the means of fitting himself
for usefulness in India. He is said to have acquired in the
course of his life twenty-eight different languages, and to
have become familiar with the literature of eacli. It was
he who gave the noble testimony to the Bible, all the more
weighty because coming from one whose professional pur-
suits were not theological, and who was also so well quali-
fied by his eminent learning to bear such testimon}^ : " I
have carefully and regularly perused the Scriptures, and
am of opinion that this volume, independent of its divine
origin, contains more sublimity, purer morality, more im-
portant history, and finer strains of eloquence than can be
collected from all other books, in whatever language they
may be written." The Asiatic Society, which he founded,
and of which Warren Hastings was the first president, was
formed for the purpose of preserving the history and the
memorials of India and the East generally. It has now an
immense collection of volumes, and manuscripts, and speci-
mens in natural history, and relics of all sorts. The large
building in which they have been kept was long since over-
flowing, so that it was found necessary to store the addi-
tions elsewhere. An extensive ran^e of buildino^s on the
CALCUTTA.
217
Chowringee Road was approaching coinpleLion when I left
Calcutta, and when it is opened it will be one of the most
interesting museums in the world. I made the acquaint-
ance of the scholarly superintendent, who expressed an
earnest desire to establish some system of exchanges with
similar institutions in this Western world.
Excepting in what is known as the Zenana Mission, the
Americans are not represented among the institutions of
Calcutta ; but that work is one of great importance, and in
India is absolutely essential as the complement of Christian
missions. It is not altogether new, but in its specific form
was undertaken only ten years since by the " Woman's
Union Missionary Society of America for Heathen Lands,"
whose head-quarters in India are at Calcutta, under the
superintendence of Miss Hook, a lady of rare culture and
refinement, and of great energy of character. Their field
of operation is the zenanas, the homes of the women of
India. Of course I was not able personally to observe the
prosecution of this work, but I became familiar with its
character and prospects, and was happy to learn that it is
full of promise. The ladies of the mission, who go out
daily among the zenanas, are cordially received, and many
of the wealthy natives express an earnest desire that their
wives may be instructed.
There is no spot in India more sacred in the eyes of the
Christian world than Serampore, beautifully situated on a
bend of the Iloogly, about fifteen miles from the city of
Calcutta. Every one who is at all familiar wdth the his-
tory of missions in the East knows how intimately this place
is associated with the names of the earliest and some of the
best men that have gone out to preach the Gospel in Asiatic
countries. In the beginning of the present century it was
the cave in which the prophets were hid when they were
forbidden to preach in British India. Being a Danish pos-
session, it was not under the control of the East India Com-
pany, and here Carey and Ward set themselves down to
study the languages of the East. Here they planted their
218 ABOUND THE WORLD.
printing-presses, and from this spot tliey sent forth millions
of pages of Cliristian truth into all parts of Asia and the
Islands of the Sea. Here, too, the apostle Judson, several
years later, found a temporary refuge when he was forbid-
den to land at Calcutta, as if he and his companions from
America had conspired against the peace of the country.
The history of Carey and his labors is known the world
over. He was born in a small interior town in England.
His parents, being poor, apprenticed him at the age of four-
teen to a shoemaker, whose trade he seems never to have
mastered ; for, in after years, wdien dining at the governor
general's in India, as he overheard some supercilious En-
glishmen speak of him as a shoemaker, he turned and cor-
rected him, saying he was only a cobbler. (On his death-
bed he was ministered to by the wife of the Governor Gen-
eral of India, and the Bishop of Calcutta came to ask his
dying blessing.) While learning his trade in England, he
indulged his thirst for knowledge by a course of reading,
and at length turned his attention to languages, and en-
larged his field of study, until he became a well-read Bib-
lical scholar, and at length w^as licensed to preach the Gos-
pel in the Baptist connection. In reading the accounts of
Cook's voyages around the world he was deeply moved in
heart tow^ard the heathen, and stirred up his brethren with
his own zeal until they resolved on a mission to the pagan
world, and Carey himself was sent. On arriving in India
he *vas obliged to conceal himself from the knowledge of
the East India Company, whose policy was altogether op-
posed to efforts for the conversion of the natives. For
many years lie labored in great seclusion, supporting liim-
self by working on an indigo plantation. In the year 1800
lie was joined by Marshman and Ward, from England, when
they established themselves under Danish pi'otection at Se-
rampore. They seemed almost to be endued with the gift
of tongues, so successfully did they devote themselves to
the acquisition of languages and to the translation of the
Word of God into the numerous tongues of the East. They
CALCUTTA.
219
established presses on which the Word of God was printed
in languages spoken by at least half the pagan world. They
laid the foundation for a college of a high order, and erect-
ed for it a building which even now is regarded as one of
the finest structures of its kind in India. They procured a
choice and extensive library, which is still a rich repository
of learning and a monument to their own enlarged ideas
and acquisitions.
A great part of the expense of these enterprises they
bore themselves. It is wonderful that a few poor mission-
aries could do such a work ; but they were earnest men of
genius, and they lived not unto themselves. Dr^ Carey re-
ceived for thirty years more than a thousand rupees a
month (equal to $6000 a year) for his services as professor
m the College of Fort William, at Calcutta, and translator
to the East India Company ; Mr. Ward received as much
more from the printing-ofhce, and Mr. and Mrs. Marshman
about the same from teaching ; and yet, while they were
receiving these princely sums, they ate at a common table,
and drew from the common fund only twelve rupees each,
or four dollars a month. The remainder was devoted, by
a mutual contract, to the purposes of the mission, and was
employed in spreading the Gospel. The cost of the Chi-
nese version alone, which they prepared and printed, was
20,000 pounds sterling, or $100,000. The words of the
agreement which they signed when they entered on their
work were, " Let us give ourselves up unreservedly to this
glorious cause. Let us never think that our time, our
gifts, our strength, our families, or even the clothes we
wear, are our own. Let us sanctify them all to God and
his cause." Xow that life's labor is over, these devoted
men sleep together on the spot consecrated by their many
yeai*s of toil in the service of the Master.
Here, too, Henry Martyn, of blessed memory, lived for a
time and studied, fitting himself for his short but important
life-service in India and Persia. Nor is this spot M'ithout
special interest for Americans. When the first band of
220 AROUXD THE WORLD.
missionaries from our own country to the East reached
India, this was the only spot in all the land in which they
could find a resting-place even for a day.
All these associations were so many powerful attractions,
and I gladly accepted an invitation from Dr. George Smith,
the accomplished and learned editor of the Friend of In-
dia, to visit him at his home at Serampore. I found him
awaiting me at the station, and we drove first to the ceme-
tery, known as the Westminster Abbey of India, where
Carey, and Marshman, and Ward were buried. Carey
wrote his own epitaph, which is inscribed on a plain ceno-
taph :
WILLIAM CAREY :
BORN I7TH OF AUGUST, 1 76 1,
DIED 9TH OF JUNE, 1834.
"^ wretched, poor, and helpless zaonn,
On Thy kind arms I fall."
I visited the college where those prophets taught; I
stood in the pulpit where Carey preached, and saw the
room in which Marshman died. Dr. Smith pointed out to
me the site of the pagoda in which Henry Martyn devoted
liimself with such assiduity and success to the study of the
languages in which he afterward preached the Gospel.
The college building is still in excellent repair, and the li-
brary was most tempting in its choice collection of books,
among which I would fain have lingered. But, as else-
where, I sufi^ered from the bane of travelers, want of time,
and I could not linger in any of the many interesting
scenes in which I found myself.
We drove out to the grounds of a wealthy Baboo to wit-
ness a Hindoo festival that had been in progress two or
three days, and which was then at its height. It was in
honor of some one of the multitude of gods which the Hin-
doos reverence, but in the form of an entertainment for
the people, who had come together in great numbers in
holiday attire. In various places by the roadside and in
booths, or under canopies, were groups of statuary formed
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA ; EUROPEANS, ETC. 221
from the plastic mud of the Ganges, which is superior to
the finest statuary clay. Some of the groups were in cari-
cature, but others were perfectly life-like, evincing real ge-
nius in the extemporaneous artists. In a large inclosure,
separated from the crowd of natives, a sort of musical
drama was in progress, the music and the words appearing
improvised, but falling on the ear with pleasing effect.
Every thing was conducted with strict decorum, and the
whole scene, as I witnessed it for a few moments while the
shades of evening were falling — its perfect novelty, its
strictly and strangely Oriental features, and its surround-
ing's of bamboos, and palm-trees, and other tropical vegeta-
tion — formed a picture which can not easily be forgotten.
Crossing the Hoogly to Barrackpore, and passing through
the grove of an immense banyan-tree, I reached the station
of the East-side Railway, and was shortly in Calcutta again.
XV.
GOVERNMENT OF INDI^ ; EUROPEANS, ETC.
The Hindoos claim for their country and nation an an-
tiquity which ought to satisfy the most enthusiastic advo-
cates of the long geologic periods. They make it out that
things have been going on somewhat after the present or-
der for indefinite ages — four or five thousand millions of
vears ; that in the early days of their race people used to
live a hundred thousand years ; that they were the matter of
thirty-five or forty feet in height, etc. ; but the records of
those ancient times are not very authentic. Nothing satis-
factory is known either of the country or the people before
Alexander the Great crossed the mountain barrier on the
north and extended his arms onward toward the peninsula.
Tliis was a little more than three hundred years before the
Clu-istian era. From that time to the present we have rec-
222 AROUND THE WOULD.
ords more or less authentic, first of the Hindoo rule of
about thirteen centuries, and then of the Mohannnedan, in-
cluding the reign of the Mogul emperors, exceeding in
splendor all that the world has seen out of Hindostan, and
reaching down to the complete occupation of the country
by British power.
It was the wealth of the Mogul dynasty which first led
European cupidity to turn its eyes toward the East. The
discovery of the passage to India around the Cape of Good
Hope, six years after the discovery of America by Colum-
bus, opened up the whole of India to the commerce of Eu-
rope. In the year 1600 a commercial company was char-
tered in England under the name of the East India Com-
pany, which continued to increase in power, and to extend
the objects and limits of its sway, until it had taken posses-
sion of all India, and at length was compelled to turn it
over completely to the crown of Britain. The East India
Company, which had been a mine of wealth and an engine
of almost unlimited power to its corporators, was abolished
by act of Parliament in 1858, the year after the great mu-
tiny, having been gradually shorn of its privileges and pow-
er by the same authority in successive renewals of its
charter. Its immense wealth and power may be inferred
fi'om the fact that its gross revenue for the year 1850 was
£135,000,000, or nearly $675,000,000. Its expenditures
were at a corresponding rate.
The Empire of India, which includes a number of jn-ov-
inces or presidencies such as Bengal, Bombay, Madras, etc.,
and extends over a territory of a million and a half square
miles, with a population of two hundred millions of people,
is now administered by a viceroy, or governor general, who
has under him, in tlie sevei'al provinces, governors, lieuten-
ant governors, and commissioners, some of the native prin-
ces retaining a semi-independent position in their own ter-
ritories. All the great native rulers were dethroned and
their territory appropriated in the conquests made by Brit-
ish arms.
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA) EUROPEANS, ETC. 223
For two centuries and a half India was ruled for the ben-
efit of the East India Company. This was a connnercial
enterprise, undertaken for the sole purpose of making gain ;
it did not pretend to establish itself for the purpose of do-
ing good to the inhabitants of India ; trade, and gold, and
diamonds were the objects sought, while the welfare of two
hundi'ed millions of people was among the last things con-
sidered. Even the claims of religion, humanity, and justice
were too often ti'eated as if they had no binding force in
that longitude. Not the splendors of successive conquests
of territory from native kings and princes, nor the brilliant
administration of such men as Warren Hastings, can blind
the world to the wrongs and crimes which marked the prog-
ress of British empire in the Eas*". It is in many respects
a dark record, unworthy of a Christian or a noble people.
But that is all changed since the East India Company was
abolished, or, if not all, the purpose and the general admin-
istration of the government is changed. India is now ruled,
not for the sake of extorting money from an unwilling, sub-
jugated race, but for the good of the people of India.
It is with great pleasure that I bear testimony to the high
character of the men who have the administration of affairs
in that empire, as well as to the promising aspect of the
country in its material, educational, social, and religious in-
terests, as being full of promise. I doubt if any country
has more conscientious and intelligent public officers con-
trolling its destinies. There are reforms yet to be consum-
mated. The extreme caution of the rulers prevents them
from taking the bold stand assumed by the home govei-n-
ment in favor of Chi-istianity and against some of the enor-
mities of idolatry and heathenism ; manv evils crowing out
of the peculiarities of the people, the variety of races, the
inveterate nature of hoary prejudices, yet remain to be re-
moved or remedied; but, judging from the promise of the
present, India bids fair to become again a mighty empire in
the East, and to outshine in real glory the splendor of the
old Moiruls.
224 AROUND THE WORLD.
The viceroyalt}' of India is the highest office under the
British crown, and, considering the extent of its sway, and
the population over which it is exercised, is the most im-
portant delegated office in the world. The power is not as
absolute as was that of the governor general in the palmy
days of the East India Company. Being directly respon-
sible to the home government, the viceroy is under statu-
tory checks ; general legislative power also is in the hands
of councils, provincial and general, so that a uniform and
complete system of government, and one which might be
called constitutional, extends over the whole of India.
The outward dignity of government is maintained by a
liberal provision for its support. The viceroy has a salary
of £25,000 (five times that of the President of the United
States), with as much or more for incidental expenses ; an
extensive palace and complete establishment at Calcutta,
with provision for a country residence and a summer cap-
ital on the Himalaya Mountains, to which the governor
general and the supreme council remove during the hot
season.
The salaries of officials in India are generally large, and
the immense army of office-holders employed in all the de-
partments of government, the revenues for their payment
being drawn from the country itself, makes this possession
one of incalculable value and importance to Great Bi-it-
ain. It is the source from which a large representation of
the higher and middle classes obtain their support. The
younger sons of the aristocracy who can not be maintain-
ed in affluence, and a large force of others who are able
to obtain appointments, are sent to India to fill the offices
in the various branches of the military or civil service.
There is a charm about Oriental life which makes it at-
tractive. The pay is liberal. Some officials receive enor-
mous salaries, with the promise of pensions after the term
of service has expired ; and at the end of seven years, as a
rule, officers high and low have a furlough of a year on
half pay, with the expenses of a journey homeward paid.
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA; EUROPEANS, ETC. 225
This rule, in the form of a custom, extends even to clerks
in Ijanks and other private corpoi-ations. It is not strange,
tlierefore, that India is regarded at home as a sort of El
Dorado.
I have spoken of the great cliange which has come over
the administration of affairs in India since it bgcame more
directly dependent upon the British crown. The change
is noticeable every where, but in no respect more than in
the extent and thoroughness of the educational work car-
ried on by the government. I was aware that a system of
public instruction had been organized, and that institutions
of learning had been established at various points, but I
was not prepared to find that these institutions were of
such a high order ; that so many of the youth of India,
Hindoo and Mohammedan, were enjoying and profiting by
these advantages, or that such liberal provision was made
by the government for their support and for general edu-
cation. Within the last ten years the progress of the work
has been rapid. The appropriations for this object by the
government for the year previous to my arrival in the
country amounted to nearly nine millions of rupees, or
more than $4,000,000. This was distributed over the
whole of the empire, so that every school conforming to
the requisitions of government received its share.
A University is established in each of the three presi-
dencies of Bengal, Bombay, and Madras. These are ex-
amining bodies only, but colleges and schools of various
grades are established in all the different provinces. In
Calcutta alone there are eleven colleges of a high order,
including the institutions of the Kirk and Free Cliurch of
Scotland, the students of which, on completing their course
of study, appear before the University on examination for
their degrees. In Lower Bengal there are five colleges,
and in the northwest provinces and the Punjaub, seven.
There are, besides, similar institutions in Bombay and Mad-
ras. These colleges are all thoroughly equipped with pro-
fessorships filled by scholars who have had a university
P
226 AROUND THE WORLD.
education at home, some of them men emhient for their
attainments, and have all the appliances for a complete ed-
ucation in the arts, sciences, and languages. In the year
above referred to there were, in the colleges and schools
taught, aided, or inspected by the state, 602,537 scholars.
These were, with very few exceptions, natives.
Too much attention and too large a proportion of the
appropriations have been devoted to the higher institu-
tions, without suitable provision for the education of the
masses. One reason for this is, that it has been the policy
of the government to educate native youth for its own ser-
vice in the various departments of civil life, and for this
purpose mainly the colleges were originally founded ; but,
now that so large a number have enjoyed these advan-
tages, it would accord with the general policy of the gov-
ernment to elevate the people by diffusing the blessings of
a sound education. Such a course, I believe, is to be pur-
sued. A general system of schools for the country, ap-
proaching our own public -school system, has been under
consideration, and will probably soon l)e adopted.
The standard objection against the government schools
and colleges of India is that they are not Christian in their
character ; that the course of instruction has tended rath-
er to favor than to oppose idolatry. There is too much
ground for the objection ; but, after becoming more famil-
iar with the character of the people, and with the peculiar
circumstances of the govermnent, I could better appreciate
the difhculties of establishing a system which should be
avowedly hostile to the religious convictions of the people.
It is not considered as the province of our own govern-
ment to teach religion in its public schools, and there are
difficulties in India in the way of teaching Christianity
through governmental institutions of which we know noth-
ing. Since being in India I look with more hope than be-
fore to the results of the work of education which is car-
ried on by the government. It must aid in the overthrow
of idolatry, and of other forms of false religion which
GOVERXMENT OF INDIA; EUROPEANS, ETC. 227
have so long prevailed in the land. Many, it is true, be-
come infidels on becoming convinced of the absurdity of
the science which has formed a part of their own religious
systems, but this may be only a transition state, not unnat-
ural as the effect of correct scientific instruction without
the pervading and prevailing influence of Christian con-
viction. This conviction must come from a higher source
than mere human instruction.
The general attitude of the government toward the sys-
tems of idolatry has undergone an entire change. The
time was, and not many years ago, when the East India
Company derived a large revenue from the temples and
places of pilgrimage for devotees; when English soldiers
were compelled to bow down and do reverence before the
false gods for the sake of securing the favor or avoiding
the hostility of the natives. A long indictment was re-
corded against the former rulers of the land, and they were
convicted not only of wickedness, but of folly, when, in the
great mutiny of 1857, the very men whose favor they had
courted became their deadliest enemies ; and when, from
the beginning to the end of the rebellion, not a single Chris-
tian convert in the land M'as known to lift his hand or give
any information against the English. The authorities have
learned wisdom and righteousness by this terrible experi-
ence.*
* Meadows Taylor, in his History of India, speaking of the administration
of Lord Aucliland, says :
"All connection between the English government of India and Hindoo
tem})les and their idolatrous ceremonies was abolished nnder imperative ei-
ders from the Court of Directors and the Board of Control. All revenues
derivable from these sources were abandoned, and the temples and their en-
dowments placed under the management of their own priests. It will hardly
now be crediteel how much honor had used to be accorded to idols and their
worship before this most necessary exactment of April 20, 1840. Up to this
time troops had been paraded at festivals, salutes fired, and offerings by the
Company presented to idol deities, and the European functionary of tlie dis-
trict was obliged, often most unwillingly, to take a part in heathen ceremo-
nies originally conceded to conciliate the ])eople, but which had grown by
usage into a portion of the ceremonies themselves. It is still stranger to
record that it was not till the lapse of years that a final disseverance from
and abandonment of pilgrim taxes was effected. "
228 ABOUND THE WORLD.
The European population of India, of whom the natives
of the British Isles form by far the largest pai-t, is about
160,000. They are chiefly engaged in the public service,
military and civil, although in the principal cities there is
a large mercantile population. Thei-e are very few Euro-
peans in India who were born there, and scarcely one
whose parents w^ere natives of the country. From a remote
period the children of English or Scotch parents have been
sent home, not merely to be educated away from the evil
associations of the land, but to be i-aised in a more health-
ful climate. Children of foreign parents are more exposed
to the injurious influences of the climate than those who
come to India in adult years. It was mentioned to me also
as a singular fact, that women boi'n in India of European
parents seldom become mothers, a proof of the deleterious
effect of the climate upon the constitution ; consequently
one rarely sees children in the families of the foreign resi-
dents, or much more rarely than in other countries. They
have either not been born, or they have been sent home.
The trial which missionaries have been called so often to
endure in sending their children from the home circle and
from parental care is one which is shared by a large part
of the foreign residents, who are engaged either in the pub-
lic service or in mercantile business.
There is another class, the children of European fathers
and native mothers, called Eurasians, East-Indians, Half-
castes, etc., numbering about 80,000. Being a sort of con-
necting link between the two races, they are commonly ac-
quainted with the foreign and the native languages ; many
of them have had special advantages of education, and
many of them occiqw positions of usefulness, as clerks or
agents of the government. They are easily distinguished by
their European features from the natives, and, being almost
as dark as the natives, are never confounded with Europe-
ans. They are not reputed to possess the same mental or
physical vigor, or to have as much enterprise of character
as foreigners.
OOVERNMENT OF INDIA; EUROPE AXS, ETC. 229
During the hot season all business requiring active exer-
tion is crowded as much as possible into the early morning,
especially if it makes exposure to the sun necessary. The
army-drill is over by eight or nine o'clock, traveling is done
by night, and during the middle of the day the struggle for
existence is most wisely managed by ceasing the struggle
altogether, and giving one's self up to perfect quiet. The
slightest exercise instantly produces violent perspiration,
and the same effect follows the suspension of the j^vnJca.
T\\eijpu7ika is a broad fan suspended overhead, and usually
stretching across the room ; in the dining-room reaching
the length of the table. It is moved by coolies in an ante-
room, who, by means of a cord attached to the j)U7iha, draw
it back and forth. Every private house, every place of
business, and every assembly-room is supplied with this in-
dispensable requisite. The churches have rmvaQus,e j^uiikas
suspended over the heads of the congregations, which wave
back and forth majestically during the entire service. The
first time that 1 was called upon to address a congregation
through such a medium, I found it far less suggestive of
ideas and suitable emotions than if 1 had been speaking to
the people face to face. But even the heat of a church
would be unendurable without the j)un7cas. They are quite
as essential at night in the homes during the hot season.
No sleeping can be done without them. Nor are they such
a severe tax upon the coolies as might be supposed. The
coolies are paid for the service ; it is their only support ;
they luxuriate in the heat as do the natives of Africa, and
they have their time for rest. Few natives of any country
in the East die of hard work.
Europeans in India live much more freely in respect to
eating and drinking than is generally supposed to be con-
sistent with such a climate, but it may be that the waste of
the human system demands a generous supply to repair it.
1 have never been in any land where free indulgence with-
in the bounds of temperance was more generally the rule.
Foreign residents rise early all the year round, and take a
230 AROUND THE WOULD.
cup of tea, with toast, or some light food, immediately on
rising. This is called chota hazril, or the little breakfast.
About niue or ten o'clock comes the real breakfast, usually
an elaborate meal of fish, eggs, and some preparation of rice,
with meats. At one o'clock t'jfin, a still more hearty meal,
is taken, and at seven or eight o'clock dinner, which is the
meal of the day, and which is much after the pattern of an
English or American dinner. This generous style of living
seems to agree with the people ; for, instead of the yellow
or dark-skinned, shrunken, liver-diseased race that I expect-
ed to see, 1 found the gentlemen robust and rosy-faced, to
my great astonishment, and the ladies equally well favored.
(I speak of health, not of beauty, for in this respect the la-
dies always and every where bear the palm.) They assured
us that we found them at their best, in the midst of the cool
season, when they were luxuriating in a genial temperature ;
but, from the general aspect of the foreign residents, I felt
con\inced that India had been greatly belied, or that for-
eigners had learned how to adapt themselves to its climate
better than in years past.
The subdivision of labor is carried in India to its very
utmost limit. Every servant has his own sphere, and it
would be about as difficult to move him from it as to turn
one of the planets from its orbit. It almost reaches the
point that one servant who takes up an article must have
another to lay it down for him. This necessitates the em-
ployment of a large number to do the work of a household.
Fortunately, the rate of wages is very low, or it would re-
quire a fortune to live at all. A family, however small,
living in any style, must have a Jiansunia, a butler or stew-
ard ; kitrtiutgar, a head table-servant, besides a table-serv-
ant for every member of the family ; hohagee, or cook ; mee-
?;«, man-sweeper; metrane,ievaa\Q sweeper; musalche,io
clean knives and wash dishes ; siirdm\ head bearer, with
eight common bearers if he keeps a palanquin, to pull pun-
ka, etc. ; re is as common in India
as tow7i or ton in our own countr}', and the signification is
much the same.
There is little in the sceneiy going north from Calcutta
that is attractive. At one or two points the country breaks
out into some demonstrations of grandeur, but the vast
plain of the Ganges is almost wholly without variety. It
is generally in a state of cultivation — not high cultivation,
for the whole country has the appearance of exhaustion
from its effort to sustain so many millions for thousands of
years. Occasionally w^e passed through rich rice-fields, and
the crops were green as in summer-time, but nowhere did
we see the signs of good, thrifty tillage. One reason doubt-
less is that the people are not landholders, and are not stim-
ulated to keep the land up to the maximum of its produc-
ing capacity. It was a novelty in agriculture to see cam-
els yoked to the plow like oxen, and elephants working in
the field with the sagacity of farmers. They are frequent-
ly employed in the East to perform work which requii-es a
discriminating eye and good judgment, and this, too, with-
out an overseer. They are trained to lift and pile lumber
with their trunks, whicli they do with as much exactness as
if they used a plumb-line.
A striking peculiarity of the great plain of India, and
indeed of the whole of Asia, from the east to the west, as
far as I have seen it, is the destitution of forests. With
all the beauty of verdure and foliage which marks Japan,
I did not see, within the thousand miles of the empire that
I traversed, a single forest of any extent. The whole coast
of China, along which I sailed more than a thousand miles,
and the interior, as far as I penetrated it, had only sparse-
1}' scattered trees. Farther inland there ai-e heavily-tim-
bered districts, but I saw none. There is not the sign of a
forest from Calcutta to the mountains, although a large
part of the country is in jungle. Even the Himalaya
R
6
258 AROUND THE WORLD.
Moiuitains that I subsequently crossed, and the second
range that I ascended, were only sprinkled with trees, in
comparison with the grand old dense forests of magnificent
growth which form one of the sublime features of Ameri-
can scenery. And to anticipate still farther ; Syria, includ-
ino- tlie mountains of Lebanon, is almost destitute of trees.
All that remain of the cedars of Lebanon can be counted
in a few moments. The plain of India, which led me into
this digression, has scattered groves of palm, and acacia,
and guava, and mango, and many other Oriental trees, but
they are all planted for shade or fruit. Centuries ago the
forests were cut down to supply the necessities of an im-
mense population, but the soil does not appear to have
the reproductive power tliat is a marked feature of our
own.
The night had gathered around us before we reached
Mogul-Serai, where we were transferred to another short
road, by which we reached the bank of the Ganges oppo-
site Benares. Crossing by a bridge of boats, we entered by
moonliglit that ancient and magnificent city — in the eyes
of a Hindoo, the holiest spot on the face of the globe.
India has three capitals, although two of them are more
historic than real ; Calcutta, the actual capital, the seat of
the British viceroyalty; Dellii, the Mohammedan capital,
the seat of the old Mogul dynasty ; and Benares, the an-
cient Hindoo capital, still regarded by Brahminists as the
centre of the world. It is tlie Mecca of the Hindoos, the
point to which their most sacred thoughts turn, and where,
of all places, they think it blessed to die. Indeed, it is an
article of Llindoo faith that the vilest sinner, if he dies with-
in a circle of ten miles around Benares, is sure of passing
at once into everlasting bliss. Thousands ai-e brouglit to
the shores of the Ganges at this spot, that they may drink
and bathe in its waters, and die within the charmed circle,
with their eyes resting on the sacred river. As soon as
the breath has departed, their bodies are burned upon its
banks, and the ashes thrown to mingle with its waters.
CALCUTTA TO BEXABES. 259
Water taken from the ghauts is carried by pilgrims over
the whole land, and every where regarded as holy water.
The city, one of great antiquity, has passed through
many and great mutations. Hindooism, and Buddhism,
and Mohammedanism have here successively reigned, the
former all the while clinging to the soil as its own sacred
inheritance. One ancient city, about five miles from the
present site, has passed away, almost from memory, leaving
scarcely a trace behind. I spent a morning among its
sparse but massive ruins, accompanied by the Rev. Mr. Sher-
ring, the learned antiquarian and historian of Benares, and
the Eev, Mr. Hutton, both of the London Missionary Socie-
ty, to whom I was indebted for most of the pleasure and
interest of my sojourn.
The modern city, if I may apply such a term to one that
has stood uiichanged for centuries, is the most magnificent
in its architecture, and the most strictly Oriental in aspect
of all the cities of India. There are grander structures at
Agra and Delhi, and there is more of show at Lucknow,
but nowhere else does the traveler find himself dreamins:
over so constantly the fancies which filled his imagination
when, as a boy, he read the tales of the East, or when, in
riper years, he lingered over the pages of its histor3\ Per-
haps I should make some qualification in speaking of the
grandeur of this or of any Oriental city. In no other part
of the world does distance lend so much enchantment to
the view as in the East. Domes and minarets, and palaces
with lofty, fretted porches, and palm-trees, and Oriental
skies, form a picture that is truly enchanting; but when
one attempts to thread tlie narrow winding alleys that are
called streets, and is jostled at every step by men, and wom-
en, and donkeys, and camels, and sacred bulls, to say noth-
ing of an occasional elephant, whose huge dimensions ap-
pear to require more than all the space between the walls,
he loses sight of the magnificence, and is absorbed with
the realities of the place.
But, even with these qualifications, the views of Benares
260 AROUND THE WORLD.
which linger in my memory are the grandest recollections
of all the cities of the East. As seen from the lofty min-
aret of the Mosque of Aurimgzebe, the domes of a thou-
sand temples, the minarets of three hundred mosques, and
palaces without number, which princes have built, that
they may live and die in sight of the holy river, make up a
magnificent picture. The city is skirted with palms and
acacias, and the deified peepul, all which add to the beau-
ty of the scene.
But, to see its real grandeur, one must look upon it
from the Ganges. Benares is situated on a bluff, rising
precipitously from the river. Its most massive structures
have their foundations laid in the river itself, and rise up
a hundred feet by terraces or ghauts, broad stone stair-
ways, so that the palaces, and mosques, and temples over-
hang the river. The style of architecture is gorgeous, and
the whole scene so enchanting that, as one floats down the
stream, he seems to be gazing upon a city built in fair}^
land. Even now, as I look back upon it, and attempt to
trace with my pen the impressions that were made upon my
mind, I seem to be dreaming.
The city stretches two or three miles along the Ganges ;
but its chief magnificence is crowded into a single mile
above the bridge of boats. The English town known as
Secrole stands entirely by itself, and is laid out with broad
streets finely sliaded, and a grand esplanade for military
evolutions. In driving toward the river for the purpose of
making the passage down the Ganges in an open dinghy
to obtain this view, we came at length to the city proper,
from which, by the narrovvness of tlie streets, carriages are
excluded as effectually as by impenetrable walls. Order-
ing the carriage to make a circuitous route in order to
meet us below, we took to our feet, and soon came to the
Boojvjha Khond, a temple dedicated to the goddess Door-
gha, but actually devoted to monkeys. Hundreds and
thousands of these caricatures of humanity, made more im-
pudent by being petted, if not worshiped by the Brahmins,
CALCUTTA TO BENABES. 261
who are their humble servants, filled the temple and the
adjoining courts, and swarmed into the streets and neigh-
boring grounds, and grinned at us from every house-top,
and garden- wall, and tree. They have the perfect freedom
of this part of the town.
Taking a boat, we slowly descended the river, admiring
the splendid panorama of Oriental architecture as it seemed
to move past us. First comes the Man Maiidil, the observ-
atory of Jai Singh, a grand structure, which still has, on its
broad stone roof, charts of the lieavens drawn by Indian
astronomers in the days of the Mogul emperors. Large in-
struments that were in use centuries ago are in its galleries.
Here is the ghaut leading to the Golden Temple of Shiva,
the reigning divinity of the city, where, on the following
day, we saw the worshipers, some of them of high degree,
bringing their offerings in successive groups, to be laid on
the altar and washed with the water of the sacred stream,
Hindoo temples cluster thick around, and sacred places,
holy wells, and shrines, all visited by devotees, reminded
us of Paul's visit to Athens, where " his spirit was stirred
within him when he saw the city wholly given to idolatry."
The idols of Benares number more than half a million.
Then comes a succession of ghauts, broad terraces and
flights of steps of hewn stone which line the ri^•er's bank,
and overhanging balconies, from which the princely pro-
prietors look out upon the river which seems to them so
near to Paradise. Here we reach the great Mosque of
Aurungzebe, the Mohammedan pride of the city, whose
foundation walls rise up from the water's edge, the build-
ing towering up in massive beauty, and the minarets pier-
cing the air still higher. Great numbers of Hindoos, men
and women, have come down the long flights of steps to
bathe in the Ganges, and all along we see them performing
their ablutions with religious solemnities, hoping thus to
wash away their sins. Others are worshiping the river
itself, bowing often and repeating their prayers, absorbed
in their devotions, and apparently unconscious of the pi-es-
262
AROUND THE WORLD.
TIIE GKA>:D JIO&QUE.
ence of others. Every now and then we come to a land-
ing-place devoted to the burning of the Hindoo dead. We
pass pile after pile made ready for the cremation. From
some the smoke and flames are ascending to perfume the
city, making this quarter of the town almost iniend;u-al)le
excepting to a Hindoo.
Leaving the river, we climbed one of the ghauts by a
flight of more than a hundred steps, and re-entered the
city, threading our way through the narrow streets. Pres-
ently we encountered one of the Bi-ahminy bulls, a race of
animals held sacred as the gods, and, knowing the fanati-
CALCUTTA TO BEXARES.
263
cism of the Brahmins, who adore them, and the imperious
nature of the bulls themselves, we gave him a wide berth.
These animals, from time immemorial, have enjoyed the
freedom of the city, no one being allowed to molest them
in any wise, or even to interfere with their predatory hab-
its. If they choose to enter a cliina-shop, no one must say
nay, and if a grocer's stock happens to strike their fanc}',
the i3roprietor would not dare to interfere with their claims.
264 AROUND THE WORLD.
They are, consequently, always in good condition, living on
the fat of the land. A few years since they had multiplied
to such an extent, and had become so imperious in theii"
exactions, that the English local authorities determined, if
possible, to rid the city of the nuisance, or at least to thin
them out. But how to do this without exciting the horror
of every Hindoo, and, perhaps, raising a rebellion, was the
problem. To kill the Brahminy bulls would be a thousand
times worse than to behead so many princes. At length
the problem was solved ; it was decided to turn them out
to graze in the jungle, where the tigers, who have no Brah-
mmical scruples, made short work with them, and the city
was relieved.
We had ordered our carriage to meet us at the bazar,
near the residence of the Rajah Sir Deo IS^arain Singh, a
distinguished native prince. During the terrible mutiny
of 1857 he had remained faithful to the British govern-
ment, and had rendei-ed important service, for wdiich he
was made a Knight Commander of the Star of India. The
queen had made personal acknowledgment of his services
by sending an elaborate piece of silver plate bearing an ap-
propriate inscription. The gentleman who accompanied
us, a resident of Benares, being on terms of familiar ac-
quaintance with the rajah, proposed a call, and, nothing
loth, we complied.
Passing through an outer court-yard, in which several
elephants were in waiting, we entered a large flower-gar-
den, rather stiflly arranged, but admirably kept, and, as-
cending a flight of steps, were met by the rajah's eldest
son, who has since succeeded to the title and honors of the
father. Giving us a cordial welcome, and inviting us to
the reception-room, he ordered refreshments and enter-
tained us with conversation in English, expressing great re-
gret that his father was absent on his estates in the coun-
try. He gave an order to one of the servants, who pi-es-
ently returned with two ghttering silver garlands called
malas, and the young rajah, throwing them over our necks.
CALCUTTA TO BENARES. 265
said, " This is the way we express hospitality iu our coun-
try." We retained them and wore them away. Another
servant brought perfumery for our handkerchiefs, and, as
we were leaving, we were presented with bouquets of flow-
ers from the garden.
The next morning, as we were at breakfast, word was
bi'ought that the rajah's servants were entering the com-
pound with baskets on their heads, and they appeared with
presents from the young prince. There were all sorts of
vegetables, a box of Cabool grapes, raisins, nuts, a large cir-
cular cake of rock candy, etc., etc. About two o'clock he
called upon us in a carriage, with his attendants. Being a
high-caste Hindoo, we were unable to show him the usual
rites of hospitality, but we enteitained him according to
the best of our ability, and gave him a hearty invitation to
visit our country, where we might reciprocate his atten-
tions.
As he was leaving, he informed us that one of his ele-
phants should be at our service if we would like to make
an excursion into the country. Soon the elephant, with
mahout and another attendant, appeared. He was a noble
specimen of his species, and, somewhat peculiar, mottled or
spotted on his breast. Obedient to command, he came
do^vn upon his belly, and even then we required a ladder
to mount to the howdah, the tower upon his back. This
was our first experience in elephant riding, and, although
the excursion was one of great pleasure, the motion was
just about as agreeable as that of a boat in a short chop-
ping sea, or, to draw a comparison from the land, it was
very much like making an excursion upon the back of a
small mountain.
I find that in the East the elephant, while he has full
credit for his sagacity, does not bear the high reputation
for fidelity which is current in the West. Even the best
of the race, and those which have been long domesticated,
are liable to freaks which have the appearance of insanity,
in which thev sometimes attack their most tried friends.
266 AROUND THE WOULD.
The year before, an old schoolmate of my own, who has
been many years in Siam as a missionary physician, and
whom I expected to visit on my way. Dr. S. R. House, hav-
ing occasion to go out several days' journey from Bankok to
perform a surgical operation, took the usual mode of con-
veyance for a long journey, with suitable attendants. One
morning, having spent the night in his tent, as he was pre-
paring to start, he passed by his elephant, which, for some
unaccountable reason, struck him down with his trunk and
tore him fearfully with his tusks. He was obliged to per-
form for himself the office of a surgeon, sewing up his own
wounds, and it was several days before he could be moved
from the scene of his injury. This treachery on the part
of elephants may be owing to the fact that they are usually
taken wild and subdued by severe discipline, and probably
are not thoroughly tamed. They may lay up the remem-
brance of their subjugation and injuries, and watch for an
opportunity to avenge themselves.
But to return to the rajah. I was pained, on reaching
home, to receive the intelligence of the death of the noble
Hindoo, the father, througli the following tribute to his
worth which appeared in the Friend of India :
" The death of Rajah Sir Deo Narain Singh, K. C. S. I,
Avhich occuvred at Benares suddenly on Sunday evening, Au-
gust 28th, is a great loss, not only to the city, but to India
generally. During many years he occupied a foremost place
among the natives in all matters connected with the prosper-
ity of the country. He was a man of very liberal views.
His mind was noble and benevolent, and he had no sympa-
thy whatever with those mere party questions Avhich injure
one class of the people by benefiting another. Of good nat-
ural intelligence, frank and courteous, enthusiastic and enter-
prising, his opinions on all matters that came before him
were those of a thoughtful, fearless, and honest man. Sin-
cerity — valuable every where, and especially so in India —
was his distinguishing characteristic. He has been cut off in
the prime of life and in the maturity of his powers. On sev-
eral occasions of difficulty and danger he rendered invalu-
able assistance to the government, and, indeed, he was ever a
CALCUTTA TO BENARES. 267
Stanch and loyal friend. In the year 1857 he was the chief
native adviser of the English officials in Benares, and it is
not too much to affirm that the safety of the city and neigh-
borhood during those perilous times was, to a large extent,
secured by his devotion and counsel. For the important
services he then rendered, the government conferred upon
him the title of rajah. He was one of the first nativemem-
bers of the Legislative Council of India. The part which he
took in the debates of the council, during his term of office,
proved him to be a man of independent thought, of clear
judgment, and of earnest sound convictions. No man in
Benares was for a moment to be compared with him in zeal
for public welfare. His house was open to all comers who
visited him for consultation and advice. For eight years he
presided over the Benares Institute, and was the life and
soul of that society. His death gave a sudden shock to the
city, and both Europeans and natives alike felt that they had
lost their truest and most faithful friend."
I subsequently received a copy of tlie Friend of India
containing an account of the investitnre of the son with
the titles and dignities of the father, " in recognition of the
faithful and eminent services of the late rajah." He is
now the Rajah Sunibhoo Narain Singh. May lie long wear
his honors as worthily as his father !
The last morning that we spent in Benares we devoted
to visiting some of the Hindoo temples, in which the city
abounds. They are erected in honor of all sorts of gods ;
many of them by private munificence, in fulfillment of
vows or under some religious impulse. Some of the tem-
ples of Benares are costly, and have a show of splendor
about them, especially the Golden Temple ; but it is more
in show than reality. Even the Golden Temple, which is
tlie pride of the Hindoos of Benares, and which more than
all others is resorted to by pilgrims from afar, is not at-
tractive either in its external or its internal appearance.
The pointed dome, which is characteristic of this style of
buildings, is not without beauty of outline, but there is usu-
ally nothing in the surroundings of these temples to make
them pleasing, and they are far from being neatly kept.
'268
ABOUND THE WORLD.
A UINDOO TEMPLE.
In almost all respects they are in striking contrast with the
magnilicent mosques of the Mohammedans in the same
cities, and there is a good reason for the contrast. When
the Mohammedans subdued and took possession of India,
they destroyed the monuments of the ancient religion,
using the material for building their mosques, and at the
Same time prohibiting the erection of temples, excepting of
very limited dimensions. Througliout the North of India,
tlieref ore, the Hindoos scarcely have any thing that can be
called temples ; they are all diminutive structures — mere
shrines. Out of the hundreds or thousands that I saw, I
CALCUTTA TO BENARES. 269
think there was not one that would measure more than
twenty -five feet in its greatest diameter. It is different in
Southern India, where some of the most extensive struc-
tures in the world are to be found.
The ordinary services at the temple are not elaborate.
The worsliipers present offerings of flowers, fruits, jewels,
money, etc., which become the perquisite of the priests.
The life of a Hindoo is one of ceaseless devotion to his re-
ligion, and the visit to the temple may be only the last act
in a long service or pilgrimage, or the initial step to some
such enterprise, and consumes but little time. There are,
indeed, occasions of grand ceremonial w^hen the gods are
taken out for an airing, but the shrines themselves afford
no room for any gathering of the people. The assem-
blages take place at some consecrated spot, like the banks
of the sacred rivers. As we approached the Golden Tem-
ple, we found it occupied by a small party of distinguished
pilgrims from the up-country ; and when they had retired
it was flooded with the water of the Ganges, which had
been poured upon their offerings to sanctify them. The
temple, within and without, was in a very filthy condition.
