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diff --git a/30581.txt b/30581.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4a65f00 --- /dev/null +++ b/30581.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2924 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes in North Africa, by W. G. Windham + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Notes in North Africa + Being a Guide to the Sportsman and Tourist in Algeria and Tunisia + +Author: W. G. Windham + +Release Date: December 2, 2009 [EBook #30581] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES IN NORTH AFRICA *** + + + + +Produced by Dan Horwood and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: R. Pheney, lith. M. & N. Hanhart, Impt. + +MY TWO SERVANTS, ANGELO AND NERO.] + + + + + NOTES IN NORTH AFRICA: + + BEING A + GUIDE TO THE + SPORTSMAN AND TOURIST IN ALGERIA AND TUNISIA. + + + BY + W. G. WINDHAM, ESQ. + + + NEW EDITION, WITH COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS. + + LONDON: + WARD AND LOCK, 158 FLEET STREET. + 1862. + + + + + LONDON: + PETTER AND GALPIN, BELLE SAUVAGE PRINTING WORKS, + LUDGATE HILL, E.C. + + + + +PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. + + +Two great faults have been found with my first edition. The first +was, that I had offended many people by personal allusions. To +this, I reply, that offence was very far from my mind; and to those +offended (if any there be), I say, consider the expressions unsaid. +For the rest, they are omitted in this edition. The second alleged +defect is, that, while I call my book, to a certain extent, sporting, +so little allusion is made to sport. I grant there is some reason in +this, and accordingly I have added matter which I think will be +useful to future sporting tourists. I would, however, not advise +the man who seeks sport alone and solely to go to Algeria, as I am +sure he will be disappointed, as I most decidedly was. With regard to +the illustrations, I have taken the greatest pains that they may +faithfully represent, not only the particular localities alluded +to, but also give a fair idea of the country and climate of these +latitudes. + + W. G. WINDHAM. + + _Hull, April, 1861._ + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS. + + + TO FACE PAGE + + FRONTISPIECE: MY TWO SERVANTS--ANGELO AND NERO 1 + + SHOOTING HYENAS ON THE PURPLE MOUNTAINS NEAR EL + GREESHE 20 + + SHOOTING WILD DUCKS NEAR AIN MOKRA, PROVINCE OF + CONSTANTINE, ALGERIA 44 + + HOG-SHOOTING ON THE BANKS OF THE OUED EL AHWENA, + IN TUNISIA 60 + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + CHAPTER I. + + THE VOYAGE OUT:--Paris in 1860--Notre Dame--Our + Hotel--Nero and the Groom--The Steamer for + Algeria--Gallic Peculiarities--Life on Board 7 + + CHAPTER II. + + DESCRIPTION OF ALGIERS:--Arrival in Algeria--Murray's + Guide-books, and their Amenities--Disembarkation in + the Port of Algiers--Our Fellow-travellers--Algiers and + its Inhabitants--The Dey's Palace--Cause of the French + Invasion 13 + + CHAPTER III. + + LIFE IN ALGIERS:--Algerian Society--A Soiree at + General Martinprez's--The Sirocco--My Maltese + Companion--The Theatre--General Youssouf and his Career 19 + + CHAPTER IV. + + "UP THE COUNTRY:"--Departure from Algiers--Blidah--The + Zouave Officers and their Companions--Government + Establishment of Horses--Joseph, the Horse-dealer--To + Arbah--The Caravanserai--Journey towards Oued-el-Massin 25 + + CHAPTER V. + + FURTHER EXPERIENCES:--Abd-el-Kader (but not the + Emir)--Difficult Road--Perils of the Way--Prospect of + Sport--The First Boar--The Chasseurs d'Afrique--Mine + Hostess of the "Scorpion"--Teniet 30 + + CHAPTER VI. + + FURTHER PROGRESS--RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES:--Cold + Weather--Milianah--Vezoul--The Aubergiste--El + Afroun--The Rhamazan--Dancing Dervishes 36 + + CHAPTER VII. + + BONA AND ITS VICINITY:--Passage to Bona--State of + Affairs on Board--Bona--The Lake Metitza--Ain + Mokra--Wild Duck Shooting on the Lake 41 + + CHAPTER VIII. + + ON TO TUNIS:--Algeria in General--The Arabs and their + Conquerors--Antagonism between the Two Races--Social + Condition of the Arabs--The _Oasis_ Steamer--Arrival + at Tunis 46 + + CHAPTER IX. + + MARSA:--Angelo's Horsemanship--The Bey's Palace at + Marsa--The Arabs and their Love of Tobacco--The + Friendly Moor at Camatte 52 + + CHAPTER X. + + ABOUT BOAR SHOOTING:--Sleeman--the Oued el Ahwena--Its + Scenery, and its Dangers--Beauty of the Landscape on + its Banks 55 + + CHAPTER XI. + + SPORTING EXPERIENCES:--El Greesh--Shooting Hyenas--An + Expedition with the Arabs--The Caid and his + Family--Another Wild Boar 59 + + CHAPTER XII. + + TUNIS AND ITS GOVERNMENT:--Picturesque Situation of + Tunis--The Horse Market--Effects of Race--The + Bazaars--Mohamed Medea--The Bardo--The Bey of + Tunis--His Mode of administering Justice--Prince + Puckler Muskau's Account of his Interview 62 + + CHAPTER XIII. + + THE RUINS OF CARTHAGE:--Reflections on Ancient + Carthage--Hannibal and his Career--An Arab + Domicile--Picturesque Appearance of the Ruins 69 + + CHAPTER XIV. + + THE RUINS AGAIN:--Great Extent of the Ancient City + Marsa, on the Sea-shore--Carthaginian Catacombs near + Camatte--Quail Shooting--Trait of Honesty in the + Arabs--The Arab Character--Anecdotes concerning them 76 + + CHAPTER XV. + + HOME:--My Fellow-passenger, the Sportsman--Passage from + Tunis to Malta in a Sailing Vessel--Disagreeables of + the Passage--Home Overland--Conclusion 83 + + NOTES FOR THE SPORTSMAN OR TOURIST IN NORTH AFRICA 88 + + + + +NOTES IN NORTH AFRICA. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE VOYAGE OUT. + + Paris in 1860.--Notre Dame.--Our Hotel.--Nero and the Groom.--The + Steamer for Algeria.--Gallic Peculiarities.--Life on Board. + + +_In medias res._ I will not stop to describe my journey to Paris, _via_ +Folkestone, nor to chronicle the glasses of pale ale--valedictory +libations to _perfide_ Albion, quaffed at the Pavilion--nor to +portray the sea-sickness of "mossoo," nor the withering indignation of +the British female when her wardrobe was searched. Briefly, kind reader, +be pleased to understand that we arrived in safety--guns, rifles, +"and all"--at the Hotel du Louvre, in Paris, at about eleven o'clock +on a certain day in February, 1860. + +The next day was Sunday, and I went to hear vespers at Notre Dame. How +I love the old gothic cathedrals, that seem to remove one at once from +this work-day world--the fanes wherein the very air seems redolent of +devotion, and peopled with phantoms of the past! 'Spite of all +disparagement, there is something grand and solemn about them. After +service, I ascended one of the towers to the gallery immortalised by +Victor Hugo's wonderful romance. The day was declining, and sunset had +already commenced. The galleries were crowded with students and +respectable operatives and _bourgeois_, with their wives and children. +Every face was bathed in the purple light of the departing sun, and +many eyes lifted up in silent meditation. + +I was aroused from the reverie into which the contemplation of this +glorious sight had thrown me, by hearing a female voice exclaim, "How +beautiful is Nature--how magnificent!" I turned, and saw two ladies, +evidently mother and daughter, of sufficiently pleasing appearance. It +was from the elder that the exclamation had come, which brought me +back from my dream to this nether world. Conquering the shyness which +appears to be the Englishman's birthright, I made some remark on the +beauties of sunset. Like the earth, we revolved round the sun; but, +unlike that planet, we quickly diverged into other orbits. I dimly +remember that we talked of Angola cats, Dresden china, Turkish +chibouques, maccaroni, and Lord Byron, with whose poems this lady +seemed sufficiently familiar. I improved the occasion, as the right +thing to do, when talking with ladies about Byron, to find fault with +his impiety, his blasphemous scepticism, his cutting sarcasm, and the +unhappy frivolity which defaces the works of the man, who, with all +his faults, was undoubtedly the greatest poet the nineteenth century +has yet produced. + +A pleasant walk along the quays brought me back to my hotel, in the +courtyard of which establishment I found an admiring circle of idlers +surrounding my English groom, who had just arrived with my dog Nero; +or rather Nero, who seemed by far the most popular character of the +two, had just arrived with him; and both appeared to know about as +much French one as the other, and to make themselves equally +understood or misunderstood. That evening, my friend and travelling +companion, B---- and I dined at Dotesio's, in the Rue Castiglione, +where we had an excellent dinner, washed down by more excellent wine. +The next day found us at Marseilles, at the Hotel D'Orient, concerning +which hostelry I have merely to place on record the fact, that B---- +was mulcted in the sum of five francs for the matutinal cold tub in +which it was his custom to indulge. + +The steamer which was to convey us to Algeria was well fitted up in +every way. We were the only Englishmen on board. The fore part of the +deck was crowded with Zouaves and French soldiers of various +denominations, with whom Nero soon made himself perfectly at home, +though the exclamation of a Zouave on his first appearance seemed to +forbode but an indifferent reception for the four-footed intruder. +"_Cre nom d'un chien_" cried the shaven, fez-capped warrior, "_mais +je ne t'aimerais pas pour mon camarade du lit!_" + +Breakfast was served in French fashion on board at ten o'clock, and +dinner at five. With one or two exceptions, the company consisted of +French commercial travellers, and they were split up into the usual +hostile factions of north against south. North, of course, commenced +the conversation with Paris, _Paris_, and again PAR-RRI; the +southerners every now and then throwing in a doubt of the universal +superiority of the metropolis over the known world. One disputant +stood out for Marseilles, another broke a lance for Bordeaux, and the +war of words waxed so fierce that I began to tremble for the +consequences. One young man in company had been some time at Bordeaux, +and had much to say thereon; but all his remarks were on one +subject--the theatre. On its beauty, its luxury, and its actresses, he +held forth at unwearied but wearisome length. + +While this conversation was going on, the inner man was by no +means neglected. Stewed pullets, potatoes, salad, and etceteras, +disappeared with marvellous celerity. The cheer was by no means +bad, though decidedly Provencal, as I remarked to my next neighbour, +a dark-looking Marsellais; which observation, by the way, brought +down upon me the anger of the Gods, as impersonated by a large, fat, +dirty Calaisien, sitting opposite. He was a big man, this champion, +and, according to Cervantes, should, by consequence, have been a +good-natured one. Giving himself a sounding blow on the chest for +emphasis, he declared the Calaisiens to be an infinitely more moral +people than the Marseillais--and washed down his own dictum with an +enormous glass of _biere blanche_. I am rather fond of going to sleep +after dinner; so I secured my nap on cheap terms, by feigning an +interest in the Picard virtues, and accordingly enjoyed a profound +rest, disturbed only at intervals by a monotonous and expostulatory +"_allons donc!_" thrown in by another dissentient southerner. He +was an enormously fat man, the new disputant, and wore a mass of very +greasy hair, hanging down over his shoulders. His flannel shirt, an +exceedingly dingy specimen of British manufacture, did duty for a +waistcoat also; but he was _decore_, though it was very doubtful to +what order the medal on his breast may have belonged. + +Our captain merits a word of description. He was a short, red-faced +individual, of such ineffable seediness, as regarded costume, that I +should never have suspected his station but for the fact that he +sported a gold band "_bien usite_" round his cap, and sat at the head +of the table. For the credit of French politeness be it, however, +added, he was a perfect gentleman in his behaviour throughout the +voyage. There was also a young French naval officer, whom I afterwards +got to know much better in Algeria. He, too, like all the Legitimists, +was a most finished gentleman, and spoke English well--a common +accomplishment among the officers of the French navy. Though quite a +young fellow, he had been in the Russian and Chinese wars, and +imparted some very amusing and instructive intelligence on both these +subjects. + +As the noise and the intimacy at the table increased, and the punch +and cognac had already "chased" the wine, I adjourned with B---- and +the French sailor to the after-deck, and, in company with two young +Dutch travellers, smoked our Havanas in a climate that was already +African in its heat, while Majorca and Minorca faded away in the +distance, and the pale moon rose silently over the quiet sea. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +DESCRIPTION OF ALGIERS. + + Arrival in Algeria.--Murray's Guide-books, and their + Amenities.--Disembarkation in the Port of Algiers.--Our + Fellow-travellers.--Algiers and its Inhabitants.--The Dey's + Palace.--Cause of the French Invasion. + + +Next morning, at eight o'clock, came the waiter with the +intelligence--"_Nous sommes dans la baie d'Alger, monsieur, a une +heure de la ville._" My desire to see Algiers was vehement indeed; but +scarcely less strong was the craving of the inner man for bread and +coffee. With the nectar of Arabia, however, the inspiration of the +Orient seemed to percolate my veins; but when a fragrant glass of +cognac crowned the meal, the aroma of the East enveloped me, the +delicious strains of Bulbul rang in my ears, the Calaisien and the +Marseillais, sitting stolidly before me, became straightway +transformed into camels, the stewardess into a houri, and the noses of +the passengers were as masques in my enraptured sight. + +But the book at my side was not the Koran, though it might have been, +for the strange farrago it contained. + +It was a celebrated traveller's manual in the English language, and +in red binding. The king of the Cannibal Islands has not in his +library a more absurd volume than this manual; for in its pages +pathetic bagmen give vent to their ludicrous ebullitions concerning +the Alhambra, or the Rhine, or any foreign lion you please to name; +and young boys just escaped from school dish up their first +impressions of the Continent in a style as savoury as the flavour of a +Spanish olla podrida. And yet, ascend the Rhine, go to Venice or to +St. Petersburg, and ten to one for the chance, that when you meet an +Englishman he will have that eternal manual clutched in his British +grasp. + +Oh, my dear and well-beloved countrymen, what creatures of fashion and +precedent we all are, from high to low! What one does, the rest must +do; and in the self-same manner. I verily believe, if the late Albert +Smith had left it on record that, in ascending Mont Blanc, he planted +his foot in a certain hole in the snow, every one of his successors in +that glorious undertaking would have paid their guides an extra dollar +for indicating to them the identical cavity, that they might go and do +likewise. Thank goodness, Algeria is as yet encumbered by no manual or +"Hand-book," as our modern Germanised phraseology elects to call the +egregious productions; so shall we travellers be at liberty to follow +our own noses, to go exactly where we like, and to do what we please, +even to dressing like Arabs, should the whim seize us. Moreover, we +may do in Rome as Rome does, and enjoy a French breakfast washed down +with good wine in lieu of bad tea, without having ourselves or our +proceedings stigmatised as "shocking," as would undoubtedly be our lot +at Paris, or Brussels, or Berlin. + +Behold us, then, in happy hour, ready to disembark in Algiers, with +the children of the desert thronging on board to act as porters. Their +appearance pleases me much, as they come forward, with their tall, +striking figures, dark eyes, and distinguished mien. "Perfect +gentlemen, these," said I to myself; but beneath the outside crust +little remains that can be called gratifying. These men are like the +apple of Sodom; at least, so I thought on landing, after a long +squabble with them respecting the passage money, carried on in bad +Italian and French. A nearer acquaintance with them may, perhaps, +modify my views on this subject. + +"Well, it has been a pleasant time on board the packet," is my parting +reflection as I step ashore; nor shall I lightly forget the captain, +so different in his politeness and urbanity from the sea-bear with +whom I sailed in the North Sea; nor the honest Hamburgher, who +appeared to have an equally beloved wife in every land and in every +place we came to; nor the would-be dandy, who lit cigars innumerable, +and invariably flung them overboard after the first puff; nor the +priests, who seemed to possess the gift of invisibility, so rarely did +they show themselves; nor the hundred thousand events and personages +that flash upon our path