Benares has a distinction in Asiatic history as the spot
where the founders of Buddhism cammenced the propaga-
tion of that religion. At one period it was firmly estab-
lished in various parts of India, but at length was driven
out to seek its home in more Eastern countries, wliere it is
still exerting its sway over hundreds of millions. The ru-
ins of Sarnath, an extensive Buddhist establishment near
Benai-es, and the monasteries cut into the rocky mountains
in the west of India, which I subsequently visited from
Bombay, bespeak the firm hold which it once had upon tlie
people among wliom it originated.
The gold brocades of Benares are among the most costly
and elegant fabrics of the world, rich and exquisite beyond
description, and as costly as they are beautiful. As the
merchants took them out of the safes and displayed them
to us, we could almost imagine that the Mogul dynasty, in
270
AROUND THE WORLD.
KLINB iNEAK Jll:NAI;I•:^^.
all its gorgeous splendor, was to be re-established ; we could
not imagine how otherwise there conld be a demand for
snch fabrics. Some of them were held at 900 rupees, or
§450, the square yard.
BENARES TO ALLAHABAD.
Til
XIX.
BENARES TO ALLAHABAD.
The nio:lit is the time for travel in India at all seasons of
the year. As there was little that was attractive in the
scenery through which we were to pass, we left Benares at
the same honr of the evening at which we had entered it.
We crossed the Ganges in the beantif ul moonlight, which
spread a wondrously weird sheen over the massive monu-
ments to the false prophet, upon its thousand diminutive
Hindoo temples and shrines, and along its magnificent
ghauts. Were we in the mystical land of the Arabian
Nights, or in tlie dream-land of Hindoo mythology, or in
the midst of the splendor of the old Mogul dynasty ? We
could scarcely say until we had crossed the Ganges, and
entered the depot to take our seats in the railway cars.
This was a modern reality.
At Cliunar we passed a fortress celebrated alike in Mo-
liammedan history and Hindoo mythology, near which, upon
a lofty eminence, the Supreme Being is supposed to be seat-
ed personally, though invisibly, a portion of every day, and
the remainder of the day at the sacred city of Benares.
Near Mirzapore, a few miles farther north, is the temple
of the Goddess Kali, which in former times was the resort
of the Thugs, the discovery of whose existence as a com-
plete and extensive organization not many years since struck
terror into the hearts of all the residents of India. To this
temple they came to worship, and to present their offerings
to their tutelary divinity before entering on any murderous
expedition — a fearful instance of the power of a false sys-
tem of religion to blind its devotees to the nature of crime.
The goddess is represented in Bejigal with a hideous black
face and mouth streaming with blood, a very fnry in ap-
272 AROUND THE WORLD.
peai'aiice. Tliuggism, if not a religious organization, was
tlie next thing to it. The fraternity, while living by mur-
der and robbery, were scrupulous in all their religious ob-
servances. They were even more pious in their way than
the banditti of Italy, who would not for all the world eat
meat on Friday, while they would not hesitate to cut off the
ears of a refractory traveler, after robbing him, on any day
in the week. The Thugs never undertook a criminal expe-
dition until they had propitiated their Goddess Kali, with
whom they afterward divided the spoil ; and, being intense-
ly superstitious, they were easily deterred from the commis-
sion of a crime, not by any enormity which it involved, but
by the slightest evil omen. If one of their number hap-
pened to sneeze as they were starting upon an expedition,
or if they met a woman with an empty pitcher, or heard an
ass bray, the expedition was abandoned. Tliey were not
ordinary robbers. Their depredations were made only upon
travelers, natives as well as foreigners, and murder was al-
ways the first step in the robbery. This is the explanation
of the secrecy that they maintained so long. The pirate's
maxim, " Dead men tell no tales," was one of their funda-
mental principles. They invariably put their victims to
death, usually b}' strangling with a cord, and then buried
them out of sight. Each gang had its j em ada?', or leader ;
its guru, or teacher ; its sothas, or entrappers ; its Muttotes,
or stranglers ; and its lughaees, or grave-diggers. These
would usually meet at some town, often as pretended stran-
gers to one another, select their victims, fall into company
with them, and travel for days before seizing the oi3portu-
nity for their meditated crime.
The discover}^ of this extensive organization >vas made in
the year 1829. Individuals, and even gangs, had been de-
tected from time to time, and, on being convicted of mur-
der, had been executed, but it had never been known that
all over India a secret association existed, with officers, and
regulations, and pass- words, which had been devoted to this
species of crime. One evening in the year named above.
BENARES TO ALLAHABAD. 273
as Major Sleeman, the Deputy Commissioner of the English
for the Saiigor District, was seated at the door of his tent,
a native came up to him in great haste, threw himself at
his feet, and begged to make a communication of great im-
portance, but to his ear alone. Mrs. Sleeman, who was
present, retired, and the man then confessed that he was
the leader of a gang of Thugs, who were near, and that the
grove in which Major Sleeman's tent was pitched was fill-
ed with the graves of those who had been murdered from
time to time. A search was made, and his words proved to
be true. The gang was apprehended, information was ob-
tained from one and another source until the proof of the
existence of the organization in nearly every province and
district of India was obtained. A knowledge of their pro-
ceedings, their regulations, their secret signs, and of the
fearful extent of .their crimes, was obtained and laid before
government. The most thorough measures for their sup-
pression were adopted, and carried out, it is now believed,
with perfect success. Every known Thug throughout India
was apprehended, and although the number was so great
that condign punishment could not be meted out to all, the
organization was broken up. The least guilty were formed
into a sort of penal colony at Jubbulpore, where they were
kept employed at various trades, secluded from intercourse
with their former companions and with the community gen-
erally. It is hoped that, in the course of time, the traditions
of this iniquity will so die out as to preclude the possibility
of its revival. No statistics of the number of its victims
during the ages in which it lias had an organized existence
could possibly be obtained, but the number must have been
very great.
The following case, which I find in the records of Colonel
Sleeman, will give an idea of the course which these mur-
derers pursued, and of the remorseless perseverance with
which they followed up their victims. It is drawn from
the confessions of a Thug who had been apprehended and
convicted of the crime.
S
274: AROUND THE WORLD.
" A stout Mogul officer, of noble bearing and singularly
handsome countenance, on his way from the Punjaub to
Oude, crossed the Ganges at Gurmuktesur Ghaut, near Mee-
rut, to pass through Meradabad and Bareilly. He was mount-
ed on a fine Turkee horse, and attended by his kibmitgar
and groom. Soon after crossing the river he fell in with a
small party of well-dressed and modest-looking men going
the same road. They accosted him in a respectful manner,
and attempted to enter into conversation with him. He had
heard of Thugs, and told them to be oif. They smiled at
his idle susjjicions, and tried to remove them, but all in vain ;
the Mogul was determined ; they saw his nostrils swelling
with indignation, took their leave, and followed slowly.
" The next morning he overtook the same number of men,
but of a difterent appearance, all Mussulmans. They accost-
ed him in the same respectful manner, talked of the dangers
of the road, and the necessity of their keeping together and
taking the advantage of the protection of any mounted gen-
tleman that happened to be going the same way. The Mo-
gul officer said not a word in reply, resolved to have no com-
panions on the road. They persisted ; his nostrils began
again to swell, and, putting his hand to his sword, he bid
them all be otf, or he would have their heads from their
shoulders. He had a bow and quiver full of arrows over his
shoulder, a brace of loaded pistols in his waist-belt, and a
sword by his side, and was altogether a very formidable-
looking cavalier.
" In the evening another party that lodged in the same se-
rai became very intimate with the butler and groom. They
were going the same road, and, as the Mogul overtook them
in the morning, they made their bows respectfully, and be-
gan to enter into conversation with their two friends, the
groom and the butler, who were coming up behind. The
Mogul's nostrils began again to swell, and he bid the stran-
gers be off The groom and butler interceded; for their
master was a grave, sedate man, and they Avanted compan-
ions. All would not do, and the strangers fell in the rear.
"The next day, Avhen thay had got to the middle of an
extensive and uninhabited plain, the Mogul in advance, and
his two servants a few hundred yards behind, he came up to
a party of six poor Mussulmans sitting weeping by the side
of a dead companion. They were soldiers from Lahore on
their way to Lucknow, worn down by fatigue in their anxi-
ety to see their wives and children once more after a long
and painful service. Their companion, the hope and prop of
BENAEES TO ALLAHABAD.
275
his family, had sunk iinder the fatigue, and they had made a
grave for him ; but they were poor unlettered men, and una-
ble to repeat the funeral service from the holy Koran ; would
his highness but j^erform this last office for them, he would,
no doubt, find his reward in this world and in the next. The
Mogul dismounted. The body had been placed in its prop-
er position, with the head toward Mecca. A carpet was
spread ; the Mogul took off his bow and quiver, then his pis-
tols and sword, and placed them on the ground near the
body ; called for water, and washed his feet, hands, and face,
that he might not pronounce the holy words in an unclean
state. He then knelt down and began to repeat the funeral
service in a clear, loud voice. Two of the poor soldiers
knelt by him, one on each side, in silence. The other four
went off a few paces to beg that the butler and groom would
not come so near as to interrupt the good Samaritan at his
devotions. All being ready, one of the four, in a low under-
tone, gave the shirnee (the signal), the handkerchiefs were
thrown over their necks, and in a few minutes all three, the
Mogul and his servants, were dead, and lying in the grave
in the usual manner — the head of one at the feet of one be-
low him.
" All the parties they had met on the road belonged to a
gang of Jumaldehee Thugs, of the kingdom of Oude. In
despair of being able to win the Mogul's confidence in the
usual way, and determined to have the money and jewels
which they knew he carried with him, they had adopted this
plan of disarming him — dug the grave by the side of the
road in the open plain, and made a handsome young Mussul-
man of the party the dead soldier. The Mogul, being a very
stout man, died almost without a struggle, and his servants
made no resistance."
It was past midnight, but a night almost as bright as
the day, when we rolled over the magnificent bridge that
spans the Jumna at Allahabad, just above the union of its
waters with those of the Ganges. The bridge is one of
the most costly railway structures in or out of India. It
is built of iron imported from England. The foundations
of the high stone piers on which it rests were laid in the
ooze of the river, which, in laying the foundations, seemed
to be almost without bottom. The rise of water in the
rainy season, which sometimes reaches forty feet, made it
276
AROUND THE WORLD.
necessary to have elevated piers, and the bridge, which is
three quarters of a mile in length, makes a line appearance
in the ordinary stages of the river.
We were delighted, on reaching the station at so late
an hour of the night, to find the Rev, Mr. Walsh awaiting
us. I had known him when a boy, but long ago he turned
lu's steps eastward to preach the Gospel in the land of the
Hindoos and the Mohammedans. Since the death of an-
other friend and classmate, the Rev. Dr. Owen, Mr. Walsh
has been the father of the American Mission at Allahaba,d.
Taking us in his gharry, we drove mile after mile through
the broad streets of this capital, until it seemed that the
streets had no end ; and when under these quiet Eastern
skies, in the beauty of the night and in our pleasant con-
verse, we almost wished they were endless. At length we
reached the bungalow of the American Mission, and found
a resting-place in an American home.
Allahabad (which means the City of God), a name given
to it by the Mohammedan conquerors of India, is one of
the sacred places of the Hindoos. It has been a point of
much importance in all the changes which have occurred
among the rulers of Hindostan, and has been fortified from
time to time under different dynasties. The present for-
tress, a mile and a half in circuit, situated at the junction
of the Ganges and Jumna Rivers, was built by Akbar, one
of the Mogul emperors, three hundred years ago, on the
site of an ancient Hindoo fortification. It has been re-
modeled and strengthened by the English, and has been of
incalculable value to them. During the mutiny of 1857 it
proved the salvation of many of the English residents at
Allahabad, and contributed greatly to the final recovery of
British power in India. It has acquired much importance
within a few years by the removal of the capital from Agra
to this place, A new city, with broad avenues and spa-
cious squares, has been laid out, and large public buildings,
including some of the finest barracks in India, have been
in course of erection. Many beautiful bungalows have
BENARES TO ALLAHABAD. 277
been bnilt, and are surrounded by extensive grounds ; and
although, like our own AVashington, Allahabad, for the pres-
ent, " is a city of magnificent distances" rather than an im-
posing capital, it bids fair to become one of the finest towns
in the peninsula. In the mutiny, every foreign residence
was destroyed, with every public building, excepting the
Masonic Hall, which the natives did not dare to attack on
account of the spirits that were supposed to guard it. This
building was pointed out to me in a remote part of the
town, a lonely monument of the terrible scenes which it
survived.
Allahabad has long been one of the most important mis-
sion stations of the American Presbyterian Church. It
was selected not only on account of its large population,
but as a centre of influence for the whole north of India,
and in one respect it has a peculiar importance. It is the
chief place of pilgrimage, and through the multitudes that
gather here every year an influence may be sent out into
every part of the land. Situated at the confluence of the
two most sacred rivers of Hindostan — the Ganges and the
Jumna — the spot is regarded by all Hindoos as one of the
holiest places in the world. They come to it from all parts
and at all times of the year to bathe where the two rivers
meet, and thus to wash away their sins. There is an annu-
al mela or gathering at this place in the month of January,
when hundreds of thousands come together; and every
twelfth year, owing to some propitious conjunction of the
stars, there is a special gathering, when the number of the
pilgrims is sometimes counted even by millions.
I first reached Allahabad in December, on my way to
the north ; but, after visiting the Himalaya Mountains, I
returned to be present at the opening of the great mela on
the 12th of January. It is held on a vast plain — a tongue
of land lying between the two rivers, which in the rainy
season is completely overflowed. When the pilgrims as-
semble they pitch their tents upon the plain, and for the
space of a month it is the most populous city in India. I
278 ABOUND THE WORLD.
learned afterward, from one of the missionaries, that two
millions were present at one time, and I could easily com-
prehend it from what I had seen.
I took my stand, one day, in a thoroughfare leading to
the grounds, to see the people pouring in by crowds, many
of whom came from hundreds of miles up and down the
country. I had seen them far up to the north, the week
before, coming down in large companies. They continued
to arrive at all hours of day and night for days and even
for wrecks, like a continuous procession. Some of the
wealthier people came on elephants, others on camels,
many of them, especially the aged and feeble,, in carts
drawn by bullocks or cows, but most of them on foot,
with the dust and dirt of their long pilgrimage upon them.
In the vast crowd were thousands oi faquirs or devotees^
who were almost naked and covei'ed with dirt, their hair
matted with filth, more disgusting in their appearance than
swine, and accounting themselves all the more holy be-
cause of the excessive filth in which they had chosen to
live. Bathing in muddy streams and living in abominable
filth seem to be the two prominent articles in the creed of
the Hindoos, at least of those who pretend to eminent holi-
ness — the very reverse of the Christian maxim that " clean-
liness is a part of godliness." More abominable or more
horrid specimens of human nature than ih&'&Q. faquirs can
scarcely be conceived ; and the more painful part of it
was, that the poor ignorant people had been taught to re-
gard these filthy, depraved brutes in human shape as pre-
eminently holy. Some of the devotees had made their pil-
grimage all the way upon their hands and knees, others by
dragging themselves along the ground, and one man, per-
haps more, by measuring his length like an inch worm, ly-
ing down, making a mark at his head, and then lying down
with his toes at the mark, and so making his slow progress
toward the consecrated spot. One man whom I saw at the
mela had held his right hand above his head eleven years,
and was, of course, accounted an eminent saint.
BENARES TO ALLAHABAD.
279
' The Brahmins keep up these festivals for the sake of
making money out of the pilgrims. Each one is required
to pay his tax as he comes to bathe, and so a large revenue
comes to the coffers of the Brahmins of the district. The
faquirs, too, extort money from the people on the ground
of their sanctity, but a more transparent set of knaves 1
never looked upon. They showed it in their countenances ;
but long practice and established custom had given them,
an ascendency and power over the people. One of the
first acts of a pilgrim {the faqui7'8 excepted) is to have his
head shaven by regularly appointed barbers, under the as-
surance that for every hair he loses he secures to himself a
million of years in Paradise ; a favor for which he is com-
pelled to make a return in money according to his means.
By this operation the pockets of the pilgrims are as well
fleeced as their heads. Then comes the bathing; and a
sorrowful sight are those tens of thousands of poor, sin-
burdened heathen, going down into the water and devout-
ly washing themselves, in the vain hope of washing awaj'
their guilt. All classes and all ages go down into the wa-
ter ; even the women of the higher class being exempt, for
the time, from the law of custom which compels them to
live in seclusion. I longed for the gift of speaking, not
only to their ears, but to their hearts, of that fountain for
sin and for uncleanness which has been opened by a dying
Saviour, and which is free and near to all, without any pain-
ful pilgrimage. But this is done by faithful missionaries,
who have their tents pitched at various points among the
crowd, and who improve this occasion for imparting relig-
ious instruction, and not without success.
After the pilgrims have been shaven, and have bathed
and performed other religious services, they devote them-
selves to social intercourse, to traffic, and often to all man-
ner of wickedness, so that the mela becomes a mixed
scene, the religious part bearing but a slight proportion
to the whole. I believe that the whole system of idol-
atry in India is now sustained more by the avarice of
280 AROUND THE WORLD.
Brahmins, who become wealthy from their perquisites and
by the incidental gains connected with it, than by the re-
ligious feelings of the people. Priestcraft has a mighty
power in keeping up rites which, if left to the choice even
of ignorant people, would speedily come to an end. At
the great mela at Allahabad I heard many confess that
Christianity was better than their religion, but they are
bound by education, and custom, and caste. It is not a
slight evidence, though only one of many, that the religion
of Christ has taken hold of the people of India, to see
preaching-tents established by the Hindoos, with readers
and preachers, who endeavor to counteract the preaching
of the Gospel by drawing away and holding the attention
of the people. I had seen the same thing in China. In
the city of Canton the Chinese have built a beautiful chap-
el, in all respects like the Christian, where they have regu-
lar preaching. Amid the melancholy scenes connected
with tliis great aggregation of heathenism at Allahabad,
there is much that gives promise of a bright day at hand,
when the gross darkness that has so long co^■ered the peo-
ple will be dispelled.
The only witness against the British government for its
complicity with the idolatry of the Hindoos that I saw re-
maining in India was at Allahabad. In the fort there is
a passage leading to extensive subterranean vaults, which
from time immemorial have been regarded with great ven-
eration by the natives. They pretend that the passage leads
to Benares, nearly a hundred miles distant, and that a third
sacred river once coursed through it. The multitudes who
come on pilgrimage to Allahabad all enter this vault, pay
their devotions, and make some offering, on which they
pour the water of the Ganges and the Jumna to consecrate
the gift. There are numerous shrines, all, I believe, of the
Lingam, the obscene object of Hindoo worship, which are
constantly covered with flowers and kept wet with the holy
water. Formerly the pilgrims wlio entered were required
to pay a tax of one rupee each to the government, whicli
THE MUTINY; CAWNPORE AND LUCKNOW. 281
became an immense revenue. The tax has been abolished,
but I saw these obscene pagan shrines still standing, and
the devotees in crowds presenting their offerings and pay-
ing their worship before them with the British flag flying
over their heads on the fort. It is a reproach and a shame
to a Christian government, and the more so because con-
nected with a fortress which belongs exclusively to the
iijovernment.
XX.
THE MUTINY; CAWNPORE AND LUCKNOW.
After I had been several weeks in India, the question
was asked me, by one who naturally enough wished to know
how I had been impressed with the country and its people,
" What, of all that you have seen, has struck you most for-
cibly ?" I replied, " The fact that no two persons seem to
entertain the same ideas with regard to any subject."
I was never in a country where there is such a diversity
of sentiment in regard to questions of public policy, the
right mode of dealing with social problems, or even in re-
gard to many matters of fact. Scarcely any thing appears
to be settled in the general opinion of the people — the Eu-
ropeans, I mean. The very names of places and things are
without any established rules. Every writer has his own
orthography, and every speaker liis own pronunciation of
native words. The languages of the country have never
yet found their equivalents in the English tongue. I was
told that there are sixty-four different ways of spelling the
name of Lodiana, a town in the north of India, and that
each one has good authority for it. I have seen the name
of the beautiful valley of the Dehra Doon^ that I visited
among the Himalaya Mountains, written Dekrah, Deirah,
Deira,D€ijra,I)€yrah,Dera,2Md. so on ad lihitum.
But in no respect was I more struck with the diversity
282 AROUND THE WORLD.
of sentiment among intelligent and well-informed persons
than in regard to the cause of the terrible mutiny of 1857,
which came so near extinguishing the power of the English
in the East. I not only felt a strong desire, in going over
the ground where its fearful scenes were enacted, to learn
more than I had known before of the causes which led to
it, tlie impelling motives which fired the natives, but I im-
agined that I should be able to obtain such knowledge by
personal intercourse with the residents, many of whom had
been there during its progress and suppression. But al-
most every intelligent man in India seemed to have his
own theory in regard to the matter, and very few, on com-
paring notes, would be found to agree. It certainly speaks
well for the independence of thought in that land, but it
shows also that this awful episode in the history of the
British occupation of India is still involved in much mys-
tery. And this is just about the truth 'in regard to the
matter. I doubt if any rebellion of equal extent and im-
portance ever before occurred which could not be traced
more directly and more clearly to its origin.
The nearest approximation that I made to a definite
opinion of my own, after careful investigation of all the
sources of information, and all the opinions current, is, that
the mutiny was a sort of blind movement on the part alike
of Mohammedans and Hindoos (though more the fonner
than the latter) to cast off the foreign yoke which had been
placed on their necks by a series of usurpations, too often
attended w^itli the very crimes of which the natives them-
selves had been guilty in past ages. One monarch after
another had been dethroned by the agents of the East In-
dia Company, and his territory added to the Company's
possessions, or made tributary. It had become clear that
the same power, unless absolutely destroyed, must cover the
whole land, and the opportunity was seized, when the En-
glish military force was reduced to its lowest limits, to rise
and attempt to annihilate the foreign element. In the
spring of 1857 there were only about twenty thousand
THE MUTINY; CA WNPOME AND LUVKNU W. ^33
British troops in all India. The army was composed al-
most altogether of native troops. There was not a Euro-
pean regiment at Calcutta, nor at Benares, nor at Delhi,
nor at many other important points. There must have
been conference or conspiracy for some time previous, for
the mutinous spirit manifested itself almost simultaneously
from one end of Hiudostan to the other. The train had
been laid, and the explosion passed with frightful rapidity
from one city and district to another.
The occasion for such a rising, too, was opportune in
more respects than one. A prophecy had long been in cir-
culation among the natives that on the hundredth anniver-
sary of the battle of Plassey, which secured the supremacy
of the English in India, their power would be destroyed.
That battle took place June 23, 1757, and the eventful day
was drawing nigh. The success of such a revolt seemed
the more assured by the defenseless state of the English in
the country at the time. The introduction of greased car-
tridges was another coinciding element. This has been re-
garded by some as the actual cause of the mutiny, but it
was simply a coincidence, and was made use of as an incite-
ment to revolt. Artfully was it seized upon, and success-
fully was it employed. To make use of the new cartridges
according to i-egulation, the soldiers must bite off the end
before inserting them in the musket. The repoi't was cir-
culated through the whole army that they had been greased
with a composition of tallow and lard — the former an abom-
ination to the Hindoo, and the latter to the Mohammedan.
The Hindoo would as soon draw a razor across his throat
as put a particle of the fat of the cow to his lips, and a Mo-
hammedan would perish before he would have any thing to
do with the fat of the swine. The report was circulated
that by this means the English intended to compel both
classes to abjure their religion, and it was effectively used
as one of the instruments by which the troops, Hindoos and
Mohammedans, were stirred up to revolt.
It is a very remarkable fact that no satisfactory evidence
284 AROUND THE WORLD.
has ever been found that the rebellion had any real head or
leader, or that it was designed to re-establish any one of the
old dynasties, or to found a new one. Conspiracy there
must have been, but there were no arch-conspirators, and
there was no well-executed plan of action. Some have im-
plicated the effete family of the old King of Delhi ; some
have regarded the ex-King of Oude, a sort of state j)risoner
at Calcutta, as being its moving spirit; some have given
the same position to the monster Nana Sahib ; but I do not
think there is any proof that any one of these, or others
who have been named, played any such ambitious part in
the terrible drama. The mutiny was more Mohammedan
than Hindoo in its origin and in progress ; but this, perhaps,
was owing to the fact that the Mohammedans had been so
long the ruling race.
Equally mysterious with its origin were tlie means nsed
in preparing for a concerted movement throughout India.
At tlie commencement of the year 1857 it was noticed that
a peculiar kind of small cakes of unleavened bread, called
(■hupatties, were distributed through tlie whole country. A
messenger appeared at a village with these cakes, he sought
out the head man of the place and gave him six, with the
cliarge that he was to send six more to the next village,
and so they passed from one end of the land to the other,
and exerted a talismanic power which has never been ex-
plained. Just about the same time lotus flowers were sent
to the native soldiers at tlie various cantonments, and they,
too, passed from hand to hand with the same effect. Strange
to say, tlie peculiar siguificance of these tokens has never
transpired, so profoundly have the secrets of the mutiny
been preserved. The history of the world will scarcely
furnish a parallel to the anomalies and mysteries connected
with this whole matter.
The first serious signs of disaffection appeared at Dun-
dum, near Calcutta, in January, 1857. The Sepoys object-
ed to the greased cartridges, but they professed to be satis-
fied wlien they were excused from using tliem. The same
THE MUTINY; CAWNPORE AND LUCKNOW. 285
disaffection showed itself, and from the same ostensible
cause, soon after at Barrackpore, opposite Serampore, on
the Hoogly, where incendiary fires also occurred. A gen-
eral order for the whole army was then issued allowing the
soldiers to tear off the end of the cartridge instead of bitiug
it, but it had no good effect. All this time the English au-
thorities slept, as it were, in profound security, ignorant of
the storm that was so soon to burst upon them. Other and
more serious disturbances took place, but without awaken-
ing apprehension. It was not until April that the country
was roused. Scenes of insubordination and violence oc-
curred at Meerut, far to the north, extended to Delhi, and
spread with fearful rapidity until the whole army was in
revolt. Forts and towns were seized by the rebels, the En-
glish ofHcers and residents slaughtered without mercy, or
subjected to the most horrible outrages that fiends could in-
fiict. The magazine in the great fort at Delhi, which con-
tained a vast ainoimt of stores of all kinds, guns, and am-
munition, was defended by a small force of English against
a horde of rebels until the unequal contest could no longer
he maintained, w^hen, instead of surrendering to the enemy,
the feeble garrison applied the torch to the train, and thou-
sands of the assailants perished with the besieged in the
explosion. Straggling Europeans escaped destruction at
Delhi and other places to wander for months in the jungle,
some to be preserved almost by miracle from all horrible
forms of death. Incidents of this character occurred which
are too harrowing to be repeated.
At Allahabad, a native regiment stationed in the town
suddenly revolted ; shot down the superior officers and bay-
oneted the younger ; attacked the residents, men, women,
and children, cutting them in pieces while alive ; children
were tossed on the bayonets of the native soldiers before
the eyes of their mothers, and atrocities committed which
the pen can not record. The remnant of English who es-
caped took refnge in the fort, which was besieged by the
Sepoys. A train of powder was laid, and the besieged
286 AROUND THE WORLD.
were prepared to blow themselves np and perish in the ex-
plosion, as at Delhi, the moment the fort shonld be taken.
But English troops arrived from below, and they were pre-
served. All through the mutiny the fort was a rallying-
point for the English.
From Delhi, and from other cities where the English
families were congregated, women and children made their
escape from the general massacre — sometimes in small com-
panies, but generally alone — and wandered for days ex-
posed to the intense heat of the summer sun, when they
could scarcely exist in the shade, and at night lay down in
the jungle without shelter, and at last perished from hun-
ger, fatigue, terror, the stroke of the sun, or the wild beasts.
At Agra, the foreign population, with few exceptions, suc-
ceeded in reaching the fort, wliere they had time to shut
themselves in before the bursting of the storm ; and here
they endured a voluntary but fearful imprisonment more
than four months, not knowing any thing of the fate of
their friends or what might be going on in other parts of
India. I met at Delhi a lady who passed through this long
siege, enduring the agony of suspense in the fear that all
the rest of India was in the hands of the Sepoys.
But the chief horrors of the mutiny centred at Cawn-
pore, and were perpetrated under the orders of the mon-
ster Nana Sahib. This station was occupied by Sir Hugh
Wheeler with a small body of English troops, who had un-
der their protection several hundred women and children
belonging to the families resident in the city and the neigh-
borhood. Having no fortress, they hastily intrenched them-
selves by throwing up earth-works on the open plain. The
space they occupied was about two hundred yards square,
and included a few small buildings. There were nine
hundred persons in all within this narrow space. A mur-
derous fire was opened upon them by the Sepoys, which,
with famine, the burning sun of June, the close confine-
ment, and other causes, told fearfuU}' upon their numbers
from day to day. Many died, and some went raving mad.
THE MUTINY; CAWNPOEE AND LUCKNOW. 287
Ax length the enemy began to pour upon them red-hot shot,
which fired the buildings, the sick perishing in the flames.
The soldiers would have cut their way through the multi-
tude of Sepoy soldiers, even at the risk of all perishing in
the attempt, but for the hundreds of women and children
who were under their protection.
While in this extremity, they received an offer from the
rebel leader. Nana Sahib, that if they would abandon the
intrenchments and the treasure which they had been guard-
ing, the sm'vivors should be furnished with boats and an
escort to take them down the Ganges to Allahabad. It
was not until Nana Sahib had signed the contract and con-
firmed his promise with a solemn oath that the offer was
accepted. Conveyances were provided for taking the wound-
ed, the sick, and the feeble to the river, about a mile dis-
tant. They were in the act of embarking, when, by the or-
der of Nana Sahib, a battery opened upon them and num-
bers were slain. A few boat-loads hastily rowed across the
river, but they were seized by the Sepoys, the men all sa-
bred, and the women and children carried back to the camp
of the monster who had thus violated his pledge. For
weeks they were incarcerated in a building at Cawnpore,
where they were subjected to the brutality of the Sepoy
troops. A rumor having reached the rebels that a military
force was on the march from Allahabad to rescue the cap-
tives, an order was given that they should be slain — not an
unwelcome order to those who were suffering a thousand
deaths. At sunset on the 15th of July, volleys of musketry
were fired into the doors and windows of the building, after
which the bayonet and the sword did their work, until all
were supposed to be dead, and the building was closed for
the night. The next morning it was found that a number
were still alive, who, upon being brought out, either threw
themselves or were thrown into a large well in the com-
pound, with the dead of the night before. Thus perished
all who had survived the slaughter of the ghaut, nearly two
hundred in all. The whole number of victims at Cawn-
288 AROUND THE WORLD.
pore was about one thousand. The army, under Havelock,
entered Cawnpore the day after the massacre, driving out
the rebels before them ; and when they reached the build-
ing which was the scene of the massacre, found it strewed
with the relics of the departed ones — remnants of clothing,
ladies' and children's shoes, locks of hair, and other memen-
toes — and the floor covered deep with their blood. The
brave soldiers were almost maddened by the sight.
On the plain at Cawnpore is one of the most beautiful
parks in the East, laid out in exquisite taste, and planted
with trees, and shrubbery, and ever-blooming flowers. In
the midst of this park rise the marble walls of a sacred in-
closure, in the centre of which, over the fatal well, stands a
marble statne — an angel having in his arms the palm-
leaves, emblematical of martyrdom and victory. This park
was laid out and planted after the mutiny, and called the
Memorial Garden ; but it seemed designed as much to mit-
igate with its beauty, as to preserve by its monuments, the
memories of the spot. The pedestal, on which stands the
angel, bears the following inscription :
" SACKED TO THE PERPETUAL ]yiEM0EY OF A GREAT COM-
PANY OF CHRISTIAN PEOPLE CHIEFLY WOMEN AND CHILDREN
WHO, NEAR THIS SPOT, WERE CRUELLY MASSACRED BY THE
FOLLOWERS OF THE REBEL NANA DHOONDOPUNT OF BITHOOR,
AND CAST, THE DYING WITH THE DEAD, INTO THE WELL BE-
LOW, ON THE 15th day OF JULY, 1857."
While General Wheeler and his command, with his pre-
cious charge, were still in their frail intrenchment, the mu-
tiny broke out at Futteghur, higher up the Ganges. This
has long been one of the chief stations of the American
Presbyterian missions to India. All the Mission buildings,
including a valuable printing-oflice, were destroyed. TJie
foreign residents were put to the sword, the English officers
and civilians being tlie first to suffer. The survivors, in-
cluding four American missionary families, attempted to
escape in boats, hoping to reach Allahabad. The Ameri-
cans were Rev. Messrs. Freeman, Campbell, Johnson, and
THE MUTINY; CAWXPOIiE AND LUCEXOW. 289
McMulleu, witli their wives, and two children of Mr, Camp-
belL Mr. Freeman had been my classmate and intimate
friend at Princeton Seminary,
The lai'ge party, one hundred and thirty in all, floated
down the Ganges, all the while in terror of the natives.
Twice they were fired on by tlie Sepoys, and a lady, nurse,
and child were killed. Once, as they landed at evening to
cook some food on the shore, they were surprised by a
zemindar, who made them his prisoners ; but they were re-
leased on the payment of a large ransom. On the fourth
day the boats ran aground near an island a few miles above
Cawnpore, The whole party went ashore and concealed
themselves in the long grass, where they remained in con-
stant apprehension of discovery, and with little hope of es-
cape. In this hiding-place they assembled for prayer and
preparation for death, the missionaries leading them to the
throne of God's mercy to seek grace for the hour of greater
trial that awaited them, and exhorting every one to stead-
fast trust in Him who would bring salvation even in death.
The record of those solemn scenes was derived from four
nati\e Christians, who were the only survivors. Near the
close of the fourth day they were discovered by a body of
Sej^oys, who came upon the island, made them prisoners,
and, deaf to all appeals for mercy and offers of ransom, took
them across the river on the way to Cawnpore. Though
exliausted with long fasting and anxiety, they were tied to-
gether with ropes, and men, women, and children compelled
to take up the line of march on foot. Night overtaking
them, it was spent on the plain in the open air, the Sepoys
keeping guard over them to prevent their escape. Early
the next morning they were taken into Cawnpore to Nana
Sahib, who ordered them to be drawn up in line on the
parade-ground, where they were indiscriminately shot down.
Those who survived the volle}^ of musketry were dispatched
with the sabre. When they were first seized by the Sej)oys,
the missionaries dismissed the four native Christians, ad-
vising them to seek their own safety, but in no circum-
T
290 AROUND THE WOULD.
stances to deny their Lord and Master. One of them, a
man who had been a servant to the Maharajah Dhuleep
Singh, disguised himself, followed the captive party, and
was a witness to the last fearful scene in which their lives
were offered np. From him the knowledge of their fate
was obtained.
The remarkable fact tliat from the breaking out of the
mutiny to its close not a single Christian convert took any
part in the fearful outbreak, is the most emphatic condem-
nation of the blind and fatal policy of the East India Com-
pany in discouraging the propagation of Christianity among
its dependent population in India, and especially in the
army. The chaplains of the army. Christian ministers,
were strictly forbidden to interfere in any manner with the
religion of the native troops. This tenderness was repaid
by the revolt of those who had been dealt with in such
mistaken policy. The whole conduct of the native troops
during the rebellion was strikingly characteristic of Ori-
ental and Indian character. The most of them joined in
the mutiny at the very conmiencement, many of them ex-
hibiting the ferocity of wild beasts. Some hesitated for
months, and at length joined the mutineers. Some regi-
ments remained loyal to the English during the rebellion,
resisting all inducements to engage in the revolt, even when
it promised to be successful, and at the very last mutinied
when it was evident that it must be suppressed. Some,
though comparatively few, remained faithful to the end.
So made np of contradictions and mysteries is the native
character.
What became of the monster Xana Sahib is one of the
mysteries of the rebellion. Whether he perished in the
suppression of the mutiny, or escaped to die in exile, no
one knows to this day.
It was evening when we reached Ca^vnpore. By twilight
we drove across the parade-ground where so many brave
and tender hearts had ceased to beat. It was late before
we were all ari-ano-ed for the nio-ht at ISToor Mahomed's
THE MUTINY; CAWNPOBE AND LUCENOW. 291
hotel in a distant part of the town ; but the moon came
out to look upon the scene once so fearful, now so placid,
and I could not resist the impulse, even at that weird hour,
to visit the places so full of interest to all who have read
the story of the Sepoy rebellion. I wandered down to the
Ganges, to the Suttee Chowra Ghaut, where General
Wheeler's force was treacherously slain. It was a lonely
spot, and the stillness of the grave reigned over it, broken
only by the ripple of the flowing river, the cry of the night-
birds, and an occasional liowl of a jackal. In that quiet
hour, with the personal and the historic recollections wliich
came thronging upon the heart, the interest of all India
seemed to centre in Cawnpore.
The next morning, after spending an hour in the Memo-
rial Garden, we took leave of Cawnpore and went on to
Lucknow, the scene of the memorable siege.
Lucknow is about forty miles to the northeast of Cawn-
pore, with which, and with the East Indian Railway, it is
connected by a l}ranch road. The Cawnpore Station is on
the opposite side of the Ganges, which we crossed by one
of the usual bridges of boats, which are much better adapt-
ed to these swift-flowing and rapidly-rising streams than
one might suppose. As we crossed the bridge early in the
morning, I looked up the stream for the island on wliich
one of the lai-ge companies that had been massacred by the
orders of Kana Sahib had been seized on their flight down
the river from Futteghur, after lying concealed for three
days in the grass. The same river on which they had float-
ed still flowed on in its course ; the same landmarks were
scattered along its shores, but the fearful scenes which tliey
had witnessed were among the things of the past.
It was near noon when the domes and minarets of Luck-
now rose into view, and grand was the sight. Few of the
cities of India could compare in outward splendor with
the capital of Oude as it was before the mutiny, or even
as it now stands. It lays claim to great antiquity, dating
far back in the shadowy periods of Iliudoo history ; but
the present city has all been built within the last century.
292 AROUND THE WORLD.
The King of Oude, whose possessions were the last to be
seized bj the East India Company, reigned here in great
splendor. He had just completed the Kaiser Bagh — the
extensive palace which forms the most striking featnre in
the view of the city, having expended in its construction
and embellishment eighty lacs of rupees (about four mill-
ions of dollars) — when the British anthorities informed
him that they required his extensive and rich dominions,
and that he must lay down his sceptre and his crown.
Lord Dalhonsie, who was then governor general, proposed
to settle on him a large pension ; but the king, very natu-
rally, was reluctant to resign his authority and his reve-
nues, and steadfastly refused to put his hand to any deed
of conveyance. When compelled to retire, he sent his
queen to England to plead his cause before another queen,
Victoria ; but before she returned the mutiny of 1857
broke out, and his fate was sealed. He now resides, a sort
of prisoner, on his own purchased estate, two or three milei
below Calcutta, on the Hoogly. By many this seizure of
the territory of Oude and the sale of the personal property
of the king is regarded as the immediate cause of the re-
bellion.
There is more of show in the city of Lucknow than of
solid grandeur, such as we see at Benares, or of the exqui-
site taste and almost inconceivable costliness that we find
at Agra and the old Mogul capital at Delhi ; but with its
domes, and minarets, and imposing structures, it is a real-
ization of all one's dreams of Eastern magnificence. The
palace, gorgeous in its style of architecture, and colored to
resemble a vast structure of gold, with its lofty dome of
real gold, looms up before the eye ; the Hoseinabad Iniaum.-
hara, built by Ali Shah, and elaborately ornamented ; the
Jumma Ifusjid, the Grand Mosque ; the magnificent mar-
ble tombs of former kings, more beautiful than the pal-
aces ; the Great Imaumhara, the architects of which were
commanded to produce a building which should be unlike
any others ever built (in which they succeeded), and which
THE MUTINY; CAWXPORE AND LUCKNOW. 293
should surpass them all in beauty and magnificence (in
which they failed) ; the DilJJiooslia palace, where the he-
roic soldier, Sir Henry Ilavelock, breathed his last; the
Martiniepe, from the dome of which the mountains of Ca-
bool are seen, though a hundred miles distant — these, and
many other striking buildings, set like gems in the midst
of Oriental foliage, give a grandeur to the views of the
city which can not be transferred to the written page. A
drive through Lncknow and its suburbs is one of rare beau-
ty and of indescribable interest.
Notwithstanding all this Eastern splendor, I felt won-
derfully like entering a familiar city when entering Luck-
now. Years before I had become familiar M^ith its appear-
ance and localities in reading the history of the memora-
ble siege, in which the garrison of British soldiers, protect-
ing hundreds of women and cliildren, were surrounded l)y
50,000 Sepoys, and subjected to a murderous fire day and
night, without any communication with the outer world
for 113 days. I had followed the noble Ilavelock and his
brave troops in their long march under the burning sun of
India, and as they cut their way through the multitudi-
nous Sepoys into the Residency, only to find that their force
was still too feeble to compel the enemy to raise the siege.
I had read with the same intense interest the story of the
final relief of the besieged, by Sir Colin Campbell, with his
Highland brigade ; of their going forth by night, leaving
the city in the hands of the rebels ; and of its final capture
the following year b}' the most heroic fighting recorded in
the annals of war. All these scenes were so familiar that
I did not feel like being in a strange city.
After findiug quarters at the Imperial Hotel (it bore
about the same relation to a genuine republican hotel that
a marble tomb, with its one lonely couch, does to a cheer-
ful home), our first visit M'as to the Residency, the scene of
the siege. It was the former residence or palace of the
British commissioner, and occupied a slight elevation, an
area of a few acres, within the city. At the breaking out
294 AROUND THE WORLD.
of the mutiny, the Muchee Bhowan fort, being found un-
tenable, was blown up, and the garrison retired to the Res-
idency, where they threw up earth-works, and endured the
long siege.
By the kindness of Dr. Fayrer, of Calcutta, former sur-
geon at the Residency, I had been furnished with diagrams
and notes made during the siege, which greatly aided me
in reviewing its memorable history. The original garri-
son, as it left the fort, numbered about 1700 men, of whom
nearly half were native troops. At the relief there were
left, including sick and wounded, only 350 Europeans and
133 natives. Several hundred women and children spent
the five months of the siege chiefly in the cellars of the
buildings, where they awaited their rescue in anxious and
protracted suspense.
It was a mystery I could not solve, excepting in the re-
flection that the Almighty had thrown a shield over this
company of imperiled souls, that for so many months they
not only could endure the privations, and suspense, and
anxiety, and heat, in such quarters, but still more that they
could survive the storm of iron hail which day and night
was poured upon them by tens of thousands of infuriated
native troops. Their numbers were greatly reduced by
death, but the preservation and final escape of any seemed
the next thing to a miracle. At any hour within the many
months of the siege, the enemy, by mere force of numbers,
might have carried the whole place by storm, and put the
entire garrison, with the women and children, to the sword.
But they had no leader of suflicient courage, and the hand
of God held back the mutineers.
With melancholy interest I went into the Dilkhoosha
Palace, where General Havelock, after escaping uninjured
the perils of war, sank under an attack of dysentery, and
died while the British forces were makins; their success-
ful escape from the city. I visited also the summer pal-
ace of the king. Alum Bagh, two or three miles out of
town, to which the body of Havelock was carried, and
THE MUTINY; CAWXPORE AND LUC KNOW. 295
wliere a force was left to hold the place until the recap-
ture of the city the following year. The tomb of the hero
f^tands in the centre of the garden, and bears a long and
\-ery inappropriate inscription.
The inscription on the stone that marks the grave of Sir
Henry Lawrence, in the cemetery of the Residency, seem-
ed equally infelicitous : " Here lies Henry Lawrence, who
tried to do his duty. May God have mercy on his soul."
The explanation should be made th9,t these were words
which this excellent man uttered as he was sinking into
the arms of death. Like Havelock, he was a man of de-
cided Christian character. After being struck by the fa-
tal shell, as he was lying in the open veranda of Dr. Fay-
rer's house, to which he was carried, and while exposed to
the constant fire of the enemy, he asked to have the holy
communion administered to him, many of the oflicers join-
ing in the service. He expressed his firm trust in the
atonement of Christ for the pardon of his sins, and his
hope of heaven through the merits of the Savior. He
spoke in words of deepest tenderness, and with bitter tears,
of his absent wife and daughter, whom he should not see
again on earth. He then earnestly entreated all around
him to prepare for the realities of another world, remind-
ing them of the vanity of all earthly distinctions, and, re-
ferring to his own honors, asked, " What is it all worth
now ?" and died.
It is an ungracious task to spoil a romantic story, but
the thrillino; incident connected with the siea^e of Luck-
now, read the world over with such intense interest — the
hearing of the pibroch of the Highlanders under Sir Colin
Campbell by a Highland girl long before any sound or
tidings of the approaching army reached any other ear, re-
late'd as an instance of the Highland second-sight or hear-
ing — was a pure fiction.
Two or three weeks after I was at Lucknow, and while
I was still in the country, I received by post a copy of a
newspaper in Persian, printed at Lucknow, which contain-
296 ABOUND THE WORLD.
ed the following notice of our visit at that place. I have
the original now before me, but I give a translation made
by a Hindoo friend who had not yet attained to a A'ery ac-
curate use of the English language :
" VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD.
"Dr. Prime, with few of liis friends, left New York in August, 18G9, and.
after visiting few places in America, came to Pacific ; from thence on a
steamer to Japan and China, and, after seeing some famous cities, he left for
Calcutta, and reached in December. From there he came up country to
Lucknow via Allahabad. He has now left for Agra and Delhi, and after-
wards he intends to visit Egypt, Constantinople, and Turkey, and then direct
to his native land. We think that this will take about fourteen months.
"What a nice thing is this, that peojjle can journey throughout the world
with great ease and comfort. And from this we find a strong proof that the
earth is round."
XXI.
AGKA AND THE TAJ.
From Lucknow we returned to Cawmpore, and took the
cars of the East India Eailway for Agra. At Toondla
Junction, where we were to make a change, we had the
only rain that fell while we were in India, and this was out
of season. We reached Toondla after midnight, and, while
waiting for the train, the heavens grew black, and shot forth
shafts and sheets of lightning, accompanied with heavy
thunder. It rained heavily until morning.
On reaching Agra we made our way to Beaumont's
East Indian Hotel, pleasantly located in the midst of a
charming compound outside of the native town, and we
flattered ourselves that we had reached a delightful retreat,
in which we could spend a few days luxuriously in this old
capital of the Timours, But, alas ! — We had a bungalow
all to ourselves, but the bungalow was nearly all that we
had. Our sleeping-rooms were without furniture except-
ius: a bedstead and mattress. We found that we were ex-
AGBA AND THE TAJ. 297
pected to furuisli the bedding ourselves. In India Euro-
peans have been in the habit of travehng with tents, taking
with them all the comforts and necessaries of life.
When I first reached Calcutta I wrote to an old friend in
the extreme north, informing him of my arrival, and asking
him to secure accommodations for our party at a hotel or
government bungalow in the city in which he was residing.
I received in reply a hearty welcome to the country, with
the assurance that, as there was no hotel in the place, he
would arrange for the accommodation of the entire party
at private houses provided we brought our own beds and
bedding with us. When we reached Agra we had not laid
in a supply of linen, and inquisition was at once made at
the principal hotel in the city, but, after the most diligent
search, only four sheets could be mustered for seven persons,
not all mated. Of course, no one could have more than a
single sheet, and not every one could have even that.
We found it almost as difficult to make a living at the
table, the commissariat being as poorly supplied as the
wardrobe. The servants were all natives wiio had nevei-
found it convenient to cultivate the English lanffua£:e, and
we had no time to cultivate the Hindustani, Persian, Mali-
ratta, or any of the numerous dialects of the region, so that
we fared ill while we were guests at the East Indian hotel.
After a vain attempt to gather up the fragments of the
sleep which we had lost on the rail and at the stations dur-
ing the night, we sallied forth to visit the renowned fort
and palace of the emperors. Agra, or, as it was once called,
Akbarabad, first rose to importance in the beginning of the
sixteenth century, and from 1526 to 1658 it was the capital
of the house of Timour. Here, for more than a century,
the Moguls lavished their wealtli on costly buildings to be
occupied while they lived, and erected still more costly
structures in which to repose after they were dead.
The fortress, which is a mile and a half in circumference,
and which contains the palace, was built by the Emperor
Akbar. It stands upon the banks of the Jumna, the mass-
298 AROUND THE WORLD.
ive walls on the river side being sixty feet in height, and
commandino; a maffniiieeut view of the river and countrv.
When it was bnilt it was a fortress of immense strength,
but the mode of warfare has changed in modern times ; it
would not now be regarded as impregnable. It served,
however, as a shelter to the European families during the
four or iive months of the mutiny in which they were shut
up and shut out from all communication with the rest of
the world, but kept secure fi-om the hordes of mutineers
that swarmed around them. Xearly six thousand refugees
from the city and the neighboring country were thus ]3ro-
tected.
As a specimen of the manner in which the old emperors
were accustomed to fortify their palaces, it may be mention-
ed that when Agra was taken by the British in 1803, among
the spoils found within the fort was a cannon of twenty-
three inches bore, the metal eleven and a half inches thick
at the muzzle, fourteen feet and two inches in length, and
weighing ninety-six thousand pounds. It carried a ball of
cast-iron weighing fifteen hundred pounds. This stupen-
dous piece of ordnance was blown into fragments by the
orders of a British officer, who perhaps had some fear that
he might live long enougli to feel the weight of one of its
balls.
The entrance to the fortress is strongly protected by tow-
ers and passages elaborately constructed, such a gateway
as none but a powerful assault could force. We drove
through it into the grand court, and alighting, entered the
Diwan-i-maum, the ancient judgment-hall in which the Mo-
gul emperors dispensed justice after tlie manner of the
times. Strange as well as splendid scenes had passed with-
in those walls, when an empire rich beyond all precedent
yielded its immense revenues to fill the cofl^ei^S and swell
the state of those despotic monarchs.
The palace stands in the same inclosure, one portion of
its walls, with its stone balconies, overhanging, at a dizzy
height, the walls of the fort itself. It was built by Shah
AGJiA AND THE TAJ. 299
Jehan, grandson of Akbar, and, like every thing in archi-
tecture that he undertook, was executed at immense ex-
pense and in exquisite taste. This emperor celebrated his
accession to the throne by a festival which, according to
Khafi Khan, cost more than fifteen millions of rupees (a
sum equal to $7,500,000) ; and although he expended hun-
dreds of millions on costly structures and their adornment,
and hundreds of millions more upon his army, he had in
his treasury, when he died, more than $100,000,000 of
coined money, besides a vast accumulation of the precious
metals in bullion, jewels, and precious stones.
The palace was laid out upon a scale of great magnifi-
cence, designed alike for the entertainment as well as the
luxurious living of its inmates. One of the court-yards
Nvas arranged in mosaic for a game resembling chess, in
which the men, living persons, made the moves according
to the order of the emperor and his guests, who were seat-
ed in the fretted marble balconies above. The bath, a suite
of marble rooms, was set with thousands of convex mirrors,
which multiplied the artificial lights by myriads, making it
a scene of splendor indescribable.
The Motee Ifusjid, or Pearl Mosque, standing near the
Tudgment Hall, is an exquisite specimen of architecture
and of the sculptor's art, of the finest marble, the interior
carved in flowers and vines, chaste and simple, but sur-
passingly beautiful. It is not alone the Pearl Mosque ; it is
the pearl of mosques, unequaled in purity and beauty by
any similar structure.
But all that we had seen in the forts of Akbar and the
palace of Shah Jehan was eclipsed by another structure,
the most sublime and beautiful that now stands upon the
face of the earth. This, I believe, is the unqualified testi-
mony of every one who has seen the Taj.
About a mile to the south of the fort at Agra, upon the
right bank of the River Jumna, lies a beautiful park, about
a quarter of a mile square, planted with the choicest trees,
and shrubs, and flowers of the East. More tlian eightv
300 ABOUND THE WORLD.
fountains, scattered along the avennes of this park, throw
their jets into the air, which sparkles with the falling drops
as with a shower of diamonds. It is surrounded by a high
wall, and guarded by a magnificent gateway, a building
fifty or sixty feet in height, which, with any other surround-
ings, would be studied and admired for its architectural
grandeur, and the beauty of its carving and mosaic orna-
mentation. No one would imagine it to be simply the
portal to greater beauty and grandeur, but such it is.
We enter beneath this majestic arch, and find ourselves
within the park. A broad avenue, skirted with lofty cy-
presses, acacias, and other Oriental trees, and tanks of
aquatic plants and jets tVeau^ reveals, at its extremity, an
object which at once rivets the eye, and steals over the
heart like a strain of delicious music, or like the melody of
sublime poetry. It is the Taj, the peerless Taj, the mauso-
leum erected by the Emperor Shah Jehan as the tomb of
his favorite begum, Noor Mahal, in which they now sleej)
side by side. She died before him in giving birth to a
child, and it is stated that, as she felt her life ebbing away,
she sent for the emperor, and told him she had only two
requests to make : first, that he would not take another
wife and. have children to contend with hers for his favor
and dominions ; and, second, that he would build for her
the tomb he had promised, to perpetuate her memory.
The emperor summoned the medical counselors of the city
to do every thing that was in their powder to save her life,
but all in vain.
Shah Jehan, who was devotedly attached to her, at once
set about complying with her last request. The tomb was
commenced immediately, and, according to Tavernier, who
saw its first and last stones laid, it was twenty-two years in
building, with twenty thousand men constantly occupied
upon it. It cost, in actual expense, in addition to the
forced labor of the men, more than three hundred lacs of
rupees, or about fifteen millions of dollars. Such a build-
ing, including the cost of materials, could scarcely be erect-
AGRA AND THE TAJ. 3Q;1^
ed by paid labor at the present time, even in India, for
$50,000,000. .
As this building is acknowledged by every traveler to be
unrivaled, and the sight of it declared by many to be worth
a journey round the world, I will give a more minute de-
scription of its situation and its prominent features.
At the extremity of the beautiful park or Oriental garden
of which I have spoken, on the river side rises a terrace of
red sandstone twenty feet in height, and a thousand feet
broad. The w^alls of the terrace on all sides are of hewn
stone, and its surface is paved with the same material. At
the extreme left of this terrace stands a magnilicent mosque,
an appendage to the main structure, the Taj. It is the
place of prayer for the faithful, who come to visit the tomb
of the favorite of the Mogul emperor. This building alone
must have been very costly, but as it M'ould destroy the
symmetry of the grand mausoleum by occupying one side
of the central building, the emperor had another mosque, a
perfect counterpart, erected on the opposite extremity of
the terrace, a thousand feet distant, of no use excepting as
dijoicah.) or answer to the first. The one is held as a sacred
place ; the other, in the eyes of a Mohammedan, has noth-
ing sacred about it ; it is simj^ly the comj)leraeut of the
first.
On the lofty terrace of sandstone rises another terrace
of pure white marble, its walls of cut stone laid as regular-
ly as the courses of a marble building. This terrace is
three hundred feet square. At each of its four corners
there stands a circular marble minaret, about twenty-five
feet in diameter, diminishing in size until at the height of
a hundred and fifty feet it is crowned with an open cupo-
la, commanding a magnificent view of the Taj with its sur-
roundings, of the Kiver Jumna, the city and fort of Agra,
and of the adjacent country. I ascended to the top of one
of these minarets, and had photographed upon my memorj-
a view which I am sure no time can dim.
In the centre of this marble terrace, equidistant from
302 AROUND THE WORLD.
the four lofty and graceful minarets, stands the building
which for more than two centuries has been the admira-
tion of every eye that in all that period of time has rested
on it. It is an octagon, or it might perhaps be more cor-
rectly described as a square with each of the four corners
slightly cut off, and is crowned witli a high swelling dome,
having the gracefulness of outline which seems to have
been an inspiration in the Mohammedan and Oriental styles
of architecture. The building is one hundred and fifty
feet in diameter; the crescent upon the summit of the
dome nearly two hundred feet above the pavement. Tlie
structure is built from foundation to topstone of the purest
marble, so perfect in its preservation and so unspotted in
its whiteness that it looks as if it might have been erected
only yesterday. Standing upon its marble pedestal, it vies
in purity with the clouds that are floating by. A cupola
of the same material rests upon the roof on each side of
the dome. The exterior of the building is carved in grace-
ful designs, the front elaborately wrought, bat in such per-
fect taste as to fill the eye like a picture in colors. No de-
scription will convey to the mind any idea of the effect of
the engraving on the arched doorway. It is elaborate, but
not florid, giving to the solid marble almost the lightness
of a cloud. Indeed, the whole building, as you look upon
it, seems to float in the air like an autumn cloud.
Let us enter — but breathe softly and tread gently as you
step w^ithin. It is the sleeping chamber of Noor Mahal,
the cherished wife of the Mogul emperor, Shah Jehan, and
here, beneath this magnificent dome, they lie side by side,
each in a couch of almost transparent marble, set with pre-
cious stones, and wrought exquisitely in tracery of vine
and flowers. Nowhere else has human dust been laid away
to slumber in such superb repose — so beautiful, so silent,
so sacred, so sublime. In such perfect, exquisite taste is
every thing within as well as without, tliat it is more like
a creation than tlie work of man. The whole interior,
which is lighted only from the lofty doorway, is open from
AGRA AND THE TAJ.
303
wall to wall, and from the pavement to the summit of the
dome, with the exception of a high marble screen standing
about twenty or thirty feet from the outer wall, and ex-
tending entirely around the building. This is cut in open
tracery, so as to resemble a curtain of lace rather than a
screen of solid marble. One who has seen the veiled statue
of a master artist can appreciate the deception, if decep-
tion it can be called where none was intended.
The sarcophagi containing the remains of the empress
and of her faithful lover, the Mogul emperor, lie in the
crypt below, which is reached by a marble stairway. That
of the former has inscribed upon it, in the graceful Arabic
characters, " Moontaj-i-Maiial, Ranoo Begum" (Ranoo Be-
gum, the Ornament of the Palace), with the date of her
death, 1631. The other has inwrought the name of the
emperor, with the date of his death, 1666. To this day
they are covered with fresh flowers, strewed by faithful
hands, in recognition of the fidelity which reared the struc-
ture.
Ujion tlie main floor, directly over these marble slabs,
and under the canopy of the open dome, stand the ceno-
taphs, designed simply as the representatives of those be-
low, but carved in tracery and set with gems in no osten-
tatious or gaudy style, but so beautifully and tastefully
that one lingers around them as he stands before some
masterpiece of art. never satisfied with looking. Upon the
cenotaph of the queen, amid wreaths of flowers, worked in
gemmed mosaic, are passages from tlie Koran, in Arabic,
one of which reads, " Defend us from the tribe of unbe-
lievers." This inscription was made by the Emperor Shah
Jehan, who seemed to think no words too sacred to be re-
corded upon the tomb of one whom he loved so devotedl}^ ;
but his own son, Aurungzebe, who placed the marble in
memory of his father, in accordance with Mohammedan
custom regarded the words of the Koran as too holy to be
engraved — the difference between conjugal and filial love.
In the same devotion to his wife, Shah Jehan caused the
304 ABOUND THE WOULD.
Koran to be inscribed npon the interior of the Taj, in mo-
saic of precious stones, jasper, lapis lazuli, heliotrope, chal-
cedony, carnelian, etc. The whole of the Koran is said to
be thus inwrought, and yet it has the appearance of a light
and graceful vine running over the walls. With the sen-
tences of the Koran, thus traced npon the marble in such
costly material, are interspersed fruits, and Howers, and
running vines, all of precious stones inlaid, designed to
represent one of the bowers of Paradise in which the em-
peror had laid the light of his life to sleep her last sleej).
While we were standing beneath that lofty dome, the
silence of the tomb reigning even over its exquisite beauty
and grandeur, voices at my side commenced singing :
"In the hour of pain and anguish,
In the hour when death draws near,
Suiter not our hearts to hniguish,
Suffer not our souls to fear.
And when mortal life is ended,
Bid us in thine arms to rest,
'Till, hy angel hands attended,
We awake among the blest."
The singing ceased, but far up in that snow-white vault, as
if among the fleecy clouds of heaven, an angel band caught
up the strain, not as an ordinary echo of reflected sound,
but as if prolonging the notes. It continued as long as the
original song, and at length gradually died away, only as
the song of angels would cease to be heard when they en-
ter the portals of heaven. This echo is as marvelous and
as celebrated as the Taj itself, and I know not in what
building or in what part of the world another like it can
be heard.
All this description may seem to the reader simply ex-
travagant, but not if the reader has ever looked upon the
building described. Every one wdio has seen it will simply
say that words are powerless to express the ideas which
its sublimity and beauty inspire. I could only comj)are
the emotions wdiich it excited to those awakened by list-
ening to exquisite music, and the building to some sub-
AGItA AND THE TAJ.
305
lime poem, whose words transport the soul out of itself.
The very first glimpse of the structure, as I entered the
gateway a quarter of a mile distant, and looked down the
long avenue of acacias and cypress, was overpowering, and
I felt at every step as I drew nearer that I must withdraw
my gaze or be overcome. Often, as I stood within the Taj,
its silent grandeur was equally overpowering. Moonlight
is said to add greatly to the effect of the whole scene, giv-
ing to the building the appearance of a cloud-castle built
in air.
According to the records. Shah Jehan had planned an-
other structure precisely similar to this for his own tomb,
on the opposite side of the Jumna, to be connected with it
by a bridge, but he wisely concluded to sleep by the side
of his beloved begum.
As we left the Taj and lingered in the park, we found it
vocal with the song of birds. Richly-colored paroquets
made their homes along the cornices of the surrounding
buildings and upon the gateway, and, by a singular though
somewhat sentimental coincidence, the only turtle-doves
that I saw or heard in India were two mates that siffhed
their melancholy notes upon the evening air as a requiem
over Shah Jehan and his beloved ISToor Mahal.
On Christmas morning we rode out several miles from
Agra to Secundra, a station of the English Church Mission-
ary Society known as " the Christian Village." We heard,
long before reaching it, the sound of the church-going bell,
a strange sound in a heathen land. This missionary sta-
tion, which comprises a considerable community, has been
organized on the principle of separating the native Chris-
tians from their ordinary associates in order to protect
them from the evil influences by which they are surround-
ed among their own people, and also to give to the natives
at large an illustration of the influence of the Gospel of
Christ upon a community, important ends to be accom-
plished, but only at the expense of losing the leavening and
aggressive power of religion working through the relations
U
306 AROUND THE WORLD.
of society. It has too much of the comniunity principle
about it to commend it to general adoption. But in this
case a great and beneficent work has been done, and this
Christian community has become a light in the land. Be-
fore we reached the place the congregation had assembled
at the neat English churcli, whither we at once directed
our steps, and where an interesting and impressive sight
greeted our eyes and moved our hearts. The building,
which was well filled, liad no benches, the whole congrega-
tion, according to Oriental custom, being seated upon the
floor, each one clothed in pure white, the women and girls
with their long muslin garments drawn over their heads as
veils. All devoutly engaged in the service, joining in the
responses, and in prayer bowing their foreheads to the pave-
ment. The services were conducted in the Hindustani
tongue, and were unintelligible to us, but before us was a
congregation of people who had been called out of the
grossest idolatry, now devoutly engaged in celebrating the
bii-th of the Saviour of the world, joining with Christians
of all lands in the song of the heavenly host, " Glory to God
in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."
As I looked upon them in their devotions, the vision of the
Apostle John in the Isle of Patmos came up before me, and
I seemed to hear the inquiry, " What are these which are
arrayed in white robes, and whence came they ?" and then
the response, " These are they which came out of great
tribulation, and have w^ashed their robes and made them
white in the blood of the Lamb." This was one of nu-
merous scenes witnessed in India, which show that the Gos-
pel of Christ, through the power of the divine Spirit, is
making its conquests and giving ^^romise of a day when it
shall completely triumph over idolatiy and superstition.
The tomb of Akbar, one of the Mogul emperors, stands
near Secundra, in the midst of a quadrangular court a quar-
ter of a mile square. A heavy wall surrounds the square,
making the inclosure a fortress. The mausoleum in which
lie the remains of the great emperor is tliree hundred feet
AGUA AND THE TAJ.
307
square, and vies iu niagnilicence, though not in beauty, with
the Taj, rising to the height of a hundred feet iu five ter-
races, with cloisters, galleries, domes, and cupolas elaborate-
ly wrought. The roof of the highest elevation is flat, one
hundred feet square. In the centre stands a cenotaph of
pure marble, elaborately carved with the JSfow Nubhey
N'am, the ninety -nine names of God, from the Koran. It is
covered with a cupola, not for the protection of the ceno-
taph, but to guard tlie names of God from the storm. The
roof is surrounded by a lattice of carved marble, and at
each corner is a beautiful marble cupola, light and grace-
ful. The sarcophagus which contains the dust of the em-
peror, on the ground floor, is reached by a descending pas-
sage similar to that of the great pyramid of Egypt. The
whole structure is almost as massive as the pyramids.
Akbar was the most powerful sovereign of his day, and
a man of independent if not enlightened views. He open-
ed the places of honor and responsibility to all races and all
religions, and by his liberal and tolerant policy secured to a
greater extent than most Oriental monarchs the affections
of his people. His sons having all died in infancy, he made
a pilgrimage to the shrine of a celebrated saint at Ajmere
to sue for an heir. He went with his whole family on foot
a distance of three hundred and fifty miles, at the rate of
four miles a day. Walls of cloth were put up on each side
of the road, and carpets spread for the royal pilgrims the
entire distance. On reaching the shrine, he was referred
to another saint still living at Secree, where he was prom-
ised an heir that should live to a good old age. The em-
press afterward ga^'e birth to a son, who became the re-
nowned Jehangeer. Akbar then took up his residence at
Futtehpore Secree, about twenty miles from Agra, where
he founded a summer capital, covering the hills with mag-
nificent buildings, the very ruins of which are among the
most impressive testimonies to the grandeur of the Mogul
court. When he died, the treasures that he had heaped to-
gether — coin, jewels, plate, brocades, etc. — were estimated
308 AROUND THE WORLD.
at seven hundred millions of rupees (about $350,000,000).
His crown, studded with jewels, was valued at twenty mill-
ions of rupees. One of the historians of India thus de-
scribes the splendor of his reign :
" The greatest displays of Akbar's grandeur were at the
vernal equinox and on his birthday. They lasted for several
days, during which there was a general fair, and many pro-
cessions and other pompous shows. The emperor's usual
place was in a rich tent, in the midst of awnings to keep oft'
the sun. At least two acres were thus spread with silk and
gold, carpets and hangings, as rich as velvet embroidered
with gold, pearls, and precious stones could make them. The
nobility had similar pavilions, where they received visits from
each other, and sometimes from the emperor. Dresses, jewels,
hoi'ses, and elephants were bestowed upon the nobles. The
emperor was weighed in golden scales against gold, silver,
perfumes, and other substances in succession, which were dis-
tributed among the spectators. Almonds and other fruits of
gold and silver were scattered by the emperor's own hand,
and eagerly caught by the courtiers. On the great day of
each festival the emperor was seated on his throne in a noble
palace, surrounded by his nobles, wearing high heron-plumes,
and sparkling with diamonds like the firmament. Many hun-
dred elephants passed before him in companies, all most rich-
ly adorned, and the leading elephant of each company with
gold plates on his head and breast set with rubies and eme-
I'alds. Trains of caparisoned horses followed, and after them
I'hinoceroses, lions, tigers, panthers, hunting leopai'ds, hounds,
and hawks, the whole concluding with an innumerable host
of cavalry glittering with cloth of gold."
Intending to leave for Delhi in the afternoon, we short-
ened our stay at the tomb of Akbar, and hastened back to-
ward Agra. But, alas for human calculations in Oriental
lands ! our horses were factors or tractors in the calcula-
tion which we had not taken fully into the account. One
of the miserable beasts gave out, and, after walking about
two miles, we impressed an ekka, one of the rough carts of
the country, and so reached our hotel. Here a new mis-
fortune awaited us, revealing visions of the Black Hole of
Calcutta, or some vile prison, not at all agreeable to our
fancy in that land of the Moguls and the Hindoos.
AGBA AND THE TAJ. 3()9
Having hastily arranged our baggage, our bills duly
paid (with the usual necessary abatements), our luggage
all upon the gharries, we stepped in and gave the order to
start, on which I settled back into my seat in the vain ex-
pectation that it would be obeyed. Again I looked out
and repeated the order, using the strongest Hindustani
words that I could command, but it was of no avail. Stej)-
ping out to see what was the matter, I was confronted by a
native policeman, whose orders had been more forcible
than my own, and I at length learned that the whole party
were under arrest for stealing one of the four sheets that
we had been able to muster on the day of our arrival. Of
course we were very indignant, but police officers the world
over seem to have a common understanding not to regard
indignant looks and high words as conclusive proof of in-
nocence, and our warm expressions were received with
great coldness. I had once, in a strange city in my own
country, been arrested for passing counterfeit money, but
then I was near enough to my own friends to communi-
cate with them, and establish my innocence. Now w^e
were ten thousand miles away from those Avho would cer-
tify to our previous good character in regard to thieving,
and the circumstantial evidence was decidedly against us.
When our party of seven arrived at the hotel, there were
four sheets distributed among us as the extent of the ac-
commodations of the first hotel in Agra. As we were about
to depart, only three sheets could be found, and what sup-
position was more reasonable, what proof could be more
positive than this, that we had stolen the fourth, and that
it had been secreted somewhere in our baggage. Of course
it was not to be thought of for a moment that one of the
dozen Hindoo servants, or one of the traveling merchants
or mendicants who had been coming and going through
the bungalow all the day long, had taken it. We w^ere the
culprits beyond all question, and must submit to an exami-
nation. Cooling down in a measure, we ordered the trunks
to be taken from the gharries, and full search to be made ;
310 AROUND THE WORLD.
but, wnen we consented to have it clone, tliey did not wish
to do it, Hke the Frenchman wlio, in a financial panic,
made haste to draw out all his deposits from the bank, but
when he found the teller ready to hand it over, he declined
to take the money ; he wanted it only in case the bank was
not willing to pay. The next order of the police was to
have the ladies' satchels searched. By this time matters
grew somewhat serious, and we made inquisition for the
host, Mr. Beaumont, who had not appeared on the scene,
whether privy to it or not. To him we could talk in round
English, and we improved the opportunity. He became
our bail, notwithstanding we gave him the assurance that
after such treatment we certainly should not stop at his ho-
tel the next time we came to India. The whole affair was
undoubtedly a ruse on the pait of the servants, who had
secreted the sheet, thinking they could extort money from
us, in payment for the loss, by calling in the police to ar-
rest us. After the affair was all over, there came an ap-
prehension on our part that, as the sheets had been folded
in the morning in anticipation of our departure, one of
them might possibly have been packed unnoticed with our
baggage. "We reached the cars in season, and at midnight,
by moonlight, crossed the lofty iron bridge over the Jumna
at Delhi, and entered the renowned capital of the Mogul
emperors, more than a thousand miles from Calcutta. We
made deliberate inquisition, but not a trace of the missing
sheet M'hich had occasioned our arrest at Agra was found,
and we had the proud satisfaction of feeling that we had
not onl}^ escaped the prisons of Agra, but were guiltless of
the felony.
DELHI. ^i-^
XXII.
DELHI.
The vicinity of Delhi is a field in whicli the antiqnarian
may revel in endless delight. Within a circle of less than
twenty miles, one dynasty after another has established its
capital and ruled in splendor, and then passed away, leav-
ing the field to the conqueror, who, instead of occupying
the same site, has founded a new city, and left the old to
crumble into ruins. In this way numerous cities have been
scattered over the plain, the monuments of some remaining
to this day, while the very history of others has been lost.
One monument, the loftiest single column in the world,
stands about ten miles from Delhi, in the midst of magnifi-
cent ruins, of which there is no satisfactory account in the
records of India. Old Delhi, as it is called, the last forsa-
ken site, is in greater perfection ; the walls remain, and
much of the city is yet standing, but its halls are deserted ;
vagabonds and beasts of prey share its hospitality alike.
But if the region is a field for the antiquarian, the present
city, for a long period the capital of the Mogul empire, is
the home of fancy and tlie field for romance.
Delhi was founded by Shah Jehan about two centuries
and a half ago. When his golden sun arose he determined
to mark the day by erecting a monumental city. Leaving
Agra, which had been built chiefly by his grandfather, the
renowned Akbar, although greatly beautified by himself,
he came to Dellii and laid the foundations of the gorgeous
capital. It is inclosed by a wall of granite five and a half
miles in circuit, and is entered by twelve strongly fortified
gates — the Calcutta, the Cashmere, the Lahore, etc. One
of these, the scene of an heroic and successful assault by
312 AROUND THE WORLD.
the English during the mutiny of 1857, like the fort and
the city itself, has a modern tragic history of the deepest
interest. One principal street, the Chandnee Chowk, 120
feet wide, divides the town, and is daily the scene of more
strictly Asiatic display than any other street in India. It
is alike the Boulevard and the I^roadway of Delhi. On
either side are shops and wareliouses of the wealthy mer-
chants ; the centre is a broad terrace or promenade, shaded
with acacias and other ornamental trees. Dui-ing the day
the Chandnee Chowk is a busy mart of trade, but toward
evening the loaded trains of camels and other beasts of bur-
den disappear, the hum of business dies away, and a scene
of Oriental leisure and display ensues. The promenade is
thronged with persons in all the varied costumes of the in-
terior of Asia, while richly-caparisoned Arabian horses, ele-
phants with gayly-dressed riders, and not a few English car-
riages belonging to natives, pass up and down the broad
street. Other parts of tlie city are equally curious in theii*
way. The grain markets are one of the sights. Camels
and buffaloes, with their heavy freights, come and go like
ships entering and leaving port, and a noisy multitude,
scarcely less bewildering and far more entertaining than
the crowd of a Western produce exchange, almost fascinate
a stranger. The people of the city at all hours of the day,
but still more toward evening, may be seen at home on the
flat roofs of their houses, apparently unnoticed by and un-
noticing their nearest neighbors. One feels, in treading
the streets of Delhi, that he has reached the heart of Asia,
and every thing is so intimately associated with the old
Mogul dynasty that its ancient scenes of barbaric splendor
are continually rising up before him.
The fortress, built by Shah Jelian for a palace, extends
nearly a mile along the river, and is protected on all sides
by a strong wall forty feet in height, flanked with bastions
and turrets. The main gateway, the Lahore, is a tower of
great strength. Entering through the archway, which once
was richly ornamented with flowers in mosaic and with in-
DELHI.
313
scriptions from the Koran, and passing into the grand court,
we came to the Diwan-a-im, the hall where the emperor
gave free audience to all who had any petition or cause to
jDresent. It is an immense canopy, supported by pillars of
stone, with an elevated throne on one side, the wall inlaid
with mosaics of precious stones representing flowers and
fruits, birds and beasts. The Dhvan-i-l;has, or hall of pri-
vate audience, is smaller, but it is a gem of beauty. It is
an open marble pavilion, resting on massive pillars and Mo-
resque arches, the marble highly polished, and having almost
the transparency of alabaster. The marble balustrade is
exquisitely carved in elaborate perforated work. At each
corner of the roof stands a marble kiosk with a gilded dome ;
the ceiling was once composed of gold and silver filigree
work, for which the goldsmiths of Delhi are celebrated to
the present day. One side of the Diivmi-i-khas opens on
the court by which we entered, and commands a view of
the whole interior of the fortress ; another looks out upon
the palace gardens, which are still kept in great beauty ; a
third affords a charming view of the River Jumna, while
the fourth, which is closed, rests upon the walls of the royal
zenana. On the side that is closed once stood the famous
" Peacock Throne," the admiration, if not the envy, of the
world in the days when the Mogul dynasty was at the ze-
nith of its splendor. It is thus described :
" The throne was six feet long and four feet broad, com-
posed of sobd gold inlaid with precious gems. It was sur-
mounted hj a gold canopy, supported on twelve pillars of the
same material. Around the canopy hung a fringe of pearls;
on .each side of the throne stood two chattahs, or umbrellas,
symbols of royalty, formed of crimson velvet richly embroid-
ered with gold thread and pearls, and with handles of solid
gold, eight feet long, studded with diamonds. The back of
the throne was a representation of the expanded tail of a pea-
cock, the natural colors of which were imitated by sapphires,
rubies, emeralds, and other brilliant gems. Its value was es-
timated by Tavernier, a French jeweler, who saw it in its per-
fection, at six millions of pounds sterling, or thirty millions of
dollars."
314 AROUND THE WORLD.
This famous Peacock Throne was taken away by the Per-
sian conqueror, Nadir Shah, who not only stripped the pal-
ace, but signalized his conquest and the subjugation of the
Mogul capital by ordering the slaughter of a hundred thou-
sand of its helpless inhabitants, men, women, and children.
He sat with the conquered emperor in the Dkoan-i-khas,
sipping his coffee, while the dead were piled in the streets.
As we- trod this marble hall, once the scene of imperial
splendor, memory and fancy bringing up the contrasts of
grandeur and cruelty, glory and humiliation which had here
been witnessed, and as we thought of the many changes
which had come over the face of things since Shah Jehan
sat upon his throne of brilliants, we could only look in sad-
ness upon the delusive inscription wdiich the emperor had
engraved in the beautiful Arabic characters upon the mar-
ble walls : " If there be a paradise on the face of the earth,
it is this — it is this — it is this."
Only a portion of the adjoining seraglio remains, but the
IIu7nmaums, or royal baths, rooms of the purest white
marble, with inlaid borders, marble floors and tanks, and a
fountain in tlie centre of each room, have a richness and
exquisite beauty that is almost inconceivable in connection
with such simplicity of material. The Ilotee Musjid, or
Pearl Mosque, a miniature of the Pearl Mosque at Agra, is
a pearl itself, built exclusively of white marble, and giving
one an idea of purity such as no other material suggests.
The Jumma Ifusjid, accounted the grandest mosque in
the East, stands upon an eminence in another part of the
city. Its paved court, 450 feet square, having in the cen-
tre a large marble reservoir of water, is skirted on three
sides by a colonnade of red sandstone, with a marble pa-
vilion at each corner. The building is very imposing, and,
with the lofty minarets, forms one of the most striking ob-
jects in the city, whether seen from a distance or near at
hand. The view from its summit, taking in the city and
fort, the river and a vast extent of the surrounding coun-
try, is sublime. Long did I linger upon it to study the
DELHI. 315
strange map which lay before me, and to ponder over the
history of strange events which had been written on it by
the hand of time througli more than a score of centuries.
We devoted one day to the Kootuh-Minar, eleven miles
from Delhi, and to the intervening monuments and ruins
which are thickly scattered over the plain in all directions.
The Kootub-Minar is a fluted column 240 feet in height,
more than 100 feet in circumference at the base, and grad-
ually diminishing to forty feet at the summit. It is di-
vided into five stories by projecting balconies, which sur-
round the tower and add greatly to its beauty. There are
many curious but evidently designed coincidences in its
construction. The lowest and upper stories make precise-
ly half the height; the lower story is just twice the diame-
ter, and the whole column is five diameters in height. For
what purpose the column was erected is a problem which
the antiquarians of India have not solved, but their solu-
tion is not at all essential to the admiration of a structure
which is pronounced the finest of its kind. There it stands,
in the midst of the ruins of an almost forgotten city, tow-
ering up toward the heavens in solitary grandeur. One is
fascinated as he follows up its beautifully fluted sides un-
til the lines mingle at the summit, and as he gazes its pro-
portions swell and rise, and his thoughts become lost in the
clouds. I have a sort of passion for climbing heights, and
could not resist the impulse to travel up the spiral stair-
case to the top (there were only three hundred and seventy-
five steps), to look out from this elevation upon the ruined
cities and magnificent mausoleums, and upon the city of
Delhi in the distance. The view was many times worth
the climb.
At the foot of the Miliar are the carved fragments of
the Musjid-i-Kootuh-ul-Isla7n, which was erected as the
grand mosque of old Delhi. It was constructed by the
Mohammedan conqueror from the spoils of twenty-seven
Hindoo temples at the close of the twelfth century. Some
of the arches and pillars are exquisitel}^ sculptured. Among
316 AROUND THE WORLD.
them stands an enigma in the shape of an iron pillar five
feet in circumference and fifty feet in length, cast in a sin-
gle shaft. It stands erect, the base by actual investigation
having been found nearly thirty feet below the surface of
the ground. It has stood there more than a thousand
years, but when, by whom, or for what purpose it was erect-
ed is unknown. It furnishes solid testimony, to the weight
of fifteen or twenty tons, that heavy castings are not among
the modern achievements of art.
In all parts of the world there is only a step between
the sublime and the ridiculous, and no one must expect to
find it widened in Oriental lands. It is rarely that we
make the attempt to look through magnificent structures
and imposing ruins into the regions of the past, without be-
ing called back to the present by some plaintive cry for
charity, or a repulsive demand for backsheesh from the
pretended lords of these crumbling heaps of stone. On
this occasion, after we had descended from the Minar, we
were summoned to witness a feat which every travelei-
must witness, and for which every one must pay. We
were taken to an immense w^ell, eighty-five feet in depth
and about fifty in diameter. A half dozen nearly naked
natives stood upon the wall around the edge, waiting for
the nod that seals a contract to pay them for the exploit.
We nodded, and at once they sprang with outstretched
arms and legs, kept in this position until within about
twenty -five feet of the bottom, when they suddenlj^ straight-
'ened themselves, plunging feet foremost into the water, and
soon reappeared, swinnning on its surface. They speedily
reached the top by an underground passage and demanded
their pay, and would not have been satisfied if we had
given them ten times the usual amount. But it is their
only means of support, and they have followed plunging
into the same well from their childhood, and their fathers
before them for many generations, and perhaps for centu-
ries.
I shall not attempt to describe the wilderness of ruined
DELHI.
317
cities, of magnificent tombs and mosques that lie between
Delhi and the Kootub-Minar ; nor the ruins of the e-rand
Astronomical Observatory of Jay Singh, the scientific Ra-
jah of Jeypore, who erected the complete observatory at
Benares. It is on the same grand scale on which these
wealthy nabobs and emperors wrought all their works.
The dimensions of the gnomon of the equatorial dial as it
now stands give an idea of its extent, the hypothenuse be-
ing lis feet, and the perpendicular 56 feet.
The English government has done much since the mu-
tiny for the improvement of Delhi, The Queen's Gar-
dens, in the midst of the town, are laid out with great
taste, and carefully cultivated, A collection of li^•ing ani-
mals and birds, and other specimens in natural history,
adds to the attractions of the park. A large ornamental
building for public and scientific uses has been erected on
the Chandnee Chowk, called the Institute, In its large
municipal hall we had the pleasure of meeting several of
the native princes. For these improvements the Mogul
capital is under many obligations to the Rev. James Smith,
an English Baptist missionary, who has also held a commis-
sion under the government for promoting the scientific ad-
vancement of the native population. A costly memoi'ial
church has been erected to -commemorate those who fell
in the terrible mutiny, which burst upon this city with ter-
rific force at its very beginning. The revolt commenced
at Meerut, forty miles distant, and after the massacre of
Europeans, men, women, and children, at that place, the Se-
poys set out in a body for Delhi, where the native troops
joined them, and commenced the slaughter of their ofii-
cers. The magazine, which contained an enormous supply
of guns, powder, and warlike stores, was in charge of Lieu-
tenant Willoughby. Seeing the state of affairs, he closed
and barricaded the gates, and then, laying a train of gun-
powder, prepared to blow up the arsenal should resistance
prove unavailing. Nine Europeans kept thousands of Se-
poys at bay until at length they were exhausted and like-
318 AROUND THE WORLD.
ly to be overpowered, when the match was applied, and
more than a thousand mutineers were blown into the air.
All the Europeans in the city who had not made their
escape on the appearance of the Sepoys were massacred.
Tlie English families were tied in rows, and shot and sa-
bred without mercy. The assassinations were accompanied
by horrid atrocities. Others, who escaped — tender women
and helpless children — w^andered for days under the burn-
ing sun, lying down at nights in the jungle. Delhi fell
completely into the hands of the mutineers, but its recap-
ture was one of the most heroic achievements of the recov-
ery of British power in India.
While at Delhi I had occasion to send homeward letters
of some importance, and not being disposed to trust them
to the uncertainties of the nati\'e servants at the hotel, I
determined to deposit them wdth my own hands in the
post. It afforded a new^ occasion for admiration of an in-
stitution tlie marvels of which seem to be forgotten in the
newer and greater marvel of the telegraph. I never cease
to w^onder at the thought that one can go into almost any
remote corner of the earth, and write his tlioughts on a
slip of paper, and drop it into a little box, even in the dead
of night, when every one else is asleep, and that wuth all
the speed of steam the identical slip of paper will travel
over land and sea, and search out the friend to whom it
is addressed, no matter in W'hat otlier corner of the earth
he may dwell, and deliver the certified message. With
the telegraph different and even remote countries are act-
ually bound together, and although tliousands of miles in-
tervene, you may, by means of a wii'e, hold by the button
the one to whom you are speaking. The wire is an abso-
lute link. But the postal service depends upon detached
messengers, w^ho must traverse sea and land, and seldom
do they fail to execute their commission. I do not know
that I have ever failed to receive a letter out of the num-
bers that have been addressed to me in all foreign parts,
or tliat any one that I have sent has failed to reach its des-
DELHI. 319
tiiiation. Some of the former have been great travelers.
Several that were addressed to me from home while I w^as
in India, through the sagacity of Kew York clerks were
sent by the way of China, and arrived in the north of In-
dia after I had left the country ; but they traveled on,
hoping to reach me at Cairo, where they made another halt
and search, and then came on to Constantinople, where
they overtook me precisely five months after they had
started upon their travels.