for a moment on our journey through life, and +then linger in the memory only as the dim phantoms of a dream that has +passed away. + +Algiers, seen from the sea, presents the appearance of a vast +triangular cone, situated on the slope of a mountain. Like all the +inhabitants of Northern Africa, the Algerians were at an early period +Christians, and it was only after several battles that the Mahometan +religion was finally established all over the coast of Barbary. Before +the French occupation, the Algerian ladies, like the females in all +Mussulmen countries, were kept in the strictest seclusion. The wife of +a rich Moor never left her home except to go to the baths, and even +that expedition was undertaken only at night. When it became +absolutely necessary that ladies should go abroad in daylight, their +faces were covered, and the whole figure so concealed by a redundancy +of wrappings, that a stranger would be puzzled to find out what the +moving bundles were. The luxury of the bath is greatly used by them. +There are public as well as private baths. They consist of three +apartments. The first is a large hall, for dressing and undressing; in +the second, the visitors perspire; and the third is for bathing +proper, or otherwise, as tastes and opinions somewhat differ. After +the bath, those of the male sex repair to the first room for lemonade +or coffee, or for a pipe. The modern Mahometan ladies of Algiers have +almost abandoned this seclusion. They are seen gadding about +everywhere, and are reported as being by no means particular or +difficult in their conquests. French ideas and morals have percolated +them considerably. Excessive obesity is regarded among Mahometans as +the perfection of beauty; so that, instead of using powders and other +nostrums to reduce themselves, like some of my friends at home, they +devour seeds and _couscous_, the national dish, especially employed +for fattening people. Some young ladies are crammed to such a degree +that they die under the operation. + +On a fine, hot day in February, 1860, I mounted the conical hill on +which Algiers is built. The weather was magnificent. The sun of Africa +already made his approach felt, and the mountains in the far horizon +stood out like _bas-reliefs_ against the azure sky. Here stood the +palace of the Dey before the French occupation. The building is now +called the _casbah_, and used as a large barrack; outside are the +Moorish houses, and the chief part of the Moorish population. + +The cause of quarrel between France and Algeria, which resulted in the +conquest of the country by the Gallic legions was as follows:--The +Dey, a pasha of the old Turkish school, was, it appears, a potentate +of extravagant disposition, and owed the French Government a +considerable sum of money. The creditors, being in a hurry for their +cash, dunned the Dey incessantly, through the agency of their consul. +Unaccustomed to the eagerness of French importunity, the Dey, on one +unlucky occasion, made a gesture of impatience with his fan, as a man +might do with his riding-whip, if his tailor became too pressing for +the settlement of his account. It proved an expensive gesture, +however; for within a few weeks it brought 10,000 French soldiers to +the shores of the Dey, and cost him his entire realm. The bulk of the +Mauresque and Turkish population quitted Algeria with their families +on the arrival of the French. Those who remain are the poorer classes, +and now live, if report speaks true, in an immoral state. These events +took place in the reign of that peaceful monarch, Louis Philippe. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +LIFE IN ALGIERS. + + Algerian Society.--A _Soiree_ at General Martinprez's.--The + Sirocco.--My Maltese Companion.--The Theatre.--General Youssouf + and Career. + + +I have described Algiers as being built on the side of a mountain. +The city possesses a commodious and safe harbour, where flutter +the colours of every nation, from the red flag of the Swede to +the Spaniard's yellow ensign. Economy of space being a primary +consideration in the laying out of the city, the houses have been +built very high, and the streets made very narrow, so that there +is no room for carriages. The Consul has a very fine Mauresque +house in the old Turkish quarter, where he invited me to dinner and +a _soiree_ the day after my arrival; and the next day I was invited +to the reception of the Governor, General Martinprez. + +The General received me and my companions most graciously, and, after +keeping me in conversation for about five minutes, introduced me to +his lady, a very pleasing person. My friend A---- and I were then +introduced to two or three other fashionable ladies of Algiers; and, +engrossed in conversation with these; we strangers were unconscious +of a general movement of the gentlemen towards the farther end of the +room, as a preliminary to the amateur concert. I was quite ignorant of +this Algerian regulation, by which the gentlemen and ladies are +separated as effectually as in a Lutheran church (a fashion, +by-the-bye, we appear to be adopting). Accordingly, on looking up, I +observed, to my infinite chagrin, that I was the "observed of all +observers," and probably was set down as a _bete Anglais_, who knew no +better. The extensive crinoline of the ladies effectually prevented a +retreat in any direction, and I was unpleasantly conscious of the +suppressed titter the fair ones tried to conceal behind their fans. I +endeavoured to summon up all the resources of my London phlegm, to +support me in this ridiculous position; but, unfortunately, I possess +very little of that desirable quality. The fair one with whom I was +conversing evidently felt for the unpleasantness of my situation, and +very good-naturedly kept me talking till the end of the first piece, +when I succeeded in making my escape. + +How I inwardly abused the opera they were performing! It was called +"_Le Diable_;" and to me it appeared as though the fiend in question +had no tail--or rather, _no end_--to that appendage, so long did the +time seem. Far be it from me to despise the arts; I admire them in +every shape, except in the compound form of speech: _exempli gratia_, +art-union, art-school, &c. Why, in the name of common sense, can we +not talk English instead of German, and say school of arts, union of +arts, &c.? I suppose we shall soon go a step farther in imitation of +our Germanic neighbours, and call poetry by the appellation of +poet-art. In the last century, it seemed likely, as Johnson said, that +we should babble a dialect of France; in this, there is more danger of +our talking a Teutonic jargon. Let us stick to the middle course--for +our language is essentially half way between the German and the +French, the Teutonic and Romance tongues, and any attempt to +approximate too much to either extreme is simply preposterous. + +The next day we had the sirocco; and, to quote the expression with +which I once heard a popular preacher commence a sermon, it was +"d----d hot." Start not, ladies of Belgravia, for the preacher in +question belonged not to the Anglican communion; he held forth to mere +vulgar audiences, at least, in a remote locality. Thrice he repeated +the expression (which I will not), and then improved the occasion by +describing a place hotter than the crowded chapel in which he was +officiating, in the month of July. He was evidently in his element. He +was especially hot against those modern spirits, who are not such +faithful believers in the burning flames of the lower regions, and +even begin to imagine they may have cooled down, if they have not been +quite extinguished. "And if"--he cried, in his ardour--"if they were +on the point of being extinguished, I would with my own breath +rekindle the expiring flame!" And his voice, which sounded like a gale +of wind, and his face, red as a furnace, and his enormous fists +fiercely clenched, made it appear to the congregation, for the moment, +that this terrifying assertion was no exaggeration. But to return to +the sirocco. + +In spite, or rather by reason of the heat, I went for a stroll on the +sea-shore with Nero, that we might cool our wearied limbs in the azure +wave of the Mediterranean. We had been walking along the shore for +about a mile, when about twenty Arab dogs rushed out most ferociously +at Nero, and would, I believe, have torn him to pieces, but for the +large hunting-whip with which I managed to keep them at bay. There was +with me a young Maltese boy, of Irish parentage--a most amusing +character this urchin was. He wanted me to take him into the interior +as my interpreter. "Take me wid you, sir," was his eloquent appeal; +"give me pound a month, sir; tell Arabs you brother of Queen Victoria, +sir; Arabs great fools, sir; know no better, sir;" but I was proof +against the voice of the charmer. + +In returning, I met General Martinprez on horseback, and saluted; of +course, he returned my greeting most graciously. But I was not a +little amused, and could hardly help laughing, when the young +Hiberno-Maltese tatterdemalion took off his dirty cap with a flourish +to the General, simultaneously with my salute, as if he had been my +confidential friend, taking a promenade with me. + +That evening I went to the theatre. The piece performed was "_Les +Femmes Terribles_"--and a terribly Gallic flavour there was diffused +over the whole performance--a kind of _haut gout_, for which we stolid +islanders have, happily, no relish. + +General Youssouf was at the theatre this evening. He is rather a +fine-looking man, and not too stout. His is a curious history. +Originally a Christian slave at Tunis, supposed to be the son of +Italian parents, he received the name of Youssouf (Joseph) from his +Mussulman masters at Tunis, where he was employed in the Bey's palace. +Of fine stature and handsome appearance, the Christian slave soon +attracted the notice of the Bey's daughter, an honour to which he was +not insensible. The Bey was soon informed of what was going on, and +Joseph would have been caged, if not racked, had not some kind friend +apprised him of the discovery, and of his own consequent danger. A +French man-of-war happened to be in the harbour at La Goeletta, off +Tunis, and young Youssouf, then about twenty years of age, managed to +effect his escape on board. The Franks, of course, gladly received him +as an escaped Christian slave. The Bey sent to demand him back; but +the French commander gave him politely to understand that he would see +the Bey experiencing the reverse of the joys of Paradise before he +would comply with such a request. The vessel set sail next day for +Algiers, where the Gallic occupation had just commenced. Young +Youssouf--who, in addition to his knowledge of French and Italian, +could, of course, speak Arabic perfectly--was here landed, and became +interpreter to a foot regiment. Quick and clever, he was soon +promoted, till he attained an officer's rank. He is now a general in +the service. Entertaining--perhaps naturally--a mortal hatred of the +Arabs, he has generally been selected to enforce those stern acts of +reprisal against the native population, which, though perhaps +justified by necessity, still bear the impress of great severity, and +are unpalatable to officers of French birth and education. These +measures he has always carried out with strict fidelity and +unrelenting harshness. He was the centre of attraction this +evening--every battery of eyes was turned upon him. He had fought a +duel with the editor of a newspaper, only that morning, for abusing +him or his wife, and had succeeded in running the journalist through +the shoulder. + +The next few days I was engaged in making purchases, chiefly of shot +and necessary travelling articles, for the interior. I was swimming my +dog in the water of the port, according to my daily custom, when I +stumbled on my servant, Angelo, whom I determined to take with me into +the interior. Besides English, which he spoke very well, he could talk +Arabic quite fluently, and I found him very useful. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +"UP THE COUNTRY." + + Departure from Algiers.--Blidah.--The Zouave Officers and their + Companions.--Government Establishment of Horses.--Joseph, the + Horse-dealer.--To Arbah.--The Caravanserai.--Journey towards + Oued-el-Massin. + + +On Thursday, March 8th, after seeing A---- start, by diligence, with +innumerable bags of cheviotine (deer-shot), I and Angelo left Algiers +with my newly-purchased horses, and, passing through some very pretty +country, stopped at the first village, where De Warn, a French +officer, came up on horseback, with his groom. He admired my horses +very much, and announced his destination to be the Maison Carree, +where he was going to shoot quails, a friend of his having bagged +forty there in one afternoon. It came on to rain very hard as we +passed through the plain of the Medidja, and arrived at Bouffaseh, +where there is a column raised to the memory of twenty-three men +killed there during the war. We galloped in to Blidah, the rain +pouring down on us. At dinner, I met A---- in a _cafe_, with Count +L'Esparre and three or four officers of the 1st Regiment of Zouaves. +They were a very pleasant set of fellows, but did not appear to admire +their remote quarters at Blidah by any means. The heat, during the +height of summer, they informed me, was terrific, and the private +soldiers are not allowed to quit their quarters between 10 A.M. and 5 +P.M. during the four hottest months of the year. We drank unlimited +punch to the "Alliance," and, on returning to the hotel, after a +mutual exchange of good wishes, we found familiar faces--belonging to +the Dutchmen who had travelled with us from Marseilles to Algiers. + +I went with Count L'Esparre to see the Government establishment of +horses. There were some very fine creatures of Arab breed; also some +Persian horses which had been presented by the Shah of Persia. We then +started on horseback for Medea, and on my way passed the "Grotto of +Monkeys," but none of the animals from which the grotto takes its name +met my inquiring gaze. The Rocher Pourri, which I also passed on my +way, had just acquired an additional but a lugubrious celebrity, an +Arab having killed a Frenchman there the day before. We rode on to +Medea through a rattling snow-storm, and arrived properly powdered at +the Hotel du Gastronome, where they made us comfortable enough. Medea +is built in a very elevated situation, among the mountains, and must +be a very cold place. + +On the next day, Saturday, it was still snowing hard. A---- had to +provide himself with a horse, and we were afterwards both engaged, +with Angelo, my Maltese servant, looking for mules to carry our +baggage to Teniet. At the hotel, there was a very celebrated picture +by Horace Vernet, for which one of the Dutchmen offered a thousand +francs, but the offer was declined by Madame Gerard. In my opinion, +the picture was far from being a masterpiece. + +Rising early on Sunday, I was immediately pounced upon by a set of +Arabs, who had engaged to take our luggage, and to whom we had paid a +deposit in advance. They now refused to take our luggage at five +francs per day, the sum agreed upon, unless we retained their valuable +services all the time we remained at Teniet, which, of course, we +never contemplated doing. I demanded back the deposit, but they would +not give it up. On going to the Bureau Arabe, we found it closed, and +the Commandant de Ville, to whom some officers recommended us to +apply, was gone to Blidah, so there was nothing for it but to invoke +the aid of Joseph, a French horse-dealer, who engaged to take our +effects on two mules to Teniet at seven and a half francs per mule per +day, we paying the return journey. After all, we could not manage to +get off until one o'clock in the day. Joseph accompanied us as far as +Lodi, to indicate the route to the caravanserai of Arbah, where we +were to stay for the night. The good horse-dealer insisted on our +taking two or three _petits verres_ on the road. A terrible fellow he +was for "nips," that Joseph. + +The road to Arbah lay across a very barren, desert, mountainous +country, with splendid views over the whole Atlas range, as far as +Mostaganem, now covered with snow. We passed one or two Arab villages, +and had great difficulty in finding our way, on account of the number +of roads that branched off right and left. On the journey we passed a +very fine house belonging to a rich Arab chief. We were sorely tempted +to turn in here, but refrained, and arriving at the caravanserai at +about seven o'clock, found a party of French officers just sitting +down to dinner. They very politely invited us to join them. + +The caravanserai is a Government establishment. In form it resembles a +large farm yard, entirely walled in and crenellated. It has stalls for +horses, and good accommodation for European travellers. A large fair +is held here every Wednesday, chiefly for the sale of native horses. +We had a long and interesting talk with the officers, and then retired +to bed, but not to sleep, for our baggage had not arrived, and the +bitter cold kept us in a state of enforced watchfulness. + +Before breakfast, next day, I walked out on a tour of inspection +through the neighbourhood. The caravanserai is situated almost in the +desert; and very cold and barren are its surroundings. During +breakfast, we were rejoiced by the arrival of our baggage, and at once +started for Ouad-el-Massin. There is a very grand sensation of +solitude and silence in riding through these vast plains. The weather +was still tremendously cold and rainy. I managed to shoot two +partridges as we came along. + +A chapter of accidents now began. My Maltese servant had been mistaken +concerning the capacity of our mules; for they broke down, and we were +obliged to leave them behind. Then my horse, an exceedingly vicious +brute, nearly succeeded in appropriating a piece of Angelo's shoulder, +as the latter stooped to tighten the girths. I found afterwards that +my steed had a very bad character all over the country; his ill fame, +however, was slightly redeemed by the fact that he was a good goer. +Then we missed our way among the mountains, and with difficulty +succeeded, just as it was getting dark, in reaching a small house at +Guebla, kept by a Frenchman. The proprietor received us very +hospitably, and gave us all the accommodation he could: it was of +rather a limited character, inasmuch as we all slept together in the +small room where we dined and breakfasted. Our host informed us that +there were a great number of lions in the neighbourhood. He had +himself been surprised by one, just after dusk, on the road from +Milianca, and offered to induce the Caid of the adjoining tribe to get +up a battue on our return. He also spoke of the great number of wild +boars in a way that would make a hunter's heart leap within him. We +retired to rest, and, sheltered for the nonce from the searching cold, +I slept as only a weary traveller can. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +FURTHER EXPERIENCES. + + Abd-el-Kader (but not the Emir).--Difficult Road.--Perils of the + Way.--Prospect of Sport.--The First Boar.--The Chasseurs + d'Afrique.--Mine Hostess of the "Scorpion."--Teniet. + + +In the hope of obtaining some reliable information as to hunting +prospects, I had in the Caid's lieutenant a fine-looking fellow, +rejoicing in the famous name of Abd-el-Kader, though he was no +relation to the renowned chief. He gave a long description of the +capture of a boar, that had been wounded by some Arabs; how he caught +the brute by the hoofs, gagged it, and brought it home alive. Mr. +----, he also informed us, had been surprised, about a month before, +by a lion, as he was returning at dusk from Milianah. There were many +lions in the vicinity, he added; and promised that his friend the Caid +should treat us to a lion-hunt on our return, if we came back this +way. + +Then we started, Abd-el-Kader accompanying us to show us a short +way over the mountains to the caravanserai of Oued-el-Massin, where +we were to pass the night, and expected to find our luggage. We +were prepared to find the river very high, and our anticipations were +not deceived. Abd-el-Kader admonished me to wait on the bank while +he went in to try if there was any getting through. He returned and +asked if my horse was good, and if I was willing to follow him. On +receiving my affirmative answer, he told me to fix my eyes on the +opposite shore, and, above all things, to abstain from looking at +the water, which was tearing along at a tremendous rate; if I +neglected his instructions, I should infallibly be carried away and +drowned. I started, and, by dint of spurring, managed to get +across, though my horse plunged up to his shoulder, and at one +moment I thought I was a "gone coon." Abd-el-Kader, the undaunted, +then went back once more for the second horse, which he dragged +across in due time by the bridle. Then he pointed out to us the road +over the mountain to Oued-el-Massin; nor did he think it derogatory to +his dignity to accept a reward for the trouble he had taken on our +behalf. + +In spite of the valiant lieutenant's directions, the road was a very +difficult one to find. After wandering about in the forest through a +number of out-of-the-way paths, we managed at last to stumble on an +Arab house or two, where the promise of a supply of powder prevailed +with an Arab, and he piloted us down to the caravanserai, where we +arrived at about six P.M., wet to the skin, and weary with a most +fatiguing day's march. We found our luggage had preceded us by about +half an hour; so we had a change of clothes, and sat down gleefully to +a capital dinner in very comfortable quarters. These caravanserais are +a famous institution. They are built by the French Government for the +convenience of travellers, and are very well organised. Each one is +under the superintendence of a Frenchman, and has one part devoted to +Europeans and another to Arabs. We had an excellent sitting-room and +bed-room to ourselves, and, as may be supposed, were exceedingly +comfortable. + +Wednesday, the 14th of March, was ushered in by a pouring rain; and we +received the agreeable intelligence that the river between this and +our next station was perfectly impassable; so we made up our minds to +stay where we were. There was some consolation in the thought that +Joseph, the exceedingly keen horse-dealer at Medea, will not be +entitled to charge extra for the delay to his mules, he having bound +himself, by solemn covenant, to deliver the baggage safely at Teniet +for a certain stipulated sum. + +After breakfast I walked into the forest which surrounds the +caravanserai on all sides, and shot two or three brace of red-legged +partridges and a woodcock. I saw the traces of several wild boars; +they were evidently quite recent; also a wretched porcupine the Arabs +had killed. + +In the course of the day the Arabs brought in a boar which they had +killed in the morning. They threw the entrails outside the house, and, +during the night, quite an army of jackals came down to devour them. +It was so dark that we could not get a shot at these African +scavengers, though I sallied out once or twice after them. + +It rained all night, so that going on was out of the question, from +the swollen state of the river; so I walked off before breakfast, with +Angelo, to an Arab village, about a mile and a half distant, to +inquire about boars. The promise of some powder brought out the +inhabitants; and, after a little banter and chaffing, they agreed to +meet me after breakfast, and to show me one of those animals. So I +returned to the caravanserai to breakfast, and then, with my friend, +rode back to the Arab huts. We left our horses at the village, and +proceeded to climb a horribly steep hill in company with some of the +natives, to whom I had promised tobacco-money, on condition of being +brought face to face with a boar. After some tremendously steep +climbing, we came upon a number of recent tracks, one of which B---- +followed with his Arab, while I remained in another gorge. Presently I +heard a shot fired, about a mile off; and, on returning to where the +horses were tethered, I found that B---- and his Arab had succeeded in +discovering a boar. The Arab had fired at the brute at twenty paces, +but missed his aim. It was now past five o'clock, so we returned to +the caravanserai to dinner. Some Chasseurs d'Afrique had arrived in +the interim. Their captain joined us in our room, and promised us an +escort for the morrow. He was from Boulogne-sur-Mer, and spoke English +pretty well. He told us we should have to start at six in the morning +to cross the river. + +Accordingly, next morning the Frenchman set out at six o'clock with +his troops and traps, leaving a dragoon behind as an escort for us, +but with the important qualification that the man might only stay one +hour behind the rest, as he must be present on the arrival of the +troop at Teniet. "_Et maintenant_," quoth this bold warrior, "_je vais +me servir d'un peu de votre tabac, s'il vous plait, car je vois que +votre blague est bien garni;_" and, filling his pipe, he vanished, +with a polite "_Au revoir, messieurs_!" + +Feeling too tired to rise at seven for the sake of escort, especially +as we had not a very long journey before us, I remained comfortably +for breakfast, and B---- started alone. After a good meal, I set out +with Angelo, and we forced our way through a densely-wooded country, +till we came upon the obstacle which had lost us two days--the river +Klebah. This stream we managed with some difficulty to cross; a +Frenchman, who emerged from the auberge on the other side, assisting +us, by his advice, as to the best spot to choose for our passage. +B---- and the trooper had just finished breakfast in the auberge, and +departed. The landlady of the "Scorpion," a very chatty and amusing +personage, insisted upon it that I was a German. She favoured me with +a sporting anecdote, setting forth how she had killed three rabbits +during an expedition to pick some rose laurier on the hills. As the +bunnies popped their noses out of their holes, she had managed to pop +them off with the branches. As this was the only house to be met with +on that day's journey, I halted there for half an hour. Mine hostess +related how an "English milord" had stayed there for six months with +his wife, in a tent, without even a servant--"_Qu'ils sont droles ces +Anglais!_" was the landlady's final comment; and it was not for me to +contradict the oft-repeated sentiment. + +Through a mountainous and most barren country, amid a pelting +snow-storm, we wended onwards to Teniet. In my way from El Massin to +the "Scorpion," I might almost have knocked over several partridges +with my whip, so close did they come; but here there were none to be +seen, nor was there any cover that might shelter them. At a miserable +auberge called "_les Cedres_," I found B----. + +The fort at Teniet is a fine edifice, in a commanding position. I went +up and left my letter of introduction for Captain Camatte, who gave us +very small hope of sport. He did not seem very keen on the subject, +and advised us to try some other place, offering to give us +recommendations, &c. I returned to a most miserable room, where we +could hardly sit, so much were we annoyed by the smoke from the fire; +we could scarcely decide which was hardest to bear, the smoke within, +or the cold without. With a hearty laugh at the absurdity of coming to +such a place as Teniet in search of game, and with a determination to +set out on our return the next day, we betook ourselves to an early +bed. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +FURTHER PROGRESS.--RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES. + + Cold Weather.--Milianah.--Vezoul.--The Aubergiste.--El Afroun.--The + Rhamazan.--Dancing Dervishes. + + +In order to avoid the trouble of carrying our ammunition back with us, +we sold the greater portion of it. The snow lay four or five inches +deep in the road; we sent to the commandant to procure us mules and +other necessaries, and set out, with a snow-storm beating down upon +us, and the cold as sharp as it well could be. At the "Scorpion" we +refreshed ourselves with coffee, and then re-crossed the river, which +was scarcely fordable; we got to El Massin about six o'clock; the +brigadier told us he had shot a hyena. Some capital wild boar they +gave us for dinner, seemed to be an earnest of our return to sporting +latitudes. At half-past seven next morning, we emerged from the +caravanserai. The weather seemed at last, after a long season of +inclemency, to have set in for heat. "_Le temps s'est remis a neuf_," +observed Mr. Ball; and it had changed with a vengeance, so far as the +temperature was concerned. Terribly hot we found it, marching across +the Milianah plain. We crossed the Djelish in a bac, or flying +bridge, and reached Afreville about ten o'clock. Leaving B---- and +Angelo to proceed to Medea, I went on to Milianah, where I arrived at +about twelve o'clock. While waiting there for my baggage, I noticed +some Arab boys playing at a game closely resembling hockey. Milianah +is a very strong fort, with a splendid view over the Atlas mountains +and the plain of the Djelish. I stopped at the Cat or Du-chat stables, +appropriately kept by Mr. Duchat-_el_, and found that it was too late +to stop at any place on the road to Blidah. + +I took a walk through the town, and on the Grande Place found a number +of soldiers singing a chorus very creditably, without instrumental +accompaniment. They perform in this manner every Sunday. The view over +the plain of the Djelish is one of the most splendid I ever beheld, +not excepting that from the Alhambra itself. I was told I could easily +get to Blidah in a day on horseback, from Milianah, so I determined to +stay at the Hotel d'Iffly, a very comfortable place. At dinner I met +Mostyn and Captain Ross, just arrived from Algiers, per diligence. +Captain R----, who is in the Bengal Artillery, told me he thought the +French used the natives much better than we do those of India. I +differ from him. One of the French officers with whom I dined told me +the only way to manage the "Indigenes" was by that vigorous measure, +"_un coup de fouet_," and, from what I saw, I believe it to be the +case. + +On Monday, the 19th, I left Milianah at about half-past seven, and +rode through splendid Pyreneean scenery to Vezoul, a French village. +The aubergiste took me for a German, and announced that he had two +German workmen staying with him, who spoke with the same accent I +used. When I repudiated my Teutonic nationality, he met me with the +remark: "_Enfin, c'est le meme sang rouge qui coule dans nos veines, +que nous soyons Anglais, Francais, ou Allemands;_" to which undeniable +proposition I rejoined, "_Oui, c'est vrai nous sommes tous Europeens +ici._" I fed my horse here, and came on, over the mountains, under a +very hot sun, to Bourkikah, where I entered the Medidja plain. On +entering this plain, the traveller enjoys a magnificent view right +onward to sea, gleaming miles away in the sunny haze. At Bourkikah, my +horse was so tired, that I was obliged to take off the saddle-bags, +and leave them at the "Bureau des Diligences," to be forwarded. Some +French officers at the hotel assured me I should not be able to get to +Blidah, and recommended me strongly to stay at El Afroun, "_chez les +Petits Freres_," if I found my horse too tired to proceed. I rode +determinedly on through the plain, but could scarcely get my horse to +move by dint of whip or spur. By the time I had crossed the river into +El Afroun, I found my horse so entirely knocked up, that it was +clearly impossible to proceed. So, of necessity, I turned into the +auberge, and had a very good dinner, enlivened by a serenade from a +legion of frogs, croaking dolefully in the neighbouring marshes. + +Getting away from El Afroun by six o'clock next morning, I found +myself at Blidah by half-past seven. The cavalry horses were just +turning out on the plains, and looked very handsome as I rode into the +town. At Blidah, where I breakfasted, the sun was hot enough to burn +my face in a most unequivocal manner, and to necessitate the purchase +of a new hat. On arriving at Bouffanieh, I got off my horse, which by +this time had fairly fallen lame, and took the diligence into Algiers. +At Bouffanieh I was much amused at the proceedings of a group of +Arabs, who were squatting on the ground, selling oranges. Their first +customer was a drunken Frenchman, who came staggering up, and began +chaffing the vendors; but they evidently got the better of him in no +time, and he retired in confusion. Next came a grave, steady-looking +Spaniard, who, after much bargaining, marched off with _one_ orange. +He was followed by a little girl, who very quickly got hold of three. +I thought Algiers improved on a second view. + +Next day I went for a ride to the Maison Carree, with De Warne and +Captain Thouars, of the _Euphrates_. We had a most magnificent view +over the plain of the Metidja. This was the first night of the +Rhamazan. I visited the mosques, which have been thrown open to +Europeans since the French occupation. Thence I proceeded to view a +strange religious or fanatic ceremony of the Mussulmans; some Swedish +naval officers were with us. The whole affair reminded me of a meeting +of Jumpers, or Ranters. There are no priests to take part in it. The +men stand round in a circle, reciting prayers to Allah, and calling on +Mahomet, while they work their bodies violently backwards and +forwards, till they lash themselves into a state of perfect frenzy. +One fanatic more zealous than the rest then rushes forward, cuts +himself with a knife, and stands on the sharp edge of the weapon, +which is held by another. The chaunt or psalm is then renewed, and +another devotee comes forward howling; snatches a portion of prickly +pear, and actually devours it ravenously. Then another exceedingly +zealous performer--whose face, by the way, reminded me strangely of +the portraits of Disraeli in _Punch_--seized some red-hot coals, and +held them in his mouth for a time, afterwards proceeding to swallow +lighted pipes, and execute other salamandrine feats. After witnessing +this spectacle of degradation for some time, we retired, somewhat +disgusted at the buffooneries perpetrated in this country, as +elsewhere, in the name of religion. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +BONA AND ITS VICINITY. + + Passage to Bona.--State of Affairs on Board.--Bona.--The Lake + Metitza.--Ain Mokra.--Wild Duck Shooting on the Lake. + + +We bade adieu to B----, who had given us letters of recommendation to +the Admiral, for a first-class cabin to Bona--a thing difficult to +achieve on board the steamers here, as civilians are only allowed +second-class accommodation, the state cabin being reserved for the use +of naval and military officers, as the steamers on this line rank as +men of war. The boat was much crowded with soldiers, sailors, and +Arabs, and we had to share a most miserable berth with eight other +occupants. We had arrived too late to procure cabin places, and were +obliged to dine in an unsavoury den, reeking with pestilential odours. +Most of the Frenchmen grumbled loudly at the miserable accommodation +afforded in return for their money. Steaming along past a fine coast, +we reached Dellis about eight o'clock. I got Angelo to bring me my +sheepskin and cloak, and preferred sleeping on deck to passing the +night in a locality which, for the horrors it contained, might have +figured as a scene in Dante's "Inferno." + +The gentle music of the sailors, swabbing the deck, awoke me next +morning. I found we were off Bougie, a most beautifully-situated +place, entirely surrounded by snow-covered mountains. Here are +distinctly to be seen the ruins of the old wall supposed to have been +built by the Vandals. A rather tedious day on board, but the +occupation of watching the coast, which is very fine, varied the +monotony of the voyage. We passed Djigelli at about twelve, and +Philippeville at nine in the evening, when I retired to rest, and, the +Fates be thanked, it was in a fresh cabin. + +There was a Jewess on board, a rather pretty personage, who slept in +the same cabin with six men, most of them French officers, with a +coolness that astonished me. Her husband was in the berth opposite +her; she did not appear to feel the discomforts of her position, but +chatted away gaily in Arabic and French throughout the whole passage. +I don't think she quitted her berth once. + +At half-past six on Saturday, the 25th of March, came Angelo to +announce to me that we were off Bona. This is a very strongly +fortified place. We were rowed ashore by Maltese boatmen, and, amid a +great crowd and bustle on the quay, landed, and went to the Hotel de +France. The proprietors were very civil, and assigned us a room at the +top of the house, looking out on the place. We sallied forth in quest +of horses to take us to the market-place. An Arab, who spoke some +very broken and dilapidated Italian, took us round the market and +through the streets, shouting "Reel Ain Mokra!" Several Arabs came up +and offered us their horses, but the steeds had such a forlorn look, +that we declined the accommodation, and settled to start by carriage +next morning. + +Accordingly, on Monday, the 26th of March, we set out at five o'clock, +on a most wretched morning. The vehicle was the most miserable +locomotive contrivance I ever saw. Drawn by two horses, it pounded and +churned along a most detestable road. We were obliged to get out +several times, and in one place we stuck in the mud for twenty +minutes. It was only by dint of putting our united shoulders to the +wheel, that we succeeded in extricating our unhappy chariot from its +stationary position. At length our eyes were gladdened by the sight of +the defile which opens on the lake Metitza, where Count Z----'s +property is situated. Though of Polish origin, the Count is an +Englishman, and has, I believe, been an officer. Right gladly we +alighted from the carriage, and, loading our guns, prevailed on some +Italian fishermen to take us out in a boat for a pop at the wild ducks +which we saw flying about by hundreds, bagged a few, and then returned +to find that the Count's keeper had come down, under the impression +that we were poachers, with a firm determination to take us into +custody there and then. The production of our letter of recommendation +brought him back to civility, and produced an offer to take us out +shooting; Count Z---- himself was absent in London. + +There is an establishment here for the manufacture of oil from putrid +fish, which agreeable occupation announced itself in the shape of such +an overpowering odour, that I seized a glass of cognac, and fled +precipitately, taking my way towards the caravanserai of Ain Mokra. +Poor old Nero, whom I had brought with me, got into a scrape here, and +narrowly escaped being drowned. It appears that the putrid entrails of +the fish are thrown into a kind of pond, which is thus filled with a +slimy mixture resembling clay, and exhaling a most horrible odour when +exposed to the sun's rays. Nero contrived, in some way or other, to +slip into this delectable compound, and there he would have remained, +had I not laid hold of him and pulled him out by main force. I at once +had him washed and scrubbed, and even emptied some scent on him, but +in vain; for days afterwards, poor Nero carried about with him a +reminiscence of his odoriferous adventure, which rendered his absence +most desirable to the comfort and well-being of his friends. I sallied +forth about four miles from Ain Mokra, and lay in ambush for boars, +but none appeared, and only shot some jackals--a very poor substitute +for the nobler game I had missed. + +[Illustration: R. Pheney, lith. + +M. & N. Hanhart, Impt. + +SHOOTING WILD DUCKS NEAR AIN MOKRA, PROVINCE OF +CONSTANTINE, ALGERIA.] + +At five, next morning, I went out to shoot on the lake. I got Angelo +to row a boat slowly among the reeds, and soon saw hundreds of wild +ducks, teals, and large white birds of whose name I am ignorant; they +looked to me like flamingoes. I could only succeed in bagging a few, +as they were exceedingly shy, and made off as soon as the boat +approached; moreover, the rushes were not thick enough to afford us an +effectual concealment. As the miasma from the lake was sufficiently +powerful to threaten fever, we returned to the caravanserai, where we +breakfasted, and, after shooting a few quails, returned in our +carriage, at one o'clock, to Bona. My driver, who sat beside me, was a +very loquacious old soldier, who had served in the campaigns against +the Arabs under Baraguay d'Hilliers and Youssouf, and been present at +the capture of Milianah and Medeah. The Arabs, he said, never met the +French fairly _en bataille rangee_, but always fired from ambush at +the rear-guard, and in this way killed a great number of men. He +described the conduct of the Arabs to their prisoners as very +merciless. They never gave quarter, and frequently mutilated their +captives; the women, in this particular, being more cruel than the +men. I was informed, on my return, that the party who came out last +year to shoot, had only killed four lions in as many months, though +they had "all appliances and means to boot," and always kept several +Arabs in their pay. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +ON TO TUNIS. + + Algeria in general.--The Arabs and their Conquerors.--Antagonism + between the Two Races.--Social Condition of the Arabs.--The Oasis + steamer.--Arrival at Tunis. + + +On the 28th of March I left Bona in the steamer _Oasis_. The engine +broke down shortly after leaving the port, and, as the sails were +absolutely useless, we had the pleasant consciousness of drifting +towards a lee shore; but in a short time the damage was luckily +repaired, and we proceeded on our voyage. + +The accounts I had heard of Algeria had not prepared me to find such a +flourishing state of affairs as I really found to exist in the +community. The colony possesses fine harbours, a magnificent soil, and +a glorious climate; numerous towns, with good hotels, are springing up +in the interior. It is true that many of the immigrants are not +French, but the majority are of that nation; and all the inhabitants, +after a few years, adopt the French manners and language. The +non-Gallic population are chiefly Spaniards, Italians, Maltese, and +Germans. I met only one party of English at Bona, where a community of +eighteen souls have been brought over by a Mr. Vincent; they appear +to thrive very well. I was told that Count Z---- intended establishing +an English village near Bona. + +From the general prosperity, I, of course, except the Moors and Arabs, +who will never, I believe, adopt European civilisation; they seem to +recoil from before it, like the wild beasts of their native deserts. + +The French people certainly pointed out to me in the towns one or +two _Europeanised_ Arabs, and laughed at the idea of their ever +becoming "_Francais_." From what I saw, the natives merely adopted +the vices without the good qualities of the dominant race. If to be +civilised consists in sitting in the _cafes_, drinking absinthe, +playing cards, and speaking bad French, I certainly saw one or two +most unquestionable specimens of the Arab adaptability to Gallic +impressions; but, with the exception of these brilliant results, I +never saw the least token of intercourse between the Moors and +their conquerors; indeed, each nation may be said entirely to ignore +the existence of the other. The peculiarity of Mussulman habits, +with regard to women, entirely precludes all prospect of a future +mixture of the two races--such an amalgamation, for instance, as +occurred in our own country between the Norman-French conquerors +and the conquered Saxons. So well are the French aware of this +impossibility, that I have seen the question of the expediency of +utterly expelling the Mussulmans from Algeria gravely discussed in +the French journals. + +Another method proposed was, that the young Arabs who had attained the +military age of from eighteen to twenty-two years, should be +transferred to France, there to pass their period of service as +infantry soldiers only, that opportunities might be found, during +their "soldiering years," for instructing them in agriculture, and the +rudiments of civilised education. This appears to me a sufficiently +feasible plan; but I suspect that the Arab converts to civilisation +would, on their return to their native land, quickly relapse into +their old idle, roving habits, their primitive mode of life, and their +inborn hatred of the infidel, whom they now regard as an instrument +sent by Providence to inflict vengeance on the true believer for his +apathy, and culpable neglect of his religious duties, including the +propagation of his faith by fire and sword. Still, they believe the +time to be approaching when every true son of the prophet shall "hae +his ain" again; and it is past the power of mortal man to shake a +Mahometan's trust and reliance on Destiny. + +For the rest, the French behave with the greatest toleration towards +all members of the Moorish faith, who are allowed to perform every +rite of their religion, and polygamy even is permitted to prevail +among the Mussulman population. At Bona, a very handsome mosque is +being erected on the Grand Place by the Government. Tolerant +themselves, the French refuse, with perfect justice, to suffer any +display of bigotry or fanaticism on the part of the Mahometans towards +the Christian community; the consequence is, that the mosques and +other resorts of Mahometans are all thrown open to European visitors. + +My dog Nero was a most decided favourite on board the French steamer, +_Oasis_. Everybody was caressing and patting him, from the captain to +the stewardess, rather a nice young female, from Germany, who took him +under her especial protection, and looked after his creature-comforts +in a way that must have aroused the most lively gratitude in the +canine bosom of the said Nero. Poor old dog! he seemed quite +bewildered at the attention he received, not only here, but also on +board the French man-of-war, the _Tartar_, where the French soldiers +and sailors were crowding around him all day long, and overwhelming +him with favours, in the shape of bits of meat, when they took their +meals. A number of Arabs were sleeping about the deck. These children +of the desert used to excite Nero's especial wonder. Whenever he was +let loose, he was sure to be sniffing about among the prostrate +figures, examining their faces and _bournouses_, and often waking them +up with a start, to the intense delight of the French tars. + +On our arrival off La Goulette, the only anchorage for ships, situated +about eight miles from Tunis, by sea, and nine miles by land, we were +greeted by a scene of the most tremendous confusion. All the feluccas +were rowed by Arabs, and their shouting, swearing, and gesticulation +exceeded all my former experiences of the kind, Stamboul not +excepted. A little patience, and a good deal of backsheesh, enabled us +to pass our baggage through the Douane; and we sent it on by boat to +Tunis, whither we proceeded by land in a carriage, and a drizzling +rain. Once on the way we stopped, at what the inhabitants term the +"Carthaginian cistern," to take in some exceedingly dirty water, from +a fountain of old-fashioned appearance. The carriage windows were +closed on account of the rain--an arrangement which interfered a good +deal with my view of the surrounding country. Twice only, before we +arrived at Tunis, my companion, a Russian, opened the window--to spit! +On the first of these occasions, I got a glimpse of a large heap of +immense stones, which were pointed out to me as the ruins of Carthage, +and a grove of olives, looking dismal exceedingly in the drizzling +rain. On the second occasion, I saw the lakes, and a solitary Tunisian +sentinel. This soldier was dressed much in the Turkish costume, and I +should scarcely have known him from an Osmanli, but that he wore the +brass plaque in the front of his scarlet fez, instead of at the top. + +As we approached Tunis, we became involved in an increasing crowd of +loaded asses and mules; and, amid a great deal of screeching and +shouting, we made our entry into the city, and drove to the Hotel +de France, where we obtained such a complete view of an old wall, +that it effectually prevented us from seeing anything else. The +rooms, or rather holes, assigned to us, were so miserable, that we +tried the solitary opposition shop the place can boast--the Hotel +de Provence--but found that here we should fare rather worse than in +the Hotel de France. There was a third establishment--a tavern, +rejoicing in the magniloquent title of "Hotel of the Britannic +Isles"--but as this hostelry was entirely occupied by sailors and +Maltese skippers, we declined to avail ourselves of the "Britannic" +accommodation. There was a great crowd of rather miscellaneous +company at the _table-d'hote_. One French female, whom, without +offence to gallantry, I may be permitted to describe as the ugliest +woman I met in my travels, excited my especial horror. This charming +person actually amused herself, and disgusted her neighbours, by +indulging, _across the table_, in an amusement generally associated +in men's minds with the chewing of tobacco! I discovered, however, +that she was only a servant maid. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +MARSA. + + Angelo's Horsemanship.--The Bey's Palace at Marsa.--The Arabs and + their Love of Tobacco.