Inquiring at the hotel at Delhi the way to the post-of-
fice, I was told it was a short distance beyond the fort. I
traveled onward and onward until I almost despaired of
reaching the place. At length, after various inquiries of
natives of all Oriental regions, made chiefly by holding up
my letters, I was directed to a back alley, which I found
led to an old temple, or mosque, or something of the sort,
and this was the Delhi post-oflice. A Eurasian who spoke
English was in charge, and seemed to be the only living
being within the premises. At the window I asked for
stamps, and was directed to a sleepy Mohannnedan who
was lying on the pavement outside, and who was any thing
but a promising looking dealer. in government securities.
When I made known what I wanted, he drew from the
folds of his loose garment a muslin bag, from which he
produced the requisite amount of stamps, as suspicious in
appearance as the dealer himself, but I paid for them, and,
afiixing them to the letters, again presented them at the
window. The Eurasian advised me to cancel them my-
self, adding that if I did not some one in the oflice might
remove them from the letters and sell them again. Tlieir
appearance indicated that they had gone through this op-
eration several times already. It was a new idea to me,
that of canceling my own stamps before mailing my letters,
but I complied, and then dropped them into the box, having
little faith in their ever seeing America. I learned after-
ward that they were all received in due time, and in good
condition, and I have now more faith than ever in inter-
320 AROUND THE WORLD.
national posts. This is rather a long story about what some
may think a small matter, but those who have been 10,000
miles or more from home do not esteem it a small matter
that by international arrangement they may hold direct and
free communication with those they have left behind, and
the motto which I have elsewhere recorded as found graven
over the arch of the post-office at Hong Kong will recur as
among the expressive sentiments of inspired wisdom : " As
cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far
country."
XXIII.
AMONG THE HIMALAYAS.
At Delhi we were more than a thousand miles from Cal-
cutta, but we had not yet reached the northern limit of our
journeying in Hindostan. We were bound for the Hima-
layas, and in some doubt w^hether to return by the route
we had taken, or to go up to the Indus, make our way to
the sea by that river, and so down to Bombay. The weather
having become sufficiently cool to travel with comfort by
day, we took the cars at 11 o'clock. In the afternoon we
passed Meerut, an important military station, and memora-
ble as the scene of the first outbreak of the mutiny.
Just at evening we reached Saharunpur, where we left
the rail to make an excursion of a few days among the
Himalaya Mountains. This town is pleasantly situated on
the great plain of India. It was one of the earliest sta-
tions of the American Presbyterian Mission, and is occupied
by the Eev. Mr. Calderwood, who met us at the cars, and
who, with his family, made our short sojourn one of great
pleasure. An interesting incident connected with our visit
was the close of the examination of the mission school, and
I regarded it as a peculiar pleasure to be invited to distrib-
AMONG THE HIMALAYAS. 321
ute tlie prizes to a large number of native youth, two of
whom bore the familiar names of Alexander McLeod and
James T. Wylie.
Saharunpur is a military station, and is the location of
the government stud. The horses of the country are mis-
erable specimens of their race, and it became a matter of
necessity to the military service to establish on a large
scale a depot where they could be reared from better stock
and for hardy service. The stalls were not full, but we
found nearly two thousand horses occupying quarters al-
most fit for the officers of an army, and altogether superior
to the cantonments which soldiers often consider very de-
sirable. The horses, when old enough for service, are found
to have cost the government from one to two thousand
rupees each, and those of Arabian blood from two to five
thousand rupees. Some of the Arabians were splendid an-
imals. We soon had an opportunity to contrast them with
the natives of the country bred in the usual way.
Having made arrangements to cross the Sewalic range
of the Himalayas from this point, we left Saharunpur in
the morning in what the natives called an omnibuchus, but
it bore in plain English on one of the panels the following
notice : " Omnibus No. 1, Gunquaram, Head office Meerut,
LicensedatSeharunpur, 10 June 1869, tocarry 5 passengers,
with 62 lbs luggage, Drawnbytwohorses." The two horses
were comparatively decent animals, and we congratulated
ourselves that if we had not found real Arabian steeds, we
had at least fallen upon tolerable specimens of the Indian
race. But we learned to our sorrow that they were intend-
ed only for show, designed to entrap unwary travelers by
making a good appearance on leaving town, on the princi-
ple upon which strictly honest fruit-dealers inevitably place
the finest specimens at the top of the basket. The road, on
starting, was as level as a railway track, well metaled, and
shaded on either side with bamboo, cassia, and other trees.
With our gallant steeds we were promising ourselves a tri-
umphant passage over the mountains, but just as we were
X
322 AROUND THE WORLD.
in the full tide of expectation, only three or four miles out
of town, we suddenly hauled up at a post-station, and two
miserable rats were put into the carriage. The word of
command was given, and. the whip duly applied, but the
more the persnasive arguments were used, the more they
would not start, excepting backward. One of them insisted
again and again on putting his heels into the front of the
omnilnickus, and the other persisted in attempting to stand
erect on his hind heels. And these were a fair type of the
horses that we took in at every station on the way, except-
ino; that some of them were even worse.
The East India Company built one of its finest roads
over this pass, in order to reach the Dehra Valley and
ascend the mountains to the summer resorts of Mussoorie
and Landour. It is as skillfully engineered and as sub-
stantially built as the roads over the passes of the Alps,
and decidedly smoother. The summit is pierced by a tun-
nel reducing the extreme elevation. Long before reaching
the sunnnit, and when we were approaching the more diffi-
cult and dangerous parts of the pass, the horses were de-
tached, and sixteen coolies took the carriage in charge, and
drew us over and down the descent on tlie other side, a
distance of eight or ten miles. We were accustomed to
being carried by coolies in sedan cliairs in Japan and China
as well as in India, but not to using them as horses, and,
had there been any other way of crossing the mountains,
we should have demurred ; but there was no other (I had
the offer of elephants on the return), and then these coolies
have no other means of making a living. It is the business
which they and their fathers have followed. They would
lose caste, and lose all means of a livelihood if they should
attempt any thing else, so that to employ them was a mer-
cy and not a degradation. Besides, we remembered that
when some distinguished dancer or singer visits the me-
tropolis of bur own country, or any of the gay capitals of
Europe, it is not uncommon for young gentlemen of the
highest breeding to aspire to the level of beasts of burden,
AMONG THE HIMALAYAS.
323
and, taking the horses from the carriage of the danseuse or
cantatrice, to harness themselves like donkeys and drag her
to her hotel. With these precedents in mind, we quieted
our scruples in regard to being drawn by coolies over the
Himalaya Mountains.
In going through the pass we came upon a splendid,
full-grown leopard that had just been caught in a trap, and
were in the region of wild beasts of all kinds. A gentle-
man whom we met had seen, not long before, a huge wild
elephant cross the highway on which we were traveling,
and, in ascending the second range of the mountains the
following day, we frequently saw around us the fresh
tracks of leopards in the snow. India, considering the
density of its population, is marvelously infested with wild
beasts, and not merely in the mountainous regions, but in
the jungles of the plain. The government has made great
efforts to exterminate them, but without any apparent im-
pression upon their numbers. One reason for this want of
success is that the natives regard the wild beasts — man-eat-
ing tigers in particular — as divinities, whose wi-ath it is
more safe to appease than to arouse, and accordingly they
will not hunt or kill them even when exposed to their rav-
ages.*
Tiger-hunting is still a favorite sport in many parts of
India, and it is not uncommon for an ordinary party to
bag half a dozen tigers in a single excursion. At Calcutta
I met an American gentleman who had shot five the sum-
mer previous.
Since leaving India, I have received from Dr. Fayrer, of
* "In the Chanda district, one of these man-eaters killed, in a short time,
127 persons, and stopped all traffic for many weeks on the road. Another
slew 150 people in three years, causing the abandonment of the villages, and
throwing 2'>() square miles out of cultivation. During six years, in Bengal
proper, 13,401 deaths were reported by wild beasts, of which 4218 were
ascribed to tigers, 4287 to wolves, 1407 to leopards, and 10.5 to bears; the
rest to other animals. The British government, on the other hand, paid in
the same time $;:52,.5O0 in rewards to secure the destruction of 18,190 wild
animals. As much as $500 has been oifered for the head of a man-eating
tiger." — Indian Mail.
324 « AROUND THE WORLD.
Calcutta, who accompanied the Duke of Edinbnrg (Prince
Alfred of England) on his tour in the north of India, the
following account of a tiger -hunt with elephants in the
vicinity of Lucknow :
'■'■Fehrnary 23f?. The camp is situated just on the river
bank, and the exact spot is known as KuUean Ghaut. The
narrow stream divides the British territory from that of Ne-
paul, the tract of country on the opposite side having been
given over to the Nej^alese since the mutiny. It contains
the finest forest land in India. The gift was probably more
valuable than it was at the time supposed to be. The royal
standard of Britain is hoisted on one side, while that of the
prime minister, the virtual ruler of Nepaul, is on the other.
The Mohan abounds with alligators and gurrials. On the
22d one of Sir Jung's men was carried oil' and eaten by an
alligator when bathing in the river.
" Fourteen years ago this used to be a splendid hunting-
ground. It is said to be so still, notwithstanding the en-
croachments of civilization and cultivation. A tiger has al-
ready been heard of, and after breakfast he is to be sought
for. Sir Jung Bahadoor is to cross the river to meet H. R. H.
in British territory after breaktast, and will accompany him
throughout the day. The weather is getting warm, fleecy
clouds obscure the sun, but diffuse rather than intercept its
rays. Sir Jung's camp resounds with barbaric music.
"After breakfast the Nepalese minister crossed the river
on a bridge thrown over for the occasion, and rode up to H.
R. H.'s camp. He was preceded by his body-guard and a
band of music. H. R. H. and suite received Sir Jung, with
Colonel Lawrence, the political agent, Colonel Thomson, the
commissioner of Seetapore, Captain Young, settlement offi-
cer, and eight of his principal sirdars, nearly all colonels, who
were presented to the duke. The maharajah, who is a slight,
active, and wiry-looking man of about fifty-three, with If'air
Mongolian features, was dressed in a military uniform, and
was decorated with the Grand Cross of the Bath. His head-
dress was made of the most costly jewels, said to be worth
about £15,000. The visit lasted only a few minutes, and
shortly after H. R. H. got into the howdah, and, crossing the
river, was joined by the Maharajah Sir Jung Bahadoor in a
plain blue cotton shooting-dress, with a broad sola hat, and
the Maharajah Sir Digbija Singh, G.C. S. I., of Bulrampore, in
a dress very like it, only colored green. The combined party.
AMONG THE HIMALAYAS. 325
with a line of above four hundred elephants — one hundred and
thirty belonging to H. R. H.'s camp — proceeded in the direc-
tion of an extensive grass and tree jungle, where the tiger had
been marked down, and where, during tlie last few days, he
had killed several buffaloes. On the way some small game was
shot, but on approaching the vicinity of the tiger's abode all
firing ceased, and arrangements were made by Sir Jung for
surrounding the brute. After beating in a long line through
a belt of sal forest, skirting the long grass, the line was gradu-
ally formed into a circle, and the elephants were brought so
close as to touch each other. It certainly was a magnificent
sight, and one seldom witnessed. They were all thoroughly
trained and stanch, as the result proved when the tiger tried
in vain to break the line, or rather circle. The inclosure be-
ing complete, H. R. H. on the same howdah, a large square
one, with Sir Jung Bahadoor, went into the circle, and the
tiger soon revealed himself, although the grass was as high
as the howdah, with occasional vacant places. He was fired
at by the duke alone, as all the rest of the party were re-
quested not to fire unless the tiger got on any elephant's
head. H. R. H. wounded him severely, and he made sev-
eral charges round the line, but the elephants stood firm,
and he could not get out, though he tried hard to break
through. He fell at about the third shot from the duke's
rifle, and then the whole circle closed in on him. He was
soon padded, and proved to be a fine male tiger ten feet one
inch in length, and very heavy.
"It was a most exciting scene; the wildness of the place,
the magnificent line of elephants, and the steadiness with
which they and their mahouts carried out the orders of the
maharajah, were remarkable, and all were much pleased, none
more so than H. R. H., with the sport ; though perhaps, in a
strictly sporting sense, the tiger may be considered to have
been rather hardly used. The Nepalese elephants are well
trained, and are so frequently employed by Sir Jung in tiger-
shooting and elephant-hunting that they can not be surpass-
ed. They are worked in line by the bugle calls, and are
taught to go at a pace that no other elephants can equal.
The maharajah is a great sportsman, and spends a considera-
ble part of each year in the Terai. After padding the tiger
the party moved on the line, and general shooting com-
menced. The party returned to camp in the evening, after
an excellent day's sport on the banks of the Mohan with
a bag of about twenty deer, one tiger, and a quantity of
partridges, hares, pea, and jungle fowl. In returning to
326 AROUND THE WORLD.
camp just before dark an accident occurred, which Avas at-
tended with very serious consequences to a mahout, and in
which two persons in the howdah had a very narrow escape.
An old but very famous elephant made a false step, and, be-
ino- weak, fell over against a tree and crushed the howdah.
The native gentlemen jumped out, while the mahout, an old
man who, at the time, Avas not on the elephant's neck, but
was trying to drag the howdah over to one side, as it had
become crooked, was crushed between the howdah and the
tree, and sustained a very serious injury to the left hand.
The wound was temporarily dressed, and he was taken into
camp, where it was found necessary to amputate part of the
hand. But for this unfortunate accident the day had been a
most successful one. The weather was fine, a moderate
breeze tempered the heat, and the wild scenery of the for-
ests, the grassy plains on the banks of the river, which are
themselves very picturesque, with the ever-varying interest
of the working of the magnificent line of elephants, made up
a scene that has seldom been equaled.
'•'•February 1\th. Before leaving camp this morning a cam-
el-man of the maharajah's was brought in with a rather se-
vere wound in the left thigh, just above the knee. He was
wading across the Mohan, which tliere was not up to his
hips, when he was suddenly seized by a large gurrial, and
dragged down. Some Sepoys who were close at hand rush-
ed to the rescue, and one of them so severely wounded the
great lizard that it let go and tried to make its escape ; he
followed, thrusting his bayonet into it, and having fired all
his (six) cartridges, he clubbed his musket and belabored it
until the stock was broken. The brute by this time was so
far hors de combat that it turned over as though dead, and
was dragged on shore, and brought into camp with the man
it had bitten. Fortunately the grip had not been very firm,
and a portion of integument only, about five inches in cir-
cumference, had been torn aAvay, leaving a painful and tedi-
ous, though not a dangerous wound. The gurrial was an
enormous brute over sixteen feet in length. He was opened,
and his stomach found quite empty, with the exception of
about twenty or thirty pebbles, from the size of peas or mar-
bles to a hen's eggs. These are useful for purposes of diges-
tion, and are probably always found in the stomachs of these
Saurians. This incident quite settles the question as to
whether the gurrial does take other food than fish, although,
from the conformation of his jaws, he is not able to seize so
larsje a morsel, or inflict so great a wound as the alligator."
AMONG THE EIMALA YAS. 327
But the wild elephants, tigers, leopards, wolves, etc., for-
midable and destructive as they ai'e, may be regarded as
rather ornamental than otherwise in comparison with the
lesser vermin which swarm over the whole country during
the rainy and hot seasons. Of these the most dreaded and
the most deadly are the snakes, from the hooded cobra,
which sometimes attains the length of ten feet, down to
the innumerable venomous snakes no larger than a riding-
whip. It is stated on good authority that in the year 1869
there were 11,416 deaths from the bites of snakes in the
single province of Bengal. From actual statistics, it has
been estimated that in all India there are from 20,000 to
40,000 deaths from the same cause every year. The snakes
live and multiply not only in the jungle and open country,
but in the villages and cities. They come into the grounds
and houses of all classes ; they make their homes in the
thatch and drop down from the rafters ; they creep into
the beds ; they lie around among the kitchen utensils, and
even ensconce themselves in the parlors. I heard many
thrilling narratives of adventures with these unwelcome
visitors. The smaller vermin are still more ubiquitous, and
a still greater annoyance. Scorpions and centipedes are
abundant, and every where dreaded. The white ants move
in armies, and are terribly destructive. Scarcely any thing
in the shape of furniture or clothing escapes their rav-
ages, and their tastes are decidedly literary. They will go
through an entire library in an incredibly short space of
time, leaving nothing to be perused by those who come
after them. If a book is carelessly left within their reach,
the form of it may be found, but the entire contents has
been devoured.
The day was all spent and the night had overtaken us
before we had completed the descent of the mountain.
For hours we rode on in the darkness, until late in the
evening of the last day of the year 1869 we alighted at the
home of the Rev. Mr. Woodside, in the charming valley of
the Deln-a Doon. This valley is one of the gardens of In-
328 AROUND THE WORLD.
dia, a vale of Cashmere transferred a little to the south.
Sheltered on all sides by the Himalaj^as, which stretch
themselves four and five miles into the skies, it has all the
year round a genial climate (if the intense heat of the sum-
mers can be called genial), the trees of all climes, the plants
of the tropics, and the fruits of the north growing side by
side. The bamboo flourishes with great luxuriance, and
the palm rears its stately crown. Extensive tea plantations
occupy the plain.
It was a joy which no words can express to meet in this
lonely but lovely valley, in the very heart of Asia, Ameri-
can families at home, and to have these homes opened to
us with as much cordiality as if we had been their nearest
kindred. The days that we spent there were all red-letter
days, and when at length w^e were compelled to say fare-
well, it seemed more like taking a new departure from
home than going homeward.
ON THE HIMALAYAS.
It was well into the new year before we could say good-
night or think of rest, but we were to be up and on the
wing before the morning light. In anticipation of our ar-
rival at Dehra, Mr.Woodside and Mr. Herron, of the Ameri-
can Mission, had arranged an excursion to the sanitary cities
of Mussoorie and Landour, perched upon the very top of
the second range of the Himalayas, between seven and
eight thousand feet high. They are crowded during the
heat of summer, being a delightfully cool resort fi-om the
plains below, and, indeed, from all parts of Ilindostan, but
in the winter, when we made the ascent, they were deserted.
Simlah, to which the governor general moves his court in
the summer, is a hundred miles farther north.
ON THE HIMALA TAS. 329
We rose long before the sun to greet the opening year.
A drive of five or six miles across the valley, through a
charming country, brought lis to Raj pore, where the ar-
rangements for ascending the mountain were to be made.
One of our number, too feeble to endure the day's ride, was
taken up in 2k jha^vpan, a sort of sedan chair, the rest mak-
ing the ascent on horseback. The cities are in full sight
from the plain below, and show themselves at different
points during the ascent, but we were long in reaching
them. Slowly we toiled upward, encouraged by an occa-
sional glimpse of the summit, and often repaid for our toil
by the views of the Dehra valley, until at length we reached
a point where the Sewalic range that we had crossed the
day before sank so low that we could look over upon the
great plain beyond. The road passed deep precipices, over
one of which the wife of an English officer, the year before,
had gone down several hundred feet and was instantly
killed. Troops of monkeys, looking old and wise enough
to be the ancestors of Darwin, sat grinning at us from the
trees. Wild peacocks, with plumage as gay as the domes-
tic bird, are abundant on the mountain, where they are shot
as game. We had dined on them two or three days be-
fore. At length we reached Mussoorie, and, passing through
it, were soon at Landour, which is on the very crest of the
mountain. I could not but marvel at the boldness of the
man who first conceived the idea of building a town upon
this lofty ridge. There is not half an acre of level ground
any where to be found. It is a simple line of peaks, with
here and there a spot on which an eagle might build his
nest. It may be a hundred feet down to the next eyrie,
but every rock on which a house could be fastened has
been seized upon, until towns of considerable extent have
grown lip. It is a place of great attractiveness to those
who are suffering from the scorching heat of the plain, but
all the while that I was on the mountain I was haunted
with the thought that if I were to spend the night in any
one of these numerous homes, I might, simply by stepping
A GORGE IN THE UIMALAYAS.
ON THE HIMALA YAS.
331
out of bed, plunge thousands of feet down the mountain
sides. The elevation is nearly three times that of the Cats-
kill Mountain House, and it appears as if one might almost
step into the Delira Doon,
I can scarcely attempt to clescribe the magnificent views
afforded at this elevation. On one side lies the Dehra
Doon, one of the fairest valleys in all the East, smiling in
its verdui'e and foliage, although it was now midwinter.
Farther on is the Sewalic range of the Himalayas, and still
farther, in full view,^ the great plain of India, fifteen hun-
dred miles in extent. On the opposite side, toward the
northeast, peak after peak of the snowy range, stretching
out into Thibet and Cashmere, lifts its snowy head into the
clouds. One of these, separated by a narrow valley from
the point on which we stood, measures 22,330 feet. An-
other, in the distance, is 25,Y00 feet high ; and still another.
Mount Everest, reckoned the loftiest point on the surface
of the globe, is 29,000 feet by barometrical measurement.
Several of these peaks have been ascended by adventurers
and scientific parties, but we did not attempt to go so far
into the clouds, among the everlasting snows. We were
very hospitably entertained at Landour by Dr. Kellett, the
British surgeon, who had made preparation to receive us,
and M'e left with him a pressing invitation to return our
call on the next New- Year's day in New York.
Reti'acing our way down the mountain sides, we were
overtaken by the darkness of night, and passed the last
hour or two in no little apprehension of the precipices
which invited us below. But we reached our home at Deh-
ra in safety, having met with no misadventure in this de-
lightful and ever-memorable excursion to the top of the
globe.
The following day, which M-as the day of rest, we spent
in this peaceful valley, greatly enjoying communion with
the happy circle of Americans whose hearts are drawn
closely together in this far-away part of the earth, and who
became very near to us before we parted with them. In
332 AROUND THE WORLD.
the morning I heard a sound which transported me home-
ward. As it fell upon my ear, the tone was so familiar
that I exclaimed, " That is one of Meneely's bells ;" and so
it proved. It had crossed the ocean, and crossed the plains
of India, and crossed the Himalaya Mountains before ns,
and there, in the heart of Asia, it was calling a congrega-
tion of native Christians to the house of God. We wor-
shiped with the natives in their own tongue a part of the
day, and in the evening, at an English service, I spoke some
words of Christian encouragement to the Americans and
others to whom our tongue is familiar, and so we spent the
sacred day at the farthest point from home I had ever reach-
ed; and yet we were not away from home — we were still
among friends. In one respect I almost envied the mission
families their lot, for I know not a missionary station in
any part of the world more charmingly located. It is one
of the fairest spots in our memories of the lands of the East.
Rising very early on Monday morning, I rode out with
Mr.Woodside to the government tea plantations, and gath-
ered the leaf for myself, though not for use. The tea of
India we decidedly preferred, while we w^ere in the coun-
try, to any that we drank in China or Japan, perhaps be-
cause it was made in more civilized style. We came upon
a company of Thibetians, one of wdiom was praying in the
early morning with a machine, a small wheel turned upon
a handle — a very convenient way of saying one's prayers,
and quite as efficacious, no doubt, as using the form of words
where the heart is not found. The tongue may become a
praying machine as truly as the wheel of this traveler of
Thibet.
Many urgent and tempting inducements were presented
to us, by the English as well as the American residents, to
prolong our stay in the beautiful valley, and gladly would
we have yielded could time have tarried with us. In an-
ticipation of our arrival, various plans for improving the so-
journ had been laid. I found that arrangements had been
made for a public lecture on the Pacific Railroad, which
ON THE HIMALA YAS.
333
A l'UAYIN(; MAOUINE.
had awakened almost as much interest in that remote re-
gion as in the United States. They had read and heard so
much about this enterprise, and of the comfort and charm
of travel by the Pullman palace cars, that they wished to
have it all confirmed or dispelled by one who had actually
traversed the road. Many of the English residents were in-
tending to take this route homeward. But, having laid my
own plans for a long time to come, I was compelled to de-
cline the invitation. Had we yielded to all the tempting
propositions to lengthen our stay in many places, to see
more that was to be seen and to enjoy more that was to be
enjoyed, especially in the society of the friends whom we
334 AROUND THE WORLD.
met, we should still be tarrying or wandering far away
among Oriental scenes, and perhaps should never reach
home at all.
The English commissioner sent us a polite offer of ele-
phants to take our party over the mountains, but we had al-
ready tried this mode of conveyance to our satisfaction.
We returned to Saharunpur as we came, being taken by
coolies over the most difficult part of the route. Mr. Wood-
side and Mr. Herron accompanied us several miles on the
way, and at the ascent of the mountain we bade them fare-
well.
Several months before leaving America, in arranging my
programme for the year of travel, I decided to spend the
first week of January, 1870, in this part of India. My ob-
ject in doing so was to pass the week with the American
Mission families and the native churches in the religious
services of the period, now known the world over as " the
Week of Prayer." Lodiana, from which the general mis-
sion takes its name, is the place from which, in 1858, an in-
vitation was sent out to Christians every where to spend
the first week in each j'ear in united prayer to God for the
conversion of all nations to Christ. That concert is now
observed throughout Christendom, and has become a bond
of union and of interest among all who look for the reno-
vation of the world through the Gospel of salvation. I
commenced the week at Dehra Doon, then came to Saha-
runpur, where I joined with the native Christians and the
mission family in similar services. I spoke to the natives
through an interpreter, and, bidding them and our friends
of the mission farewell, went on in the evening of Tuesday
to Amballa, fifty miles farther north. Here I was wel-
comed by an old friend. Rev. John 11. Morrison, D.D., who
has spent between thirty and forty years in India, and, after
joining in the same interesting services at this place, went
on with him seventy miles to Lodiana, where we met with
several missionaries and the native Christians in the chapel
in which, twelve years before, the resolution was adopted
ON THE HIMALA YAS. 335
and sent out into all the world to devote the week to this
holy purpose. In that distant land, and amid the many
sacred associations, it was a week of peculiar interest.
I had now reached the extreme northern limit of my
travels, having abandoned the plan of going to Bombay
by the River Indus and the Indian Ocean on account of
the low stage of water. Thus far my journeyings had been
accomplished in exact accordance with my originaV pro-
grannne, and I was not willing to trust to the uncertainties
of navigation through a river of shifting bars and shallow
waters, when I could lay my course by the hour according
to a previously arranged time-table.
Before leaving Lodiana I went into the native town to
witness the manufacture of the Cashmere shawls, one of
the principal branches of industry. I called also upon two
Cabool princes, who were living in exile upon a small pen-
sion from the British government. They #ere sons of
Shah Shujali, one of the last native possessors of the re-
nowned Koh-i-noor diamond, which now belongs to the
British crown. The early history of this gem is as roman-
tic and as tragic as that of an Eastern princess. It has cost
many a prince his eyes, and many a one his life. It was
found in the mines of Golconda, in Southern India, and
first belonged to the viceroy of the province, a native of
Persia, who afterward presented it to Shah Jehan, the Mo-
gul emperor who built the Taj for Noor Mahal. After
lying in the imperial treasury near a century, it was carried
off by Nadir Shah, the king of Persia, who invaded India
in 1738. It passed through several royal hands. Some of
its possessors had tlieir eyes put out, and others were assas-
sinated in the strife to gain possession of the treasure. One
of these princes, after he had lost Iiis sight, had it taken
from him on the plea that such a gem could be of no value
to one who had no eyes with which to see its beauty. The
father of the princes whom I met at Lodiana, while sharing
the hospitalities of the Maharajah Punjeet Singh, the Lion
of Lahore, was put to the torture and compelled to give it
336 AROUND THE WOULD.
up to his host. The diamond remained in Runjeet Singh's
family until the Punjaub was conquered by the British,
when it was seized and presented by the captors to Queen
Victoria.
Dark has been the history of this brilliant, reckoned
second among the most valuable gems of the world. When
found it weighed 900 carats. It was reduced by cutting,
first to 279 carats, then to 186, in which state it was shown
in the Great Exhibition of 1851. It has since been recut,
and now weighs 123 carats, being valued at about $600,000.
LODIANA TO BOIMBAY.
On the 6th of January we turned our faces southward
and homeward, taking the Delhi and the East Indian Rail-
ways to Allahabad, where we paused again for a few days.
As we passed through Cawnpore, the native and foreign
communities were agitated by the recent occurrence of a
suttee, the burning of a widow on the funeral pile of a
husband. In studying the state of society in India, I
found that there is more to commend this practice to Hin-
doo widows than is generally supposed. They are not
driven by the mere law of custom to immolate themselves
when thus bereaved. It is not affection for the husband
which leads them to cast their own bodies into the flames
which consume the dead. It is the future of the widow,
her degraded, hopeless, helpless condition, that makes her
choose death rather than life. The suttee was abolished
by law in 1829, and now rarely occurs. All who take
part in it are regarded as aiding and abetting murder, and
are treated accordingly.
Our last evening at Allahabad was spent with a pleasant
party of English and American residents, our host being a
LODIANA TO B03IBAY.
337
\eteran English officer who had spent forty years in the
military service in India. He was apparently nnaffected
by the climate, which had sent tens of thousands home to
England, and many thousands to their long home. The
evening passed delightfully, and soon after midnight we
took the cars bound for Jubbuljjore. By morning we had
left the great plain, and were among the hills. There was
little that was interesting in the face of the country ; no
picturesque scenery ; no high cultivation. By noon we
reached Jubbulpore, where the only break in steam com-
munication around the world occurred, a space of 167
miles to Kagpore. The gap was filled a month or two
later by the completion of the rail through from Allahabad
to Bombay, connecting Calcutta with the latter place by
rail.
Jubbulpore is the station to which the Thugs were con-
signed when the murderous clan was suppressed. They
are organized in a sort of penal colony, under the superin-
tendence of British officers. Some of the more desperate
and dangerous characters are in irons, and all are kept at
hard labor. Even the children of the Thugs are under
surveillance, and not allowed to go out into the country,
lest the seeds of this infernal band should again be spread
over the land, and its horrid crimes be repeated. Here we
were to make arrangements for the only formidable jour-
ney that we encountered during all our travels, and it was
a journey which we have occasion to remember until the
journey of life is over. We were not shut up to Hobson's
choice in regard to the mode of conveyance, a variety of
vehicles and of motive power being presented to our selec-
tion. There was the palanquin, the ancient carriage of In-
dia, a long black box in which one person can lie down
but can not sit up, and which becomes exceedingly tire-
some after traveling fifty or a hundred miles. It is carried
by coolies, four at a time, and if the journey is designed to
be speedy, relays are required every few miles. They
travel nifjlit and day, though in the warm seasons it is cus-
Y
338 AROUND THE WORLD.
tomary to journey only by night, and seek repose and
shade durino; the dav. Tlien there were the bullock-carts,
di'awn by oxen, which are sometimes very fleet, but which,
in a long journey, make slow progress. As time is of little
account in Oriental countries, the bullock-carts are a favor-
ite mode of conveyxmce. The distance between Jubbul-
pore and Nagpore is made by these carts in four or five
days, which was enough to condemn them in our eyes.
The conveyance that we selected, chiefly on account of
speed, was the dah-gJuwry, the government post-carriage,
which resembles the palanquin, although larger, is set on
wheels, and drawn by animals that are dignified by the
name of horses, three abreast. It has this advantage over
the palanquin : it can be arranged so as to enable one to sit
up, but in general it is furnished with a flat bottom, on
which a mattress is spread. The passengers (each gharry
will accommodate two, and no more) lie down with their
feet toward the horses, and are dri'. en night and day al-
most at railroad speed, and without any regard to bruised
muscles or broken bones.
The entire distance, 167 miles, we were assured would be
made in twenty-four hours, and, as time was something
more than money, we made choice of the dak-gharry, not
wholly unaware of the severe pommeling to which we
must be subjected, though not altogether aware of the se-
vere trial of physical strength and endurance that we must
pass through. Accordingly, I engaged two gharries at the
government post-oflice, one for myself and wife, and anoth-
er for the young lieutenant, paying one hundred rupees, or
fifty dollars, for each, a large price considering the wear
and tear of flesh, for which no allowance was made. The
rest of the party engaged gharries of a private company
which run their vehicles over the same route.
It was late in the afternoon wlien we were fairly launch-
ed. Going out from Jubbulpore for several miles we met
large numbers of natives, some of them gayly dressed, re-
turning from a Hindoo festival whicli they had been cele-
LODIANA TO B02IBA Y. 339
brating on the hills. Four miles from the town we de-
scended into the valley of the ISTerbudda, w^here the scenery
became more attractive. The "Marble Eocks," situated
on the river some miles below the ghaut at which we cross-
ed, are celebrated in the annals of this part of India for the
bold and striking views of which they form a part, and are
a place of great resort.
During the whole journey the horses were changed every
five miles, and every time that fresh ones were put in it ap-
peared as if they had just been caught wild, and were then
for the first time put into harness and introduced to the
gharry. The first move was for all tliree to attempt to
jump over each other at the same moment of time, an ex-
ploit the absurdity and impossibility of which they had not
learned by years of experiment. The next move was for
half a dozen natives to seize hold of the wheels, and two or
three to take the horses by the head, while all together set
up a hideous shout that frightened the miserable beasts out
of their senses, and away they went as on the wings of the
wind, under the lash and shout of the driver the whole five
miles of each post, seldom going at a less rate than ten, and
often, I believe, twelve miles an hour. We were driven
with such reckless speed over the plains and down the hills
that at evei-y new stage we committed ourselves anew to
the care of Providence, confident that, without special pro-
tection, we must be dashed into our original elements before
the next five miles were up. But we came through alive.
A great part of the distance, especially that which we
passed in the night, is a jungle, which, like every available
spot in India, is still kept for raising tigers. At one of the
stations we learned that two soldiers, who were on duty at
the place, had been carried off not long before by tigers,
and eaten. We concluded that there were two tigers at
least in that part that were not hungry ; but, as night was
coming on, I took from my traveling-bag, that had been my
pillow, an excellent revolver, that I had not loaded since
leaving home, and,. carefully inserting five metallic car-
340 AROUND THE WOULD.
tridges, lay down to sleep in the gliariy, fully prepared, as
I supposed, for savage beasts and for still more savage men,
of which there are such in India even since the Thugs have
been suppressed. The next morning I found, on examina-
tion, that in the dim twilight, and in my inexperience with
fire-arms, more especially with metallic cartridges, I had
inserted the latter with the powder toward the muzzle and
the ball toward the stock, so that, if we had been attacked
during the night by one of the rovers of the jungle, I should
have shot myself, and not the tiger.
About two o'clock at night I became delightfully con-
scious that we were making no headway in our journey.
The sensation was so peculiar and refreshing I did not
move to inquire into the cause even after we had been ly-
ing still for half an hour or more. Presently I heard a
gentle tap at the sliding-door of the gharry, and the coach-
wan calling '■'■ sahib! sahib P'' (gentleman, or sir) in those
pereuasive tones which in the East usually mean backshish.
Supposing we were merely changing drivers, and that he
was rousing me to obtain a fee, which he had no business
to do at that unseemly time of the night, I made no answer.
The coachwan retired, but it was not long before I heard
the same gentle call — '■^sahibf sahih P"* I rose, and found
that the tire of one of the wheels of the other gharry had
broken, and I was summoned to a council of war by the na-
tives to determine what was best to be done in the emer-
gency. We were happily in a small native village, and not
in a jungle ; but we might almost as well have been in the
wilderness, so far as repairing damages was concerned.
We found a miserable little smithy, but our only light was
obtained from a string in a cup of oil, which scarcely made
the dusky natives visible, and afforded little aid in mending
the broken wheel. They had already removed the tire, and
were preparing to weld it and put it on again — a very nice
operation for an experienced wheelwright, and an impossi-
bility in the circumstances. I remonstrated ver}" fluently
in good English against their undertaking so difiicult an
LODIANA TO BOMBAY.
341
operation, assuring them that they could not accomplish it
if they took a week for it, all of which they understood as
perfectly as if it had been Hebrew. After three hours
spent in ineffectual attempts to repair the break, they aban-
doned it as a hopeless undertaking, substituted a mail-cart
for the other gharry, and we resumed the journey.
At fi-equent stages on the road the government has erect-
ed bungalows, where travelers can rest during the day, or
spend the night, provided they carry their own beds and
bedding. They are supplied with a few articles of furni-
ture, the chief of which is a bedstead, and with the neces-
sary means of preparing a meal, but they are not intended
as hotels. About nine o'clock in the morning we reached
the dah bungalow at Seonee, midway between the two ends
of the journey, and paused for the first and only time on
the route, excepting during the delay connected with the
accident to the gharry. At this place one of the wheels of
my own gharry gave ominous signs of failure, and the re-
mainder of the journey we made with increased speed, and
with increasing apprehensions of a wreck. But, through
the mercifid care of Providence, we reached the end of our
ride in safety — more dead than alive, it is true, but with the
vital spark ready to be resuscitated, as it was by a refresh-
ing dinner and a good night's rest at Nagloo's Residency
Hotel, in the pleasant town of Xagpore.
This was a journey that I would not undertake again for
a large part of India; but, now that it is over and safely ac-
complished, we look back upon it with mingled feelings of
pleasure and pain, in which the former predominate — pleas-
ure in the thought that it is safely over, and that we enjoy-
ed one of the last opportunities that could be afforded to
any foreigners of sympathizing with the multitudes who,
through all the past ages, have been pounded almost into
gelatine by traveling in the dak-gharry over the hills of
Western India. It is a luxury which can never again be
enjoyed on any of the long routes. Travelers will hereaft-
er pass from Calcutta to Bombay, by the way of Allahabad,
342 AROUND THE WORLD.
without leaving the cars. The dak-gharry is among tlie
joys departed never to return.
We were still 500 miles from Bombay, but we had the
rail before us all the way. Our route lay through the
Mahratta country, famous in the wars of the past centu-
ries, and even in the conquest of the country by the Brit-
ish. All day long, every few^ miles we came upon the old
forts standing in the midst of the plains, some of them
having walls of great heio-ht. The time was when in this
whole region no one was safe unless shut in by the walls
of a strong fortress. One conqueror after another has
swept over it with his armies, and even rival petty chief-
tains have made pre}^ of the people and their substance.
It is now devoted to the arts of peace.
The country through which we w^ere passing is the great
cotton region of India, a large portion of the land having
been appropriated to its cultivation since the rebellion in
our own country compelled the English manufacturers to
look for a supply from some other source than the United
States. India is the oldest cotton - growing and cotton-
manufacturing country in the world. It produced cotton
thousands of years ago, and from the earliest accounts cot-
ton fabrics have formed the clothing of the inhabitants.
Nothing equal to the finer qualities and the long staple of
our Southern States has been produced, but it affords a
large supply of the shorter staple. The production was
immensely stimulated by the war in America cutting off
the supply. The value of the crop of 1859-60 exported
from India was £5,637,624. In 1864-5 it had risen to
£37,573,637. After this there was a great falling off in
its value, though not in quantity, the exports of the crop
for 1869-70 amounting to £19,079,138.
"We were at Egutpoora, nearly 100 miles from Bombay,
early in the morning. From this point onward the road
passes through mountain scenery bold and striking, a per-
fect contrast to the most of India over which we had trav-
eled. Within a few miles we passed througli a long sue-
BOMBA T.
343
cession of tunnels, scarcely emerging from one before we
plunged into another. Tliis portion of the railway was
immensely expensive, but it was among the first projected
in the grand system of railways for opening up and forti-
fying the country. It connects the port of Bombay not
only with the Deccan^but with the whole of northern and
eastern India. Arriving at Bombay at eleven in the morn-
ing, we found pleasant quarters at the Byculla Hotel, in
the suburbs of the city.
BOMBAY.
BoiviBAY is situated at the extremity of an island of the
same name. It was taken by the Portuguese after the
capture of Goa, in the early part of the sixteenth century,
and ceded in 1661 to Charles II., of England, as part of
the dowry of his bride, the Infanta Catharine. King
Charles gave it to the East India Company a few years
later, and in 1865 it was made the seat of the chief presi-
dency. On the opening of communication with England
hy the Bed Sea route it received a new impetus, and its
importance, if not its supremacy as the commercial capi-
tal of India, has been secured by the opening of railroad
communication with all parts of the country. Its popula-
tion and commerce have rapidly increased until it has be-
come the successful rival of Calcutta. It is now a delicate
matter to express an opinion in India as to which is the
chief city, but it will be the fault of the people of Bom-
bay alone if tliey do not take the lead. Admirably loca-
ted, both in regard to its internal and foreign trade, at the
western gateway of India, it is in direct communication
with the richest parts of the country, and at the nearest
point of communication with the whole western world.
344 AROUND THE WORLD.
Calcutta, on the other hand, is at the far side of India,
near the head of tlie Bay of Bengal, and 100 miles from
the mouth of a river which can be entered by large ves-
sels only at certain stages of the tide. Bombay has a fine
open harbor — a little too open, it is true, during the preva-
lence of the southwest monsoons, but it may be farther
protected without great expense, and the navies of the
world might here ride at anchor. As one of the results of
the American war, which opened a market for the cotton
of India, and other causes, the city became inflated in 1865
with the promises of a golden harvest, and launched out
into extravagant speculations, as if the business of the
world was to be concentrated at this point. But the bub-
ble burst almost as soon as it was blown, and a disastrous
collapse occurred. Waste lands, that had commanded enor-
mous prices, were suifered to lie waste, and those which
were bought at fabulous rates while still under water were
never reclaimed from the sea. The people of Bombay be-
came sadder, but wiser, from this experience, and now the
city is on a career of assured prosperity. All my observa-
tions convinced me that it is destined to be the great city
of India, if not of the whole Eastern world.
In its general aspect Bombay is the most lively city of
the Indies. Its population of nearly a million is very mul-
tifarious. Nearly all the tribes of Hindostan are repre-
sented, Hindoos, Mussulmans, Parsees, Indo-Britons, Indo-
Portuguese, Europeans of various nations, Americans, and
natives of Western Asia. The costumes of the people are
varied and gay beyond description. The streets are throng-
ed by a busy multitude on foot, on horseback, and in car-
riages, many of the latter gaudily trimmed and drawn by
bullocks.
The city is not so remarkable for its public buildings or
its public institutions as Calcutta, and for the reason that
the latter has been the real capital of the country, the seat
of the East India Company, where its wealth was concen-
trated, and in a great measure expended. But some por^
BOMBA Y.
345
A miLLOCK CAKKIAGE.
tions of the town, especially that known as the Fort, which
is commensurate with the ancient bounds of tlie city, con-
tain many fine buildings. The town-hall is a massive struct-
ure, with apartments not only for the public service, but for
scientific and liistorical purposes. The rooms of the Royal
Asiatic Society, with its library and museum, are full of in-
terest to every intelligent stranger who desires to study the
past as well as the present of India. The Elphinstone Cir-
cle, named from the Hon. Mountstuart Elphinstone, who
succeeded to the Bombay presidency in 1819, is the Wall
Street of Bombay, and the centre of its most important
commercial operations. The government was erecting new
and spacious buildings for public use, and the whole for-
eign portion of the town was putting on the promise of
coming greatness.
The Parsees, numbering more than 100,000 of the popu-
lation of Bombay, embody a great part of the wealth of the
city, and are the most intelhgent and enterprising of the
natives of the country. No small part of the mercantile
346 ABOUND THE WORLD.
business of the East is in their liands, and leadhig houses
have branches in Paris and London, as well as in Eastern
Asia. Their dress is peculiar, partly European and partly
Oriental. They have a sort of caste like the Hindoos, and
are forbidden to marry excepting among their own people ;
nor do they usually eat what has been cooked by one of
another religion. A well-educated Parsee gentleman and
his wife were among my companions in crossing the Pacific
Ocean. They mingled freely with the other passengers
and ate at the same table with them. On returning to
Bombay, he was called to account for violating the rules
of his race, and his situation became so uncomfortable in
consequence that he removed to London to take charge of
a branch of the house with which he is connected. With
all their intelligence, the Parsees are still greatly under the
power of their ancient superstitions, and there are no more
bigoted religionists among the tribes of Asia, not even
among the Mohammedans. In their religion they are dis-
ciples of Zoroaster, who lived several centuries before Christ,
and they are usually known as fire-worshipers, reverencing
the sun, moon, and other heavenly bodies, and even lire
itself, although the more intelligent do not admit that they
pay actual worship to these objects. The distinction is
very much the same with that of Romanists in regard to
the worship of images ; the intelligent and truly devout
may use the image as an aid to the imagination, while the
ignorant worship nothing but the image. In their temples
fire is kept continually burning by priests, who maintain
that it has never been extinguished. They feed it with
fragrant spices, and treat it as if it were a god. The priests
even cover the lower part of their faces with a mask when
they approach the sacred fire, lest they sliould defile it with
their breath. Their reverence for fire forbids them even
to burn tobacco into smoke.
Nothing connected with the Parsees is more peculiar
than tlieir treatuient of the dead. Tliey have a large cem-
etery on Malabar Hill, near Bombay, the highest ground in
BOMBAY.
347
the vicinity, selected on this account, that no one may look
into it. The very approaches to the spot are guarded with
the most jealous care by men who form a distinct class or
caste, and who, from one generation to another, are not per-
mitted to mingle with the rest of the people. The ceme-
tery contains a building devoted to the preservation of the
sacred fire, buildings for the priests and those who have
charge of the dead, and five round stone towers called
" Towers of Silence," each about sixty feet in diameter,
and forty or fifty in heiglit. These are the receptacles of
the dead.
When a death occurs, the body is taken to the gate of
the cemetery and delivered into the hands of the priests.
iS^o one is allowed to enter the walls with the dead. After
a prescribed ceremonial, the body is taken to one of the
towers and laid on a grate upon the top of one of these
towers. A flock of hideous vultures is always waiting to
devour the flesh, and the bones fall into the body of the
tower below in an indiscriminate heap. It is the most re-
volting mode of disposing of the remains of departed
friends of which I have any knowledge, but the Parsees
adhere to it with a tenacity which borders on fanaticism.
Through the influence of the Parsee gentleman to whom
I have alluded, we obtained an order from a high oflicial
in their communit}- to visit the cemetery. Even witli this
order we had much difiiculty in gaining admittance, and
were constantly followed and closely watched by the at-
tendants. We walked through the grounds, which were a
picture of desolation, and saw the vultures seated upon the
towers, anxiously awaiting their human prey ; but the arca-
na of the place were carefully guarded. We had already
seen more than often falls to the lot even of the Parsees
themselves.
The Hindoo mode of disposing of the dead is far less re-
pulsive. We had been dining one evening with a friend
whose bungalow was on Malabar Hill, the most beautiful
of the suljurbs of Bombay. The drive was through groves
348 AROUND THE WORLD.
of cocoanut palms, and the bungalow was embowered in a
luxuriant growth of vines and trees, making the place one
like fairy-land. It was late when we returned to town.
Across the bay, on the Bombay side, a row of brilliant lights
stretched along the shore. In the deep stillness of mid-
night and the strangeness of the whole scene, they had a
mysterious look, and, on inquiry, I learned that they were
the funeral piles on which the Hindoos were burning their
dead, a more appropriate use of fire than to worship it, and
a more becoming mode of treating the remains of the de-
parted, ashes to ashes, than the horrid funeral rites of the
Parsees.
We devoted one day while at Bombay to a visit to Ele-
phanta, a lonely island lying six or eight miles across the
bay. whicJi we reached by a sail-boat placed at our disposal
by Mr. Kittredge, of the American house of Stearns, Ho-
bart & Co. We were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Hard-
ing, and Mr. and Mrs. Ballantyne, of the American Mission,
Mr. Cliaimtrell, an English barrister, and Dr. Bhau Daji, a
Hindoo gentleman, to whom I was indebted not only for
many polite attentions, but for much scientific information,
as well as for many hours of pleasant intercourse. He has
a high standing as a man of science, and is in correspond-
ence with men of learning in this country and in Great
Britain. The caves of Elephanta are deserted Buddhist
temples, immense caverns cut into the solid rock. Colossal
Buddhist figures still remain in comparative preservation.
Their history is not known with any degree of certainty,
but they are supposed to have been made in the sixth cen-
tury.
Another day was spent, at the invitation of Dr. Bhan
Daji, in a visit to more extensive excavations in the moun-
tains of Ivenhari, twenty miles from Bombay. We left in
a carriage before daylight, and drove twelve or fourteen
miles to the mountains, where horses and palanquins were
awaiting us. I chose one of the latter, and, bestowing my-
self in the box, was soon sound asleep, and woke up in the
BOMBAY.
340
wilderness as we were approaching the object of onr visit.
Like the caves of Elephanta, the excavations at Kenhari are
involved in mystery, but they are supposed to have formed
a Buddhist monastery. They are more than seventy in
number — one room a cathedral, with pillars and aisles, all
cut into the solid rock as square and smooth as the rooms
of a house — are scattered along the mountain in galleries,
and are not only deserted, but miles from human habita-
tions. No fitter place for anchoretic life and meditation
could be found if it were formerly as lonely as it is now.
One morning Dr. Bhau Daji invited us to his house, ro-
mantically situated in the midst of a grove of tall cocoanut
palms, to witness the performances of a troop of Indian
jugglers. We had seen a similar performance at Delhi, at
the house of an English gentleman with whom we dined,
but were in no wise impressed with their superiority to their
own craft in other lands. Those at Bombay were more ex-
pert, but not one of them could equal Hermann, the pres-
tidigitateur, in the variety and skill of his marvelous feats.
From what I saw and all I heard, I am inclined to believe
that the tricks of Indian jugglers, so celebrated the world
over, appear more wonderful as rehearsed in the stories of
travelers than when seen on their own ground. The great
feat which I have often heard described as the marvel, if
not the miracle of such performances in the East, the al-
most instantaneous growth of a mango-tree from the seed
to fruit-bearing, in the dry earth, before your eyes, I saw
twice in India, but I saw enough to make it clear that it
was mere sleight-of-hand. There were other performances
that were to me more wonderful than this, in Avhich there
was no attempt at deception.
While we were enjoying the delightful shade of the palms
in the compound of our host, the servants ran as nimbly as
monkeys up the tall cocoanut-trees, and threw down the
fresh fruit for our entertainment. But neither the milk
nor the meat is at all tempting in any stage. I prefer to
leave the cocoanuts to be manufactured into oil, for which
purpose they are raised all over the East.
350 AROUND THE WORLD.
Among the curious places in Bombay was the hospital
for aged and infirm animals. It was open to all races save
the human, from the elephant down to the smallest domes-
tic animal. If any poor dog happens to break his leg, or
meets with any disaster, or is overtaken by sickness, he will
find provision here for his comfort and relief, if he can be
relieved. A large square in the midst of the city, with suit-
able shelter, is devoted to this benevolent though rather
sentimental object. The numerous invalids and unfortu-
nates were any thing bat a pleasing sight, and it appeared
to me more of a work of mercy to end their misery than to
prolong their days.
BOMBAY TO CAIRO.
Whatever may be the feelings of the reader, I leave this
land of the Hindoo and the Mohammedan, of palms and
palaces, with the deepest regret that time will not wait
while I tarry longer among its strange scenes. Thus far it
has been the most interesting country that we have reached,
not alone nor chiefly for its Oriental and tropical scenery ;
nor for its venerable and varied histoiy, running back
through thousands of years, and down through changing
dynasties, some of which liave been maintained in splendor
such as the world has not seen elsewhere ; nor for the re-
markably diversified character of its numerous races, wliicli
altogether make up one of the most curious pieces of mo-
saic that the population of the globe will furnish ; nor for
the monuments of the past, which exceed in beauty, if not
in magnificence, all that the ages have left in other lands ;
but still more interesting in the changes that are now tak-
ing place in the condition of its people, and in the promises
for the future which every where meet the eye and strike
the eaj\
BOMBAY TO CAIRO. 35;[
Not the glory of the past, the age of " barbaric gohl and
pearls," but a greater glory is yet to rest on India. I have
looked with the deepest satisfaction npou the signs of a
coming higher civilization, and the evidences that the light
that is to lighten all ]iations is dawning upon its two hun-
dred millions. India is not now altogether a land of dark-
ness. The mass of its people are still bowing down to its
gods of wood and of stone, or following the false prophet,
but from Cape Comorin to the Himalayas the Sun of right-
eousness is lighting the peaks here and there, and giving
sure promise of the coming day when Christianity shall tri-
umph over superstition and false religion.
I rejoice heartily that India is under British rule. AVliat-
ever may be the errors, or even the crimes of the past, in
connection with the extension of British arms, and in the
complicity of the governing powers with idolatry, now that
they have been so fearfully expiated in the mutiny of 1S5T,
and since the power has passed directly into the hands of
the. home government, a new destiny awaits the land and
the people.
I had timed our arrival at Calcutta so as to spend in In-
dia the only two months of the year in which one can
travel with comfort, December and January ; and our de-
partui'e, so as to avoid the stifling heat of the Eed Sea,
which becomes almost insupportable in summer. On the
24th of January we went on board the steamer Krishna,
which was lying at anchor in the harbor. The waters of
the bay were quiet, but outside we had a taste of the sea.
As we passed the light-ship, a boat came off to the Krishna
to put a passenger on board. It was already dark ; the
waves were running high ; and as a sailor in the boat
caught the rope that was thrown him, the boat receded
with a returning swell, he was jerked into the angry sea
and left struggling with the waves, the boat drifting far
astern. Almost instantly the first officer of the Krishna
jumped into the sea to rescue the man, and then there
were two in great danger. They clung desperately to the
352 AROUND THE WORLD.
rope, and twice were drawn to the ship and part way up
its side, when a returning wave overwhehned them, and
they dropped again into the seething waters, the officer cry-
ing out " I'm done," and apparently giving up all hope. It
was a frightful scene. In the darkness there seemed little
prospect of saving either of them, and w^th anxious hearts
we peered into the black waters, and could only pray that
a merciful God might strengthen their arms and rescue
them from what appeared an almost inevitable fate. The
officer at length caught a buoy which was thrown over-
board, the sailor clung to the rope, a boat was lowered,
and, to the great joy of all, the men w^ere both brought on
board. It was all the work of a few minutes, but it seem-
ed an age as I watched them in their struggle for life, and
when they were safe I felt as if I had myself been rescued
from a watery grave.
Once off the coast, the voyage through the Indian Ocean
as far as Aden, 1660 miles, was without any striking inci
dent. A strong northeast monsoon kept our ship steady,
helped us on our course, and supplied us with 'plenty of
fresh air, a great blessing in these Eastern seas. Our pas-
sengers were chiefly East India officers, in the militarj^ and
civil service, with their families, and as we gradually be-
came acquainted, the time passed pleasantly aw^ay. On the
morning of the sixth day the shores of Arabia were in
sight, and toward evening we descried the heights of Aden,
ninety miles to the east of the entrance of the Eed Sea. It
is a mass of rock, connected with the main land by a low,
sandy neck, and towering up to the height of 1776 feet.
It was held by the Portuguese when they were stretching
their arms and their commerce into the East. It was cap-
tured by the Turks in 1538, and held for three centuries;
but in 1839, for an outrage committed upon a vessel sail-
ing under English colors, the British government seized the
place, strengthened its fortifications, and have kept a large
garrison upon it ever since. It is called the Gibraltar of
the East on account of its commanding position near the
BOMBA Y TO CAIRO. 353
entrance to the Red Sea, and its great natural strength as
a fortress. Owing to some peculiarity in its situation, it
seldom rains at Aden, three or four years passing without
a drop falling from the clouds, even when it rains on the
main land near by. To supply this deficiency, the early
occupants of the place, how long ago is not known, but it
is conjectured as early as the sixth or seventh century, ex-
cavated immense tanks in the rocks, collecting the water
when it fell, and preserving it for years. These ancient
cisterns are still in use, and afford an abundant supply.
Not long after we had touched at Aden there came a heavy
rain, a fiood, wdiich not only filled the tanks, but swept
away houses, and caused great destruction of property.
We took on board a small flock of Arabian sheep of the
broad-tail species, the finest mutton in tlie East, and an im-
portant addition to our commissariat, and were again un-
der way. Passing through the Straits of Bab-el-Mandeb
(tlie Gate of Tears, or the Gate of Desolation, as it is va-
riously interpreted), we entered the sea which, in all ages,
has been a terror to navigators. This narrow strip of wa-
ter covers a small space on the map, but it is more than
1200 miles in length, making a voyage of five or six days
by steam, during which the shore is seldom seen on either
side. Its navigation is diflicult and perilous. The water is
of great depth, but rocks and islands are scattered through
it, and coral reefs abound, which seldom lift their heads
above the waves to warn the sailor of his danger. The
shores are almost entirely destitute of light-houses, and are
occupied by not the most hospitable races of men, where
inhabited at all. High winds prevail a great part of the
year, making the navigation particularly undesirable for
sailing vessels, which are now seldom seen.
Near the Straits, which are about twelve degrees nortli
of the equator, we had another view of the constellation of
the Southern Cross, which, in the clear skies of the Red
Sea, was very brilliant in the early morning. The first
evening we were off the town of Mocha, on the Arabian
Z
354: AROUND THE WORLD.
side, a name suo-o-estive of o-ood coffee, wliich lived in our
memories, but formed no part of our experience on ship-
board. The second day we were off the Zebayer Islands,
called the Twelve Apostles, nearly opposite the landing-
place of the Bi-itish expedition against Abyssinia. "We had
on board one of the heroes of the war, who had served also
with distinction in the suppression of the mutiny in. India.
He bore many marks of his heroism, having, as it was said,
been cut to pieces and put together again. We afterward
fell in with one of the original captives of King Theodore.
He had his chains with him, and was bearing them home
as a trophy. Farther on we passed Djiddah, the port of
Mecca.
Two or three days before reaching Suez we encounter-
ed a fierce north wind, which never subsided until we were
on shore. Every few minutes, on the last day or two of
the voyage, a heavy sea would break over the bow of the
ship, washing her decks from stem to cabin, which, with
the cold blasts from the north, drove us all under shelter,
and many to their berths. Nor were the high winds, and
the coral reefs on which the British steamer Carnatic had
struck and gone down a few weeks before, a large number
of the passengers perishing, our only perils. In the midst
of the gale and in the midst of the rocks our captain pre-
pared liimself to meet the danger by a drunken carousal,
and became crazy with rum, one or two of his officers fol-
lowing his example. How we came safely through we
never knew, excepting that we had the guidance and pro-
tecting care of the great Pilot who holds the winds in his
fists and the waters in the holloAV of his hand. This cap-
tain afterward fell overboard in the harbor of Bombay and
was drowned.
It was not until the evening of the sixth day from our
entering the Straits, and the twelfth from our leaving
Bombay, that we dropped anchor at Suez — it may have
been upon one of the chariot - wheels of Pharaoh. The
sun liad set before we reached the anchorage, which is five
BOMBAY TO CAIRO.
355
miles from the head of the gulf and from the town. As
we could not go ashore until we had been inspected by the
health ofHcer, we fired heavy guns and threw up rockets,
but there was no response, and w^e were compelled to
spend another night upon the sea. But we were at rest,
and the perils of the voyage were over.
Suez is not an insigniiicant town. It has a population
of several thousands ; its bazars are well supplied with
goods for Oriental consumption, and there is more of an
air of activity and business about it than one might expect
in such a desert region. When the overland route to In-
dia was opened a few years since, Suez had a revival of
the traffic it enjoyed before the discovery of the route to
the Indies by the Cape of Good Hope ; but the more re-
356 ABOUND THE WORLD.
cent opening of the Suez Canal may be another blow to its
prosperity, by making all transhipment of passengers and
goods needless.
Immediately on landing and getting comfortably estab-
lished in the Suez Hotel, I took my Bible to read over the
inspired account of the Exodus from Egypt, and went out
to compare the account with the face of the countiy. It
was the same land over which Moses led the children of
Israel more than thirty -three centuries before. The same
sands were still there, though the footprints of the depart-
ing host had been obliterated ; the same sea rolled before
us ; the same mountains frowned from the southeast ; the
general aspect of the scene was unchanged. It was not
difficult to obtain a perfectly satisfactory idea of the route
by which the Israelites came thus far in following the
cloudy pillar, although the precise point at which the mi-
raculous crossing of the sea took place is still one of the
problems of sacred geography. There is no doubt in re-
gard to the route by which they came from Succoth to the
sea. The path is clearly defined by the features of the
country. A precipitous mountain range stretches from
the shore diagonally to the northwest, leaving a sandy
plain between it and the sea, from which they could not
diverge. All this was so clear that, as I looked over the
vast plain, I could almost imagine I saw the great host on
their march, the pillar of cloud leading them on by day.
and the great curtain hung up by the hand of God to pro-
tect them from their pursuers by night. But where was
the point at which they heard the command of God to go
forward, and were so marvelously delivered from their en-
emies ?
Dr. Robinson is of the opinion that the crossing took
place very near the site of the modern city of Suez ; but
his reasoning savors rather of rationalistic explanation than
of a full acknowledgment of the grandeur of the miracle
by which God effected this deliverance of In's people. He
explains away the miracle by referring it to natural and
BOUfBAY TO CAIRO. 357
secondary causes, and in order to do so locates the cross-
ing where the sea is now scarcely half a mile wide, and
only deep enough to be navigable. It is true there are in-
dications that the sand has encroached upon the sea, and
that the latter was liere more than a mile wide in former
times ; but even this scarcely makes the necessity of a stu-
pendous miracle evident. From the point selected by Dr.
Robinson they might have moved several miles farther
south, or have passed np to the head of the sea farther
north, as the shores in either direction are perfectly smooth.
Every thing in the divine record shows that they were
shut up to entering the bed of the sea at the very spot on
which they stood when the Lord said unto Moses, " Where-
fore criest thou unto me? Speak unto the children of Is-
rael that they go forward ; but lift thou up thy rod and
stretch out thine hand over the sea and divide it, and the
cliildren of Israel shall go on dry ground in the midst of
the sea."
From an examination of these localities, it appeared to
me much more probable that they followed the sandy plain
to the south, where the sea and the precipitous mountain
range converge, and where it was impossible for them to
move excepting in one direction. Pharaoh and his hosts
were in their rear ; they had fled until they could flee no
farther ; a mountain wall was on one side, and the deep sea
upon the other : God divided the waters before them, and
they passed through the midst of the sea.
At the point to which I refer the Red Sea must be five
or six miles in width, and of great depth ; but the whole ac-
count indicates that the crossing took place where the sea
was wide. The Egyptians, pursuing the Israelites, " went
in after them to the midst of the sea, even all Pharaoh's
horses, his chariots, and his horsemen." It was in the midst
of the sea that they proposed to turn back when they found
that the Lord was fighting for the Israelites against the
Egyptians. They turned and fled ; but when the sea came
back to its bed, of the vast army that had gone into it " there
358 AROUND THE WORLD.
remained not so much as one of tliem." The simple narra-
tive, the Song of Moses which he sang with the children of
Israel to celebrate their deliverance, the allusions to it in
other parts of the Holy Scriptures, show that it was a sub-
lime miracle, not accomplished by a concurrence of ordina-
ry means, and therefore that there was no occasion for select-
ing a place where it could be easily performed, but rather
the contrary. The drying up of the waters was not effect-
ed alone by the strong east wind, for " the children of Israel
went into the midst of the sea upon the dry gromid, and
the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand and
on their left." In the Song of Moses it is said, " The floods
stood upright as an heap, and the depths were congealed in
the heart of the sea." This is not all poetic imagery.
While we were yet in the far East, on the way to Egypt,
the ceremonial of the formal opening of the canal connect-
ing once more the waters of the Mediterranean and the
Eed Seas took place, but the passenger lines were not yet
established when we reached Suez. In connection with
two or three English gentlemen, one of them a member of
Parliament who had been sent out to investigate the ex-
penses of the Abyssinian War, we chartered a small steam-
er at Suez to explore the canal, laid in a stock of provisions
at the hotel, and left Suez about eight o'clock in the morn-
ing, expecting to be at Ismailia, fifty miles distant, by three
in the afternoon. We steamed quietly along, stopping here
and there to examine the work, climbing the high walls of
sand thrown up on both sides to look out over the desert.
We were well on our way toward the end of our inland
voyage when an ominous gathering of steamers loomed up
before us, very suggestive of one of those dead-locks pre-
dicted before the opening. We would fain have convinced
ourselves that it was a mirage of the desert, but it was no
unsubstantial apparition. We found, on coming to a halt,
that the stoppage was produced by a float made fast in the
middle of the canal for the pui-pose of blasting rock at the
bottom, and that no craft could pass until the drilling was
UOJIBA Y TO CAIHO.
359
completed and the blast exploded, which would probably
be near midnight — as it proved, and we did not arrive at
Ismailia, which is on one of the lakes of the canal, until one
or two o'clock in the morning.
NIGHT ON THE CAHAL.
The Suez Canal was not a new idea to the man by whose
energy and perseverance the seas have now become practi-
cally connected. It was projected by the ancient Egyp-
tians, who must have had some sort of communication
through the lakes across the isthmus. In 1798, Napoleon
I., then commanding the French expedition to Egypt, pro-
posed opening a ship canal through the same route. A
commission appointed to make the survey reported that the
Eed Sea was thirty feet lower than the Mediterranean,
which was considered a fatal objection to the enterprise ;
JDut the survey of the overland route to India in 1830 es-
tablished the fact that the two seas are on the same level.
360 AROUND THE WORLD.
M. de Lesseps was then in Egypt, attached to the French
consulate. He at once caught up tlie idea with enthusiasm,
and by indomitable perseverance carried it out to its pres-
ent success.
It was strange to find in old Egypt a city of palaces and
parks not more than five years old ; but such is Ismailia.
It has sprung into existence by the touch of the Suez Canal,
with as much rapidity and a hundred-fold more stability,
and beauty than the towns on the Pacific Uailroad. From
this point we struck out into the desert, and for hours trav-
ersed the sandy waste, the picture of dreary desolation.
Once in a while we came upon some weary travelei's or
traffickers, who, with camels or donkeys, were dragging
their way through the sands ; but even this did not relieve
the prospect, for we pitied the travelers who Avere making
such slow progress, while we were driving onward by the
force of steam over an iron pathway.
We were going down to the valley of the Nile by the
same route which Abraliam took when he went into Egypt
to escape famine ; by which the sons of Jacob went down
to buy corn ; and by which the grand funeral procession
returned bearing the body of the patriarch to its resting-
place in the cave of Machpelah (where, I have no doubt, it
still slumbers undisturbed). At length we descried in the
distance an oasis, a grove of palms, a beautiful sight always,
but most beautiful when seen in the distance over a sandy
waste, bearing the promise of green fields, upon which we
presently came. They lie along the margin of the canal
dug to carry the refi-eshing waters of the Nile over a wider
extent of country.
We caught sight of Cairo just as the sun was going-
down beyond the Pyramids. Its golden light streamed
over the domes and minarets, pouring itself in a flood upon
the green fields and among the palms, and drawing a beau-
tiful contrast between the buildings and the dark foliage
in which they were set. The Citadel,with its Grand Mosque,
towered above the rest of the city, having for its back-
BOMBAY TO CAIRO. r^Ql
ground the gray mountain, the mausoleum of long-buried
generations. The broad valley of the Nile, dressed in liv-
ing green, was spread out before us. For a while we for-
got that we were travelers from a new world, and fell to
dreaming of the Pharaohs and the patriarchs, until that in-
tensely modern invention, the shrill whistle of the locomo-
tive, restored us to consciousness, and summoned us to alight
in the city of splendor, and dirt, and donkeys.
We had not seen the interior of our trunks since leaving
India, and among the most pleasing anticipations of reach-
ing Cairo was the general renovation that we were to un-
dergo when we should again be admitted to the arcana of
our luggage. But, on presenting our tickets, we were in-
formed that the lu2:2:ao:e had been left behind at Za^azio;,
half way to Ismailia. All we could do was to repair to
Shepheard's Hotel and wait until it should arrive, if it came
at all. I had no expectation of seeing it for at least two or
three days, being confident that it had gone off to Alexan-
dria and perhaps to London, with our English friends who
had left us at Zagazig to take the steamer. But, greatly to
my surprise, about ten o'clock in the evening the Egyptians
came marching into our room with the lost baggage on
their heads, and it was like getting home to get into our
trunks once more.
They have strange chambei'maids at Shepheard's. The
one who waited on our room and attended to all the vari-
ous duties of the calling, even to making of beds, was a
courtly Frenchman, dressed as if for a dinner-party, and
having the air of a refined and educated gentleman. It
was really embarrassing to accept his services. One of the
ladies, on arriving at the hotel, rang for the chambermaid.
This gentleman presented himself. Supposing him to be
the proprietor or chief clerk, she informed him that she had
rung for the chambermaid. He very politely replied, in
the best English he could command, " Madame, I am she."
362 AROUJSfD THE WOULD.
XXVIII.
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM.
My first expedition to Cairo, after recovering from the
fatigues of our long voyage and subsequent journeyings by
land, was to the Citadel ; not so much to see the Citadel it-
self or the Grand Mosque, but for the panoramic view of
the city and the valley of the Nile which it commands.
This view alone would repay a traveler for coming to this
far-off country, even if he should see nothing else. As you
stand upon the parapet, the whole of Cairo, ancient and
modern, lies at your feet. On the right are the tombs of
the Caliphs and the Mamelukes. On the left is what re-
mains of Old Cairo — called old by courtesy among the mon-
uments of thirty or forty centuries. Beyond the city flows
the Nile, encircling several beautiful islands. Farther on.
across the emerald valley, the Pyramids and the Sphinx sit
in silent majesty. A few miles up the Nile is the site of
ancient Memphis, now nearly obliterated. The hills on
either side of the broad valley, rising up as walls to say to
the overflowing stream, " Thus far shalt thou come, but no
farther," are inhabited by a silent multitude, unnumbered
millions, unknown and undecayed, who await the coming
of the resurrection morn just as they were laid in their
tombs thousands of years ago. In the midst of this scene
the old Nile flows on and overflows, as it has from the time
of the Pharaohs and from the time of the flood, if not fi'om
all time. As he gazes one can not help but people the val-
ley with the generations that liave come and gone, and fill
it up with the grand events that have transpired, until he
becomes bewildered with their variety and with the suc-
cession.
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM. 353
Taking a carriage at the hotel, and crossing the Nile by
the bridge of boats, we drove directly to the Pyi-amids,
which are about ten miles west from the river. The car-
riage-road is an embankment of Nile mud from ten to tif-
teen feet high, making it available during the overflow
and at all seasons of the year. It is shaded by large aca-
cias, and the carriage-track is usually in excellent order.
The viceroy has shown some sense in sparing a trifle from
the vast sums which he is expending upon his numerous
palaces for the construction and improvement of this road ;
and whether the natives bless him for it or not (it must
greatly interfere with the donkey business), all foreigners
who have occasion to visit the Pyramids will give him
their benedictions. He might immortalize himself by ef-
fecting one reform — the abatement or abolition of the
backshish nuisance. A horde of Arabs, nominally under
the control of a sheikh, who is paid in advance for their
services, stand ready to torment the money, if not the
life, out of every new victim who falls into their liands.
They give him no rest in making the ascent of the Pyra-
mid, nor will they suffer him to enjoy, undisturbed, the
magnificent prospect from the summit. And woe be to the
luckless traveler who is persuaded to enter the cliambers
with money in his pocket, and without a large measure of
courage and firmness.
There is no greater abatement to the pleasure of journey-
ing in the East than this never satisfied demand of money.
It meets the traveler at every turn, like the flies of the an-
cient plague, and comes up into his very bed-chamber, like
the frogs, and there is no escaping it. Backshish is not
asked as a matter of charity ; every one who renders the
slightest service, or who only makes an offer of service, or
who even looks at you, whether you wish him to look or
not, feels that he has established a claim to your purse, and
dogs your steps with incessant appeals which it is impossi-
ble to thrust aside. The claim is made with such ^•ehe-
mence and pertinacity, that you are almost persuaded to
364
AROUND THE WOULD.
THE PYRAMIDS.
believe that in some ^vaj the miserable creatures who
swarm around and follow you from place to place have
become entitled to every thing you possess. If vou could
only purchase immunity by paying liberally there would
be a satisfaction in doing it, but, like the flies in the fable,
if you drive one swarm away, another at once takes its
place.
I will not tax the reader with a description of the Pyra-
mids, with which every one is familiar; nor of the Sphinx
whicli sits a few hundred yards distant, looking out upon
tlie valley of the Nile as it has looked for thousands of
years, a strange monument to the strange ideas of the an-
cient Egyptians. After a stroll to the^ ruins of the old
temples— long covered by the sand, but now excavated-
we returned to Cairo over the same road, and through the
same green valley xvhich, at this season of the year, ap-
pears fresher and greener every time that the eye rests
upon it. Nor shall I here record our excursions to Old
CAIRO TO JERUSALE3r.
365
Cairo ; or to the new palaces of the Khedive, on which he
is expending milUons of treasure, as if the wealth of the
Indies were his ; or to the island of Rhoda, where we were
told the infant Moses was fonnd in the ark of bulrushes —
A STREET IN CAIEO.
QQQ ABOUND THE WORLD.
all these and other expeditions in the land of the Pharaohs
must remain unrecorded for the present.
Bria;ht and beautiful was the mornino- when we left Cai-
ro — but what morning is not bright in the East, the lands
of the sunrising? With the exception of one shower, of
which I have made mention, we had not seen a drop fall
from the clouds, and scarcely a cloudy day or hour, for
many months. It is not pleasant always to live under a
glowing sun, but smiling skies are usually welcome to a
traveler.
Through the crowd of donkeys and donkey -boys, por-
ters, and idlers, we made our way to and into the railway
station, and into the cars bound for Alexandria, and were
on our way toward the sea and toward other lands. Be-
fore leaving Cairo we heard that some home friends were
coming up that day, and, meeting the train at the half-way
station, I shouted their names while the cars were coming
to a halt. There came back a response, and for a few
brief moments we enjoyed one of those delightful inter-
views which can be had only thousands of miles away
from home, after havino; been strano-ers in strano;e lands
for many long months of travel. Our words of greeting
and parting, our inquiries and replies, our items of infor-
mation, which were confined to friends and matters of mu-
tual interest, M^ere brief and hurried, but into those few
minutes we crowded an amount of pleasure that might be
spread over many days of ordinary life. These stolen in-
terviews in the wide desert — these snatches of home de-
light, as one flits by another in a strange land, are not to
be measured by moments.
Our time in Alexandria we divided between the Cata-
combs, and Pompey's Pillar, and Cleopatra's Needle, and
ancient and modern Alexandria. No one who has ever
lived in the Republic of Letters can come to this spot and
not be harassed with the remenibrance of that wealth of
learning which was here committed to the flames. What a
treasure would the Alexandrian Library be at the present
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM. 35^
day ! If one such repository had escaped the ravages of
war, and of barbarism, and of time, what a flood of light
would it shed upon the dark past ! More than one million
volumes are reputed to have been gathered in the Library
and Museum, the most of which were burned during the
wars of Julius Caesar. The Library was subsequently re-
stored and enlarged, but again the torch was applied by
the Moslem conquerors. When importuned to save it,
Omar coolly replied, " If these writings of the Greeks
agree with the Book of God, they are useless, and need not
be preserved ; if they disagree, they are pernicious, and
ought to be destroyed."
In what remains of ancient Alexandria there is nothing
more interesting than the site of ancient Pharos, the first
of those towers of light tliat now stud the shores of every
sea, like guardian angels watching over the mariners. The
light-house of Pharos is counted among the seven wonders
of the world, and well does it deserve a place in the cata-
alogue. It was a massive building of pure marble, erect-
ed by the orders of Ptolemy Philadelphus, whose name
was to be inscribed in the marble in front. The architect
made himself infamous, but did not detract from the fame
of his emperor, by a deceitful ruse. He engraved his own
name in the marble, covering it with stucco, on which he
placed the following inscription : " King Ptolemy to the
Saviour Gods for the use of those who travel by sea."
When, in the course of time, the stucco fell, it revealed an-
other more durable inscription : " Sostratus of Cnidos, the
son of Dexiphanes, to the Saviour Gods for all who travel
by sea." There is a light-house now standing on the same
site.
We were now bound as pilgrims for the Holy Land.
Embarking at Alexandria on the French steamer, Ave were
at Port Said, the Mediterranean entrance to the Suez Ca-
nal, early the next morning. Should the canal be a per-
manent success, this port will be an important station be-
tween the East and the West. Its formation was one of
368 AROUND THE WORLD.
the most difficult parts of the great enterprise. The sea at
this point being shallow, scarcely more than a mud flat,
it was necessary to construct a harbor, and, at the same
time, to excavate it to the proper de]3tli. Two breakwaters
were run out more than a mile into the sea, inclosing a
harbor. As there was no stone for their construction, the
great projector supplied the deficienc}' by making conci-ete
blocks of sand and cement, which look like blocks of gran-
ite. A light-house, wharves, and other structures at Port
Said have been built of the same material, and promise to
endure the action alike of air and water for ages.
We left Port Said at 5 o'clock P.M. Late at night I
was sitting on deck, enjoying the swell of the sea in the
open air in preference to the confinement of the cabin, and
by necessity became a listener to the conversation of two
English gentlemen who sat near me. One said to the
other, " What a host of Americans we have on board !"
(The Americans comprised about two thirds of the passen-
gers.) " Yes," replied his friend, " and it is the same wher-
ever we go in the East. I should think they had room
enough in their own country to wander in without coming
over here in such crowds. Why ! they can travel eight
days and eight nights in one train of cars without stopping,
but they do not seem contented even witli that." And they
voted that it was an unauthorized proceeding for American
sovereigns to invade that part of the world in such num-
bers, evidently forgetting that they had stepped off from
the little island of Great Britain without any better author-
ity. It was gratifying to me to observe tliat they had be-
come so familiar with the geography, or at least the extent
of our country, which few have been able to comprehend.
Several years since I met, in a social circle in London, a
very intelligent English lady, who, in the coui'se of our con-
versation, feeling called upon to make some remark in re-
gard to the country from which I came, said to me, " I see
by the papers that you have had a Are in America," appar-
ently regarding our continent as a small village compared
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM. 359
with the immense extent of the British Isles. Having re-
cently left New York, 1 felt bound to apologize for not hav-
ing been at the fire, or, at least, for not kno^\dng where it
was, and replied that I did not know what one she referred
to ; that we often burned a large part of our cities over to
build them up in better style. (It was a year in which there
had been extensive fires in Milwaukie, St. Louis, and San
Francisco, and other Western cities, some account of which
had met her eye without making any particular impression.)
To account for my ignorance, and to give her some idea
of the extent of our country, I stated that not long before
leaving New York I had taken a steamer in the interior of
Pennsylvania and sailed a hundred miles down the Monon-
gahela to Pittsburg, a thousand miles down the Ohio to the
Mississippi, another thousand down the Mississippi to New
Orleans, and that I was then a hundred and fifty miles from
the mouth of the stream on which I had first embarked.
This statement, although literally true, was such a tax upon
her credulity that it suddenly stopped the conversation.
She made no reply, evidently regarding me as another
Baron Munchausen. But an English gentleman, who had
traveled extensively in the United States, saw my unhappy
position, and came to my relief. He said he had been on
our Western rivers, and knew that wdiat I said was true. A
good understanding was restored, and all would have passed
off well enough had not a young New Yorker present felt
disposed to indulge in a bit of pleasantry and enlarge her
ideas of American scenery. Noting her surprise, he said.
"Madam, we have lakes in America so large that you might
take up the whole of England and drop it into one of them,
and it would not make a ripple on the shore." We were
then all at sea again, and were both set down as incorrigi-
ble illustrations of our national fondness for lar^e stories.
The United States of America are much better known
to the world at large than they were but a few years since.
Our late struggle for national life, affecting as it did, in one
way and another, nearly every land, has made the nations
A A
370 AMOUNB THE WOELD.
better acquainted with our geograpliy, onr resources, and
our strength, and never did the country or the nation stand
higher in the estimation of the world than at the present
time, if I may judge from the reception of Americans be-
fore and since the war. Fifteen or twenty years ago, as I
can testify from personal experience, Americans, in travel-
ing abroad, were constantly and often rudely placed upon
the defensive wlien their nationality became known, and
they are not in the habit of concealing it. It was not safe,
even by the wayside or in a railcar, to address an English-
man on the most ordinary topic without an introduction, or
unless he had first spoken ; and when the subject of our
country came up, it was the next thing to a declaration of
war. I have many interviews of this character in mem-
ory.
Our late war, in all its liistory and its results, developing
the indomitable energy of the people, their invincible at-
tachment to the government under which they have at-
tained to their present state of prosperity, and their inde-
pendence of all foreign alliances, has greatly elevated the
country in the eyes of the world. With no other people is
this cliange more apparent than with the children of what
■^•e are w^ont to call the mother country. I take pleasure
in bearing the most cordial testimony to the friendly bear-
ing of Englishmen in all parts of the world, and to their
friendly interest in our land. Time and again, as I have
been passing through Eastern countries, where the interests
of England are predominant, has the expression of such
feeling been made, and with it the acknowledgment that
while our war was in progress the sympathy of the more
intelligent and influential classes of Great Britain, at home
and abroad, was against us. They have as frankly con-
fessed the cause ; they thought we were becoming too pow-
erful ; they wished to see our strength divided, and for this
reason they desired the success of the rebellion. But they
now see their error, and heartily express the regret that
they held the views and took the course they did. Such is
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM. 371
the loo'ic of success. May this international amity, which
on both sides is now hearty, never again be interrupted !
It was evening when we left Port Said. When tlie
morning came 1 rose early, and with no little anxiety look-
ed out upon the sea. There is no harbor at Jaffa, and, as
the anchorage is a mile from the shore, unless the sea is
comparatively quiet, it is impossible to have any communi-
cation with the land. In rongli weather the steamer does
not stop, so that passengers are frequently carried by, and
those on shore who have come down fi'om Jerusalem to
take the steamer are compelled to remain another week,
and, perhaps, be doomed to a second disappointment from
the same cause. Happily for us, it was calm, and we reach-
ed the shore without difficulty.
Jaffa is built upon a rocky hill directly on the sea, and
the town rises so abruptly that it shows to good advantage.
But if there be any beauty in its situation or appearance,
the charm vanishes the moment one sets foot upon the
shore and enters its dirty, winding streets, to be jostled by
its miserable crowd of idle Arabs, camels, and donkeys.
Our experience in getting ourselves and our baggage to the
hotel in the American colony on the outskirts of the town,
attended by nearly a score of porters who demanded back-
shish for all sorts of services, actual and imaginary, would
make another amusing record, but there is not space for it.
So many Americans were arriving that the people were in-
dulging "great expectations," and nothing but princely
gifts would satisfy them. I tendered the leader of the
band that escorted us what was his due, but he indignantly
rejected it, demanding five times as much, and, when I qui-
etly put the money into my pocket, he and his whole crew
lashed themselves into a towering passion in true Oriental
style, and made all sorts of threatening demonstrations.
Yerily, it seemed as if the Philistines were upon us. In
the course of an hour or two he expressed his wilhngness
to accept what I offered, said he was satisfied, and added a
" Thank vou."
372 AROUND THE WORLD.
We tarried at this ancient harbor of Hiram and Solo-
mon, and of Jonah's embarkation for Tarshish, only long
enough to make ari-angenients for the journey to Jerusa-
lem. A new road had been recently built, well graded,
and affording a carriage-track twenty-five or thirty feet in
width the whole distance ; but the carriages were wanting,
and we must needs take the saddle. The distance from
Jaffa to Jerusalem is only thirty-six miles, but very few not
inured to the saddle can accomplish it in a single day, while
it is often done in eight or ten hours by those who have
been hardened to the exercise, and sometimes in less.
It was afternoon on Saturday when we w^ere prepared
for a start. We had sent forward to engage rooms at the
Russian convent at Kamleh, a few hours distant, where we
were to spend the Sabbath — a far more quiet and desirable
resting-place than the miserable city of Simon the Tanner.
We rode out of Jaffa through the orange-groves that sur-
round the city. The trees M'ere still loaded with the gold-
en fruit, and more magnificent specimens I have never seen.
One gentleman whom I met cut a twig having on it six or-
anges which together weighed between seven and eight
pounds, and another had tAvo oranges that weighed five
pounds.
Our course was over the beautiful plains of Sharon, then
covered with wheat-fields in the early green, and decked
with a profusion of wild flowers, and the ride was one of
indescribable interest. We were traversing the plain which
for thousands of years had been memorable in history and
storied in song ; the plain which had been trod by prophets
and apostles ; the plain which, time and again, in ancient
and in latter days, had shook to the tramp of marching-
hosts. The classic sea was behind us ; before us rose the
hills of Judea ; on our right, as far as the eye could reach
toward Philistia, stretched the plains of Ajalon.
The gorgeous sun of Palestine had gone down in glory
behind the sea before we reached our stopping-place, and,
but for the gathering sliadows, we would gladly liave lin-
CAIRO TO JERUSALEM.
373
gered longer on the plains to read upon them, and upon the
skies of Judea, the long and sacred history of the past. We
followed our dragoman through the winding streets of Ram-
leh, and were soon resting in our quarters on the house-top
of the Russian convent. The lower and only story of the
convent was appropriated to our horses and the pack-mules,
while we ascended to the roof, a broad pavement, around
which were rows of small rooms ready for our reception.
Here we spent our first Sabbath in Palestine. The stillness
of the wide plains surrounded us, scarcely broken by day
or by night save by the muezzin's musical voice from the
minaret adjoining, sounding forth the call to prayer. More
than once were we roused from our slumbers by the solemn
chant,
"Allah ekber! Allah ekber!
Eshedon en la Allah ilia Allah !"
This is repeated seven times by day, and as often by night.
The following is a translation of the usual form, varied
only on Friday, the Mohammedan Sabbath :
" God is great ! God is great !
I testify that there is no god but God.
I testify that Mohammed is the Prophet of God.
Come to peace ! Come to happiness !
God is great ! Tiiere is no god but God ! "
On the Sabbath we gathered from their tents, and from
the Latin convent, all the Americans whom we could find,
and had our usual services on the house-top. It was liter-
ally a sacred day, and one to be consecrated in memory.
We could enter into the feelings of the patriarch wdien, far
away from home, he fell asleep by the wayside, and awoke
to say, " Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not.