--The Friendly Moor at Camatte. + + +On the first of April I rode to Marsa, a little town on the seashore. +Angelo's horse seemed rather fresh, and my servant was evidently no +Centaur. He came up to me in an olive wood, where I made a halt for +about five minutes. He was holding on hard by the mane, his trousers +were up to his knees, and his face was horribly pale. On my asking him +why he loitered behind so, he owned, with a dismal sigh, that he was +half afraid of the horse. "Afraid of the horse, sir!" was poor +Angelo's lament: "Very wicked horse, sir--fell from a horse, sir--at +Scutari, sir--broke three ribs, sir--and in hospital five weeks, +sir!" + +I told him to be of good cheer, for the horse would soon be quiet +after a good gallop; and, tying the horses to some olive trees, I bade +Angelo wait for me by the side of a little hillock in the plain, where +I could readily find him on my return, and went away into the forest +with my gun. The ground was covered with long, thick, pointed grass, +very wet with the dew. I saw some quails, and shot a few; then +returned to where Angelo was waiting, and galloped on to Marsa. At +this place, the Bey, and the principal inhabitants of Tunis, have +summer residences, to which they resort for the sake of sea-bathing. +On the way, I encountered a number of Arabs, mounted on mules. The +foremost shouted out to me in Arabic, as I passed, asking me to stop +and give him some tobacco. I understood the word "tobacco," which +seems to have nearly the same sound in all languages, and knowing this +request to be often a "dodge" on the part of the Arabs, who want an +opportunity to rob, if not to murder, the traveller, I pointed to +Angelo, who was following, about fifty paces behind me, with my gun, +and shouted out that _he_ would find tobacco for them. They evidently +understood my meaning; for they all set up a loud laugh, and my friend +the tobacconist--or rather the tobacco-less--looked exceedingly +"sold." + +I found Marsa very prettily situated, opposite to the bay of Tunis, +near the ruins of old Carthage. The Bey's palace is a handsome +building. The English and French consulates are also well built. I +proceeded to a small Italian _locanda_, to get breakfast; but the old +lady, who seemed the presiding genius of the place, obstinately +refused to let us have anything. "_Io han niente_," was her +unanswerable argument. But I rather ostentatiously pulled out my +watch, whose golden blink somewhat softened the old lady's mood, and +caused her to remember that she might have certain eggs, and some +bread, and salad, though a moment before she had been protesting that +she had not even such a thing as bread in the house. Her son, a +handsome young Italian, returned at this juncture, and we soon had an +excellent _dejeuner_ of sausages, salad, spinach, omelette, and +cheese, with very good wine and coffee. I went down to the seaside and +bathed, first burying my watch and purse in the sand; for the Arabs +have a weakness for occasionally coming down under such circumstances, +and stealing one's clothes. + +Past a ruined temple, down an avenue into Camatte, where I got an Arab +to show me the way to a house formerly occupied by an Englishman. +Here, for a wonder, I met a Moor, who spoke very good French, and was +very civil. He asked me how I liked Africa, and laughed cordially at +my open avowal, that it was "_un peu bizarre_." After gathering a few +delicious oranges for me in the garden, he took me into the interior +of the house. I found it a most charming residence, with a deliciously +cool marble reservoir in the centre, full of gold and silver fish. + +I rode back by the margin of the lake, but saw only small game till I +got to a large olive forest, where a jackal made his appearance. I +gave chase, and, after a rattling gallop, lodged him among some cactus +bushes, where I could get near enough to shoot him; and so back to +Tunis. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +ABOUT BOAR-SHOOTING. + + Sleeman.--The Oued el Ahwena.--Its Scenery and its Dangers.--Beauty + of the Landscape on its Banks. + + +I started next day with the Umbra, who was remarkable for a long +scimitar, and spurs nearly as long. Each time I put my horse to a +gallop, he was under the impression that I wanted to ride a race with +him, and went on at full speed, till I restrained his ardour. We +arrived duly at Sleeman, where the Caid had everything prepared very +comfortably for us. My friends B---- and F---- arrived later, in a +carriage. We had a good Arab dinner, with the national kouskous, +followed by a chibouk. + +There was a river about six miles off, where boars were rumoured to +make their abode. I rose early next morning, and, proceeding to this +stream, hid in the thicket on the banks, while the Arabs beat the +bushes. After waiting a long time, I managed to "pot" a wild boar, +which came rushing past me at full speed. After this, the Arabs +refused to beat the bushes any more, declaring that the dogs were +tired, though the real reason was that they wanted their own dinners, +so I was obliged to give up the sport and return. The wild boar was +dispatched as a present to the consul. + +[Illustration: R. Pheney, lith. + +M. & N. Hanhart, Impt. + +HOG-SHOOTING ON THE BANKS OF THE OUED EL AHWENA, IN +TUNISIA.] + +The river which we visited to-day is called the Oued el Ahwena. It +runs through a rich valley, bordered on both sides by mountains which +rise up gradually, and are covered to their very foot with trees of +various descriptions. The plain itself is fragrant with myrtles, +orange trees, and olives. The beauty of the scene amid which this +river falls into the sea is beyond description. Here the water is +hissing wildly among osiers and furze bushes; there it skips along +like a young goat over the small pebbles; and yonder, again, it winds +like a serpent among the sand hills on the sea-shore. The dark +olive-trees on the bank seem to look seriously on, like a father +watching the pranks of a favourite child. The large ash-trees shake +and quiver, like old aunts, all in a tremble at the dangerous hops and +vagaries of a lively niece; while the gay-plumaged birds of the air +ring out their wild applause, and the flowers on the bankside murmur +tenderly, "Oh, take us with you, dear sister!" But the joyous, +sparkling river rushes on like a coquette, bounding and skipping +towards its goal. + +Such is the river Ahwena in the glorious month of April: fair without, +like many a gay flirt, she can yet inflict wounds incurable, if not +death, upon those whom her wiles entrap. Woe to the traveller or +hunter who, oppressed by thirst in this burning climate, ventures to +taste the sparkling water that bubbles up like champagne, invitingly +at his feet! Cholera and death would be the probable result. The +waters are redolent of cholera, and the banks of fever. No man may +pitch his tent in safety for a single night on the banks of this +death-dealing water; not even the Bedouins, who avoid the locality as +if it were plague-stricken, for fever is in the very air. Strange that +so fair an exterior should veil so baneful a mystery. Those bright, +sweet-smelling flowers conceal snakes and reptiles whose bite is +almost instantaneously fatal, and the place might be appropriately +termed the Valley of Death. Among yonder fair trees lurk the +treacherous panther and the slinking hyena. + +Yet, in this world, amid present impressions of pleasure, we have +little time to think of the danger veiled beneath the smiling outward +shape. So, at least, it was with me, as I reclined on the carpet of +soft grass, after slaying the boar, placidly discussing my breakfast, +and enjoying the beauty of the scene around, with the azure-rippling +sea about two miles off, the magnificent mountains around me, the +sparkling river at my feet, and, across the bay in the far distance, +the ruins of the once mighty city of Carthage, with the birds singing +merrily overhead in the bright sunshine. There is exquisite pleasure +in the sensation of the external world thus melting away, as it were, +into a little world of our own, and when the green trees, the azure +sky, the perfumed plants, all take their places in an exquisite +picture of Nature's own painting. Women, perhaps, most indulge this +feeling; hence they often smile with an amiable incredulity when they +hear the "lords of the creation," proud of their scholastic lore, +discussing and settling everything, priding themselves upon having +divided all things so cleverly into _subjective_ and _objective_, and +boasting that they have furnished their wise heads with so many +drawers (like a chemist's shop, forsooth), with reason located in one, +good sense in another, understanding in a third, and so on to the end +of the chapter. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +SPORTING EXPERIENCES. + + El Greesh.--Shooting Hyenas.--An Expedition with the Arabs.--The + Caid and his Family.--Another Wild Boar. + + +The next day I rode on to a place called El Greesh, about twenty miles +from Sleeman. I wanted to pitch my tent at the base of the purple +mountain, outside the village, where I was sure we should have got a +great deal of game, as the mountains were covered with thick +underwood. A----, however, and the rest were opposed to it, so I +yielded, and pitched my tent in the village itself, where I soon had +the entire tribe around me, examining me and my arms, my gestures, and +everything, as if I was an event. After a cup of coffee, I determined +to start in search of game, and, with a little backsheesh, got an Arab +to accompany us to one of the neighbouring defiles, where, after +waiting about an hour and a half, I managed to bag a very fine hyena. +He was just sneaking out of his hole, and was about 150 yards off. On +my return, the natives manifested great joy, shook my hands, made a +circle round me, tapped me on the back, &c., to my chagrin. As I was +tremendously fatigued, I retired to my sheepskin in my tent with +great satisfaction. The natives all slept around our tents on the +ground, and some of them kicked up a most infernal noise till about +two in the morning, singing a sort of chorus. The following morning +the whole tribe collected around our tents and watched _our toilette +du matin_ with the most intense eagerness. + +[Illustration: R. Pheney, lith. + +M. & N. Hanhart, Impt. + +SHOOTING HYENAS ON THE PURPLE MOUNTAINS NEAR EL GREESHE.] + +The greater part of them had brought their matchlocks, as the day was +to be a grand field-day, and they were all in the highest spirits, +laughing, and cracking jokes to an extraordinary amount. We started +about seven A.M., and I remained till eleven A.M., till which time +they had not succeeded in driving anything out of cover. Here I +sprained my ankle in descending a broken gully, and was obliged to +return to the tent. I came back about four P.M., with only small game. +After sun-down we went out a second time in ambush after hyena. A lion +or panther came, a little after sunset, and frightened the horses so +that they broke loose, and we returned to the tents about eleven P.M. + +The next day we started early, in order to return to Sleeman. We +stopped an hour on the banks of our old friend, the river Oued el +Ahwenah, for luncheon, where I shot several quail and snipes, and a +large bird, whose name I ignore, also a hare, the only one I saw in +Tunisia. About four P.M., I reached the Caid's house; a woman, for a +wonder, opened the door. As the Caid was there, I looked anywhere but +at her. The next day we went out all day, after boar, to the river, +with an Italian and some Arabs. I stood up to my knees in the river +for about an hour in the brush-wood, when one rushed by; I fired, and +he rushed forward badly damaged. The rest fired, and he was found dead +a few yards off. The Italian's steed broke loose, and he left us in +search of it. I broke from my _corps de garde_. My horse lost a shoe, +and then broke loose, and I had to follow him for more than a mile. I +had a kind of dumbshow conversation with the Caid's son on my return, +a very fine, handsome lad, about seventeen. I hear his sister is most +beautiful, and I promised to send him a present, on getting to Tunis, +and he is to write to me and tell me if he receives it. After dinner +the Caid came and smoked two or three pipes, drank coffee, and wished +us adieu in a most gracious manner. + +We had considerable difficulty in bringing home the boar, as our Arabs +all deserted us on account of its being the Ramadhan; but Angelo and +B---- managed to carry it back between them. I returned to Tunis next +day. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +TUNIS AND ITS GOVERNMENT. + + Picturesque Situation of Tunis.--The Horse Market.--Effects of + Race.--The Bazaars.--Mohamed Medea.--The Bardo.--The Bey of + Tunis.--His Mode of administering Justice.--Prince Puckler + Muskau's Account of his Interview. + + +Tunis is situated on the borders of a lake, or rather inlet of the +sea. It is surrounded by a crenelated wall, which resembles very much +that of Constantinople. Like that city, too, Tunis, from the exterior, +presents a very imposing aspect; but enter the city, and the illusion +vanishes; there is the same dirt, the same narrow and filthy streets, +as in the Turkish capital. The dogs alone are wanting to make the +comparison perfect. An ancient historian has called this place _Tunis +the white_; but, like other whited sepulchres, it is very foul within. +The horses, the really thorough-bred ones, are the finest objects in +Tunis. As in the canine and human, so in every other race, blood will +tell. The Arab horse, though by no means so swift for a short distance +as his English cousin, has a most marvellous power of endurance. He is +also extremely sure footed, and scarcely ever comes down. I weigh over +thirteen stone, yet have frequently ridden the same horse forty +English miles per diem, over country that would infallibly cut up your +English two hundred guinea hunter. They also, so to speak, live on +air. Their chief drawback is that they are, with few exceptions, +stallions, and, consequently, when tethered or standing near each +other, are very apt to fight most desperately, or else break loose +from their tetherings, when a long and wearisome pursuit is the +necessary result. It is very difficult to come across the best _pur +sang_ horses, as the Arabs are afraid of the Bey's taking a fancy to +them, and taking them by force; and, consequently, they often +purposely mutilate them, lest he should seize them to himself. There +are also some very fine bazaars at Tunis, and the otto of roses there +is especially excellent. Our Consul has a very fine, large house, and +dispenses his hospitalities, &c., very generously to his compatriots. +His lady is also a most amiable person. Tunis is, I hear, celebrated +for the manufacture of the red cap, usually termed "fez," which is +worn generally throughout Mussulman countries, and universally by the +military. The Tunisian soldiers wear the plaque in front of the fez, +in lieu of on the top, like the Turkish. As soon as I had selected my +horse, a fine black thorough-bred Arab (whose price was four hundred +francs only), I used to make excursions every day into the country, +sometimes alone, sometimes attended, always armed, as the Francs of +Tunis told me many stories of the dangers arising from going out in +the country unarmed, among the Arabs. I think a great number of them +were very much exaggerated. One of the places I was fond of riding to +was Mohamed Medea, about twelve miles from Tunis, very prettily +situated, where there was a very fine ruin of a Roman aqueduct, and +eke a French restaurant, where a _dejeuner_, made more agreeable by a +twelve miles' ride, was served in quite Parisian style. The reason of +there being a French restaurant is this:--The present Bey, on his +accession, determined to build a fresh palace at this place; and, +being under a sort of douce compulsion, employs nothing but French +architects and operatives, who make the hotel their head-quarters, it +being about the only Christian house in the entire place. Quail +abounded in this vicinity, and there were _pas mal de sangliers_. To +escape from the _ennui_ of the _table d'hote dejeuner_ at Tunis, +occupied by French bagmen and milliners, and served in a stuffy hole +of a back kitchen, I used frequently to make Angelo put my breakfast +in my _sacoche_ (saddle-bag), consisting of a piece of cold meat and +some _vin du pays_, and then ride out, dismount, and breakfast _al +fresco_, or rather _al bosco_; sometimes I am sorry to confess to +breaking the eighth commandment, as I helped myself to my dessert of +oranges, from the trees near or under which I sat. The Arabs, _malgre_ +the ogre histories I had heard of murder and robbery, were always most +civil, and would accept, in spite of the prophet, a glass of wine from +my hands though our conversation was of course of the most limited +description, unless Angelo was present to interpret. It is true I +always was armed. + +The Bardo is one of the lions of Tunis. It is the country residence of +the Bey, and, besides the harem, contains a hall of justice and +barracks. It is at Bardo that the Bey holds his court of justice, in +which the cases are decided very quickly, and with great precision. +The interior of the harem, according to a French traveller, who had +visited it, is fitted up very gracefully. There is a magnificent _jet +d'eau_ in the marble court of the interior. The gallery running round +this court on the second storey is furnished with a very artistically +elaborated railing, or grating, part of which is painted green, part +gilt. Behind this railing the ladies of the harem get a sly peep at +those who visit his highness. The vast saloon in which the Bey +receives his visitors is hung with crimson velvet, embroidered with +gold, and the ceiling is also gilt and painted over in brilliant +colours. From the two sides of the wall are suspended different +descriptions of arms, richly manufactured; on the right, they consist +of swords and poniards; on the left, of various kinds of muskets and +pistols. Gold, silver, and precious stones sparkle out from these +arms. Under these weapons are ranged three rows of divans, covered +with a thick sort of red silk. The centre of the apartment is +furnished with magnificent Persian carpets. On the lowest of the +divans, the principal courtiers seat themselves, on solemn days of +reception, in double file; while at the extremity, the Bey reclines on +an ottoman placed crossways, and covered with white satin. In Europe, +we might, with great advantage, take a wrinkle or two from this +semi-barbarian prince as regards the administration of justice with +expedition. The Bey of Tunis is, at one and the