This is none other but the house of God, and this is the
gate of heaven."
We rose at two o'clock on Monday morning to resume
our journey beneath a brilliant sky. The stars were out in
hosts — the same stars which shone upon the land of Canaan
when Abraham first passed through it — the same stars
which were shining when One, the brightest of all, was add-
374 AROUND THE WORLD.
ed to their number. The moon was shedding its peaceful
light u^oii the plains as we struck out again upon the track
Zionward. Soft as is the evening moonlight, and suggest-
ive of sweet and sacred thoughts, the moonlight of the
morning is softer and more sacred. Entering, as we were,
upon the Holy Land, and traversing the beautiful plains of
Sharon up toward the Holy City, an awe of solemnity stole
over us, and almost in silence we rode onward, hour after
hour, until the east, toward Avhich our faces were turned,
became luminous with the advancing day.
And now the path became more rugged. We were as-
cending the mountains which are round about Jerusalem,
and which guard it like the walls of a citadel. We paused
but a short time to break our fast, and were again in the
saddle pressing on to stand within the gates of Zion. More
than once, as we reached an eminence, expecting to see from
it the city which was once " the joy of the whole earth,"
were we disappointed ; it was still beyond. At length our
eyes beheld the sight. As we reached the last height, the
whole familiar scene, with all its hallowed memories, was
before us. We needed no one to point out the various lo-
calities. It was a scene on which we had been looking
from childhood. We needed no one to say to us, That is
the Holy City; there, to the right, is Mount Zion, the city
of David ; there, to the left, wdiere rises the dome of tlie
Mosque of Omar, is the site of the ancient temple ; the
height beyond, now looking so barren and desolate, is the
Mount of Olives— the favorite resort of Him who came
from heaven to sojourn upon earth, and the spot last press-
ed by his sacred feet ere he ascended to his native skies.
The memories of the sacred scenes which made the places
so familiar even to our eyes came thronging upon our
hearts, until we could scarcely collect our thoughts enough
to imagine in what age of this old world we w^ere ap-
proaching the Holy City, or whether it had any age other
than that in which the most important events in its history
transpired.
THE HOL Y CITY. 3 75
And this is Jerusalem ! the mount where Abraham bound
Isaac in the wilderness, and laid him on the altar ! the city
of David and Solomon ! the spot which God selected for
the display of his glory in the Holy of Holies ! the place
where he was long manifest in the flesh — where Jesus lived
and taught ! the city in which he was arrested and tried a?
a malefactor! This is the spot where he was stretched
upon the cross, and where he cried " It is finished," and
bowled his head and died !
Slowly and silently we wound our way down the hill-
side, past the Russian hospice, along the ancient wall to the
Damascus Gate, passing through a strange crowd of frown-
ing Mussulmans to the Mediterranean Hotel, and then we
rested in Salem, the City of Peace. " Pray for the peace
of Jerusalem : they shall prosper that love thee. Peace be
within thy walls, and prosperity within thy palaces. For
my bretln-en and my companions' sakes, I will now say,
Peace be within thee."
THE HOLY CITY.
In the Hotel Mediterranean (it sounds almost profane to
speak of a hotel in Jerusalem) we found more of comfort
than one could expect, and, until another day had come,
were not disposed to leave it to explore the city. But
with the morning we went forth to trace the scenes which,
eighteen hundi-ed years ago, made this mountain so mem-
orable in the history of our world and in the records of
time. "With little faith in the traditions that have mapped
out the holy places in the sacred city, I determijied to
give myself up to the spirit of the scene, and, first of all, to
follow, in imagination at least, the path the Saviour trod
when he was led as a lamb to the slauo-hter. According-
376
AROUND THE WOULD.
ly, I told the guide to take us first to the house of Pilate.
The one now bearing this name occupies the same general
locality as that of the Roman governor, but there is noth-
ing to establish the identity, and as little to assist one in
recalling the scene of the judgment-hall. Following the
Via Dolorosa, we come to the Chapel of the Flagellation,
VIA DOLOROSA.
and then to the Arch of the Ecce Homo, said to cover the
spot were Jesus came forth wearing the crown of tliorns
THE HOLY CITY.
377
and the purple robe, when Pilate exclaimed to the people,
'^ Behold the man ;" and then we followed, as near as we
could, that strange procession which led the holy victim on
toward Calvary. Here we are told the Saviour of the world
sank under the burden of his cross, when Simon the Cyre-
nean was compelled to take it up and bear it after him ;
here we pass what are called the houses of Dives and Laz-
arus, and presently reach the spot where we are informed
Veronica appeared with a napkin to wipe the sweat from
the sacred brow, when the portrait of the Saviour was mi-
raculously impressed upon it. The pretended relic is pre-
served as one of the chief treasures of the Basilica of St.
Peter at Pome.
Making a slight ascent through a narrow street, we come
at length to the open square in front of the Church of the
Holy Sepulchre, a sort of bazar for the sale of relics, and a
LULl.oU OI- lUL UUL'i ^LILLCUEE.
378 AROUND THE WORLD.
place of gathering for all sorts of pilgrims. The door of
the church is closed. The time for the opening has come
and passed, but the Turkish officials who have it in charge
delay, and still longer delay, hoping that a party of stran-
gers, not having the look of ordinary pilgrims, will tender
backshish. At length we are admitted.
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre might more appro-
priately be called the Church of all the Holy Places. Tra-
dition has so conveniently located many of them within a
few yards of each other that they are all inclosed under
one roof. ISTear the door is the " Stone of Unction," a
marble slab, on which the body of our Lord is said to have
been anointed for the burial. The dome of the building
covers the Holy Sepulchre, which stands in the centre of
the area — not a tomb " hewn out in the rock," according to
the Scripture narrative, but a marble structure about six
feet square, and the same in height, apparently built on
the pavement. It is asserted that the surrounding rock has
been removed, and that what remained was incased in mar-
ble, accounting for its present appearance. The whole
structure is above the floor of the church, and bears no
sign of attachment to tlie original rock. The coincidence
of " stooping down" to enter or look within the sepulcln-e,
as did Peter on the morning of the resurrection, is pre-
served by a low doorway thi'ough which we enter. About
one third of the width of the interior is occupied by a mar-
ble slab representing the stone on which the body of Jesus
was laid. It is fitted up as an altar, and on and above it
are costly gifts, set tliick with precious stones, presented by
different sovereigns of Europe. A Gi-eek priest was stand-
ing at the head wdien w^e first stepped within. He court-
eously gave us the names of the royal donors of the gifts
recently made, and handed us from the altar some of the
fragrant flowers that are daily placed tliere in profusion.
The priests of the different sects in turn stand guard in the
tomb, a necessary precaution with such a crowd of pil-
grims and strangers. Free access to the holy places was
THE HOL Y CITY.
379
allowed to all, nor was there any disorder or confusion in
the crowd of visitors which thronged the church all day
long.
A flight of steps leads to an upper chapel, which is said
to cover the Hill of Calvary, and a round hole in the rock
is pointed out as that in which stood the cross while the
Redeemer hung upon it. A cleft in the rock, which is
shown, is said to have been made when Jesus yielded up
the ghost, "and the earth did quake and the rocks were
rent." All the localities, even to the places where Mary,
the mother of Jesus, stood while his body was prepared
for the burial, and where Christ appeared to Mary Magda-
lene on the morning of the resurrection, are pointed out
with the same precision.
Descending a long stone stairway, we were taken to the
Chapel of St. Helena, and then to a still lower recess, ap-
propriately called, in English, " the Chapel of the Invention
of the Cross." I can have no faith in the miracle said to
have attended the finding of the three crosses in perfect
preservation three hundred years after the crucifixion. It
is without satisfactory proof ; the links in the chain of evi-
dence are altogether too wade apart ; and I can see no oc-
casion for the miracle. Even the pretence has been used
the world over to encourage a superstitious worship of the
supposed relic instead of faith in the victim that hung npon
the cross. I am equally incredulous in regard to the iden-
tity of most of the holy places. Without professing any
accurate knowledge of the topography of Jerusalem, I have
familiarized myself with the arguments of those wlio have
endeavored to establish their verity, but it seems to me only
fancy or superstition can be satisfied with the evidence.
On my first visit to the Latin Chapel connected with the
Holy Sepulchre, the priests and monks had just commenced
the vesper service preparatory to visiting the stations here
grouped together. As I entered, a Capucin monk, whom I
afterward found to be a jolly Irishman on a pilgrimage to
the Holy City, handed me a Latin Breviary, and I joined
380 AROUND THE WORLD.
the pi'ocessioii in the entire circuit, reading with tliem the
description of tlie scenes connected with the death and
burial of the Redeemer. The chants from the Latin Vnl-
gate were well rendered, and would have been impressive
even iii other circumstances. At the close of the service.
Father Antonio (he gave me his name as soon as it was
concluded) conducted us through the chapels in possession
of the Latins, showing us the relics which had been left in
Jerusalem by the Knights of St. John, and treating us with
great courtesy. I must confess I thought him rather pro-
fane in his bearing, for he spoke with a le^^ty of the place
which was far from being consonant with my feelings, even
though I could not satisfy myself that I was, without doubt,
upon the scene of the great events associated with the re-
puted holy places.
It is not a pleasant thought, even to those who have no
superstitious reverence for any of the localities of the Holy
Cit}^ that these places are in the keeping of the followers
of the false prophet ; and it is still more painful to con-
template the scenes of strife, amounting not unfrequently
to bloodshed, that have occurred upon this sacred, if not
holy ground. Nowhere else is the hostility between Latin
and Greek Christians more intense or more ready to break
out than on the very spot where, as they profess to believe,
the Prince of Peace shed his blood for their redemption,
and where his body was laid in the grave.
From the Holy Sepulchre we went to Mount Zion, the
City of David, which is partially reclaimed from Moham-
medan defilement, and f roin Oriental and Roman supersti-
tion, by the establishment of a Christian mission under
Bishop Gobat, who has had much encouragement in seek-
ing out the lost sheep of the house of Israel. Sad and mis-
erable is the condition of the Jews in this city of their fa-
thers, as it is in most parts of the world. Their quarter in
Jerusalem, as in nearly every Oriental and European cit3%
is the most wretched and filthy of all, and they seem here,
as every where, to be suffering the cui'se which their fathei-s
THE HOLY CITY. 381
invoked upon themselves and their descendants when they
cried, " His blood be on us and on our children." They still
clino- to the curse, even though they meet once a week to
weep over the desolation of the Temple and the city. And
even this is with most of them a mere formality. At the
appointed hour I went out to the Wailing Place. More
tlian a hundred Jews were assembled, but not more than
one in ten appeared to enter into the spirit of the service.
The rest were looking around upon the crowd as uncon-
cerned, many of them more unconcerned, than the Gentiles
who came merely to see the Jews. Even the Kabbi who
read the penitential and mourniug psalms, and those who
joined him in weeping over the stones of the Temple, man-
ifested no real grief.
" As the mountains are round about Jerusalem, so the
Lord is round about his people from henceforth even for-
ever." The city itself is set upon a hill, surrounded, except-
ing at one point, by deep valleys, while far above its high-
est elevation, to the north and to the south, to the east and
to the west, rises the circle of mountains, hemming it in and
guarding it on every side. In looking down upon Jerusa-
lem thus peculiarly situated, I was often reminded of a
precious jewel deeply set in gold to protect it agahist all
injury and loss, and of the more wonderful setting of the
human eye. Of the mountains that are round about Jeru-
salenij there is only one from which to view the city to ad-
vantage, the one most fraught with sacred memories. The
second day after our arrival we crossed the brook Kedron
and ascended the Mount of Olives, the nearest point of
earth to heaven, if we may make such a comparison, be-
cause from this the Son of God ascended to the skies, lead-
ing the way for those who are to rise and li\e with him.
Before passing out of the walls we turned aside to visit
the Mosque of Omar, on the site of the Temple of Solomon.
The mosque itself, and the extensive grounds in the midst
(if which it stands, in years past were guarded with jealous
care by the Mohammedans, and it was with great difficulty
382 AROUND THE WOELD.
that Christians could gain admittance ; but of late there
has been little hinderance or objection. Arrangements hav-
ing been made beforehand, we presented ourselves at the
outer gate, and, provided with slippers for the more sacred
parts of the inclosure, were conducted by a Mohammedan
guide through the whole area, into the mosque and even
beneath it, to the Cave of Kock, which we were allowed to
examine thoroughly. This is one of the ancient places
about which there can be no reasonable doubt. Here,
within this square, once rose that magnificent building, the
grandest and most glorious on which the sun ever shone;
here it was that Jehovah came down and dwelt among men
in the visible glory of the Shekinah, long before the Son of
God dwelt on earth in the likeness of mortal man. Here
the gorgeous Temple service was instituted and celebrated
for centuries, until sacrifices and ceremonies were abolished
by the offering up of the one great sacrifice, the Lamb of
God. It was refreshing to meditate in the deep stillness
of this sacred spot, where no idling intruders are permitted
to enter, as in so many places, to destroy the sacredness of
the scene.
Leaving the Mosque of Omar and the courts of the an-
cient temple, after visiting " the gate that is called Beauti-
ful," we passed out of the city walls by St. Stephen's Gate,
so named because the martyr Stephen was stoned just out-
side the gate. Descending the steep side of the mountain,
we came to the bed of the Kedron, at the bottom of the
Yalley of Jehoshaphat. It was simply the hed for a stream,
not a drop of water moistening its stones. In the rainy
season a torrent sweeps through its entire length. Just as
we commence the ascent of the Mount of Olives, we come
upon what is called the Garden of Gethsemane, a square
plot of ground, perhaps half an acre, surrounded by a high
stone wall, and containing a few aged olive-trees, with
plants and shrubs. The wall is confessedly modern, nor is
there any conclusive evidence that the spot was the scene
of the Saviour's agony and of his betrayal, while to my mind
THE HOL Y CITY.
583
THE BEAUTIFUL GATE.
the probabilities are all against it. There is nothing that
marks it as a place for retirement. It was doubtless, then
as now, on the frequented road from the city to the Mount
of Olives, and a public place. The vague tradition connect-
ed with the spot is not enougli to mark it as that to whicli
Jesus retired for secret prayer, and in which he endured
the mysterious agony when one of the heavenly host ap-
peared to strengthen him, as his disciples, overcome witli
fatigue and sleep, left him to suffer alone. The inclosure
belongs to the Latins, or Roman Catholics ; but the Greeks,
not to be outdone, have a garden near by which they as-
sert is the real Gethsemane, thus bringing their rival claims
into a sort of contempt.
And now we climb the Mount of Olives, in all probabil-
ity by the very path so often trod by holy feet — the feet
which last pressed the earth upon the summit of this mount.
384
AROUND TEE WOULD.
I.i;.\I AMI GETUSEMANE.
There is no other of all the sacred places in or near Jernsa -
lem that may be visited with more confidence in its being
the scene of events associated with the Savionr's life. I care
not to know whether this precise rood of earth on w^hich I
am standing was the one on which Jesus stood when he
spake the words of the Sermon on the Mount, or whether
THE HOLT CITY. 335
from this very spot he beheld the city and wept over it,
saying, " If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this
thy day, the things which belong to thy peace," or whether
on this precise spot he was talking wnth his disciples when
" he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their
sisrht." It is enough to know that the mountain on which
I am standing was the scene of these great events, and
that I am brought so closely into communication with the
past, with the days of his flesh, and so near to that heaven-
ly world in which I hope to see that form that was carried
up in a cloud and hid from mortal sight. Indeed, it is a
decided relief to my feelings, I might say an aid to my
faith, it certainly with me is conducive to sacred recollec-
tions and pious emotion, that there is no one near to say
that precisely here these words of Christ were spoken, or
that this identical spot was last touched by his sacred feet.
I can commune with the past far better without than with
such meretricious helps. I found it very pleasant again
and again to visit this holy mount, to linger around it, and
from its summit to look down upon the Holy City, and
backward into the past, and upward into the skies, as if
through the opening made by the form of the ascending
Eedeemer.
The summit of Olivet being 300 feet above the Temple
area, one looks directly down upon the city which is spread
out before him like a map. Every building and every lo-
cality can be distinguished. Looking eastward, the Valley
of the Jordan and the Dead Sea, although nearly twenty
miles distant, and about 4000 feet lower, are seen so dis-
tinctly that one can hardly believe they are so far off.
The surface of the Dead Sea is the lowest point on the face
of the globe, being 1312 feet below the Mediterranean and
the ocean, and to look into it from the Mount of Olives is
like looking down into the depths of the earth itself.
I was greatly interested in tracing out the path that King-
David took when he fled from the treachery of Absalom.
•• And David went up bv the ascent of Mount Olivet, and
B B
335 AROUND THE WORLD.
wept as he went up, and had his head covered, and he went
barefoot; and all the people that was with him covered
every man his head, and they went up, weeping as they
went up." Nothing in the record of the reverses which
kings have suffered could be more touching. The scene
was constantly recurring to my mind as I went up the
mountain from time to time, and I almost expected to
meet Shimei as I passed over its summit. The Mohammed-
ans were there with their curses, if he was not.
One day, as we came from the Mount of Olives, we fol-
lowed the valle}^ of the brook Kedron, past the tomb of
Absalom, to the Pool of Siloam, a rapid fall of between
300 and 400 feet within a mile and a half ; thence up the
Valley of Ilinnom, past the Jaffa Gate to the Damascus
Gate, where we entered as on our first approach to the city.
The same afternoon we rode out to Bethlehem, six miles
due south from Jerusalem. After passing through the
deep Valley of Ilinnom, the road over the plain is the fin-
est in the vicinity of the Holy Cit}^ We were in sight of
several ancient villages mentioned in Scripture, that were
lying off upon the neighboring hills. The Convent of Mar
Elias, said to be erected on the spot where the prophet was
ministered to by angels, and the tomb of Kachel, one of
the few well-authenticated places in the Holy Land, were
directly upon the road-side. And then we came to that
spot, the grand illumination of the book of time, on which
the Son of God appeared in the likeness of man. I looked
out upon the hill-sides for the shepherds, and listened for
the voice, " Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy,
which shall be to all people ; for unto you is born this day,
in the city of David, a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord,"
and the chorus of the heavenly host, " Glory to God in the
highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."
We entered the towm of Bethlehem, where once the Lord
of Glory entered our world in the lowly form of a little
babe. We rode through the streets to the Church of the
isativity, and instead of meeting with the shepherds who
THE HOL Y CITY. 387
said, " Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see this
thing which is come to pass," or the wise men who came
to pour out their treasures at the feet of the infant Jesus,
we were surrounded by a swarm of imperious mendicants
and traffickers in relics, who seemed determined to shut
out all sacred thoughts of the place. The star that once
"stood over where the young child was" had long since
set, though shining brightly on so many other lands. May
it soon arise again in all its glory on Bethlehem and all
Judea !
Among the saddest of all the scenes connected with my
pilgrimage to the Holy Land was a visit to Bethany, the
one spot with which are associated many of the tenderest,
sweetest memories of the life of our Lord, and more of our
knowledge of his real humanity, his actual sympath}^ and
friendship, than with all other places. Who has not, in
reading the words, " Now Jesus loved Martha and her sis-
ter, and Lazarus," and of his resorting to Bethany to enjoy
their society ; and of the message the sisters sent him when
Lazarus was sick, and his going to weep with them when
Lazarus was dead ; who, in reading all this in the Gospels,
has not pictured to himself a rural village where he him-
self would love to stand, if not to dwell? But how changed
is the present reality from the scene of his imaginings !
It is about two miles from Jerusalem. We left the city
by St. Stephen's Gate, descending into the Valley of Je-
hoshaphat, passed Gethsemane, and took the path around
the south side of the Mount of Olives, the very road by
which, without doubt, the Saviour made his triumphal en-
try into Jerusalem, when " a very great multitude spread
their garments in the way ; others cut down branches from
the trees and strewed them in the way ; and the multi-
tudes that went before and that followed cried, saying,
Ilosanna to the Son of David ; blessed is he that cometh
in the name of the Lord ; hosanna in the highest," The
scene, as it lay before us, was one of mere desolation. Ut-
ter sterility, without verdure or foliage save an occasional
388 AROUND THE WORLD.
olive-tree, marked the whole way to Bethany. The path
and the fields w^ere heaps of stone, and the town of Mary
and Martha, a miserable clnster of cheerless huts, with a
more miserable crowd of children and grown people de-
manding charity, had not the first attractive feature. We
looked into the reputed grave of Lazarus, and turned away
in sadness at the desolation every where presented. And
this is but a type of a great part of Palestine at the pres-
ent day.
In these rapid sketches of travel over so large a part of
the surface of the globe, it will be impossible to give even
a continuous account of all our wanderings. I must omit
the record of our excursion to the Valley of the Jordan
and the Dead Sea, where we were attacked by the Bedou-
ins in the dead of night, as we were encamped on the
plains of Jericho. We escaped without injury or loss, but
a party of our friends, who went down to Jericho soon aft-
er, fell among thieves, who stripped them of their raiment,
robbed them of all they had, and threatened their lives.
The last day that we spent in Jerusalem was the day of
rest. In the morning I attended the English service on
Mount Zion, and heard an excellent sermon from the ven-
eraljle Bishop Gobat. In the afternoon we had religious
services of a social character at our liotel, attended by
about twenty-five, chiefly Americans. Our landlord kind-
ly prepared the dining-room for the services, and in this
" large upper room, made ready," we joined in prayer and
praise, and talked of the scenes which transpired in that
Holy City nearly 2000 years ago — scenes in which the
world has the same deep interest to-day as when they were
transpiring on these holy mountains ; which will never lose
their interest while the world shall stand, and which will
only have gathered fresh interest when the woiid sliall pass
away.
TO DAMASCUS AND CONSTANTINOPLE. 35^9
TO DAMASCUS AND CONSTANTINOPLE.
Tfie morning came on which we were to take our de-
parture, and I can not say that I regretted to look for the
last time upon the city, filled though it is with holy memo-
ries. I never had an intense desire to enter the earthly
Canaan, although it had long been one of the unsettled
purposes of my life to do so. Knowing its forlorn, desolate
state, so different from what it must have been when Abra-
ham dwelt at Mamre, or when David and Solomon reigned
at Jerusalem, or when a greater than patriarchs and kings
sojourned in the land ; knowing how completely the traces
of their footsteps had been obliterated, and the sacred scenes
connected with their lives changed and desecrated, I could
scarcely tell whether I desired most to gratify a common
wish, or to cherish in my heart memories of the land de-
rived from reading the Word of God. But, journeying
homeward from more eastern climes, I could not pass by
the land with which is linked all the most sacred history of
the past, and with which are associated all the holiest an-
ticipations of the future. I entered it ; I traveled and tar-
I'ied in it, and I turned away from it with a feeling of sad-
ness, but with no regret.
I presume that every traveler experiences a measure of
disappointment on entering Palestine, especially in visiting
Jerusalem. He comes with all the sacred emotions that
were excited in childhood, strengthened and deepened with
his growth, now raised to their utmost by the very sight of
the land. He does not expect to find it, as in days long
ago, flowing witli milk and honey, or to see Jerusalem as it
was before the glory had departed ; but few are prepared
390
AROUXD THE WORLD.
to see it so waste and desolate. While in Jerusalem, I
found myself continually repeating the words of the la-
mentino; prophet : " Is this the city that men call the per-
fection "of beauty, the joy of the whole earth ?" The frown
of God is every where resting on the land ; it may be read
not only in the desolation of the Temple and of the Holy
City, but in the dust of the earth and the stones of the field.
The land lieth waste and mourneth, and no Christian trav-
eler can fail to weep over it. It seems as if God had been
sweeping it with the besom of destruction, obliterating the
traces and attractions of its sacred scenes for the very pur-
pose of preventing the idolatrous reverence for holy places
which is even now carried to such an extent, and to impress
upon the world the words of Jesus to the woman of Sama-
ria : " Woman, believe me, the hour cometh when ye shall
neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the
Father. God is a Spirit, and they that worship him must
worship him in spirit and in truth."
Early on Monday morning, our horses saddled and our
baggage packed, we waited for the guard. From day to
day, after our return from the Yalley of the Jordan, we had
accounts of fresh robberies and attacks upon travelers on
the road to Jaffa. One poor Jew had been robbed and
nearly murdered, and others had suffered in like manner.
Through the American consul, Mr. Hay, I had made an ap-
plication to the governor at Jerusalem for a guard, unless
he would be responsible for our safe passage. He sent us
word that we must have a military escort, which he pro-
posed to send on his own account. After eveiy thing was
in readiness for the journey, we waited an hour, and began
to grow impatient, when at length a cavass made his ap-
pearance with a message from the governor that we could
go without the guard, and he would be responsible for any
loss or damage that we might sustain. We could do noth-
ing more, and accordingly we passed out the Damascus
Gate, ascended the height, turned to take a last look of the
city and of the mountains that are round about Jerusalem,
TO DAMASCUS AND CONSTANTINOFLE. 39]^
and began tlie descent toward the Mediterranean. As the
sun was setting we re-entered Ramleh, where we spent an-
other night within sound of the muezzin's voice. With
the break of day we rose to cross again the plains of Sha-
ron, and early in the morning rode into Jaffa. The French
steamer Tage was at anchor off the town ; the sea was calm,
relieving us of the apprehension that we might be com-
pelled to lie over for many days (as were a party who came
down the week before), and without any delay, and under
the most pleasing promise of a smooth passage, we were
taken on board.
About midnight we passed Mount Carmel, the scene of
that sublime trial between the Prophet Elijah and the
prophets of Baal, and early on the following morning were
off Beyrout, the most homelike and the most beautiful city
on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean. Indeed, it was
a home to one who had been at my side in all my journey-
ings, for here, at the foot of old Lebanon,
" On that classical sea whose azure vies
With the greeu of its shores and the blue of its skies,"
she first looked out upon this little world which we had
been surrounding, and now, for the first time since early
childhood, she was returning to gaze once more upon these
sublime mountains, and to look out from their heights upon
this cerulean sea. I had no such memories to revive, but,
from my first view of Beyrout, I wrote it down as just the
place one might choose to be born in, if he should happen
to have any choice in the matter. During the many days
that we spent at this place, I was more and more charmed
with its beauty, and never grew weary of looking out upon
the blue sea and up the grand heights of Lebanon, or of
watching the constantly shifting lights and shades. And
when, as once, the brow of Lebanon grew dark and then
angry with gathering clouds, and peals of thunder came
rolling down its sides and echoing through its chasms, the
scene became sublime,
JSo city in the East has been more changed within the
TO BA MASCUS AND CONSTANTINOPLE. 393
last half century than Beyrout. Fifty years ago it was a
small . town — a collection of mud and stone houses, sur-
rounded by a wall, but having nothing imposing or attract-
ive in its appearance. It is now a large, well-built city, a
place of great and growing importance, having long ago
burst through its mural inclosure. It has become also a
moral centre for a large part of the East — the seat of ex-
tensive missionary operations, which extend over the moun-
tains of Lebanon and far into the interior. When the first
missionaries from America, Messrs. Goodell and Bird, with
their wives, landed in 1823, they became first objects of cu-
riosity, then of bitter hostility, and for a long time their
lives were in danger. On the breaking out of the Greek
Revolution they were obliged to leave the country for want
of protection, but they were succeeded in after years by one
of the noblest bands of Christian laborers that has occupied
any part of the great field of the world, among w^hom were
Dr. Eli Smith, the comjianion of Dr. Robinson in his bio-
graphical researches in the Holy Land ; Dr. Thomson, au-
thor of " The Land and the Book ;" Dr. Yan Dyck, the em-
inent Arabic scholar; Dr. Calhoun, now of Abeih ; Dr.
Bliss, President of the Arabic College, and others — a gal-
axy of shining names.
Among the tribes inhabiting the mountains around Bey-
rout, the most peculiar and interesting are the Druses. Thev
are a fine, noble-looking race, generally intelligent, and
able to read and write. Their sacred rites are performed
in strict seclusion, as secretly as the rites of Freemasonry.
Among their articles of belief is the transmigration of
souls, not into bodies of the lower animals, as some Oriental
nations believe, but into those of other human beings. They
hold that the number of the race, or at least of human souls,
does not increase with the addition of new members to the
human family ; that when a man dies, his soul goes into
the body of some infant who is born at the same time, and
that the souls of all good Druses enter bodies born in China.
On this belief is founded a tradition that there is in China
394 AROUND THE WORLD.
an immense army of Druses, 25,000,000 strong, who are
coming over to Syria, not only to liberate them from the
Turkish yoke, but to put them in possession of this whole
country, if not of the whole earth. In a visit which I made
to one of the mountain villages, the Druses of the place
learned that I had recently come from China, and I was
waited on by one and another, among them a sheikh, who
came to make a host of inquiries in regard to what I had
seen of the country, which is to them, as it was not to me,
a paradise. But the point to which I found they were de-
sirous to come, and which they finally brought out, was
whether I had seen any of this grand army of liberation.
I assured them that, although I had been in different parts
of the empire, I had not seen or heard of a single Druse
in all China, and that 1 was quite sure 1 should have heard
something about it if such an army existed there. My
words sadly disappointed them, but it was evident they did
not cany conviction to their minds. They fell back upon
the firm belief that the army was yet to come from that
distant country.
After the fearful massacre of 1860, in which many of the
villages of Mount Lebanon were desolated, the French gov-
ernment sent into Syria an army of occupation, or protec-
tion to the Christians, which was withdrawn in a few years,
but the army left behind it one monument for which thou-
sands of travelers have blessed its memory. This is the
splendid road across the mountains to Damascus. Such a
road was a novelty in the East ; the natives regarded it as
a desecration of sacred soil, and an outrage upon the rights
of donkeys and muleteers ; but it has been a blessing to
wayfarers, and has greatly facilitated traffic, not to say com-
merce, between these two cities.
The grandeur of the mountains of Lebanon exceeded all
my anticipations. Not even after watching them from the
sea, and then, day after day, from the city of Beyrout, was
I prepared for such sublimity. They attain, indeed, no
mean height, being 10,000 feet above the level of the Med-
DA3IASCUS TO CONSTANTINOPLE. 395
iteiTanean ; and, as if scorning to turn aside for any obsta-
cle, this road mounts some of the loftiest ridges, and for
miles runs along the brow of chasms two or three thousand
feet deep. It was not at all in accordance with the ancient
ideas of Oriental travel to be making the passage of these
lofty mountains in a well-ordered French diligence ; but
this mode had been chosen out of regard to the more deli-
cate members of our party, and those of us who were en-
dowed with more strength were nothing loth to exchange
the saddle for a comfortable seat in an Occidental carriage.
Nor did we enjoy the magnificent scenery any less for the
change.
We were to start for Damascus at four o'clock in the
morning, nearly two hours before daylight. As the dili-
gence would not come to our hotel, Mohammed like we
concluded to go to the diligence. On retiring, we had given
special and repeated charge to landlord and porter to call
us by two o'clock, that we might have every thing in readi-
ness for our niglit walk of nearly a mile to the office ; but
I had learned that the proverb has double force in the East :
" If you wish a thing done, do it yourself," and accordingly
I attended to my own waking. If I had not risen and
called myself, we should have spent the day in Beyrout in-
stead of crossing Mount Lebanon. Not very cheerful was
that walk through the streets of Beyrout under a cloudy,
moonless sky, with a single lantern dimly burning, nor was
the first hour or two of our journey much more inspiriting.
In the darkness our thoughts were all the while turning to
the easy couches we had left more than to the scenery
around us, which we could not see, or the views of Damas-
cus, its rivers and its plains, which were yet before us. But
when the morning fairly dawned, as we were ascending
those lofty heights from which Hiram had cut the cedars
to build and adorn the Temple of Solomon, and when, in
the frequent windings of the road, as we made our zigzag
way upward, we looked back upon the plain and the city
of Bevrout far down below, and then out upon the sea, the
396 AROUND THE WORLD.
thermometer of our hearts rose as many degrees as did the
thermometer of Fahrenheit. And all day long we were
catching new glimpses of the sublime heiglits and sublime
depths, until, as we were drawing near to Damascus, the
hoary head of Mount Hermon appeared in the distance.
The valley of Crelo-Syria is a beautiful episode in the
journey. The mountains have little verdure or foliage.
Occasionally a garden spot or a vineyard appeared, but the
mountains are usually masses of rock, on which no vegeta-
tion can take root. After traversing those wild ranges for
hours, all of a sudden an emerald valley was seen several
thousand feet below, the mountains rising again on the op-
posite side. The descent was long, and we went down into
the valley only to climb the anti-Lebanon range which lies
beyond. About four o'clock in the afternoon we com-
menced the descent. In the course of an hour we were in
a deep gorge, and suddenly came upon a swift-flowing
stream, which we travei'sed for many miles, its banks shaded
with groves and diversified with gardens, the River Abana,
of the story of Naaman and the Syrian maid. Following
the course of the stream, we were presently at the entrance
to the city, and soon found quarters at the excellent hotel
of Dimitri Cara.
It was Saturday night Avlien we reached Damascus. In
the morning we went out into " the street called Straight''
(some traveler has remarked very truly that it could have
been called so only out of courtesy), and after a long walk
we found, at the other extremity of the city, the American
Mission, and heard an excellent sermon in Arabic from the
Rev. Mr. Crawford. I call it excellent ; I am sure, from
my subsequent acquaintance Mnth him, it was so, and his
manner was at once so easy, earnest, and eloquent, that I
heartily enjoyed his discourse without understanding a word
of it. We had a sermon from a stranger, in English, at 11
o'clock ; and in the afternoon went out to visit the ceme-
tery of the martyrs of 1800— the Christian population avIio,
in the fearful massacre set on foot by the Mohammedans
JDAJIASCUS TO CONSTANTINOPLE. 397
and shared by the Druses, were slain in this city to the
number of 2500 men, besides women and children. Far
greater would have been the slau2;hter of the Christians
had not the hero of Algiers, Abd el Kader, espoused the
cause of the persecuted. More by his valor than his elo-
quence he saved the lives of at least 15,000 whom the Mo-
hammedans had sworn to put to the sword. We regretted
much that this noble but unfortunate chieftain was not in
Damascus during our stay. We desired to pay our respects
to the hero who had not only won the admiration of the
world by his valor in the wars of Algiers, and its sympa-
thy by the treacherous treatment he received from his
French conquerors, but who, though a Mohammedan, had
stood forth as the defender of the Christians when those of
his own faith were fanatically putting them to the sword.
We sent him our cards, but he was on the Plains.
Damascus is the oldest city now in existence. It is men-
tioned in the time of Abraham, the steward of whose house
was " this Eliezer of Damascus," and its interesting record
reaches down all along the ages to the present time. The
city covers a wide extent, and with its suburbs, which are
well watered and green, is an oasis in the desert in which
it lies. It is a lovely picture as seen from the mountains,
the water-courses and the irrigated portion of the plain be-
ing thickly studded with trees, and sliading off into green
fields of grain that at length are lost in the arid desert.
We explored its quaint old streets, which have more of
magnificence than one could imagine from the distant view.
The bazars are busy marts of trade, well supplied with the
productions and fabrics of the East. The khans, the ware-
houses of the merchants, are many of them solid and mag-
nificent stone structures, surrounding open courts, in which
the ships of the desert — camels — were discharging and re-
ceiving their freights of silk and other goods. The khan of
Esaad Pasha was truly gorgeous in its architecture. After
going through the bazars and khans, we climbed the moun-
tain overlooking the great plain to see the city from above,
398
AROUND THE WORLD.
and from the lonely kiosk upon its summit had the view
which arrested the Prophet Mohammed when he exclaim-
ed, " Man can have only one paradise ; I shall not enter
this below lest I should have none above," and turned back
without ever entering Damascus. Such is the leo-end.
DAMAbCLb.
Fresh snow had fallen upon the brow of Hermon the
morning that we left Damascus on our way back to Bey-
rout, and when the sun rose it shone first with golden and
then w^itli silver light, reflecting the glory of the East which
was poured upon it. Tliere it stands as it has stood for
thousands of years, one of the great landmarks on which
the patriarchs and prophets looked long before it was trod
by Him who was greater than them all. Mount Hermon,
in the opinion of many Biblical scholars, was the scene of
the Transfiguration. Even now it shines with an ineffable
brightness, as if still in the light of that glorious One whose
BAJIASCUS TO CONSTANTINOPLE. 399
raiment, when on the mount, " became shining exceeding
white as snow, so as no fuller on earth can white them."
At Sturza, in the vale of Coelo-Syria, a portion of our
party struck off to the north to the ruins of Baalbec, while
we returned to Beyrout, reaching the outlook upon the Med-
iterranean early in the afternoon of a charming day, and
enjoying in a wonderfully clear atmosphere, during the
long zigzag descent, one of the most glorious sights of
mountain, and plain, and sea that can be found on any of
the heights of this world. In descending the mountain I
heard an uproar and a din that gathered strength as we
proceeded, and presently we were in the midst of one of
those clouds of locusts that in all ages have infested Syria.
A public order had been issued requiring the inhabitants
to turn out and drive the locusts into the sea. The people
had formed an extensive line, and with horns, and drums,
and pans, and any thing that would make a hideous noise,
were pursuing the invaders, which were fleeing before them.
The music reminded me of a scene I had witnessed in Bom-
bay on the occasion of an eclipse of the moon, when the
Hindoos swarmed in the streets armed with the same weap-
ons, hoping by their insufferable jargon to drive away the
monster that was swallowing the queen of night. They
were both successful. The Hindoo monster was compelled
to disgorge — the moon came out as bright as before ; and
on the mountains of Lebanon the locusts that had been de-
stroying all the greenness of the earth, unable to endure the
music, moved on in a vast cloud toward the Mediterranean.
Whether they reached the sea and were drowned I do not
know.
Once more we were afloat. We had again said the fare-
well, which we have so often found it hard to say ; the an-
chor was lifted, and we were steaming onward through
the waves ; the city at the foot of Lebanon grew dim in
the distance — the city of which the author of the " Cres-
cent and the Cross," in his unrivaled sketches of Eastern
travel, wrote : " Beautiful Beyrout ! I yield to thee the
400
AliOUND THE WORLD.
palm over all the cities of the earth ;" the mountains grew
darker and dimmer in the twilight, and night at length
settled down over the sea.
In the morning we touched at the island of Cyprus, the
scene of a strange mixture of myths and traditions, and
history, reaching down from the days of fable, when Ve-
nus rose from the foam of the sea in all her beauty, to the
days of Richard Coeur de Lion, when the island passed into
the hands of the Templars, and until it was at last cap-
tured by the Turks. The third day we anchored off the
harbor of Ehodes, where once stood the famed Colossus,
one of the seven wonders of the world. The same even-
ing we sailed along the shores of " the isle that is called
Patmos," to which the beloved disciple of Jesus, the Apos-
tle John, was banished in the persecution under Donritian,
the scene of the apocalyptic vision. On the fourth day, as
the sun was lifting its face above tlie hills that overhang
DAMASCUS TO CONSTANTINOPLE.
401
the city of Smyrna, we entered the deep harbor and an-
chored off the town. The country around was greener
and fresher than any we had seen since leaving the shores
of Japan, always excepting the tropical shores near the
equator. The city was smiling in the morning light as if
conscious of its surroundings, and of its own beauty as
seen from the sea. It had other attractions for one of our
number, and a few hours were most agreeably spent in the
society of friends, and in an excursion to the hill on which
stand the ruins of the ancient castle. Here we received
the usual welcome from a score of Mohammedan boys, a
general stoning, which greeting was returned until they
dispersed over the hill.
Smyrna is memorable as one of the many cities in which
Homer was born, and still more sacred in the eyes of the
Christian as the scene of the martyrdom of Polycarp, to
whom, as " the Angel of the Church in Smyrna," accord-
ing to Archbishop Usher, one of the seven epistles of the
Apocalypse was addressed. He had been bishop of this
church more than eighty years, when, in one of the Ro-
man persecutions, he was summoned to judgment. As
he was led out to the place of execution, the proconsul,
ashamed to put to death so venerable a man, besought him
to blaspheme Christ and save his life. It was then that
he uttered those heroic words : " Eighty-six years have I
served liim ; during all this time he never did me any in-
jury ; how then can I blaspheme my King and Saviour ?"
Leaving Smyrna toward evening, we stopped at Myti-
lene, touched the next day at Tenedos, Dardanelles, and
Gallipoli, and on the following morning at sunrise were in
sight of the domes and minarets of Stamboul.
Co
402 ABOUND THE WORLD.
XXXI.
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES.
Almost the only place in all the world where the smile
of heaven through pleasant skies forsook us was at Con-
stantinople. Circumstances had shortened my stay in Pal-
estine and Syria so that 1 reached this stage of the jour-
ney a month earlier than I had arranged on leaving home,
and a month too soon to enjoy the beauties of Stamboul
and the Golden Horn of the Bosphorus. We sailed up the
Sea of Marmora and rounded Seraglio Point in the midst
of a drizzling rain, which changed to snow soon after we
landed ; the snow continued to fall, or rather to drive im-
petuously for two whole days ; and for nearly three weeks
it was almost incessant rain. Not for a day, no, not for an
hour in all this time did the sun come out and shine upon
lis as it had shone for nearly a year. Those were dismal
days in which to see the glories of the Orient, although
very conducive to enjoyment in the many circles of friends
which we found in Stamboul and scattered along the Bos-
phorus. One can appreciate friends five or six thousand
miles away from home, when the heavens are weeping
over him, and there were many associations that made the
society at this place peculiarly agreeable to some of us.
Of all the cities that I have visited, Constantinople prop-
er is tlie last to be chosen for a season of rain and mud;
but, despite all difficulties, we made the tour of the mosques,
palaces, bazars, and otlier places of renown, and, after wait-
ing in vain for the skies to clear, we saw the Bosphorus and
the Golden Horn under a cloud. H I do not celebrate the
beauties of this part of the Orient, it must be because I saw
them only in deep shadows, and other pens will more than
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. 4Q3
supply all that may be lacking in these sketches. The next
time that we go to Constantinople it shall be on the iirst of
May.
The political condition of this part of the world remains
unchanged, while progress is the order of the day East and
West. Turkey is still Turkey. Its government is the
most effete, inefficient, irresponsible, and at the same time
despotic, with which civilized nations have any thing to do,
and Constantinople, in one way or another, is a centre of in-
terest to nearly all the nations of the West. In the prov-
inces the government is even worse than at the capital. In
the vocabulary of Turkish officials Justice has no name,
excepting as it is represented by the Tm*kish synonyms of
bribery or infiuence. ' What is to be the future of Turkey
is still one of the problems over which philanthropists and
diplomatists, and especially the powers of Europe, are exer-
cised. Almost any change would be for the better; it
could scarcely be for the worse. A radical change of some
kind is needed to bring Turkey into sympathy with the rest
of the world, but the present government is past reform.
Tliere are some signs of a waking up among the differ-
ent nationalities which compose the population of the cap-
ital. The press, and steam, and the telegraph are doing
their work. I noticed, in passing up and down the Bos-
phorus fi'om day to day, that nearly every man on the
steamer had his morning or evening paper. There are
now published at Constantinople four daily papers in Turk-
ish, one of which lias a weekly illustrated edition for la-
dies, printed on embossed paper, and another for children.