same time, the chief +governor of the realm, the administrator of the public revenues, and +the final judge of all grand cases. From his immediate authority +depends the administration of the police, the imposition of taxes, the +various diplomatic relations, and the superintendence of the army and +navy. + +We Europeans can scarcely comprehend how one man can look after so +many different details, or direct them with order and precision. But +in this country, mark, oh! red-tapeists, everything relating to +interior administration is reduced to the greatest simplicity, and +from this simplicity, freed from the complicated system of European +red-tapeism and bureaucracy, results, it is to be hoped, a strict +economy in public expenses, and a rapid process in the courts of +justice and other Government affairs. Where a European prince would +require a hundred different _employes_, here five or six clerks +suffice. Besides the celerity and economy resulting from such a +system, a third no less important advantage is derived, viz., the +facility with which the Bey is able to superintend the conduct of the +ministers, being so few in number, and immediately detect and punish +those in whom any act of embezzlement or fraud has been detected; and +punishment in this country immediately follows detection. Verily, +there are advantages in autocratic as well as in constitutional +dynasties!! + +In the administration of justice, too, the Bey is supreme judge, from +whom there is no appeal. The celerity with which causes are tried and +judged, is, I am told, perfectly astounding. The case merely consists +in a simple exposition of the facts, and such is the wonderful power +of discernment of the merits of the case which the Bey thinks he has +obtained from long habit, that it is said he rarely deliberates. The +court is open to the public--even to Christians! I did not go; but +Prince Puckler Muskau has left an account of his presence there. After +giving a description of the room, &c., and the Bey's entry, the Prince +proceeds:--"The Bey was now presented with a magnificent pipe, which +was at least ten feet long. After a few puffs, the audience commenced. +The civil and criminal procedure is so summary, that a great majority +of cases were decided in as many minutes as they would have taken +years in Europe. The subject of the causes was frequently very +trivial, yet the patience of the sovereign was by no means exhausted. +I thought, in general, that the pleaders were satisfied with the Bey's +decision. One sees, by this, that the Bey's place is no sinecure; and +I am told that few monarchs in Christian countries have so much +personally to do. The Bey sits every day in the court, from eight in +summer, and from nine in winter, till mid-day; and illness, or absence +from town, is his only excuse for non-attendance. His other +governmental duties occupy pretty well the rest of his day." + +Each country has an "idea," I suppose, that its own Government is +best, and perhaps it is as well it should be so. The man who travels +much sees the defects and the advantages of each. Our Parliament would +certainly not easily be acclimatised in Barbary, nor would a Bey +exactly do to grace the British throne. What, for instance, would we +think of such a proclamation as this in the _London Gazette_, on a +king's accession? It was issued by Mustapha, the father of the present +Bey, to the consuls of Christian powers:--"Glory to princes of the +religion of Messiah. To the chosen by the great of the nation of +Jesus, our most honoured, most longed for, most magnificent, and most +powerful friend, the King of ----, we make known, friendly, the +following: On Wednesday, 23rd of the month of Moharrem the sacred, of +the present year 1251, at the moment when the sun illumined the +horizon, the hour marked by destiny having struck for my most honoured +brother, Hassein Basha, he emigrated towards the mansion of eternity," +&c. &c. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +THE RUINS OF CARTHAGE. + + Reflections on Ancient Carthage.--Hannibal and his Career.--An + Arab Domicile.--Picturesque appearance of the Ruins. + + +I went three times to the "Ruins," and therefore should have been +lucky. I was, however, the reverse, both as to seeing anything of the +ruins, and also the particular object which brought me there. I think, +myself, proverbs are very deceitful, and should, like dreams, be read +by contrary; some are utterly unintelligible; as, for instance--will +any one tell me what this one signifies?--"Sweet words butter no +parsnips." I thought parsnips (and, being fond of vegetables, I should +like to know) were generally seasoned with pepper or vinegar. I am, +perhaps, too stupid to comprehend it, and, like stupid people, abuse +what I don't understand. Therefore, don't let any one expect a long +description of how this part is Phoenician, and is supposed to be +where the Carthaginian parliament was held; or their dandies and +"fast" of both sexes met to polka of a night, or drink Punic punch; or +a "_cabinet de lecture_," or club, where the _Times_ or the _Globe_ +gave the latest telegram from Italy; as how Hannibal obtained a +glorious victory over the Roman troops at Thrasymene, or that the +commissariat was bad; then, perhaps, old grumblers decried the +dissipation at Cannae, and the expense of the war; and ancient +merchants on 'Change complained of the rising importance of the Roman +navy, whose ships had just captured the large Phoenician brigantine +_Argo_, from Sidon, laden with a valuable freight, otto of roses, and +bound for Carthage--_apropos_ of which I will remark, there is a +military Rome and a mercantile Carthage in modern times. Take care we +be not the Carthage; let us remember that it was from a stranded Punic +vessel the Romans learnt the maritime art, in which, at last, they +excelled their enemies. Hannibal appears to me always the greatest man +of any age, ancient or modern--Napoleon not excepted--and perhaps the +most unfortunate. His character comes to us, as his exploits, from +foreign and hostile sources; for I believe there exist no Phoenician +records; so that there remains a great deal of discount to take off in +the way of disparagement, depreciation, &c. &c. It is as if the future +Australian, standing on the ruins of a city mightier than Carthage, +could obtain no account of Napoleon, but through partial and +depreciatory fragments from the pages of Sir Walter Scott's life of +that extraordinary meteor. Napoleon, it is true, crossed the Alps, but +Hannibal traversed the Alps and Pyrenees too, and I fancy the last are +the more impassable of the two. It is true I have not copied Albert +Smith, or our other heroic youths, but I have climbed the Malodetta, +which well becomes its appellation. Then, Napoleon had a friendly +population at any rate behind him, to bring supplies, &c. Hannibal was +everywhere surrounded by hostile tribes, besides having had the +disadvantage of a march through enemies' countries of several hundred, +if not thousand miles. I hope the living in Spain, for his sake, did +not then consist of _olla podrida_, with a variation of garlic and +acid wine. + +Perhaps there existed in these days some machine, or some marvellous +powder, by which real mountains might be removed (as spiritual ones by +faith) at pleasure, and replaced in their original position; but as +history makes no mention thereof, it is but fair to conclude not. No, +the only machine used, the only mine, was the invincible and iron will +of the Carthaginian hero. He, too, if I mistake not, lived under +parliamentary _regime_, in the shape of a senate, a great hamper on +military manoeuvres, where all should be done quickly, secretly, and +unanimously. Napoleon was his own master, with a devoted people. I +wonder if parliamentary debates, in Punic days, were as long and +insipid as in modern; that is, I have not been to them, but judge by +what one reads in that modern tyrant, the _Times_. Oh, mighty _Times_! +how we abuse you, and yet how should we relish our breakfast without +you? who ever comes up to all we look for when great occasions call +for your wonderful pen, stirring us to the quick; or whether, in an +idle mood, we seek to while away the passing hour by a description of +the last new folly, or the latest odour of the Thames, or anything +else instructive and amusing. By the way, if the senate of Carthage +took quarter as long sending supplies to their general as the Commons +discussing the way to purify the Thames, I fancy he would not have +crossed the Pyrenees. + +I said I went three times to Carthage; the first time, an English +friend was leaving that day by a sailing ship, and I had promised to +lunch with him at Goulette, and then see him on board, the first of +which I did in a small house dignified by the name of _locanda_, or +_Hotel Francais_, where some Maltese captains were breakfasting, who +had a strong odour of onions and garlic, and at another table a +Savoyard was discussing the question of annexation with a Provencal, +in what I may term _moitie Francais moitie Italien_. They gave us soup +made of, I don't know what, but the pepper was very strong, or rather, +I may say, would have been, if it were not for the strong taste of the +water, and _vice versa_; after that, some dried fish, called sardines, +which they said had just been caught. For second course, we had a sort +of _gigot de mouton_, which, in form, resembled the temple of Neptune +at the "ruins," and you might almost have sworn they had cut it into +that shape on purpose; and quails, very excellent; and we finished +with cheese, which might have been manufactured from goat's milk, or +cow's milk, or camel's milk, or all three, or any other milk, but was +dignified by the appellation of _Chesterrre_, and was decidedly not +Stilton, and eke delicious oranges. In this dinner we meet, as in +life, with much good to counteract the evil, as the delicious quails +made up for rancid flesh of sheep or horse; so, when next Lady Julia +Plantagenet jilts me, I will remember Jessie Jones; or, again, as +these fragrant oranges, redolent of the East, caused me to forget the +nauseous _fromage_, so shall the friendship and good opinion of Brown +console me for the putty eye and freezing regard of the fashionable +Fitznoodle, when next we meet, not at Philippi, but in the park! After +lunch, and adieux, I mounted my horse for the ruins, as my friend's +vessel did not start as expected that day, owing to the calm. + +On passing the gate of Goulette, several Arab convicts, in chains, +shouted at me for something; what it was, I ignore; perhaps they asked +for backsheesh, or tobacco, or powder, fine or coarse; or, may be, +they called me a dog of a Giaour, and cursed my relations and their +limbs. This Goulette appears to be the chief place for the Arab +malefactors, and they are mainly employed in improving the high road +between Goulette and Tunis, and also in repairing the fortifications. + +The afternoon was beautiful, though hot. As it wanted some time to +dinner at Tunis, I made a _detour_ on my return to the ruins, and it +requires a fine air to make you enjoy fine scenery. There was +scarcely a ripple on the blue Mediterranean. Beautiful trees of every +description, olive and orange trees, oleanders, and others, grew to +the very base of the mountain, and sent up a delicious perfume. I +visited the chapel of St. Louis, from which one enjoys a most +delicious prospect. It is built over some god's temple--whose, I +forget, or even whether a Roman or Punic one; but this is dedicated to +the true God and Christian worship, in remembrance of that venerable +French king, who is said to have perished here, while on his way to +Palestine, to fight the Moslem. Peace to his ashes! However, I +soon left the hill to re-descend, for I was very thirsty; all of a +sudden, behind an olive bush, I saw a head, black as ink, pop out; +I hallooed to it first in English, then in Italian. No effect. I saw +a female figure disappear behind a cottage, and out rushed a fine +tall Arab, with menacing gesture, and more menacing language. I was +in his garden. "A glass of water, please," said I, in Italian. Still +no effect. I thought he was going to be savage, when, from behind +the house popped, or rather rolled out, another little naked, +curly-headed, black ball--a triennial by his looks--the Arab's only +boy, no doubt. He was so irresistibly comic in appearance, that I +burst into a fit of laughter. The man's face changed in a moment. I +suppose he thought I was admiring the child. He immediately +understood what I required, which he brought in such a large cup, +that I thought it was intended for a pail. I nearly emptied it, +however. He then volunteered bread and olives, which, however, I +declined, to spoil my dinner. We then made mutual signs of greeting, +and parted. Had I been able to talk, I would have stopped longer. +There was a sudden friendship sprung up between me and that poor +unlettered infant of the desert. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +THE RUINS AGAIN. + + Great Extent of the Ancient City.--Marsa, on the + Sea-shore.--Carthaginian Catacombs near Camatte.--Quail + Shooting.--Trait of Honesty in the Arabs.--The Arab + Character.--Anecdotes concerning them. + + +The second time I went to the ruins I went, like Scipio, to weep, not +over Carthage, but the loss of my breakfast; and the more so that +it was to have been a very good one--a regular pic-nic, or _fete +champetre_--under olive-trees, or orange-trees, or palms, shaded +from the scorching rays of Phoebus. Champagne, Burgundy (my +favourite wine), were to crown the repast. Nor was the food to be +only corporal, but eke mental, as the great explorer--the great +excavator--was to be there, to have explained that this was a +theatre, that an aqueduct; the god to whom this temple or that +altar was dedicated; and how many four-in-hands, driven by fast +young Phoenician guardsmen, would have been able to pass each other +down that "_via longa_." How many stones made up that house; and that +this was a bath, and not a harem; and that a certain statue of some +celebrity--whose name I had never heard, and never shall--was, by +some, supposed to lie 100 feet under this marble pillar, though, +according to others, he might be 102 feet deep interred--for all of +which, I daresay, I should have been the wiser and the better; but I +was sufficiently mundane to regret my _dejeuner_ the most. The fact +is, A----, whose back was not sufficiently recovered to accompany me +riding, and the American Consul and Davies, had gone with the edibles +and beverages in a carriage, and were to have met me at the temple +of some god. But, unfortunately, I mistook the deity's name, and +afterwards found that their shrine lay ten miles off from the one I +worshipped at. This will give one a good idea of the vastness of +the ancient city, and struck me more than all the lectures and +description in the world. Where people were crowded like bees, as +in our London, buying and selling, and riding and driving, some 2,000 +years past--occupied then, as now, in all the frivolities of this +empty world--to find a complete solitude--a desert nearly--where +wander the jackal and hyena! A very clever people, no doubt, these +same Phoenicians were, to judge by their edifices; yet they had not +discovered the theory of water finding its own level, as the +peculiar construction of an aqueduct proves, the remains of which +still exist, and which was to convey water some forty miles from the +interior. There was a Roman city built over the Punic one, and the +latter alone, of course, interests, as the former is seen any day, at +Pompeii, in better perfection. Besides Angelo and myself, there was +not a human being in view--yes, there are three Arab youths +reclining behind that ruin of a wall, motionless as statues; I thought +they were statues at first. Two have long flint guns, perhaps to +keep crows off the corn, or shoot quails; or, perhaps, to shoot me +if they can; for I have a fine gold chain, not to mention a ring, +which would maintain them till they died of old age--which could +keep them in ease and elegance for a couple of years, at the least. +You have yet to learn, if you know it not, that ten Arabs, fine +men though they be, with such rusty weapons as yours, are barely a +match for one European with an arm such as mine. But, my poor boys, +there is no chance for you. I have, you see, a revolver with six +barrels. When you see that, your brow droops as much as your eyes +sparkled when you saw the chain. It is fancy, on my part, most +probably; so, off my horse, and off with my clothes. The sun was +scorching, and I took a delicious swim in the sea, and then rode on to +Marsa, where is a ruin (everything is in ruins here) of modern +date--the late Bey's palace--a most superb edifice. I said a ruin, +yet it is scarcely a ruin, though fast becoming so. Marsa is a sort +of watering-place for the Christians of Tunis during the heat of +summer. A----'s description of the part he visited I will give: "I +went with Davies and the Yankee Consul to see the catacombs of +Carthage, near Camatte, which