There are three dailies in Greek and three in Armenian.
Besides, there are numerous weekly papers in Turkish, Ar-
menian, Bulgarian, Arabic, etc., the most of which are own-
ed and conducted by natives.
The revival of evangelical religion among the Armenian
population has been a part of the liistory of the times, and
one of the most remarkable movements in connection with
missionary labor in any part of the East. Forty years ago
404 AROUND THE WORLD.
the Kev. William Goodell and his wife landed at Constan-
tinople, the first Christian missionaries to this place from
America. Others joined them and took up the work, men
and women whose names will not be forgotten so long as
the sun and moon endure — Schauffler, Riggs, Hamlin,
Dwight, Bliss, with many younger. Some of the early la-
borers I found toiling on in the field, but others have gone
to their reward, having finished their labors. The work-
men die, but the work goes on here as elsewhere. Twenty-
five years ago there were only about a hundred Armenians
who had embraced the evangelical faith. There are now
in Turkey seventy churches, with 3200 members, and the
movement has extended all over the empire. Two thirds
of the churches which are the fruit of missionary labor
have native pastors, and nearly half of these are self-sup-
jwrting. In 1S47 there were only about 500 recognized as
Protestants ; there are now from fifteen to twenty thousand.
Scarcely any other city has such a cosmopolitan popula-
tion. This is indicated by the number of languages in
which the Holy Scriptures are circulated, I learned from
the Rev. Mr. Bliss, the Secretary of the American Bible So-
ciety for Turkey, that there had been circulated within the
last twelve years 333,415 copies of the Scriptures, includ-
ing the whole Bible in Arabic, Armenian, Armeno-Turkish,
Osmanlee- Turkish, Greco - Turkish, Hebrew, Wallachian,
Hungarian, Servian, Judseo-Spanish, English, Fi-ench, Ger-
man, Italian, Latin, Swedish, Portuguese, and Dutch, with
the New Testament in Russian, Bulgarian, Albanian, Syri-
ac, Slavic, Ancient Greek, and Ancient Armenian, with the
Gospels in Koordish — thirty languages in all. These are
not all the languages spoken at this cosmopolitan city.
While I was at the hotel at Pera an American gentle-
man arrived who had been in Constantinople before. In
speaking of his former visit, he said to me very enthusiast-
ically, " There is one thing in this city that you must not
fail to see. Of course you have been to the Mosque of St.
Sophia, and up and down the Bosphorus and the Golden
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. 4O5
Horn, and have seen the Sultan and all that, but there is
one thing that you must not fail to see." Before he con-
cluded his impressive injunction I had become rather im-
patient to know what it was, when he added, " It is Dr.
Hamlin." He then gave me an account of the circum-
stances in which he made the acquaintance of this remark-
able man. He came there a stranger, fell sick, and, having
heard the name of Dr. Hamlin, sent for him, and was speed-
ily cured. Dr. Hamlin happens to be a Doctor of Divinity,
but there is scarcely any science or art in which he is not
worthy of the highest degree. I assured my friend that I
had long enjoyed his acquaintance.
Robert College, so liberally endowed by Christopher E.
Robert, Esq., of New York, and now established on its beau-
tiful site upon the Bosphorus, owes its existence in a great
measure to Dr. Hamlin, the president, by whose persever-
ance it secured a local habitation. Year after year the
Turkish government, in its usual dilatory way, withheld its
sanction for the location and erection of the building. Dr.
Hamlin neglected no opportunity to press his application.
Once, after a longer interval than usual, he applied through
some intercessor, when Ali Pasha, the late Grand Vizier,
gave vent to his desires in the impatient inquiry, " Will
that Dr. Hamlin never die ?" And so, to get rid of him,
seeing he would not die, he gave him permission to build.
After once deferring our departure another week in hope
of brighter skies, we at length went on board the steamer
bound for Athens in the midst of a storm of snow, and hail,
and rain, one of the most forbidding days of our sojourn.
We had scarcely reached the Sea of Marmora before the
sun burst forth from the clouds to cheer us on our voyage,
and to tantalize us with the remembi'ance of all the days of
gloom in which his face had been hid. But we had the
satisfaction to learn that we had escaped a perilous voyage
on the steamer by which I had engaged passage the week
previous. She was overtaken by a storm on the Sea of Mar-
mora, and lay all night in the lee of an island waiting for
406 AROUND THE WORLD.
the morning, all on board having no little apprehension in
regard to the result.
We did not trust ourselves to the Turkish or Greek steam-
ers, which are to be avoided by all who seek either comfort
or safety in sailing on the Mediterranean. Those belong-
ing to the Sultan's navy are splendid specimens of naval
architecture, and, as they ride at anchor in line on the Bos-
phorus, make a formidable appearance, but I heard many
stories not at all to the credit of the men who commanded
them. A Turkish naval officer, once sent with his ship to
Malta, was gone about three weeks, at the expiration of
which time he turned up at Constantinople, and reported
that he had searched diligently, and there was no such place
in the Mediterranean Sea. Another was sent to Jaffa, and,
after cruising up and down the Syrian coast, returned with
the report that he could not find it. It is to be hoped that
those who have command of the passenger steamers have a
better knowledge of the sea, but I never felt disposed to
test their nautical skill. On the Mediterranean I invaria-
bly took either the French or the Austrian steamers, be-
tween which there was little to choose ; they are both good,
well officered, and well managed.
We left Constantinople at four o'clock in the afternoon,
and had fine weather through the Sea of Marmora and the
Archipelago to the shores of Greece. The second night
out we retired not expecting to be on shore before morn-
ing, but about half past one we were roused with the cry
that the lights of the Piraeus were in sight, and that we
must be prepared to land within a few minutes.
Far worse than starting off by night in a stage-coach is
being roused from sleep to be set ashore in a small boat, on
some strange coast, in a dark night. But the same familiar
stars on which we had looked at home from early child-
liood, and which were as familiar as the faces of sisters and
brothers, were looking down and smiling upon us, and si-
lently whispering to our hearts that above them was an eye
that never sleeps. We dropped anchor about a mile from
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES.
407
the landing. As we were rowed ashore in the quiet star-
h'ght I heard tlie sound of approaching oars, and, knowing
that friends who were some days in advance of us would
probably take the steamer that we were leaving, I called a
name, and heai'd over the waters an answering voice —
" All's well !" — and so we passed ; the boatmen not even
resting on their oars, we were able only to exchange this
transient salutation in the darkness. We found a carriage
in waiting on the shore, and within an hour were at the
hotel in Athens, about six miles distant, and had a pleasant
sleep before the morning appeared.
Our steps were first directed to the Acropolis, the centre
of Athens and of all Greece. We climbed the heights
crowned with the ruins of the most perfect structure of
antiquity, and looked out upon the theatre of so many
grand events in the historj^ of the classic age ; upon the
ruins of temples, and arches, and amphitheatres, and down
upon Mars Hill, where Paul stood before an assembly of
Athenian philosophers and preached Jesus and the resur-
I'ection; and upon the Pnyx, where Demosthenes enchained
with his eloquence the crowds who gathered round the ros-
trum ; and out over the grand panorama of Lower Greece
to the same old mountains on which the eyes of sages and
orators, poets, and sculptors, and warriors had looked cen-
turies ago, when Greece was in her glory. The Acropolis,
lUlEZK OF TUE PAUTUKiJOlS.
408 AROUND THE WORLD.
with its commanding height, its magnificent temples, its
peerless sculpture, and its crowning feature, the colossal
statue of Minerva, of ivory and gold, a landmark to the
mariner at sea as well as to the dweller on the Plains,
might well be called " the eye of all Greece."
We were strongly urged to make an excursion to the
Plains of Marathon, but I declined for prudential reasons,
which soon after had melancholy force. I had escaped the
Bedouins in the valley of the Jordan, while others were
compelled to pay tribute, and not without risk to their lives.
I was well aware, and so was every traveler at the time,
that the Greek brigands were no more scrupulous in re-
gard to the rights of property, and that they were on the
alert for prey. They have a very unhappy way of detain-
ing for ransom those who happen to fall into their hands,
and occasionally sending back an ear or a finger if the ran-
som is delayed. I assured my urgent friends that I was
not willing to run one risk in fifty of paying a heavy ran-
som, or of losing my ears for the satisfaction of seeing a lit-
tle more of the classic soil of Greece, and I was somewhat
laughed at for my prudence.
At the same hotel where we were stajnng was a party
who determined to make the excursion. Their fate soon
after shocked the whole ■civilized world. They left in the
morning for Marathon in high spirits, but before night they
were all in the hands of the brigands. The ladies of the
party were released and sent back to Athens. Lord Mon-
caster was subsecpiently sent to negotiate the ransom of his
companions, and escaped. The rest were murdered and
horribly mutilated.
Returning to the Piraeus by carriage in preference to the
rail, we crossed in the night to the island of Syra, and took
the Austrian steamer for Corfu. The next day we rounded
Cape Matapan, usually a stormy point with a turbulent sea,
but on this occasion the elements were enjoying a holiday,
the winds were off duty, and the waves asleep. In the aft-
ernoon we were off the Bay of Navarino, where the deci-
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. 409
sive battle was fought in 1827 between the Turkish and
Egyptian navies on the one side, and the allied British,
French, and Russian fleets on the other. It was the de-
struction of the Turkish power on the sea and the libera-
tion of Greece. In the course of the day we passed Cepha-
lonia, the Samos of Homer, and, later in the day, Zante, " the
Flower of the Levant," of which some writer extravagantly
says, " Zante is especially delightful in spring, when the
fragrance of the flowering vineyards, orange-trees and gar-
dens, floats for miles over the surrounding sea."
The next morning we were enterini;; the Gulf of Corfu,
and one of the most beautiful scenes that we had looked
upon in all our travels, reminding us of the Inland Sea of
Japan, was before us. The day was perfectly serene. The
sun rose in great splendor, and poured upon land and sea a
flood of gorgeous light. Not a ripple, not even a dimple,
was on the face of the water to break the reflection of the
shores. As we rounded the point of the citadel, a rocky
height of great strength and greater beauty, overgrown with
vines of the richest green, the picturesqueness of the scene
was such as the pen will not describe. The day we spent
in driving about the charming island was one of the days
to be recalled when we are looking into the memories of
the past for some lovely nook in which to And rest from
the weariness of toil and care.
We could have tarried much longer with great delight,
but, finding a steamer that was to sail in the evening, and
uncertain when we should be able to leave again, we went
on board, and the next morning were landed at Brindisi, a
place that has acquii-ed new importance. It is the Brun-
dusium of the ancient Eomans, and was once their chief
naval station. It was also the southeastern terminus of the
ancient Appian Way, and, in the completion of one of those
remarkable cycles which not unfrequently occur in the his-
tory of nations and countries, has become the terminus of
the great railway from London and Paris to the East. The
most direct route to Egypt and India, and the most speed}',
410 AROUND THE WOELD.
is now through the Mont Cenis Tunnel to Brindisi, whence
the steamer leaves for Alexandria.
Brindisi is a good place to stoj) at, provided one is not
detained. We tarried just twelve hours longer than was
desirable, landing at seven in the morning, and leaving at
the same hour in the evening. With nothing to see, aud
nothing to do but to wait for the evening train, the hours
passed on leaden wheels. It was rainy without and damp
within ; the new Grand Hotel des hides Orientales, then
scarcely completed, was dripping with wet, and we sat and
meditated on fevers and rheumatism until the cars kindh'
bore us away, bound for Naples.
In crossing the mountain range between the eastern aud
western shores of Italy, we were transferred, for a few
miles, from the cars to the diligence, the tunnel not being
completed. We were here reminded once more of bandit-
ti — the Italian brigands, who belong to the same fraterni-
ty w^ith the Greeks and Bedouins, whose hands we had es-
caped. They have the same habit of picking off stragglers
and picking up baggage. The conductor prepared for them
by placing the baggage- wagons under the protection of the
passenger train of carriages, and w^e crossed the mountain
without having a sight of their muskets.
I know of no other part of Italy, unless it be the plain
of Sardinia, that bears the marks of such fertility or of
such careful cultivation as the region north of jS^aples. It
is a vast plain, the soil is rich and easily tilled, and ever}'
rood is improved. The trees are trimmed far up, destroy-
ing their beauty to a great degree, but letting in the sun
and air upon the fields ; while the vines are festooned from
tree to tree above the growing crops, giving the country a
holiday aspect. The peasantry of Italy belong to a differ-
ent race from the dwellers in the towns. They are more
industrious in their habits, and large sections of the coun-
try, devoted to corn and the vine, attest their thrift.
In entering Naples one is struck with the vagabond, and,
at the same time, lively character of the mass of the peo-
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. 4]^]^
pie. Thev swarm every where, like bees that are just ready
to desert a hive that has become too close to contain them.
They live in the open air, not only seeking their amuse-
ments and attending to their ordinary business out of
doors, but cooking and eating in the very thoroughfares of
the city. All seem bent on catching the pleasures of the
day as if there were no to-morrow. Formerly the beggars
constituted one of the most striking features of Neapolitan
street life. They were your escort in entering the city,
coming out in crowds, sometimes for miles, to meet the
public conveyances. They were unremitting in their at-
tentions as long as you staid, never failing to take off
their hats to you whenever you made your appearance in
the streets, and when you were leaving they followed you
out of town, wishing you every blessing by all the saints if
you answered their demands, and cursing you by the whole
calendar if you did not. Many of them had a merry way
of begging, throwing somersaults, or playing a tune upon
their chins, or cutting antics to attract attention, like the
merriest creatures alive, when they would tell you, as the
next thing, that they were dying of hunger, and ask for a
little money for the love of the Madonna. The whole
kingdom of Naples, and, for aught I know, adjacent king-
doms, had been raked and scraped to gather in the halt,
the maimed, the lame, the blind, and all the miserable and
disgusting objects that could be found, as so much capital
on which to drive the thriving trade of begging, one of
the principal branches of business in Naples, and not the
least profitable either. But that is now changed, and one
can go into and out of Naples, and stay there, with com-
paratively little annoyance from this source.
The Bay of Naples I regard as, beyond comparison, the
finest single view in the world. It has a combination of
beautiful features and of interesting associations that clus-
ter around no other spot. The bay itself has a graceful
sweep of thirty or forty miles within the islands placed at
its moutli as sentinels to ward off the towerino; waves that
412 ABOUND THE WOULD.
come rolling in from the sea. Its waters are almost as
blue as the vault of the sky above it. At tlie centre of its
broad sweep stands the genius of the scene, the beautiful,
majestic, living mountain, that has no equal ; graceful in
its outlines, and standing alone in its grandeur, like Fusi-
yama, the glory and pride of Japan. No other mountain
has, for my eye, such a power of fascination. I have nev-
er looked upon it, from whatever point, or how often soev-
er, that it has not had the same strange, fresh interest, as
if I had never seen it before. It seems to be a living
thing. There it stands, year after year, gently breathing
out its vapor, like breath upon the frosty air, that floats
away and is soon dissipated. When in a state of erujDtion
the signs of life are far more striking.
The top of Vesuvius is the best point from which to take
in the beauties of the bay and its surroundings. To the
west lie the islands that form an important element in the
perfection of the view. To the south are Sorrento and other
sunny towns, with the blue mountains towering up behind
them. The bright, gay city of Naples stretches for miles
along the shore to the north. In the distance stands the
tomb of Virgil, and farther on the town of Pozzuoli, the
ancient Puteoli, the terminus of the Appian Way, at which
Paul landed on his memorable journey to Rome, when he
appealed to Csesar's judgment. Farther on are Baise and
Cnmse, the summer resorts of the Roman emperors and
men of wealth, the Newport of those days, where they
erected splendid palaces, and reveled in luxury and dis-
play. The ruins of their magnificent summer palaces, which
were built out into the sea, and overhung the heights,
stretch for miles along the shores. From these same shores
and their surroundings Virgil took the scenery of his vEne-
id. Here are Lake Avernus, and the River Styx, and the
Elysian Fields, Here, too, are the Sibyl's caves. No part
of Italy, not even Rome itself, with its suburbs, was more
consecrated by the homes and writings of her emperors,
and orators, and bards.
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. 4^3
At the foot of Vesuvius lie the long-buried cities of
Herculaneuui and Pompeii, revealed to-day after slumber-
ing forgotten for eighteen centuries. A world of interest
gathers around them as we look down into the silent, de-
serted streets, that so long ago were filled with a bustling-
crowd, and then in one dark storm were overwhelmed.
In what part of the world can so much that is beautiful
in scenery, so much that is fraught with classic interest,
and so much that stirs the heart with tragic recollection, be
seen at a single glance as from the heights of this burning
mountain ? And this is an indication of what the traveler
has to occupy his time and his attention in his sojourn at
the sunny city of Naples. It requires many days to make
the various excursions, but I shall not attempt to conduct
the reader through them all.
Vesuvius was a burning mountain two thousand years
before the Christian era. Its fires were extinguished and
slumbered for a while, but just about the time that Paul
landed at Puteoli it was seized with convulsions ; the whole
region was shaken, and several towns were laid in ruins.
The memorable eruption in which Herculaneum and Pom-
peii were overwhelmed, the former by lava, and the latter
by the shower of ashes, occurred in the year 79. The
younger Pliny, who witnessed it, states that about one
o'clock in the day he saw a strange cloud overhanging the
plain of Naples, like a huge pine-tree shooting up to a
great height and stretching out its branches. This singu-
lar cloud, which seemed to be composed of earth and cin-
ders, excited his curiosity, and he embarked in a boat to
cross the bay and examine into it. As he approached the
coast, the red-hot cinders and stones fell into the boat, and
lie was obliged to retreat. He j^roceeded to Stabiffi to
spend the night with a friend, but before morning they
were driven to the fields by the shaking of the house.
The morning came, but it brought no relief. One shock
of earthquake succeeded another, as if the foundations of
the v.'orld were ffivino; wav. The sea receded from the
414 AROUND THE WORLD.
shore. The mountain poured forth a mass of flame and
burning rock, and the cloud of cinders spread over the bay
and over the land. They attempted again to escape to a
safer distance, and joined the crowd that was surging on-
ward. Pliny's father had already perished. He led his
mother by the hand, and fearing she would be pressed to
death, proposed to step aside and suffer the crowd to pass
by. He says : " We had scarce stepped out of the path
when darkness overspread us — not like that of a cloudy
night, or when there is no moon, but of a room when it is
shut up and all the lights are extinguished. Nothing was
to be heard but the shrieks of women, the screams of chil-
dren, and the cries of men ; some calling for their children,
others for their parents, others for their husbands, and only
distinguishing each other by their voices ; one lamenting
his own fate, another that of his family ; some wishing to
die from the very fear of dying ; some lifting their hands
to the gods ; but the greater part imagining that the last
and eternal night was come which was to destroy the gods
and the world together."
This was the most fearful eruption on record. Many
of less account have since occurred, the most remarkable
in 1779, in which, according to Sir William Hamilton, the
molten lava was thrown in jets to the height of 10,000 feet.
More than once have the sides of the mountain broken in
while the melted lava poured out of its sides, and ran in
streams toward the plain below. In 1855 I made the
ascent of the mountain, reaching the top of the cone, and
looking down into the abyss. It was then comparatively
quiet ; only the presage of a coming explosion was notice-
able. Soon after I had left the pent-up fires broke forth ;
the lava came rushing down in broad streams, filling up
the ravines, and moving onward toward the sea. At night
the mountain cast up a fiery mass, and flames marked the
course of the burning tide. The green ti-ees, encircled by
the red-hot lava, generated steam, and then exploded with
terrific noise, scattering the lava in all directions, and mak-
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. 415
ing the scene still more brilliant by setting fire to the trees,
which, with the mountain itself, illuminated the whole Bay
of Naples, and the surrounding cities and country.
Herculaneum was buried too deep in solid lava ever to
be excavated to any great extent, but the larger part of
Pompeii has been reclaimed, and one may now walk for
miles through its streets and among its buildings. He need
not lose his way ; many of the streets still have the names
upon the corners, as in modern cities. The ancient pave-
ment, rutted deep by the carriage-wheels, remains intact,
not equal, it is true, to the Belgian, but as firm as when it
was laid eighteen centuries ago.
Entering the homes of the Pompeians as they were dis-
covered, we find in them bracelets and jewels, some of ex-
quisite workmanship, gold and precious stones. Here are
writing materials; ink-stands and pens; lamps, as they
went out when Pompeii was extinguished ; thimbles, and
distaffs, and spinning-wheels — in short, the whole catalogue
of a woman's domestic life, together with all the parapher-
nalia of the toilet, even to the rouge and false hair. (Tlie
apothecaries' shops have on hand a large quantity of cos-
metics, showing that they were in great demand.)
The cellars were stored w^ith wine, and, although the old
Falernian has long since evaporated, the amphorse, or earth-
en jars which contained the wine, stand in rows along the
walls. In the house of Diomede, one of the most exten-
sive and elaborately ornamented villas, situated near one
of the gates of the city, were large numbers of wine-jars of
great size. This house, being remote from the centre of
the town, was evidently resorted to by the friends of the
owner as a place of comparative safety ; but more persons
probably lost their lives in it than in any other. The skel-
etons or forms of seventeen persons were found in the cel-
lars. On the women were found gold necklaces, and brace-
lets, and other ornaments. Two were little children, whose
heads were still covered with beautiful hair. In one of
the houses in Pompeii two of the bodies are kept in a glass
41 6 ARO UND THE WORLD.
case, the attitudes and posture of the limbs expressing the
mortal agony which came upon them. Diomede himself
(or one who is supposed to have been the owner of the
villa bearing his name) was found near the garden gate
with a purse of gold and other valuables in his hand, while
an attendant stood by his side grasping the key to the gate.
Some of the houses have the names of the owners inscribed
on the outer wall, especially tliose of a more imposing char-
acter. Among the familiar names is that of " C. Sallust."
The house of Pansa, thus marked, one of the largest in the
city, contained five skeletons when it w^as opened.
The shops, with their contents, are as great a curiosity as
the homes. Some of them are extensive, the property of
wealthy citizens, from which they derived their incomes.
There are several bakeries, or cook-shops, in perfect preser-
vation, from which large quantities of viands have been
taken. In some the bread was found standing in the ovens.
The notices around the doors and in the interior show that
the art of advertising is not a modern invention. In one
of the villas was found the following poster :
"Julia has TO LET for five years,
A BATH, A VENERIUM, NINETY SHOPS,
WITH TERRACES AND UPPER CHAMBERS."
They are still without tenants, although they have been ad-
vertised ISOO years.
Nearly every thing found in the houses and shops at
Pompeii is preserved in the National Museum at Naples,
one of the most interesting collections of antiquities in the
world. By its help we can readily refurnish the luxurious
but now deserted homes, see how their inmates lived, and
learn more of their domestic history than from any other
source. One can study and muse for days over this ex-
traordinary collection, and find his interest growing deeper
every haur that he lingers.
Before leaving Naples we drove to the cities of its own
dead, among the characteristic features of the place. The
Protestant cemetery is a neat church-yard in tlie outskirts
STAMBOUL TO NAPLES. ^\^
of the town. The cypress here waves over the grave of
many a stranger who has died far away from the friends
and scenes of home, but flowers also bloom profusely in
this sweet resting-place of those who have no more seas to
cross, and no farther journey in life to make. After lin-
gering to note, by the various inscriptions, from how many
lands the sleepers had come, we drove to the Carivpo Santo
Vecchio, the great charnel-house of Naples. It contains
three hundred and sixty-five pits, under a wide, paved
square. Every evening the stone which covers one of
these pits is removed, and the common dead of the city for
the day are thrown into it, without even a winding-sheet to
cover them. The old man and the child, the rough lazza-
roni and the tender maiden, are dropped in together, and
lie in one indiscriminate mass ; quick-lime is thrown in to
consume the bodies, and the pit is sealed for another year,
to be opened at its close. We did not wait to witness the
revolting scene, although the city carts were arriving with
the dead, but drove to the Campo Santo Nuovo, the ceme-
tery for the aristocratic dead, and here I was surprised to
find a burial-ground laid out with refined taste, shaded with
the cypress and other trees, and adorned with tombs of the
most costly description. Many of them were in the form
of chapels built of fine Italian marble, elaborately finished.
After what I had heard of the burial of the dead at Na-
ples, and after what I had seen at the Campo Vecchio, it
was a relief to enter one that indicated so much refine-
ment of feeling.
Dd
418 AROUND THE WORLD.
XXXII.
EOME TO FLORENCE.
The old route from Naples to Rome along the sea,
through Terracina and Mola di Gaeta, was far more pic-
turesque than the present route by rail, and one could
fully enjoy it when traveling leisurely by vettura. I was
once several days on the way, spending a night at Terra-
cina in a storm, when the wild waves came rolling in from
the sea, dashing against the walls of the hotel, and threat-
ening to wash away its very foundations. It was quite
equal to being rocked in the cradle of the deep. The true
way to see Italy is not to whirl through it by tlie rail-car,
but to take the old modes of conveyance. But every mode
has its advantages, although no gain in time can compen-
sate for the loss of the charming Italian scenery, and
glimpses of Italian country life which were once enjoyed
in traveling through the interior and along the shores.
On reaching the Roman frontier, for the first time, and,
I may add also, the last time in all our journey around the
world, a demand was made for passports. We had trav-
eled from one end of Asia to the other, through Egypt and
Syria, European Turkey and Greece, and thus far in Italy,
without being called upon to declare our nationality, or ob-
tain permission to go or come. But now, as we were en-
tering the estate of his holiness the Pope, we must needs
go through the old investigation. In no respect has a
greater change come over the countries of Europe, and es-
pecially those having Roman Catholic rulers, than in the
abolition of the passport system, and it is one of the many
significant indications of the progress of religious freedom,
as well as of the principles of free government. Several
BOME TO FLORENCE. 4X9
years since I had traveled over the route I was now taking,
and, upon reaching home, found that my passport had on
it eighty-seven vists^ or official seals and signatures, as evi-
dence of my having been permitted to enter and leave dif-
ferent countries and cities, and in nearly every instance it
was where Roman Catholic influence was predominant. In
going even from Rome to Xaples and returning, fifteen or
twenty examinations were rec[uired. The fact that in my
recent journey, of which I am now writing, my passport
was only once exhibited in the entire circuit of the earth,
is a volume of testimony in regard to the progress which
the world has been making, and also in regard to the
waning power of popery as a political element. Passports
are no longer required even at the gates of Rome. They
belong to an order of things that has passed away even at
Rome.
It was night when we reached the Alban Hills and came
out upon tlie heights that overlook the Campagna and the
city of the Csesars, and we could study the scene only in
imagination, peopling it with the multitudes of the past in-
stead of the present. As we entered Rome we found it il-
luminated in commemoration of the anniversary of the re-
turn of Pius IX. from his long but voluntary exile after the
occurrence and success of the Revolution of 1848. I call it
voluntary because he was in no sense compelled, excepting
by his fears, to flee or to remain in exile. When he was
chosen pope in 1846, he entered upon a course of reform,
and corrected many of the abuses which had become hoary
with the lapse of time. He established his temporal gov-
ernment on a sort of popular basis, and gave the people a
taste of liberty, which led to their taking the government
into their own hands. Pius IX. was personally popular,
nor was there at any time the least disposition to interfere
with his position or power as head of the Church. On the
assassination of his minister, Count Rossi, the pope became
alarmed, and fled in disguise to Mola di Gaeta, within the
territory of King Ferdinand of Naples. As soon as his de-
420 AROUND THE WORLD.
parture from E.ome became known, a deputation of emi-
nent citizens was appointed to wait on him and urge his re-
turn, with the assurance that there would be no interfer-
ence with his dignity or his functions as the liead of the
Church. But the reactionary cardinals had him in their
hands, and would allow no interview, and under their ad-
vice he remained in exile until the French army had sup-
pressed the rising liberties of the people and re-established
the temporal tyranny of a spiritual power. The freedom
which the city of Rome is now enjoying is that which its
people won for themselves by their own right arms in 1848,
and which was subsequently wrested fi*om them by French
bayonets alone. Never were claims to temporal power
more false than those which are now urged in behalf of
the pope.
A somewhat striking coincidence marked my coming to
Rome. I had reached the city in 1854 while the council
was in session that adopted the dogma of the Immaculate
Conception as an article of the faith of the Church. I
stood at that time near the high altar in St. Peter's on the
day of its public announcement, and heard the pope read
it from beginning to end. His heart had been set on mak-
ing this declaration, and cardinals, and bishops, and digni-
taries of all degrees were called from all parts of the earth
to bow to his will and say that it was tlie will of God. He
read the Latin with a feeble voice, weeping as he read it,
and it was generally thought at the time that this would be
the expiring act of his pontificate. I reached Rome again
in season to be present in St. Peter's at the first public ses-
sion of the Council of 1870, and heard the same pope an-
nounce the dogma De Fide preliminary to the impious
claim of infallibility. He was feebler than before, with
more than fifteen years added to his age, but there was the
same iron will before which all inferior ecclesiastics have
been made to bow. The utterance of this impious assump-
tion of divine prerogatives was the signal for the providen-
tial destruction of liis temporal as well as spiritual power.
R03IE TO FLORENCE. 421
Once, as we learn from sacred writ, auotiier ruler, " Herod,
arrayed in royal apparel, sat upon his throne and made an
oration. And the people gave a shout, saying. It is the
voice of a god, and not of a man. And immediately the
angel of the Lord smote him because he gave not God the
glory, and he was eaten of worms, and gave up the ghost."
Pius IX. survives, but almost immediately npon the ntter-
ance of his dogma, and the shout of the people, " It is the
voice of a god, and not of a man," his throne crumbled
and fell, and his spiritual power over those who acknowl-
edged his supremacy is fast passing away.
With modern Rome and with the remains of the ancient
city every intelligent reader is familiar, and I should not
attempt any general description even did my space permit.
I shall refer only to one or two of its innumerable objects
of interest.
The first point to which I bent my steps on entering
Rome was not the Church of St. Peter, nor the Vatican,
nor the Coliseum, but a monument that stands on the an-
cient Via Sacra^ in some respects the most interesting ob-
ject in the ancient or modern city. It is the smallest of the
triumphal arches, and is known as the Arch of Titus. It
bears the following inscription :
Senatvs.
POPVLVSQVE ROMANVS.
Divo. Tito. Divia. Vespasiana.
Vespasiano. Avgvsto.
This arch was erected to commemorate the conquest of Je-
rusalem. While at the head of the army before the walls
of the Holy City, Yespasian, upon the death of Nero, was
proclaimed emperor. He hastened back to Rome, leaving
Titus in command, who, upon the fall of the city and the
destruction of the Temple, made a triumphal march into
Rome, bringing with him a long train of captive Jews, to-
gether with the spoils, among which were the sacred vessels
of the Temple. It is this procession which is commemora-
ted in the beautiful arch. The great interest of the bas-re-
422 AROUND THE WORLD.
lief is in the fact that it supplies a place in the illustration
of the Bible which can be tilled from no other source. It
is the only visible representation that exists of those sa-
cred vessels, the patterns of which were received from
heaven.
The frieze of the arch is ornamented with sculpture — a
procession of warriors leading oxen to sacrifice. Upon a
side panel of the interior is a group representing Titus in
the act of celebrating his triumph over the Jews. He
stands in a chariot drawn by four horses abreast, accompa-
nied by the senators of Rome, and officers bearing the fas-
ces. The sculptured form of Victory holds a wreath of
laurel, with which she is about to crown the conqueror.
Upon the opposite side, on a similar panel, is the celebrated
group bearing the sacred vessels of the Jewish Temple.
First comes a standard-bearer leading the way, with a can-
opy or arch supported above his head. The table of shew-
bread, with a cup and the silver trumpets used by the priests
of the Temple to proclaim the year of jubilee, is borne on
staves. Other bearers follow, carrying chaplets of laurel,
and the golden candlestick with its seven branches. In
size and form these bas-reliefs correspond precisely with
the descriptions of the sacred record and the minute de-
scriptions of Josephus. Little did those ancient pagans —
the Eoman senate and the Roman people — when decree-
ing and erecting this monument to a deified warrior, imag-
ine that they were erecting a monument to the true God in
the verification of prophecy and divine history, and little
did they suppose that, after nearly two thousand years, the
disciples of that faith which they had already begun to per-
secute even unto cruel death would come from distant lauds
to read the record and to be confirmed in their faith. The
Jews of modern Rome are said to be the descendants of the
captives which Titus brought from Jerusalem to grace his
triumph. Not one of them, even at this day, willpass un-
der the Arch of Titus, although it spans one of the thor-
oughfares of the city. They shun it as a memorial of the
ROME TO FLORENCE.
423
subjugation of their nation, a fall wliich lias never jet been
retrieved.
One of the most perfect and most striking of the relics
of pagan Korae is the Pantheon. It has lost its external
beauty in the covering of marble, but its massive walls and
the form of the building remain just as when erected sev-
eral years before the Christian era. It is still a wonder of
architecture, faultless in its beautiful and grand proportions,
and, notwithstanding its simplicity, it is to me the most im-
pressive of the ancient or modern buildings of Rome. It
stands in what was formerly the Campus Martins, where it
was surrounded by the buildings belonging to the Thermae
of Agrippa, and was reached by a flight of steps, all of
w^hich must have added greatly to its effect. Now it is in
one of the meanest corners of the city, and is scarcely on a
level with the adjacent streets. The portico, which is re-
garded as a model, is 110 feet long, forty-four in depth, and
is composed of sixteen Corinthian columns of Oriental
granite, each one of which is a single block or shaft. They
are forty-six and a half feet in height, and fifteen in cir-
cumference. The entablature and pediment are still per-
fect, and the frieze bears the following inscription, extend-
ing along the entire front :
M. AGRIPPA. L. F. COS. TERTIVM FECIT.
The massive bronze doors are acknowledged by the best au-
thorities to be those set up by Agrippa. Although nearly
forty feet in height, and having swung upon their hinges
for nineteen centuries, they may still be moved by tlie iiand
of a cliild. Tlie building is circular, 143 feet in diameter,
or more than 400 feet in circumference. The walls, which
are twenty feet in thickness, rise to the height of seventy
feet, when they pass into one vast dome, the centre of which
is 143 feet above the pavement. The dome is more im-
pressive than that of St. Peter's, and one peculiarity adds a
charm to that impression such as I have never found in any
other building. The dome is open at its centre, the aper-
424: ABOUND THE WORLD.
tnre being twenty-seven feet in diameter. It was never
closed, even by glass, and the storms of nearly two thousand
years have beaten through it and fallen upon the pavement
below. This might seem a defect, but it constitutes, in re-
ality, its most beautiful, if not its grandest feature. The
circular walls are unbroken by windows, and, when the
massive bronze doors are closed, this aperture in the dome
is the only source of light, and communicates directly with
the heavens above. One can look up and see the clouds
floating by, or gaze into the blue ether, while the lower
world is shut out by walls whicli no earthly sounds can
penetrate. The poetry and sublimity of this conqeption
for a temple may be imagined. It excludes all things ter-
restrial — opens heaven alone to the worshiper, and that, too,
without any intervening medium.
An anecdote characteristic of Roman morals is related
in a manuscript narrative of the sack of Rome, preserved
at the Vatican. When Charles Y. visited Rome in 1536,
he ascended the roof of the Pantheon, and looked down
through the aperture from above. A young Roman who
had been ordered to accompany him afterward confessed
to iiis father that he was strongl}' tempted to push the mon-
arch over on the pavement below, a depth of nearly 150
feet, in revenge for the sack of tlie city a few years before.
The wily old Italian said, "My son, such things should be
done, and not talked about."
The Pantheon has been stripped of all its costly orna-
ments, leaving only its simple grandeur to delight the eye.
Formerly the outer walls were faced with marble, which is
now all gone. The vast dome was covered with gilded
bronze, and its interior either lined or profusely ornament-
ed with silver. The plates of bronze that covered the roof,
and the silver, were removed by Constans II., A.D. 655.
and afterward taken to Alexandria. Pope Urban VIII.
completed the plunder of the building by taking the bronze
beams of the portico to form the baldachino of the high
altar of St. Peter's, and to cast cannon for the castle of St.
ROME TO FLORENCE. 425
Angelo. This pope belonged to the Barberini family, and
used a part of the plunder to ornament the Barberini pal-
ace. Pasquin, the mediseval oracle of Rome, made the fol-
lowing record of its final desecration: Quod nonfecerunt
Barhari Romm, fecerunt Barherini. (What the Barbari-
ans left of Rome, the Barberini destroyed.) The prince of
painters, Raphael, who was a great admirer of the sublime
structure, requested that he might be buried within its
walls. When he died, his body, together with his last and
noblest work, the Transfiguration, was exposed for three
days in the Pantheon, and visited by crowds, who gazed
upon both with equal interest, but with different emotions.
His remains were afterward deposited in a niche formed
in the walls, and the spot is now marked by a simple slab
with an inscription in Latin. For many years the Academy
of St. Luke, an association of artists, had a skull in their
possession, said to be Raphael's. As doubts had arisen in
regard to the actual resting-place of the immortal master
of the pencil, it was determined in 1833 to settle the ques-
tion by an examination of his tomb. It was accordingly
opened in the presence of several ecclesiastical dignitaries
and artists, and the skeleton was found entire just as it had
been entombed. The relics were replaced, inclosed in an
antique marble sarcophagus from the Vatican Museum.
Of course the skull in the possession of the Academy of St.
Luke lost its value, notwithstanding it had often awakened
the admiration of phrenologists, who had found the paint-
er's bump strikingly developed. But perhaps it did belong
to a great artist. Who knows ?
The ardent student of classical poetry and history (which
in ancient times were often identical) is greatly scandalized
in coming to the banks of the Tiber. Instead of a mighty
river commensurate with its fame, he finds a small, muddy
stream, scarcely any where two hundred yards wide. The
mud, the narrowness, the very swiftness of its current, as
if it were hurrying away to the sea to escape observation,
are too much for him at the first glance. But as he gazes,
^2Q AROUND THE WORLD.
the events which ages ago crowded around its banks, and
which were known and felt the world over, come np before
him like a grand procession, and it is no longer the insig-
nificant stream, but the river of ancient Rome. Tliat is
distinction enough. It matters little to an ordinary trav-
eler whether the stories of ^Eneas, and of Romulus and
Remus, are myths or veritable history. Very few who come
to Italy have any purpose or desire to settle the questions
of fancy and of fact with which the early days of Rome
are environed. This is left for the Niebuhrs whose tastes
incline them in that direction. It is far more pleasant (and,
for all practical purposes at the present day, it is just as
well) to do as we did when school-boys — accept as history
the story of the founder of Rome cast by the waters of the
Tiber upon the spot where he aftei-ward built the city.
The river is always turbid. Virgil is the only author
who calls it coerulean, and this was a stretch of poetic li-
cense quite beyond the mark. Upon what the fancy was
founded it would be difficult to tell. It often overflows its
banks as in ancient times, and the Campus Martins, on
which the modern city is chiefly built, becomes inundated.
The height of tlie water is marked upon columns standing
on the river bank in the Via Ripetta, and also upon the fa-
9ade of the Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, in the
very heart of the city, wdiere the marks are some ten or
twelve feet above the pavement. I have seen the pave-
ment of the Pantheon several feet under water, so that the
building could be entered only by boats. Treasures of art
have often found their way into the river, which, if they
could be -recovered, would bring in the art markets of the
world immense prices. Statuary more perfect, and perhaps
more beautiful than any of the works of the ancient mas-
ters that are now preserved in the Vatican, doubtless lie
imbedded in groups in the muddy bottom. The famous
banker of the time of Leo X., Agostino Chigi, gave to the
pope and his cardinals a splendid and costly entertainment,
at which the dishes were all of tlie precious metals. It is
ROME TO FLORENCE. 427
said that when the feast was over they were thrown into
the Tiber by the order of the rich banker, that no less illus-
trious ffuests mio-ht use them. There is a tradition that
the sacred vessels of the Jewish Temple, brought from Je-
rusalem, among them the golden candlestick, were lost or
thrown from the Milvian Bridge and never recovered.
There is nothing connected with the antiquities of Rome
that Christian travelers visit with deeper interest than the
Catacombs, although few venture far into their dark and
intricate recesses. These narrow passages, some of which
are sixty or seventy feet below the surface of the ground,
run in all directions under the city and under the Cam-
pagna. The whole country is honey-combed by tliem, and
it is said that in ancient times there was comnnmication
through them from Rome to the sea, fifteen or twenty
miles distant. The openings or entrances are few, but it
is not uncommon for riders over the Campagna to break
through into those that are nearer the surface.
Their origin is not absolutely known — at least there are
no authentic records of their excavation ; but it is alto-
gether probable they were formed in the early days of
Rome by digging for the volcanic sand caWed j>oszulana,
which was used extensively in making the Roman cement
for the erection of buildings — that mortar which has re-
sisted the action of the elements more than two thousand
years, and which bids fair to last as long as the stones
themselves. The pozzulana was removed in the same way
that coal is dug — in long avenues crossing each other at
various angles, leaving enough of the earth or rock to sus-
tain the superincumbent mass. They have fallen in at
many places, completely blocking up the way, and, as there
is always danger of such an occurrence, visitors are usu-
ally taken only a short distance, just to show how they were
formed, and for what purpose they were subsequently used.
Sad indeed would be the fate of those who should be bur-
ied beneath the falling mass, and sadder yet of those
whose retreat should be cut off, while they were left to
428
AROUND THE WORLD.
GBOUNn PLAN OF THE CATACOMBS.
wander hopelessly until compelled by weariness and weak-
ness to lie down and die. Some thrilling incidents are
related as warnings to those who enter, and to repress the
curiosity of such as might wish to exceed the limits which
prudence has assigned to the exploration of these subter-
ranean passages. Several years since, fifteen or twenty
youth, connected with one of the colleges of Eome, ac-
companied by a teacher, descended with candles, taking
the usual precautions to secure their safe return to the light
ROME TO FLORENCE. 429
of clay, but not one of them ever came out to tell the fate
of the rest. They either lost their way, and wandered on
in hope of finding the path that would lead them back
until compelled by exhaustion to lie down and die, or the
fall of the earth on the path they had taken cut off their
escape. Long and diligent search w^as made, but to this
day nothing is known of how or where in the vast laby-
rinth they were overtaken by death. The imaginations of
those Avho go down into those dark recesses picture many
a fearful scene which no words have power to express.
Later still, an artist entered the Catacombs alone, pro-
viding himself with a ball of twine, which he unwound as
he wandered on, until he became absorbed with the records
and recollections of other days. When he came to himself,
the slender thread that bound him to the outer world was
missing ; with his dim taper he searched for it in vain ; at
last the light grew dim, and was then extinguished. In
the liorror of despair, he groped from one passage to anoth-
er, until at last he stumbled in the darkness, and, in his
struggles, his hand caught the thread which brought him
back to the world.
The peculiar interest attaching to these Catacombs is,
that during the early ages of Christianity, in the times of
persecutions by the Roman emperors, they were the resort
of Christians for safety, and probably, to some extent, for
worship. They formed a secure refuge for those who
were familiar with their windings, and it is probable that
great numbers fled to them to escape the cruel death to
which they were devoted by their persecutors. Either at
the time they were thus used, or subsequently, they became
sepulchres for the Christian dead. Niches were cut longi-
tudinally in the sides of the Jong corridors, sometimes
five or six one above another, in which the dead were
deposited ; they were then closed with a slab of marble
or terra cotta, and sealed with cement. In this way they
became populous cities of the dead. Not tliousands, but
hundreds of thousands, were here laid to sleep their last
430 ABOUND THE WORLD.
sleep. When they were first opened the bodies were in all
states of preservation or decay. Some retained their form,
in other cases the skeletons only remained, while the great
multitude had crumbled into dust or had entirely disap-
peared.
The entrances to the Catacombs, which have all been un-
der the strict supervision of the ecclesiastical authorities,
are chiefly through or in connection with tlie churches,
and are few in number, notwithstanding the limitless ex-
tent of the excavations. The one most accessible and most
frequently visited by strangers is at the Church of St. Se-
bastian, a mile or more on the Appian Way, outside of the
walls of the city. I had several times been into this as far
as the old monk in charge consented to act as guide, and
as far, probably, as he was familiar with the windings of
the way, beyond which it certainly was not safe to venture
alone, as a single turn might bewilder any one, and lead
him into an endless labyrinth. An ecclesiastic who was
visiting Rome to be present at the council entered at one
time with our party, but he soon became alarmed, and en-
treated us not to go farther, as we must needs keep togeth-
er to have the services of the guide. Having seen all that
was to be seen of this, I was desirous to make a more ex-
tensive examination of those which had not been so com-
pletely rifled of their contents, and learning that the Cata-
combs in connection with tlie Church of St. Agnese, in an-
other part of the Campagna, were far more interesting on
this account, a party was made up, application was made to
the cardinal vicar, and, through the intercession of an
American lady, permission to enter was obtained. An in-
telligent gentleman who was well acquainted with the
place and with its history was deputed to accompany us.
We spent a large part of the morning appointed for the
visit in wandering through the silent vaults, which, unlike
the others, are still filled with the crumbling remains of
the early confessors of the Christian faith. The excava-
tions are much more regular, and on a larger scale than
ROME TO FLORENCE.
431
those which we had previously seen. Instead of being
more unsafe, as is generally supposed, they are less liable
to crumble and fall. The rock in which the excavations
are made is more solid, allowing the passages to be cut with
more exactness, and they run often to a great distance in a
right line. The roofs are vaulted with regularity, and the
sides cut perfectly square. Tlie same niches occur as in
the other Catacombs, and I'ise one above another to the
number of live or six, but they have not been touched ex-
cepting to remove the slabs and inscriptions. The bones
of the dead by hundreds, and even thousands, were lying
where they were deposited sixteen or eighteen centuries
ago. Occasionally they were in a state of preservation,
and not unfrequently were covered with a mineral deposit
from the drippings of the rock above, which had assisted
in keeping them entire ; in many cases it seemed to have
produced a sort of petrification, but generally, where the
form of a body, or even of a bone appeared, it would sink
and almost vanish under the touch, all substance having
gone. The teeth were occasionally undecayed, and, as I
took one from its socket, the bone to which it had been at-
tached sank immediately away.
The bodies had been laid in their narrow couches uncof-
tined, and, as the slabs had been removed, all that remained
of the sleepers was exposed to view ; but there was nothing
repulsive in the sight, as there would be in an ordinary
charnel-house, nor any thing melancholy in the place itself.
The sacred. Christian associations dispelled such thoughts.
These bodies, which had been slumbering quietly for nearly
two thousand years, had been laid away in the hope of a
coming morning — the morning of the resurrection, wiien
the dust into which they would crumble should be gather-
ed again and reanimated, to meet at his coming Him who
is the resurrection and the life. Many trembling hearts
had been driven by the persecutors into these recesses to
escape the sword or the jaws of wild beasts ; but when they
ceased to beat, whether through violence or by a natural
J.32 AROUND THE WORLD.
death, they were all and forever at rest. The storms of
centuries had raged above their heads, armies had met in
deadly conflict on the soil above them, but they slept on un-
disturbed. Instead of being oppressed with sad or mourn-
ful thoughts, a feeling of triumph— of actual joy, came over
me in the remembrance of the glorious victories over death
and every other foe that had been gained by the host around
me. After fighting the good fight of faith, and resisting
unto blood, they had gone up to receive the reward and the
crown of the martyrs.
When the Catacombs were first opened inscriptions were
found on the slabs, some of them rudely cut, and not un-
frequently they were accompanied with emblematical de-
vices expressive of Christian hope or sentiment. The slabs
were removed and set in the wall of the long corridor lead-
ing to the Museum of the Vatican, where they may now be
seen. Among the most common emblems were the Three
Children in the Fiery Furnace, and Daniel in the Lions'
Den, doubtless used as emblems of martyrdom ; the Good
Shepherd, with a Lamb on his shoulders ; Noah at the win-
dow of the Ark ; the Dove ; an Anchor ; a Fish, the signifi-
cance of which as an early Christian emblem is well known ;
with representations of the miracles of Clirist, etc.
I give but a few specimens of the multitude of inscrip-
tions : " Valeria dormit in pace" (Valeria sleeps in peace).
" In pace Domini dormit" (He sleeps in the peace of the
Lord). " In pace" and " In Christo" occur frequently.
The constant occurrence of the word " sleep" as a synonym
for death is striking. The following are mere translations
of inscriptions :
" Lannes, the martyr of Christ, rests here. He suffered
under Diocletian."
" In the time of the Emperor Adrian, Marius, a young
military leader, who had lived long enough : with his blood
he gave up his life for Christ. At length he rested in
peace. The well-deserving, with tears and fears, erected
this in the Ides of December, VI."
ROME TO FLORENCE. 433
" Here lies Gordianus, deputy of Gaul, murdered with all
liis family for his faith. They rest in peace. Theophila,
his maid, erected this."
I can not attempt even the briefest enumeration of the
places and objects of interest, ancient and modern, which
are in and around Home ; it is a world in itself, and I have
found by experiment that months would not exhaust the
study. The Vatican, the Capitol, the ancient and modern
palaces, the Coliseum, the churches, which are also reposi-
tories of art ; the Seven Hills, the Appian Way, the sub-
urbs, Albano, Frascati, and a thousand ruins, each one of
which has its classic history, all claim the attention of the
traveler, but can not have their record here. There is no
other city in Europe where an intelligent traveler can tarry
so long with so much interest. But we must pass on. I
can not do so, however, without expressing my own pleasure
in tlie thought that Rome, which I had seen only under a
dark shadow — the shadow of spiritual despotism, is now in
the light. The sun is shining on liome as it has not shone
for many long centuries, save in the brief period after the
Revolution of 1848. Its people walk the streets breathing
the air of freedom — fi-eedom to think their own thoughts
and speak their own words, enjoying the protection of a
liberal government, even though it be a kingly. Long live
Victor Emanuel, and long may he reign over United Italy
— at least so long as he pursues the enlightened policy which
he has been carrying out since he came to the throne. And
ever may the people of Rome rejoice in freedom fi-om
ghostly tyranny, the most oppressive of all forms of despot-
ism. The temporal power of the pope will assuredly never
be re-established with " the consent of the governed."
As a matter of necessity, owing to the arrangement of
the trains, we made a night journey to Florence, entering it
in the morning, and greatly enjoying the views of river, and
mountain, and vale as we approached the city. Victor
Emanuel can not have set his heart upon making Rome
the capital of the new kingdom of Italy on account of its
^Ee
434
AROUND THE WORLD.
greater beauty. There is no inland city in Europe more
superbly located than Florence. If not a gem in itself, the
setting makes it one. The surrounding heights, with the
numerous villas, and vineyards, and monasteries that crown
the hills, make the sight one to be enjoyed and never for-
gotten. The view from San Miniato, which is reached by
one of the most beautiful drives in the suburbs of any city
in the world, can scarcely be surpassed by any mere inland
view.
H.URI.NdE, ir.dM SAN MINtATO.
And Florence is as attractive as ever in its works of art.
The Uffizi and Pitti Palaces, the treasure-houses of paint-
ing, iiave witnessed revolutions raging around them, but
their pictures and other treasures remain where they were.
It is a marvel as well as a pleasure, after reading of the
many changes in the government of these lands, to find its
galleries of art and all that they contain untouched. The
first Napoleon ruthlessly despoiled Italy, but the sentiment
ROME TO FLORENCE. 435
of tlie world, as well as his own changing fortunes, com-
pelled him to restore what others have not dared to touch.
The removal of the court to Rome will make no change in
the art treasures of Florence ; they will remain undisturb-
ed, and future travelers will find them just where they
were found before Victor Emanuel was welcomed to Flor-
ence.
The da3's passed quickly away in visiting and revisiting
the galleries, where one can linger for weeks ; the Duomo,
with its Campanile and Baptistery ; Santa Croce, and San
Lorenzo, and the many places and objects of interest which
have so long attracted crowds of travelers to the beautiful
city, made more attractive than ever before. An excursion
to Pisa, distant about an hour, afforded a sight of the Lean-
ing Tower, and of the Cathedral in which still hangs the
bronze chandelier, the swinging of which suggested to the
philosophical mind of Galileo the theory of the pendulum,
the first step toward his demonstration of the nature and
order of the solar system, for which he came near suffering
martyrdom at the hands of the Church of Rome. I great-
ly scandalized the priest who attended us when I gently
touched the chandelier and gave it a swing, that I might be
brought moi'e into communication with the heretic Galileo
by seeing it in motion.
Florence, since it has passed from under the dominion of
the Grand-duke, has become a centre of light and true re-
ligious inllnence for all Italy. -There is something truly
sublime and almost inexplicable in the stand which Victor
Emanuel has taken in i-egard to religious liberty. He is
not reputed to be a man of religious sentiment or feeling ;
quite otherwise ; and yet, since he first came to his father's
throne, he has pursued a steady course in securing to his
subjects the right to worship God, and in granting to his
people equal privileges without regard to their religious
opinions. The Waldenses, who for ages suffered oppression
even when they were not suffering persecution, are now
represented in the Italian Parliament, and enjoy full eccle-
436 AROUND THE WORLD.
siastical privileges. It was said in Turin many years ago,
when Victor Emanuel was king of that corner of Italy,
that he received the principles of religious toleration as a
sacred legacy from Charles Albert; if so, he has been a
faithful executor of his father's will. Not all the threats
of excommunication, nor excommunication itself, which has
been hurled at his head more than once, has had any effect
to turn him from his course.
VENICE HOMEWARD.
In the journey from Florence to Venice, where once
the traveler passed over the Apennines, w^e passed directly
through them, piercing the mountains b}^ more than forty
tunnels within the space of two or three hours. We scarce-
ly emerged from one before we dived into the gloom and
darkness of another, until it really seemed as if the eye of
day was simply winking at ns — now shut, now open, and
now shut again. Xight came on, and the stars came out
long before we reached " The City of the Sea ;" but near
midnight we landed (if leaving terra firma and taking to
the water can be called landing), and glided quietly to our
quarters at the hotel a mile or more distant.
There are only two cities in the world that I have found
just what I expected. When I first caught sight of Jeru-
salem in ci-ossing the hills of Judea, and wdien I looked
down upon it from tlie Mount of Olives, it was the Jeru-
salem of my tlioughts ; I had been there often before.
When I reached the railway terminus on the lagoon at
Venice, and took a gondola instead of an omnibus, and
was rowed by moonlight througli one street after another,
and at length landed at the door of the hotel, into which I
stepped from the gondola ; and when, on the following
VENICE U02IEWARD. 437
days, I floated through the Hquid streets, into and along
the Grand Canal, past the old and now deserted palaces,
beneath the Rialto, and under the Bridge of Sighs; and
as I stood in the grand square of San Marco, and entered
the Doge's Palace, and walked through its great historic
halls, and descended into its subterranean and subaqueous
dungeons, I found myself just where I had been a hun-
dred times. It was not the realization of a dream — it was
the dream prolonged ; every thing was as I had fancied it.
Venice is a city so peculiar, so unlike all other cities we
have ever known, that we do not base our conceptions of
it upon what we have seen of other places, but upon actual
descriptions.
In this singular city travelers must needs become am-
phibious. They sleep in houses, not upon the land, but
anchored in the sea. If they step into the street they step
upon the water. If they wish to make a call upon a friend,
they order, not a carriage, but a gondola. There is not a
carriage in all Venice, and only one horse, which is kept
on an adjacent island as a curiosity. He would have been,
in truth, ra7ri avis if he had not been a horse. Over the
streets, which are water, a stillness reigns throughout the
year which to many becomes oppressive, absolutely pain-
ful ; but to me it is a positive luxury. Here the noise and
bustle of life are suspended, the days float along as still as
the flight of a bird in the air, or as smoothly as one of the
gondolas in which we glide over the surface of the water.
Thoroughly to enjoy Venice, one must come at the right
season, and have plenty of time. In midwinter the air is
too cool to enter into the spirit of the place. In midsum-
mer, and all through the warm season, the canals are of-
fensive, reminding one of the streets of Cologne ; and if
one has been in China, they will slightly remind him of
the cities of the Celestial Empire. The month of May,
when the air is balmy, and just warm enough to enjoy the
open air without exercise (for exercise here is almost out
of the question), is, perhaps, the best time of the year.
438 AROUND THE WOULD.
And then to take a gondola in front of the Doge's Palace,
and allow your gondolier to row you gently into the Grand
Canal, and through its whole extent, and give you — as he
will, if you secure an intelligent gondolier — the name and
the story of each one of the old marble palaces as you
glide by it, or pause to read up its history ; to enter these
ancient halls of the Venetian princes, as you may by a
suitable introduction ; to bring up the days of the Old Ke-
public, when these water streets were resplendent with na-
val displays, with gorgeous regattas, and with the hiagnifi-
cence of Oriental sights — all this bewilders and delights
the imagination, until one can scarcely do any thing but
give way to the intoxicating influence of the scenes and
associations by which he is surrounded. Even visiting and
studying the works of art which abound in Venice seem
almost too much like servile labor for the atmosphere of
the place. Venice itself is the work of art which each one
will most delight to contemplate.
The evening before leaving Venice, after making a call
on some friends on the Grand Canal, we took a gondola to
return to our own hotel. The niglit was enchanting, and,
instead of going directly to our quarters, I told the gondo-
lier to row down the bay toward the Lido. The skies were
])erfectly clear, the stars were out in hosts, looking down
upon the placid scene ; the water of the bay -was literally
like glass, and, as we returned, the whole city, with its bril-
liant lights, was reflected from its surface, making two
perfect cities, one above and one below the sea. Not a
sound came from the city itself, in which no rumbling
wheels are ever heard. AH was perfect stillness. I di-
rected the gondolier to rest upon his oars, and leave us to
float. Just then the great historic bell of San Marco,
swinging in the lofty Campanile, with its deep-toned voice
rung out the hour of midnight, and the bells all over the
city echoed the sound. Was it all a dream ? It was not
like the common realities of earth. We returned to our
hotel to dream in truth, and to bring away with us the re-
VENICE HOMEWARD. 439
membrance of this last evening as the most appropriate of
all our pleasant memories of the Queen of the Adriatic,
Going from Venice to Vienna, we chose the route by rail,
around the head of the Adriatic, having had enough of the
sea to satisfy our most earnest longings. From Trieste the
road leads over the Semmering Pass by one of the grand-
est pieces of engineering, and through some of the grand-
est scenery on any railroad in the world. We ascended
many lofty heights, now passing through dark, rocky gal-
leries, now rushing along the mountain side, from which
we had charming views of the valleys beneath us, and anon
winding down until we were in the very depths of the val-
leys preparing to ascend other heights beyond.
Vienna, the splendid capital of the Austrian Empire,
is becoming more and more magnificent. The internal
fortifications were razed in 1858 to furnish room for the
growing city, and piles of buildings have been and are still
in course of erection. Paris, taken as a whole, is more
beautiful, but there is no city in all Central or Southern
Europe that is more magnificent. In the old town the
streets are narrow; but the new, broad avenues, which
stretch for miles and encircle the city, are lined Mnth splen-
did blocks of buildings, giving it the aspect of a city of
palaces.
A great change has come over this capital, and over the
whole empire within the last few years. The Austrian
government is now carrying out the principle which I saw
inscribed as a motto on one of the arches leading to the
imperial palace — an inscription which was long a dead let-
ter — JusTiTiA Regnorum Fundamentum. The contrast be-
tween Austria as it was and Austria as it is I have had oc-
casion to test. A few years since, in crossing the fi'ontier.
I was taken by the police into a private room, and subject-
ed to a long and rigid examination in regard to my birth-
place, my family, my destination, my purposes of travel,
and many other particulars ; the answei's were all commit-
ted to writing and forwarded to Vienna. But now I en-
440 AROUND THE WORLD.
tered Austria without a question being asked, and traveled
from one end of it to the other without a challenge. When
I first entered it, Austria was in complete subjection to
Rome. The Concordat was in force. The educational
system of the country was, by treaty, in the hands of Eom-
ish priests, whose persons were inviolate, and whose power
was almost supreme. Austria is now ruled by its own gov-
ernment. The Concordat with Eome has been dissolved.
The education of the country has been taken out of the
hands of the priests, and is directed by the government.
Romish priests and bishops are now required to obey the
laws like other citizens, and are sent to prison when they
violate them. I know not why the priests should decline
to show themselves, since they enjoy equal protection and
privileges with others, but 1 did not see a single one in
priestly garb in the streets of Vienna during my stay. It
is not the least of the signs of change that the prime min-
ister of Austria, whose emperor is a Roman Catholic, is
himself a thorough Protestant.
Among all that was to be seen in this splendid capital,
there was nothing of deeper interest than the crypt of the
Capucin Church, in which lie tlie remains of a long line of
emperors and princes. Descending a staircase, we entered
a long hall, and walked by the side of coffined dust once
animated l)y ambitious spirits struggling for empire, but
now sleeping their long sleep, the turmoil of the battle of
life all ended with them. The sarcophagi stand in regu-
lar order upon the pavement of the long con-idor like so
many cots spread for repose at night. The Emperor Ma-
thias Corvinus, who died at Vienna two years before the
discovery of the Western Continent by Columbus, was the
first buried. After him a succession of kings wrapped
their imperial robes around them, and were laid in this roy-
al mausoleum. It is a treasure-house of history, and the
stories of some of the royal occupants are romantic and
tragic to the last degree. Here lies the Duke of Reich-
stadt, only son of the first Napoleon, who received from hi^
VENICE HOMEWARD. ^^l
father, at his birth, the title of King of Rome, that proved
but an empty name. He closed his melancholy life at the
palace of Schonbrunn, in the suburbs of Vienna, at the age
of twenty-one, attended by his mother, Marie Louise. His
last words were a wail of despair : " I am sinking, oh
my mother, my mother !"
But far more tragic was the end of one of the royal
sleepers in this hall of kings. The last deposited coffin,
still covered from day to day with fresh flowers, is that of
the Emperor Maximilian, the tool of Napoleon in the at-
tempted conquest of Mexico. Sad as was his fate, it is to
be envied before that of Carlotta, who still lingers in hope-
less insanity. There are more than eighty coffins in this
corridor of illustrious dead, one of them — that of Joseph
I. — of solid silver. It is said that the Empress Maria The-
resa, motlier of the illustrious Joseph II., descended every
day, for thirteen years, into the crypt to mourn for her hus-
band Francis I., until at length she was laid by his side.
A singular precaution against the premature resuri'oc-
tion of any of these departed monarchs has been adopted.
The bodies lie in the crypt of the Church of the Capucins,
their hearts are deposited in urns in the Church of St. Au-
gustine not far distant, and their bowels are buried in St.
Stephen's Cathedral in another part of the city.
From Vienna we made our way by rail across the battle-
fields of Austria to one of the most curious cities in Eu-
rope, and one of the most interesting in its historical inci-
dents, the ancient capital of Bohemia. Prague is charm-
ingly situated on both sides of the River Moldau, and the
variegated surface of the ground on which it is built, es-
pecially the bluff on which the old palace stands, gives to
it an exceedingly picturesque appearance, A portion of
the town is very ancient, and the whole has a more antique
and unique aspect than any other European city that I can
recall. I was attracted to Prague by its association with
the early martyi-s of the Reformation — John IIuss and his
associate, Jerome of Prague ; but I found that I had enter-
442 AROUND THE WORLD.
ed a city that was filled with curious old buildings and
monuments, and with records of stirring events that occur-
red all along through the centuries. The Rathaus or Town-
hall, which has in one of its towers a famous clock that
rivals the celebrated clock of the Strasbourg Cathedral, was
the scene of some of these events. As the Hussites, under
Ziska, were marching through the city in 1419, they were
assaulted with stones from the Rathaus, when they rushed
into the council-chamber and threw the councillors, to the
number of thirteen, out of the windows. They were caught
upon the pikes of the people.
This throwing of people out of the windows became so
common as to acquire the name of " The Bohemian Fash-
ion." In 1483, the people, dissatisfied with the course of
the magistrates, entered the Rathaus, pitched the burgo-
master out of the window, and then threw several of the
senate down upon the spears of the exj^ectant crowd.
The Rathaus in the Neustadt w^as the scene of a similar
(occurrence, the magistrates, on two separate occasions, hav-
ing been ejected from the windows. Two members of the
imperial government were thrown from the windows of
the palace, a height of nearly eighty feet from the ground,
but, falling on a dung-heap, their lives were saved. Their
secretary, thrown after them, of course came down atop,
and is said to have made a humble apology to his superi-
ors for coming into their presence in this unceremonious
manner.
Prague was the seat of the observations of the celebrated
Danish astronomer, Tycho Brahe, who was invited by the
Emperor Rudolph 11. to make the city his home. His ob-
servatory was on the castle hill, near the ancient palace,
where his nocturnal study of the heavens was greatly dis-
turbed by the monks of a neighboring convent ; in conse-
(|uence of which, an imperial order was issued that the
monks should finish their prayers and cease the tolling of
the bells before the rising of the stars -which the astrono-
mer was intendino; to watch.
VENICE HOMEWARD. 443
The palace of Count Wallenstein, the liero of the Tliirty
Years' War, though now neglected, was once a princely seat,
and is said to have been, during the life of that distinguish-
ed and eccentric warrior, the scene of splendors such as
have been rarely seen in any regal court. He lived in
great state ; barons and knights were his attendants, and
sixty pages of noble families waited on his orders.
But of all the memories connected with this ancient
city, none stand out upon the pages of history like tliose
associated with John IIuss, and his faithful friend and co-
adjutor, Jerome of Prague. Huss was born in the south
of Bohemia in the year 1373. He came to Prague to
pursue his studies in what was then the first university in
Europe. At that time, it is estimated that as many as
1{0,000 students were present from all parts of Europe.
Here, too, he became acquainted with the writings of
Wickliffe, and began at once to preach against the errors
and iniquities of the Church of Pome, and though threat-
ened, and placed under interdict, and excommunicated, he
M'ent on with his work, appealing from the pope to a Gen-
eral Council of the Church, and to Christ, its only Head.
Summoned to appear before the Council of Constance in
1414 on a charge of heresy, he obeyed the summons, pro-
tected, as he had a right to believe, by a safe-conduct from
the Emperor Sigismund. The emperor was told that a
promise made to a heretic was not binding, and gave him
up into the hands of the Council, which condemned him
find his writings to be burned together. His friend Je-
rome, who braved all perils, and came to Constance to de-
fend him, was cast into prison, wliere, after being reduced
to utter weakness and the verge of despair by six montlis
of solitary confinement, he recanted, but not long after re-
tracted his recantation, and died heroically at the stake.
On the Gth of July, 1413, Huss, then forty-two years of
age, having boldly avowed his firm belief in the Gospel of
Christ as revealed in the inspired Scriptures, was con-
demned by the Council to be burned alive. He was strip-
444 ABOUND THE WOULD.
ped of his priestly garments, and arrayed in fantastic robes
on which devils were painted, emblematical of the com-
panionship to which his persecutors would fain consign
him. While the fagots were piled around him he remain-
ed perfectly calm, and as the torch was applied, and the
flames sprang up, he broke forth in a hymn of praise which
was heard above the noise of the multitude, and, com-
mending his soul to the Saviour in words of prayer, his
sj^irit went aloft in the chariot of fire. His ashes -were
collected and cast into the Rhine, as those of Wickliffe,
" the morning star" of the Reformation that had guided
him to Christ, were cast into the Severn.
Stirring scenes occurred within the city of Prague aft-
er this noble martyr had given his dying testimony to the
truth, and his spirit still animates the Bohemian people.
His name is yet used as a watchword — a sort of synonym
for liberty, even by those who reject the doctrines of the
Reformation. I searched out the spot where he lived, and
found it occupied by a Roman Catholic ; but the house is
conspicuously marked w^ith a large medallion likeness of
the great reformer in front, while over the door is the
following inscription, cut into the stone and gilt : " Here
lived Master John Huss." The house has been rebuilt, but
a stone windows-frame taken from the former building is
inserted in the corridor leading to the court-yard, and in-
closes a stone tablet with the words,
A Relic of the House where lived
MASTER JOHN HUSS,
Who preached at Betlemske Chapel.
All clerical titles are denied him — he is simply Master
John Huss. I found the ancient chapel where he preach-
ed occupied as a carriage-maker's shop.
By another stage of our journey we M-ere, in the course
of a few hours, in the former capital of Saxony, a capital
only in name, since the kingdom has been swallowed up
in Prussia, and, still later, in the German Empire of to-day.
Dresden, although charmingly situated on the Elbe, and in
VENICE H03IEWARD.
445
the midst of a heaiitiful champaign, has its chief attrac-
tions in the right roj'al gallery of paintings, celebrated the
world over, and in its collections of antiquities and arts,
many of which are associated with the history of Saxony.
Not the gem, but the diadem of the collection, is Raphael's
Madonna del Sisto — an exception to nearly all the Madon-
nas of fame in the deep thoughtfulness, the almost super-
womanly look into futurity which marks her countenance.
Artists, in giving us their ideals of the mother and child,
have seldom done more than paint the portraits of come-
ly women and expressionless infants. But one who looks
upon this masterpiece of Raphael may well imagine the
mother to be pondering in her heart the deep meaning of
those prophetic words of Simeon : " Yea, a sword shall
pierce through thy own soul also." It is a majestic crea-
tion of the pencil — the queen of the Madonnas.
It was only two months before the breaking out of hos-
tilities between France and Prussia when we reached Ber-
lin. There was not then a whisper of war, not a breath in
the atmosphere which made one apprehend that such scenes
of strife were at hand, and yet the whole aspect of things
was martial. There was military display in the streets.
There was a grand military review at Potsdam, and at even-
ing the capital was like a military camp. The people them-
selves were talking over the old scores with France which
had never been settled. As we rode out to Charlottenberg
to see the exquisite statuary, by Ranch, which adorns the
tomb of Frederick William III. and his lovely wife, the
Queen Louise, whose memory is almost adored by tlie Prus-
sians, a German who was witli us gave expression to the
national hatred of the first Napoleon, and the desire to re-
dress tlie insults and injuries which had been heaped upon
the Prussian royal famil}' and upon the kingdom and cap-
ital. But little did we imagine that another Napoleon
would so soon afPord the opportunity for avenging these
wrongs.
We devoted a day to Wittenberg, long the home of Lu-
4-4:6 AROUXD THE WORLD.
ther, and the scene of some of the most important events
of the Reformation. It is about sixty miles from Berhn.
We first went to the Schlosskirche, npon the doors of whicli
Luther nailed the ninety-five theses, his protest against the
doctrines of Rome, and a confession of the faith of one who
had been taught by the Holy Spirit out of the Bible. The
doors of the church were burned by the French when they
ravaged Prussia, but they have been replaced by gates of
bronze, on which are engraved the whole of the ninety-five
theses in the original Latin text. With much difficulty we
obtained the keys, and entered the church to stand within
the walls which liad resounded with the thunders of that
A'oice that stirred all Europe, the echoes of which have roll-
ed over the earth, and will roll onward until time shall be
no more. Luther and Melancthon were both buried in
this church. . The spot where Luther burned the pope's bull
of excommunication before an assembly of doctors, stu-
dents, and citizens, just outside of the Elster Gate, has been
inclosed, and is carefully kept as an ornamental garden.
An oak-tree marks the spot where tradition says the bull
was consumed. The monastery in which the great reform-
er lived and taught while yet a monk is now a college for
educating Protestant ministers, and the houses occupied by
Luther and Melancthon are schools. The statues of th<*
two reformers — costly and noble works of art — stand in
the market-place, the former bearing the well-known words,
in German, " If it be God's w^ork, it will endure ; if man's,
it will perish." The University building, in which Luther
lived with his wife Catharine, contains many memorials of
the reformer, including his chair, the table on which lie
wrote, and the capacious mug from which he drank iiis
German beer. Kings and nobles many have stood within
this room to pay homage to the memory of one who was
mightier than kings and princes. The sign-manual of Pe-
ter the Great rudely adorns the wall.
Another day we devoted to Potsdam, the home of Fred-
erick the Great, and in his time the real capital of Prussia.
VENICE HOMEWARD. 447
It is a cluster of royal palaces, the grouiKls of which arc
laid out with royal taste and on a magnificent scale. Found-
ed by Frederick Wilhelni, Elector of Brandenburg, its chief
glory w'as imparted to it by the great Frederick, who erect-
ed its finest buildings and enlarged its parks. Here he in-
dulged to the utmost his peculiar tastes. The room at the
chateau of Sans Souci in which he died is preserved in the
same state as when liis spirit departed from it nearly a hun-
dred years ago. The clock, which stopped the moment at
which he breathed his last, remains undisturbed, the hands
pointing to the memorable hour and minute.
One of the monuments of the pLace is the famous wind-
mill. Adjoining the royal grounds was a field, in which
stood a wind-mill, a sort of vineyard of Naboth to the great
Frederick, who wished to add it to his own parfe. The
miller refused to sell, on which the king brought an action
in the courts to dispossess him. It was decided against the
king, who regarded the decision of the judges as so honora-
ble to the nation that he built for the miller a fine stone
mill that is still standing, although the grounds have been
added to the royal domain by purchase. Such triumphs
are worthy of commemoration by kings and people.
From Berlin we crossed the country to Cologne. The
city, within the last few years, has been greatly improved,
the " two-and-seventy stenches" of Coleridge being reduced
in number and powder, while the perfumery establishments
have multiplied. Progress has been made in the renova-
tion of the Cathedral, which is the grandest ecclesiastical
structure in the world. St. Peter's, at Rome, is larger and
more highly adorned with \vorks of art ; the Cathedral at
Milan is in some respects more beautiful ; but, take it all in
all, in appropriateness and purity of architecture, in sim-
plicity and grandeur of effect, in its power of appeal to the
heart, it is without a rival among all the structures erected
for Christian worship.
Disdaining the railway as a profanatio"n of the romance
of the Rhine, we took the steamer at Cologne to ascend the
448
AROUND THE WORLD.
river, the beauties of wliicb, with the historic tales that
are written on its rocky heights, and castle walls, and
crumbling ruins, have been sung for ages, but not exag-
gerated.
BINCCN 0\ lUE KUINE.
The sun had set and the moon had risen as we passed
Bingen on the Rhine, and for two or three hours we en-
joyed the perfection of the romance of this river, which is
more thickly crowded witli legendary interest than any
other that pours its waters into the sea. As we sat in the
soft moonlight on the deck of the steamer, tracing the out-
lines of the lofty heights and catching shadowy glimpses
of the shores, the nightingales on either bank regaled ns
with their melody, displaying alike their marvelous power
of song and tlieir exquisite taste in preferring moonlight
VENICE HOMEWARD. 449
to sunlight for song. We thought of good Izaak "Walton's
pious ejaculation as he listened to their melody, " Lord,
what music hast thou provided for the saints in lieaven,
when thou affordest bad men such music on earth !"
After spending the Sabbath at Mayeuce, we went to
Worms, recalling, as we entered the city, the time when
Luther, summoned to appear before the Diet to answer
to the charge of being a heretic, and to show cause why
he should not be burned, like Huss and Jerome of Prague,
made answer to his friends, who dissuaded him from
trusting himself in the hands of his perfidious enemies,
"Though there were as many devils in Worms as there
are tiles on the roofs of the houses, I would go on," and
boldly entered, chanting the Marseillaise of the Reforma-
tion, ^'■Eiiifeste Burg ist imser Gottr Here it was that,
standing up before the Emperor Charles V. and his nobles,
and a multitude of Koraish prelates, who were eager to
light the fagots around his body, he boldly defended his
doctrine, and ended with the declaration, " Let me, then,
be refuted and convinced by the testimony of the Scrip-
ture, or by the clearest argument ; otherwise I can not and
will not recant, for it is neither safe nor expedient to act
against conscience. Here I stand ; I can not do otherwise ;
God help me."
l^ever, since the Lord Jesus was arraigned before Pon-
tius Pilate, has there been witnessed on earth a sublimer
judicial spectacle, or one in which the example of the Mas-
ter was more nobly illustrated in the bravery of the disci-
ple, than Luther before the Diet of Worms avowing, in the
face of all his enemies, the truth of Jesus as revealed in
his Word. The Episcopal palace in which the Diet M-as
held, near the great Cathedral, has disappeared ; but the
memory of that scene is now preserved in a group of mon-
umental bronze statuary, erected at great cost, represent-
ing Luther surrounded by the early reformers of many
lands — Wickliffe, Huss, Savonarola, etc. — and the faithful
electors who stood by him while alive. The group stands
Ff
450
AROUND THE WORLD.
upon an elevated stone terrace in the open air, at the en-
trance to a park or garden, embracing a secluded ravine,
in the deep shade of which, even at noonday, the nightin-
gales were pouring forth their sweetest lays.
From Worms we reached French territory at the town
of Weissenberg, where our baggage was overhauled by the
officials. This little town, a few weeks later, took its place
in history as the spot where the French and Prussian ar-
mies first met in deadly conflict, but as we halted on our
way it had no presage of its coming distinction. All was
smiling and peaceful. An hour later we were at Stras-
bourg. By a singular but undesigned coincidence, I found
it was fifteen years to a day, and almost to an hour, since
I had entered it once before. The town was not a little
changed in the mean while, having lost a measure of its
(juaintness ; but no amount of polish or paint could make
a French city of it. It was German still, and will be more
at home in Germany than in France, whether the inhab-
itatants are at home or not.
We tarried at Strasbourg over a day to see the grand
Cathedral, with its wondrous clock. The Cathedral, as a
specimen of Gothic architecture, is not far behind that of
Cologne. It is melancholy to know that this monument
of many centuries suffered so mnch in the siege. That it
did not suffer more was marvelous. The famous clock, a
wonder of mechanism, was but slightly injured. We paid
a visit to the Protestant Church of St. Thomas to see the
group of statuary erected by Louis XY. in memory of
Marshal Saxe — a noble monument to a noble Protestant
by a Catholic king. The marshal was represented as de-
scending into the tomb ; Death, in the form of a skeleton,
stood lifting the lid of the coffin for his reception ; while
France, in the form of a beautiful female weeping, was
holding the hero back dissuasively. Other emblematical
devices completed the group. The church and its monu-
ments were reported as destroyed in the siege.
The afternoon before we left Strasboura: we took a walk
VENICE HOMEWARD. 45]^
outside of the fortifications on the north, and, seating our-
selves in the fine old park which stretched, out into the
country, we speculated more in a sentimental than a seri-
ous way upon the effects of war. The great fortress which
incloses the city very naturally suggested such thoughts ;
but, in the total absence of every thing intimating the possi-
bility of war as near, our sympathy was mainly expended
upon the venerable trees under the shade of which we were
resting. They looked as if tliey might have been standing
there for centuries. We lamented that, if war should ever
come into these parts, one of the first measures of defence
would be the leveling of every one of those majestic mon-
archs of the soil, all which was done very shortly after we
had left the city.
It was but a few weeks before the French army came
into tlie region throwing down the gage, and then com-
menced that series of disasters to their arms that has sel-
dom, if ever, had a parallel in the history of European wars.
Strasbourg was surrounded by a besieging force, and one
after another of its buildings and monuments disappeared
in the long and fierce bombardment. The hotel at which
we had lodged was demolished, and the faithful porter who
waited on us, and attended us to the cars as we were leav-
ing, I afterward learned, had liis head carried off by a can-
non ball as he was going his nightly round of inspection,
lantern in hand.
Our way to Paris was through Nancy, Bar le Due, Cha-
lons, and other places that became famous in the progress
of the war, and through the beautiful champaign that was
soon devastated by the opposing armies. It was then cov-
ered with luxuriant crops that were smiling in the sum-
mer's sun, but they were not gathered before the iron heel
pressed them into the soil. As the terrific confiict went on,
and the forces of both armies drew all the while nearer to
the French capital, we read the accounts with deeper inter-
est and more intense sympathy from having so lately seen
the fields smiling with the promise of a peaceful harvest,
452 AROUND THE WORLD.
and the cities rejoicing in the quiet and plenty which were
to pass away- and be succeeded by scenes of blood.
Paris was more gay and beautiful than ever. Twenty
years of rebuilding under Louis Napoleon, with the purse
of the nation at command, had made it the most splendid
city in the world. Its palaces and boulevards, its parks
and public buildings, its residences and shops, were never
so attractive, nor was the city ever thronged with so gay a
crowd. There were no signs of the coming storm ; all was
the luxury, the intoxication of peace. The wickedness of
the city was more unrestrained than I had ever seen it —
less garnished with the outward covering of propriety, but
no one dreamed that its doom was so close at hand, or that
the empire was about to commit suicide by plunging into
war. Much sooner should I have predicted revolution in
Paris than war on the frontier. In the shops, on the streets,
and in social circles, curses deep, but not loud, were heard
against the empei^or whose ambition and extravagance had
run their race with the French nation, notwithstanding he
had done so much to gratify French vanity. Louis Napo-
leon never had the hearts of the people ; they never really
believed in him, and they were becoming weary of his iron
though brilliant rule. The change in popular feeling was
strikingly perceptible — it was scarcely concealed, and was
the subject of general remark among foreigners who had
been familiar with Paris in the former years of his reign.
Weeks passed quickly away in recovering from the fa-
tigues of nearly a year's journeying; in the society of
friends who were gathering from the Continent and from
home ; in excursions here and there in and around Paris ;
and in doing nothing ; and then we crossed the Channel to
sojourn for a little season in merry England, and to enjoy
the scenery of Scotland and Ireland.
An excursion of two days in the Isle of Wight, made
from London, I shall ever recall among the most pleasing
memories of British soil. The island is a beautiful garden ;
some of its scenery, especially the cliffs upon the sea-shore,
VEXICE HOMEWARD. 453
in the highest degree picturesque and striking; the ruins
of Carisbrool^e Castle furnish the romance and history;
and the scenes which have been recorded by the pen of
Leo:h Richmond are invested with a sacred interest scarce-
ly equaled in any other localities outside of the Holy Land.
No one who has read his Annals of the Poor — among the
most touching and instructive of human biographies, sim-
ple though they are — can fail to appreciate a visit to the
cottage of the Dairj^man's Daughter, and to the home and
the grave of Little Jane.
Taking it leisurely through the interior of England, go-
ing here and there as inclination led us, and stopping now
and then as attraction held us, at Oxford, Stratford-on-Avon,
Kenilworth, Chatsworth, and many other places of interest,
we at length reached the Tweed, and made another pilgrim-
age to the home and the haunts of Sir Walter Scott. We
paused again at Edinburg, appropriately styled the mod-
ern Athens. Its location, in regard to land and sea, is strik-
ingly like that of the Grecian capital, its monuments are
not unworthy of the ancient city, and it has long embodied
much of the learning of Britain.
Fresh in our hearts shall we ever keep the memory of
the days we spent in the hospitable homes of the ancient
kingdom of Fife, among the associations of the early days
of Chalmers, where our time for sojourning was so short
that we almost wished we had there begim instead of end-
ing our travels. But the days would not wait upon us, and
leaving reluctantly those delightful circles of friends, we
made the tour of the Trosachs and the Lakes. From
Glasgow we crossed the L-isli Channel, ended our wander-
ings on land by journeying through the Emerald Isle, and
took the steamer for home.
Gladly would we have avoided the Atlantic had there
been any other way of reaching home. Long ago did I
come to be of the same opinion with one of the Catos of
ancient Rome. As he was drawing near his end, he said
there were three resfrets still Iving on his mind. The first
454: AEOUND THE WORLD.
was, that lie had spent a day without bringing any tiling
good to pass ; the second, that lie had once intrusted a se-
cret to a woman (in wiiich I differ from him toto ccelo) ;
but the third regret was one that has always commanded
my profound respect for the old Roman since first I was
rocked in the cradle of the deep — that once in his lifetime
he had made a journey by sea when he could have gone
by land. Had there been any way to make the journey
around the world by land, I should have avoided all the
seas. Not that I have any fear of the ocean ; nor am I
called upon, like most voyagers, to pay tribute to Neptune ;
but I greatly prefer the solid earth.
With the exception of the China Seas, we found the
winds and the waves nowhere so inhospitable as on the At-
lantic. It was the month of July — the month and year of
the extremest heat recorded on our shores, but, between
northerly winds and the icebergs, we suffered intensely ^^Ai\\
the cold. Not until we had crossed the Banks was there a
day on which it was mild enough to enjoy the deck.. The
voyage was boisterous and protracted, a perfect contrast to
our experience on the Pacific.
But every voyage, not excepting that of life, must have
its close. The familiar shores at length appeared, and we
hailed Columbia, the sight of which was never so dear as
when, after having tossed upon so many seas, and wander-
ed in so many lands, the highlands of the coast, and then
the green shores of the harbor, and then the spires of the
city of New York rose into view.
And here we are at home again. Thanks to the kind
Providence which has been over us in all the perils of the
land and of the sea. And more thankful than ever shall
we be that this land is our home. Each country that we
have seen has its own peculiar features and its own attrac-
tions, but nowhere have we found such a combination of
all that makes a country attractive in scenery and desirable
as a life-long residence: majestic mountains and broad
prairies, wide - spreading lakes and rivers navigable for
VENICE HOMEWARD.
455
thousands of miles, gi-and old forests and magnificent wa-
terfalls, boundless mineral resources of every kind, all the
varieties of climate, and the fruits of the earth poured out
with a profusion scarcely imagined in any other part of the
world. If we have learned nothing more in our wander-
ings, we have learned to appreciate our own country, and to
be thankful to Him who " hath made of one blood all na-
tions for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath de-
termined the bounds of their habitation," for the goodly
heritage he hath given us. The American who can ti-avel
abroad and not have his admiration for his own land in-
creased can have seen but little of it, and is equally to be
pitied with him who can see nothing good or beautiful in
other lands.
Here evermore may our home be, until our journey ings
on earth shall come to an end, and we take our departure
to " a better country — that is, an heavenly."
THE END,
VALUABLE STANDARD WORKS
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