completely undermined a large mountain +by the sea coast. They contain rows of niches for the coffins, and +each chamber communicates with others. They hold some twenty coffins +each. Some skeletons have been found, and nails; the former crumbled +to pieces immediately, on being exposed to the air. These catacombs +are now inhabited by hyenas and jackals, and had a strong odour of +those animals." It is supposed they extend for miles, but the impurity +of the atmosphere precludes entrance to any distance. + +My third visit was to shoot quails on ground where, centuries ago, +Hannibal had passed at the head of his bronzed legions, amid admiring +groups of citizens, the bands playing, perhaps, "_Partant pour +l'Italie_." The migration of quails takes place at this season, and, +with a good retrieving spaniel, hundreds may be shot. But they lie +very close, and require a dog to put them up. They are by no means +easy to shoot, and require snipe shot. They lie in the young corn, +which is very thick and thriving here as on the field of Waterloo. As +I had put up No. 6 shot by mistake, and had no spaniel, I bagged but +few comparatively, some twenty. A great number of these quails are +sent alive to England, and on board the Italian steamer from Sicily +there were about twenty large cages, containing about fifty live +quails each, which they told me were going to Britain; they had been +caught like larks by the net. + +By the way, I had here a proof of Arab honesty, refreshing as an +oasis in the desert. Riding back through a village to Goutelle (where +I was staying, previously to embarking for Malta), I dropped my +powder-flask, unawares to myself. I had not passed two minutes when +I heard a loud halloo, and turning, perceived an Arab running at full +speed to me with my powder-flask. Now, powder is what Arabs prize +more than gold even, precious stones, or tobacco, yet they might +easily have taken this without my knowing anything. On my offering +him coin worth about sixpence, the Arab, in broken _lingua Franca_, +made me comprehend he preferred a few charges of powder, which I +immediately gave, and which he carefully wrapped up in some old +paper. I record this, because at Tunis and elsewhere, we hear of +nothing but Arab dishonesty and thieving propensities. Is it true, +and this exception a proof of the rule? or are all these stories +false? It is hard to say. + +They are a curious race, apparently a mass of contradictions. One +thing is certain; you must not treat them in the _du haut en bas_ +style. They are very proud, and naturally regard every Christian _ipso +facto_ as individually inferior to the Mussulman, more specially in +the far interior, where Christians have not as yet penetrated. A---- +and his party had started for Kef, _malgre_ my dissuasions. The fact +of a man going to explore Punic ruins with one going to discover +Mauritanian lions, was, to my mind, like mixing oil and vinegar, or +fire and water, or eating meat with your knife, or soup with a fork, +or taking two helpings of soup, or anything else incongruous. D---- +was to be their interpreter. The Arabs there told them that a lion +can carry away a camel on his back, but not lift a sheep. This they +firmly believe. The reason assigned is, that in former times (when +animals spoke), the lion said, "I will carry off this sheep, with or +without the consent of Allah;" and Allah said to the lion, "You shall +not;" and from that time the monarch has never been able to lift a +sheep. At one time the man and the lion were great friends, and the +lion did not know he was stronger than the man. One day, as they were +out walking together, a thorn ran into the lion's foot; he limped, and +stopped to pull it out, when the man, in derision, said, "What! so +strong a creature hurt with a thorn?" Then the lion in anger ran the +thorn into the man's eye, who cried out with pain. This proved to the +lion the man's inferiority, and ever after they were declared enemies. +At a place called Tibursok, where A----'s party passed on their road +to Keff, not a Christian, or even a Jew, were to be seen, consequently +the Arabs were very intolerant. D---- walked into this town alone, in +front of the party, and, speaking Arabic well, questioned one of the +Arabs about some ruin, when another came up and said, "Why do you +attend to that dog of a Christian?" D---- took no notice, when the +other shouted out, "Cursed be your father, your mother, and all the +members of your house." D---- then collared him; the Arab inquired, +"What for?" "Because you cursed my relatives," said D----, seeing the +rest of the party with the Bey's escort coming up, "and now, just +show me the Caid's residence, and I will have you bastinadoed." +However, as some of the other Arabs crowded round and begged for +mercy, D---- thought it better to let him off. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +HOME! + + My fellow-passenger, the Sportsman.--Passage from Tunis to Malta + in a Sailing Vessel.--Disagreeables of the Passage.--Home, + Overland.--Conclusion. + + +On the steamer _Meludiah_, for Malta, I found a sporting Frenchman +on deck. He had been my fellow-passenger from Bona to Tunis, and +carried a revolver and a gun; the first for porpoises, the second +for gulls, &c. He recounted to me, with great glee, how he had shot a +grosbeak, and some other small birds, near Tunis, and given them to +the cook on board for our dinner. It was a Mussulman steamer, and, +being Rhamazan, they did not serve dinner till after sunset. I was +nearly famished. The first course was salad served with rancid oil, +which immediately brought me and the Frenchman on deck. During the +rest of the passage I made Angelo serve my repasts. The Frenchman was +a character. "_Je viens de perdre ma femme_," he said; "_il y a +des femmes mechantes vous savez, Monsieur, et des femmes bonnes; la +mienne etait bonne! mais bonne! Tenez, je l'ai mis dans le cercueil +moi meme, et maintenant je suis ici pour me distraire, car je n'en +trouverai pas une comme celle-la, allez. Je ferai le voyage, j'irai +en Alexandrie--n'importe ou, travailler j'irai a l'Isthme de +Suez._" At last we arrived in Malta. It is a pity for officers and +others there is no regular communication by steam between Malta and +Tunis; for the _desagremens_ of a sailing-vessel are by no means +despicable. Witness a friend of mine's report thereon:-- + +"25th.--Came on board the _Gemo_ at seven A.M.; went on shore again at +nine, and stopped all day. Dined and slept on board; rough living +here, but no cattle, which is a great thing.--26th. Set sail at eleven +A.M.; fair wind; fine day, and very hot.--27th. Rain all night; wind +light and variable, and one made but little progress. Cape Bona still +close to us this morning. We are only going at three and three-quarter +knots per hour. A fine breeze got up at twelve, and at seven we passed +Panteleria Isle, going at seven knots.--28th. Wind fell away early +this morning, and about eleven blew strong from the east: the worst +quarter it could for us.--29th. This accursed wind has lasted all +night, and blows harder this morning; the sea, too, is very high. It +is intensely miserable; rough sea, bad grub, no one to talk to, no +books, and no idea when we shall reach Malta.--30th. East wind still; +an almighty swell on; one can neither sit, lie, nor stand with +comfort. The coast of Sicily is very plain this morning. We are about +forty-five miles from Malta, but no one can say when we shall reach +it. Fresh provisions have nearly come to an end. Let any one ever +catch me on board a sailing-ship again, unless I am forced.--1st. Half +a gale, and a heavy sea last night; got no sleep, as the ship jumped +so; and the mattress--fancy now!--is stuffed with sticks, and is so +cursedly hard, that, after five days of it, one's bones ache all over. +A very fine day; but this awful wind still east. At eleven A.M. we +were off Gozo, only twenty miles from our destination; but it was +impossible to get there. The diet and food on board are awful; I am +nearly starved. There was only one thing amusing. A Maltese, who slept +in the other berth near me, sneezed nine times in as many minutes; +and, after each sternutation, he went through a short formula of +prayer, beginning 'Santo Something,' to keep the devil to leeward, I +suppose; and, egad, I think he must have been on board _in propria +persona_, under some disguise, to have caused us so bad a passage. +This afternoon, to vary the programme pleasantly, we had a dead calm. +Our miseries seem to have no end. I begin to think I shall rival the +'Flying Dutchman,' and never make my port, but sail on for ever.--2nd. +A north-west wind sprang up at five P.M., and we reached Malta at +seven." + +Thus, the sailing-vessel took seven days to do what I did in thirty +hours on the steamer. After the usual amount of driving, dining, &c., +at Malta, in the words of the poet I bid + + Adieu to joys of La Valette, + Adieu, sirocco, sun, and sweat; + Adieu, ye females without graces, + Adieu, red coats and redder faces; + Adieu, the supercilious air + Of those that strut _en militaire_. + +And now the word is "homeward;" and across a track well known to the +English tourist, we journey onward, till + + The mountains of Trieste afar are seen, + And farther yet, the Alps, whose highest peak + Now glitters with a gay and snowy sheen + In the bright sun; as quick our sailors seek + An anchorage in the port, where Turk and Greek, + Swede and Levantine, and full many more, + The haughty Spaniard, and the German sleek, + All races, from the Nile unto the Nore, + Into Trieste, in many a varied costume pour. + + Along thy silent streets I wander now, + Venice, once queen, aye, empress of the sea! + Fairest in art as clime, yet sunk so low + Beneath the despot Teuton's rule, I see + Thy halls deserted, fallen, yet in thee + Much splendour to admire there still exists. + Well could I quit my native land, and flee + The rugged northern clime, the vapid mists, + With thee to dwell, did I that only what me lists. + + The fiery car speeds on her iron way, + Through hill, o'er valley quickly do we fly. + There lies the grot of Adelberg, and day + Sees us past Gratze's fortress hasten by + Like lightning's flash, nor stop until we spy + St. Stephen's dome from out the darkness peer. + Like _bas reliefs_ her turrets in the sky + O'ertop Vienna, great the pious fear + Of holy men, who such vast beauteous structures rear. + + There Coeur de Lion lived and almost died, + In yonder ruin gray o'erbent by time, + But that a troubadour, a servant tried, + His well-loved master sought through every clime; + Nor sought in vain, for by a simple rhyme, + A soft tuned sonnet, in a dungeon cold, + Imprisoned here he found him for no crime, + And saved. The ruins past, I now behold + Prague's lofty palaces arise, and turrets old. + + The scene is changed by many a lovely vale: + Upon the Elbe my rapid way I went, + Where Nature reigns supreme, nor aught avail + 'Gainst her the charms a Raphael's touch can lend + To Art's supremest works; these all depend + On light, on colour, on the master's hand; + Nature's own work, so thought I, as I bend + My steps through Dresden's galleries, and stand + Before Art's fairest deeds in this fair Saxon land! + + Swift be my verse, and swifter still my pace + (Oh, pardon me, for I'll be sworn I bore) + By Berlin's quays, past oft a plain, I race + To Hamburg's crowded port, until the roar + Of ocean's wave is heard again once more. + Once more upon the deck I stand and view + Behind that cloud arise old Albion's shore-- + Shore that I love, roast beef, plum-pudding too, + Pale ale, the _Times_, and scandal, like a Briton true. + + + + +NOTES FOR THE SPORTSMAN OR TOURIST +IN NORTH AFRICA. + + +The best time to go to Algeria or Tunis is October, when the heats of +summer begin to become cooler. By all means, let the traveller, if he +wish to be independent, travel on horseback. In Algeria he will meet +with accommodation everywhere, and proceed as safely as in London, or +any part of England. + +He can go to Boussada or Laghouat, about six days' journey from +Algiers, staying every night at caravanserais _en route_. Boussada I +did not visit myself, but from rumour, I believe, there is excellent +gazelle shooting in the neighbourhood. By the plains of Boussada, the +tourist can pass into Tunisia over the French frontier. At Algiers, +the best hotels are the Hotel d'Orient and the Hotel de la Regence, on +the Grande Place. For ammunition, I recommend Huet, armourer, near the +English Consul's; and for horses--Francois or Francisco, a Maltese, +who speaks French and English. The grand thing to be considered is +economy of space. Let every necessary for clothing, if possible, be +crammed into the saddle-bags attached to one's saddle, as ammunition, +guns, &c. &c., must be placed on the other horses. Well did the +Romans call baggage by the appellation of _impedimenta_. In this +country it is so literally, not figuratively. It is absolutely +necessary to have an interpreter who can talk Arabic; for though in +Algeria there are many natives who jabber broken French or Italian, +even this _lingua Franca_ is so disguised that it is almost impossible +to comprehend them; and in the interior there are very few "indigenes" +who understand anything but Arabic. In Tunisia nothing but Arabic is +of any use whatever. + +To travel in the interior of Tunis, it is necessary to have a mounted +escort, and also a letter of recommendation to the "Caids" (mayors) of +the different towns through which you pass. Here you must expect a +great want of comfort, as there are no beds, and you generally have to +sleep on the floor. On the Lake of Tunis, close to the city, there is +very good flamingo shooting. The flamingoes sit on the water in rows +like a regiment, and the method I employed in shooting them was as +follows:--I used to take a boat with my gun loaded with buckshot +(chevrotine), and my rifle. I fired my rifle at the line of flamingoes +when about 400 yards off, which used to bring them flying over the +boat for curiosity, when I managed, generally with my gun, to bring +down one or two. This is, I am sure, the best way of shooting them, +though several Europeans told me at Tunis I could shoot them with the +rifle. + +The shortest way direct to Tunis is by Malta; and, in passing, let the +sporting tourist visit Gozo, where, in April and September, there is +excellent quail shooting. + +The inhabitants of this isle are a simple, primitive race of people, +very lively and intelligent; they speak nearly a pure Arabic. They +live chiefly by fishing, and also serve as sailors in foreign vessels, +where they remain sometimes entire years without being heard of by +their families. In this way they often find a watery grave; and in the +isle I met some females, whose male relations had all perished in this +way. + +Navigation appears to have a great charm for these simple islanders; +and when they sail along these southern waters, where the sun shines +with a brilliant lustre, and the moon with a fairy splendour, they +forget not the simple home where the members of their family are +crouched side by side, enveloped in a sort of bournouse, and drinking +perhaps tea which differs only nominally from the tepid waters of the +surrounding ocean, and gabbling a jargon which one can scarcely +believe that they understand themselves. The charm which binds these +poor people together in their sober and modest existence is less the +_penchant_ of natural and intimate affection, than the chain of habit, +the necessity of a life of fraternal community and sentiment. A +certain equality of position and social development gives them the +same desires, the same ends of existence, and like ideas produce an +easy mutual understanding. Each one reads, as it were, in the eye of +the other; and when they talk, each knows what the other will say +almost before he has opened his lips. All the ordinary relations of +life are thus present to their memory; and so, by a simple intonation +of the voice, by the expression of the visage, by a mute gesture, they +excite, _inter se_, as many smiles or tears, more joy or vexation, +than we, among our equals, could perhaps evoke by the longest +demonstrations or declarations. For we civilised ones live, on an +average, in intellectual solitude; each of us, thanks to our +particular form of mind or education, has received a different bias of +character; each of us, morally weighed, thinks, acts, and believes +differently from his neighbour; and hence misunderstandings arise so +frequently among us, that, even in the largest families, life in +common becomes difficult, and we are often, as it were, apart, utterly +unknown one to another, and everywhere feel ourselves as on strange +territory. + +Races, indeed, have lived--aye, for centuries--in a state of community +of ideas and sentiments such as I have described in the Isle of Gozo. +Perhaps, but only perhaps, the Roman Church of the Middle Ages wished +to establish among the nations of Catholic Europe such a state of +equality and uniformity of spirit. Hence, no doubt, the reason why she +took under her guardianship all the social relations, all the force +and manifestations of this life--in fine, man himself, moral and +physical man. I will not deny, nor will any one else, that much +peaceful happiness, much piety has been established by these means; +that human existence in the Middle Ages took an expression of greater +fervour and intimacy; that the arts, like flowers, mysteriously +developed, unfolded then, and showed to the day a beauty we now admire +and deplore, and that the rash and unquiet spirit of modern days +cannot imitate. But mind has its rights from all eternity; mind will +not be fettered by dogmas, or lulled to sleep by the ringing of a +bell; mind has cast aside his swaddling-clothes, and broken the string +by which his nurse (the Roman Church) held him, and, in the madness +and intoxication of his holiday, has rounded the globe, has traversed +all nations, has scaled the Himalayas, and, returning again to Mother +Earth, has begun to meditate over the wonders of creation by day, and +the stars of heaven by night. We know not, indeed, nor ever shall, +perhaps, the number of the stars that shine in the canopy of heaven; +we have not yet unveiled the dread mysteries of earth or of sea. +Enough: many enigmas are resolved; we know much--we guess at still +more. There remains one question unsolved--it is this: Is there more +real felicity in our minds now than there was in ancient times? I will +confess that if we look at the many, now-a-days, we could scarcely +answer this question in the affirmative; yet, it must also be +remembered that happiness, which is in part due to mental tyranny, is +scarcely true happiness, and that in the few moments of real +intellectual dignity some educated man can enjoy more real felicity +than the uneducated coal-heaver during many years of uninquiring +tranquillity. + +But while, with a certain benevolence, I was dilating on the +intentions of the Roman Church, I find myself all of a sudden seized +with a zeal worthy of Exeter Hall. So I return to my Gozo friends. +Living among these simple, Christian islanders, of Moorish descent, +one is apt to meditate on the mighty transformations which have swept +over Europe and left them untouched. + +The reason I recommend the route _via_ Malta and Tunis, instead of +passing by Algiers, as I did, is the miserable accommodation on board +the steamers between Tunis and Algiers. The passengers on these boats +are chiefly bagmen and colonists of different nations. We had a +Savoyard, a Spaniard, and two or three Frenchmen and Italians at one +table; and the noise, and row, and heat after dinner were very +edifying. Bottles were quickly emptied, and heads as quickly filled. +One of the guests sung songs; another neighed; a third shouted in +tragic verse; a fourth spoke Latin; and a fifth preached temperance; a +sixth gave himself out for a professor, and his lecture was nearly as +follows:--"The earth, my friends, is a cylinder, and men are but +little diminutive dots spread over its surface, apparently at hazard; +but _voila_, the cylinder takes a fancy to turn, the little dots are +hustled about, some here, others there, and so emit a sort of +vibratory sound, some frequently, others more rarely; and this is the +marvellous, complicated music that men call universal history," &c. +&c. A fat-looking German, who kept his nose continually dipped in a +glass of punch, inhaling the steam with a very gratified look, +observed that he felt as though he was in the refreshment saloon of +the Berlin theatre; while the Savoyard kept looking at us through his +glass, as though it were a _lorgnette_, and the red wine streamed down +his purple cheeks into his gaping jaws. + +And now to proceed to matters of sport. With regard to small game, +partridges, ducks, quails, rabbits, &c., there is abundance to be +found in Algeria. Near Algiers there is hawking of partridges and hares +among the Arab tribes; and, before the French occupation, falconry was +the especial amusement of the Arab aristocracy. For shooting of small +game I would more especially recommend a caravanserai called Oued el +Massin, about half way between Milianah and Teniet. Partridges and +woodcock abound there; the quarters, moreover, are remarkably good, +and the _cuisine_, superintended by my friend, Mr. Ball, is by no means +despicable. From Oued el Massin, a day's journey beyond Milianah, I +am convinced excellent shooting may be obtained with a couple of good +pointers. Quails are also very numerous. Aquatic birds abound in +Algeria, more especially on the lake Fetzara, near Bona, in the +province of Constantine. Nothing is more beautiful than the lake +Fetzara at sunrise; on its banks are a thousand plants and flowers +of every colour and hue, and on its waters repose birds of every +description and plumage. As yet it is dusk; everything animal and +vegetable is in repose; but with the first ray of the sun come sounds +and cries of every imaginable description, and thousands, aye, +myriads, of birds are everywhere on the wing. In the impetuosity of +their flight, they shake, as it were, the plants and flowers on the +border of the lake, who thus pay their morning salute to the sun of +Africa. A small barque, however, advances (_vide_ picture), and from +this frail skiff suddenly appears the flash of a gun. In a moment the +whole air is in motion; grebes with their beautiful plumage, +flamingoes with flaming wings, wild swans, and ducks, and teals, by +thousands whirl through the air. + +Is it really to be believed that Nature has affixed (so to speak) some +danger to everything charming? One is almost tempted to say so, after +examining the enchanting borders of this lake, whose azure waters flow +from the mountainous frontier of Tunisia to the opulent plains of +Bona. You botanists, who are attracted by the singular colour or +strange beauty of some plant or flower here, beware how you approach. +Under this magnificent vegetation a trap--a mortal trap--is laid: the +banks are of quick-sand! One step, and you meet death--a horrible +death. The earth gives way, and you disappear without a trace, for +those delicious flowers and plants close up their ranks again, like +immortelles over your sepulchre. Listen:--A French cavalry officer +came from Bona to shoot flamingoes on this lake. He was accompanied by +his servant, also on horseback. He shot a flamingo, who tumbled just +on the border of the lake, and dispatched his servant to fetch the +bird. At three or four yards from the bird, the soldier disappeared +with his horse; and some Arabs, coming up, at the cries of the officer +(for the Mussulman believes that the genius of the lake, propitious to +Mahometans, devours the profane European), with difficulty saved his +servant. As soon as the soldier was out of danger, he cried out, with +all the gasconade of a Frenchman, "_Je ne laisserai pas la ce maudit +oiseau, cause de ma mesaventure!_" In spite of the energetic +dissuasions of the natives, whom, by the way, he could not understand, +he advanced on foot; but the earth opened again--he disappeared. One +moment his head remained above this liquid ground, one moment he cried +for aid, and the abyss had swallowed its prey. However, at certain +points, this lake is quite approachable; and, there being several +barques, excellent sport may be had. I would, however, recommend +sportsmen to procure a letter of introduction to some neighbouring +grandee. There is an excellent caravanserai close by, at Ain Mokra. +For gazelles one must go quite into the interior of the desert--to +Boussada and Laghouat--in the great Sahara desert. Ghazella is, in +the Arab language, the synonym for beauty and velocity. + +Those persons who really desire sport, however, I would recommend to +travel from Algiers to Tunisia by land, and, if possible, let them +pass by Kef, which is the frontier town. In the vicinity of this town +there are, no doubt, plenty of lions; and my friend (who visited it +with Dr. Davies, the celebrated explorer and excavator at Carthage) +heard of several there, though his stay was so short that he did not +succeed in bagging one. For lion-hunting, as for many other things, +"_il faut bien de la patience_." Thus it very frequently happens that +a man may search without success for months and months for the +whereabouts of a lion, and then, suddenly, when your hunter is least +prepared for it, and perhaps unarmed, the monarch of the desert will +present himself to his astonished gaze. Notwithstanding the formidable +character attributed to the lion, he will rarely attack any man unless +previously molested. There are three sorts of lions in North +Africa--the black, the tawny, and the grey, though the latter is by +some supposed to be the same genus as the tawny, only grizzled by age. +There are two ways of hunting the lion, by day and by night. That by +day is by battue, when a whole tribe turns out to "beard the lion in +his den" and make him break cover. Those who are well armed are posted +at the outlets of the cover or beaten tracks by which the lion +generally passes; any Europeans who assist are usually so stationed; +they, however, need have but little fear, for the monarch almost +always attacks the _tawny_ native by preference. Is it from sympathy +of colour, _similia similibus gaudent_, or from a sort of instinct +that the European is better armed, or because he supposes the Arab +will make a better repast? The other way of killing the lion is in +ambuscade, of which there are two or three kinds. Sometimes the +hunters dig a hole in the ground near the spot where the lion is in +the habit of passing by night; over this hole they throw branches of +trees, which they cover with stones and mortar; they then place some +bait near, which can be commanded through holes made in the covering, +and when the lion approaches to examine the carcase, he is immediately +brought down. Another way of shooting is from a tree. My friend, Count +Zamoyski, who has a residence at the Lake Fetzara, shot several in +this way. I will, however, refer the reader to Jules Gerard's book for +a description of this kind of sport. I did not stay long enough in +North Africa to be able to judge of it myself. What I recount now with +regard to lion hunting is from hearsay, not from personal experience. + +The panther is a more dangerous animal than the lion, and much more +cunning. Like his relative, the cat, he is very difficult to kill, and +it must be a well-directed ball through the head or heart that will +prevent him from avenging his wound. For the rest, he is hunted much +as the lion. I will not mention the jackal and hyena, both of which +animals can be shot after dusk from the tent or hut, by throwing out +some carcase or bait before sunset to attract them. Let us pass to +that animal which, in my opinion, of all creatures presents by far the +best sport on the coast of Barbary--I mean, of course, the wild boar, +or halouf, as he is called in the Arabic language. + +I had long had a desire to hunt the halouf. On my arrival at the +Caid's house at Solyman (about twenty miles from Tunis), an old Arab +named Mahmoud was sent for, who was reported to be, like Nimrod, a +mighty hunter before the Lord and before the tribes. + +The next day we started before sunrise to the river, where the boar +was supposed to be. + +_En route_ I questioned my Arab by interpreter. "The halouf," he +replied, "when wounded, is as dangerous as the lion. I have," he +continued, "myself seen a boar repulse the attack of a young lion." + +Of boars there are no doubt plenty in Tunisia. They are fond of lying +in the thickest brushwood, what the French call _broussailles_, and +the main difficulty is to drive them out. It requires some one +perfectly conversant with Arabic, and having some authority over the +natives, to make them beat properly; otherwise, in a short time they +will give over, and pretend that there is nothing there. The best +localities for boar are near Solyman, in Tunisia, and Biserta, about +fifty miles from Tunis. As for Algeria, the country is now so much +frequented by Europeans of all nations, who frighten, if they do not +kill, the game, that one has to go a long way into the interior before +any sport can be met with. + +The French talk a great deal about "_la chasseaux pantheres_" and "_la +chasse aux lions_," &c. &c.; but, in my humble opinion, their forte is +"_la chasse aux dames_" or, in plain Saxon English, the success of the +"_salon_." Let me conclude with a few words regarding regimen. In this +burning climate, above all things observe temperance. I do not mean by +that expression that you must be a teetotaller, but the more you can +abstain from heating liquids or solids, the better. The other extreme, +too, is bad; too much lemonade, or water, or sherbet, is apt to +produce diarrhoea. Nature seems to have indicated to the Arabs the +best beverage in this zone, both to quench thirst and to preserve +health, viz., coffee; but as on a march or out shooting you cannot +always stop to have a fire lit, the next best drink is a little weak +brandy and water, which you should carry from where you start in the +morning, as the water of the rivers is pestiferous. To avoid fever or +malaria, I would always take a small quantity of bark of quinine. +During the time I was in Africa I enjoyed most excellent health, as I +believe everybody may who takes the commonest precautions, and does +not indulge, as he may with impunity in more northern climes. + +Finally, let me give one piece of advice to the sportsman. If he +comes to these countries with the expectation that he can, as in +England, go out with his gun of a morning and return with his bag full +in the evening to a capital dinner, he had better stay at home. To do +anything in this country, a man must make his mind up to long and +fatiguing marches in the heat of the day, with miserable quarters +often at night, in places infested by vermin of every description; in +a word, he must be content to rough it. I will also candidly own that, +from the accounts I had previously received, I was very much +disappointed as regards the quantity of large game to be found in +these parts; still, I was, to a certain extent, indemnified for this +by the pleasure of visiting a beautiful country, a remarkable people, +and magnificent scenery, the entire appearance of which is utterly +unlike what one is accustomed to see in the hackneyed countries of +modern continental Europe. + + + + +ITINERARY CARTE. + + +ROUTE--from London to Marseilles, about forty-eight hours. Marseilles, +Hotel d'Orient. + +Marseilles to Algiers, average passage, three days. Hotels--Hotel de +la Regence and Hotel de Paris, both good. + +Algiers to Blidah--horse or diligence--about five hours; Blidah to +Medeah--horse or diligence--about eight hours; Blidah to Milianah, +about fourteen hours. Blidah--Hotel de la Regence; Medeah--Hotel du +Gastronome; Milianah--Hotel d'Iffly. + +Milianah to Teniet, two days, staying at Oued el Massin, caravanserai; +Teniet to Boghar, two days; Boghar to Laghouat, extremity of French +frontier in Great Sahara Desert, three days. + +From there visit Boussada for Gargelles, thence to Constantine, five +days; Constantine to Lake Fetzara and Bona, one day. Bona--Hotel de +France. + +Another way, is to return to Algiers and proceed by sea to Bona, +passing Boujie, and Djidjelli, and Philippeville, about forty-eight +hours. + +From Bona to Tunis, by sea, about eighteen hours; or by land, _via_ +Keff, the frontier town of Tunisia and Algeria, about six days; an +escort required. Tunis--Hotel de France. + +Tunis to Solyman, four hours; Tunis to Biserta, fourteen hours. + +On horseback, take two flannel shirts, one change of boots, and +bournouse, &c. Average expense per diem, with horse and servant, +twenty-five francs. I had three horses and one interpreter, and my +expenses averaged L1 10s. _par jour_. + + + + +THE END. + + +PETTER AND GALPIN, BELLE SAUVAGE PRINTING WORKS, LUDGATE HILL, E.C. + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's Notes: + + + Illustrations have been moved closer to their relevant paragraphs. + The page numbers in the List of Illustrations do not reflect the new + placement of the illustrations, but are as in the original. + + Author's archaic and variable spelling and hyphenation is + preserved. + + Author's punctuation style is preserved. + + Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_. + + Passages in bold indicated by =equal signs=. + + Typographical problems have been changed and are listed below. + + +Transcriber's Changes: + + + Page 5: Original Table of Contents lists Chapter III as page 17. + + Page 8: Was 'unhapy' (his cutting sarcasm, and the =unhappy= + frivolity which defaces the works of the man) + + Page 30: Was 'Kadir' (FURTHER EXPERIENCES:--Abd-el-=Kader= (but not + the Emir)--Difficult Road) + + Page 33: Was 'twent' (The Arab had fired at the brute at =twenty= + paces, but missed his aim.) + + Page 85: Was 'mattrass' (and the =mattress=--fancy now!--is stuffed + with sticks, and is so cursedly hard) + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes in North Africa, by W. 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